Indianapolis News, Indianapolis, Marion County, 29 July 1891 — Page 4
THE ITTDTANa5P0LI8 NEWS. WEBNESDAT, JULY 29, 189L
in town* kpolit exceeds the ion •! Mr other in«spaper. i largest bona fide America ia propostion ©Mr. exceeds in si*e any IT.
for display advertisements in not later than 10 o’clock „ve attention same day. (classified advertisements) re-
i ot The Indianapolis News tor i lending July 1 was aa ave 1,138 for £ach Bay. government seems to pronaries in very much the as ws protect the celestials country. been remarked that it is much handle a deficit than a surplus, alto seems easier to reduce than to WATTBB60N'% yiciousness in puncturing the Hill boom suesrests that he would not even leave the GovernorSenator a paraebuti to come down with. BaLMaCEDa has but one month more of power in Chili, but it looks as if be would have nothing left to turn over to hit suecespor. He is spending all the ey and killing off the people; A New Yoke Judge has rendered a decision to the effect that ‘‘a nuisance is anything that it hurtlol and vexatious, that dlyturbs happiness and impairs and prevents enjoyment, and that causes displeasure, gives pain, or produces unpleasant sensations.” According to this tafinition, lifa is pretty much made up of luisances. ■
'1 ho Democrats’ Work. As M could be said of tha first meeting of the Democratic city convention, "Well begun is hnlf done,” it esa be said of the concluding session, "All's well that ends well.” Of the nominee for police judge Tha News believes Hr. Busk irk to be the best of the lot that was before the convention. It might add, too, that “the bfet is none too good.” Tha convention could havo dona hotter by going outside and nominating a younger man, one less identified with effort at political preferment, and more identified with effort at legal preferment The office, be It said, is perhaps the least important of all. It does not amount to a criminal court, over which Hr. Bnskirk has presided one term as judge, and as to which his ability and conduct ure matters of record. He is equally well known and neither advocacy nor opposition can make for him as it might with ons little known. That he is capable of discharging tha duties of the office to which he is named is conceded, and so his candidacy is open and above board. For eouncilm&n-at-large the convention did well It nominated men of character and attributes to be commended; nominations additionally significant when considered in their full meaning as signs that tha ring and gang alement' was suppressed; thst the city government under the new charter is to be placed in the hands of its friends, and regarded in the spirit of its being — business first, politics afterward. The convention did well. It presented men in whose hands the interests committed to councilmen-at-large will be safe. They represent the conservative, responsible ‘‘business” spirit of the party, and stand for a triumph over the corporationservers and "combine” that would unite with the gang to subvert the city’s interests. By its general direction and* its a work as a whole, the convention testified that its party is alive to the spirit of the new administration of city affairs and in sympathy with it.
K if
i >
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Commissioner Morgan is being generally commended for his decision in hit reiusal to have any further official relatione with the Catholic Bureau of Indian Miscions. The Government has no right to recognize or support sectarian education. The Indian schools should be under Governmental auspices, and the public funds should support only public schools. Indiana would be justified ia going for the Census Bureau with an ax. First It refuses to give us but' 10 per cent, increaee in population, then it proves that thera has been a decrease in mur school enrollment Now it has issued a bulletin to show that there hae been an increase In the ratio of prisoners in’the county jails. Perhaps when the figures are all added np it will show that we are not Mi# center of population and that we did not produce the President of the United Statee. Really wc ought to knock a leg •ff of that bureau. _ THE Farmers’ Alliance may have a practical demonstration of their financial schemes by studying the methods that prevail in tha sadly battered-up republio of Chili. Every firm at Iquique, the seat •f war, ia isaning its own eorreney, and pill-box lids are the medium of circulation. A round lid is worth 25 coots, an oval lid passos for 50 cents. They are stamped with the promise of the firm to redeem them in gold in the sweet by and by. The government has issued paper eurrency until n dollar of it is worth but 25 cents in gold. The inflationists should include pill* box UdaJn their scheme. They’ would be as handy to carry around as a poker ship. -
l
J. Elliott, former editor of the Capital at Columbus, 0., was yesconvicted of murder in the second a. In February last he shot and l A. C. Osborn, a reporter of the kf World. The affair was entirely
the result of personal journalism, a malignant and abusive attack upon affairs that were of a purely private nature, •■-
upon the character of a wife, as no man could be expected to enre. This ia a species of journalism that
should not bs tolerated, either by the individual or the community. The column* of a paper may be need for a
and uoon public matters
i may be, and at times must be, made
freely expresacd. lieu how to give and take in this ideas not necessarily sever
♦,fcuha*k Kilt
are sacred and no provotheir being dragged The fact th^ a man respect. The press a higl*r and more iiv . • " : •
The Universal Demand for Best. Persons who have a great deal to do with machinery know that it has a peculiar way of ruuuing down, failing to move with its highest power, showing all the symptoms of what in a human being would be called fatigue. A period of rest apparently restores its qualities. Meu who use edged tools, especially those of fine quality, such as razors, soou learu that at certain periods they must be. laid aside and allowed time to recover their edge. Tho same is true of gold pens, and he who would have them at their best must provide himself with several and give to each a stated period of repose. But a*mnch more remarkable case than any of these is vouched for by a St. Louis jeweler, who says: Any one in the business will tell vou what a heavy loss a man will incur by jewels in bis cate or show-case going off in appearance. All the cleaning in the world won’t help them, and all the time they are getting to look more and more shabby, until at last they have so salable value. If they are sent awey to another city they frequently brace up of their own accord and come back looking bright and lustrous. It is a well-known fact among women that dresses, trimmings, household adornments, anything that has color and becomes faded, if put away in the dark for awhile, will come ont as fresh and bright as it just from the hands of the cleaner or dyer. This principle has always been recognized in the vegetable kingdom, trees and plants of all kinds going into a death-like trance during the winter months, to come forth in the spring with renewed vigor and beauty. The application of these ideas to insensate things, to the products of the mineral kingdom, is, however, a later and more original proposition. If we admit that rest is the inexorable law of physics, what shall be sjud of its necessity to humanity, or rather what excuse can be offered for the general ignoring of this law by mankind? When the eyes grow dull and lusterless, and the machinery of the body begins to move slowly and ineffectually, and the keen edge of the intellect loses its sharpness of execution, what does it all mean? Simply that the time has come for a rest and a change. Shall we slip off the bands and put out the fires and let the inanimate machinery rest, while we force the delicate mechanism of the body to its utmost effort and never let the fires die out? Shall we put the pen away until it recovers its point, and yet refuse the rest demanded by the brain that guides this pen? Are we not committing these fatal mistakes day after day and year after year? In time the machinery wears out, its movement^ become uncertain, its fore© is lost, or, else, all of a sudden, some of its intricate parts give way and it is a total wreck. People ray of the mental work, the pen has lost its cunning, the writing grows feeble. Why? Simply because the tired writer is cheating his mind of its imperative demand for rest and a change of occupation. We say we can not spare the time, tbat the exactions of living require that we shall labor without ceasing. We cheat ourselves with this delusion, and, after awhile, with dimmed and weary eyes, we read across the pages this written legend, "What fools these mortals be I” i Tho Making of America. Under the title "Are we AngloSaxons?" John C. Fleming contribute* a short paper to the current number of the North American Review, discussing tbat much-discussed and intensely interesting question of the composition of the American. We are too ready to taka it for granted that we ure Anglo-Saxon, because we were in the beginning English colonies and beoausa we are an Englishspeaking people. And as we grow greater and mot© powerful aa a Nation, Hr. Fleming notes, the anxiety of tha Englishman grows to have it understood that we are Anglo-Saxon, Anglo-Saxon in race feeling and literature. Thu idea, advocated by eminent Englishmen like the late Matthew Arnold and Jamea Anthony Fronde, is received with acclaim by some—particularly tbat fringe of Anglo mania on the Atlantic coast from Boeton to Washington, and extendleg as far inland as Philadelphia, possibly to the Allegheny mountains. It is
iweaivsd with indifferenos by othsn. By •till othsn it was not raoaived nt aU for tha raaaon to them that it is falsa. When the Marquis of Lorne was Gover-nor-General of Canada, he repeatedly glorified the Anglo-Saxon, congratulating Canadians thst they were of that strain, yet the marquis himself is Celt, tod at the death of his father will become the head of a great Celtic tribe, the Campbells; and as for Canadians—one-third of Canada’e population is Frsnch—that ia to say, Celto-Latin; one-third Irish and Highland Scottish, and the remaining third of English and German descent. Hr. Fleming thinks that the marquis was about as ethoologicallv correct in addressing Canadians as Anglo-Saxons as was Mr. Blaine in his letter accepting the nomination for the presidency in 18S4, when he drew a distinction between the two Americas by terming one of them Spanish and the other Anglo-Saxon. To fairly estimate the composition of the American people appeal must be made to names, language, immigration, figures •nd'features. Now, while there can be no question that the English language is all but universally spoken in the United States and Canada, it is spoken as eloquently and sonorously by the IrishAmerican Daniel Dougherty, the FrenchAmerican Chauncey M. Depew, the Ger-man-American Carl Schurz, as by the Anglo-Saxon-Amerioan Henry James or John Sherman. Seven or eight millions of African descent also speak the English language, but they do not claim to be Anglo-Saxons. For purposes of ethnological classification, and lacking accurate data, Russia is called Slav, Germany Teutonic, Ireland Celtic, England Anglo-Saxon. When our first census was taken, hi 1790, the white population was 3,172,006. Assuming that all English are Anglo-Saxon, Hr. Fleming considers 2,000,000 a liberal allowance for the number that then were among the 3,172,006. Supposing, then, that these 2.000. 000 had received no accession from extraneous sources, to what number would they have increased, let us say, up to 1880? This can not be answered, for there are no statistics showing the natural increase of the American people. But there is one element in the United States which has received no extraneous increase worth speaking of, and that is the African. It is known that in 1790 the colored population, bond and free, was 767,208, and in 1880 6,580,793, which is an increase of 770 per cent, in ninety years. Now, if the 2,000,000 Anglo-Sax-ons increased in the same ratio, their number in 1880 would have reached 15,400.000. As a matter of fact, the colored population increased more in proportion than- the Caucasian until within a very recent period; but waving thht, the next question is, to what extent has the AngloSaxon benefited by immigration? Mr. Sodfford, Librarian of Congress, says that between 1779 and 1820 the immigration to this country is estimated to be 250.000, of which for obvious reasons the Anglo-Saxons formed a very small percentage. After 1820 there are official figures. Frojpn 1820 to 1879 (both years inclusive) 9,908,709 immigrants from Europe and'British America settled in the United States. Here is their nationality: England, 894,444; Ireland, 3,061,761: Scetland, 169,547; Wales, 17,893; Great Britain (not specified), 560,453; Austro-Hun-gary, 65,688; Belgium, 2?,267; France, 313,716; Germany, 8,002,027; Greece, 385; Italy, 70,181; Netherlands, 44,319; Poland, 14,831; Portugal, 9,062; Russia, 38,316; Spain, 28,091; Scandinavia, 306,092; Switzerland, 83,709; Britiah America, 568,941; other countries, 97,007; miscellaneous (unknown), 256,776. It will be seen from this that England alone furnished less than a tenth, but allowing half of the Scotch to be Anglo-Saxon and a tourth of the Canadians, the total would be 1,115,450, which, added to the 16,400.000, would make a little more than sixteen and a-half millions in 1880, plus the natural increase of the immigrants, which, if set down at half a million would allow the people of Anglo-Saxou blood in this country in that year to be 17,000,000, or about seventeen forty-fourths of the white population. ' The 560,453 immigrants from Great Britain (not specified) are not taken ihto account, for it is believed tbat they are Irish and other Europeans, it being known that the English immigration bureau kept track of English emigrants proper sailingfrom English ports, while as for others it often did not take the trouble to classify them according to nationality. Since 1880 upward of 7,000,000 immigrants from Europe and British America have come, chiefly from Germany, Scandinavia, Ireland and Italy, and relatively few from England. Hence Mr. Fleming holds it to be a liberal estimate that there are now no more than 19,000,000 of AngloSaxon blood in this country. The features of the people resemble the CeltoLatin races more than the Anglo-Saxon or Teutonic. The average Englishman is fair; the average American dark; the face of the average Englishman inolioea to flatness; that of the American is sharp and aggressive, with a Celtio contour. Names furnish little or no indication of race. Names, whether German, French or Irish, get translated or anglioixed with eas© and rapidity. Thus Schmidt and Jansen ohang© to Smith and Johnson after a generation; Lemarcb, Dubois, Leblanc and Lenoir are translated into Walker, Wood, Whit* and Black; and the Irish names Callahan, Mahoney and Greehan are modified to Calhoun, Mahone and Green. It Jeems to be, ns has been said, that not England, but Europe is the mother of America. Certainly w* nr© developing n type destined to pass into the future as essentially American, ns different from Celtio as from Latin, as different from Anglo-Saxon as from either.
An Irish Love non* When w© parted, mavoureen—and ead was the parting! A hope buoyed my coal I’d soon see thee again; That hope, Uks a star, lit my pathway at To leave alff cherished and oroes the wide main fk Wherever I roamed ia the land of the stranger, In momenta of toy or when elouds would appear, Lika an angel to cheer me and guide me from danger, Minnie, xnavourneen, thine image wae near. If I but knew that still I am remembered— That even a thought you have given to me, The pains I've endured and the sorrows no- _ numbered Would melt in the arms o! wild eostacy. Earth would be lairer and life would be dearer. Hop* on my pathway would smile as of yore; Fancy would bring all I love to me nearer— My heart’s Idol, Minnie, and my native ■bore. What were a kingdom to me, love, without thee? What were a crown but a weight on my brow? Beauty and love have hung jewels about the# A king or a kingdom could never endow. Minnie, mavourneen, though sad was the parting, ' Tha meeting will pay for a lifetime of pain, ▲ad homeward will soon tha fond exile be starting To claim his heart’s idol and part not again. —(New York Saturday Review. “SCRAPS.’»
An Marly Patent. [Scientific Amerlcaa.1 The earliest Connecticut patent found on record was granted in October, 1717, to Edward Hinraan, of Stratford, for the exclusive right aud liberty of making molasses from the stalks of Indian corn, in Fairfield county, for ten years, which grant ended with the words: “Always provided the said Hinman makes as good molasses and makes it as cheap as comes from the West Indies.” — — — - Discriminating Judgment. (South Bead News.) W# will alwaye think that The Indianapolis News is to-day tbs most readable newspaper in the State. Paternal Wisdom. 'South Bend News.] A son is apt to think he knows more than Us lather until he becomes a lathee.
Of 10,757 farms in Utah 9,724 are made
fertile by irrigation.
During a spell of coughing Miss Bertie Troupe, of Harrisburg, Pa., dislocated her
jaw.
There are twenty-six engineers and sixty firemen always on board the City of Paris
steamship.
Pronunciation “bees” have taken the place of the one* exciting and profitable
spelling bee.
Missouri is the most populous State west of the Mississippi, and is nearly as big as all
New England.
A tailor says that few men have evenlybalanced shoulders, the right almost inva-
riably being lower than the left.
A justice in New York has just decided that you need not pay for a meal ordered
at a restaurant unless you eat it
There is a spring in Mendocino countv. California, from which rises such noxious gas that one whiff of it will extinguish life. The young king of Servia is one of the best educated boys in the country, and at fifteen years old is admittedly a marvel in
mathematics.
The State of New York supports seven scbools for deaf mutes, in which there are graduated many thousands, and most of
them are doing well.
When the new granite art building of Bowdoin College is completed it will have the distinction of being the only building devoted exclusively to art in any American
college.
Three telegraph poles, two fifty feet and one sixty feet, were cut from the sapie tree at Harlan, Mich., a few days ago. The tree forked above the stump,' which was four
feet in diameter.
A colt that saw the wooden horse in front of a harness-store mistook it for its mother, and it was a considerable while before it could be made to believe that the wooden horse was a fraud.—[San Francisco Call. The education of Russian children is conducted in four languages—the native, German, English and French—and they grow up masters of these languages. The czar himself speaks English remarkably
well.
Gough’s library is so remarkable in many respects, especially as to the bookbinding and his testimonials from temperance societies at home and abroad, that the suggestion has been made that it be preserved entire. Rev, A. K. Bates has resigned the pastorate of the First Presbyterian church of Cadiz, O., and will hereafter serve some congregation that can not afford to support a pastor. He recently inherited a large fortune. The present Shah of Persia, recently reported ill, has been one of the meat progressive nionarchs that country ever had. During his reign Tbherin haschauged from a dreary old town of 10^,900 inhabitants to a city of thrice that population and greatlv beautified. Probably the most remarkable railroad in the world is that running from Gloggintz to Lounering, near Vienna. It is only twentyfive miles in length, but cost $9,000,000. it becins at an elevation of 1^00 feet, and has its terminus at 13,000 feet. It has fifteen double viaducts, seventeen tunnels, and crosses itself nine times. . One section of the historical collection at Dresden, Germany, is literally a museum of boots and shoes, being, it is' believed, unequaled in the world as a repository of the footwear of celebrities. Among the things of interest shown are a pair of shoes worn by Martin Luther at the diet of Worms, and the toilet slippers of the great Maria Theresa. The United States census reports only 110 paupers in Louisiana. There is no sufficient paUper law in the State—there was no provision whatever made for paupers even in New Orleans until the Shakespeare almshouse was constructed a few years ago, and it is unable to hold half of those entitled to admission—and in only a few parishes is any provision made for their care and maintenance. It has been demonstrated tbat while the greatest velocity imparted to a cannon ball scarcely exceeds 1,500 miles an hour— meteors from space penetrate the air with a velocity, it is claimed, of sometimes 150.000 miles a» hour. This tremendous speed raises the temperature of the air at once to 4,000 or 6,000° centigrade, causing in many cases the complete destruction of the meteorite by combustion. Considerable excitement was caused in Portland, Me., a few days ago by the sudden appearance in the lower bay, near Long Island, of a school of several thousand mackerel of fair size, averaging what ar© technically known as Nos. 2 and 3. The appearance was so unexpected that there was no time to seine them, hand lines in small boats being used almost entirely. Perhaps fifty barrels in all were secured. A few days since Mr. Kahn, the furdealer, while driving out of Empire City, Coos bay, met a young lady riding into town with a rifle in her hand and the carcass of a bear strapped across the horse behind her saddle. The young lady was Miss Charlotte Nichols, of Empire City, who had started out to visit a place her father owns in the country and took her rifle along, and meeting the hear shot it She is quite an expert with the rifle, having killed a number of deer.—[Portland Oregonian. California enjoys the distinction of haying the only railroad that runs on the tops of trees. This peculiar piece of engineering is in Sonoma county, between Clipper Mills and Stuart Point, where the railroad crosses a deep ravine, in the center of which are two huge redwood troes, side by side. These giants have been sawed off seventy-five feet above the bed of the creek, and the timbers and ties are laid on these tall stumps. This natural tree bridge is considered to bs equal in safety to a bridge built on the most soien* tifie principles. Justice Field is the scholar of the Supreme Bench. Besides bis Greek and Latin ne is thoroughly versed in modern Greek and Turkish, and can converse fluently in French and Italian. His library is one of the finest in Washington, and he himself is probably the most interesting man in public life at the capital. His extensive travels, combined with his long experience of life and his wide reading make him a most agreeable and entertaining companion. In personal appearance he is tall, with a somewhat stooping figure and a large head that looks like Shakespeare’s. A lively banana war took place the other afternoon between two rival department stores on State street, Chicago. Each store had purchased a car-load of banauas to use in a special bargain sale. It was accidental that the purchase! were made the same time. One store opened out by selling a down bananas for • cent. The other offered three dozen fora coot, and the rivalry waxed hotter, until for an hour nice bananas were sold at ten dozen for on© cent. Both store* closed out their stocks. Many fruit venders were among the customers at tho latter part of tho sale.
THE NEW YORK JL V—^ JtrVf JlIjI* [Established in 1S53.1 OUIt PRINCIPLE OF BUSINESS 18 TO SELL ONLY RELIABLE <;K)OD8 AT FAIR
PBICESj,
Irouxrapous, July 39.199L
-OF THE-
■^^0 Our offer ol any rrn • -i Jacket, Wrap, Suit i. ilinK Tea Gown or Cape at exactly haif the original price, should be worth your
notice.
Our offer of Anrp-, - derson’s and other J. JllIlK Scotch Ginghams at 25c a yard should close out all we have before Friday night and it probably will. T\T0 That the special rp-i • i values we are ofTlllIlK! iering in Black Silk Grenadines should cause every lady in Indianapolis to buy dresses. 0 . You should cer-r-rri • -j tainly visit our AliinK! store during the present week. Pettis Dry Goods Co.
Just received, another entire new stock of Ladies’ Bootees and Oxford Ties, in all the newest styles. C. FRIEDGrElSr, 19 North Pennsylvania Street.
Stencils, Seals, Rubber and Steel Stamps. Badges, Checks, etc. OKO. J. MA-YICR, Send for catalogue. la South Meridian
WORLD’S FAIR
ANOTHER DEEP CUT In ©very department. W© ar© com palled to lower our stock on account of our corny to make some extensive additions to our building, which will be necessary to accommodate the extensive ■took that we shall carry this fall. Now ii your time. Don't wait until thw fall No better investment, if you contemplate refurnishing this fall. SEE THEM. FURNITURE DEPARTMENT. 9165, massive Old English Bed Room Suit, worth $200. $85, XVI Century Suit, best value ever offered. Desirable Suita at $55, 940, $35, 927.50,923.50, $1&, 915 have been cut in price 25 per [©eot. All decided bargains. 57.50, beautiful XYI Century Hall Tree. 812.50, beautiful Antique Oak Hall Tree. 922.50, magnificent Hall Tree, worth $33. 945, mammoth Hall Tree, ©heap at $65. These prices are disasteroue. However, they must go. $13.50, Antique Oak Sideboard, best ever offered at the price* It sold elsewhere for 820. $18, handsome Old English Sideboard. $45, grand XYI Century, French plate mirror, Sideboard. This great redaction includes every department of our establishment— Carpets, Queensware, Stoves, Refrigerators, Trunks, Traveling Bags, Baby Carriages, and everything for housekeeping. Opp. State House. Telephone 1296
AStLmutMOTM.
SUMMER REPORTS.
SEA SIDE PARK HOTEL. Sea Side Park. Ocean County, New Jersey. Open under new management. 127 room*. Handsome, hueat and saiest surf bathing on the coaet. Good fishing, crabbing and sailing. Terms: |e to R2per week. Send (or circular. THE SEA BIDE PARK HOTEL.
PARK HOm AH SAHTAR1H,
resort,
nd
leasee of the hole attendants are aiwi circulars and rates,
ng am
ament are oontroUed by the L Competent physician and ays at hand. For descriptive
^ address
FRED V. NEEDHAM.
WEST BADEN SPRINGS. THE CARLSBAD OF AMERICA. THE SARATOGA OF THE WEST. For particulars and terms address WEST BADEN SPRINGS CO., West Baden, Ind.
Package makas 6 gallons.
Delicious, sparkling- lu “i appetizing. Bold by ail dealers. /-KiT a beautiful Picture Book and cards sect to any one addreeeing O. K. HIRES * CO..
Philadelphia.
WILDER & CO., 220 Devonshire Street, Boston, Mast., Manufacturers of a superior grade of paper, for newspapers, in rolls and reams. This paper is printed on quality advertised. Correspondence solicited.
TO BE ADVANCED AUG, 1 TO $4.00
OR WITHDRAWN FROM ©AX.IS AND AI^TlNCKD TO PAR.
tea
AN INVESTMENT THAT WIIX DOUBLE IN IS MONTHS. PAYING REGULAR DIVIDENDS APRIL AHD OGTORER
STOC=PE of- the;
Georgia-Alabama Investment and Development Company. c:AF=>inrAi_-s-tcixz:p5:, s^.©oo,ooo.
Gen. BENJ. V. BUTLER, President.
DIRECTORS.
Gee. B*bJ- T. Butler, of HaeMdiusetts. “ " H. Hoots, of trkann*.
. Hyatt, m aid,Pro*.;
Tho*. C. Smith, r*e*. nut Ward Bulk, Brooklyn. L. M. Ssaford, Fret. Baukof X*w Cud*, of Kuttaeky.
Ion, Logsn I
Hon. Ja» W Hyatt. •a-Treunrw of U. S._, of ConnaeUaat.
Qou. C. Soofitid, Fra*. X. i. Con - Co., t
»lh. Pi**, nth Ward Bu
, of Hew York.
okljro.
| Hon. JAMES W. HYATT. Treasurer.
ADVISORY BOARD.
Hon. John B. Gordon, ex-Governor of Gcorfl*. Hon. Richard H. Bright, of Washington, D. C. Hon. K. F. Mann. Snpt. 0. A M. R. R., of H. H. E R. True, Cashier V, 8. Treasury, Washington, D. C.
Henry Peuchtwanger, Member Sew York Stock taehange. P. X. Room, Cashier First Katins*! Bunk, Little Rock, Ark. W- Y. Robertson. Prss. First 5.bonaI Bank. Kearney, XeU
■on. D. 0. Seevillt, at Hew Vert Otty, H. V.
AT_r^i_Js-r is-r.
The Company offers to the Public a Special Registered issue of FULL PAIR
SHARES of Its Capital Stock, forever anassessable, at
$3,60 PER SHARE The Company guarantee purchasers Immediate cosh for their stock at an advance of 6 cents per share per month (or JT^ per cent per annum), at any time after the month following purchase they desire to sell prior to ite being Hated oa the exchanges in October, or will secure a purchaser for the stock at their own selling price, lea© two per cent commission for making th© transfer as th©
stockholder may elect
SCoefc purthameM ssose anti *eM until mffr She payment of tho Oetohow tKedtfemtf (probably BOo. per oharo) trill not thapurehaoer on atfvassee oqnivolent to 40 PER CENT PER ANNUM RIGHT RESERVED to withdraw the stock from sale without notice after Aug. &. NO ORDERS RECEIVED AT THE PRESENT PRICE OF t8.«0 PER SHARK AFTER IS O’CLOCK MIDNIGHT, AUG. l,and aU applications for stock should be made os soon os possible, and In no event later than several days prior to
date, to insure delivery at the present price.
STOCK PROSPECTUS OF COMPANY, Maps, Engineers’ Reports, and 80-psgs Illustrated Prospectus *1 Tallapoosa. Ga„ where the Compsnf* HUnino, m*nufacturtna and city properties are located, with full particulars, suited Ires oa
application to any ol tha offices of the Company.
jAAArooo mil mppUmoMono for otorh mnM proopoctumem, on* make t*»tt1Vs_ Arofto
or money orAmro payable to
FRED K E. TURNER,
General Western Manager,
STOCK EXCHANGE BIDS., <87 DEUBOBH ST. • CHICAGO, ILL.
H'HSSSSC IS*
JUST RECEIVED. OUR OWN IMPORTATION. QUININE TONIC, VIOLET WATERS, SOAPS and EXTRACTS, ^ry Pinaud’s LILAC AND BORCHETTO. Can supply the trade at lowest prices. CHARLES MAYER & CO 29 and 31 West 'W’ashinerton St. ALASKA REFRIGERATORS—Economical in ice, beautiful in design, reasonable in price. Ask or send for catalogue and prices. LILLY & STALNAKER. 64 East Washington St
••at* b.”'
iv*' ti 1
WOOD and
SLATE
WM. H. BBSjSTSffHrrX. s»
’ Wrought Steel Beagec
PROPYLAEUMNorth Sueet, opposite Blind Asytnm. Elegant accommodation* for dobs, claw**, coucuru, dramatic •nttrtalntn*st* 1 parti**, tom receptSoM. dinner*. For date* ahd term* SO* Curator at baitfling from »to 1 o’clock daily. fltMMIJO Kentucky am. and Mlaaiwippi si., PROF. O. R GLEASON, KING OF HOR8E-TAMERS, — JVM BattU With the—-MAN-EATING STALLION DUKE B.,
A horse that has killed 3 men, This will be a genuine fight for victory. Read the owner*s telegram to Pro/. Gleason, July 21 th: COLLBGK CORNER
iurnd another man two weeks ago. I will thin him to you by IreUht Tuesday, and you mutt b« at the depot to recolv* him. if you subdue him without getting hurt, thp people of ColleR* Cor •WTho audience will then witneoa the greatest battle between man and horse ever seen in America. The mammoth tent will be enlarged so all can- see and be ont of danger. Owing to the great expense of getting this horse here and the great danger of training
him the
ADMISSION will be RESERVED SEATS
BOo. fill.
Box Office open through the day, Thursday. Get your tickets iu advance. Exhibition at
8:15.
SCHoOLa-COLLEGEs-MUSlC.
LOUISVILLE LAW SCHOOL (Law Department University of Louisville.)
Session opens Octobers. Address W. O. HARRIS, Lean,
BOYS’ CLASSICAL SCHOOL
Next session begins Kept. 7, ItWL Thorough pees aratlon for Harvard. Yale or any College* or**,
•nttfio School. Address
Besldenos^^w^t,
HANOVER COLLEGE. Sixtieth year opens Wednesday, September 9- Classical and Scientific Oonrees in College proper. Preparatory deiArtn ent. Muaio. open to both sexes. No saloon* On tha Ohio, ueaf Madison. For catalogue, address Presldttd Fisher, Hanover, Ind.
u
INDIANA UNIVEKSITf.
The oeth College year will
189L Thirty-two
instructions
- r ...
The University is fully equipped to do the in oat advanced work. Th* expenses are reduoed toa minimum, as tuition is free, and tbs coal of llv-
Bloomington, Indiana.
Girls’ Classical School. hU.wmw&is, sissjis ar mlt women. Large gymnasium In charge of
competent direoior. Music and <
WRIGHT BE WALL, m Nor street, INDIANAPOLIS. INP,
amM
ivanla
INDIANAPOLIS SEMI OF IK N. W. cor. Ctrel* aud Market streets. Third rear opnna September M, Piano, sing lug. violin, pipe-organ, tbeery and compost dot taukht by specialists who hare bad from four «4 six years In th# best music schools of Burop© For catalogoe, cell at office or address Ciar euce Forsyth. Th* school trill be open dafi tng the summer for piano and violin pupil*.
BUTLER UNIVERSITY Irvington, Ind. Fall term begins Tuesday, Sept. 15. Superior faculties are alTordedstndeota, The college main talus a full corps of competent Instructors and otters groduat and undergrade at* course In study In science, philosophy. Tenguege. Hteatnr*, music and theology. Preparatory Bohool graded to receive pupils from the public schools, flu students for western college*. Irvington Is easily accessible from Indiana! ' by the electric street car line. Add res* BUTLBR, President, or BIMEON FKA
Secretary.
I 1 ?
A BUSINESS EDUCATION, XX Bookkeeping.
usiNEsslffivlsif When Block.opposit* Postoffice. Son large j eumulet l&ru SCHOOL (with separate Typewrltlag deperiment, MnW d with the leeding writing machines and [n charge of a trained teacher). Uorivaled facillMe# For teaching the leading sy^ terns of Phonogrephy. fcleoflv* or prescribed course, students trained ia actual offlo* work. Diploma free, at graduation: tutequaled In the suocees of ttigraduetes; npcharg*
PRO
J. B.
M. t).
Gibson, 248 River Aveaue, Want l»dtaaap©fl%
Dr. G. W. Lutz,
DISEASES OF WOKE*. Office removed to CRH North I
te removed to (AH North HUgoieSt, DENTIST.
J
1 i
1
■■i
$p
Lr. iLdolph Bli EYE, EAR, LOSE AND THROAT Room 2. Odd Fellows* Kail. lad
LATEST STYLES WEDDING CARDS Visiting and Msnne Card* order ot dan ess. Great variety, prices. Mail orders receive proi tiOB* FRAKK H. 22 N. F yTAll kinds of 1
