Indianapolis News, Indianapolis, Marion County, 23 August 1877 — Page 3
THE INDIANAPOLIS DAILY NEWS: THURSDAY EVENING, AUGUST 23,187L
New York Store.
INDIANAPOLIS, IND.
(bitafcltetied IS33.)
the 1«-«M the If ew l«rk fetere Ium the eeati imce
will vf the people tfcreesMrt the State. _
We She I eeeltwwe te ■n«tala •nr lepwteiiieet hy ■■•plylny ear ci—teietw with the beei gee he at the leweet merket pslee. Being represented ie
ihe Baeicra eutrkeui all the year ren ed by reeftdeet hnyere, and ae we hay leverlehiy for "j cash, we feel eeeare lu e tyln< tb at ne house can and ae h »u* e •hall give better gweae f »r tbs money than can be had at the
OLD ESTABLISHED
m YORK STORE
Pettis, (vers & Co.
‘ INDIANAPOLIS Sa?ims Baal,
66 EAST MARKET STREET.
Deport ts Jane 1,1877 —$404,108 98 Burplos Fand 8,996 83 Nunber of Accouuta June 1, ISM 9,128
W. Nt JACKSON. President.
JOHN W. RAY. TreMurer. The Gem Laundry
OF INDIANAPOLIS.
OFFICE, et the PaLce Gents’ Furnishing Store, No. 46 W. Washington street, opp. the Occidental Hotel.
p. 8. Whe Gem Laandry hw been recently itarted and fitted ap by lartce outlays of tnoney with all the latest and most improved machinery tow in use at Troy, N. Y., securing thereby unrivaled facilities and speed for turning out the very highest order of work in Gents’ and Ladies’ Cellars and Caffs on the day following their deiirery at the OFFICK, fa)uh not THE DAILY NEWS THUBBD4Y, ittQUST 23. 1877. cjit v ivjb w^, • - Weather Kepors. IxnugaroLia. August 23. 7 a. mi Cairo, Ills — — 67 W cloudy Chioago, Ills 67 NE cloudy Cmeinnati, 0 69 K threatening Davenport. Iowa 66 N fair Denver, Col 60 S clear Fort Qibaqn.— 0 foggy penison, Tex .....h * cloudy Indiananolii. Ind. fi NE rain Brown«ville 81 8 clear Keoknk. Iowa.......... 67 N fair Jaeksboro, Tonn ........ 66 8W clouly LaCrosse. Wis. 62 N foggy Leavenworth. Kan...... 61 clear Louisville, Ky 68 SE threatening Memphis, Tenn...^... 63 N VV clear Nashville. Tenn^.^.. 71 S\V cloudy New Orleans, La <7 E clear Omaha. Neb 59 clear Pittsburg. Pa....... 7 SE cloud. Portland. Oregon...^.. 61 8 cloudy Salt Lake City, U. T... 63 E n[r ar Nan Diego.Ca’ 65 SE cloudy ban Francisco. Cal..... 65 W clear PartaFe.N. M 50 SE clear Shreveport, La............ 71 NW clear bt. Louis. Mo 62 NVV cloudy 6t. Paul. Minn......^.. 61 8E clear Vicksburg. Mis* 63 W clear The city library baa issued 13,200 cards to date. Powell Howland has partially recovered from hie severe illness. The City weigher baa adopted a new motto: “Pay as you weigh.” To morrow is the last day of service for the September term of the superior court. Otto J. Isensee claims to have been drugged and fobbed on East Ohio street night before laat The commissioners assigned a room lu the court house to Stagg & Garber, law reporters, yesterday. The Belt and stock yard company are taking care of the workman who broke his leg a few days ago while engaged on their stock stables. Miss Alice Chapin will begin the fall aenion of her kindergarten and training school, in the High school building, on fieptembe- Sd. An effort will be made to secure the appointment of Dr. G. De La Matyr to the pastorate of the Meridian street M. E. church this fall. Tons of drowned vegetables found slow sale on east market this morning. Farmers came to town in large numbers, expecting a let-up in the rain. The Pittsburg papers are bewailing the lose of McKelvey the crack base ball player of the Alleghenies, who has signed With the Bines for next year. Yesterday afternoon three young men confined in the jail-coop crawled oat through the grub-hole, which was being repaired, and climbing over the wall escaped. Articles of association of the Guilford Township Cheese company, of Hendricks county, were filed In the secretary of state’s office yesterday. Capital stock $3,000. D. 8. Alexander, secretary of the Oregon senatorial investigating committee, returned from the west last evenine. He has grown corpulent since he left the Booeier state. Ip several directions around the suburbs there are new residences going np. A pretty fair sign of a revival of business, after a year or more of such stagnation as there has been. The Marion connty teacher’s institnte was addressed this morning by Rev. J. C. Fletcher, on the subject of volcanoes. Jrneet Morris is on the program for a lecture this afternoon. Chief of police Travis started for Louisville last night for Emmet Adams, who Is charged with having stolen $IC ) worth of clothing from Dick Short, a colored map employed by Wm. Belking. Ray street, from Tennessee to West, over a quarter of a mile, is one of the beet improved in the city. Roadway and aidewalks are graded, leveled and graveled finely. It is downright pretty, and ft has a first rate bridge across Pogue’s creek, bnt there ie not a house on it in all that quarter of a mile.
The crossing of the Belt and Nat'ona! roads, west, will be on the same level as the crossings in the country usually are The old company composed of Vfr. Kingao, contemplated bridging ihe National roatk The Tony Pastor combination and the Hyers sisters will be at the Grand opi*ra house next week, though the regular dramatic season will not open until Sep ten.ber 10, with the Baba combination. The Metropolitan will open Saturday night. The petition of Harry Southgate, who applied to the county commissioners for an aPowance to enable him to appeal to the supreme court has been denied. Fifty dollars was the amount asked, which amount he says would be necessary for him to get a report of the evidence given on tha trial and thus perfect his appeal. The second span of the Belt bridge is np, a single track laid to it along the pile 4 work from the Bluff road, a single track east of the bluff to Pleasant run for construction trains, aud east of Pleasant run a single track is going down steadily to meet that advancing southward from Brightwood and the Pan Handle road. A s-cond one of the gigantic stables is half dene. The passenger train on the Pan Handle due here at 11:30 lest night, was delayed for two hours by an accident at the yards in the eastern partof the city. Twofreight cars by an oversight had been left on the main track and the train, going at twelve miles an hour, struck these cars, damaging the pilot and steam chest of the engine, badly scratching the postal car and utterly wrecking the offending freight cars. No one hnrL ]»IcCarty*s Improvements* Nick McCarty is grading and graveling two streets through his fields from Morris street south to the stock yard. One runs just east of the Marmon & Nordyke machine works, the other about half way between that and the biff levee south of the Morris street bridge. Both will be made in first rate style, as all the street improvements “over thera” have been, ana will be lined with rows of shade trees like River avenue and Morris street Mr. McCarty has had rare good luck in his tree planting. There can not be much lees than two miles and a half of shade trees along his improved streets—if all were set in a single line—and they are but twenty feet apart. Yet of all these hundreds of trees he has had lees than a half dozen to die. On the easternmost of his new streets he has employed some thirty or forty teams, and apparently not far from a hundred men, teamsters included. The street next to the machine works is left to the last, as there will be little cutting or filling or grading of any kind made on its dead level surface.
Size of tli e Stoek. Yard Stables. The exact measurement of the space covered by the stock yard at .bles was given a News reporter yesterday by Mr. MorrisDefrees, civil engineer of the yard. The fall length of the stables from north to south is, in round numbers, 900 feet, and the breadth, trom east to west, is 1.000, or about 990.0C0 square feet, equal to 16 acres exclusive of the streets that separate the stables. These are in process of grading and graveling. The brick work on the Exchange building is going on rapidly,while the stone basement work is all done. There were 14 cars of steel rails for the Belt on the Vandalia switch west of the river yesterday, enough to lay nearly a mile of single track. The huge fill at the west end of the bridge, 108 feet wide, 27 high and 100 long js piling np rapidly, and more rapidly as it rises, because the bank narrows rapidly toward the top. IIc-mna.ntv of the Canal. The improvements of the last three years have obliterated the canal below Market street utterly, except in two small patches, one of “jimpson” weeds and dogfennel below Morris street, and another of mud and garbage, weeds and waddling ducks, between Merrill and McCarty streets, north of Merrill Missouri street show’s no memory of the canal that thousands of the middle aged oi this generation have skated, fished and swam in. It is a good deal more street now than it wss the day the first spade was struck in it to make the canal forty years ago. In all that forty years it never did the city or anybody in it one cent’s worth of service, and made an annnal outlay for quinine big enongh to pay each patient’s city tax. Undiluted Ague. A singular circumstance was noticed by the men engaged on the stone work of the west abutment of the Belt road bridge. A driven well was sunk there for their convenience, but the water produced a prefect epidemic of chills and fever. Every hour through the day some of the stone hands, or of those at work upon the “big fill,” would cave and go off somewhere to have their shake out. The well had to be abandoned. On ihe east side,jast as cloie to the men another driven well yeilds as good water as any in or about the city, and the weetside hands have to get their supply from them. Small Fires. Three small fires occurred last night The first alarm was occasioned by the discovery of a blaze in a large stable on Davidson street, near St Clair, belonging to Davis & Cole, and leased by the Butsch & Dickson coal company. Several horses belonging to the coal company were rescued, but one owned by Charles Matlock, a painter valued at $150 was burned to death. Total loss about $500. Later in the night a five hundred dollar fire oc enrred near the corner of East and McCarty streets and the roof of a diminutive stable near Vine street close to Broadway, was burned.
A Creative Doctor. Dr. Heniy Jameson, though a successfnl physician, was evidently intended by nature for a machinist. He has made, out and out with bis own hand, every part of a handsome little steam engine, capable of working up to about one-fourth of a horse power or the full strength of a powerful man. The castings needed he made th* patterns for, and all the finishing work he did himself. An ordinary gas jet will make abundant steam, and the boiler will easily bear a pressure of 50 pounds to the inch. The stroke is about 2% inches. Crematory Views. . ■ Dr. John E Lockridge, of this city, has an article on cremation in the July number of the Richmond and Louisville medical journal; treating the subject from a sanitary point of view. The doctor thinks that a quarter of a century will bring about a great change of public sentiment on this subject, and that the hundreds and thousands of acres of valuable land now condemned 4pr reeling places for the dead, near large towns and cities, will be more profitably utilized. For the Thirty-third Degree. The supreme council' of the ancient and accepted Scottish rite, will meet in Boeton, September 18. The following are the persons elected from this state to receive the 33°. Dr. Charles E. Wright, Martin H. Rioe, G. W. Davis, Indianapolis, and Henry G. Thayer, Plymouth. The present members here, N. R. Ruckle, John Caven, P. G. C. Hunt, Joseph W. Smith and J. W. Hess will accompany the candidates on their eastern trip.
Prices of Food Here. To the Editor of The Indianapolis News: As the price of floor falls our baker bas reduced the weight of his loaves two ounces; be is a rampant member of the bakers’ union, too. Formerly his loaves weighed fourteen ounces, but since the decline in.flour they weigh only twelve ounces, notwithstanding tne charge is five cents each as before. The bread wh*ch cost us here $1 (30 we paid only $1 for in Cleveland, Baltimore, Boston, Philadelphia and other cities where Hoar sells equally high as in this place. A barrel of yield 345 one-pound loaves, which at five cents each gives a product of $17.25; in twe’ve ounce loaves, $22 50; in ten and one-half ounce loaves, $25, Judging from the quality of the bread we should guess the baker pays about $4 a barrel for the flour, but allowing that he gives $7, his profits are simply euormoas. In the cities above mentioned the price of one-ponnd loaves is four cents, against five cents here for a three-ounce to a twelve-ounce loaf. There smoked sturgeon is offered for eight to ten cents a pound; here sellers demand 15 to 25 cants a pound. There common crackers cast us five cents a pound; hare nearly as good a quality sells for ten cents, and so on through the prices current There a cup of coffee or tea with milk and sugar and a three-ennee bun is given for five cents, against a smaller cup of clear coffee or tea here for-the same price. Some people seem to imagine that this city and a little circle of about fifty miles in circumference around it, constitute all there is of this world worth knowing anyhing about Qcoth.
BRAITHWAITE’S Retrospect, PART 75. For July, 1871?. PRICE, II.£0. By mail on receipt of price. CATHCAKT 4c CLELAND. 26 East Washington st. COAL and COKE. All orders for COAL and COKE left with me will receive prompt attention. Weight and Quality Guaranteed. Favorable arrangements made with parties wishing to buy in large quantities. Office, No. 17 Indiana Avenue. HENRY ARMSTRONG, JR. z ? TWIN BROTHER?’ INDIANAPOLIS EYE If MARY. Drs. M. A H. BRANDON, formerly of Do. eatur, Illiy are now permantbr located at No, 11 >4 West Washington street, from Block. Dr. W. H. Walters, President of the Maoon County (Illinois) Medical Society, oloses a very positive testimony in these words: _ “Tnis is the first time in my medical life that
5l m iblii
amend them to the Buffer! W. H. WALTERS. M. D. #
CATHARTIC PILLS- , For all the purposes of a Family Physio
Erysipelas, Headache, Piles. Rheumatism, Eruptions and Skin Diseases, Biliousness, Liver Complaint, Dropsy, Tetter, Turners and Salt Rheume, Worms, Gout, Neuralgia, as a Dinner PillandPurifyingthe Blood, are the most eon-
. _ . . d. Their effects abundantly show how much they excel ^11 other Pills. They are safe and pleasant to take, but powerful to cure. They purge out the foul humors of the blood; they stimulate the sluggish or disordered organ into action and they impart health and tone to the whole being.
diseases. Mostskillfnlphysicians, most e clergymen and our best citizens, send certificates of cures performed and of great benefits they have derived from these Pills. They tl
coated, they are easy to take; and being purely vegetable, they are entirely harmless. ■arrrepared by Da. J. C AYER & Co , Lo well Mass , Practical and Analytical Chemists Bold by all Druggists and dealers in medicine: 4
LIFE INSURANCE CO. OF INDIANAPOLIS, IND, The Only Home Company in the State SECVKK—atUTUAL—LIBEKAI* Its best friends are among the principal boatness men of Indianapolis—men who know It 'best Its funds loaned only to policy holders. Admitted Asset* ...t377,073.*» Offlcere—A. D. Lynch, President; A. a. Fettlbone. Vice President; L. G. Hay Sec’y; Fred. Baggs, Treat#; Wm. E, Harvey, Actuary. Medical Advisers—F, 8. Newcomer, M. D.; J. H. Wood barn, M. D. General Office In Company's Building, conies Kentucky avenue and IllincU street te T
J. B. COWIB «V CO., Dealers in MONUMENTS, NO. 74 N. DELAWARE ST., T Indianapolis, Indiana.
Have You Dyspepsia? With its attendant troubles, constipation
DaUosta’s Radical Cure and be well. Its re su't is astonishishing, and sure relief is guar anteed in every case, where it is used as directed. It assists digestion, tones np the stomach, strengthens the debilitated, restores a natural appetite, and as a living regulator has no equal. A clergyman of Philadelphia says: It is the very fountain of health. To all who are suffering from a disordered stomach or liver, or who need a gentle spring or summer tonic, we say try It, and you will thank ns for the advice. Trial size, 25 cents. Sold by WARD BROS., 190 Ft. Wayne are.. J. W. Dryer, S44 East Washington street, ana E. Martin, 8. Mer. st. and Russell avenue. Browning A Sloan, General Agents. Also, Agents for Prof. Parker’s Pleasant Worm Syrup, which is sure death to worms. Pleasant to take, and requires no physic. [ Price, 25 oenti. Try it, Uyloutu-U-i
STAND FROM UNDER. Great Sale OF. Of Watches, Jewelry, Silverware. Tableware, Clock*, Farcy Goads, Etc. Having purchased the entire stock of W. P. Bingham, Bankrupt, I will commence salet o close it out as soon as possible. Private sales during the day. and Auction sales every evening at 7:30 o’clock. The attention of dealers is specially called to this opportunity to lay in stock for the Fall Trade and Holiday Season at figures far below the manufacturers’ cost. REMEMBER THE PLACE, Bingham's Old Stand, Cor, Washington and Pennsylvania Sts,
HARRY CRAFT.
Office Directory. Second Floor. Wo. M. CARTER * RIPLEY. Attorneys. 22. J:L. MITCHELL, J.W. HARPER,At’yfl *. JOHN S. CAMPBELL, Attorney. 26. FRANK H. LEVERING, Attorney. 27. C. W. BROUSE, Broker. M l A. L. WRIGHT. Vance Block Offiee. IBRAINARDR0RI80N.Con.Mut.Lfe, 29.30,31,PORTER,FISHBACKaP., Att’ys. 33. McLAIN a BAKER, Attorneys. 34. JORDAN a JORDAN, Attorneys. 35. 36, DENNY a BURNS, Attorneys. S8, P. H. LEMON, Attorney and Notary. Third Floor. M. H. W. FULLER, Erie Railway. Agent 41. BROWN a R0CKW00D. Attorneys. 44. J. Q. BAIRD A CO., Gr.a Com. Mehta. 63. MAX LECKNER, Teacher of Mnsie. Nos. 43, 47. 48,51, Occupied; others fer rent. Fourth Floor, 62. R. M. COSBY. Architect. Seven others occupied, remainder ior rent?
SPECIAL MEDICATION. Chroaiq Dlaeanee a Specialty. / The Docter has had many years of experience in the treatment of those diseases requiring special skill and experience, and feels perfectly safe in raaranteeing; a cure- in every case where it is possible for human aid to effect a cure. During his extensive practice in this city he has treated thousands of ladies and gentlemen successfully, and to their entire satisfaetien, to whom he respectfully refers. Consultr.tion invited, in person or by mail. Prepared medicines sent safely
WhenYouTravel, Take tke PAMlXANDIsE! and PEXHSYL YAJflA ROUTE, the on^ direct line from Indianapolis to Columbus, Pittsburg,Harrisburg. Philadelphia and Yew York, w ithout change of cars. Only one change to Baltimore, Washington and Boston. Fare always the same as by longer and slower route. BAGGAGE CHECKED THROUGH to destination. (Secure your Tickets at (he Union Depot, and see that they read via “Pittsburg, CinclnnatlASt.EouisBailway, Panhandle Beale.** W. L. O’BRIEN, Gen’l .Pass, ami Ticket Afffint, Columbus D. W. CALDWELL, diw General Manager.
gALlSMCRY, VINTON A CO. CENTRAL PAPER MILL XAKB THS BEST A.KTICLB OV IV EYV S F* A. U* ES ■WThe Paper npon which the Indianapolis Journal is printed is famished by this Mill.
“A NO. 1.” The above trade mark means strictly pure goods guaranteed. Country and town dealers at a distance may order bv postal or letter our job lot packages with assurance not only of freshness but of the latest decline In the market. Roasted Coffee, Pure Spices, Baking Powder. Our Baking Powder Is the “CLIMAX," which won the premium over all competitors at the State Expoeition, and has ever since led the van. A. B. GATES A CO., t 31 E. MARYLAND ST.
PATENTS igll Agency. AH business perta : ning to Patents promptly and carefully attended to. Send
IUSIC.—Great Westm* Bawd, 16 men. EnrareiDont« solicited. J. B. Cameron, Leader BandiJAthlick Smith,Leader Or* 1 chestra; Abe Springsteen, Manager,
HIS SUCCESS.
Dr. Von Moschzisker Has now been eleven months in Indianapolis. During that time he baa treated with great success hundreds of the aeverest cases of CATARRH, THROAT, LUNG, CHEST Diseases, Deafness, Noises in the Head, IMPAIRED SIGHT and other OBSTINATE CHRONIC MALADIES, some of which have been pronounced incurable He has published 120 TESTIMONIALS of cures from the very best citizens of Indianapolis and vicinity. Though frequently requested to visit other cities in the State, he finds it impossible to do so at present, as most of those who now apply for treatment come by the recommendation of PATIENTS CURED. He would, however, URGE on all from the city and vicinity who desire to be TREATED by him to call without FURTHER DELAY at his office, Grand Hotel, if they -desire the full benefit of his per sonal attendance on their cases.
Engle k Drew, COAL
AXD
COKE, 14 N. Peiralraia St.
PENNSYLVANIA MILITARY ACADEMY, * CHESTER, PENN., Opens September 12th. Location healthful, grounds ample, buildings commodious, icrongh instruction in Civil Engineering,
I. HODGSON, Architect, Rooms 2 and 4 Griffith Block.
Prescriptions. J. B. DILL, 99 Indiana Ave.
J. T. BOYD, M. D., Surgeon and Homoeopathic Physician, 69 Maasachusetts avenue, Indiananolis, Ind.
DRS. WANDS 4 SUTCLIFFE, 84 East Market street, Peeidenee—Dr. Wands, 330 E. Vermont. Residence—Dr. Sutcliffe, 350 E, McCarty.
W. 8. HAYMOND, M. D., Surgeon, „ 25 Baldwin Block. Residence—College ave. and Tenth st. Office Hours from 9 a. m. to 3 p. m.
J. A. COMPTON, M. D., Homoeopath is t. 1 40 East Ohio street.
MRS. DR. 0. E MOORE No. 406 N. III. St. Diseases of the Head, Scalp and Hair a specialty. Medicated Bath Treatment.
EMILY A. LEWIS, M. D., 190 East Market street, Homoanathist. Electrical Baths, Medical Electricity, etc. R. E HAUGHTON, M. D., rhyiican and Surgeon. Office, 26 E. Ohio • Office hoars, from 7 to 9 a. m.. 2 to4p. a., 6 to 9 p. m. Residence, 145 Bellefontaine st. M. X. RUNNELS, M. D.. Oculist and Aurlst, Office—Oor. Circle end Weet Merket fits, JOHN 8. CAMPBELL, Attorney at Law, Collections promptly attended to. Room 25 Vance Block. OOM1NGOR 4 MABSBR Surgeons. Offices—107S South Illinois st. 78 fist Michigaa st. DR E J. McGREW, Enterprise Hotel, Rooms 9, 10, Office hours—7 to 9 a. a.| 1 to 3 p. m.. 6 to S p. m. TT'EATHERS, Featherbeds and Pillows at 173 X 1 Eaet Wash. st. Old feathers renovated. Bedding a specialty. Ginseng, Beeswax, Tallow, Rags, and new and old Feathers wanted. J. 0. HIRSCHMAN. IKE KING, (Successor to King A Knight,) Horse-shoeing of every description on short notice, 28 South Delaware street. PHONOGBAPHY. The briefest, best, most rapid and perfectly reliable system of modern Short hand Writing ever devised thoroughly mastered and knowledge guaranteed <n the course of ton easy leesons, under the instruction of Prof. T. 8LEE, a practical phonographic reporter and experienced teacher of the art. Classes for private tuition at the residences of pupils, if desired. For a course of instruction $10 each; to parties of three. $8 each; to parties of six. toeaoh. Students, with a little practice, soon acquire the ability to report a rapidly delivered speech, and find it a labor-saving and thought-pre-serving system of writing. Application may be made at the Business College, Bates Block, or thro of h the Fort Office.
Indianapolis Railway Time Table! •KFAKT. A EXIT*. Cle., Col., CiaelBBatl A ladiuapoll*. gl-WB-JfeJ'dJBam N. Y B. A N. 0. **: G.F.W.aJ^z.4.25 am daily, 6 96a SB Union Aec.......6^15am UaQ.Ex...10.25a m
S St. L Ex d.ll.OS paa Brightwood Division. (C. C. C. 4 L Railway.)
PffBrt— —4:26 a m •• j-u" ■ 6*4® » » „ — ♦•;2°J36 * * „ ——..12:00 noon
"—~ P n» .••••••m.o• lo p m
—8.-58 b :
rrfv#*.***, ••**»— _ __
;; ::
*• -—4:10 pa
daily....li.30 p m l 1* daily.U;08 p a Pittsburg, Cincinnati Bt. Louis. iSTSS I ff® lAivASy
Vandalia Lino.
Mail Train— 7.00 am ( Fast Uae(d*lyM.15 am Day Ex , p l.Oppm I Mail and Aoc.10.06um £Zl£,Vi3al:SSS! SVuEfib. ax Indianapolis A St Louis.
Day Express. 7.45 a m Night Exp.s. 8.15p m
Ind’nap. Aec.l).45i
, _ . Day Express— 6 00 pa Indianapolis, Cincinnati A Lafayette.
Cincinnati Division. g£3Sl5fS: fiffS I Lafayette Division.
af"A“. A L”: 6 -“* m Mail-....— 12.43 pm svs?i*s: M3, “ L., daily....ll.33 p m
C. A St. L. F.
L., daily £08 a a Sff-jfe'i 10 -— T M*U 5.58 p a Lafayette Ao. 8.23 p a
0.0. OM l Indianapolis. Bloomington A Western. P. Ex. A M. 6:30 a.m. | K.aS.Ex. d’ylraoa-m *
R.I.aW.Ex. ll;20p.m. |
Cincinnati, Hamilton and Indianapolis. M. A Cin.Ex 7:45 a.m.—Mail 12:25 p.m, Acommod n 4:25 p.m.—Accommod’n 9:35;p.m*
Indianapolii and Vincennes.
Mail A C. ex. 9:00 a.m | Spencer ao. 9:30 a.m.' Spencer acc. 3:50 p.m | M.ACairo ex. 6:01 p.m. Indianapolis, Pern and Chlcage.
«:s
1 • 0 * D,t
Jeffersonville, Madison A Indianapolis.
Wi-S'js J! :s l
E7.-X 1 :; 1 ?. isss i H&fL'&u.-g Cincinnati, Wabash A Michigan, via Bee Line. Indianapolis, depart: 4:20 a m 4:20 p m
Marion, arrive 7.42am abash. ..... 8.50 am Warsaw, “ 10:40am Goshen,: •* -11:68am Elkhart. •• 2:35 pm Kalnmaaoog” - 5:10pm
G. Rapids. •• 7:40pm - Detroit Eol River and Illinois Railroad.
7.59 p m 9:07 p m 11:33 p m 1:09am 4:36 am 7:30 a m 19:00 a m
XAflT.
- ' . _ LBAVIC. Logansporti 7:00 pm 7:45 am Denver I.Pi AC.Cros’g, 8:37 pm 8:25 am Colmb’aCy 10:25 pm 11:15 am Auburn Jn 11:43 am 1:07 am
Butler.
Asams * tv.
2:00 am 12:20 am
WKST.
ARR1VC. 6:50 pm 1:00pm 6:07 pmll:4$am 4:40 pm 9:23 am 3:27 pm 7:40 am _ , I.KAVK. 2:45 pm 6:55 am
Louisville, Now Albany and Chicago. - (Vial.. B. and W.) 10:00 a. m, I Crawfonlsvilio, north, I 7:15 p. m. 9:50 a. m. I Crawfordsvillo, south, | 7:00 p. m . Logansport, Crawfordsvillo and Southwestern Railway. OOING NORTH. Depart. Arrive. -12:55 p m 11:00 p m 10:50 p m 9:08 p m Colfax via l,.C. a L ......... lf):15 p m 8:30 p m ( rawfordivillevia I..B.AW 9:18 p m 7:10 p m WaveUnd 8 37 pm 6;19pm Rockville- 7:52 pm 5:28 p m Terre Haute - 6:50 a m 4:15 pm GOING SOUTH. T . Arrive. Depart. Logansport fi.-.M a m 3:25 p tu Frankfort............. 8:24 a m 5:15 p m Collax via I C. a L 8:55 a m 6:43 p m • rawfordsville viaI..B.* W 9:50 a m 0:55 pm Wavelsnd io : 43 a m 7.59 p ln Rockville... H..32 a m 8:47 p m Terre Haute...- - 12:45 pm 9:55 pin c drains marked thus, r. 0., Reclining Chair
Jlc,u
i.Tsr.^a.r.v.A, s “° dM DRS. JONES. MITCHELL A BRIGHAM, HOMCEOPATHISTS
p.m.
No, 84 Blast Ohio St,
to 1 m., f tot
— - W, - V , * V, r_
Dr’ Mrrcxzu^B to 11 a* ^jPtoV 7 -
QRAND OPERA HOUSE Monday* .August 27: Positively One Night Only, the over Popular Favorite, Tony Pastor, And His Great Troupe,
SmnotTTrran'k
PASTOR himself, assisted by ii. T. Dvaisii’a
Brilliant Orchestra and Brass Bafcd.
Admission as usnal.
—Reserved seats at Benham’s Mnsie Store, to h N. D. ROBERTS, Business Manager.' L ectures By the Rev. 1. C. FLETCHER, for the
Benefit of the Home for
the Friendless.
I. Life in Portugal—At the First Baptist
church, August 28th.'
II. Modern Italy—At Roberts Park church,
September!.
Admission 30 cents, or 50 oents to both. Us »i. CABVKn. C. DUHMSYBS
IH. CARVER A CO.,
Wholesale and Retail Dealers ia
Crystal ICS,
No. 215 B. Illinois Bt., Indianapolis. HAPPY RELIEF -
To all suffering from chronie diseases of all kinds. Confidential consultation invited pers.”.*2d" r Vu , sii^isr'fiite , ass:
lars sent free in scale *
Howard Assocf delphia. Pa.— reputation lor
siocal skUn_ DR. DUrTV No. 39 Kentucky Av., Indtenapofle, Ini. regular graduate of medicine, has bees r engaged in the special treatment of all
longer en
Chronic
Indianapolis, as
rorideuts know
es than any other phyeloiaa in is city papers show, and all eld .Experience insuree suoeess.
and it is self-evident that a physician treating thousands of case* every year attains to that degree of skill eo necessary In all eld longstanding and chronic cases, and which eaablefi the Doctor to absolutely cure recent cases ia • s u firth n* 1 d iMBM^A^fr fe ndly > talk^taVhls opinion costs nothing. Confidential eoasulta-
tion free and in^ TRi
demanded until a cure Is effected. Patients pay for medicine# only ae eure proceeds, and
