Indianapolis News, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 May 1879 — Page 3
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THE INDIANAPOLIS NEWS: FRIDAY. MAY 2; 18T9.
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Ntw York Store.
(■MAMMmA UMHkl
Millinery
DEPARTMENT WB ABB HOW SHOWLKO
UNTRIMMED
HATS
or vrwAWM or
r*irty
!AT8 HATS HATS HATS HATS HATS HATH BATH BATS
of m
Mott Poptlar Shapes.
HATS HATS hats HATS HATS HATS UMS HATS HATS HATS s:« HATS HATS HATS HATS HATS HATS HATS HATS HATS HATS HATS HATS HATS HATS
PETTIS, IVERS & CO. Fancy Bazaar. BABY CARRIAGES/ VELOCIPEDES, BOYS’ EXPRESS WAGONS, J’XXmt ZROPOiTTOCX, Fancy Bazaar. UDnS’, flENTS kal ChUtrea’s KID, CASTOR and DOGSKIK ' OLOVES, FITTED TO THE HAND. Parisian Glove Depot, ID and 14 W. Waahlnffton St,
CITY NEWS. A A meeting ot the school board will be held thia evening. The 3(Hh lost will be the next discharge 4»y in bankruptcy, Ed. Guthrie is first in the field for the place of master of the west market. Librarian Yohn baa placed the late purchase of French books on the shelves for cirenlatioa. Ten car loads of stone, to be used in the foundation of the state house, come in over the J. M. k I. road^rom Deputy daily. The St. Anna school girls enjoyed a May dance and crowned a queen, Him Celia Manson, yesterday at Schofield’s mill, on Fall creek. - Taylor Edwards resigned from the police force yesterday, having concluded to work for the democratic candidates for council,with whom he has cast in his lot. F R. Weis, landlord of the Circle house, celebrated the completion of his first yeatxn that position last night, by spreading a substantial banquet to the guests and inmates of the hotel. Henry Walters, of New Albany, one of the State louse experts, is suing the board of commissioners in ’Squire Newcomb’s court for 935.00, the balance due on his board bill at the Grand hotel. Articles of association of the American furniture company of Batesville, capital stock $13,000, have been filed with the secretary of state. Nicholas Zimmer, Francis Mehlon and John Test are directors. * The board of state house commissioners intend making an entry upon their record book, setting forth the distinct duties of Mr. Vogdes, the superintendent of construction, to avoid conflict with Mr. May, the architect
[)f education yesterday. The trui report the enumeration of children in the several townahips ontside of the city for 1879 to be 3,300. It is rumored that the Lafayette, Mancie k Bloonington road, recently sold, was purchased in Jay Gould’s interest, and that he will'build a road from Toledo to Detroit to compete with that branch of the Lake Shore road already connecting these two cities. The marriage of John Newman Cary and Miss Mary Stewart took place last night at the residence of Daniel Stewart, father of the bride, No. 530 North Delaware street, the ceremony being performed by Rev. Joseph Tarkington, grand-father of the bride. A large Dumber of presents were given by relative* and friends. The horse of Edward Schurman, attached to a buggy in which he and Miss Lizzie Stewart were riding, ran away yesterday afternoon near the corner of St. Clair and Illinois ste., a wheel came off. and the vehicle thrown against a tree and brokeh to piece*. The occupants succeeded in jumping out unhurt a moment before the collision took place.
• THE GATLING GCN. Who lavsated It f-Was the Idea Gatling'*
or Bailey'*.
The communication under this head in The News last night attracted the attention of a gentleman, who said some facts tending lathe same direction had been known to him for ten years; although he isn’t “personally responsible.’’ He says: , dai*M to have beea working on* gun in MSI at the machine .hop of Sinker A Co., Indi*n»poua. He had drawings of two strle* ot gnu, «M a many haneled revolving gun, and one in “ “io oerreh wore arranged on a horizontal d ware fixed. The latter plan he »o (nr into efieri a* to make a working model he took to Waahlngton city. Meeting with mmgement he left the model and went into Thu model he recovered la 1S7S -blah room of the patent attorney with iho had been in oonsaftation concerning th* ■ton, and when It had laid seventeen year*, iworklng at Sloker’i *hop, he form ad the *ctance of Dr. Gatling, who was i _ working on a patent lath-cutter. ■•Hey exhibited hi* plans to the doctor explained hi* invention, which waaof the 1 plan u the gun afterwards known as The claim that the invention was ft* yratling’s was eorre bo rated by the Hraentaaf. Mr. (ireeoleaf was one of in Indiana, and in 1861 wu Stakar'a shop. Mr. Greanleaf. iDr. Gatling had come la him in ittf i— and asked him to make the **ry mechanism. This Mr. Dr. Gatling then aaid U ha * ot it financially ha would preI with a house and lot. Mr. i whan the doctor came to him ) IumI So more Ido* of the mochaa-
i than a child.
Ik* > Mft& tlie ttPtlfnian***t*pe*r to he thwt ‘ * tha gun; that Dr. Gatling
i and carried away from an drawing* the general outline aa a start lag point ha
of aeveral matade the origin-
M SO changed the »n cartridges, and from the brains of •awhere. Tha geni new in tha city, caa
. tha lawyer
an latarwaaftha
405^' ^
m
MILL POSTING BvwtttaDwstn Mi thu~ONy—Ceat of «Pn-
sr this morn toe, to Aleck Harbii
tut now* •wt report-
er thia morning, to Aleck Harbttun, the “boss” bUl peeler, of the . firm of Herbtaon k Abrams. They are the direct successors to that firm of whom it was proclaimed, years ago, oa the lower left hand corner of the drop certain at tha old Metropolitan, that
“Dfahen Brae, end ne others.
Go forth in haste With bills and pasta;
And proclaim to all creation,
That man are wiaa
Who advertise.
In thia prsssat generatlorn.” “Yes, indeed,” he respoodad; “ia a business view no complaint can be made. The only trouble I find now is to get sufficient rest. 1 am up every night till midnight arranging work, but must be at the office as early as any one to see that there are no orders which will interfere with the program of the night before, and if there are, to change directions so that all may be executed.” “Tell me something about your business; how it is carried on. Its axtoat, etc.” “There isn't much to teik 1guess, except what people know already. We have 500 three-sheet bill boards in the city, and fiftyfive stands, beside fences and dead walls. The bill boards are just large enough for an ordinary theater poster, three time* as big The News, spread out The “standi” ran from ten to tw *
the biggest c There are only
length in the city. The largest one is the fence aronnd the state house. That is owned by another bill-poster, bnt we tent it from him when any of our customers want it” “Bnt why don’t they rent it themselvesY” “That’s ene of the tricks of the trade. I control the renting of the only eligible circus grounds in the city, those west of the river, the old base ball park, and the old coal yard south of the Tan dalia depot, where Fore pa ugh shows next week. I say to the showman: i f you want any one of these places we must de your billing; if you don’t want os to do your work look elsewhere for a show ground.’ That fetches them if it becomes necessary to play that card, but it un’t often. They gen-
erally come to ns anyhow.”
“How do you get permission to locate and
use stands?”
“In various ways, but usually by paying for the privilege. It costs us over $2,00# cash oer year for rent. Where we us* fences, in some cesee we build and keep them up for using them. It is funny to notice how th* value of a vacant lot goes up sometimes when we ask the privilege of fencing it ie. It may not have brought in the owner a cent for yean, but the minute it is suggested that we can utilize a fence that will protect his property, he demands an outrageous rental. Ana then he doesn’t get it. We will lay out about $3,000 this year for rent and keeping np stands and fences, which our contract requires us to maintain in good order." “There ie a good deal of paper up now. What does it cost Forepaugh to advertise this
city?”
A Not a cent less than $509. And that is in addition to the cost of printing. His expenses in a large place are over 91.200 per day. In smaller places they fall off, according to the population, to not more than half that amouat. About 40 per cent, go for advertising and printing. These circns fellows know and appreciate the value of printer's ink. But Den Thompson’s manager is a ‘hummer.’ Why, he’s got more paper up than Forepaugh —takes 36 stands besides the bill boards. And then he pat out 50,000 dodgers not bigger than your hand. I tell you the bills made the Opera bouse folks’ eyes bug ouL” “Why, what do they have to do with it?” “The principal thing to us—to pay for it. When a manager plays on shares the opera house managers do all the advertising. If extra p*u>er is furnished they have to put it out. We make special rate* with them because they do so much with us, and when a fellow like Hill comes along, it is a ten strike
or theboys.” -
“Do you have a regular schedule of rates ?” “Qh, certainly; and it doesn’t give us a cent of profit on theater business, except, as i say, when some party like Thompson comes along. However, when the opera house i > rented for an entertainment or series of entertainments we make special terms with the manager which are generally better than the schedule. Our work includee posting, distributing and inside work, the latter including the hanging of lithographs, photographs and cards in show windows and
store doors. To have to enter
blocks and 1 don’t believe there is a good location in the city that my men can’t get into—climbing the roof and coming down hatchways, coming np from cellars, any way to get in. And being a will, there’s always a way. Occasionally we have an order to distribute circulars to the houses. It requires 20,000 to do the city thoroughly, and take* six men three days to accomplish the task. We keep one man who does house work, that is, carries his stuff directly into private residences. That’s his special job, and he’s perfectly reliable, an old and repn-
table citizen.
“How long do you keep a bill in place.”’ “We guarantee twenty days. A bill keeps fresh and in good order for that length of time, and except in rare instance* is as long as the party will ask to have it kept np. Occasionally, however, a man comee along who says he doesn’t want his stuff cover**!, and we accommodate him. In New York and Philadelphia, where there are so many rival poeten, and the bill stands public property, as it were, bills last only one day. They are put up at night, and the next night are covered up. The northwestern association, which includes the city of Cleveland, Toledo, Cincinnati, Louisville, Indianapolis, Chicago, Milwaukee, St. Louis and others have adopted the twenty day rule. In these places every bill poster owns his particular boards and stands, and knows what he can do. “Strip” work, such aa “Sapolio" and “Jackson’s,” we keep in stock all the time,
find an unoccupied spot big enough to hold one or a hundred, or a thousand sometimes, np they go. Well, I’m off now to see aa ■gent."
DExnur THOMPSON. “Joshua Whitcombe” is booming. Full house* and delighted audiences are the rule. To-morrow evening closes his highly successful engagement TO-XIOHT. Spellin’ skewl at the Third church, “My Turn Next ’at Unity church, “Aerial Locomotion” at Wright’s ball, and “Uncle Joshua" at the Grand Opera house. COMING. Forepaugh's Noachiaa show, which has flooded the city with bills and dodgers, will be ready to be deluged with patronage a week from to-morrow at the vacant lot, corner of Tenneese and South streets. From all accounts this is one of the finest show* traveling as to its collection of animals, the excellence of its riders and other points. [Tbs follovln* appeared only la the first edition : ] MODERN JERUSALEM. It* Architecture, Its Streets, It* Blxe, and Its Basinese. [CorreapoDdance Washington Star.] therefore, suhntially constructed, but among those intended for private use, whether for dwellings or business purposes, there is no pretension whatever to architectural style or taste, neither kas anything been accomplished in that direction by accident. Nor are the interiors of dwelling or boriness houses, if they can be said to be aeparate, an/more attractive to the eye than their exteriors. The outer walls, the partitions and the roofs are thick mamees of stone; the floors and ceilings of the rooms are of the same material: the windows are few and small; and the farilitia* for heating are rare and inadequate, so that the moment ene enters one of the rooms he feels as though he had been immured in the damp, chilly and oheeriem vanlta of a prison. The only public buildings in the city worth speaking of at all are the churches, of one kind and another, and as a rule these are quite aa unimpoaiog relatively •« th* private
do this wall we empty houses and
it on every side, while it* interior is an divided la it* elevation*, ao cut np into chapel* and sub-section#, and so dataared op with tawdry fitting* of one kind and another as to entirely destroy N
j occupie temple, and claims to have Jacob’s sacrificial stone within its wall*, has a magnificent dome, seme really beautiful windows, and some fine oruameatation, both insideandout; but the building as a whole is not extensive in scale nor grand or pleasing in design. Besides there is considerable cheap imitation decoration observable in
standing also on the old temple plateau, coven a good deal of ground, bat that is the moat that can be said of it It is neither lofty, massive or graceful, nor in any way particularly attractive, according to my way of thinking, at least The Armenian churcn of St James comee next in size and importance, bnt in any other city than Jerusalem would not be likely to attract attention, much less be regarded a* an architectural lion. It has, however some famishing* that are unique to a western ey*. There are two Jewish synagogue*, also, whose conspicuous domes—one green, the other white—lead the visitor to expect something worth seeing when they are reached. Such an expectation will not be realized however. One is quite old, the other comparatively new, but both are barren, dreary places, poorly famished, decorated in wretched taste and exceedingly dirty in every part. This comparatively brief catalogs includes about all the building* of any cpnsequence in the city. They are all overshadowed and put to shame by the walls surrounding the city itself. These are indeed of great mam and simple dignity, and, with the strong and lofty towers rising above them at irregular intervals, constitute about th* most impressive feature of the locality, whether viewed from the inside or at a distance from beyond. Bnt if little is to be said in commendation of the general architectural appearance of Jerusalem, still fewer words of praise can be bestowed upon her streets. The thoroughfares are all narrow, dark, crooked, uneven and filthy to the utmost degree conceivable. Such a thing as a conveyance on Wheels has probably never been seen inside the walls of the present city, and so ronnd and smooth have the limestone paving blocks been worn that travel either on the hack of an animal, or on foot, is always disficult and sometimes positively dangerous
remark is especially applicable to those in the Jewish quarter. In some of the Fellah villages of Egypt I had seen filth and foulness which 1 then supposed could not be matched any where in the world, but what I afterwards saw and smelt among the chosen people in Jerusalem made the Egyptian abomination* seem clean and fragrant by comparison. Why the people inhabiting sotoe of these localities are not every year swept off the face of the earth by diseases born of filth, decay and degradation is a question that would puzzle all the boards of health and sanitary commissions in Christendom if they could for a moment only conceive the actual condition of things existing
there.
From what I already knew’of Jerusalem I
did not expect to see a city covering a large extent of ground, yet I was nevertheless greatly surprised to find it occupying so small
will probabl ing there.
Onaartra Trad* i* ep to the Ntan >«*i at !*•«*>;
^ «SB»Se; *« A,
Lake ran, St u la ear Ms; 9t fifi hi email foantitiae. Elea, •Xffifia Ms Mr ta bast UmUktm and Qm tea. Cbaraa, JeMtaf at TX#fie toe wsstis* (*• awe, seal ad, 1SKB11H* Ms stifiard grata* #Ne; caaria, K#40e; nntraa*, Me£Cl.t« par B.
MraphteeSfiffiffififiE Qatalne,* idafl.*B#L40;b hot, •fi.MBf.li; shkeofiorm, fi*ta*0a) •*•; oraara tartar, pus, MBfita; —star ofl, ■*• L I; *H bravura*, par pond, I; soda, Hrcarba, 40ta; ralta, *!*■*, d •6c; sulphur, fioor, 6#6e; ralt pstae, S#9Be; tora, S5ta4fio; glycerine, 1 *•***! hreralds padB#a*e; lord oU; WMa linseed *0, M •70S. opium, 94.75; white lead, 6>4®7Xe. Foreign Fritita—Market firm. Mew rafirins tayon, ta hen*, a* •LMtafi.OS; Lowdrai layraa. 9U5. •*.40; loco* Muscatels, 9LOO0XAO; Yalandra, •He per B. Mew currant*, 6#5Xe per B. New Ue pra ». Dates, 7><e praB. 75£4M. Box Memlna orangra, $4 OOQS 50. Imperial orange*, $4 7S05 » per box. Fi**—drum Ite; layer 16e; hags 15c. Dry Geode—Trade strong and active. Cblieoraat ••fie. Harmony 5c. Brown drilling* beat standards, fie, tickings, 4-4, UX#l>Xc; 7-8 do 10®lfic. Brown muslina—Crescent A., 8c; Crescent B, 7><c; Crescent a, 7c. Chevotts AKBllHe, according to atylesBd weight. Bleached sheetings. Trautale, 8J*e; Blackstone, 7ftc; Hope, 7J<«; Hill, 7-8,7e; «e 4-4. IJ^e; Waramtta, 11 He. Grata hep, 19026e, according to quality. Ginghams, dira* atylaa, 10)<c; staple styles, standard makes, to. Ameekeag A. G. A. ticks, 15^0. Boll JaooneU,5>4c. Merrimac shirting prints, 5%e. Hidra-Mtrhet in better demand at • advancing pricea. Bales of G. 8. cured at fiKffiTs; green hides cows, fie; green hides, steers, fiHe; green Up, 7c; green calf, to; bulla, stags and grubby Hot Tallow at5)44<%o. Leather—Trade is active at firm pries*; oak sols held at BO^Sfio; hemlock sole held at 33 b; harnara, 3O0S8e; skirting, S4#S7e; rough harness, 3B#Slc; Pittsburg harness, *5•toe; totals pra doaen, «8$54e; city kip, 80£»o; French kip, H.00®l.d0; city eall-eklna, 80o«tl.*; French.call, skin, 8l.3S0l.75. Iron—Market very active at firm prteee. Ocaaraan sheet,Nss. 10 to 14,93.M; 18020,88; *3 to 34,88 10; common sheet No. 27, 98.40#$8^0; cold relied, No. 37, 4%c. Bar inn 82.00A3.30; other tiara In proportion; wrought charcoal bar, 18.88. floras •horn—Burden’s, 4AL38; mule shoes, •5.00<§5.9fi. Timurs’Buppura—Market steady. Northrop’* ■heet Iron roofing, 94.75 per square. Best brands charcoal tin. 1C 10x14, and 14x30, *7 26; 13x13, r.60: IX, 10x14, and 14x20. 90 25; 13x13, 99.50; IC. 14x30 roofing tin, 98.78 IC, 20x28, roofiag tin at 913.76: blotto tin. in pig* 30c; in ban, 280. Iron—37 B lroii.8S.40AS.50;37 C Iron, 4%e: galvanised 42H P«r cent discount Land, In pigs, 6c; to bon. fie. Sheet tine to pra Ih. If any trouble is attendant upon the baby’s teething, don’t hesitate to use Dr. Bull's B&by Svrup. It is invaluable. Price 25 cent* a bottle.
on Brood va American
ray, la nov conducted on both plans, the $2.60or $3 00, and the European gl.00. rds, per day, which allow* you to take
merlean S2.50 or *3 00, a ad upwards, per day, wl our meals at the elegant
you
your meals at tha eleipmt Restaurant attached to the hotel, at moderate pricea, or to taka a room only, and pay for what meals you get. oa oT Ban dreams, disturbed sleep, Indigestion, stomach gas, all removed by Hop Bitters. See adv.
a territory as it really does. A friend aad myself started out for a stroll one Sunday afternoon, and walked entirely around the city outside the walls ih fifty minutes. The way is hilly and stony for the most part but a brisk walker could do it easily inside of forty-five minutes, and I should say that almost any one walking leisurely could do it comfortably in an hour. My companion, ion who is a thoroughly competent practical engineer, afterwards calculated it from the best snrveys and maps at command, and found that the total area of the city inside the walls is a trifle less thaa two hundred and forty acres—hardly a respectable sized farm in a country where land is reasonably cheap and population not toe dense. There is something of a settlement ontside the walls, on the northwestern side, but from one thousand to fifteen hundred
ly cover all the inhabitants residIn all other directions, excepting
the little village of Siloam, on the south side, and a few houses lining for a little way the road to Bethlehem, everything is barren and
unoccupied.
How the people of the city manage to make their living or whence they obtain a supply of life-sustaining food, is more than I can imagine. The only sign of a market I saw anywhere in or about the place was a little display in that direction in the open street in front of our hotel every afternoon. I watched it closely, bnt was never able to find anything for sale except a great profusion of cauliflower, a few baskets of Jaffa oranges and ten or a dozen bandies of olive wood roots, which had been brought in for fuel on the backs on donkevs and the heads of Arab women. Never, 6y the way, did 1 see a man belittle himself by carrying a burden of the kind. The selling was also chiefly done by women, and the same sex likewise seemed to be the principal buyers. Around these miserable bits of merchandise did these forlorn creatures squat by the hour and what they lacked in business they seemed to try and make up by screams and noisy clatter. This, too, appeared to iacrease in direct proportion as the stock in hand grew less. But it seemed to me that less than 919 would at any time have bought out the
entire market, wood and all. No Need to Bay Him.
Mason was an unsuccessful grocer in Littleridge, Michigan. He had been a Methodist, but bankruptcy in business led him to carelessness about religion, although he was exceedingly superstitious. He had read of the devil buying souls, and made up his mind that for a satisfactory price he would sell his own. He wrote out a formal offer, the purport of which was that he was to be given 20 yeans of wealth, and then his soul was to go into the devil’s possession. This document he suspended over a fire, round which he performed incantations of his own invention. Although several weeks have elapsed he has not gained wealth, nor received any intimation that the bargain has been closed.
A Bold Offor.
[BockTills Tribune, (rep) ]
The stalwart* are whacking us all around, but none of them accept our offer. We propose to furnish them with the names of fifteen close friends and warm supporters of Grant who hare been convicted of rascality, if they will find us one such among those
near to Bayes.
We make this further proposition to oar Parke county critics: They may select a jury of good citizens, using whatever advantage the criminal law gives them, and we will go before that jury and pfove by the evidence that Grant used his power to shield the guilty in the whisky trials. ,
ftAJULET BETOKI.
Chew Jackson’* best sweet navy tobacco. *, w*
BOOTS BOO Lb BOOTS. BOOTS BOOTS BOOTS BOOTS BOOTS BOOTS BfiOTS BOOTS BOOTS BOOTS BOOTS BOOTS BOOTh BOOTS BOOTS BOOTS BOOTS FOOTS BOOTS BOOTS BOOTS Boara BOOTS BOOTS BOOTS BOOTS BOOTS BOOTS BOOTS BOOTS BOOTS
LADIES* Cloth-Top Button, Fine *2 M, 88.00, LADIES’ PEBBLE GOAT and KID BUTTON SHOES at |7. French Kid Side Lace At 88.00. French K id Button, Worked Holes, 83.58. Gentlemen's Whole Cat Oxfords, London Toe, 82-50,83 00,84 00. Largest assortment of Gents* FINE SHOES in the city.
SHOES SHOES SHOES SHOES SHOES SHOES SHOES SHOES,. SHOES SHOES SHOES SHOES SHOES SHOES SHOES SHOES SHOES SHOES SHO<58 SHOES SHOES SHOES SHOES SHOES SHOES SHOES SHOES SHOES SHOES SHOES SHOES SHOES SHOES SHOES
Barnard’s City Shoe Store, 40 WEST WASHINGTON ST.
Telephone See and try its workings by calling at Telephone Headquarters, Vance Block. Speak to JACOB METZGER A 00. for quarts or pints of P. LIEBEB A CO.’S celebrated TAFLE BEER, ALE and PORTER.
For shipment and city deli very .send postal ordan to 512 Madison Avenue.
——
Mrs. C. B. INGRAHAM, Instructor of Oil. Voter Color, Fas telle and Decorative PAINTING, Ckayon, Pencil and Perepectlra JDX*£L-Wi33.gr, No. 886 N. Tenneraes at, Indianapolis, lad.
Markets quiet this morning. Prices are unchanged. Th* Jobbing Provision Market—Market steady oral fins. Clear pork, fill. Mare perk. 111; a. o. haaaa quiet at 808^c, according to average; s. e. ahoolders, 5c; breakfast bacon, 7c; hacoa, tides, ctawatfjikc; hocaa, shoulders, 4c; kstUe lord, la tiercee, «K«7«e. te kegs, T^c. Produce and Fruit-Market qalst. Shlppeni paying 8c Mr eggs, raHta* at fiMc. Grad butter, sti-vg-j*. ££2, SSL grass, full feathered fra doe, 9L38; pieked, ] doe, 3.IH08.88; dock*, 92.80; turkeys 7c par M, Be; dock aa* mlxa*. 31 a-- — « - - - - - ■ jm rara^rata tata ^PP»* *A-AR0 1 ’ IW ' Aral apples, *3 7HM«. Hooey, 14«1
POND’S EXTRACT.
OATAJMtV .—POND'S Extract Is nearly a . Specific for this diseara. It can hardly he excelled, even in old and obstinate eases. The relief is so prompt that no •ne who hra ever tried It will be with-
out it.
CHAPPED HACTM AND PACD—
PONDS txtract should be in every
family this rough weather. "
akin promptly.
softens and heals the
able weathm no one subject to Rheumatic Faina should he cue day without POND'S Extant, which always relieves. -
• •KB LUNGS
•MfBXa; Ftea. ft«iOXe; fate,
IS, OokranoTTOir, Oooan, This cold wsathsr tries the
ianraaaaly. Have POND'S Extract on hand always. Urettevra the pate and
ra—wiM: i.Kra rljmrararara
THROAT, Qcurrr, Imam Vara, an* and An Pamaans at* promptly cured by the me M POND’S Extract.
It never tails.
CTRACT. — Pamphlet, history i ram with erah bottle ■ era mailed i ra application. Sold by Druggists.
GRAND OPERA HOUSE.
oil wm OILY, Oram.ra.ta,MONDAY,AprsK ■sraySraatag mm Tim A* Joshua Whitcomb, “tt&KSSSRSW 55%““ tiro weeks Is Boston. Prices os usual. Baeu* yaor Mate at Bsatam** Music Store. teas
Grand Opening
OF THE
Opa Inst Sain. WITH FINE LUNCH, Saturday Evening, May 3
ACardtottoPubfie. Having been compelled by financial embarrassment to turn over my stock to the bank, it is desired to convert it into cash as soon >• possible. We will, therefore, offer at wholesale and retail tha entire stock of Gold and Silver Watches, Diamonds, Jewelry, Solid Silver and Silver Plated Ware, Clock*, etc., at prices far below the manufacturer’s cost. The stock is large, complete, fresh and desirable. Call at once and secure a bargain at the JEWEL PALACE, 24 E. Wash. at. HARRY CRAFT, Manager.
White Loaf Sugar Syrup. Diamond Sugar Syrup..... Perfection Sugar Syrup.... Golden Sugar Syrup New Orleans Molssras,
PF AFFLIN, THE GROCER, 94 and 96 Indiana Avenue.
Lemon Brothers COMMISSION MERCHANTS, 62 South Meridian St., HAYI IV STORE CA0ICS DRIED PEACHES, DRIED APPLES Michigan Sweet Cider. BUTTIB, EGGS, Etc., receive* dolly.
PROVERBS. “No one cun be rick when the stomach, blood, liver and kidney* are healthy, and Hop Bitter* keep them so.” ‘‘The greatest nourishing tonic, appetizer, rirengtheter and curative on earth—Hop "It is impootible to remain long sick or out of health where Hop Bitter* are used.” “Why do Hop Bitten cure ao much?” “Because they give good digestion, rich blood and healthy action of all the organa.” “No matter what your feeling* or ailment is. Hop Bitten will do you good.” ‘‘Renumber, Hop Bitten never does ham, but good, always and continually.” “Purify the blood, cleanse the stomach and sweeten the breath with Hop Bitten.” "Quiet nsrves and balmy sleep In Hop Bi tiers-” "No health with inactive liver and urinary organs without Hop Blttera.” Try Hop i'll re and Pain Belief. For salt by all Druggists. [aje ao?
LIGHT SHADES
And Checked Cloth Top
Ladies’ and Misses’ Shoes,
JUST RECEIVED AT
Burs Sloe Palace, 3 Eaat Washington St BI*W-f
STOUT PIPES CO BROCKVILLE, IND. Fine Book, Newspapers. The Indianapolis Dolly and Wsekly News la printed on popar aaanulaetarad by tela company
$25 to for substantial fortunes every week, and yields an immense percentage of profits by the New Capitalisation fiyatem of open t log In Stocks. Full explanation on application to * ADAMS, BROWN A CO., th on? Bankers, 26 and 28 BroodteL, N. Y. City.
T7!FATHERS 15c lb, new and fine; mmpi* frm. T Large 6-lb. Pillows, $1. Moaoiaox A Go., 4fi JcdL avenue, Detroit, Mich. f-m-wf
A GENTS, Cheapest Feather Duster* in tea -«-*• World, SO New Novelties, sample free. J. W. Moaaxsow A Co. Detroit Mich. f-m-wf
GROCERIES. Fiaeat Quality, Lowest Prices, * WETnraT^nraafra mrarl VF—a—gf wnoi«aai6 ana i4.eLa.il. James R. Ryan, TO* 72 m»ti 74 NIa*«mch aoetta mro.
rnTjTa TlTTmPI IXlJCl JJUJcLGjI Pha Grand Duka! The Duly Duka! An axcaa*
Picture Frames,
a cn
m
25 cn PEEBOI
troch: - t .- W iw. ^ Prapored aad JMd ifw JOHN I. BB0WH k SONS, Boston.
’TOW > the noara o# th* pre-
roehsae
r
-to My ram
Cough, Bronchitis, Catarrh,
25c.- WORLD- JTAMJSD
MRS. WINSLOW * SOOTHING SYRUP. fcrChildraa Trethlng, Ac. BROWN’S VERMIFUGE COMFITS, for Eradicating Worm# la ChUdraa (unfaflinf}. BROWN'S HOUSEHOLD PANACEA, for Relieving Pain, both Internal and External. BROWN’S CAMPHORATED DENTIFRICE, foe Wktteoteg and rraranrift^T—tlL
BOX.D BY JEZaZ* OBT7OOZBT0*
• -C
Excelsior Steam Laundry S **« f BASOXn TOm, Smth Teumm Stmt Jg uti!y_!S^'!^!.rL‘.mThT wain dim. <*Mm nm. uum
Just Received: SBsSSS POWER & LAN6D0N, 60 N. Pom. St
Vienna Bakery. Breai, Rolls tad Flos Cakes. 70 "Ml a mm.
crssss&xsfssffissws Miahiran aterat.
Katahliakad 1S50. Capital Stank. $$00.00 SINKER, DAVIS & CO., Foondara and IffmohinlNta, INDIANAPOLIS, IND., Mill and El avatar Build on and Foraishan and Manufaetoren of French Burr MlllStones,ootapleta Flooring Mills, Pulley and Geared Pratahta Grist Mills, Improved Bolting Chests, Vertical French Bure Mills for grinding con, middlings and feed: Circular Sa w Mills, Head Block* and Dreg Saw Machines. Estimates and Plana fra Mills furnished oa Application, Portable and Stationary Engines, Of tea moat improved construction. TUBULAR AND FLUB BOILERS Of all tiara and descriptions. Shafting. Hangers, Pull***. Coupling* and Fork Bourn Equipments. Sand tor DlustmiedOBtalocuM
Indianapolis Tima Table. Depart- Arrive. Cleveland, Ooinmbos, GtactanaU aa<f Indianapo
It* & W.
N.TAB. Evd’y «:Uhb D’y A BpT’g Ex 4115am Union Ac..., 5:15am DaytonA Col Ex 12:00m N.Y. AB.Bxd’y •:40pm Elk * Ft W Ex 8:40pm
L. ASLL.ExA’1 l:8tati Ind W A M KxlO :68am Union An,, m - 8:8Bpra B., lAStinBi 6:15pm Oo\ A la’Ua £ •:lSpa N Y AStLKxd’UAfoti Cel. 8 A Ind Ex 10:SBpte
rlghtwood Dlvtetan. (C., C., G A L BallwayJ
Depot daily.
dtitam 8:06am
H :30am ... 13:00m 8:40pm dolly6:80pm
11:10pm
Flttahaigh, Cincinnati and Bt. Loaf* B. W.
Richmond Ao.— 8:
w
Arrivt daily.— 7 ...i.»...... 10:55am
“ 11:80am “ ' - 6119pm
gtiBpra
•• (tally- 10:88pm
NYABFLd’yrt BA W FL d’y V DASpringfEx, DAXanSTEx Sprlngf ACEx fleh iDav Ao Zsnta AC Ac, HYABFExd FLWFExd,
.ho- £SgJ5:«l»— Yawtaiw
7222? 1:00pm
JOS. A. MOORE,
$4 last Harlot Stmt
FOB BAAE-Smah dwtiUng, No.M Spruce at.,
Ota bargain.
roonks Hutchings’s blook, 98 rata. Btererasm 1M 8 Mar. at Ftrst-class re eras and eMcra In Bsatam block. Ten emeu t v. rWooou on 3d fioor S3 K. lUrkS* ■L, with eonrenlsneeq, 813-50, separate antenna*. One storeroom 388 Mam. arena*. Living noma In Bristor block, Ya. arecu*. Snltra and singk reanm McBride block, ara. Walnut aL and MmaTatanna. Storeroom 78 8. Penn, at- Salto of rooms Rafert block, Fort Wayne are.. 88, Small atorareora an Indiana arena*, suitable far a drug stars aad barhar •hop. House 1M Areher street, 98. HoaaelQBJE * New York at. House 473 N. Aishaara st. M
Prat tin* d’y.— 4:00am
I’y- 1:00pm Mail and Ao 10:00am i A*. 4:00pm I Day Ex d’y. 6:S5pra I’y til:00pm | Mall aad Ac—. 8:40pra
Mel ’irate. •SijiLi'
Pacta* Ex d’y til KWpm |
IndtanappHa and BA Irani* B. B. Day for pc. t^Oam I N. Y. Ex d’y- fitilam Local Kxs - 8:88pm IndhumpoM* Ac. 10:45am N Y. Ex d’y a. U-lOpm | Day lx «:00pn Indianapolis, Onetanatt and Irafayotta E.1B,
(Cincinnati Division.)
CAStLFLd’y a 4:15ora I Grerauborg Ac.. 8Mara Cincinnati Ae-U:16am | ChidStL mall-lStiOpra ^Geanaburg Ao. 4:80pm I Western Kx 8:50ma atiABtLraTpe. 6:66pm I CAfltLBLd’y-UOAfipm
Irafayotta Dlvtetan.
FAB Ex. 8:10am I ChlFL d’ly ■:8*am Chi mm* Mail pc 13:48pra Cincinnati A* 10:60am Western Ex——. 7:06pm j Chicago Mall-. lidOpm OhlP L d’y roe 11:16pm | Irafyctt* Ac S :15pm Indianapolis, Bloomingt mi and Wwurn B. W. PaeExAMall—... 7.15*m I BABEx dally..- 4:18am Crxw Aocom 8:64pm 1 Chaiupaiga Aco.ll :00osi EanATBpeci&l— 7:00pm DeyKxAMsll 8:40pm EIAWEx reWBvll :00pm Otactanott. ti.—(itn« and Indianapolis E E Mail A Cta Ex— 4:18am I Mau —....—13:15pm Aeoonunoda’on.. 4:85pm | Wssterm Ex..... t:85pm Indianapolis and Ylnosnnra B. B. MaHACkfroEx.— 8:00am I Bpenosr AM. 8:06am Bpsoora Accomu t:S5pm | MailAOtiroEx- 8 J6pm Indianapolis, Para and Chicago B. W. FtWTolADotM L 7:38am j CAMCEx dally. 4tifom ChiATelBx .UrtBpra I Psru Acoom • :88am 1 AM CEXaoAs— 8:10pm | TolAEtWEx—_ 13:00m XolACBx dally ■.11:10pm | CUAM.0 MalL 6:»fm JO—OWTUIti JUaLMMI ioa mdiMUlpolls R* R* LootaABEx a— 4:10am I Mndtean Mril 18 8*— ModALEx d’ly. 7’J*am MANorthJta 13:00m ColAMadAm— 8:00pm I Day Exparas.— (:10pm BAEvEx re 6:35pm | NightEx daily-16 tapra Fart Wayne, Mnnoe and Otaohmati. Lravs Indianapolis via Bee Una: Port IV«J. A D. K*............4ti6 a at Fort Wayne Ex— 6:40 p m Arrive at Indianapolis: Fort W. J. A D. Ex 8:18 p ■ Fort W. J. A D. Ex— p m G. W. Muixxv, G. T. L IraotevHta, N*w Albany A CMaagA
(Yin L, B. A W.)
lltiamx I Qrawfordsvill*, I north 9:18 pm •Mara | Ckawfordbreilk, I ■oath 7*8 pra Loganspart, CravfardsTille A Booth Western E. B.
North.
BURDSAL’S Point Store, 34 South Meridian Si, HXADQVARTXBS FOR OILS, PAINTS, TARNISHES, BRUSHES, Window Glass, • xsto.. asto. FOR $10 GASH
Colfax.,
•48 ara •tit pra - 8 tit ara CnwfordaviUa. 7:18 pra •A0 ara
408 pra | “
L, C. A L. and L., M. A EEMboada.
Tagatynrt.—. Utikpra ooifax—:::: u-SpS
..... 8:88 fa
Qrawfordsvllla. 3:30 pra
701 pra •Ai pra Uti8pm
ISA* pra 8:08 n ■ 4:48 pm 8:41 p« Stil pra 7 A0 pm
8:1* a as 4:00am
ladtanapcite Lafaystte
10:87 am UJOsra
Hoopsteca Paxton
12:06 pm Itifipra
Gibson
8:48 p m 8:1* pra ItiSpra 13:87 p ■ 13 tit pra ItAtaas
G. W. Bmra,
Gen. Para. Agent, Lafayette, Ind.
lUrvaafrawtrawl raww-o «. « Edff nfolrarate Vtra Brara FJrara finninw, waoMi m nciitgaa, wm 09$ ii»o$
IndiauRpoiii, depart
Omhra.* Elkhart,
• :eup* «:u*m Itifora 8 Afora 'UK iSS
Ferncoonaetiag with tea L, F. ACL g=;25=fis::iss::i iajs
EU Blvra E. E.
8A0pm fitiTara. Denver «s 10:17pm IQ-Tfsra N. Manchester. 8: 13:43** 13-tapra Is Otto 8. 1:13am 13 AOpra-kuburn June’s 8: 3:00am Ititnni nutira 3: _. * - If:48ran SMMatfilnitinHi BO* ^■ra»h*fiftata«.fo55ngr
I. H. SHEPARD & CO., xurbi a» surnsf or White RiverCoal Mines at Edwardaprat, oa Indtanapctis and Ytaostinra Railroad. Office *4 Yinoenncs, lad. Osrrrapondcoos soUeitad. toot —ii —raramratak, WW 11 T1 Wall Paper. BETTEE OOODB THAN EYKEEE3EEE. Sotloaao. X*xrloofl$m CATHCART & CLELANO’S.
vj
W# will inrart a ■eren-Unoadv a diflbrent list ofm pmrsforten tiaratwaireaS in a choice of either of four separata and distinct cwira.’aJS lin* on* wash in all tix Uate eorahlMd, batag rarad than 1,000 papers. Ws eko hevs liote of pepsre hv Stats* througheat tha United States and Amadm Btmd for oar loo-proparaphtat. AddramGEEF. ROWELL A OB., 18 Sproo* tercet. Now Teak.
ODORLESS Privy Vault and Sink Cleaner. Offloa—16 North Delaware street. Rcsidsnco—471 Booth Illinois te, All srdsre attended to cheaply aad procaptigl LAMBENT KEtJMHOLZ. f-ra-w LADIES,
has a large vault made expressly for keeping them and insures against mote or fire. There la a department in it for Baal Basques end othsr large garments. Fin* seal goods an often damaged by being ceralcstiy packed sway. It will sest hot M8tie to have you Fun properly taken car* of fit STOUT’S, 76 E. Wash. SL
TbeMercantile Agency. R. 6. DUN & CO., 88 South Maridian 8k.
