Indianapolis Journal, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 January 1885 — Page 6
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THE INDIANAPOLIS NATIONAL BANK Designated United States Depository, Comer Room Odd-fellows’ HalL Him. P. TTaugiiey. Pros't. H. Latham Cash’r
LVDUNAPOLIS MARKETS, CANNED GOODS. Tomatoes—Two-pound eans. 80 ®BS c; 3-pound. [email protected]. Peache*—Standard 3-pound, Sl.Tf)® fc.oo. 3-ponnd eeooxtds, $1.5091.60; 2-poumistsuui-ird, $1.40 n-1.50. <V>rrj—Polk’* 2-pound Bans. 95©: Yarmouth, $1.30; liovere. $1.25; llcMurray, $1.25 • 1.30. Blackberries—Two-pound, 95c®51.10; raspeerrira, 2-pound. sl.lO a 1.20; pineapple, standard, 8- $1.7592.50; second do. $1.2591.35; cove oysters. 1-pound, full weight. $ 1.05 <r. 1.10; light, 55 ®6sc; 2-pouud, full, $1.50®1.95; light, $1.05® 1.20; string beans, 85®90c; Lima beans. 90c®51.30. peas, marrowfat, 85c®51.75; small, $1.85® 1.90; lobsters, $1.8521.90; red cherries, 95c®51.10; gooseberries, $1 ® 1.10. COAL AND COKE. Anthracite coal, small, $7 4* ton; large.. $6.73; Pittsburg coal, $4 4> ton; eoal $5.25 jp ton; Raymond City coal. $1 ton; block, eoal, $2.50 p ton;’block nut, $2.00 ton; Jackson coal, $3.75 4P toil; Jackson nut, $3.25 ton; charcoal, 13c HP" bush; Oonnellsville coke, 15c IP 1 bush; crushed coke, 12c 4* bush; gas coke, 10c 4P bush. DRUGfc. Alcohol, $2.2092.30; asafetida. 30®35e; altnn, 4®sc: camphor. 25 ®3oc; cochineal, 50®53c, chloroform, $1 ® 1.10: copperas, brls., $3 ® 3.50; cream tartar, pure. 38® 10c, indigo, 80c ®sl; licorice. Calab, genuine, 35® ioc: magnesia, carb.,_2-oz., 30 ®3sc, morphine, P. & W. ounce, $3.50®3.75; madder, 12914 c; oil, castor. gal.. $1.65®1.70; oil, bergamot, ft. $2.7593; opium, $1.5024.75; quinine, P. &W. ounce. $1.05®1.10; balsam copaiba. 60@75e; so&r>, caatHe, Fr., 12 ® 16c; soda, bicarb, 4*2®6©; eakrs, epsom; 4®sc; sulphur Hour, 4®6c; saltpeter. B®2oc; turpentine. 35® 40c; glycerine, 20®22c; iodidtL potass, $2.7rj®3.00; bromide potass, 40®45c; ehlorate potash, 20222 c; borax, 13 ®lsc; cinchonidia 40®45c. OlLS—Linseed oil. raw, 51 ®s2c ip gallon; boiled. 54255 c; coal oil, legal test, bank, 60® 65c; best straits, 65c; Labrador. 60c; West Virginia lubricating, 20230 c; miners’. 65c. Lard Oils—No. 1,58265 c-; do. extra. 68®72*gc. White Lead—Pure. lower grades, -123 c. DRY GOODS. Prints—Albion*. 3olid color, American fancy, sLjc; Allen’s fancy, s*ac: Allen's dark, s*oo Allen’s pink, 6c; Arnold’s, 6e; Berlin, soiid colors, 5 1 2C; Cocheeo, 6c; Conestoga, s*<jc; Bunnell's s*ac; Eddyatono, 6c; Gloucester, sc; Hartel, 5 *ac; Harmony, sc; Hamilton, 6e; Greenwich, 5*2C; Knickerbocker, Mailorv, nink. 6c; Richmond, 6c. Brown Sheeting —Atlantic A, 7c; Boott C, 6c; Agawam, F, sc; Bedford R. 4*ac: Augusta, 5%c; Boott, AL. o*2©; Continental 0, 6*2©; Dwight Star, 8c; Echo Lake, 6c;’ Graniteville EE, 6c; Lawrence LL sc; Pepperell E, 6*ac; Peppered R, 6c; Peppered, 9- IS'’; Peppered 10 4,20 c; Utica 9-4, 25c; Utica 10- 27V C; Utica C, 4c. Bleached Sheeting—Elackstone AA, 6%c; Ballou & Son, Oc; Chestnut Hill. 5*2C: Cabot 4-4, 63*0; Chapman X, 6c; Dwright Star S. 7*ac; Fruit of the Loom, 8*40; Lonsdale, 73te: Linwood. 7*3C, MasonTide, 8c; New York Mills, 10*ae; Our Own. 53t©, Peppered, 9-4, 20c; Pepperell 10-4, 22c; Hill’s, 7%; Hope, 68ic; Knight’s Cambric, 7 82c; Lonsdale cambric, lOhjc; Whitinsville, 33-inches. 6c; Warnsutta. 10*sc. Tickings—Arnoskeag ACA 13*2C, Conestoga BF 14c, Conestoga extra 13*2c, Conestoga Gold Medal 1382 c, Conestoga CCA 11 *4O, Conestoga AA 9c, Conestoga X Bc, Pearl River 12*2C, Lewiston 36inch 14Ljc. Lewiston 32 inch 1 2k*c, Lewiston 30-inch 11 *<\ Fails 080 32-ineh 15c, Methuen AA 128ae, Oakland A 6*30, Swift River 6c, York 32-inch 12*oc, York 3Q-inch 11*ac. Ginghams—Arnoskeag 7*2e, Bates 782 c, Gloucester 7c, Glasgow 7c, Lancaster 78ic- Randelman 7*ac, Renfrew Madras 9c, Cumberland 781 c, White 7 82c, Bookfold lQßsc. Paper Cambrics—Manville 58jc, S. S. & Son Cc, Mason vide 5 Me, Garner 5 1 ac. Grain Bags—American sl9, Atlanta S2O. FrankHnville s2l, Lewiston S2O, Ontario $lB, Stark A $23.50. FRUITS AND VEGETABLES. Am>Eß—Choice, $2.25 22.75 <jp brl; common, $1.5092 brl. Cranberries—Choice, sl4 W brl, $4.50 bps; common. $lO IP 1 brl. Celery—2o93o •P’doz. Cabbage—7sc ®sl brl. Onions—s222.2slP brl. Potatoes —45250 c -F bu. Sweet Potatoes—Kentucky sweets. $2.7523 -Ip Urh Philadelphia Jersey sweets, $5 brl. Turnips $1.2521.50 brl. FOREIGN FRUITS. Rai,HNS—London layer, $3.4523.60 box.- loose muscatels, 2-crown, $323.15 box Valencia, 10 J lb; Citron, 36c ft. Currants. 5 *a® (>Bc 4>* ft. Bananas—Aspinwall, $'223.50; Jamaica, $1.5022.50. Lemons —Malaga, $3.5024; Messina, $125; Valencia, $7. Dates—Fard, inbbxes, 8210 e; frailed, 6c. Figs—New, 16218 c. Malaga Grapes—4o tbs, $8.50; 55 lbs, $lO. Cocoanuts —$5 26 hundred. Oranges—Stem-cut Jamaica, in brls. $7 28.50; Florida, box Primes—Turkish, 5 8326 c for old; 681270 for now; French, 8^2216c. GROCERIES. COFFEES—Ordinary grades. 9210 c; fair, 10910*2C; fDoc., V21182C; prime, 1221282 c; strictly prime, 28if' idc; choice. 13 3 321-lc; fancy green and yellow, 14 21482 C: old government, Java, 23226 c; imitation Java, 1821982 c. Roasted—Gates’s A 1,16 c; Gates’s prime. 14%c: Arbuckle's. 14%c; Loveriug’s 143tc; Del worth’s, McCune’s, 1434 c. CHEESE —Common. 7®Bc; good skim. 9210 c; ciearn. 10*32110; fuU cream, 12*3213c; New York, 14215 c. Dried Beef—l3B22l4c. RiCß—Carolina and Louisifuia, 5*2280. Molasses and Syeups—New Orleans molasses, fair to prime. 40245 c; choice, 53258 c. Syrups, low grade, 25227 c; prune, 30233 c; choice to fancy, 35 ®4oc. Salt Ftsh—Mackerel, extra mess, $25226 ■s> brl; halves, $11.50212.50; No. 1 mackerel, $19220; halves, $8 210; No. 2 mackerel. $9213; halves, $4.50 26.50; No. 3 mackerel, $5.5026.50; halves, $32 $3.50. Sugars—Hards, 6%278jc; confectioners’ A. 6 ®B*6C; standard A. 5 7 q26c; off A, 5^25 7 c; white extra C. o'Vt fine yedows, yellows, s*6®s*4c; common yellows, 4 r> s2sc. St ARCH —Refined pearl, 3*42 3 Bjc ft; Eureka. 26c; Champion gloss lump, 6®7c; improved corn,' 6 *a2 7c. Salt— Lake. 95c, car lots; 10215 c more in quantities less than a car-load. Spicks—Pepper, 17 2 ISc; allspice, 10212 c; cloves, 20230 c; cassia, 13215 c: nutmegs, 65285 c & ft. SHOT —$1.5521.60 bag for drop. i’LOUR SACks—No. 1 drab. *4 brl, $33 1,000, x 3 brl, sl7; lighter weight., $1 W 1,000 les? T'wiVE— Hem 1 1'■*'1 S' l - vro n ' 8210*’- flo-r 202 30c; paper, 18c; jute, 12915 c; cotton, 16 225 c. WoODKMWAEE—No. 1 tubs, $8.0028.25; No. 2 tubs, $7.0027.25: No. 3 tubs. 6.00 26.25; two-hoop Sails. $1.6521.70; three-hooj) pails. $1.90®2; ouble washboards. $2.5022.75; common washboards, $1.4021.85; clothespins, 50®$1 peT box. Wooden Dishes—Per hundred, 1 tb, 20c; 2 ft, 25c; 3 !b, 30c; 5 IC. 40c. IjKad—sßj2(s l *2c for pressed bar. Wrapping Paper—Orowu straw, 18c per bundle; medium straw, 27c; double crown straw, 360, heavy weight straw, 2*422*3 & ft; crown rag, 30c If* 1 bundle; medium rag, 45e: double crown rag, OOc; heavy weight rag, 2*%®3c -S* ft: Manilla. _No. 1, 78i29c; No. 2, 5 26c; print paper, No. 1. 6®7c; book paper, No. 1, S. & 0., 10a/11c; No. 2, S. AC., B®9c; No. 3. S. & C., 7*428e. IRON AND STERL. Bar won frates), 2c; horse-shoe bar, $3.15®3.40; Norway nail rod, 7c; German steel plow-slab, 4c; American drill steel, 12c; Sanderson’s tool steel. 15c; tiro steel, 4c: spring steel. 6c; horse shoes, ■P’ keg, $4.00; mule shoes, ■| > keg, $5.00; horse nails, box, Bd, $5; cut nails, lOd and larger, $2.20 Log; other* aizes at the usual advance. Tinkers’ Snpi lies—Best brand charcoal tin—TO, 10x14, 11x20. 12x12. $6.50; IX, 10x14, 14x20, and IX 12x12, $8.50: 10, 14x20. roofing tin, $6.25; IC, 20 ®2B, $12.50 213; block tin, in pigs. 26c; ife bars, 27c, Iron—27 B won, 3*4c; 27 C iron. 6c; galvanized. 50 lj> cent, discount- Sheet zinc. 68jc. Copper bottoms, 23c. Planished copper, 36c. Solder, 15 ® 10c. Wire, 50 cent, off list, LEATHER, HIDES AND TALLOW Leather —Oak sole. 33®40c; hemlock sole, 26® 32c; harness, 30®35c: skirting, 3741)c; black bridle, doz.. s6o'®6s; fair bridle, SHO®7B doz.; eity kip. 60®80c; French kip, 85c®51.20; eity eaifakins. 85e951.10; French calfskins, $1.15 ® 1.80. Hides—Green, 6*sc; heavy steer, 7 8c; green salt, B®9 * ic; green salted calf, lie; dry flint, 12c; dry aa.’ted, Hie. Damaceil one-third off the above prices. Sheepskins—3o® 00c. Tallow—Prime, tic. GRKAaE —Brown, 4e: white. 5 ®sßic. 01L CA KE. Ofl cake and oil meal. 1.000 fts, sls; 2,000 IBs, S3O. Bags anu dravuge extra. PRODUCE. Butter—Creamery fancy, 28c; dairy, selected. 18 920 c; choice eoun try, 13 el oc; poor to fair. 8® 10c. EGGS—Bhip|Kr are paying 22c, loss off; selling from store at 23® 24 c. Feathers—Primes cose, 45c ft; mixed duck, 20® 25 ib. Honey—2o®22c in 1 and 2-ft cans. Venison—l 4 ®i6c & lb. Game—-Rabbits, 60c doz. Poultry —Hem;. 6c ■#>" ft; roosters, 4c; young chickens. 6c 4* ft; ducks, $3 doz; geese, $6 •jp' doz; turkeys, - t<’nKß—lhiffy’s, Rochester, $6 ¥ brl. Wool —Tub washed, 28® 32c; unwashed. melium, 20c; unwashed, jcommon, 18c; Cotswold, 17; burry and unmerchant able according to their value. 1 PROVISIONS. Wuolkrai.e Prices—Prime lard, 6.55 c; short ribs: green, ft.sOc; no cured ones here. Sweet pickled hams. 88? c. Fresh packed shoulders. sc. Jobbing Pricks—Smoked Meats—Sugar-cured hams, 10 Li 12** fts average, 11 o; 15 tbs average, SOUage luufui, be, Caiilorut* uains, 7 *4O; English break-
rRICES —x rime lard, tf.J h; no cured ones here. Sv< n*h packed ghuulders. sc. tß'Ks—Smoked Meau— fi Itis average, llo< 15 1 iverajre 10%c: 20 IBs and o 6j Caiif or in* uaiua, 7 1 ac-,
fast bacon, clear. 10*$c; English shoulders. 6\o; family shoulders, pieces averaging 6 to lO fts, 6*4c; drif 1 b>sef. 15c: bacon (dear sides), medium weight, 7%c: backs, and beilie?, light weight, 7%c: French flitch, 7-ft piece*, 63e. Dry Salteil smd Pickled Moaia—English cured clear sides or bucks (unsmoked), 7c; bean Dork(clear), brl 200 fts, sls; clear pork 4* brl 200 tbs, sl3; family pork (clear) brl 200 tbs, $11; family beef 4* brl 200 IBs, $lB. Lard— Pure kettle-rendered, in tierces, B*4c; also, in *3 bbls and 50-ft tubs, *3O advance on price of tierces; 48-ft tin tubs, and 20 ft pail*, lc advance: 10-ft pails, 1 83 c a<lvance. Sausage—Bologna, in cloth, 6*flc; in skin, 7c. SEEDS. Timothy— sl.4o® 1.05 ■!>’ bu; clover, $4.5094.75 f*' bu; bluegrass. extra eln Kentucky, $1.40® 1.60 ¥ bu; red top, 75c V bu; orchard grass, $1.50® 1.75 ■4* bu, owing to quality. —— ' ..ijga ASCENSION DAY. Adventists Wlio Ars Prepared to Leave This Cold World on Jan. 4. Denver News. • As the time approaches for the end of the world, according to the Adventists, prepara-, tions are being made on a grand scalo for ascension day, which will be Jan. 4, and the elect will assemble at a point on the Boulder road, several miles from Denver. A number of the chosen have already chosen their robes and golden slippers ready for the event, and the only thing that annoys them is the weather, the persistency of the weather in remaining cold. If Jan. 4is not a bright, warm day, there will be many left behind, beenuee they will be weighed down with blanket shawls, sealskin sacques, and heavy overcoats. No girl at all attached to the amenities of civilization would like to appear before Saint Peter without having a sealskin sacque on; that is, if she be tho fortunate possessor of one here, and the probabilities are that when the command is given to fly many will so weigh themselves down that they cannot with all possible flopping of imaginary wings leave this sublunary sphere. In the meantime, the preparations for the great event continue. A? aged colored sister has just had a robe seven feet long made out of mosquito bar netting, profusely trimmed with blue ribbons arid gold leaf stars. She proposes to go right up with that on and nothing else. She will certainly not be encumbered by a superfluous amount of clothing. A brother, who has no desire for a continual shiver on his serial voyage, lias had prepared a well jjadded dressing gown, with which he can protect his nether limbs from borean blasts should a current of air convey him too near tho north pole. He is ready and willing to flop, and thinks that he will be given a chance to exercise his gyrating ability Jan. 4. A young lady eighteen years old, with a tendency to embonpoint,has a sea-green robe with a sky-blue turban. She evidently intends to make an impression on the old gentlemanly warder of the heavenly gates which tarn on golden hinges. The majority of the elect, however, have common white robes, with short sleeves, and a few have lace around the arms. The number of those that will he ready to mount when the bugles call boots and saddles will be about fifty, includiug all ages, sexes, and almost every nationality. They hold nightly watch meetings, but will not break up camp and start fer the rendezvous before the evening preceding the wind-up. A good many have settled up their worldly affairs, disposing of their property to their friends whom they can not prevail on to accompany them, and who will be left behind. A difference of opinion exists as to what Adventists liqve set the day for the uprising. The gentlemen who issued the circular, a portion of which was published in the News not long since, claim to bo Seventh-day Adventists, and that that denomination alone is the one to which has been given the solving of the riddle when the world will roll up like a scroll. Mr. Eldridee Green, of Boulder, denies that they are Seventhday Adventists but First-day Adventists. He says the members of tho former organization have set no day, and it is not a part of their religion to do so. He also says that they who keep the seventh day will have no need for any robe prepared by human hands. Be that as it may, this much is sure, there is a sect in Denver preparing for ascension on Jan. 4, and are getting their garments in readiness. What sect they belong to no one seems to know, though they call themselves Adventists. It is more than probable that they keep the “first day,’’ as there are many sensible people who belong to the Seventh Adventists, and who are as willing and ready to ridicule the pretensions of the other class, who claim to be able to tell when time shall cease. They desire to state, liow r ever, that they want their misguided brethren to have a pleasant day for their jour ney through space.
AN AMERICAN ARISTOCRAT. The Indian with His Privileges Is the Real Aristocrat of the Land. Century for January. There is a mistaken notion among the philanthropic people in the East that the Indian is a much abused person, who is entitled to the spmpathv of mankind. Unquestionably there have been plenty of instances of broken treaties and individual and tribal wrongs, but looking at the matter, not from the historical, but from the actual point of view, it must be admitted that the aborigine on a reservation has more rights and privileges than a white man enjoys. “If I could have the privileges on this reservation which the Indian has,” said Major Roman, the Indian agent., as we were driving through the lovely Mission valley, “I would resign my office at once, settle down on one of these streams, fence in all the land I wanted, and get me a big herd of cattle. ” The Indian or half breed, explained the agent, can inclose as much laud as he pleases, and use as mueh more as he wants for a stockrange. He pays no taxes, and rides free on the railroad. If his tools get out of repair, or his horses need shoeing, the government employs a blacksmith to work for him. He takes his wheat to the agency flour mill, where it is ground by the government, and his logs to the agency sawmill, to bo made into lumber of the dimensions ho wishes. If he is sick, the government supplies him with medicines and a doctor. The missionaries educate his children in a boarding school, and finish him with the comforts of religion without charge. If too idle to work, he knows that the will in no event let him starve. If h. tries, ho can become a rich man by the mere increase of his cattle and horses Now, how does it stand with the white citizens? Instead of thousands of acres, he can get from the government only one hundred and sixty, and on them he must pay taxes and “rustle for a living,” as the Western phrase goes. The Indian is our American aristocrat. He owns the whole landscape; he toils not, save in a fitful way as suits his pleasure, and he spends his time in hunting, fishing, horseracing, gambling and loafing. It will be argued, I know, that the Indians once owned the whole country, and that their reservations and the privileges they have upon them are, after all, but a small compensation lor what they have lost. This, again, is a mistake. No people own a country because they roam over it before others come to share its occupancy. If a few hundred white men should chance to be the first inhabitants of a territory large enough for a great State, who would say that they owned all the land by.reason of that circumstance? The Origin of Billiards. American Sports. The game of billiards was invented about the middle of the sixteenth century by a London pawn broker named William Kew. In wet weather this pawn broker was in the habit of taking down the three balls, and with the yard measure pushing them, billiard fashion, from the counter into the stalls; in time the idea of a board with side pockets suggested itself. A black letter manuscript says: “Master William Kew did make one board whereby a game is played with three balls, tf and all the young men were greatly recreated thereat, chiefly the young clergymen from St. Pawles; hence one of ye strokes was named a ‘cannon,’ having been by one of ye said clergymen invented. The game is now known by the name of ‘bill-yard,’ because William or Bill Kew did first play with a yard measure. The stick is now called a ‘kew’or ‘kue.’” It is easy to comprehend how “bill-yard” has been modernized into “billiard,” and the transformation of “kew” ot “kue’’ into “cue” is equally apparent Cable’s Danger. Atlanta Constitution. It is to be feared that Brer George W. Cable is gradually working himself intuit colored de sac —if we may be allowed to give play to our knowledge of French.
THE INDIANAPOLIS JOURNAL, FRIDAY, JANUARY 2, 1885.
THE FARM AND HOUSEHOLD. THE FARM. Agricultui-e in the South. Jacksonville, Fla.. Letter, in Hartford Times. The great need of the South is grass. The Commissioner of Agriculture could not do this couutry a greater good than to have the energies of the department turned in the direction of hunting up something that will flourish in the Southern States, upon which horned stock will thrive and fatten. His experiments in tea culture are not half so important. We ail can get along much better without home-grown tea than the cattle of the South without hay. If it is impossible to do much with tho “Bermuda grass,” and impossible to find a grass that will grow in the South, then let the people of the Southern State* begin at once the cultivation of a fodder crop. No farmer can import hay from the North and make stock-growing profitable. And without stock his lands are growing poorer, year by year. The South is full of poor farmers, in every sense of the word, and it will never rise above the point of getting a mere existence unless there are radical changes in its agriculture. Commercial fertilizers may ai i the Southern farmer, but they will never save him from that sure poverty that broods over his fields, and upon which the sheriff will enter '‘foreclosure” in the record at no distant day. I met on my way here a Virginian, who, as they used to say out West, had a “level head” on all questions, political as well as industrial. He said: “The South needs good farmers more than anything else. You of the North work, and study into the needs of the land. Our farmers, after the crop is made, devote the winter months to loafiing. They spend their whole time, from autumn until spring, in fox-hunting and poker-playing. If they would get out muck and make compost heaps, to be applied to the next crop, they would be more successful, and their farms w'ould be greatly improved. The South needs Northern men more than anything else —it needs good example as well as money.” This was the talk of a reconstructed rebel, and he could not havo more squarely hit the nail on the head if he had spent his whole life in the study of the situation, North and South. When the war closed he had been left flat on his back pecuniarily; but, instead of lair mting the past, he had gone to w T ork, and liis appearance indicated that he had become prosperous. He certainly had sound theories. The climate makes anyone lazy in the South, and having already felt its seductive influence I do not wonder that this is a slow-going community, when compared with the Northern stir and bustle. Jacksonville, and in fact much of Florida, is under Northern influence; but when milk sells for ten cents a quart, when the beef is so poor and t- ngh that you cannot eat it, and when your baiter and cheese all come from the North, one cannot help thinking that something needs to be done at once to improve Southern methods in agriculture. The commission merchant and storekeeper holds a mortgage on every man’s labor, which he has had discounted in anticipation of next crop. _
Portable Barbed-Wire Fence. 0. S. Bliss, in New York Tribune, The rail is 2x4 sawed hemlock, of such lengths as we buy at the mills and lumber yards, generally about 12J feet. They cost ten cents each. These are framed to two posts of 3x4 timber, 2 feet 9 inches long, which cost nine cents. The adjacent end pieces or posts of two lengths set into one removable foot, made of two pieces of timber and two pieces of boards, which .cost six cents, and two. three, or more strands of barbed fencing are used. Before prices of barbed fencing became demoralized, under the recent decision of tho United States courts. it cost me from nineteen to twenty-seven cents a length for three strands of different kinds of fencing. Prices are now less. Nails and staples cost less than two cents. Total cost of material, about fifty cents a length of 131 feet. A fair mechanic can make thirty or forty lengths a day. A good farm-hand can make half as many on the barn-floor any rainy day. One man can take a length and the post to support it, and carry it anywhere, though, on account of its peculiar shape .and tho prominence of the barbs, it is a good deal better that one should take hold at each end. No post-holes are required, and no preparation of the ground is necessary except to see that it is level. No nailing or tying together is required. It is simply set down, and it is there, and stays there till it is taken up and carried away. It has the advantage over all wire fences that the rail is not only visible, but it serves as a four-inch guard to keep the animals from running “side on’ against the barbs. One wire above and one below the rail makes a good fence against all cattle and horses. One above and two below, or two above and one below, makes a good fence against sheep and full grown swine. When built of Buckthorn solid steel barbed fencing, with the rail placed next the top strand and neatly painted, it is much the finest looking fence into which the barbed fencing enters as a part, and with appropriate surroundings is really the most ornamental of all cheap fences. _ Winter Top-Dressing. Country Gentleman. The practice of top-dressing the ground about young trees, both for protection from cold and for enriching the land by washing, which was formerly so rare, has now become widely adopted by cultivators. But the fault still prevails of applying too small a circle of manure. Writers often recommend extending the topdressed circle as far out as the spread of the branches; but this is not half enough. The many examinations we have made show that the roots always extend from each side of the trunk or stem to a distance at least equal to the height of the tree, forming a circle of roots, the diameter of which is twice as great as the height of the tree. We have, on a former occasion, alluded to this subject; but t'j show the insufficiency of the conr nou practice, we have measured a Q f trees with the spread of their tops. v ‘ t j lo f o p lowing results: A young peach seven feet high, had a head four feet in or with branches extending two Aee t awa y f ro m the center stem, lhe conr rton ru i e W ould direct that a circle of manure 0e a ppjj e j f OUI . feetin diameter, while the r„ a j extent of the roots reach a circle twice *„ ne height, or fourteen feet, the area of w ,iich, as figures show, is at least twelve times as great as the four-foot circle. An older peach tree was twelve feet high with a seven-foot head. The roots occupy a circle twenty four feet in diameter, which is eleven times as great as the seven-foot circle of the branches. An erect cherry tree was fifteen feet high with a head nine feet in diameter, in which the area of the roots were eleven times as gi eat as tho area indicated by the spread of the branches. Topdressing, therefore, to be of much use, must extend over a broad surface. Stock and Graft. Peter Henderson, in illustrating how little the graft is influenced by the stock, says that if we take a graft from thesourest crab apple, and insert iVin a branch of the sweetest apple tree, we can find the shoot, which grows from the crab graft, will ever remain a crab, in no way affected by the sweet apple stock on which it is growing. The result will be the same if tho operation is reversed, with the sweet apple grafted on the sour; the individuality will not be changed. Or, you may take a young seedling apple tree, graft another into it, and then another into the last growth, and so on with many successive grafts, rubbing off all the shoots that sfart below, the last graft will hold its identity unchanged. Or, you may set a hundred kinds of 1 roses into a bush which has a hundred branches, of all different colors, forms and odors. Each will hold its own character for color, form and fragrance, be it crimson, white, pink or yellow, double or single, or of tea or other odor. Farm Notes, If the roots of a tree are frozen out of the ground and thawed again in contact with the air the tree is killed. Water is death to raspberry canes if it stands around them. It should find a quick means of exit, either on the surface or by soaking into the drains. Farmers who like cabbage greens in the spring pull up their cabbage, when ready to use them, and set the stalks close together in a trench, with the roots deep. In the spring these will throw out sprouts that furnish nice greens. An Indiana farmer states that he cured heaves in horses by withholding hay from them and substituting green feed in its place. He also gives a ball as large as a walnut, composed of equal parte of balsam of fir and balsam of copaiba. The Farmers’ Gazette (Ireland) claims that the operation of dishorning cattle made the
animals much more valuable, and that it rendered dishorned animals more tractable, gentle and less dangerous to man and each other. The Journal of Chemistry states that the ant is an active aud efficient destroyer of the canker worm. They seize the worms, which feed upon the leaves, and bear them to their nests in the ground. It is claimed that they also attack the army worm. Money invested in lumber to make comfortable stables for stock in winter is less expensive than allowing the animals to seek shelter around straw etacks, as in the latter case they require a much greater amount of feed than if they were properly housed. A correspondent of the Southern Home and Farm says: “This year I shall put my sausage in clean corn husks (or shucks), tie the • ends with strong twine, hang up and smoke. I consider it a loss of time, labor and strength to use the entrails, besides not being enticing to dainty stomachs.” Wabash county in Illinois is the color bearer of all corn-growing counties in the country. All the farms on the bottom lands of that county produced at leat 70 bushels per acre planted in corn, while some of them gave yields respectively of 95, of 98, of 101, and of 106 bushels' per acre. One small farm on bottom land produced an average of 118 bushels per acre. Wabash proudly asks “What corn-growing section can come up to this?” The result of grain farming and stock farming, says the Canadian Breeder, may be summed up as follows: The grain farmer spends all his energies in getting all he can out of the land during the short space intervening between the beginning of spring workaudjthe end of harvest, or perhaps he may havo a few acres of wheat, which he sows in the fall, and, after sprouting, waits till the advent of spring to renew its growth, while the stock breeder has his work at his hand the whole year round, but his herd manures the land, reaps the crop and carries it to market. A Maine farmer who has been fattening stock for upward of thirty years, condemns the system of feeding the first half of the winter on less nutritive food than is given the second half for “finishing up” for tho market, and takes the rational ground which successful Canadian feeders have taken, that the steadier and evener the gain the better and move remunerative is the result cf feeding. Writing ot particular feed, lie says: “I value oats more than any other food for colts and calves until the second winter. I can sell my outs fed to this kind of’ stock (four quarts each day to an animal) for seventy-five cents per bushel. After the first winter one-half the ration should ho meal of some kind to produce fat as well as growth.”
THE HOUSEHOLD. Hohso Plants. American Agriculturist. Dryness of tho air is the chief obstacle to successful gardening. Plants succeed much better in the kitchen than in the parlors, as the air is charged with moisture from the cooking, etc. If the house is heated by a furnace, there should be a pan for evaporating water in the furnace, kept well supplied. If stoves are used, keep vessels of water on them. Dust is injurious to plants. Much may be prevented from settling on the leaves by covering the plants with a light fabric whenever the rooms are swept. All smooth-leaved plants, like the ivy, camellias, etc., should have a weekly washing with a damp sponge. The others may be placed in a sink or bath-tub, and given a thorough showering. Water should be given as needed, whether daily or weekly. Do not water until the soil is some what dry. Keeping the earth constantly wet soon makes unhealthy plants. Let the water be of the same temperature as the room. Hanging plants dry out rapidly. Plunge the pots or baskets in a pail or tub of water, and after they have ceased to drip return them to their places. The so-called green-fly, or plant louse, is easily killed by tobacco water. Apply this wheu of the color of black tea. The red spider is very minute, and works on the lower sides of the leaves. When these turn brovyn, the spider may be suspected. Give frequent showers, laying the pot on the side, and apply water with the syringe. Scale insects and mealy bug are be§t treated by hand-picking before they become numerous. Chrysanthemums, when through flowering, should have the steins cut away and tho pots of roots taken to the cellar. The pots of bulbs which were placed in the cellar or in a pit, for roots to form, may be brought to the window, and as they grow give an abundance of water. If needed, support the heavy flower spikes of hyacinths by a small stake. Recipes. Rich Coffee Cake. —Two cups of butter, three of sugar, one of molasses, one of very strong coffee, one of' cream or rich milk, the yelks of eight eggs, one pound each of raisins and currants. one half pound of citron, the same of figs, and five cups of brown flour after it is stirred. Put the flour into tho oven until a rich brown, being careful not to burn it. When cold, sift with it three tablespoonfuls of good bnking powder and a little salt. Cut the figs in long strips, dredge all the fruit with flour, beat the cake well up, and bake in a moderate oven from four to five hours. Vienna Coffee. —Leach or filter the c yo ff ee through a French filterer, or any of the man y coffee-itots that filter instead of boilin" coffee: allow cine tablespoonful of ground coffee to each person and one extra for the Put one quart of cream into a milk boiler off if you have none, into a pitcher in a pail boiling water, put it where the water wi' 4 keep boiling, beat the white of an egg to a then add to the egg three of cold milk; mix the egg and cold milk throughly together; when hot, remove the cref lifl from the firo and add the egg and cold xiilk; stir it all together briskly for a minute or two, and then serve. Pickled Oysters.—Take two quarts of oysters. put them in a saucepan, and, if they are fresh, salt them; let them simmer on the fire, but not boil; take out the oysters and add to the liquor in the saucepan a pint of vinegar, a small handfull of whole cloves, quarter of an ounce of mace and two dozen pepper-corns; let it come to a boil, and, when the oysters are cold in tho jar, pour the liquor on them. Orange Pie.—A delicate and delicious pie is called an orange custard. One cup of cold water, thickened with one heaping tablespoonful of flour, first rubbed smooth with a little of the water, one cup of sugar, four well-beaten eggs (the whites of two are to be reserved for the frosting), tho juice and grated rind of one large orange. Make a rich crust, and line a deep plate with it; fill it with the mixture and bake. To the beaten whites of the two eggs add two tablespoonfuls of powdered sugar; spread this over the top of the pie when it is done, and let it brown slightly but evenly. A Winter Evening Game. Southern Horae and Farm. A game called ‘•Character*’ is very good. Let one person leave the room, and during his absence some personage of history or fiction be selected. Upon his return address him as if he were the person upon whom you have fixed, and he is to guess who it is by your remarks. The one by whose remark the name was guessed must in his turn go out. As an example: if the person on entering is asked by one, “Did you get wet!” By another, “Do you enjoy solitude?” By a Third, “.Why do you carry an umbrella when the sua shines?” By a fourth, “Do you like Friday?” He soon guesses that Robiuson Crusoe wsa . the character chosen, and the one who asked the fourth question must next be the guesser. Another method of playing the game is by sending out two players who fix on the character, and on their return talk about it together until it is guessed by one of the persons in the room, who may then choose a companion and enact the next character. In some cases where still greater variety is desired they may dress in costume and act the leading incidents of the life of the person they have chosen, and then if the name is not guessed they may act each syllable of the name in charade, if it is suitable for such division, as is often she case. By thus changing the method of playing a great deal of amusement and instruction may be derived from this game. The Caro of Children’s Teeth. New York Evening Post. The ignorance of many a mother determines whether her children shall go through life with poor and constantly poorer teeth. Not half the mothers of children, who aro intelligent in other directions, know that the “six-year molar” comes to stay, and that if it is allowed to decay the child loses a tooth ho needs and ought to have. Care should be taken of the first baby teeth, even. A dentist of good standing says that* a very smooth bit of wood dipped into myrrh will remove discoloration ana tartar
from the baby’s teeth without injury to the gum, and with benefit to the teeth. Nothing is mere common than to see little hoys and girls whose first teeth hare decayed, and of whose use they aro deprived before the second teeth are near ready to appear. Some people attribute this to the constant munching of candy, particles of sugar and candy being left upon or between the teeth, but it is true also that particles of food will act in much the same way; perfect cleanliness should be observed. The children should be fed with reference to their teeth. The corn bread upon which the negro depends may well be given to our children. The good effects of forming the habit in early childhood of caring for the teeth will be felt at three score and ten. An Umbrella Case. For an umbrella case, to hold two silk umbrellas, buy a yard and an eighth of stout gray linen. Cut from this two pieces, each ten inches wide, and slope from top to bottom, making the bottom six inches across. Now, from the rest of the linen out two strips thirty inches long, seve o inches broad at top and four inches at the bottom. Bind each of these with seal-brown mohair braid. Work on the wide part of each an umbrella in brown crewels, and stitch on to one of the pieces already cut to form pockets, leaving open at top for the umbrella handle and at bottom for the ferrule to pass through. The back should extend eight inches beyond the pockets at top, two inches at hot tom and one inch on the sides, and the top should be slightly rounded. On the space left above the pocket embroider the initials or monogram of the person for whom the umbrella case is intended, and baste the part which you have finished onto the strip left, with an interlining of buckram; round off the top to match the first piece : and bind together all round with brown braid. Sew brass rings at the top and bottom to hang the case to the wkll, and the work is done.
Household Hints. A buffot scarf of cream momie linen with borders of autumn leaves in Kensington stitch is very effective. Bags made of crazy patchwork are trimmed with gold fringe or tassels, and are closed with ribbon drawing-strings. Dust aprons made of fine unbleached muslin have the hems worked in feather stitch. On one of the pockets is a cobweb in outline stitch, and on the other a brush. Muffs that have seen service may be renovated at home to suit the present fashion with little labor. They may be covered with velvet or plush and trimmed with bands of fur or feathers, or they may match the bonnet or dress, or be a combination of the dress material and bonnet trimming. Ribbon, lace, chenille, birds, flowers and jet ornaments are used for trimming. A pretty pin-cushion, which is intended to be hung on the wall near the dressing-case, has a round center of brown velvet of the size and color of the center of a sunflower. Surrounding this are leaves or petals of yellow velvet, pointed and put on with a very small pleat in the middle, so that the point will standout stiffly. Make it look as nearly like a sunflower as possible. The pins are to be put in the brown center, that being the cushion. Every one knows how difficult it is to induce a patient to take cod-liver oil, and how the taste is abhorred by most peopls. A perfectly simple way to prepare it is to drop the desired dose into a little glass of cold water; the oil will form a globule that is easily swallowed. Take a swal low of cold water, then drink rapidly from the glass, keep the mouth closed tightly for a minute, and when you open it you will be surprised to find that no unpleasant taste is left in the mouth. If a person swallows any poison whatever, or has fallen into convulsions from having overloaded his stomach, an instantaneous remedy is a heaping teaspoonful of common salt, as much ground mustard stirred rapidly in a teacup of water, warm or cold, and swallowed instantly. It is scarcely down before it begins to come up, bringing with it the remaining contents of the stomach; and lest there be any remnant of poison, however, let the white of an egg or a teacup of strong coffee be swallowed as soon as the stomach is quiet; because these very common articles nullify a large number of virulent poisons. An ornamental and convenient wall-pocket is made by covering a large palm-leaf fan with wadding under it, so that the ribs in the fan will not show. The silk must be put smoothly over it. The handle of the fan must, when it is hung on the wall, be at the left-hand side, not inclined at all, but pointing straight toward the left. A pocket is to bo shirred on across the fan; it is cut rouudine at the bottom and straight across the top. At the top of the pocket put a bow of ribbon. Above the pocket on the plain silk work, in delicate gray etching silk, a spider’s web, and at one side pin on a metal spider, which can bo obtained at a milliner’s store. This makes a pretty ornament for the wall of any room. Queen Victoria as a Nuisance. London Truth. Last Tuesday evening her Majesty came to London to visit the Duchess of Cambridge, the trip having been suddenly arranged at an hour’s notice. The most extravagant precautions were taken at Paddington (by orders sent from Windsor) to secure privacy for her Majesty, and there was quite as thorough a clearance as there used to be in the streets of Bagdad when the Sultan’s daughter went to the bath. Every human being on the arrival side of the station was peremptorily ordered off, to the infinite inconvenience of the numerous persons who had gone to meet friends who were coming up by the trains then due; and when these trains arrived the passengers who came by them were rushed away almost before thoy could obtain their luggage. “The Girl I Left Behind Mo.” Nineteenth Century. “What a beautiful melody,’’ said Rossini, “is ‘The Girl I left Behind Me!’ It does honor to Ireland.” But Rossini was wrong. That beautiful melody is pure English—published in England long beforo it was first played in Ireland by the soldiers of William 111. “How sweet,said an English lady, “is the air of ‘My Lodging is on the Cold Ground!’ England has no tunes so tender and so touching.” The tune is old English, and Ireland has no other claim to it than the assertion of Thomas Moore, unsupported by a tittle of evidence. Prospectus. Luling Wasp. C. B. Collins is editor-iu chief of this paper, and we have quite a corps of assistants. The local editor is an observant young man of varied attainments, and the agricultural editor doesn’t know a pumpkin from a potato bug, but he will learn during next crop season. Our musical critic runs a genuine Cremona in the orchestra at Bowers Hall, and our marine editor has a scow on the San Marcos river. Our distinguished war correspondsut, Sir Garnet Wolseley, is now in London, while our political editor has gono to interview Mr. Cleveland. We have no religious editor. Beware of Cheap Imitations. Take no other than Dr. Wing’s Com and Bunion Remedy. 4t has no equal. Price, 25 cents. Browning & Sloan, agents. WALTER P. DAVIS & CO., COMMISSION 14 W. Front street, CINCINNATI. Grain, Flour, Provisions, Dried Fmit, Beans. Eggs and COUNTRY PRODUCE. Correspondence solicited. CHAS. H. CUMMINGS, GRAIN, Collision aid Slipping felani 307 WALNUT ST., PHILADELPHIA, PA. EZEKIEL DUNWOQM l CO.. Flour, Grain, Seeds, etc., COMMISSION MERCHANTS, Nea. 1900 and 1911 Market street. PHILADELPHIA.
RAILWAY TIME-TABLE.* [TRAINS RPN BT CENTRAP STANDARD TISIR.J Trains murkod thns. r. c., rsejining chairfr; ■.. sleeper; thus, p.. parlor car: tans, h.. bote! car. Bee-Line,’c., C. t C. & Indianapolis. Depart—New York aud Boston Express, daily, s 4:00 am Dayton, Springfield and New York Express, c. c. 10:10 am i Anderson and Michigan Express.. 11:15 am ' Wabash aud Mancie Express 5:53 pm | % New York and Boston, daily s., c, e. 7:15 pua ’ BRIGHTWOOD DIVISION. Daily -1:00am 2:30 pm Daily 6:15 am 3:30 pm Daily 10:10am '5:25 pm % Daily .... 11:15 an\ 7.15 pm Arrive—Louisville, New Orleans and St. *Louis Express, daily, s G:4O am Wabash, Ft. Wayne and Mancie Express 10:45 am Benton Harbor and Anderson Express 1 2:20 pm Bouton, Indianapolis and Southern Express 6:00 pm New York and St. Louis Express, daily, s 10:35 om Chicago, St. Louis & Pittsburg. Depart—Now York, Philadelphia, Washington, Baltimore and Pittsburg Express, daily, a..# 4:35 am Dayton and Columbus Express, ex- • oept Sunday 10:45 am ‘ Richmond Accommodation........ 4:00 pm New 1 ork. Philadelphia, Washington, Baltimore and Pittsburg Express, daily, s„ h 4:55 pm Dayton Express, except Sunday... 4:55pa Arrive—Richmond Accommodation, except Sunday 9:40 vm New, York, Philadelphia, Washington, Baltimore and Pittsburg Express, daily .11:37 am Columbus and Dayton Express, ex- _ cept Sunday 4:30 pm New York. Philadelphia, Washington, Baltimore and Pittsburg Express, daily 10:20 pm Dayton Express, daily, except Sunday ; 10:20 pm CHICAGO DIVISION VIA KOKOMO, P., C. A ST. U R. B. Depart—Louisville and Chicago Express, p. c 11:15 am Louisville and Chicago Fast Express. daily, s 11:00 pm Arrive—Chicago and Louisville Fast Express, daily, s 3:59 am Chicago and Louisville Express, p. c. 3:35 Cincinnati, Indianapolis, St. Louis & Chicago. CINCINNATI DIVISION. Depart—Cincinnati and Florida Fast Line, daily, s. and c. c 4:00 am Cincinnati, Rushville' and Columbus Accommodation 11:05 am Cincinnati and Louisville Mail, p. c. 3:45 pm Cincinnati Accommodation, daily.. 6:55 pm Arrive—lndianapolis Accommouation, daily 1 1:05 am Chicago and St. Louis Mail, p. 0... 11:50 am Indianapolis Accommodation 6:20 pm Chicago, and St. Louis Fast Line, daily, s. aud c. e 10:45 pm CHICAGO DIVISION. Depart—Chicago and Rock Island Express.. 7:10 am. Chicago Fast Mail, p. e 12:10 pm Western Express 4:55 pm Chicago, Peoria and Burlington Fast Line, daily, s., r. c 11:20 pm Arrive—Cincinnati and Louisville Fast Line, daily, c. c. ands 3:35 am Lafayette Accommodation 10.55 am Cincinnati and Louisville Mail, p. c. 3:30 pm * Cincinnati Accommodation 6:42 pm
Indianapolis & Vincennes. Depart—Mall and Cairo Express.. 8:15 am Vinceunes Accommodation 4:00 pm Arrive—Vincennes Accommodation 10:40 aim Mail and Caii'o Express 6:30 pm Cincinnati, Wabash & Michigan Railway, (Over the Bee-line.) Depact—lndianapolis and Grand Ilapids Ex. 4:00 am Michigan Express 11:15 am Louisville and Wabash Express... 5:55 pm Arrive-—Wabash and Indianapolis Express. .10:45 ana Cincinnati and Louisville Express. 2:20 pm Indianapolis and St. Louis Express. 10:35 pm Cincinnati, Hamilton & Indianapolis. Depart—Cincinnati, Dayton & Toledo 4:00 sm Cincinnati, Dayton, Toledo and New York 10:45 am Connersville Accommodation 4:25 p.u i Cincinnati, Dayton, Toledo and New York Express 6:35 pm Arrive—Connersville Accommodation 8:30 am j Cincinnati, Peoria and St. Louis... 11:50 am ", Cincinnati Accommodation 5:00 pm Cincinnati, Peoria and St. Louis... 10:40 pm Wabash, St. Louis & Pacific. ' Depart—Detroit and Chicago Mail 7:15 am Toledo, Fort Wavne, Grand Rapids aud Michigan Express 2:15 pm Detroit Express, daily, s 7:00 pm Detroit through coach on C., St. L. & P. Express 11:00 pm Arrive—Detroit Express, daily, s 8:00 ran Pacific Express 11:30 am Detroit and Chicago Mail, 8:55 puu Detroit through coach on C., St. L. &P. Express 4:00 am Vandalia Line. , Depart—Mail Train 7:15 am< L vy Express, daily, p., h. ..11:55 ami Ten e Haute Accommodation 4:00 pmi Pacific Express, daily, s 10:45 pud Arrive—New York Express, daily 3:50 &UU Indianapolis Mail and Accom 10:00 ami Cincinnati and Louisville Past Line 3:30 pmj New York Express, daily, h 4:40 pmj Jeffersonville, Madison & Indianapolis. Depart—Southern Express, daily, s 4:10 am Louisville and Madison Express,p.c 8:15 am Louisville and Madison Mail, p. c.. 3:50 pm Louisville Express, daily . 6:45 pm Arrive—lndianapolis and Madison Mail. —. 9:45 am Indianapolis, St. Louis and Chicago Express, daily, p -.10:45 am • New York and Northern Fast Express, r. c 7:00 pm St. Louis, Chicago and Detroit Fast Line, daily, s 10:45 pMw Indiana, Bloomington & Western. '■ PEORIA DIVISION. Depart—Pacific Express and Mail 7:25 amj Kansas and Texas Fast Lino. r. e.. 5:05 pu*( Burlington and Rock Island Express, daily, r. c. ands 11:10 pmi Arrive—Eastern and Southern Express, daily, r. c. ands 3:50 an* Cincinnati Special, r. c 11:05 am Atlantic Express and Mail —..... 6:30 pm BT. LOUIS DIVISION. Depart—Moorefiei-d Accommodation 6:30 am ! Mail and Day Express 8:05 am I Night Express, daily, r. c 11:05 pm Arrive—Night Express, daily, r. e 3:55 amMail and Day Express 6:00pm! Mooretield , t EASTERN DIVISION. Depart—Eastern Express Mail, daily, s., r. c. 4:20 am Day Express 11:45 am Atlantic Express, daily, s. and c. c.. 7:10 pm Arrive—Pacific Express, daily, s. aud c.c... 6:55 am Western Express 4:45 pm Burlington and Rock Island Express, daily, s. and r. c 10:35 pm j Indianapolis & St. Louis. Depart—Day Express, daily, c. c 7:10 am Paris Express. 3:50 pm ‘ Boston and St. Louis Express, p... 6:25 pm New York and <St. Louis Express, daily, s. and c. e 10:55 pm Arrive—New York and Boston Express, daily, e. 3:45 ant) Local Passenger, p 9:50 am Indianapolis Express 3:lsp*rf Day Express, c. e., daily 6.25 pn* Louisville, New Albany A Chicago. (Michigan and Grand Rapid3 Line.) Depart— Michigan City Mail 12:45 pm Frankfort Accommodation ;. 5:00 pm Michigan City Night Ex., daily, 5...11:20 pm Arrive —Indianapolis Night Ex., daily, 5.... 3:35 am Indianapolis Accommodation 10:00 am Indianapolis Mail 3:15 pm IUATOSICUMHAFQim MANUf ACTURCRB Os ISAWSI THE FINEST AND MOST PITIABLE MADE. HOTEL, • INDLANAPOLI& IND. Passenger "elevator and ail modern eonvenienesfcj Leading Hotel of the city, and strictly flraW’iaa. I Rates, $2.50, $3 and $3.50 per day. The latter uridemcluding bath. GEO. F. PFINOS7\ XixlL a I. try is among the Wuml For ftaloa, etc., of the INDIANaH>LJ# DAILY JTOUr! NAL, at only FIVE CENTS PER LINE each? insets “V i*rmm or properly to dwpwaeoC will afford you a easy eatand 6AMp ageuogt Trym j
