Indianapolis Journal, Indianapolis, Marion County, 17 November 1884 — Page 3
REPUBLICANS GIVE -IT UP. New York’s Vote Elects Clevclaud by 1,10(1 Plurality. He viewing tlie Conduct of the Campaign— Kumor that tlie Stalwarts and Democrats Will Fuse for Conkliug. [From the Journal of Sunday.] COI'NTKIJ FOB CLEVELAND. The Electoral Vote of New York Democratic by 1,100 Plurality. Special to the Indianapolis Journal. New York, Nov. 15. At 2 o'clock this afternoon tlie canvass of the vote in this city was completed, and Grover Cleveland, by the slender majority of less than twelve hundred, placed to his credit by the most stupendous of ‘‘clerical errors’’ and Dr. Burchard’s “rum, Romanism and rebellion" speech, becomes beyond dispute the President-elect of these United States. A great pressure has been removed from the public mind. The long and feverish struggle, with its sleepless anxiety, is over, and tlie people are accepting the result calmly. Business promises to be depressed a while, and the Republicans think it hard that they should be robbed of the electoral votes of half a dozen States in the South. bu£ both of these things, business depression and hard feelings, will pass away. Mr. Cleveland will be inaugurated as quitely and peacefully as Garfield was. The feeling is growing that Mr. Cleveland will be his own w'orst enemy. If he is only allowed to go unmolested about his business, four or eight years of Democratic administration will make the people pray for a return of the good old times of Republican rule.* The Republican party Deed not despair of success because it will not have the patronage of the government and the influence of the administration to aid it in the next presidential contest It can do without them. The administration was called hostile this year, and rendered the Republican national committee no assistance of any considerable value. The administration, by ordering the postoffice to remain open here on election day and refusing to give the letter carriers a holiday on the day of the election, easily took from Mr. Blaine 500 votes. The support from the hundred thousand office-holders of this country was absurdly mean and small. The officeholders contributed to the campaign funds $38,000, and not one cent more. The Democrats had $5 to spend where the Republicans had $1; and that spent it the result in Indiana and New’ Jersey proves. This campaign has been conducted, on the part of the Republicans, with one-third the money spent in 1880. 1876 or 1872. “We feel that we have done all we could,” said Chairman Jones, when the result of the count was announced. “We fought the battle honestly and vigorously; we could do no more. ” There has been a disposition to criticise the national committee, but 1 observe that the people are becoming more just, and they recognize that the committee did the very best that they could in the face of the fearful odds that rose before them from the first day of the campaign down to the very day of the election. On this point the Sun sensibly observes: “For some notorious reason these committees are held responsible because a plurality of 1 200 among the voters of the country preferred Cleveland to Blaine. If Blaine had happened to have a few hun dred more votes in this State, as would probably have been the case if Brother Burchard’s laryngeal, Ungual and labial facilities for the propulsion of the letter R had been less, Mr. Barnum and Mr. Gorman, and their associates would have been as soundly abusod by the Democrats as Mr. Jones and Mr. Elkins now are by the Republicans.” The aldermanic supervisors entered upon their work of canvassing to day earlier than usual, in order to complete the electoral count, at all hazards, by an early hour in the afternoon. Chairman Waite came ahead of the crowd and took his seat long before 9 o’clock. Not another alderman was visible in the chamber at that time, and but one lawyer, Mr. Bartlett, was in attendance. Mr. Waite had a brief consultation with Mr. Bartlett, and then proceeded to attach liis initials to the tally sheets, in order to ex pedite matters, while awaiting his colleagues. The first important preliminary, when the board came to order, was the resolution laid over yesterday providing for the canvass of tlie electoral count only in the lemaining districts to-day. Supervisor O’Neill offered a motion to that effect, and there was no oppo sition. Supervisor Kirk then took up the Fifteenth district returns and rattled off the electoral figures with such rapid ity that within fifteen minutes he called out for the returns from the Sixteenth. A large crowd occupied the benches in the rear of the chamber and the floor. It was found that two returns in election districts of the Seventeenth Assembly district were defective, and they were sent to the committee on corrected returns. Otten dorfer was scratched in the First election district of the Sixteenth Assembly district. The Eighteenth Assembly district was then taken up and read. It was found in the First election district that the vote for Blaine was 54, Cleveland 141, and St John 3. making a total ol 198. There were 225 votes cast, making a difference of 27 for Blaine. The return was referred to the com mittee to be corrected. In the Third election district of the Eighteenth Assembly district, the total vote cast for Cleveland was shown to be 213 instead of 313, the figures heretofore pub bushed. In the Sixteenth election district of the Eighteenth Assembly district the figures gave Cleveland a gain of 2UO over those already cred ited to him. The vote cast was 272 in place of 72. In tlie Twentieth election district of the Nineteenth Assembly district Ottendorfer was again blotted from the electoral ticket. The canvass went on briskly and without a hitch. The spectators lounged back iu their Miairs and puffed cigars until the air was blue and misty, and a buzz of whispered con versa tion ran round tlie chamber. At 2 o’clock the canvass of the electoral count in the city was completed, and the announcement was greeted with tremendous applause. The committee on corrected returns were still in session in the Governor’s room, making the necessary cor rections, and the supervisors took a recess to await their report. After that is re ceived the canvass of the electoral ticket for the entire State will be completed. As the electoral canvass was completed, at 1:25 p. m., Alderman. Kirk remarked: “We’ve put Cleveland in the White House.” “Then the aldermen are good for something,’’ said Alderman Fullgmff. Tho committee on corrected returns made no Tery material change in any district until the ■Eleventh Assembly district was reached. From the Twenty-second election district 108 defective votes were returned, when, in fact, thero were but three actually defective. This mistake was
due to counting the electoral vote as thirty-six instead of one. Nothing now remains to be done except for the State Board of Canvassers to approve the proceedings, on Wednesday, and issue certificates of election. The latest figures place Cleveland’s plurality at 1,106. THE LATE CAMPAIGN. Inside Workings of the Republican State and National Committees. Gath’s New York Special: “Do you know Warren?” said my friend. “Said I: “Warren is au upright man every way, is he not?” “Yes, we think he is a perfectly square man. He was in favor of Arthur’s nomination. In the heat of his disappointment he said that Blaine could not carry the State of Now York. Afterward he found so much zeal for Blaine all through the interior of the State that he revised his view. He was then made chairman of the State committee. Like all of us, he was short of money and had these powerful intrigues and combinations to fight, but, we thank God we beat everything in tho State except tho last low Italian intrigue led by Conkling. We leave liim to the verdict of history ns about as mean a character as has been portrayed in the past. Ho has made a Democratic President out of the State of New York, just as lie, tried in 1876 to secure the election of Tilden over General Dix." Said I to my friend, who has been in tho national committee ever since it was organized. “How do you boys feel in there over this defeat?” “Why, we were conscious of no want of labor or sacrifice to help our friend Blaine. We sincerely loved him. loved to work with him, hoped to have him President, Nothing which has happened in tho campaign has in the smallest degree changed our view of him within the national committee. Wo have always been harmonious and kind to each other, and nothing has happened there to distress us except the want ot funds. We have been accused of being the party of the jobbers and monopolists. Every interest of that kind has kept away from us. All that we could r*-ly upon in this* campaign were the sincere Republicans who considered that tho country had been v/ell managed for twenty-four years and ought not to "have a change. Compared to the times when General Arthur ran the committee, we were really hard up. There were times when we had to put our hands in our personal pockets and pay small pressing bills which it would have been dishonorable to have protested. You must understand that Jim Blaine has never been surrounded by any powerful assemblage of capital. He has belonged all his life to the rank of poor, aspiring, hopeful men. A man’s friends are very much like himself. We were all of us a kind of school teachers’ band of fellows, who had made their own way in tlie world, and had not more than half made it. Our zeal was our chief capital. There is Steve Elkins,” said he; “i defy any man to discover a more upright man than Elkins in any relation of life. He is a TtHuous husband, a true and upright father, a partisan, never severe but perfectly faithful ali tho time, and ho is a comfort to any person connected with him. To have a man like that abused as if he were a culprit fills his friends with unspeakable disgust with tho public criticism of this country. Then our old man Jones, at the head of the committee, was a perfect father to everybody. He wanted no praise, no office, anti was ready to take all the blame. In short,’’ said my acquaintance, “considering the power of the Republican party in the past, it is astonishing to see how, the moment it nominated a really great man, its editors and bosses got into ""a confab. N lf we had picked up some cheap, second-rate person, they would all have exclaimed: ‘There is the pink of sweetness!’ We gave them a great big fellow, able to take care of himself everywhere, and tney could not stand him.” Referring to Chester A. Arthur, a man about whom I think I have made no mistake for some years past, a friend from Washington sends me a note to the following effect: “The night of the election tho entire diplomatic corps with their wives were by invitation in the State Department to receive tlie news by special wire. All were eagerly desirous of the election of Cleveland, and the officials of the State Department encouraged them to believe that he would bo successful. Before the diplomatic corps left the department they were told that they could cable their governments that Mr. Blaine was defeated, and they did so. Thereupon there were congratulations and handshakings on both sides. What a spectacle for the loyal men of the country to witness the entire administration. except two Cabinet officers, striking hands with the representatives of foreign governments and of the solid South! No wonder that the old rebel yell is heard at night on the cornel's, and pictures of Jeff Davis and Wilkes Booth come out of their hiding places.” AN ALLEGED FUSION. Rumor that tlie Stalwarts and Democrats Will Fuse in Conkling;* Favor. Buffalo feyecial to Courier-Journal. The Sunday News, a paper which is responsible lor the gubernatorial boom of Governor Cleveland, and which has been iiis home organ ever since, has made a canvass of the western part of the State on the question of returning Roseoe Conkling to the United States Senate, will editorially, tomorrow, claim that stalwart assemblymen will unite with the Democrats and accomplish this. It finds that more thau thirteen Republicans, or enough to elect, will unite with the Democrats. W. F. Sheehan, First district; Frank >l. Mies, Second district; Timothy W. Jackson, Fourth district, of Erie county, all Democrats, will support him, ns they feel it for the best interest, of the party to do so. Win. M. Ilawxins, Third district, of Erie; Walter H. Horn, Second district, Niagara couuty, Republicans, are both in favor of him, and believe him the best man for the place. Jacob A Driess, of Niagara county, Democrat, will also support him. The Wyoming assemblyman. Lorinsr, is noncommittal. and the Monroe county assemblymen, Hubbell, Tumilly and Garbutt, are quoted as being favorable. Interviews in an indirect way with assemblymen from other parts of tho State show a favorable impression, and that Conkling will, beyond a doubt, be elected through a consolidation of Democrats and stalwart forces. High Price for a Kiss. New York W< r!U. Alexander Weber, a dull and delicate-looking Scandinavian thirty five years old. is a butcher in the employment of William Greenfield, who keeps a butcher-shop at No. 507 Tenth avenue. A few weeks ago a bright-eyed boarding house keeper, Mrs. Elizabeth Krepser, came to occupy the house acr<>ss tlie avenue at No. 508. On Wednesday she beckoned to Weber, who woufc over and took her or-h r for meat. Sbe said she wanted some meat, which she w'otihl paj T for on Saturday. Weber took it over to her. and he says he was just comiug out wheu she closed the door on him and refused to let him go out with out his p ying her s2do. She says that he kissed her against b**r will. She had him arrested, and on the way to the station she proposed to settle the matter for S2OO. At court yesterday she raided her demand, and decided that no less than SI,OOO would compensate. She was disappointed to find that the man she proposed to charge SI,OOO for a stolen kiss was not tho owner of the butcher-shop, but only a poorly-pai l employe, and not a good mark for damages. Justice Patterson discharged the prisoner, remarking that as it was money the complainant wanted, her only remedy was in a civil action. The Correct Vote of New York. New York Special. The correct electoral vote in tho State stands: Cleveland, 563.073; Blaine, 561.986. Cleveland’s plurality. 1.087. This is made by taking tho lowest electoral vote in New York city as a basis, as Mr. Ottendorfer ran about 10J behind Jiis ticket. This reckoning gives Cleveland 100 less than tho other electoral votes show. A well known pomological writer says that thero are 209 varieties of cherries, 09 of apricots, -39 of peaches, 1,087 of pears and 297 of plums. Hood’s Sarsaparilla, acting through tho blood, reaches every part of the system, and iu this way positively cures catarrh.
MAN A POLLS JOURNAL, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 1881.
THE IN
EDMUND YATES’S MEMOIRS. An Interesting Book—llls Recollections of Charles Dickens. lie view of Rook in New York Herald. In 1853 he was married. The happy couplo took up their abode in a little nutshell of a liousa in Gloucester place. They were present at many receptions given by Mrs. Milner Gibson, where they met such men as Louis Blanc. Alex ander Cockburn, Ma/zini, Pianche, and a host of celebrities. Mr. Yates became a contributor to Chambers’ Journal. Bentley’s Miscellany and other papers. A collection of sketches which had been published in these was brought out in book form by Mr. Bogue. The little volume was kindly received by the press, and its publication formed an epoch in the author's life. That same year, 1854, was a memorable one. Mr. Yates made the acquaintance of Dickens. He called on him at Tavistock House. “There were uo photographs of celebrities to bo purchased in those days.” says he, “and 1 had formed my idea of Dickens’ personal appearance on the portrait of hirn by Maclise, prefixed to ‘Nickelbv;’ the soft and delicate face, with the long hair, the immenso stock and the high-col hired waistcoat. He was nothing like that. * * * His hair, though worn still somewhat long, was beginning to be sparse; his cheeks were shaved; he had a mustache and a ‘doorknocker’ beard encircling his mouth and chin. His eyes were wonderfully bright and piercing, with a keen and eager outlook; his bearing hearty and somewhat aggressive. He wore on that occasion a loose jacket and wide trousers, and sat back in his chair with one leg under him and his hand in his pocket, very much as in Frith’s portrait. ‘Good God ! how like your father, were his first words.” Dickens remained his warm friend until death. Mr. Yates now became better known in journalism. He wrote for the Illustrated London Times and Household Words. He published in collabv>ration with Mr. Frank Smedley. a volume of floating verse entitled “Mirth and Metre by Two Mer ry Men.” which captivated the town. He was also permanently engaged as dramatic critic on the staff of the Daily News at a salary of £4 a week, which made him “supremely happy.” Mr. Yates tolls some good stories of Douglas Jerrold, which are worth quoting. Mr. Yates was escorting him one night to the Bedford Hotel. “As we went up New street we met two or three drunken roisterers, one of whom, after tumbling up against me, apologized and asked‘the way to tho Judge and Jury.’a popular entertainment of the day. lustantly Jerrold bene forward and addressed him: ‘Straight on, young man; continue in the path you are now pursuing and you can’t fail to come to them!’ it was to Peter Cunningham, mentioning liis fondness for calves’ feet, that Jerrold said ‘Extremes meet!’ To Mrs. Alfred Wigan, expressing her fear that her hair had been turned gray by the application of some strong stimulant, lie said: ‘I know, essence of thyme.’” Mr. Yates introduced us next to Bohemia, a country in which he traveled much, even if he was never naturalized. As editor of the Comic Times, which sought to rival Punch iu its own particular field, his intercourse with literary Bohemia of course beeatne closer. Many aro the auecdotes which he tells of the clever men and women with whom he was thrown. This chapter is exceptionally bright and amusing reading. The life of the Comic Times was brief, but it Was brilliant while it lasted Next comes the story of his “difficulty with the Garrick Club,” which arose from a little article he wrote on Thackeray, in Town Talk, grazing the too sensitive cuticle of tho great novelist. Mr. Dickens in this difficulty stood by Mr. Yates, and, on calm reflection, it will pretty generally be conceded that Thackeray throughout comes out second best. Mr. Yates’ dramatic recollections are quite entertaining. His own work for the stage had been successful. He became editor of Temple Bar and made it a sparkling magazine. In the chapter, “People I Have Known,” Mr. Yates tells us of Sir Alexander Cockburn and of a lively little incident of that jurist’s visit to Sir Richard Bethel 1. Sir Richard and his sou Dick and Cockburn went pheasant shooting. The keeper happened to get shot. Cockburn asked tho keeper by which of his masters he had been peppered and got the reply, “D—n ’em! both of ’em.” Next term time Sir Richard Bethell, while addressing a number of legal dignitaries on the subject of au important reform in the law, said lie was to have the support in the matter of his friend Cockburn. Cockburn protested. Bethell said, “in his mo'-tTniucing and affected tones, ‘You must recollect it, my dear friend; it occurred on the morning you shot my keeper!’ ” And so the book goes on, with good stories on every page. KILLED BY THE KAZOO. Why a Music Dealer Decided to Sell No More “Kazoos”—Ruin Wrought by its Use. Newark Nows. “Say, mister, got anykazoosT breathlessly inquired a boy as he entered a Broad street music store this morning. The music man silontly and sadly produced a cylindrical piece of red painted wood which the urchin eyed all over carefully, placed what appeared to be the mouthpiece in his mouth, inflated his cheeky, emptied the wind into the hole, and a sound compared with which the rasping of a saw would bo sweet melody filled the store and caused the proprietor’s teeth to ache. A moment later and the boy was on tho sidewalk exhibiting his prize to three other boys, who looked at their companion enviously as ho remarked, after causing the instrument to emit a sound that made tho lamp post rattle, “Ain’t she a daisy!” “Watch those boys closely.” said the proprietor of the store, “and if either of them starts in here lock the door. If this thing is kent up the new asylum will be too small to hold the kazoonatics. It’s anew form of lunacy caused by those little instruments of torture which you see in that window. “On last Monday a nice little hoy purchased one. His father is a highly respectable man, a church member, and all that, who resides in Woodside. On Wednesday he came in here a perfect mental wreck. Talked awfully; said that I had ruined everything, broken up his home, wrecked the family fireside circle, and carried on so that 1 thought I should have to send for the police ambulance. “From a neighbor i learned that the boy had done it all. He went out into tlie yard first and practiced. In ten minutes tho watch dog, which the neighbor said had a voice of wonderful power and elasticity at night, was dead. He split his throat in a vaiu endeavor to equal the notes of the kazoo. As tho boy kept on practicing and struck new discords, tlie boards which composed the back fence began to warp and finally curled up in agony, while the heads of the ten-penny nails ached. The boy, after getting well up in running the scales, entered the house, and* the minds of the family were wrecked. The man h:n sued tor damages, and says that if he is expelled from church it will bo my fault. 0 As the man concluded ho mournfully handed one of the red pieces of wood to the News reporter for examination. It was about four inches long, with three holes on top, and a piece of tin also perforated. “The name was not selected on account of its beauty nor because the inventor had any idea that it wou’d prove an incentive to purchasers.” said the music man. “It was chosen because the peculiar character ot the noise which it produces requires a startling rather than a beautiful name. Indeed, the peculiar characteristic of the music is so much more startling than anything else that it would seem a libel to cull the instrument anything like a rational name. “One of the strongest features of the instru mont, next to its music, is the tact that it has an affinity for Oie boy. It is harmless unless one end be attached to a small or largo boy. It then emits a noise which, as you will agree, would make a foghorn blush and cause a calliope to bust with envy. The kazoo and the small boy are amendable to each other by adding, do you see, and the noise is the result. If the amendment goes into effect tho music is likely to produce a second amendment, offered by the boy’s father, and which insists on ‘striking out’ tlie instrument originally amended to the boy. “The greatest possibilities in the way of sound lie not in the kazoo but in the boy, and the number of boys who will use it. No ono who has heard his neighbor’s children practicing on tho instrument for hours, patiently and heroically, endeavoring to master tho variations. will ever argue that the kazoo alone is eapnhle of expressing the multiplicity or volume of disorganized and discordant notes which makes the r®:t-ho\vling dog long for solitude and silence. ' Mu. Thomas Murray, alderman, Queen at., Toronto, Canada, says: “After all other rome dies had failed to relieve mo of a severe burn on my hand, JSi Jacobs Oil cured mo.
Witl i Lon cl P cals! RING THE BELLS! RING! RING! For the Victorious CUT-RATE SALE opened on Saturday at the BUFFALO SHOE HOUSE. READ ON! READ ON! WITHOUT AN EQUAL! The gorgeous parade, the waving flags, enlivening music, the attractive signs seen on the streets of our city on Saturday morning announced the opening of the event that CAUSED UNPARALLELED EXCITEMENT. The GRAND CUT-RATE SHOE SALE, so extensively heralded, opened on Saturday morning with the most stupendous jam ever seen in a Retail Shoe Store. See the Pi-ices That Did It! MEN’S CALF 1 BOOTS (sold lots of them), $1.43! LADIES’ FINE KID BUTTON (worth $2.25), $ 1.30! Women’s, Men’s, Boys’ and Misses’ Shoes were slaughtered to the tune ot 47c! THIS WEEK WE “BURST THE SPELL!” If you never saw SHOES SOLD CHEAP before, come THIS WEEK to the BUFFALO. If you never realized what it is to take your pick from $35,000.00 worth of Boots and Shoes, at nearly HALF PRICE, come to the BUFFALO THIS WEEK. Do not stop to think! Do not stop to wonder! Do not stop to ponder! But Kum! Kum! Kum! to the GREATEST SLAUGHTER CUTRATE SHOE SALE ever inaugurated in the State. Ring the hells loudly for the B UFFALO ! Tell your friends and neighbors of the GREAT BUFFALO SHOE CO.’S CUT-RATE SHOE SALE J 66 East Washington St. (Near Court-House.)
_ DIED. MAURICE—Mary Maurice, wife of J. A. Maurice, acjed forty five years. Sunday morning, at her late residence, liO Fayette street. Funeral at 2 p. m. on Monday. JONES—Of diphtheria, Arthur W„ son of Charles R. and Louise Jones, at their residence, 2G7 Huron street, aged live years, five months aud seventeen days. Private funeral, Nov. 17, at 2 p. ra. C. E. KREGELO & WHITSETT, FUNERAL DIRECTORS AND EMBALMERS. Telephone SGL FREE AMBULANCE. ANNOUNCEMENTS. Art reception, at mbs. ingraham\s, 2G5 North Tennessee street. All interested in pictures invited. I KK HANSHAW. RESTAURANT AND LDNCH' J room, 32 and 34 Circle street, west side, has reduced meals from 25c to 20c, five meals for if 1.00. Oysters served in every style, iiueat and fattest in the city. Open at all hours. WANTED. WANTED— A MAN WITH A CAPITAL OF $3,000 to $5,000 to take an active part in an established manufacturing business, must be a practical business man. who understands book-keeping, etc. Address MANUFACTURER, Journal office. TTfTANT ED—LA D Y AGENTS FOR “QUEEN V f Protector” daisy stocking and skirt supporters, shoulder braces, bustles, bosom forms, dress shields, safety belts, sleeve protectors, et,o. Entirely new devices, . nprecedeuted profits. We have 500 agents making SIOO monthly. Address, with stamp, E. H. CAMPBELL & 00., 9 South May street, Chicago. AGENTS WANTED. Agents— any man or woman making less than $ !0 per week should try our easv moneymaking business. Our $3 eye-opener free to either sex wishing to test with a view to busiuess. A lad/ cleared sl6 in one day: a young man S7O on one street. An agent writes: “Your invention brings the money quickest of anything I ever sold.” We wish every person seeking employment would take advantage of our liberal oiler. Our plan is especially suitable for inexperienced persons who dislike to talk. The free printing we furnish beats all other schemes and pays agents 300 nr cent, profit. A lady who invested $1 declared that she would not take SSO for her purchase. Write for papers; it will pay. Address A. H. MERRILL & CO., Chicago. FINANCIAL. rpo LOAN—MONET—ON CITY PROPERTY. E. X C. HOWLETT, 8 Condit Block. Money at the lowest rates of inter” est. J. W. WILLIAMS & CO., 3 aud 4 Viutou Block. Vl/E WILL FURNISH MONEY ON FARM SKCIf T ▼ rity, promptly, at the lowest rates for long or short time. Tilo6. 0. DAY & 00., 72 East Market street. FOR RENT. RENT—THREE ROOMS, UNFURNISHED, with board. 410 North Meridian street. —WB—Mg——————Mil—H—ii W M 111 ■11.1..1 AUCTION SALES. Hunt & moourdy. real estate and general Auctioneers. No. 88 East Washington street. Stocks of merchandise in city or country bought outright for cash. FOR SALE. SALE—ONLY ONE DOLLAR PER YEAR the Weekly Indiana State Journal. Send tor it |7OR SALE—SSOO FOR A TWENTY4IORSE Engine, boiler, heater and pump, including iron smoke-stack and brick for setting boiler. BAKER & RANDOLPH, 28, 30 and 32 West Maryland Street, in rwTrwr— iii i■ l m irwi —niMnrirniTMiwiim "iiiMCgi WASHINGTON, October 27, 1881. Whereas, by satisfactory evidence presented to the undersigned, it has baen made to &p;>er that Lie INDIANAPOLIS NATION A Ii BANK, in the city of Indianapolis, in the county of Marion, and state of Indiana, has complied with all the provisions of tho “Act of Congress to enable Nat onul Banking Associations to extend their corporate existence and for other purposes,” approved July 12, 1882} Now, therefore. I, John S. L ingworthv, Deputy and Acting Comptroller of Uto Currency, do hereby certify that the INDIANAPOLIS NATIONAL BANK, in t lie city of Indianapolis, in tho county of Marion, and Btat® u? Indiana, is authori/.ed to have succession for tho period specified in its amended articles of association, namely, until the close of business on October 31, 1904. In testimony whereof, witness mv hand and seal of office this 27th day of October, 1881. J. 8. LANGWORTHY, Deputy and Acting Comptroller of the Currency. No. 581. IB“*“^kSTOPFEuFHEE lu 6*l Nb&k Marvelous success. M H Xa Insane Heisoiu hestored y || Dr.KLINEiJ GREAT 53 * ™ I Nerveßestorer rt//BRAm&NPRVK Diseases Only sure cure forMerve Affect u>" r Fits, FPH'Psy, etc. INPM.i.iblii if taken as directc I- A'j Fits after first efoy't v*r. Treitlsa and $* trhl bottle free to Fit patients, tiiey paying express .harjjcs on box when re'-eived. Rand names, I*. o aud express address of afflicted to Hit.Kl.lNK.jpt Arch St.,t*hiladelphia,Pa. Druggists* IifJKXR# <W* iMJTAriNU f&AV&S*
IB IRON FITTINGS. A Selling agents tor National Tube fiSpp Globe Valves. Stop Cocks. Engin eTrimmings. PIPE TONGS, fjf. - Vrn CUTTERS. VISES, TAPS. I S Stocks and Dicss, Wrenches, I'fSpJ \ S Steam Traps, Pumps, Sinks, figM li HOSE. BELTING, BABBIT METALS (25-pound boxes), 1, Cottor Wining Waste, white l-wl and colored (100 pound bales), Lsg’f rfiF* andall other supplies used in coni Cfc! nection with STEAM, WATER U~fJ YW and GAS. in JOB or RETAIL pfeT Ej&‘ LOTS. Do a regular steam-lit-WSI ting business. Estimate and contract to heat Mill 9; Shops, h| Factories and Lumber Dry Bf Houses with live or exhaust W steam. Pipe cut to order by M l KNIGHT&JILLSON m 73 and 77 S- Penn. St. wmmmmmKmmaamKmmmmMammmmmmmumasnammmnmammz* Pasßcngpr Hydraulic TJ T DIT ETTA V ELEVATORS. 11. Ja i\LLUI, Factory Belt Steam (Established 1800) ELEVATORS. Freight and Passenger * ELEVATORS? ° ELEVATORS. Iland or 6team Baggage ELEVATORS. Office, 128 E. Eighth st., Cut Gear Noiseless Works: • unniiig Eighth, Lock, Clevelandsta, DUMB WAITERS. CINCINNATI, O. PlEliisLi On Blood Poisoning Is of Interest to all classes. Will bo mailed free on receipt of your address. ‘kiijs Swift Specific Cos., Drawer 3, Atlanta, Ga. constitutionaTscrofula. A girl in my employ has l>een cured of what I believe was constitutional Scrofula ly tho use of Swift’s Specific. j. o. McDaniel. Allavoona, Ga., July 25,1884. PRESCRIBED BY PHYSICIANS. T have prescribed Swift’s Specific in many cases >f Blood Poison and as h general tonic, and it has made cures after all other remedies had failed. B. M. STRICKLAND, M. D. Cave Spring, Ga., July 28, 1884. FF.ARFUL BLOOD POISON. negro on my farm has been cured of a fearful case of Blood Poison by the use of three bottles of Swift’s Specific. ANDREW J. HOWARD. FOBBVTH, Ga. Aug. 5, 1884. MOTHERS! LOOK INTO THE MERITS OF THE SOLAR TIP ® SHOES! FOR YOU It ROYS. They will be A UHKAT SAVING in MONEY, and your boys will be pleased. None genuine without trademark and “John Mundei.l & Cos.” on each pair. Beware of imitations with names soiiCdiiig ainidar to Solar Tip. THERE IS NO IHSAPFOINTAI ENT with THESE SHOEB*for they are as cood nn wo represent them, and your dealer will say so too. CANVASSING AGENTS. Energetic ami reliable (male or female) wanted to sell our now Medicated Chest Protectors and Abdominal Bands, (hire and protect, from Coughs, Colds, Pneumonia, Bronchitis, Pleurisy, Rheumatism, Inflammation of Liver. Stomach Bowels and Bladder, Colic, Pains in Side, Back or Bowels and Dyspepsia. Will aid ••reat.ment and relievo distressing symptoms of Consumption. Nothing else of this kind in tin* market. Goods and prices popular. Liberal inducements. Now York Health Agency, 285 Broadway, Now York. 1 ~ Send sl. $2, $3 or $5 for a A I\T r\ \T samolo retail • x. by express, of I A vrll i JL/ A • up in elegant boxes, ami strictly 1 pure. Suitable for presents. Kx* 1 press charges light. Refers to all Chicago. Send for catalogue. CANDY 1 . C. F. GUNTHER, I-- -1 _.u.. Coufoctiouur, Chicago
the ' INDIANAPOLIS JOURNAL. Daily and Weekly Editions. The Oldest, tho Largest, the Best Republican Newspaper ia Indiana. The Daily Journal. The Indianapolis Journal is better equipped than ever in its history to serve the public. With a fine mechanical outfit, not excelled anywhere, the typographic appearance and arrangement of tho paper will maintain for the Journal tho deserved reputation of being one of the best printed papers in the country. Our arrangements for the collection of news from all parts of the world were never so complete, never involved so large an outlay of money, while in all departments the paper is served with experienced and intelligent direction. The Journal is, first, a New-spaper. It will give all the news of the day, from every quarter, with fullness, entire fairness, and so edited as to make its columns free from impurities and allow them at all tirnos to be read with perfect safety by every member of the family. The Journal is a Republican paper, believing in the principles and general policy of the Republican party; but it recognizes that in the work of parties there are and will be wrongs, possibly frauds aud corruptions. These the Journal proposes to be perfectly free to criticise aud to condemn without stint, but in a spirit and with a purpose for good, having a proper regard for personal rights and reput.v tions. And tho right to mako this criticism will be asserted and maintained without detriment to the political character aud standing of the paper. With no desire to bo captious or fault-finding, in the interost of the people aud of the party, believing that the great glory of republicanism is that it permits freedom of thought and liberty of expression, tho Journal will endeavor, in its editorial comment and conduct, to keep the Republican party the agency through which and by which the best thought of the people may find expression and the highest purpose of tho people bo executed. Other than this, and less than this, will meet its most vigorous opposition. Wo liopo to make the Journal the exponent of tho highest and best, thoroughly sincere and earnest in whatever it says and does; a paper of tho people and for the people, as welcome to one class as to another, expecting a continuanco of generous confidence and support by tho people. Subscribe at once. JNO. C. NEW & SON, Publishers THE JOURNAL, IXDUiUrOLIB, Ini>,
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