Indianapolis Journal, Indianapolis, Marion County, 7 October 1896 — Page 6

. THE INDIANAPOLIS JOURNAL, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 7, 189(5.

fcsiiAXCH OFKu-LS . . ' or TUB JOURNAL Have been conveniently located the following - drug 8tcre In the various fcectttms of the city, from whfoh ADVERTISKMKNTS WILL, BE TELEPHONED Ulrect to this office at regular rates. i CENTS I'ER UNBOf SEVEN WORDS. STATIONS Alabama and 7ta Bts. S. Muht. t Hellefontaine Bt., No.. 4X Claude Fields. Christian Ave., No. 137 F. F. Dannettelle. Clifford Ave., No. Si Philip Miller. College Ave, and 7th St. Oo. C Fifclier. Columbia Ave., and 7th Kt Geo. C. Kuh. Columbia and Hill Avea, R. C. Ilamnon. IVlaware alid MeCarty H. A. Pfafflin. Dillon and Fletcher Ave. Hugo II. Lehrrltter. East and MeCarty Sus. &. C. Reick. ,, Ft. Wayne Ave.. No, 190 Thos. K. Thornburg. HlIIMde Ave., No. 19-li. W. Carter. Illinois and J?t Pts. S. Muhl. Illinois and 13th Sta. S. Muhl. Illinois and 7th Bts. J. M. Fcott. - Illinois and North Sts. R. M. Navln. Indiana Av. and Vermont it. H. P. Elodau. Indiana Avn., No. 201 John D. Oauld. Miriiaon Ave., No. 427 Jos. M. Jjwyer. Musa. and Cornell Avea. C. E. liarmm. . Mass. Ave., No, 301 L. E. Haag. Mer. and Morriu Sts. C. II. Brolch. Mer. and Ray Sts. John E. Myers. . Mer. aiid Ranee.ll Ave. Oeo, F. Borst. Mich., Nj.30f9 Eaat Van Ansdale Eros. New York md- Noble Sts. E. H. Enners. New York, No. S78 West F. E. Wolcott, Fine. No. 2(1 South A, L. Walker. Senate Ave, and 3d St. A. M. Eyster. Senate Ave. No. 1053 North E. E. Steward. fhelby St., , No. 182 C. A. Eltel, Talhot Ave., No, 3S0 M. Schrt9!. : Virginia Ave. and Cobum C. G. Mueller. Jrglau.Ave. and MeCarty M, C. Staley. ah Ht. and State Ave. N. 8. lriKf. Wash. St., No. 703-East Baron Urns. "Went St., No. 503 North C. W. Eichrodt. YanfleB aad jSth Sta. Dixon. HENRY Suddenly at 7:30 p. m., Oct. 5, 1S96, of --rheumatism of the heart, Theodore L. Henry, aged sixty-one years. Funeral services at the residence, 25 West Walnut street, Wednesday, Oct. 1. at 4 p. m. Friends Invited.

FUNERAL DIRECTORS. y. - FLANNER & BUCHANAN 172 North Illinois street. Lady embalmer,- for la lies and children. Oifiee always open. Telephone 41. CntRCH NOTICES. TAliERNACLE CHURCH A . congregational meeting will be held -on Thursday evening, Oct. 9, 1S95, In chapel to hear report of eommitfe and to Issue call for pastor if desirable. By order of session. - WILLIAM O. ANDERSON, - ' ' J ' ... . . Clerk. MASONIC-r-Ancient Accepted Scottish Rite v Meeting of Adoniram Orand Lodge. of Perfection this (Wednesday) evening at 7:45 o'clock for business. N. R. RUCKLE, T. P. G. M. J. W. SMITH,- Secretary. FINANCIAL. LOANS Mcney on lnortgages. C. F. AYLE3, o agar net street. TO LOAN A large sum; amounts to suit; com- ;. . ?nlsK)n and expenses lowest. No gold clause. NEWTON TODD, 6 IngalU Block. LOANS Sums of $6tw and over. City property and farms. C. g. COFFIN ft CO.. 90 East Market street. x MONEY -To loan on Inuiuna farms. Lowest rates, with partial payments. Address C. N. WILLIAMS & CO., Crawfordsvllle, Ind. - FINANCIAL Money to loan In sums of S100. ai0, $300, $500 or $5,000,' without delay. Pay - back at any time after six months. C. W. GOR- ' BUCH. S0o Indiana Trust Building. , JiONEY To loan on Indiana rarms. Lowest market rate; privileges for payment before due. We also bur municipal bonds. THOS. C. bAI tU. Rooms --i-Xi0, third floor Lemcka , Building. Indianapolis. WANTED Salesman Calling: on Indianapolis grocers to sell side line oi staple goods. Address C. A. LOCKE & CO., 648 Washburn avenue, Chicago. . a . , ; . WANTED-iSalesmen $75 to $150 salary and expenses to salesmen for cigars; experience un- ' necessary; extra Inducements offered dealers. W. L. KLINE COMPANY, St. Louis. v WANTED AnTTdea. Who can think of soma simple thing to patent 7 Protect your Ideas; they may bring you wealth. Write JOHN WEDDENBURN Ac CO., patent attorneys, Washington, J).. C for their $1,00 priae offer and list of j. Inventions wanted. f W-iNTEli-To "buy "two perfectly ; white diamonds. Address, girtng full particulars, E. D., care Journal. WANTED Reliable party with $500 for office management; Income $35 weekly, with Increase; money amply secured; opening undoubted. CANTNER, 60? Lemcke Building. WANTED Apprentices for tiarber trade; good chance, for men from country, as well as city; ; can earn board while learning; steady situation : given after two months,' experience; write for Illustrated ' catalogue. MOLER'S BARBER SCHOOL, 283,South Clark street, Chicago. ' FOR RENT Second and third floors, 33x195 feet each, of building Nos. 9 and 11 West W&shingtln street. C. F. SAYLES. 77V4 East Market. toil RENT Physicians' offices; three rooms; hot and cold water,' steam heat furnished; best location la - city, 14 East Ohio street. C. F. fcAl'LEJf. "" . FOR SALE Bicycles, $45. $50. $70, Cash or payments.' Ladies' and gents' second-hand wheels cheap. Bicycle repairing. Punctures, 25 cents. W VANDiiRPOOL, 226 East Washington street. FOR SALE German Lung Tonic. Will cure. Pearson's Cut Price Drug Store.

FOR SALE German. Lung Tonic. Cures all colds. Pearson's Cut Price Drug Store. FOR SALE German Lung Tonic, Stops any cough. Pearson's Cut Price Drug Store. FOR SALE German Lung . Tonic. Stops any ; romhi PearBon'a Cut Price Drug Store.

FOK SALE German Lung Tonic. Stops any - cough. Pearson's Cut lrlcft Drug Store. vSALEJ 5erman Lung Tonic. Stops any cough. Pearson's Cut Price Drug Store. . FOR -SALE German Lung Tonic. Stops any cough. . Pearson's Cut Price Drug Store. k FOR SALE German Lung TonicI Stops any 1 " eo-gh .- j ettrson' g Cut Price Drug Store. FOR SALE Stop' "that cough. tierman Lung -Tnle. Pearson's Cut Price Drug Store. FOR SALEThisgreat system" builder, German Ltirg Tonic. Pearson's Cut Price Drug Store. . FOR S.tLE A big . lot of boys' school suits at half p;.ice, from 3Sc up. to close out. O. J. CON RAD, ' 70-72 Massachuset ts avenue. . STORAGE Indianapolis Warehouse Co., 265-27S S. Pennt., Pennsylvania tracks. Phone 1343. KTOR AGE INDIANA liTOTtAfja" AND TRANS- " - FER COMPANY. Registered warehouse. KigheUss building; insurance ., low. -37 to, 33 North Capitol avenue. CLAIRVOYANT Mrs. T. Grlswold, the great cl;iirvcjant and lalmlst. tells you every hopt fear and ambition of life; everything revealed; ptvj s . advice on, business, love and marriage. Otlioeand residence,- 2S6 East South street. MISCELLANEOUS. HARNESS I've got the best $10 harness that can be-made for the monry. Come and see; Cash or payments. WILLIAid VAN DERPOOL, tut East Washington street. ' rnoposAi.s for siti'lies. . National Military Home, Indiana, treasurer's , ffice, Oct. -a,- 1. 'A. . .. Staled proposals will tie received at this office until noon. Tuesday, Oct. 27, 18!G.-for furnishing and debxery t barrack wardrobes, blacking cases and coffins, supplies at Marlon branch, Nationul Hunie, I). V. S.. tiuantilies to Ire Increased 10. yer - ent. ,if repaired during the execution of the contract. . , ? l '.ttai'.dardri can be examined, and printed Instructions and pe lficationt nd blank proisals will be supplied upon appllctition to this otlioe. HtunplfH presented by ' bidders will not be t on8lderjd tinlees rame are called for in mecinca- ; lions. The light i reserved to reject any or all proposal!, or to waive any informalities therein. Envrli j es containing proposals should be indorced: PwpoelB for supplies N. II. U. V. s., and addresst-ed to the undersigned. . ' Bids aK'e(it,ri over m mufit' be accompanied by M.certlned cheek., payable, to. the undersiKned trasurer, for at least 6 per cent, of the amount thereof, which check wilt be , forfaited to the NationiU Heme for LVV. S. in c.e the successful bidder retires or fails to enter into rontract as ref;uird; otherwise to be returned to the bidder H. O. HEK'HKRT, Treasurer. Approved: J I'STIN II. CHAPMAN. Governor. INDIAN A, UrCATtfi k. & WESTERN RAILWAY CO. , ; . i- OflW of the Secretary, Sept. 22. 1S96. Notice ! to s(o'ktioldT; The stockholders of this comttany, nre hereby notified that the annual rneetitig of the etockhojderi will be fcfld at. the otlit-e of the company in IndlanHfioliii,,. 1J., on Wednesday. Oct. 14, lSSfi, ,at I o'clock p. . m... for the election of directors to serve the ftisubig year nd for the traiWiCttoa Of any other bueties that may come frd tlie.meeutifi iiEO, R. iialch, 1 . . . Secretary. .

LOST.

LOST Pair gold spectacles in case east side of ftatenoiire grounds. yesterday. Return to F. B. BRICK LEY, 101 South Meridian street. Reward. READY FOR THE WINTER TRACKS IN" CONDITIO FOR HAULING AN INCREASED) TRAFFIC. The Fulnre of the Motion Tlie Time Between Lontville and CbloJiK" to Re Still Furtlier Shortened. The chief engineer of one of the largest system of roads in this section states that the roads will enter the winter in much better physical condition than in any former year, notwithstanding the fact that not so much money has been expended in improvements to roadbeds as in either Bn year 1894 fr.nd 1S95. So much money was expended on roadbeds in those years by tho Monon, the Big Four, the Pennsylvania lines, the Cincinnati, Hamilton & Dayton and the Lake Erie & Western that the ordinary work on tracks the present year has rone much further than usual. The season has been so favorable, and although there has been considerable rain It has been so distributed over the summer and tho fall months that the beds have not suffered. In making improvements special attention has been given to waterways. The Vandaiia track through the American bottoms, where for years the company have much trouble from high waters, is now four feet above the high-water- mark. The Indianapolis & Vineennes, which a few years ago suffered a good deal whenever there was a heavy rain, will henceforth bo exempt from trouble on that", score. Most of the Indiana, Ohio and Illinois linos have replaced woodtu bridges with substantial iron structures, so that but little need be done in that way the present year. Some new steel has been laid,, but not more than 50 per cent, as much as in either' 1SSJ4 or 195. In ballasting with gravel- more had been dope this year than usual, from the fact that business was light, it was: a good opportunity to carry on such work, and, comparatively speaking, it is not an expensive part ; of maintaining roadbeds. Trafllc had not been so heavy the past spring and summer, and thus far his fall, as in many former years, and the. . .track has not been pounded by ponderous freight engines to the extent of seme years, consequently the section men have been able to keep the tracks in line. Prince llllkoff'ti Ylsft. "There is the only new country in the world to-day and its, trade may be America's for, the seeking," said Major J. G. Pangborn, who ' reached San Francisco yesterday to receive Prince Hilkoff, Russian Minister of Railways, as he placed his hand over that portion of the map of Asia, on which is shown Mongolia, western Manchuria and eastern Siberia, Major Pungborn left St. Petersburg to arrange for tho visit of the Russian minister, who comes to America to inspect the railway syttem, at the express command of his royal master. Prince Hilkoff calls himself something of a Yankee and looks it, too. Unlike the average minister, he has traversed the entire reaim, traveling the 4,(KK) miis from the present terminus ot the great transsiberian railroad to Viaaivostock mat he might know personally jut what kind of a country is eastern Siberia. His tour of this country will occupy his time to Nov. 4, when he pails for home by. the St. Louis from New York." Friday, in company with Vice President Crocker and General Manager Kruttschnitt, of the Southern Pacihc road, in a specia train, he will visit Sacramento, inspecting the Solano en route. The night wiu be spent at Sacramento and the shops visited. The special will then go to Ogden, where President Jeffrey, of the Denver & Rio Grande, will join the party. The trip to Denver will include a visit to Marshall pass and Colorado Springs. At Pueblo President Ripiey and Traffic Manager White, of the Sante Fe, will take the party, escorting the Prince through the Arkansas valley and the Topcka shops. At Kansas City the Pennsylvania road special train of two private cars and an observation car will be taken and St. Louis and Chicago visited. , Personal, Local and General Notes. It is denied that A. J. Smith, general passenger agent of the Lake Shore, will resign on Jan. 1. D. B. Martin, general passenger agent of the Big Four, was in the city yesterday, going to Chicago in the afternoon. C. G. Waldo, general manager of the Cincinnati, Hamilton & Dayton, has gone to New York, to be absent several days. W. A. Wolford, in charge of the Big Four shops at Bellefontaine, formerly at the shops in Wabash, has resigned on account of ill health. The Wabash fast mail train on Monday ran from East St. Louis to Decatur, 111., 110 miles, in 125 minutes, time taken for two stops to be deducted. The friendly manner the Lake Erie & Western and Wabash are working together is exciting comment. For some years the relations ,have been somewhat strained. The general health of Harry Fuller, general passenger agent of the Chesapeake & Ohio, is now better than at any time in many years, but he is still obliged to uso crutches. ' The new train which the Cincinnati Hamilton & Dayton is to lit up to run: between Cincinnati and Chicago in answer! to the train recently put on by the Monon.j is to be square vestiliuled. The Wabash for some time past has been and is now expending a good deal of; money in rebuilding and repairing Itsbridges, not only on the main line, but on its less Important divisions. 1 The present understanding is that the Cincinnati Freight Bureau will, on the first of the year, pass out of existence, as efforts to continue it after that date have not met with the encouragement, anticipated. . - ' A. J. O'Reilly, commercial agent at Indianapolis, has ' been appointed general agent of the L., N. A. &. C. with jurisdiction over all matters pertaining to the operating department at Indianapolis in addition to his present duties. An official of one of the Indianapolis systems was asked yesterday why certain conductors were recently discharged, lie. answered that for that information one must go to the auditors of the roads, as they were the directing power in that matter. There has been a wholesale discharge of conductors on the Houston & Texas Central in the last ten days, men who had been in the company's service twenty years or more being dropped. The officials decline to give the reason for their dismissal. The question of who is to succeed T. J. English as trainmaster on the Cincinnati and Sandusky divisions of the Big Four is still unsettled. J. C. Carney, poneral yardmaster of the Big Four at Sniingiield, has fcx-en offered a position by William Gibson, who left tho Big Four to go to the Baltimore & Ohio. . Passenger officials state that the passenger receipts from the county and State fairs the past fall have been disappointing, in but few cases exceeding 50 per cent, of what they usually amount to, and this has shown more in the earnings than one who has not investigated the matter would think. J. S. Leahy has been appointed general Southern agent of the C, H. & D.. with headquarters at Cincinnati, in charge of business originating in Cincinnati, south of the Ohio river and east of the Mississippi river; J. R. MeGrcaor. traveling passenger agent; Perry Griffin. Northwestern passenger agent, with headquarters at Chicago. On the Indianapolis division of the Cincinnati. Hamilton & Dayton lines Oxford has become the best paying way station in passenger business on the line, and Ccnnersville the best paying freight station. For some years P.ushville led in both passenger and freight receipts, hut with more road, centering at Uushville the business has been divided. It Is stated that the Pennsylvania Com--pany has under consideration still further shortening its running time bftv.-ccn IouisvilU; ami Chicago, claiming that if foreed to do so, it can make the run between the two cities one hour or more quk-ker than can its competitors. When the Southern tourist travel sets in thi- schedule may ti n be so arranged, says one of the officials. . Just before C. E. Schaff, general mamsger of th Big Four, left for New York, a committee of trainmen from the Louisville division of the Bsr Four waited n him and asked for an increase in pay. Hp answered by saying he would Hk.. to uiak.a dal with them bv which thev would ac cept as their pay the earnings of the pas-

senger trains on that division. As a freight line the receipts of that division have been quite satisfactory, but as a passenger line it is not satisfactory. Thomas Noonan. general manager of the Central States Dispatch states that the business of this fast freight line for the year ending June 30 yie ded a revenue of $245,000 in excess of that, of the preceding 'year. The report of the Continental fast freight line, of which he is also the general manager, is not so far complete as to give deiinite results of last year's business. The Pennsylvania. Company has fitted up several cars for live stock business and lettered them "the Keystone Live Stock Express." The company has in the last few months largely increased Its live stock traffic, and not at the expense of the Beeline division of the Big Four, which for many months past has been carrying the largest live stock and dressed meats business in the history of the road. The better time and better accommodations Indianapolis lines are giving the stock shippers are diverting business from the Chicago routes.For some time past the Union Railway Company has been endeavoring to effect a settlement with the Sheets heirs through which, the Union Railway Company will be able to clear the title for the ground on which the Tandalia freight depot stands of anj- claim the Sheets family may have through the wording of the deed of the property to the Terre Haute & Indianapolis Railroad Company. It is stated that all but one heir has been satisfied. It is quite necessary that the old Vandaiia freight depot should be removed to enable the Union Railway Company to lengthen its tracks west of the train sheus, the present: sharp curves causing much trouble. Within the last ten days large blocks of the securities and stock of the Louisville. New Albany & Chicago have changed hands, and much interest is shown as to whom the purchasing parties are.- Some of those who think they are of keen perception say that it is the Woodford syndicate, which controls the Cincinnati, Hamilton & Dayton and which, they think, is to have a hand in the reorganization of the Monon, while others seem equally confident that, despite all denials, the Southern railway is endeavoring to secure control and get into Chicago. There never was a time when the property was worth as much money as at present. Not only is the roadbed in excellent condition, but its terminals have largely increased in value, as has its interest in the Chicago & Wrestern Indiana, in which it owns one-fifth. The new train schedules of the lines carrying the passenger business between Cincinnati and Chicago and Indianapolis and Chicago have brought about some remarkable phases. For instance, one can leave Cincinnati on the Big Four white special, reach Indianapolis in two hours and fortyfive minutes, which is faster than any other train; then transfer to the fast afternoon express over the Monon. its fastest train, and make the run to Chicago in four hours and thiray minutes, thus making the run from Cincinnati to Chicago in seven hours and thirty minutes. Eight hours is now the common time 01 the three lines between Cincinnati and Chicago. Twenty years ago twelve hours was called fast, and ten years ; go ten hours was very fast. For the last three years the common time has been nine hours; a month ago it was cut to eight, and now it is likely the time war willi cut off another thirty minutes. . COMPULSORY SCHOOL LAW.

Council oC Women AVill Auk Legislature to Fa s One. The first meeting of the Local Council of Women was held yesterday afternoon at the Propylaeum. The first hour of the meeting was given up to the hearing of reports. The legislative committee asked that the committee . be authorized to secure an attorney to present its requests to the General Assembly. It wants school attendance compulsory between certain age limits, and to secure school suffrage for women, of Indiana at all school elections. There are now twenty-one States that have school suffrage for women. Mrs. J. S. Jenckes's resignation as a member of the municipal committee was accepted. The president will fill any vacancies that may occur. Miss Harriet Noble was made chairman o the information committee and will choose her associates. , The conference committee, which Is to act with the Commercial Club, will not meet until after the election, when it will consider a movement to secure a revision of the school laws. After Miss Jacobs had presented the matter of the' university extension conference in this city next month Mr. C. S. Denny was introduced by the president, Mrs. Kind Vv uischner. Mr. Denny spoke of "vice and its reform," and he presented in a plain and practical way some of the great vices and what he thought would or should secure reform. Twenty years ago people scorned the -vork undertaken in the slums, the mission chapeis and that of the Salvation Army, but now these are acknowledged powerful factors in reform. He commended women's clubs and the work of the Local Council towards making the city and its people cleaner morally and physically. Among other things he would provide that the ceilhouse and the court for . women be under one roof. Over three thousand women and gins have come under Mrs. Buchanan's care since" she became the pouee matron. In 1S90. "Common decency demands that female prisoners shouid be under the care of women, and yet the sheriffs of the county do not always deputize a woman to accompany such prisoners to jail or asylum," said he. Mr. Denny spoke of the btneful influence of the wine room and the social evil, the latter which he denounced as the worst in the category of sins. The remedy he believed to be only partial, but the nearest to a remedy would be the enforcement of the laws. "If the betrayer be ostracised as the betrayed and the visitor as well as the keeper of the house, then social purity would be hair gained," said he. For a lesson in statistics, he quoted ex-Superintendent or Poilce Powell, -who had found that of two hundred fallen women to whom he hatl spoken while superintendent of podce, there were only two who were contented,'' and Mr. Wheeler, of the. Rescue Home, has never found one. Ore remedy which he would suggest would be a home, far from the cit where such wemen could go of their own free will and in this respect it would be unilke the Reformatory. In this home all kinds of labor would be taught. The one who would endow such a home wouid probably be laughed at, but it would be a great gairi toward a reform. Mr. Denny thought the ccuncil should memorialize the Legislature to raise the age of consent, and he would advocate the punishment of wife-beaters and ravishers to be not only imprisonment, but lashing. As a last suggestion to remedying existing evils; he would desire a curfew law, which would be the means of saving many young girls. "The curfew law has a close connection between the social and wine-room pvils," said he. At the conclusion of the address there was an informal discussion by different members of the council. IN THE COURTS. He NVnsi Ejected from the Car. Thomas Brennan ha filed suit against the Citizens' Street-railroad Company asking damages in the sum of $1,000. He boarded a fair grounds car on Illinois and Georgia streets and paid his fare. He a -leges that he was ejected at Twenty-sixth street for the nonpayment of his fare. Ask a Writ of Habeas Corpus. Mary' and Allen Canatsy yesterday filed a petition for a writ of habeas corpus to secure possession of the four-year-old child of Julius Schlenter. The father is the defendant in the case. THE COI RT RECORD. Superior Court. Room 2 Lawson M. Harvey, judge. William S. Lockman vs. George Wernsint. Dismissed. Costs paid. Mason J. Osgood vs. Emma N. Warring et al. Judgment against defendant for $7Ift.4 and costs. W. J. Holliday vs. Fred Hartman: note Judgment against defendant for $3S3 and costs. Bernhardt Budd vs. Julius R. Schuller; account. Judgment against defendant for $7(.5G and costs. L. M. MeOehee vs. S. A. Koeppen; damages. On trial by jury. Jury out. New Suit Filed. Thomas Brennan vs. Citizens' Street-railroad Company. Damages demanded, $1,000. Superior Court. Room 3. William Maloy et al. vs. Anna M. Stipp et al. Proceedings supp emental to execution. Superior Court, Room 1. John J. Carriger et al. vs. Charles B. Lint bac k et al. Damages demanded, $1,000. Superior Court. Iioom 2. Mary Canatsy et al. vs. Julius Schlenter; habeas corpus. Circuit Court. Yesterday afternoon a Colie ro'.lided with a laundry wa; tege-avenue car agon driven by N. M. Wallace at the corn-r of Walnut end Massach jsetts avenue. The wagon was broken up and the horsf sightly lamed, but the. driver escaped without injury. Purify your Mood with Hood's Sursaparilu. which will give you an appetite, tone your stomach and strengthen yuur nerves.

A COLLEGE DESTROYED

LOGANSI'ORT BUSINESS UNIVERSITY BURNED TO THE GROUND. Panic Among , Seventy Students and ?7,MM Lomm Horse-Thief Detectives' National Meeting:. Special to the Indianapolis Journal. LOGANSPORT, Ind., Oct. 6. Michael's Business University was destroyed by fire this afternoon, entailing a loss of about $70,000. with insurance of about $.13,000. The fire originated on the third floor in a storage room for stationery. A defective flue Is supposed to have been the cause. Seventy students at classes on the second floor rushed pell mell from the building, but fortunately no one was injured. About forty of the students roomed In the building and they succeeded in saving all their personal effects. Aside from this nothing was saved. Some $7,000 worth of furniture and about $3,000 worth of stationery for use in the school were destroyed. The building was erected in 1S72 by the Universalists, who made this the main college of a number throughout the State. Joshua Smithson and wife, of Vevay, devised two-thirds of their large estate to the founding of the colleges and this, the main building, was christened the Smithson College in their honor. The building cost originally over $100,000, but Professor Michaels purchased it something over a year ago for less than $00,000. He had vastly improved the buildings and grounds and had expended about $20,000 more. The insurance is in the following companies: , Ohio Farmers, $2,500; Concordia, of Milwaukee, $2,50i); Royal, of Liverpool, $2,500: Atlas Assurance Companv, Liverpool, $2,50;); Orient, of Hartford, $2,500; Rockford, of Illinois. $2,000; Citizens of Evansville, $2,000; Fort Wayne Insurance Company, $2,000; Glenns Falls, of New -York, $:J.0O0; Green-, wich, $3,000; Alliance, of Philadelphia, $3,000; Indiana Underwriters, $1,000; Hanover, of Philadelphia, $2,000; St. Paul Fire and Mar;ne, $2,500; American Central, $2,500. rilAISE FOR GLASS WORKERS. 31annger Hart, of the Trust, Says the Strike Is a Manly Flftht. Special to the Indianapolis Journal. MUNCIE, Ind., Oct. 6. Thomas F. Hart, manager of the Western Window Glass Manufacturers' Association, with headquarters in Muncie, in reply to numerous reports, has furnished the following card to the press: "Presa reports appearing this morning contained a report to the effect that the Pittsburg Window Glass Company was either gone or about to go asunder and that the Western Window Glass Company, whose headquarters is in this city, would follow suit ere many days.' The two companies herein named represent fourteen plants, located in Pennsylvania, Ohio and Indiana. The members of the Pittsburg Window Glass Company presented to their workmen a scale- of wages for their acceptance, same to be effective until June 30, 1S07. The workmen refused to accept our scale of wages and ask of us a rate of wages we cannot afford to pay and want the price ruling on a competitive product made in Belgium and England. The result is the workmen are idle and the plants lifeless, pending the results of the present contest or strike,' "To many persons it may appear that employer and employe are at sword's point, but such is not the case. The strike is being manly conducted and the best of feeling exists between -employe and employer. We have reason 'to believe our skilled workmen will realize that the reduction asked of them is necessar- in order to put our plant in the blast and compete with the foreign-made product. "T. F. HART." INTERNATIONAL BARBERS. Eighth Annual Convention in Session at Evansville. EVANSVILLE, Ind., Oct. 6.-The first biennial convention of the International Barbers' Union w called to order this morning at 9 o'clock in Central Labor Union Hall, and the delegates welcomed by Mayor Hawkins. The union embraces barbers in the United States and Canada, and the meeting will last for several days. Heretofore meetings have been held annually, the one last year being the seventh annual, and was held in St. Paul. Thirty-eight States are represented at the meeting. The chief question of interest at this convention will be the agitation in favor of licensing barbers. San Francisco, Washington and Memphis have strong delegations working for the next meeting. HORSE-THIEF DETECTIVES. Hon. James A,.Monnt Spenks to the National Convention at Warsaw. Special to the Indianapolis Journal. WARSAW, Ind.-, Oct. 6. The National Horse Thief Detective Association is holding its annual session in this city. Fully fifteen hundred delegates are in attendance from this and other States. A grand street parade, headed by the Fourth Regiment Band, took place yesterday afternoon. Over a thousand delegates were in line. Last evening Hon. J. Al Mount, president of the Indiana division of the association, and Republican candidate for Governor, addressed an immense crowd at Rigdon's Opera House. Old Indian Skeleton Unearthed. Special to the Indianapolis Journal. MONTICELLO, Ind., Oct. 6. Yesterday as a party of workmen were repairing the road about seven miles north of town they were considerably surprised at finding, about two feet beneath the surface of the ground, a human skeleton, presumably that of an Indian. Encircling the bones of the wrist were small, thin bands of silver and across the breast was a piece of buckskin with a silver plate in the center. As the skull vas being removed from the ground several teeth fell out. A party of men from town, passing by soon after the discovery, were permitted to bring the bones to town. The locality in which the skeleton was found seems to have been one of the camping grounds of the Indians and many telie& have been found. Joseph Moore, of Buffalo, has a collection of arrow heads which he has unearthed when plowing on his farm in that vicinity. "Winjeed" a Horse Thief. Special to the Indianapolis Journal. GREENSBURG. Ind., Oct. 6. Word reached Sheriff Meek to-day that a mare and colt which had been stolen from Robert E. Jolly, near Lawrenceburg, was in the possession of a man near Burney, this county. Armed with a description cf the thief, the sheriff and posse went to Burney, where they found a man answering the description working for John Gartner. The sheriff demanded his surrender, but the man cleared a fence and made for a corn fie'id. The officer fired six shots, but the man made good his escape. Soon the surrounding country turned out, and the thief was captured at a doctor's office at Hartsville. where he was having his wounds dressed. One of the shots had taken effect in the fleshy part of the thigh. Gresham's Resrluient Meets. Special to the Indianapolis Journal. NEW ALBANY, Ind., Oct. C The annual reunion of the Fifty-third Indiana Regiment Association was held in this city yesterday. The election of officers resulted as follows: President. J. W. Marshall, of Corydon: vice president. Dr. J. D. Homer, of Lanesville: J. Engleman. of Georgetown, and Boone Miller, of Indianapolis; secretary and treasurer. George H. Pennington, of New Albanv. The next reunion will be held Oct. 5. 1;&7. at Corvdon. General W. Q. Greshain was the tirst colonel of the Fifty-third Regiment. His widow and son. Otto Grrfham, of Chicaco. attended the meeting to-day. Mr. Gresham is collecting data for a history of the regiment and for a life of his father. Anderson Bolt Works Still Out. Special t the Indianapolis Journal. ANDERSON, Ind.. Oct. 6. The representatives of the bolt trust in the United States that have been in Anderson for the past several days, have returned to Cleveland and the deal to incorporate the plant of the Anderson Iron and Bolt Company, of this city, as a part of the trust has been declared off. s . John Wolf Fatally Shot Himself. Special to the Indianar-olie Journal. NEW ALBANY. Ind., Oct. C John Wolf 1 shot himself in the head this afternoon at his home, five miles northeast of this city, and was instantly killed. Coroner Starr

will return a verdict of accidental death. Wolf was fifty-eight years old and an old resident of the county. None of his family had heard him make any threats of suicide. He attended the Bryan meeting in this city, and the affair occurred just after he reached his home.

The "Assemhly' Season Opened. Special to the Indianapolis Journal. SHELBYVILLE, Ind., Oct. 6. The Assembly opened its season this evening with a reception and dance. The hall was handsomely decorated with tropical flowers and the club colors, black and gold. The guests numbered two hundred, those from a distance being Mrs. Charles Porter, Greensburg; Mrs. Scott. Washington, D. C. ; Miss Marion Brown, Indianapolis; Miss Buckley Topeka. Kan.: Miss Knight. Lexington, Ky.; Messrs. Charles M. Malotte. Indianapolis; Harry Briggs, Terre Haute; It. M. Cooper, Indianapolis; Earl Payne, Donald Smith, Rushville; Louis Sheik. Sheboygan, Mich.; James Clark, Manitou Springs, Col. Three Badly Hurt In a Runaway. Special to the Indianapolis Journal. RUSHVILLE, Ind., Oct. 6. Joseph .Bray and family were out driving last night when their horse shied at a bicycle. The horse overturned the rig on its occupants and injured three of them, as follows: Effie Bray, eighteen, a daughter, badly cut and bruised about legs and side of her head. Mrs. Bray, her mother, bruised about body and dangerously hurt. Joseph Bray, left arm broken and right hand cut. Two little children escaped Injury. Swine Sale at Winchester. Special to the Indianapolis Journal. WINCHESTER, Ind., Oct. 6. Messrs. Cheesman and Franklin and D. L. Cheesman & Son, of Farmland, Ind., breeders of registered Duroc-Jersey swine, held their second annual sale of pigs at the fair grounds near this city to-day. A number of buyers from a distance, as well as many local dealers, were present. Took Too Muck Morphine. Special to the Indianapolis Journal. MARION, Ind., Oct. 6. Mrs. John II. Vance, of this city, took an overdose of morphine early this morning to relieve neuralgia and died from the effects. The deceased was forty-five years old and leaves a husband and three children. One-Legged Strangrer Suspected. Special to the Indianapolis Journal. VlNCENNES, Ind., Oct. 6.-John S. Brown, of Sullivan, was robbed of $450 last night at Avenue Hotel, this city. Brown was on his way West to buy land. His roommate, a one-legged stranger, suddenly disappeared, and is suspected. Kicked to Death by a Stallion. Special to the Indianapolis Journal. GOSHEN, Ind.. Oct. 6. Henry Tschapp, a wealthy stock raiser, was last night kicked to death by a vicious stallion he had purchased but a few days before. Indiana State News. Every department of the Indiana, Iron works, at Muncie, resumed yesterday, giving employment to over 500 men. The Attica. Comets desire to play any football team with an average of 145 pounds or under. Dates and particulars will be given by Secretary Frank A. Hoimes, who is manager of the club. William H. Hutton, a Howard county pioneer, died at Kokomo Monday, aged sixty-three. He had mail contracts here tor twenty-two years, and in the early history of the county operated a woolen mill at New London. A wife and two daughters survive. UNDAUNTED BY RAIN. (Concluded from First Page.) long distance, and I am sure, at a great discomfort to yourselves, to testify your devotion to the great principles of the Republican party, which for the moment I represent, principles which I believe embrace the greatest good of the American people and the highest honor of the Amercan government." SPEECH TO LUMBERMEN. What Protection Has Done for One of the BiS Lake Cities. To the lumbermen of Buffalo and Tonawanda county Mr. MeKinley said: "My Fellow-citizens I am very much honored to have this visit from the lumbermen of Buffalo and Tonawanda of the great Empire State. No one can know better than the men engaged in your occupations the value of staple money and cf general prosperity. No one can know better than you the effect upon your business of the waves of depression and those of prosperity, and I receive the assurances so feelingly given me by your spokesman with a grateful heart, and return to you all my sincere thanks. "This is a year, as your spokesman has well said, that party ties are not strong enough to hold any patriot within it who believes that his party has ceased to represent the highest and best interests of our glorious Republic. (Applause.) I do not think we appreciate the great industry which you represent and of which you are a part one of the greatest in the country. The number of establishments engaged in the manufacture of lumber and other mill products, from logs, bolts, etc., 21,011; the capital invested is the enormous sum of $496,339,968. The planing mills number 3,6i0. The capital invested in them is $120,271,440, and the cost of material used is $336,482,452, and the value of the annual product is $588,349,127, and they give employment to 373,080 men, who are paid in American wages or used to be (laughter and applause) the sum of $136,754,513. "We are honored here to-day in having with us these enterprising business men who represent the great lumber interests of Buffalo and Tonawanda. These, I believe, constitute one market and handle, as your spokesman has said, one thousand millions of feet of lumber per annum, worth nearly or quite thirty millions of dollars.. In 1S90 the lake trade in lumber at Buffalo was over 2S2.000.000 feet and at Tonawanda over 717,000.000 feet, though under the lumber provisions of the present tariff law the trade of Buffalo has since decreased., until in 1S93 it was 51.000.000 feet less than, in 1890. while that of Tonawanda has shrunk in the same period more than 296.000,000 feet. Canadian free lumber has been encouraged at the expense of the lumber interests of the great State of New York and all the other States of the American Union. I may be pardoned, gpntlemen, if I say in this presence that I believe in the po'icy that gives preference to Buffalo and Tonawanda rather than to Montreal and Toronto. Like all the other features of free trade, it has helped to make us poor for the advantage of other people living within another jurisdiction and who owe no allegiance to our flag. "I have noticed bv the census figures that the number of manufacturing establishments in Buffalo which always afford, under ordinary circumstances, such great prosperity have increased from 1,1 S3 in 1SS0 to 3.359 in 1S90: that the value of her manufactures increased from $?:t. 000.000 in lsso to $96,000,000 in 199. The number of her employes in factories increased from 18.0)0 in 1SS0 to 50.000 in 1S90, and the wages paid thorn from $7,500,000 in 1830 to $24,500,000 in 1890. . "Could anything more clearly demonstrate the wisdom of encouraging and protecting a system of home production which, in a single decade, could add lOO.Ono inhabitants and all this wealth to a singrle city? But there may be some who claim that protection had nothing to do with this prosperity. Well, if protection did not aid in building up our internal commerce and our marvelous rail and water transportation and vast manufacturing industries. T would like to know what other agency did more. There is nothing in our progress more marvelous than the growth of our internal commerce: and I have a comparative statement of vessel tonnage, entrance and clearances, which certainly conclusively proves that it ought to be the policy of this government to constantly build it up by every means at its disposa1. This tab'e shows that the tonnage, entrance and clearances for our Pacific coast in HI for 365 davs was 4.2'1.6SO tons: for the Suez canal, al'" nations. 35 days. 6.SP0.0P4 tons; for the port of Liverpool. 365 days. 16.621.421 tons; for the port of London, 365 days. 20f(2.51 tons. The total tonnaee for our Atlantic coast. 365 days. 22",497.S17 tons more than the entire tonnase of either Liverpool or London; and the tonnage of Lake Erie and the ereat lakes. Unbed States and Canada. 22S days, was 2S.991.959 tons, the Greatest water commerce of the world. Therefore I am in favor of encourrssfing our shipping interests in every proper and suitable way. and am in favor of the restoration of a tariff system which builds up home factories, home markets ami tiom trade, and which makes thin wonderfu' internal commerce possible. We know bv experience in the lat three years that there is nothing we cou'd ex chance it f"r and not be woefully cheated in the bnrgnin. "No one knows better than you the effect nnon vour business as well as rpon the general business of the country of having all our industrial enterprise at work and constantly at work, manned with an army 'of v. orkingmen. vhat givs vcu business isi when the work'ngmen are steadily emp'oyed at good wages, and they buy lot and build he uses, and you know tlie effect it had uuon tho magniiicent

growth of the city of Buffalo between 1S30 and lv 0. For the past three years we have contributed something sto build up manufacturing in the cities of Europe which is well enough if we had no idle men at home and while we have been doing this we havo been correspondingly doing something to drag down manufacturing ia American cities aiding our foreign rivals to our injury and sacrifices; helping foreign markets by surrendering our own markets and getting nothing by the process. If that ' ' s, lumbermen of Buffalo and Tonawanda? . ommon with other good citizens, you are concerned in the proper settlement of the free-coinage question. Did you ever reflect how it would he-p the prices of real estate and of buildings to have .all values unsett ed and the validity of contracts thrown into jeopardy. The history of the world proves that the real estate suffers most severely in every period of financial distre.-s and of all property, it" recovers the most slowly. Read the history of the great financial depressions and panics of 117, 1S25, 1S37, IStl. 1S57. 1S73, LS7S. 1h;i3 and 1S96 and see if this is not true. The triumph of rund monev and protection at the polls in November will, in my judgment, restore confidence and thercbv he p every species of business, and when that !s done, your business will share in the general advancement and profit by the general prosperity. "I am more than glad to meet these citizens of the city of Buffalo. I know that you not only stand for a judicious protective tariff system, but you stand for an honest money standard that will he recognized the world over. And. more than that and above that, you stand by this government of law and whatever differences we may have on minor questions of pub'.ic policy, every patriotic citizen this year insists that the honor of the government and its financial integrity shall be sustained and preserved." TO l'ENNSYLVANIANS.

Major MeKinley Tells What AH Working People Want. "Mr. Graham and My Fellow-citizens of East Brady, Pa. I am very regretful that the day Is so inclement on which you make your call. I am glad to meet each one of you at my home. I have received a great many delegations, as your spokesman has said, in the past two months, many of them larger than youra, but from the shouts I have heard from you to-day I am sure none of them had better lungs than yours. (Laughter.) And none of them was more earnest in their support -of Republican principles than the little body of men gathered about me to-day. There la one thing which, 1 think, we are apt to forget. We are too apt to forget what is behind us and too apt to be needless of our own experience. We can hardly realize that from 1873 to 1S93 we reduced the public debt from $2,333,331,30S in 1866 to $570.000,01)0 in 1S93. We paid off during those twenty years $1,623,581,673 of the public debt. And we were under a protective and sound-money system when we were making the large payments. Two-thirds of that great debt has disappeared and while we were paying it off we were building in this country the most Splendid industrial enterprises, giving constant and steady employment to American labor t fair wages and giving to the farmers of the country a just reward for their toil and labor. During that period, for the greater part of the time we were selling more goods abroad than we were buying abroad. And the balance of trade was therefore in our favor and that balance of trade settled, as it was in gold, gave us the good yellow money from the other side of the ocean. . ".Now, my fellow-citizens, four years ago the people of this country determined to change that policy and they did change it. What has been the result? We have since that time created a national debt, principal and interest, of about $300,000,000. We have had for the great part of that time a deficiency in the treasury, the government not collecting sufficient revenues (o meet its current expenses, and labor has never been so illy employed as it was in that period. Your spokesman tells us that in your own county thirty-one blast furnaces have been stopped. What does that mean? It means that wages have been stopped. It means that labor has been unemployed. It means that comforts have been taken away from hundreds of American homes which they had previously enjoyed. It means distress and what is true of your county has been substantially true possibly not to so large a degree, of other counties of your State and throughout the entire country. "Now. what we want to do, whether we are railroad men or farmers, or professional men, or mechanics, or laboring men. Is to get back to a policy that will give us a chance to increase our manufacturing, improve our home market, extend our foreign market and give employment every day In the year to everv workingman who wants it. (Applause.) If we will but follow the lamp of experience, and follow in the direction which the light of that lamp leads us on the 3d day of November, we will vote down the policies which have brought us these conditions and vote to continue a monetary system built upon a solid basis which will give us the- best money of the world, a money which panics cannot disturb and business failures cannot depreciate. (Tremendous cheering and cries of 'Pennsylvania will vote that way.') We want good times, plenty of work, good wages and good money. How. will you vote? (Cries of 'For MeKinley!') I thank you most heartily for this call and bid you all good morning." (Applause.) FAIR WEATHER TO-DAY. Prediction and Observations of Local Forecaster Wnppenhans. Forecast for Indianapolis and vicinity for the twenty-four hours ending 11 p; m., Oct. 7 Fair weather on-Wednesday. General Conditions . Yesterday High barometric pressure continues; the slight depression moving eastward covers New York. The temperature fell except near the Atlantic coast, the gulf coast, in Kansas and Nebraska, where it rose. Rain fell from Indiana and Michigan eastward to the northern Atlantic coast. FORECAST OR THREE STATES. For Ohio Generally fair Wednesday, with cool fresh to brisk northerly winds. For Indiana and Illinois Fair; northerly winds. . Tuesday's Local Observations. Time. Bar. Ther. R.I J. Wind. Wea. Prec. 7:00 a. m.. 30.14 55 97 S'west. Lt.rain. 0.60 7:00 p. m.. 30.22 51 77 North. Clear. 0.24 Maximum temperature, 60; minimum temperature, 51. Following Is a comparative statement of the temperature and precipitation Oct. 6: . Temp.Prec. Normal 58 .09 Mean 5 0.84 Departure from the normal 2 0.75 Departure since Oct. 1 24 0.3O Total departure since Jan. 1 497 0.12 Plus. C. F. R. WAPPENHANS, Local Forecast Official. A Fire Scare at Lieber's Brewery. The employes at Lleber's brewery had a fire scare yesterday evening at 6 o'clock. Smoke was seen issuing from an upper window and an alarm was turned in. The department was not needed, however. The flames were extinguished by hand. Workmen had left a pine piank near a gas Jet, and when the gas lighted the plank caught on fire. The firj did not communicate to any part of the building and did no damage. - TO BE HEALTHY AND STRONG Uso "Garland" Stoves and Ranges. i able, The Krfiirh Do!L ihli:giUiiiM(.i.U0'0iiwitt.lilI ' -- hi i iwi. ii.i iii IHIfmi'V,M,l.1"M,

MRS. G OOLD'S G K ATITUDE.

Her Story of How She Was Roetored to Health. Condition Before and After the Birth of Her Child. From every city, town and hamlet on this vast continent, come letters from suffering- women; from those whose physicians , havo been unable to assist them, or from that nnraberless class who.e confi dence in Mrs. Pinkham's ad vice and tho curative properties of her Vegetable Compo-und i3 unbounded. Kvcry letter received from women is recorded, and hundreds of volumes of cases treated aid in fur nishing practical information for tho women of to-day. No letters are published without the request of the writer. The strictest confidence is observed. The following1 letter represents thousands : - I always enjoyed good health until six months before the birth of my babe. Then I was very weak; mybiie'k ached all the time. My physicians said I would be all right after the birth of the child, but I was not, although at that time I hd the best of care. The pains in my back were almost tmbearable. I had leneorrhoea in its worst form; menstruations were painful. "Any work or care would entirely unnerve me. "When my babe was 11 months old, friends persuaded me to take Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. Before I had taken one bottle I felt the effects. My back did not ache so badly, and I felt stronger. After taking four bottles I felt well. My ambition returned, menstruations were painless, leucorrhoea entirely cured, and I could take care of my babe and do my housework. I shall always recommend your Vegetable Compound for all women, especially for young mothers." Mrs. II. L. Goold, Oregon, Wis. If Mrs. Goold had been well before the birth of her child, subsequent suffering would have been avoided. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound should always be taken before and after birth, in order that the system may withstand the shock. Bryce's Old Homestead Bread FASTTRAINS Louisville, Ky., PennsylvaniaShort Line Leave 3:40 a. m arrive Louisville, 14th, street, 6:45 a- m.; Union Station, 7 a. ni., daily. Leave 8:50 a. m., arrive Louisville, 14th, street, 11:55 noon; Union Station, 12:10 noon, dally. Leave 3:35 p. m., arrive ' Louisville. 14lh street, 6:15 p. m.; Union Station, 6:30 p. m., daily. Leave 5:00 p. m., arrive Louisville, 14th street, 6:15 p. m.; Union Station, 8:40 p. m dally, except Sunday. Pennsylvania high-grade standard coaches and buffet parlor and sleeping cars. Ticket offices No. 4 West Washington street, No. 4t Jackson place and Union Station. GEO. E. ROCKWELL. D. P. A.. E. A. FORD. O. P. A. FOR ST. LOUIS $7.50 Round Trip $7.50 ANNUAL FALL FKSTIVITIES.-Exposttlnn. Sept. 9 to 24. Kair. Oct. 5 to W. Kins liotu parade, Oct. 3. Veiled Prophet, Oct. 6. Four trulns daily; leave 8:50 a. m., 12:i(t noon. 7 p. m., U:2i) p. m. Through coaches and Kleepem. For full Information call on ticket agenta, 4S West Waslilnrton street. Union Station. Notice . . . Where cross streets are beltij; Improved, mains will bs laid if residents will give timely notice. Indianapolis Water Co. The Sunday Journal, by Hail, $2 a Year LH hi

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Five beautiful doll3, lithographed on cardboard, eight inches high. Can be cut out and put together by the children no pasting. Each doll has two complete 5uits. American, French, Spanish, Russian, Chinese, Japanese, German, Swiss, Turkish and Indian costumes. All parts being intcrchange-

many combinations cau be made,

affording endless amusement nnd instruction. A hiph-chss series of dolls, patented and manufactured 'for us exclusively and not to be compared with the numerous cheap paper dolls on the market. Blow To Get Tlieirt. Cnt from Ave outside wrappers of None Sneli Mlrco Meat the head of the nrl liotrilng pie. Send thftise with ten cents In s-ilver wrapped in paper and your full naino and tuldrens, und we will send the dot la postpaid. Or we will send them free for twenty beads of the girl. Send only the, heads to avoid extra postage.

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