Indianapolis Journal, Volume 51, Number 306, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 November 1901 — Page 3

TUR INDIANAPOLIS JOÜRXAL, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 2, lOOl

3

indiana-s Greatest Dry Goods Emporium Sat'ur daySpecials.. Men's Japonet Handkerchiefs, with silk embroidered initials in ev- O ! cry letter, a 10c value, al I 2 Ladies black sateen petticoats, in five different style?, QQ f hemstitched all-linen table cloths, tv-l size, 5 - 7 " quality, Qf tach )I.0 Double damask Irish Dinner Napkins S ;,o quality, Q" QQ dozen vU.O Pettis Dry Goods Co.

WI MAKE UBEUAL ADVANCES ON P ROOMS AND ALLTPAN5ACn0N! STRICTLY CONFIDENTIAL llOcS LOAM0FFICLSiaW!AKiTr6T. Indiana Dental College Department of Dentistry University of Indianapolis. for a!t klnda of dentJ work. Ttae te are to cover the cotts only. Receives patients from a. m. to I ft. m, 8. XV. Cor. Delaware and Ohio Streets. THE DRAMA. At the Theaters To-Day. ENGLISH'S Primrose and Dockstader' s Minstrels, J: 1.1 arid :11 p. m. OR A Nl) Vaudeville, L:13 and 8:13 p. m. PARK "The Night Before Christmas," melodrama, 2 and H p. m. KM PIRK Sheridan's City Sports, variety, 2 and 8 p. m. Primrose and Doekstader'n Show. George Primrosa and Lew Dockstader and. their fellow-minstrels, having greatly pleased one large audience at English's Opera House last season, decided to give three per'' -lances on their present visit. Hereto! it has been usual for a minstrel ev: to make this city a one-night stand. The applause last night Indicated that the two audiences to-day would be of profitable Flze. The entertainment begins with the regular "first part." The company Is in evening dress and black face, and the color is left to the scenic background. Nell O'Brien and Kddie Leonard anc Primrose and Dockstader are the jesters. Leonard Is especially funny in his song and dance, "I'm Going to Live Anyhow Until I Die," and Dockstader scores with "Don't Butt In," with an extra story about the SchleySampson complications. The cornic songs, which are all ragtime, alternate with the ballads. The latter are well sung, but they are of poor quality. The olio of a minstrel show usually seems to be arranged on short notice and often is dull, but in this Instance the "turns" are entertaining. Claudius and Corbln attempt Juppe's "Poet and Peasant" overture on banjos, and they play with an amazing oasn mat takes hold of their audience. There is more musical tone, too, than the Firings and drumheads usually give out. The apparent difficulty of the work helps the men to get applause. Olli Younr and brother give their Indian-club and nooprolling tridts. The club work is not ex citing, but the noop juggling is new and interesting. Lew Dockstader probably Is the best of the monologuiats. He has a new line of talk, and his methods stir up roars of laugnter. lie excels in negro, Irish and cockney accents, and his old "new shovel' pong is a wonder. George Trimrose follows him on tr stage with the oid-stvle min Ptrel dances. He has two small boys with him that have caught his precise stvle. One m3 so little good dancing on the stag-e at this day that Primrose's turn with his boys is exhilarating. The act bogies with several changing color pictures of. Southern scenes. Neil O'Rrien appears In the olio with "William Hallett. They offer the well-worn ffcetcn wmcn starts as if it were musical, but produces no melody. O'Rrien is comi cal, and would please more than he doe If he freshened his material. Between this feature and the final one, the acrobatic act tvr Zeno, carl and Zeno, a man steps to the footlights and begs the audience to remain Jn Its seats until the close. This is a plight to the acrobats, who are skillful and adventurous on the high bars. They need no apology, and it is a relic that could well be rut out. At the performance to-nicht the mem bera af the Indiana and Illinois football teams will be the guests of the comnanv and Manager Miller, of the theater, and win nave me ooxes. 3iotes of the Singe. Thil Sheridan's show, with its basket frail scramble among the chorus girls as i wind-up, will close Its engagement at the Empire to-day. This theater will have h snow oniy me nrst nail or next week. W B. Watson will be at the head of the com pany. xxx Mr. and Mr. Gardner Crane and the other vaudeville players associated with them at the Grand Opera House this week will close their visit here to-nliht UiMa Comedians will take the stage next week jiorace unuim, magician, is a member the company, well-known In Indianapoli of XXX . Mrs. Maurice Thompson and her children of Crawfordsville, will have a box at Km.' llsh's Opera House Monday night, when Miss Virginia Harned and her company begin their performance of "Alice of Old incennes ai ui.ii ineater. The nlav w as woiKfu out tu .ur. i nompson s novel Kdward K. Rose, who is employed Charles Frohman for such taks. XXX by bv The two children in "The Night before Christmas," a melodrama at the Park The ater, were trained by the late James Herne. They ate turkey night after night In "Shore Acres" and later acted in "S ig Harbor." Mr. Herne was tutor to a con fid-rahlc number of children in th - - - ...x.v J.J, and if they remember what the great stage manag r ami author taught them, they w have valr.abV guidance in their matu Work on the stag-. Next week the Park will offer two no re nn lodramas "The Convict's Daughter" and "Across the Pacific." PERSONAL AND SOCIETY. The MagizHe t'lul) will meet to-dav at the Hotel Kngllsh. .Mrs. George FhÜip Meier is visiting Miss Rrth Winter: otham in Chicago. The D bonai- Club gave its second dance cf the season at Brei.ru ke's lat night. Mrs. Jame Simpson Conwell. formerly of this city, now of Anderson, visited friem.s here t .-terday. Mr. ar.d Mrs. L. G. Kent, of Brookton. Ind.. are i:-itinv Mr. ami Mrs. L. I.. Men-ti-rihall. of th.e Higlns tbits. Invitations l,.ie U-n isi:d to the men of St. Paul's t'hureh To.- a dinner at the p-i-ish house. Thursday evening. Nov. 7. ?.!r. .lanes i: Mcurely has returned from IliMsboro. ., where h was marritd cri Thursday of this week to Mi's Walker. The Ladles' Aid Society of the Seventh Christian ciiiin li was entertained by M:.s. J. K. Murphy and Mrs. '. it. Sw.ft on Wednesday n I ternoon. Mr. Harry tiers and ('laud - Llebhardt. of Wcshin-tou. Ii.., graJuat's of tr.o State

Universltv. are in the rity to attend the I. U.-Illipois football game. Miss Elizabeth KMcham. who ha been sp-ndinir the summer at Maxir.kuckee, is visiting frknds in Chicago and will return home the middle of the month. Mrs. John Kolmer. formerly Miss May Aufderhe-hie, wa- the guest of honor at a luncheon yesterd y given by Mr. Minnie Aufderheid. The decorations throughout were Japanese. Mrs. Alh'-rt K. Metzger has returned from San Di Cal.. accompanied by her sister. Mrs. Kdmuiid Mayer, formerly Mi-s Olga Mueller, who will remain here until after the holidays.

The Kappa Kappa Gamma Alumnae 'lub will meet with Mrs. R. I- Kautz. 1125 North Alabama street, at '2::i o'clock this afternoon. A paper on "Tapestries." by Miss Y rkes. will be read by Miss Grace Van Buskirk. (jueen K-thcr Auxiliary was entertained ' Mrs. Louise French. North Capitol ivenue. yesterday afternoon. Mrs. French was assisted bv Mrs. Nettie Cleaveland, Mrs. Klizabeth Z. Brown and Mrs. Kath arine Kell,gg. Mrs. J. II. Parkhurst and Mrs. De Brurr. pi!2 Central avenue, will receive in formally this afternoon from 3 to o'clock for Mrs. G. O. Roily, of incennes, who will b.- the guest of Mrs. De Rruler for a week. No invitations have been issued. The marriage of Miss Ella It. Yule and Harry Stead Bastian was celebrated Thurs day evening at the home of the bride's parents, Mr. ami Mrs. Jams ule. Iu7 Highland avenue. Rev. I-rank C. Hood officiated. Only relatives and a few friends were present. The parlor talk arranged for nxt Mon day at the home of Mrs. Henry Kit 1 has been postnoned. Mrs. rairbanks having been unexpectedly summoned to Washing ton on account of business connected with the national society of the Daughters of the American Revolution, of which she is president general. The t.-venty-fourth birthday anniversary of Mrs. A. J. Fish was pleasantly cele brated last evening at the homo of her son, J. L. Fish. 17o6 Central avenue. Guests from out of the city were Dr. V. N. Heath and family and Mrs. C. Y. McGuire and family of Anderson, Mrs. A. C. Garrisus and YV. S. Grishaw and family of Kokomo. The home of Mr. and Mrs. Franklin L. Spahr on Broadway was the scene of a pretty wedding Thursday evening, when their daughter. Miss Kva May Spahr, was united in marriage to Mr. t rederick Filmore Fox. The ceremony was performed by the Rev. C. K. Bacon. The bride, who was attended by her sister. Miss Blanche Spahr, wore a gown of white crepo de chine, trimmed with lace and applique, and carried white chrysanthemums. Miss Spahr wore white embroidered silk mull, trimmed with lace and yellow ribbons, and carri d yellow chrysanthemums. The bridegroom was attended oy Mr. Gwynn Patterson. The house was decorated In white, pink and yellow chrysanthemums. Mr. and Mrs. Spahr were assisted in entertaining by Mr. and Mrs. C. K. Bates and Mr. and Mrs. Henry L. Spiegel. Guests from out of town were Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Marvin, of Frankfort, and Mr. and Mrs. George Spahr, of Lebanon. Mr. and Mrs. Fox will be at home at 522 North Pennsylvania street after Dec. 1. VI IITKSID K-1 1 KATON. Special to the Indi unpolis Journal. JKFFKRSONVILLK. Ind.. Nov. 1. The home of Mr. and Mrs. 11. K. Heaton was last night the scene of a very pretty wedding, the principals being their eldest daughter. Miss Janet Fitch Heaton, and William Whiteeide. The Rev. J. S. Howk officiated. The j'pung couple left soon after the ceremony for a trip through Colorado. Greennood. Mrs. Mary Sebern, of Anderson, is visit ing friends here. Miss Edna Roberts, of Indianapolis, is spending some time here. Mrs. W. H. Maxwell has returned home, after a long visit with friends in Ohio. Mrs. Barber and her two sons, of Madison, will spend iart of the winter here. Mrs. Josephine Fudge has returned home, after a four weeks' visit in Louisville, Ky. Miss Jessie Bass, of the Deaconess Hospital, visited her parents here the first of the week. James Shortridge and his daughter, of St. Paul, Ind., visited Dr. Wishard and his family the first of the week. Prof. Harry Longdown, of Greencastle, was the guest of his wife's mother, Mrs. Julia Johnson, the first of the week. Miss Olive Creasey left on - Tuesday for Franklin, where she will spend some time with her sister, Mrs. S. V. Van Nuys. The Rev. Mr. Y'ouckem and his famiiy have arrived here. Mr. Youckem will have charge of the Christian Church for the coming year. TRAINING OF TEACHERS SKVILNT Y INSTRUCTORS IIAVU II KM-:. FITED I1Y THE GREGG IIEUl EST. Report of Trnntee .llerrltt Made to the School Hoard Super in ten dent KendaU'a Ileport. One of the items of business that occupied the attention of the School Board for a considerable length of time last night was a report from George Merritt, truFtee of the Gregg fund. This report shows that the last of the land which represented a part of the Gregg bequest has been sold. This land was in Dallas county, Iowa. The present condition of the fund is as follows: Cash In the hands of Treasurer Koehne on July 1, $105.64; cash deposited with the Union Trust Company, $7,(; note of special fund for money loaned that fund. ?2--0; note of S. L. Fouts, X3.ln); total cash and notes, J34.105.64. The Gregg fund was a bequest to the city for the benefit of the public schools, made by Thomas D. Gregg, an old school teacher, who died Dec. 17, 1S76. The fund is being used to give teachers special training by sending them away to other cities. About seventy teachers have benefited by this fund by being sent away. A report submitted by Superintendent Kendall shows that the enrollment in the city schools is 24.410. in Iimj the enrollment was 23.S-1. The number of pupils enrolled in the Manual Training High School is 1,121. The superintendent made a report on the condition of school buildings, with recommendations. He pointed out that additional accommodations are needed at school No. 21, at Woodside, and at school No. 33, north of Woodruff Place. He recommended that a four-room building be constructed for children of the first four grades in the region known as Jackson Park. The superintendent thought that additional accommodations must in the near future be provided in the territory of schools Nos. 20. 27, 32. ;; ami 45. In the northwestern part of the city, west of Meridian street and north of Washington street, additional accommodations are also needed. The superintendent reported that a six-room addition to school No. 52 is desirable. At school No. 4. near ' Military Park, is a congested condition of affairs which the superintendent says demands relief in the uear future, and he recommended that a third-floor room be fitted up at once. It w.'.s also recommended that an additional room be erected at school No. 5, Mount Jackson. The superintendent thinks it is only a quetioa of the near future when a new school building will be necessary somewhere- near that part of West Washington street where a considerable amount of house building is going on. In West lndianapclis. the superin tendent pointed out. something will h-.t. to be done in the near future to relieve the crowded condition of the school.--. The Manual Training Hi;h School, the superintendent savs. is crowded to its utino.it capacity, and he does not see at present how the school can k I on during the latter half of the ore-sent school year without additional accommodations. The hoard deride-d to make the improvements to school No. 21 at otu and instruc ted the business director to proe-eed with th work. The superintendent riorted that Charles Denby, former minister to China, hid presented the school with the fo ir-volume report of the Philippine Commission's work. ;to!tlc Urteiiuen. The revenue of th- Indianapolis postoflU-e for the month of October amounted to $(".- 51. UY an increase ov. r the corresponding month of last year of JI, 14.1 13.

TARLTON A LIEUTENANT

apimhn ti:d a secomi lii;iti:ant I Tili: HKGILAH ARMY. He linn n Long Record In the Militia und Volunteer Service to Ills Credit Other Announcements. Charles S. Tarlton. of this city, was yesterday appointed second lieutenant in the United States infantry. Lieut. Tarlton !ecently returned from service in the Philippin s, where he served in the volunteer army as a captain. While in the Philippines Lieut. Tarlton participated in a score of engagements with much credit to his company and himself. As the subsequent paragraph will show. Lieutenant Tarlton has spent most of his life in the military service with the militia and as a volunteer during the SpanishAmerican war. When he was mustered out Brig. (Jen. James R. Campbell, Brig. Gen. Schwan, Col. Cornelius Gardner, Lieut. Col. S. I). Sturgis and Capt. Charles Newberry at once recommended him for appointment to the regular service. Lieutenant Tarlton has been in the State and Knitcd States military service for about twentv-three years. He became an officer In the Indiana militia in 177 and entered the government service as a volunteer in 1h'8, retiring, when mustered out. ir. March of this year. A brief record of his service follows: First lieutenant Centennial Cadets. June 13. 1877. to June. 1S7h; first lieutenant Tecumseh Rifles, Feb. 2S, ISM: captain Tecumseh Rifles, Feb. 2. 18S3, to June, 1SS1; captain Indianapolis Rifles. Nov. 1. 1SS.1; captain Company E. Second Infantry. I. N. G.. March 2. 18S9, resigning in November, Ml; military instructor Knightstown Soldiers' and Sailors' Orphans' Home, June, lvs9, to November, lS'Jl; aid-de-camp on Governor Hovey's staff, June. IS!), to I SOI; major, aid-de-camp, Governor Chase's staff. Oct. 12. 1S01. to January, 1S!'.'; captain Company H. Second Infantry, I. N. G.. June 5. IS.. to May 12, lsDs; captain Company H, One-hundred-and-flfty-eighth Indiana Volunteer Infantry. May 1. lv:S, to Nov. 4. 189S; first lieutenant Thirtieth Infantry, U. S. V., July 5, LMO, to March S, 19ol. Lieutenant Tarlton was born In this city and is about forty years of age. He is now in Arkansas on a hunting expedition with Gen. W. J. McKee. ARMY AM) XAVY APPOINTMENTS. Rntch of Promotions Henry Glnsa Made a Hear Admfrnl. WASHINGTON. Nov. 1. The President to-day made the following appointments: War. Charles R. Humphrey, assistant quartermaster general, rank of colonel; George E. Pond, deputy quartermaster general, rank of lieutenant, colonel; Isaac W. Littell, quartermaster, rank of major; Gonzale S. Bingham, quartermaster, rank of major. Valery Havard, deputy surgeon general, rank of lieutenant colonel; Ogden Rafferty, surgeon, rank of major. James A. Shipton, captain, artillery corps; second lieutenants, artillerj' corps. Fielding L. Poindexter, James H. Johnston and Charles L. Fisher. Assistant surgeons, rank of first lieutenantJames Mathew Thalen, William Russfii Eastman, Charles Alexander Ragan, Edwin Willis Rich, George William Jean, James Frank Hall, Raymond Franklin Metcalfe, perry Lee Boyer. Second lieutenants cavalry Robert F. Tate, Jens S. Tedjt. Edward O. Perkins, Robert M. Nolan. William R. Renziehausen. Oscar A. McGee, John A. Wagner, Albert E. Phillips, Robert W. Reynolds. Second lieutenants, infantry Fred L. Dividson, Robert S. Knox, Charles S. Tarlton. Alfred J. Booth, Charles H. Morrow, William H. Plummer, Stephen O. Fuqua, Morris M. Keck. Herbert L. Evans, Clyde R. Parker, Samuel C. Orchard, John B. Shuman. Allan L. Briggs, Robert O. Patterson. Hunter Harris. James A. Higgins, Henry M. Fales, Gideon H. Williams, Theo dore L. Reyser. Henry Wessell, provisional second Ueutent, Philippine scouts. -Navy.Henry Glass, rear admiral; John L. Hob combe, lieutenant commander; lieutenants. Lewis m. Nulton, Chester Wells, Stephen . Graham. HIGH SCHOOL SENATE. Report Fa-rorhiK Trunt mil Adopted Noten of Schools. The fight which both sidefs are putting up on the trust bill caused the gallery to be filled at the meeting yesterday afternoon, when the High School senators again wrestled with that question. After the committee reported on the bill the body ac cepted the minority report, which favored the passage of the bill. Senator Lodge (Edwin Friend) opened the discussion, making a strong speech in favor of the bill. He was answered by Senator Fairbanks (John White), who spoke in favor of trusts. Senator Proctor (Herbert Wagner) then declared that mo nopolies were harmful to the laboring class, and gave a striking example of thirty-eight traveling salesmen losing their positions through the trust. The gentleman from Massachusetts again defended his bill, and Senator White (Frank Williams) declared trusts were not a detriment to any coun try. The debates were exceedingly spirited and applause was rrequent. When time to adjourn came the question was not ready for a vote, so the arguments will be continued next week. Charles Pettijohn. an old member of the Senate, who is now attending the Indiana University, was seen in the rear of the room and called upon for a speech. Mr. Pettijohn made a few remarks, in which he called attention to the Indiana-Illinois football game to-day, and the body adjourned. The following new members were admitted to the senate at the session last night: Irene Thurmaa, Mary Randall, Mabel Charpie and Ratie Francis. Shortridse High School. Webb Adams has returned from a trip to the Pan-American. xxx Miss Amy Moore, of the Cincinnati College of Music, was a visitor at school this week. xxx The first bowling games will be played on the Pastime alleys a week from to-night, when the Shortridge League will open. xxx Miss Margaret Cook entertained Room P with a piano solo Wednesday morning and Ethel Nickerson and Edna English gave a duet. xxx The senior club of girls met yesterday afternoon with Klizabeth Caldwell. Bessie Trout has been chosen president, which is the only officer the club will have. XXX The Delta Phi Senior Club met at the home of Harlan Bosler last night. On next Tuesday evening the Blacksmiths, the S. H. S. tennis club and the senior club wili give- a dance at the home of Albert Buchanan. xxx Halloween was celebrated in various ways by the social organizations of the school. The Blacksmiths gave a progressive luncheon, the G. G. C.'s took a hay ride, and the Sans Soucei Club went haylidlng. during which a progressive supper was served. xxx The High School Cadets held their regular drill last night, and the guns were given out. After a short exercise in the manual of arms the boys were measured for uniforms. It is the Intention of Captain McNellv to prepare the company for the dedication of the monument. Manual Trulnlnig High School. The Puritans, a June. '02 "fiat.." will meet this afternoon with Minnie Stewart. xxx A si b ntiMe club has been organized, with Lin Smith president und Mamie White secretary. XXX The Forum Debating Society met Monday and discussed the question: "Should phyieal training be compulsory in educational institution".'" Frei Dappers spoke on the aftlrmativv side and Charles Jennings on the negative. The judges decided in favor

of the former. Fifteen new members were

admitted. The lorum will meet again next Monday. XXX The June class of 1003 has completed its constitution and will choose officers early next week. XXX Miss Elizabeth Everitt will entertain the Jap fraternity, known as the Hana Batake, this afternoon. XXX The Ilykyas met Wednesday with Albert Bernd. The next meeting will be at the home of John Kittle. xxx Fred Hohn, at one time captain of the football team and a popular athlete, who Is attending Purdue, visited the school Wednesday. xxx Glenn Diddel entertained his Arabian brothers of the Shiekhs of Adjman recently. when Harry Ogborn and Robert Sweeney were admitted to the brotherhood. xxx The M. T. H. S. Literary Club held a well attended and enthusiastic meeting Monday. This week's debate was on the question: "Resolved. That fraternities should be abolished in the M. T. IL S. Hulda Hansen spoke for the afflmative and Oscar Kettenbach befriended the "frats." The judges decided in favor of the afflma tive side. Eva i lasse rendered a piano soio and Mamie Kientschky gave a recitation. HIGH PRICES WERE PAID LAMIA AND THE HERO PRINCIPAL. OFFERINGS AT HORSE SALE. The Former IlronKlit Jl,075 and The Hero Sohl for ifSlO Two Great Stallions to Re Sold To-Day. M. L. Hare stood in the auctioneer's stand at the Union stockyards yesterday during the sale of the well-known horses from his Grasslands farm, and told the people that they were buying gold dollars for 23 cents when they purchased good horses for considerable less than he had paid for them or what he thought they were worth. The Hero, 2:KU. sold for JS10, and the brood mare Lamia, dam of Hamward, 2:12Vs. and Warham. 2:22;. sold for 11,075, the top price of the day. Other animals sold as follows: Emeritus, sorrel gelding, by Graystone, to Dr. Hoover, city, $113; Why Not, gray mare, by Hambrino, sold to Mat Bowen, of Delphi, Ind., $325; Lamia, by Onward, sold to A. A. Branch, Portsmouth, O., for J1.075; Waddel, bay mare, by Pretender, sold to John Ader, Danville, Ind., for $100; Phema, gray mare, by Hambrino, sold to Jesse Fletcher, city, for $730; Zephira, brown mare, by Hambrino, sold to Sterling R. Holt, city, for $300; Zuriel, bay mare, by Graystone, sold to Sterling R. Holt, for $210; Argosa, chestnut mare, by Hambrino, sold to D. B. Whipple, Bowling Green, O., for $50; Jennie O., bay mare, by Jersey Wilkes, sold to Nat Bowen, Delphi, Ind., $25); Baroness, gray mare, by Hambrino, sold to Sterling R. Holt for $210; Gamelia, bay mare by Graystone, sold to A. A. Branch, of Portsmouth, O., for $305; Stargosa, brown fill', by Graystone, sold to William Dagler, Rushville, for $115; Flying Gyp, sold to Herman Goetz, Martinsville, $120; Suffolk, brown colt, by Graystone, sold to Dr. Hershey, Carmel, Ind., $100; Graydelma, bay filly, by Graydon, sold to P. Shirley, Danville, for $140; Caspar, bay colt, by Graystone, to C. W. Ellis, city, for $115; Prosy, brown filly, by Graystone, to W. E. Thomas, Arcadia, Ind., $1; Royal Priestess, bay filly, by Graystone. to Frank Hard. New York city, for $105; The Ghost, gray colt, by Gravstone, to Frank Hard. New York city, $S0; Eulogista, bay filly, by Princeton, to XV. G. Robinson, city. $100; Frolic, bay colt, by Graystone, C. F. Cllne. city, $); Princess Azalia, bay filly, by Princeton, to D. B. Crist, Lima, O., $110: Prefix, bay colt, by Graystone, to A. A. Branch. Portsmouth, O., $130; Miss Kadmos, bay filly, by Graystone, to S. Hutchinson, Greenfield. Ind.. $1S0: Amorita. bay mare, by Hambrino, Lew Green. Indlanaola.. 111.. $4): Lyric, bay mare, by Onward, D. B. Crist, Lima. O.. $120; Prince Chester, gray colt, by Princeton, Jese Fletcher, city, $10; Zephlrona, brown filly, by Gravstone, William Dugler. Rushville, Ind.. $105; Yetive, brown filly, by Graystone, C F. (Mine, city, $S5; Zeuron. bay colt, by Graydon. W. C. Haueisen, city, $85; Jersey Belle, bay filly, by Grayson. Frank Hard. New Y'ork city, $05: Argorette, chestnut filly, by Graystone, $135, same buyer; Baressa, gray Ally, by Graystone. S. Hutchinson. Greenfield. Ind.. $110; Gamelton. bay colt, by Princeton. F. B. Tope, Pittsburg, $105: Amorton. black colt, by Graystone. C. XV. Sheets, city. $165; Esmerelle. porrel filly, by Graystone, $100. .to C. F. Cline, citv. There remain about forty-five head to be sold, including the great stallions Graystone and Graydon, together with several of the best brood mares and fifteen head of youngsters. The sale will be resumed at 10 o'clock to-day and will be continued until all are sold. Jesse Fletcher has five horses entered for sale, and one of them, Belon. was sold yesterday for $350 to R. E. Tarker, of Pittsburg. INJUNCTION IS GRANTED. Restraining Order Issued Against City of LoKnnsport. Judge Raker, of the United States Court, yesterday issued an injunction against the city of Logansport and its municipal officers to prevent the defendants from interfering with the business of the Logansport Street-railway Company. The plaintiff claims that It has a right to the streets of the city and that the city officers are interfering with Its affairs. The case will come up on Nov. 16. Pnllninn Company Sued. The transcript in the case of Landis C. Renn against the Pullman Company has been filed in the United States Court. The plaintiff shows that his wife was not allowed a berth in a sleeping car on the Iake Shore & Michigan Southern Railway on June 7, 1W0, although holding a ticket, which he purchased in Chicago, and which entitled her to passage from Chicago to the city of Elkhart. Ind. She was sick and fe?blc at the time, he avers, although convalescent. She was not able to sit up, but was compelled to during the ride to Elkhart. Her death occurred on June 9. Her husband now sues the company for $4,5o0 damages. HIST Mortgage Foreclosed. By agreement a mortgage was yesterday foreclosed in the United States Court against the Lake Cities Electric Railway Company of Michigan City. The suit to foreclose the mortgage was brought bv the Metropolitan Trust Company of New York. The sum of J91.3SS.50 is involved. Strike Condition Unchanged. The conditions of the strike at the National malleable casting works was unchanged yesterday and everything about the plant was quiet. The strikers held a meetin. but no new features were developed. The white men say thev will stand firm until the negroes are discharged. JURAT HAl.STEAD'S LIFE AND DISTINGUISHED SERVICES OF WILLIAM M'KINLEY" Is the Rest Life of lr. McKinley Ever Written. The Journal has purchased several thousand of these books for the benefit of Its subscribers. We bought them at a.n exceedingly low price and can resell them to our subscribers at less than wholesale nrlces. We are not making a single cent profit on the sale of the books. You can ecure a book by b-coming a subscriber if you are not already one. We cannot attempt t furnish people who are not subscribers, and will not furnish more than a single copy to one person. Complete details will be found In our three-column display advertisement elsewhere In to-dav's pr.per. Read it carefully. If you want the book, prompt action will be necessary, ai the supply is limited.

NEW APARTMENT HOUSE

LARGE INVESTMENTS BEING 31 A DE II Y FRED H. TITTLE AND WIFE. A New Structnre That Will CoM ?4.ino Faith in Indianapolis Real Estate Values. The new apartment building about to be erected by Fred E. Tuttle and his wife on Alabama, New Jersey and the north side of Eleventh street is to be on a plan entirely different from any apartment building pre viously erected in Indianapolis. Mr. and Mrs. Tuttle have just bought the piece of ground of about the same size lying on the south side of Eleventh street and will build on it early next spring an apartment building to harmonize with the one which they are to construct at once. The contract for the first building has been let to Fred C. Smock and calls fcr an expenditure of $12,150. The building will be solid and at the same time will, in fact, be made up of twenty-seven separate and distinct houses. Each house will be equipped with electric lights, thoroughly modern baths, steam heat, a laundry in the basement and a private cellar. Electric lighting and steam heating plants will be installed in the building for the accommodation of the tenants oi the twenty-seven houses. The structure is to be of substantial brick construction, with handsome stone trimmings, and it, together with the companion apartment building, will be highly ornamental to the part of the city in which thev will be located. The deals by which both tracts of ground were acquired bv the Tuttles were negotiated by W. E. Stevenson. Mr. Stevenson tells an interesting story of the way in which Mr. Tuttle happened to be drawn to Indianapolis as a place for investment of capital. "Three years ago," said Mr. Stevenson, "Fred E. Tuttle resided in San Francisco, and while on his way to New York was taken sick between Torre Haute and Indianapolis and stopped off in this city to remain until he became better. During bis convalescence he walked about the city and at times procured a bicycle and made extended tours over the residence districts. "One day he came to see me. and after introducing himself said that he believed he would invest some money in this city. 'Do you live here?' I asked. " 'No,' he replied. " 'Then why do you wish to invest money here?' I inquired for the purpose of satisfying my curiosity. " 'Because,' he returned promptly, 'your real-estate values here are good. I would rather have money invested in Indianapolis at 5 per cent, than in any of the Western States at 7 per cent., because your values here are first-class and I would be certain to get my money back. "Before he left the city that time he invested between $40,X and $5o,0 in real estate, and since then he has increased his holdings until they now amount to about $75.0no. "That is what I like to see." continued Mr. Stevenson; "plenty of fresh capital coming into the city. It demonstrates the high position Indianapolis occupies in the estimation of the outside world." Speaking of real estate in general. Mr. Stevenson said: "Ihe real-estate market of Indianapolis is in admirable condition. There are no fictitious values. Everything is on a substantial basis. You do not find improved property thrown on the market to satisfy mortgage. And the market Is not spasmodic. During the past summer the sales have not been of a startling character at any time, but the trading has been steady and continuous. That is as it should be. It shows the city is growing along right lines. I am a firm believer in Inducing all the outside capital possible to invest here. There is nothing better for the city." TARIFF MODIFICATION. Modern Ilnslnesn Development and the Protective Principle. Elkhart (Ind.) Review. When Henry Clay was advocating the "American system," or the protective tariff for the development of manufactures, Daniel Webster opposed the measure on the ground that this was an agricultural nation and the development of manufacturing was not a desirable motive or end. When, however, the protective principle had been adopted, and Daniel Webster recognized the fact that a gradual change from agriculture to manufacture was surely coming, especially in the New England St?.tes, he modified . his opposition and became a elefender of, if not a believer in, the protective po'icy. He gave as his reason the fact that changed conditions required a charge. From that time until nearly the present there has been a necessity for the encouragement of manufacturing industries and commerce in this country, and a tariff which was larger than the necessities of revenue was a necessity for the stimulus of these lines of commercial life and became a policy of government, selfish, perhaps, but yet at the same time necessary and desirable. But the development of industries has been so rapid and so marked, especially within tie last four years, and the accumulation of capital has been so vast that any outside stimulus offered by the government beyond the point where the increased wag:-s of American labor enters into production is not only unnecessary, but has become especially unwise. The Republican party, as the advocate of the protective principle, should learn the lesson which the evolution of industry and of commerce is teaching the world at large, and should recognize the demand, not only of the people, but the demand of the times and the conditions, and of the laws of trade, for such modification of the protective element in the tariff legislation as will place this country in the fore in all lines of industry and commerce. The demand for the modification of the application of the protective principle is not partisan nor entirely ef policy, but is a demand of the changed necessities and altered conditions of the diversified Industries of the United States. We are no longer an agricultural nation with a necessity for stimulating manufactures, but we have become largely a manufacturing nation with the necessity of stimulating commerce with the world at large and of restimulatlng the decaying agriculture of the country. The principle on which the Nation should base its action in tariff reform is the re tention of protection against foreign cheap labor, but putting the American purchaser in the markets in the world on equal foot ing In the purchase of raw material, re moval of all stimulus to manufacturing in terests where vast capital is invested, but the retention of suc h tariff as shall plice American skill on a higher footing than foreign Ignorance. The time has come when American industries should stand upon their own feet, with only a safeguard cgainst th? igonrance and lack of skill of foreign labor and the cheaper rate of living to which foreign labor Is accustomed. There Is almost acute danger that we shall overdo manufacturing unless we stim ulate commerce and agriculture. The prin clple of modification of the tariff should h on Mnes looking to the establishment of foreign commerce and a revival of the earlier tendencies cf this country to be come a partner with nature and the soil in the production of food elements and other natural elements which enter into the necessities of mankind and into the vastly expanding range of comforts and even of luxuries which wealth is developing. The Republican pj,rty cannot afford to overlook the necessities in the present rordition. and in some way which shall be devoid of partisan bias so modify the tariff laws of this country as to fit them to the present time and to r-nder them so elastic that they may be self-contracting and selfexpanding to meet r.ew conditions. Sales of Real Estate. Seth Burnett has sold his property on Hillside avenue, r.ear Ingram street, to Jacob Straffa for $4,oii. Mary A. Gilmore has sold to David A. Leach a residence property on Bellefontaine street, near Twenty-eighth, for SC.100. Lyman M. Graham has purchased of A. M. e)srle two lots on Washington street, near Richland avenie. for $4.75w. Anna K. Clayton has sold to Henry F. Shoemaker two lots on East street, near New York street, for II.OuO. Smoke (irn. Worth High grade 5c cigar. C. W. KRIEL. distributer.

TWO VALUES.

HERE arc two values to every purchase

what it costs and what it pays you. Cork costs 8 cents a pound, but if you are drowning half a mile from shore, its value would

be " not what you pay for cork, but what cork saves you' When a woman buys soaps she often confuses the two values. She sees only what she pays. She overlooks what she receives. Now a single cake of Ivory Soap pays back from ten to twenty times its cost in the saving it effects. Test it yourself! Vegetable Oil Soap. Ivory white. It floats!

EUROPE PANIC STRICKEN nFI-ECT OF AMERICAN PROGRESS OX THE OLD-WORLD XATIO.S. They Do Xot Like the Great Repnblle, and Its Growing; Importance They Regard at a Real Peril. Sydney Brooks, in Atlantic Monthly. The great European ejuestion of the present moment is certainly America. The United States is occupying the second thoughts of English and continental states men more continuously to-day than ever before. America is reaching out, with an intensely irritating consciousness of success, for the commercial supremacy of the world, and her voice is raised among those of the decisive nations of the earth in the settlement of international questions. All this is disquieting and perplexing enough to Europe, which is woefully misinformed upon America and all things American. Just when the excessive production of cereals and meat in America, Argentina, India and even Australia, but chiefly in America, has half strangled the agriculturists of middle Europe, the remaining workers employed in manufactures find themselves ominously threatened by the competition of American artisans. The decline of European agriculture has been the familiar nighmare of the past generation, but the intrusion of the American manufacturer has a doubly sinister significance. It blocks up the one road of escape open to Europe, and chokes the source on which she is relying to make good her natural deficiencies. COMPETITION CRUSHING. With the stress of foreign competition In the bare necessities of life growing keener and yet keener, the production of food under European conditions, it is feared, must become in the end unprofitable. The landlords will be ruined, and the peasantry forced back into that primitive stage of civilization in which men eat only what they grow, clothe themselves In their own wool and tlax, and. having no margin to fall back upon, are incapable of commerce. The danger has been foreseen and prepared for in the way England met it fifty years ago. in the way M. Witte is hoping to meet it to-day in Russia by a vast extension of manufactures, by calling on the towns to redress the adverse balance of the country. In England trade has gained what agriculture has lost. What Europe is now painfully realizing is that if American manufactures are to undersell the manufacturer as completely as American prodducts have undersold the farmer, the hope of restoring national prosperity by bringing a fresh and buoyant industrialism to the aid of a decaying agriculture must be given up. To Count Goluchowski belongs the honor of being the first responsible statesman in Europe to sound a note of warning. Speaking to the parliamentary delegations in November. JK7, the Austro-Hungarian foreign minister declared the "very existence" of the European peoples would be staked upon their power to defend themselves, 'fighting shoulder to shoulder," against "transoceanic competition." That speech may be looked upon as the beginning of the anti-American movement on the continent. Hardly a chamber of commerce meets anywhere in Germany, Austria or Hungary without some eliscussion taking place on American competition. Though Count Goluchowski gave the movement its first Impulse, it Is not the statesmen, but the people themselves, and especially the industrial and commercial elements, that have maintained and expanded it. in the shape of a "Ban-European combine" against American aggressiveness it had from the start an obvious attractiveness for the populace. Nothing came of it; nothing ever can come of it so long as the political map of Europe remains as it is. To talk of I'an-Europe is easy enough, but to apply the suggestion In practice, to reconcile the divergent interests, and. abov all, to get England to join the coalition, is quite another matter. So long as England has to rely upon America for two-thirds of her food supply, self-interest of the most flagrant and peremptory kind forbids her the futile luxury of taking pnrt in the Weltboyeott of American products. PAN-EUROPE POWERLESS. Offensively, I'an-Europe dare do nothing. It might forbid the importation of American food, but at what a cost! At the cost, inevitably of raising the price of bread to the point cf revolution. It might also close the continent against American manufactures; but the bulk of Europe is agri cultural, and would gain nothing thereby. Or. finally, it mlßht do both fence the continent around with a tight wall, place an Impossible duty on American products as well as American goods, and to restrict nil trade to contlental Europeans. In a' desperate effort to find out whether nations cannot live by taking in one another's wi.-'hlng. All these sc hemes were broached, and to them, of course, was added the pet

f. rSV...s&. 11

continental specific of handsome, unverssl bounties. All died the death, and Fan-Eu-ropcanism to-day is but a rhetorical catchword. Anti-Americanism failing, a united Europe fell back on the triple alliance, and the chances of converting it into a sort of Trade Defense League, only to find itself once more confronted by Insuperable politics. Neither Austria nor Hungary can afford the political price which a customs alliance with Germany would entail. In both countries there are millions of German-speaking subjects nearly ten million in Austria and over two in Hungary all of them more rr less Infect ed by the X'ropaganda of Pan-Germanism. Such a union would put the seal on the political and commercial predominance of Germany In central Europe. This was the second tage of the antiAmerican movement. The third Is still in progress and developing along sound, business-like lines. Joint action is postponed; individual action is now the formula. The Austrian manufacturer began It by adopting a resolution declaring "the necessity of

placing the commercial relations of the dual monarchy and the United States on a basis of reciprocity and equality simultaneously with the renewal of the commercial treaties In 19"3." Hitherto Germany and the dual monarchy have Included In their commerlclal treaties a general and unconditional most-favored-nation clause. This is now to be abandoned aral the American example followed instead. RECIPROCITY THE REMEDY. This policy enables the states to act In concert, and yet preserves to each, in great part. Its llbertj' of action. It puts a decided and peculiar pressure upon the United States. Americans, as a rule, so compla-' cently content with the prodigious disparity between their exports and their Imports as to forget that this very' disparity exposes them to easy retaliation. Whatever she may become, Europe Is not yet un economic dependency of the United stMe rd so long as American breadstuff andprof slons are not the necessity to her that they are. for instance, to England, she can always strike back with effect. Russia, on a small scale, by her prompt acceptance of Mr. Gage's challenge, has thrown a useful light on the prccariousness of being an enormous seller and a small buyer. In German hands the le.-son could, and, it semn, will, be brought home yet more unmistakably; for Germany's exports to the United States are worth only about half as much as American exports to Germany J37.374.703 to J1S4.WS.OS4. It is, of course, an open question whether Europe has not half brought the American Invasion upon herself. To put it in another way, would not the Americans have made more of Europe than the Europeans hav done? The strength that the nations of Europe waste in arming themselves against one another 'Americans have turned to "fruitful strifes and rivalries of peace." As the stress of American competition grows fiercer, may It not prove for Europe a rouKh-and-ready alternative between facing commercial ruin and abandoning militarism? Meanwhile, the United States has no friend In Europe. There is at the bottom of It all a despairing envy of her profrerlty and success. In the eyes of the continent, the Unltad States is a monster of hypocrisy, only l2ss unctuous than Great Britain herself. EUROPE HATES AMERICA. Rightly or wrongly, Europe believes that the action of Washington throughout the muddle In the far East points to an American determination to preserve China to the Chinese, or at least to resist, with force, if necessary, any scheme of partition that threatens to put American traders at a disadvantage. Either way, her policy cuts directly across the path of European ambitions. What Europe seeks in China is not only fresh markets, but exclusive markets. Europe has learned to her cost that It it usually England and America, who manage to slip in first through the "open door." And if this Is true of China, with howr much greater force does it hold good for South America! It is the only part of the world's surface that has escaped the modern rage for colonisation. It is the last and most tempting field for the reception of overcrowded Europe. And this magnificent domain Is at present divided among a congerlen of pseudo republic, the btst of them unstable, the prey of military adventurers, as turbulent in spirit as they are crooked in finance. What a prise to dangle before & world whose ceaseless endeavor It is to lower the social pressure by emigration and secure for her workers easy access to exclusive markets! The Ualted States will neither take South America for herself nor let any one else take it. She does not colonize the country with her own people; she has no trade with it worth mentioning; she admits no responsibility for the outrages, disorders and financial freakishnesi of her proteges. But she Insists that South America is within her sphere of Influence; that such European holdings as exist there shall be neither extended nor transferred, and that, in the event of trouble between a Eurcpean government and one of the half-breed republics under her patronage, satisfaction must be sought, if at all. In a mere financial indemnity never In the seizure ond retention of South American territory. Do Americans seriously believe that Europe -will He passive forever under such an edict? Any ore who has looked into th bloody and tangled history of South America and kept an eye on th steady stream of European Immigration Into Brazil and Argentina can imagine at least a score of Incidents, any one of which would bring the Monroe doctrine to a decisive test. J. W. Nelson, aged stxty-nlne. a wealtby resident and landowner of West Guthrie, O. T., committed suicide yesterday by shooting. Continued worry over imaginary enemies caused the act.

'mA When Considering

The Piano Question We advle you tomnkeone resolution a j the outset; that Is, don't buy a cheap one. If you thoultl pay twenty-five ilolUo fxt much, you vroulrt be only twenty-five dollars out: hut If you should pay twentv-five d l!ar too little, yo'i would lx' e.ut practically the wind- value ..f tin ia-

Indiana's La first Muiic Hoas:. V.

Nos. 128 and 130 N. Pennsylvania St.