Indianapolis News, Indianapolis, Marion County, 15 May 1871 — Page 2
il
THE EYENING NEWS.
IOBM EL BOLUDAY,
MONDAY, MAY 15, 187L
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ttiMjmUUmami Oratei
tUMmaumomu. Mrailbwanrra4 kf wntenla tmnms Ua tUf M Ms MBte fra vmL. <Wl—rtVrai —rra* hgr mil, «m t*py mm ■Mrth a M im rarr teffifcmrawtfca i » ’Am ra»y ter — yrar. cw ittnrHmmmiti tmttrUd m *Mlortai*wM* AO Mite4a*mini |—niii AM MO* wUhrapdra alraHlam na4n«4 naatAly. All —uaaalrartora, vkadur oa Mndamar A m to ■AdramA to tto PraprteMr.
Til ARuax reiarn* show that the colored popaUUom of thte coantry n am ben 4,857,000 Tm Terre Haute Expren aaoouocex that Speaker Mack it foing to Earope. He ought to go somewhere to learn parliamentary law. As exchange says Gambetta is a better man than most people fire him credit for. That's what we're always thought, and we still maintain that although not much at fighting be It a matter hand on proclamation!! Til Oommnne is lerying on all the property it can get hold of, and avenging itself on Farre and other opponents by bnrning their houm. The furniture has been token ont of the palacee and is to be sold. ^The Bank of Kcmace anticipating a raid has armed its derks and victualled its building, for resistance. ■' 'S'-':
Tsi Free Masons of Paris must be under the control of a nice party of men. Not satisfied with their wretched fiasco the other day. they heid a meeting yesterday and resolved that the property of persona now absent Irom Paris, and not returning within eight days, should be confiscated for the benefit of widows aud orphans. A rum os prevails*^ New York that Commodore Vanderbilt is negotiating with Fisk aid Gould for the possession of the Erie Hoad We don’t see what the Commodore wants with the Erie. He certainly can not water its stock for Fisk and Gould bare doue that about as extensively as it could be done. One thing is certain, however, that if Vanderbilt gels the road there will be more cutting of rates.
Tax Society of the Fifth Army Corps, which has just been bolding its annual meeting at Boston, adopted a singular resolution requesting the President to reopen the case of Fit?, John Porter, in order that justice might lie done him. While we believ^n doing justice to all men, we can not see The propriety or benefit of reopening a case which the bead of the army, after a careful examination, decided agaiiyt. _ It was announced the other day that the Grand Duke Alexis of Russia had postponed his visit to this country until f*U, and now it is assarted that ke will not come at ail. ThU will be a severe disappointment to some of our people who were making preparations to receive him, but perhaps their disappointment will be somewhat allayed by the intelligence that Emperor Pedro and wile, of Brazil, will be here in the fall.
Gov. CLarLiw, of Massachusetts, is a reformar of tbs bold stripe. He has just rtcognized “the march of intellect and the cause of freedom,” by appointing Mrs. Julia Ward Howe, of Boston, and a Mrs. Stevens, of Cambridge as Justices of the Peace. Unfortunately for him th^appointments have to be confirmed bu that unique body known in Massachusetts as the Governor's Council, aad there is reason to ftor that bigotry and the spirit of "caste”
•UU exist in the aforesaid council.
the “little Giant” deposited therein, and the enterprise languished and finally died. The moonment, or the piece of it that was completed, still stands there, a disgrace to the great city, but as if that was not enough, the ground on which it stands has been advertised for sale this month, for the delinquent taxes. The Com moo Council ha* at last ordered that the tax be paid out of the general fuad,.and the Senator s remains will rest in peace quietly for another year. Can not Chicago now complete the work, or most it remain as a monument of her great aspirations and sickly execution? In contrast to this is the Lincoln monument at Oak Ridge Cemetery, Springfield, which is nearly finished now, and which will be formally dedicated in a short time. We are glad to *ee that the Association intends to make the event one of national interest and importance. The chief olficen of the government and the distinguished men of the land should be present to pey respect to the remains of the illustrious dead, as they are laid away in their last rest ing place. Os* of our morning papers published, the other day, the full text of the Joint High Commission, with such annotations as H thought the stupidity of the public needed for a fair eppreciation of the thing. It happened, as it sometimes will to those who undertake the adventurous task of expressing opinions withont having any, that the first article of the treaty was not unnatural! v mistaken tor that recognition of English responsibility for the Alabama depredations, the refusal of which has so long been the cause of trouble between that government and ours. One would be apt to look m that place for that sort of provision. But the treaty really put in that place an expression of regret, not an admission of re*]>onsibility. The morning paper in question, finding the regret where the responsibility might have been expected, took it for the other, and remarked thereupon that it was “ample and unequivocal.” Of coarse, haring said ‘The horse was fifteen feet high,” it is not goinglo take it back, so it is not at all surprising to see it eulogizing upon the importance of the fir»t article the indispensability to a satisfactory treaty of this occurrence of natural remorse. We quite agree as to the value of the admission that Eugland is sorry for what the Alabama did, but protest agaiost our contemporary relocating its ground of importance and making it a great thing as a “regret” when at first the importance was imputed to it as an admission of responsibility. The “dodge” is neat but nevertheless it is quite obvious.
Tew Yen™ Ago. Khe laaoeJ half out the nutle p’reh, I he moon waa making pretty facets We ktaeed adieu -yoa know a mao Gan do that iu thote country places. My name is William, mark it w*V, (t’H show you why I make this statement) I turned to go. yet turned aaain, For lore would sutler no abatement. I sa’d, ‘'What pretty flower, sweet. What gem or suaay spot or shady. When I, and evening, come again. Mi all f, interning, biing my iady? Wild roses, woodbine, vio>ts bine, t'ond-Uliea from the drowsy shadows, The blooming bough of forest tree, bweet flags, or d.Uies from the meadow, The morning glory of the fields, The woodland queen, the fair mscnolta, Or that bright clustering thing Miss Jan». The school ma’am, calls the muitifotiaT” To each her silent sign was “No,” I feared at latt she meant to scout me. For ‘’though those flowers were aw.et,” aha said, “still—ahe could gather them without me.’* Twas only woman’s teozing way, For “yot.” said she. “there was one flower None eould supply but I, and that bhe loved to greet each evening hour.*' Still holding by the wraith of vines That climbing there had turned ami run down She bent, and blushed, and whispered low, “Bring me Sweet Williams just, at sundown. So “just at sundown” we were wed; The flower so rare was but her lover. Ten vearaago, that was; how—humph! “Sweet WiiJiama”-e» are thick as clover.
“ArBAPA.'
It la thought at Washington that the treaty will go through the Senate with little or no oppraUioa. Amendmenta'will be offered upon soiae minor points, bat the settlement of the main questions will not be disturbed, in the Arbitration of the San Juan boundary, the Emperor of Germany baa been aeleoted as one of the rtfereea, aad to thia it is objected that he is very old and likely to die, in which case hia aon Frederick William would take his place, and, as he is Queen Victoria a son-in-law, it ia feared he might be prejudiced in favor of England. It ic not a matter of sufficient consequence to quarrel about, any how.
Goon ha* become to come out of Nazereth. A Kentucky judge who was General Joe Johnson’s Provost Marshal General in the Confederate army, has decided that negroes are citlsena and have the right to testify in all courts, State as well as Federal. The Bourbons will learn something after a while. Another glimmer of light comes from Louirville, where they have been quarreling for several daya about the right of negroes to ride in street care. After numerous collisions, in which blows actual as well as wordy were straek, the companies have abandoned the contest and hereafter a negro’s money will be considered as graCas a white aaaa’s. Tnx semi-annual meeting of the state Editorial Association, whpfa will lie held at Association Hall on Thoreday, wUl be attended by a larger number of thyirofeasion than have ♦vnr been present before. NE editor who can come should absent as the seamen will withoit doubt be* pleasant and profitableoaa. The exercima on Thursday evening, consisting of a poem by Benjamin F. Taylor and addresMS by W. P. Pish back of this city, M. C. Garber, of Madison, and John B. Stoll, of Ligonier, promise to bb very intereaUn* aad as a cordial invitotion is extended to the public, we hope to see a large attendance. Thia community, as weU as every other, jx vitally interested ia the progress of the prefp. ami whatever tends to improve it should be
heartily encouraged. Too much can not bet Tfc * d ’* Uj done to elevate the standard of the pres*, to * krd A1 f' ho
make our newspapers ' ftapfaWWi dependent and upright. Wherq growing prana, there will h
prosperous country.
Cnicaao atoned out rereral years build a grand monument
Douglas, near his old I Lake Michigan, in
, city. The
A maiden speech—Ask papa. A bird of ill omen—A swallow of brandy, A Chinese gambling saloon has been started
in New York.
Governor Leslie, of Kentucky was a wood-
chopper in 1833.
When Bismarck was Prussian Ambassador in Paris Jules Favre was bis lawyer. The English papers announce an approaching visit of General Butler to Europe. The President expects to go to Long Branch about June 1st, to remain two months. Bismarck’s title in full, is “His Serene High-
ness the Prince Von Biamarck-Schoenhausen.”
Great numbers of excursionists from the
Atlantic States are now travelling in Califor-
nia.
Mrs. Farragut has returned from California and is visiting her native place—Norfolk, Vir-
ginia.
Notice to suicides—To jump into tbe Mississippi is a crime of the “deepest die.”—[New
Orleans Times.
The Kmjerar William has decided not to allow the erection of any statne of himself
during his lifetime.
The Empress of Russia, contrary to, tfie unanimous predictions of her physicians, is re-
covering her health.
A cotemporary speaks of that “peculiarly impressive tread which nothing but a returning jury in a murder trial has." The Lon do* Times says that one American small arms manufactory has a larger production than those of all England combined. The Pall Mall Gazette rays of a certain Irish court of law, that it is never so sore to be wrong as when the judges axe unanimous. A Mississippi doctor has invented a onewheeled boggy. It run* by doakey~pow«r, and the doctor himself officiates as the don-
key.
Professor Allen, of Oberlin. intends to start •oon for the Wert with a party of naturalists, to make explorations about the Rocky Mount-
ains. ',
The death of Prince Henry Gedefroyo Rer-
de la Tour d'Auvergne Laura-
guais is reported in the telegraphic news from
France.
The great qnretio a in Chicago ia, which is. worse, the little Storey of the Times, or
great White He of the Tribune-[Ohio State 'tie ^
Journal. ^ | find* that thef^ ’ ■
onrnal.
Killsao* is j
half •
•Jd . ha«lr.d entyeur. #
IF
An ingenious artist named Tayler bu invented a process for making butts of leather, tbe material being first liquified, then run into
moulds, dried and polished. *
Maria Griffin, colored, of Philadelphia, is after a $200 000 estate near Richmond, Virginia, tbe elatm being based on the will of a
citizen who died tnere in 1859.
The solemn removal and demolition of the fire stones which used to serve u base for the gnillottne in front of the prison of L* Re-
queue, took place at Paris recently.
A Kentucky vagrant wu sold under the vagrant act and bought in by bis wife for ten cents—and she is supposed to have paid an advance of nine hundred per cent, on his value The experience of a year has proved that there was not inch a demand for national banks at the South and extreme West as was reported. Only $16,000,000 of tbe $54,000,000
capital allowed has been token.
A plain granite shaft has been erected at Dean Hill, Norwich, Connecticut, to the mem ory of Major John Mason, the “Terror of the “Pequots.” He was born in England, and died in Norwich, aged seventy-three. In the Iowa City body snatching case, in which it wu attempted to implicate the med ical department of the State University, the Grand Jnry has just acquitted the Professor and students, finding no canse of action. Tbe Chicago Times has a new definition. It is tax-eaters—“which term is meant to include
bore, he ia entirely without annoyance on that
score. |1P|E y
tss Moan from a Boast. sraaoeoixT. The driver who fights hi* horses has not got throegh the first lesson in tbe management of these animals. Some strike their horses in a fit of anger; others Oeat them as a punishment tor what they conceive to be s»nfui acts on the part oi the horse. Now, the fact is, the norse u#ver does wrong on pnrpose. In this respect he is better than most mA. If he refuses to pull, it is the fau<t oi education; and if he runs away, and kicks things to pieces, it is because he is frightened. Men wnen tney are sound, do some very foolish things and they are excused; but no allowance is made for the runaway horse Ha is kicked and cuffed aad beaten, as if it waa done on purpose to hurt somebody, and not in consequence of supposed danger, which the poor animal was trying to Hee from. Horses never kick witbout a motive. They use their heels for defense;and tbs first kick at the traces is given to ward off what to them seems danger. No horse ever kicked for any other purpose. Thsy cherish no ill-feeling toward any one, and always do, as far as they know, what is right. All horses can be educated to do whatever the driver wishes. They obey cheerfully and withont
li:
Soap Making —The most important thing to insure good luck, is strong lye. In putting un a leach, put ia a little straw first, next a * '4j— *>hen fail with hard wood aihe-
too great a burry to get ths !
to running; hot give it time to draw strength from the ashes; put vour grease into the first lye that runs through, set it over ths fire and boil slowly until ail is dissolved; add a handful of resin, aad poor into a barrel. If you put in two or Utrea pound* of sal-soda and one of borax, it wilt make your clothes wash easier and look vtry white. FinaHv, fill up the barrel with hot lye, and stir it well, mi
■nine Fi
rations in a cold, filthy, mnddy stable. A horse can easily be taught to know the harness will not hurt him. Then he will not kick at it and run away. He is also aasQy taught to puli by the traces, or by the halter strap. If you want him to pull well on the halter, all you have to do ia to bitch him with something he can easily break, and h* will soon learn fo pull back with such force that no bridle will hold him. If you want him to pull well in the traces, give* him a light load until he learns to move it, and he will soon pull his best at heavy loads. Horses balk or pull
not only every city office-holder, but every J 0 ** •* they teught. It does not matter
which end of the horse vou fasten the weight
person connected in any war with the admin istration and disboreement of city revenues.” A newly married man complains of tbe high price of “dneks.” He says his wife recently paid for three of them—a dock of a bonnet, a dock of a drew, and a dock of a parasol. He says such “dealings in poultry will ruin him.’’ Two m«?n arrested near Peoria, charged with a murderous awault at Jacksonville, and also with the Tyndale murder, are not supposed by tbe Springfield authorities to be tbe guilty parties They are now detained at Jackson-
ville.
In China, no virtue is universallv recognized except duty to parents. The motive to avoid disgrace and seek honor is that credit may be reflected back on a man’s father, and this reverence is the basis of all respect paid to tbe political powers that be. ' Mrs. Anson Burlingame, widow of the latm Minister Burlingame, daughter and maid, arrived at New York, last week, from Europe She was received at the steamer by her eldest son, Edward L. Burlingame, who is a student at the University Uw school. Mrs. Burlingame will reside in New York -permaneutly. “Strawberries grow in California all the year round. The strawberries attain a considerable size; it is not uncommnn for an ordinary family to subsist on one for a week, mast nost be supposed that all of the varieties are this size; some are much smaller, and it is not an nncommon thing for a healthy man to finish one at a meal.”
The Farm and House.
THE FAKW. SKASONARLX BINTS. Those disgusting nuisances, black lice, have already made their appearance, and should be attended to at pace, or tbe plants they attack will be mined. Wood ashes or hellebore should be sprinkled over every shrub or tree they attack. Among the work that ought not to be done in May, the best horticulturists say, is the prunimr of trees. Liquid manure made from rotton wood is a capital fertilizer for violets. Farmers, as a general rule, neglect the kitchen garden, and deprive themselves of many comforts; aad if they do not attend to it, it is not planted until all the crops are in, and then receives but little attention. But if the wife and daughter of the house can take it in hand, they will be very proud of their handiwork andwelipaid for their labor. May is the month tocultivateafondness for tbe oc cupation. If the season is backward seeds can be planted in the house, and their growth will be hastened by several weeks. The toad is a great deetrover of insects, and has been found very useful in gardens for ex terminating the striped-bng, equash-bug, fleabeetle, etc. It devours the potato-bug with great aridity, and aaffers no itfconrenience from feeding on this poisonous insect. LIJIA BEANS. A correspondent of Tilton's Journal of Horticulture gives his mode of raising Lima beans, so as to have them . for more than two months, beginning before the middle of August, as follows: As I had in my garden Limas in pefectioa for more than two months, and on exhibition' in Massachusetts Horticultural Hall, Augnst 13th, and September 10th, and received the first prize, I take the liberty to communicate my mode of culture, believing it will be of some interest to amateur cultivator?, if not to others. Tbe beans were planted in box frames, (“cucumber boxes,” so called by market gardeners,) about the first of May, in ths cold grapery, transplanted into open ground May 30th. “Cacumber boxes” are simply sides of a box seven inches wide at tbe top, eight inches at bottom, and six inches high. The box being one inch smaller at tbe top than bottom, allows plants when transplanted, in open ground to slip ont easily withont injury. A warm exposure was selected, the soil well enriched and pulverised, and tbe box containing tbe plants taken from tbe cold grapery (a cold frame will answer as well,) by
half feet apart, the earth heaped on tbe oatside of tbe box even with the ton, and the box was then lifted, drawing it off over the plants. The plants were undisturbed by the change, and grew finely, a month or six weeks being gained by this mode of culture. ‘'Cucumber boxes,” purchased at tbe box manufacturers for six dollars and a half per hundred, will last many years, aad be equally useful for melons, cucumbers, squashes, etc.
axxxicak GSJtrea.
A correspondent of the Boston Spectator, after a late trip through tbe wine-growing countries of Europe, fe convinced that American grape-growers follow too servilely the KnowTttofthe SSSSui g^JS'cai^grJJl 1 npen this continent only on tfie Pacific slope, when the climatic conditions resemble those of the western coast of the eastern continent. Oar nativegrapes being adapted to an entirely different class of conditions, would natural- ** **P®cted to require a different treatment. Gur excessive pnining, for example, is thought by many fo seriously cripple foe productive power of American grap«. To test this mat-
^ ^ the Spectator
- ^ X 32 th * ^toaent ^is own 1 * m<,tbod9 - now
'M ~ ■will doulttkss .Htm from rot and mildew.
-v. [White these diseases with leaf-blight and ten-
bte bumiB K- to * «mhie extent, the vineyards of nia neigh-
daring the
-[1
Farmer.
Frynre Potatoes.—Cst
the soap is made French Modi or
them in whatever' shape yon wish above a bowl of cold water so that they will drop inro it Then drain and wipe them dry. This must be done quu-kiy, so as not to allow the potatoes to begooie reddish. Have a coarse towel ready, then turn the potatoes into a collander, and immediately turn them into tne towel, sbake them a little, and quickly drop them into hot tat. When done, turn them into a eollander, sprinkle sa3t on them and serve hot. II you wish them light or swelled, leave the potatoes in the collander only about ball a minute, then put them back in very hot
again in the rollander. If tbe fat is very hot, when dropped into it for a second time, they
•tolas Leaf Hats.
[From the Philadelphia Ledger. |
Tbe only place in tbe United States where palm leaf oraid is manulactured is in Massachusetts, the principal towns where the ttwde is carried on being Amherst, Palmer, Barre and Fitchburg. The raw material is brought from Cuba to New Loadon, Connecticut, in bunches of twenty-five leaies from four to five feet long. The bunches, placed on the stock end, are packed in the bleaching rooms and subjected for sixteen days to the fumes of brimstone. The leaf, after being bleached passes into the hands of the splitters, and about ona-third of the material is rejected.
For Sale—28 Beautiful Luts
H. B. ALLEN’S NORTH ADD1TI0I, All Laying Hfoh and Drj, m a Good
*** 10 ***“' ll€1Jt pmutogt. w W. 1. JOCY. mye dim Raai Istate Agaut.
wu.ua w.
OAJEtXEU M WBXOm . REAL BSTATB AGENTS, Over No. 100 Eart Waahlngtoa 8l
(Osasrst Dataware,) This Ital shaaged DaBy,
now sold as
ty dol-
to. They will balk as readily as when hitched by the traces, if improporlv trained, as when hitched by the baiter; and they will pull back as faithfully by the halter, if trained to do so, as they pull forward when hitched by the traces to a wagon. It i* an easy matter to teach a horse to refuse to pull at either the halter or the traces, snd it is equally as eas. to teach him to pull by the same means. I those who drive horses would keep this fact in
view, and keep their temper out of view, they This work is done by the wives and children would never be guilty of the shameful act of 0 f ,ho Now England farmers, and large teams
This waste, until recently, was useless, but is
paper maker*’ stock for hft w
lars a ton, when delivered at the mills.' The
beating their team in a mud hole or on tbe
hillside.—[Field and Farm.
RAISING TURK SYS.
The turkey is the most tender when young and the most difficult to raise of alt domestic fowls;-y ■fHI ... eggs under game hens and cooping the brood at night regularly, while the turkeys are young, they mav be easily reared in great abundance. Never feed the young turkeys boiled eggs or corn-meal dough, or wheat bread crumbs. They need very little food of any kind under seven days of age, and should have nothing but sour milk set in pans. At about a week or ten days give them also wheat screenings or chimb* soaked in sour milk. Let this be their only food till thev begin fo feather, and then give them grain of any kind. Tie tbe hen (which has the young turkeys) to a peg off to herself, with a coop near by her so that she can enter at night to roost. At two weeks old let tbe hen loose to roam, and if she is a game hen she will do the work of rearing the brood. BALT TO PRKVJtNT BORERS. J. C. N\, Duncan's Fall?, Ohio, says sprinkles a handful of salt abont the trunks of his peach and apple trees from tbe first of June nntil the middle of July, and it prevents the borers working, and benefits the tiees other
wise.
RAISING FOWLS. During 1869, I raised about 150 fewls on an old place where fowls had been more or less for years. The consequence was, I lost at least one-third of all hatched, by the much-dreaded gapes. I tried nearly all the remedies recom mended, but my only success was in removing the worms with a feather trimmed for tbe purpose. This year I am on- a new place where no fowls were kept. I set my first hen on January 29; I have now about 140 chickens out, some cue-third grown, and not a single case of gapes or other sick yet; treatment the same in both years.—[Poultry Bulletin.
THE HOUSE. Ckkam Pie—Halt pound butter, four eggs, sugpr, salt and nntmeg to yoar taste, aad two toblespoonfutis of arrowroot wet; ponr on a quart of boiling milk, and stir tbe whole together. To be baked in deep dishes. To Improve Starch—To each bowl of starch add one teaspoonfuil ot Epsom salts, and dissolve in the usual way by boiling; the fabric thus starched will be considerably stiffer, besides being rendered to a certain degree fireproof. . Cheap Fruit Cake —One cupfull of sugar, one cupfull of butter, half * cupfull of buttermilk. three eggs, one cupfull of raisins, one cupfull of currants, and a little soda; flour enough to make a proper thickness. Chop the raisins and currants very fine.
spread this half an inch'thick over sheets of cake baked very thin, and cover tbe whole with cream, prepared as for Char lotte Russe, an inch or more deep.
Felons—The following simple prescription is recommended as a cure for this distressin ailment: Take common rock salt, such as i used for salting pork or beef, dry in an oven, then pound fine, and mix spirits of turpentine equal parts. Pat it on a doth and wrap round the parts affected, and as it gets dry put oa more, in twenty-four hours you are cured the felon will be dead. It will do no harm to
try it.
A Nick Way of Stewing Chickens —Parboil two fine chickens, take them up in a pewter dish, cut them up and separate all the joint bones from one another, then take ont the breast bone, add a little of the water they were stewed in, a blade of mace and pinch ot salt, cover closely with another dish, and put It to stew until the fowls are tenderserve hot in the same dish. Rabbits, partridges and other game may be served in the
, * 7 ' /
To Broil Fihh —jWhen fish are broiled, the bars of the grid-iron should be rubbed over with a tittle butter. Then place your fish, skin side down, aad do not turii.it till nearly done through. Have ail your butter tiU the fish is dished. 1 a this way you save the juices of the fish too. Fish should be broiled slowly. When served, fish should not be laid over each other, if it can be avoided. The top ones will be made tender and moist bj the steam and
will break to pieces.
Curds —Freshly soured, thickened milk, is esteemed by the doctors as very wholesome and easy of digestion. Families in the coantry may make this serviceable by stirring several ' spoonfuls of orange wine or native port into a dish ot sour milk before it sets, then leaving it to curdle, and eating with powdered sugar aad nutmeg. The wine quite disguises the unpleasant taste of sour milk, and makes it a < ieacy. When cream is churned, as it sho be, every morning, the buttermilk may be treated in this way, and will be found v
riefi.
Clkassisg Tarnish id Paikt.—In cleaaatag paint which has been varnished, there is nothing better t nan weak tea. AH leaves front several drawings should he saved and boiled
and vou will be surprised at its brightness No soap is needed, no milk: the tea is the
■film
'
illl
most capit the paint < that very j Tarnished ]
as the i
rapidlyiritoti
■Wipe will find !
split leaves are now sent out into the country to be braided into bats and woven into webs
for Shaker hoods
are constantly passing ever tbe steep hills and into the most remote • toesses of the conntry. carrying the raw material to be braided aad bringing back the finished work. A large numcer of persons find emplojmeut in braiding, and nimble fingered girls con earn as much a« an adult woman. The pay is small, but odd moments which otherwise would be disengaged are devoted to this labor. Coun try merchants, it is stated, frequently take tbs leaf and put it out in tbe neighborhood, being satisfitd with the increase ot sales, although they may make no profit from the braiding.
CARPET HOUSE DIRECTORY — W. H. ROLL, Dealer In CARPETS, Wall Paper, Window Shades, OIL CLOrHS and MATTINGS
No. ItS N. IllInolM HU
narSO Sinoa,
AAfycrt, Car nil.
■toMler fa
CARPETS, WAU* PAPER, WINDOW SHADES,
Oil* CI.OTIIH, Eie.,
101 Ea»t Washington St.
marSCSaiM.
Hume, Adams & Go., Whelemle aud Entail Dealers in CARPETS
WALL PAPER,
WINDOW SHADES,. -
OIL CLOTHS and
, MATTINGS,
47 and 49 S. Meridian St.
MSmes.
ISAAC H. HERRINGTON,
Manufacturer of sad Dealer in
Harness, Saddles,
BRIDLES, COLLARS, WHIPS, Etc.
te*All kind* of Itepairtng done on short sella*
IM W. Waahingtom fit.
INDIANAPOLIS.
spredSm
J. C. HERETH,
MASUrACTUHUB OI*
MS UD HiMESS,
Jit* • ’-wfrri, db-A. * ' COLLARS, WHIPS, EUv
■
Mo. SO M. Pennsylvania St. ihDIANAPOUS. INDiAMU
k’x-X’MBauvoir a Jtxcxcxrx-’is,
\ -} |p
New & Second-Hand Furniture,
STOVES, Etc.
*<> IM W. Wa ■•"Cash paid]
aprl* dim
the south port oHfae*mj at
*r&t: hjf ££ {KtaKnram
SI
■I
.r- is!* ««•**•
ante ia ona and two j ran.
&&'!52!ttr2»tz3 irsaa
sgggKSS
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OMap'enoMh * nNOrth Lib * rtjr ,u * #t «sarOhio. h•Mcs prick clay tend near ths city. We will rail the tend cheap, or will teara the iMd and sell theetev rt ieV,w brick ,on it. Cailaoee. Aeree with frame house, ben,
-j .Id; it is it the tend is of the brat quality' half cash, balance in 1 year. OAJtTXX * WVIWWV.
ly pa?”raU. rOOM *’ ^00m, ’ a “ ••■tely . Uou**® hoaet oa os# of the brat streete. Prlee. SMbO; §•» throughout, first-ejue finish ead every necoerary convenience. ,t0r/ *orth Fennsylveala at. i JT^Aflno cottage on North Illinois street. Woo, A cottage on Bluff Rood, near McCarty sL *2.000. ton rtwet 0f *uS* MI ’ *** • q ““* • #tttk of WashingA house of 4 rooms oa Uatoa street. II, M0. A number °f vacant lots in ths Houthsast Addt-
SIPEOIAL ivotige Parties Going West. ggmkQUi »tffnfUa - INDIANAPOLIS & ST. LOUIS BAEBOAD
HAS
SPECIAL COLONISTS TICKETS On sale et Orion Depet Ticket Offise at
the following rates:
FROH UVDIAJVAPOLH . TO Kaunas City . ‘ . . . . . 0.1.4* Lravca worth ,r«* Atekisea - .‘Jua Kort Scott iMi Neoshoe 14,44 Tickata are Good for rint-Olu* Panaga. JBrah passenger is entitled to ISO pounds baggage. Upward* 01 *• ft “ r ti*s ef five er •eriho public are cautioned against aft rs safari of excursions, officers sad fonts of so-caUod Kmi-
MSS SJK:
Tip**. Trouble and Money
„ for further information or tickots, applv at
C. ▼. LEWIS, ; General Agent.
marfl dAwtf.
ARTIFICIAL STONE * vou Sidewalks, Cellar Floors, Window Caps and Sills, AID FOR BHILDINB PURPOSES .eSIHAUT. Cheap, Durable and Handsome. JOHN T. MACAULKT A Oe., aprt dSm Oor. NBJket st. amMJutrana.
AUGUST M jA I, 43 South IlUaela Street. American and Bwisa Watches. CLOCKS, JgWIUT, SB P MS O'X* A O JL JB W , live* 4k Oprar* CHweeee sti.lraw—s ifesp*e*b All kinds of repairing a spaJtngrftTliif d«M dMPi uul flU wotIc 1
The Largest
THM VOJLOCCS AXtXSJBH.
serijmgav*vs«y day
%
UVce-Bo.se Worth 3
Notice to Taxpayers.
lar***'
Chamber, la
lifter, Mai«, mu m TX retart r. m..
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