Indianapolis Sentinel, Volume 34, Number 40, Indianapolis, Marion County, 9 February 1885 — Page 5

THE INDIANAPOLIS DALLST SENTINEL MONDAY MORNING' 1'EBItUARY 0-1885

THE WORLD'S FAIR.

Tc?23 at tbe e?T Orleans Exposition. Vornan' Work HandPalntlng on China A Palntlof by a Boy The Exposition Financially. 2'w Ohliaks, Feb. C This great American enterprise has made rapid progress In lhe l&st two weefcs. The GoTernment building, where the Elates and foreign countries are exhibiting their products, is about fall; 210 space unoccupied and more wanted. The fWoinaa'a Department, whicn is under the management of Mrs. Jalia Ward Howe, is Ziot yet open, though it is rapidly approach 3ns completion. Art Hall will ba open on ihf lOtb, and when the Mexican building it completed, which will be in a few days. He whole grand display will bs in fall rtfs. TEXAS. To Ire anything like a fair description of Ir.e exhibit made here by the Line 8ti' 'axe would require rxore time and labjr 1 1 an I can give in one letter woman's work. II: s. Terrell and Mr. Fester are in charge f ibis beautiful exhibit, and they are certainly acquitting themselves admirably. 3te women of Texas are ably and faithfully represented by these two ladies, who have displayed great skill and artlatlc taste in arranging the various specimens of woman's work from their State. Toe most of this woikwasdoneby the ladies' societies organized for the purpose of furnishing maie rials for this exposition. The band made lace curtain pin-cushion i a fit e piece cf wer man ship, Sherman has an exhibit or a hand-painted banner, repre--nsnting a group of cattle on the prairie, that is yery creditable to the youDg" lady who produced It. Miss Eva Fowler. Handfainted curtains and many other interesting specimens rf woman's work frjin Fort "Worth. are attracting favorable notice. Mrs. Uamill, a lady of Marshall, who is sixty ?ears of ae, contributes a beaatifal soeci men of lactwork. A cilk qnilt by Mui Oibbs Ij a line specimen of work. Kirs. Hereford, cf Dallas, sendd embroidery work a hat is very fine. A VERY ATTRACTIVÄ EXHIBIT 3 band-painting on china made from kaolin found in Texas. Quite a cariosity is a table 3x2 feet Inlaid with 2,70 different designs In wood. A mantel Ircm marble found near Austin, handVainted by a lady, is a beauty, ar-d said to be the fine3t fpecimen of marble in the world. Dr. A. Gregg, of San Siba, sends same specimens of very line variegated marble. 'J he ladies of Corpus Chriati send a case filled with bf autifal specimens of their skill. The beet asphaltum on this continent is from Texas. Of cotton, wheat, wool, corn, oats, rye, bay and other farm products, Texas hai a jocd exhibit, and equal In quality to any other State. Her mineral resources are well lepresented, aa wellaa frulta o? all kinds. A specimen of a Malaga grapevine that made growth In a Texas vineyard of twenty-eight Jeet in three months is on exhibition. A PAI5TIKG i er resenting the old Catholic Mission of San Jote, near San Antonio, by a ooy only sixteen years cf age, is a very correct picture of that ancient building. Texas has nearly two acres of space, the largest assigned to any Mate, and yet every foot of ground is occulied Oy some valuable and interesting product of her soil, forest, Jakes and rivers. The Legislature appropriated $20.000 at one time besides large amounts were donated by counties, individuals and societies. Still, most of the people who are here represantirg the interest of this State are doing so free of charge to the State. The weather here is Ziow delightful, and health distresjingly ood. so ay the doctors and druggists. The people of this city have adopted an ingenious f.'an to beat the physicians. One hilf or -store ate organized into benevolent societies cl various kinds, and they tike in doctors T ron condition that thv will only charge about twelve cents a visit. This tjives the ! ctors penty of work, bnt very pjor pay. The idea of a doctor having to make euht lisits t-i earn a dollar is not very encouraging to one in search of a location. Still out1- of thete societies medical charges are Jiith enoogh to satisfy the averags doctor, llnaicially. I fear this exposition isgoins: 1- prove a failure, as most of them have c'one heretofore. The only thing that will save it is for the railroads to cut down fares to a very low rate. Then the people will cone to see the great show, otherwise they will stay at home. It is reported here that thtre is a great scarcity of money up North, which I hope is not true. There ought to he 50.C00 visitors to the exposition every Jay to Insure success. Still whether the n'erprise pays or not does not concern the Tublic tpecially. as the show is the greatest er made, and thoee who do see it will be p'eased and benefited. A. Patton. Hell on tbe Wnbasb " f Communicated. J 31 y attention was called to an article in "J be Cincinnati Enquirer with the above named "eaphonecaa" caption, in which, If the startling headlines would indicate what w:s to follow, we would expect to find that the Democratic party of Indiana wa torn to Hinders, the leaders gone mad and were after each othsr with razors, tomahawks and scalp-5ng-knives. After reading the article I almost Involuntarily looked to the head of the paper, to see if I were not reading the Comzcerctal Gazette or Indianapolis Journal, bnt, lo my disgust, it was the veritable and damnable Cincinnati Enquirer. It has commenced its old game again, in which the "Wish is father to the thought. It would like to well to see the Democracy of Indiana all torn up and divided that it grasps at every whim, and has its Republican correspondents tired to herald to the world things that sever transpired and magnify the merest street lies into astounding evidences of the rapid dissolution of our party in Indiana. Any Democratic paper that was interested la the welfare of the party would have re ' icsed to publish such things until it was an Ofenfsct that could not be contradicted; .much less would they have published such ball-faced lies, that never had a shadow of foundation. The Democracy of Indiana -should rccst emphatically sit down on tbe Enquirer for such contemptible injustice toward our jople, and they owe it to "the party to do o. It the Enquirer could make any money bf the destruction of the Democratic party -in Indiana it is evident it would destroy the party acd exnlt over its great power. Well do I remember that all through the loDg period from lSß-3 to ISst I was a constant reader of the Enquirer, and o apeat in mild terms, it has always manifested an unfriendly disposition toward the leading Democrats of Indiana, and has takei great treasure at times in trying to destroy the inttuecce and usefulness of re feral of our bast men, including Mr. Hedrlsxs. jit as It us

lately been trying to ds'troy those unflinching Democrat Allen G. Thurman and George H. Pendleton. Aa the Hoojier Democracy are as one man for McDonald for a Cabinet position, wa alt know the whole story of our disnsiom ü a myth, a lie made out of Republican wind. Democrats of Indiana, you have a good paper now published at your Cspital-The Sentinel that gives all the latest news, with complete Legislative reports, in which you are interested. It reaches our town six hours ahead of the Enquirer, and is reliable as a newspaper, while its Dsmocracy is unquestioned It has labored assiduously for cor success, while the Enquirar has constantly allowed its Gath and Jayhawker and other Republican satellites to disseminate f their cankerous articles amoig cur voters and hypocritically call it Democratic. If you want to read a Republican paper subscribe for one that hoists its banner and baa too much honor to claim to be Democratic and at the same time promulgate Republican doctrines. Of ail things I do bate it is a hypocrite. Give me a paper of fixed principles and courage enough to eprak its sentiments, and it will ever be r nected. For this coursge and unfsltering devotion t)curcauel wonld commend tn Indiaaap Jis Secticel. It is not only worthy our snrrort a newspaper, but it ia worthy ot renege by onr county officials throngh out the ötate. As long as the Sentinel C-jni lany d:es the wo-k as cbetply a) others considering the quality ot work and material rjted, there is no reason why we should not mpficrtthe organ of our party with our entire trade, especially that part which can rot be done as cheaply by the county pipers. We ought to do more for the .Sentinel than ever before to compensate for its expense in defecting the truth. The Democratic party h come to say, if we bnt act justly to our8 Ives. We can not affjrd to ignore the welfare ol cur citizens, neither can we aliord to tr.rov ay our cffic al patronare. BlLtfton, Ird Feb. 5 D. HK1TAÜLTEH.V DODOES.

Tli XV j by Wlitrti Kmplojei Kob Their Eni piny er. iChlcAso Tribune. Defr.IciUon y persons occupying posltionf of trust, 'Yhich bids fair to deserve the name of the "American system," has become so co rum on that the number of expert accountants wfco undertake to ferret out the mystery of a default has been rapidly swelled within the last few years. The life of an expert is both wearisome and exciting, (flitting his home at midnight he is driven rapidly to the bouse where the suspected caahier or bok keeper is employed and buries hiaiseif in figures until the dawn of day. M 3 one ma it nurmise his employment, ieast of aU the man wbcte methods are to bs sifted. Ererv bcok must be replaced precisely as it wa? left at the close of business, and not a trace of the midnight intruder must remain. Sometimes, too, the detective himself becomes an object of suspicion, and few who have been long engaged in this nocturnal employment have ftcaped arrest at some time or other. Robberies have often been perpetrated bv perrons professing to be employed about te premises at night, aad the police have grown so suspicious of this pretense that the load eit protestations of an honest detective as countant have sometimes been unavailing to save bim from arrest. A resident of Chicago, whose long experience in the examination ef irregular accounts gives his opinion some value, exErtwes his coriviction that there is hardly a irpe establishment in the city in which dishonest practices do not prevail. There is a remarkable difference, he says, between conservative business concerns of England and Scotland and the dashing, go-lucky houres of America. In the steady business of Great Rritain, where the son succeeds the father and is trained in the counting house from his early years, ell the details of his office are carefully elaborated, and no one can steal five cents without being found cut. Rut here a shrewd business man establishes an enormous business without giving any part of his attention to the routine of the cilice, and as his employes usually re ceive a beggarlv allowance, it is scarcely to be wotdered that they add to their talary ly theft. "Much as I should deprecate any attempt to excuse the thief," said this rnao, "I f.el no commiseration whatoo?er for the merchsnt or banker who looks for horfesty in a clerk or cashier who is paid $35 a month or hardling $100,000 a year, without any check or safeguard imposed upon him. An employer who expects fidelity should reward his servants according to the responsibility of place. The loore and inadequate systems of some firms are amusing I do not believe there it a la-ee ettablisment in Chicago where, if employed in a position of trust, I could not steal thousands of dollars evey yi ar. There are several difiarent kinds of defalcation which we often have to deal with. First, ttere is the blunderer, who takes ad vantsge of a mistake to pocket the odd cash. Suppnee be ha the pay-roll to make out in a bouse where tiftv men are employed. That duty in generally considered so purely mechatiiral that some subordinate employe is d If gated to draw np the pay roll. lie credits a(h nan with his proper salary, but by mistake makes the footings $690 instead of f;75 The proprietor loots over the roll, ttserves the correctness of each item, tales the footing for granted, and draws his check for G'.K). The young man pnt the weekly stipend of each person in an envtlope, finds a surplus of $15, and, discoverir v bis error, rockets that amount. Then he rejects what a fool he has been to live on $50 a month when by a careful blunder eyeryveek he might easily double bis in come. The suggestion of accident is tamed into a system, and he becomes a regular defaulter. The preservation of the pay-rolls ought, of course, to be imperative, but as a matter of fact he quietly destroys the evidence of his crime, which is never suspected until the drain is felt by the firm or his own style of living betrays him. Even after he knows himself to be suspected he will not stop his thieving. Having acquired certain habits and associated himself with C9rtain ccmpsniocs he will not reduce his expenses, but sets himself to invent some new mode of cheating.' Fearing to betray himself by incorrect footings, he begins to insert In the pay-roll the names of "dead men." or those no longer employed in the house. By this ruse he succeeds in deferring the day of judgment "The blunderer is harder to detect than tbe systematic defaulter. A bookkeeper will sometimes enter all items correctly in his cash-book, but when he comes to post his ao counts will docter the footings. He will enter a debit torgeneral expenses, with same hiercglyphics intended to particulars the items of expenditure. Instead of the correct footing of $31SClhe will write 5113 64. get the voucher, and pecket $100. After a month oreo. when the items are forgotten. be will turn back and prefix the figare 1 to some one ol them, making the footing ap parently correct. No one can explain his abbreviated cotes but himself, and so he feels that he has covered up the tracks of his dishonesty. II takes his chances ot not bing called on to aisver for his accounts daring tbe month pest. "The expert will readily detect the deceit. It is impossible for a man, afte- the lapse of a month, to change the figare 51.50 to 151.50 without enabling a practica eye to recjgnize the Inserted dig't. Generally the in trading fijure Is drei with a blotter, whll

the rest of tae psge has been allowed to dry by evaporation. When the plan of defalcation is ence made out the details ein be followed with ease It will generally be f jand that tbe false entriea occur a, the same lime in each week or Imontb, and we hive only to turn to that date to find the inevitable traces of guilr. "An old trick is the use of cirbon piper to duplicate voucher. A member of the firm writes his 'O. K. on the voucher presented to him, and the book-keeper, having carefully inserted his carbon paper underneath, has two vouchers for the sasie sale. He has left tbe date blank, and afterward fills it up with any date he pleases. I had such a ce not very long ago, and detected the ruse the moment I set my eyes on ooe of the vouchers. That stratagem is rahr stale nowadays, and has gone out of fashion. "Many of the defalcations are the result of conspiracy. Those who are empowerel to act as checks upon each other pool isiaes anadivide the profit. Toesecase are hiri to dettct, as the accounts are often prfec:ly regular. But young men who enter Into such dishonest enterprises are apt to be inditcxeet, and they usually display by their extravagance the disproportion between tbe ir salaries and the r exp ms ?s "The Unorasce cf many rich men ie;rd ir their orn bnsine&3 is incredible. I kr.w cf one case where a firm owed one of the partLers over $100 000. of wh'ch he wis as go d as lnorat. A great many firais are vaguely aware that their employer are cheating them, but while business is pros itrone they fay, Never miud, we are makirg crouch!' Salesmen in dry goods stores constantly hind goods over the counter to their friends without any return whatsoever, and in many establishments hundreds of thousands of dollars pass through the hands of men who are not even restrained by a system of checks, and who can put an indefinite sum in their p cket without leaving any record whatsoeer. If I were young man receiving a salary of ?if" a month ar.d handling a very large amount cf money, with no reputation to 1038 and a very remote prospect of detection, I doubt if I cou'd rpsi3t tbe temptation 80 freely offer d. Merchants and brokers wlo strain human nature so far ought to be regarded 8 participants iu the tjuilt of their hirelings." UN II A I' TV POLAND.

Ingratitude ol the C.ir-HH Latest Effort to Cruftlt Ttiat Lftud. London Cable Special. While ot Skierniwiecze with the German and Austrian Emperors the Czir rejoiced at having been able to cros3 Poland without n olesiation, and the Roles naturally expected some return for their Eelf restraint In lieu of this the Czar last month promulgated a ukase both cruel and ruinom to his Polish subjects, as it aggravates the already oppressive land lawa which govern them. Up 1 1 last month the Poles weta prevented by law from owning, purchasing, or inheriting land, thete privileges having been taken from them by a ukase soon after the repression of the last insurrection by Monraview, in 1SG3, the object being the Ilassification of Poland, and the result that the country was cverrnn by Russian land-grabbers, who, finding it impossib'e to cultivate their property with profit, left the country, after mortgaging their land to the Poles, who were prevented by law from baying it ack. The new edict not only confirms the former one and forbids mortgages, even when regularly and legally drawn up by notaries, but its effect is made retroactive. It affects all previous transactions, will lead to endless lawsuits, and pnt the Poles at the meicy of the Russian officials. The Poles ie despondent and do not see that there is any hope for them, yet all they ask is to be allowed to live. In the case of a war between Germany and Russia it would be TongLt on their soil, and they would be the greatest sufferer. Of revolution there are no cbancea of success. Tue outlook is no better in Rnsia proper. The Czar, who is tu daily iear of his life, is led by hh tutor, Pobodenf zow, who is detested, Katkow, and Count Tolfctoi. who are enemies of civilization. The nobles are disaffected or indifferent, the peasantry are in tbe sorest distress while the nihilists are sapping the loyalty of the army. STYLK IN ISIO. A Celebrated Dinner Ulven in Wathluztoo Fortj-fr lve Yearn Ago. Washington Letter. 1 There were ways of entertaining at Washington fifty years ago that would be very startling in these me re practical and bustcetslike times. Hereisa short acccouut of a dinner given in 1810 by M. de BUco, the Kuian Ambassador: "He betran his American career with a brilliant fete eiven at his residence in Georgetown. His bouse, as approached on the memorable evening, was in such a blaze of light that it resembled a conflagration. Tt furniture, nearly all Imported, was elegant and of cevel workmanship. He receive n tne costume of his Court blue, covered with silver lace toa great depthaod udorncd with precious stones The backies ol his pumps weie set ia brilMant. At supper the ladie n were seated the whole length of the tab'e, which was laden with sold and mirror plateaus, costly chandelier, Grec'an temples and castles in candied sugar, froits in ornamental dishts and golden terk. This was but a prelude to a series of entertainments of a similar character." De Bisco was a bachelor of forty-two when be came to Washington, and is described as hsving been a "handsome, captivating man of fine presence, cultivated tastes, aod manners shaped through long entercourse with the most polished courts in Earope." He n arried a Ml?s Williams, of Washington, and her first bridesmaid was Jessie Benton, now Mrs. General Fremont. The bride was given away by Henry Clay. President Lincoln's ISoyhood. Arnold's New "Life of Abraham Lincoln," PablUhed br Jansen, McClurg 6i Co., Chicago. 1 "In ISIti, the year in which Indiana was admitted into the Union, the family of Lincoln removed from Kentucky to Spsncer County, in the former State. It was a long, lard, weary journey. Many streams were to be forded, and a part of the way was through the primeval forest, where they were often compelled to cut their path with the axe. At the time of this removal the lad Abraham was in his eiehth year, but tall, large and strong of his age. The first things he had learned to me were the axe and the rifle, and with these he was already able to render important assistance to his parents on the journey and in building up their new home. The family settled near Gentry ville, and built their Iogcbinon the top of an eminence which sloped gently away on every tide. The landscape was beautiful, the soil rich, and in a short time some land was cleared and a crop of corn and vegetables raised. The struggle for life and its few comforts was in this wilderness a very hard one, and none but those of tbe most vigorous constitution could 3ncceed. The trials, privat'oos and hardships incident to clearing, breaking ap and subduing tbe sil and establishing a borne so far away from all the necessaries of lite taxed the strength and endurance of all to the utmost. Bears, deer and other sorts of wild game were abaodant. ar.d contrlb. uted largely to tne support ot tbe famllv. The common free schools which now so closely follow Ue heels of ths plooesr ail

settler in the western portions of the Republic had not then reached Indiana, An itinerant teacher sometimes "straggled". into a settlement, and if h could teach rea.lin, writin and clDherin" to the rule of three, he was deemed qualified to set up a fchool. With teachers ihn qaaliäed Lincoln attended school at different times, in all about twelve months. An anecdote is told of an incdent oc:urriog at one of these schools, wh'ci iodicitis his klndnrss and his realiaes ol invatier. A poor, diffident girl, wni pelld definite with a y, wa th.eitead ani frightened bv the rude tetcher. Lincoln, with a B'gni6caut look, putting one of his long fingers to his eye, ecabled her to chU26 the let'er in time to escape punishment, lit early manifested the most eager dlre to learn. He acquired knowledg-s with gret facility. What he learned he learned thoroifih'TaEd everything he hid once acquired was always at his command. "In these years In wore a cap ravl from the sk n of the coon or sqiirrel. bactsttn breeches, a hunting shirt of deerskin or a linsey-Oölf ev shirr, and very coiree cow hideshors. His ficdwasths 'corn dodr' and the ganeof tha forests acd prairies."

Besieged by Lobbyists. I Washington Special to SpringSeld republican. 1 The Land-Grant Forteiture bills aoi the proposed legislation relating to the L'aion atiu central Pacific roads have brought here 4ii unusraily large number of railroads lobbyists, who haunt the orridors of tha Caoito frr m day to day. There is a Nicaragua treaty h.bbv tbat is still active despite the recent vote of the Senats. Then there is a Soanish treat? lobby that is reputed to be engaged lavishly in tbe dinner line. There is alio a o'g tension lobby active day and night in rb interest of the Mexican Pension bill with the Senate amendments. There is, as a.-tia!, a sttaniship subsidy lobby ever reckle pa end persistent. There is an equally per--Ment lobby working in the interest of the Dbir Educational bill, and thre ate many uumerens emaller lobbies whose members can be een evrry d3y in the Capitol ani about the hotel corridors. Congress is at this time in a state of Riege. The Idhocu aa Hat. Baltimore American. I have just finished Cleveland's inaugural i n hat," said P-ter Jebson, the large K Chester manufacturer, yesterday to an American repoit?r. "I intended to present tne hat to the Governor, but he insisted oa tftjingfor it, and upon its receipt a few days ao sent me his check on the National Commercial Bank of Albany for S. I was offered 550 for the check by one of your enterpr sing üaltimore Democrats yesterday, ontlofcouree refused to part with it. I ntbll keep it a? a eort of souvenir. Mr. Clef eland's head is cf ordinary shape and very arge. The hat is 7J inches in diame ter 7Ja inches high, with a brim 24 inches wide.'' Strictly llartlneaa. (Chicago Times. It is said that Mr. Cleveland, in asking tbout public men, always inquires as totheir bility to do a hard day's work. Mr. Cleveer.d. it would appear, intends that Federal Hiceholrfers shall earn their salaries as well as draw them, and during the next Administration the countrv will probablv not be edified with the usual summer transfer of the Administration to the fashionable water-ug-pleces, and the transformation of the American navy Into a line of excursion boats for tbe amusement of public function aries and their families and friends. Poetry for March Foarth. (Newark Advocate. John McSweeney, of Wooster, in his 8th f January speech speaking of the length of irue which the Republican party had been -Ecking at tbe public teat, in the following o anner faraphrased the good old Methodist hmn: "When we've been there ten thousand year3, And sucked from sun to sun. 'lis just oa bard to quit the trat, Ab when we tint begun." Pig Auction Sale or Horses Lexington Combination Sale Company will told their great sale of High-bred Trot ters, Roadsters. Saddlers, Stallions, Brood Mares, Undeveloped ooungters. Jacks and Jenrets, at Lexington, Ky., February 17 and LS. lSo. Send for a catalogue AdTlce to BXotnttrs. MM. WINSLOW'8 800THINQ BTBTJP chooia always be tiaeU wh u. children are cutting teeth. It relieves the little suserex at onoe. It produoea natural, quiet sleep, by relieving tne CMll fron pain, And the little cherub awaxes aa "bright aa a button. it la yery pleasant to taste. It aoothes tho child, soften the cmns, allayi all pain, relieves wind, regates the boweis. and la tne best known remedv for diar rhoea, whether arising Iron teethltg or other causes. Twcntr-flve oents a bottle. SOCIETY NOTICES. S M A SONIC Mj-stic Tie Longe. No. :S. r . and VV A. M. Stated meeting iu Masonic Temple V tt 7:30 o'clock thiscvenine. JACOB W. SMITH, V. M. Wiixis D. En'gle. Secretary. C. E KKEOELO & WHITSETT, Funeral Directois and Embalmer, Ko. 7 North Delaware street. Telephone connection to office and residences. Carriages for Weddings and Parties. Absolutely Pure. Tb Is powder ceer vat if a. A. barrel of purttr,' itreopth and wbolesomene&a. More economical than ibe ordinary kind, and can not be fold In competition with the multitude of loir test, sbort weight, alum or phosphate powders. Stld only lnca oa. Royal Baking rowosjt Co, 1W Wall d:rtet, New Tors.

mm Troyal I SSm$ j XI ' Jgg.

'CÄRTEKS :pr!.s. U

F!c!c nea3scba trd rIcro aü the trtnV.ra :-!-c:nt to a Lilloua ftc cf the Fysten. esch as Dlrrinsa, Nau? ei. Dro'.v6l'', Distress after eatic, l'r.'.i m tho Ciüo, &c. V7hU lbe?r xaoat reaarltbU; 6ucccäj boa been shown La csrui n-s,i'"hrt, yrtCartere Little Lirrr PH? am rnaJiJ usl;! in Constipation, curing aa 1 preventing tiiia aanoyin conp!üt, whi3 tncy also correct a lJiorde-cf tho Kt?si.rh. etlTnulata the liver Zj.d rcrwliw Chs bowcLi. liven Lf ihey only cured Ache th7 wonld a'aoct r ricrrs to these wfca EuHor from this U: : trying cemptimt ; but f ortu citely their goodn. doc-3 cotend here, and thosa vho oaco try thera will find these ltttle pilla valuable in eo many way 3 thü vhc7 viil not os wilou j do wilLout thczi. Cut filer aU eick head Is thebane cf po many lives that here's where trt make our great boast. Oar pills cure it whita ethers do not. Carter's Little Liver Pill3 are very raa.Il ani v?ry easy to take. Cce or two pU!3 caakj a dos. They are etrictly vegetable and donotripoor purge, bat by their gentle action pleasa til who tite them. In rials at 25 cents ; five for ft. Sold by druscists everywhere, cr Best by mad. CAHXEIZ HÜDJLCINK CO. TCvV Vor!: "'r ENGINES, FreiQ Onr-f fislith Dorsfi Itor I'ji. Erricson's Nbw Caloric Pumping Enclno, GAS STOVES OI All Descriptions on Kxhibitlon and for &ale at cost at the oSice of the INDIANAPOLIS GAS-LIGHT & COKE CO Ko. 49 South Pencsjlrania Street. We ell to rh customer only. JOHN EDWARDS, BILL POSTER. One Hundred Large Stands. 300 3-Shcet Boards. Also CGntroHinj tleJtate House ?m cum !

Si

t& SAD

GAS

WAR

ON

Our Price List, and No ResoiTe in Patterns! iVLLi GOODS A.S LIST.

Pest Velvet Oarpet -

Best Bcdy Brussels 5-Prame Best mith 10-Wire Taps. Brussels -Best AH-Wocl Extra Sopors - - W 11 Ooods Cash on TJolivory

w O a-Uaai

RT

üaiO

30 and 32 Sontli Illinois St.

For ten days our cpen, advertised pirce waa to cents per toa lower than any and all oth eis In Brazil Block. Now, lave money still by ordering BROOK8IDG COAL! in f.am'e and strength akin to Pittsburg, free from soot and clinkers. No other dealer ha lt. block is higher thiB mernlng and and a wider door is opened for tne introduction ol Brooui eny point in that? Ivy Brookside, Brookside, Brook f-i de, f2.S5 per ton.

EEI.EYY!L!.E FTT COAL. Per Ton SFELIYY1LLE LI MP lUaL, Per loa, (oaly ilipprrs MU' hMUK. ter ion bKAZIL BLOCK, fall weight, writ forked -For prices on all kinds of Coal Call at EHRLICH & SMITH, - TFLFPHDNE 1014. GOAL,

BRANHAM As CO. . Sell the City Gas COKE, always Dry and Clean, and All Kinds COIL At Lowot Prlce. OPPICES60 Honk Delaware, 140 South Alabama, and 453 Bst O vo fitreett. TolflpboD 444.

WM. I. RIPLEY.

Uudertakers, Funeral Directors, yVI13 PRACTICAL EMBAL.MK118. C3rFiTit.cla8J attEdDC9 at low prices our motto. Oflke and Warerooms. Nos. (0 and Oi U'pgt Market St.,near lllinoii To) pliono No. 031.

WHEAT BAKING POWDER. PURE and WHOLESOME. It mrtain no f njcrios InirreIie:jtx lr-vei u.) d.k tTW!i (nlsurfv m tfcbrl r i a i'uro fcTaj-o Crcaiii of TrUr aud Alula v-o a.r It restore tn tb fr-nr thd hL"!i?y important cont.tueuts re jetted ia tiie bran r.f tie iat. It lUiike a l-tttr ui LUlr LiaCwt Ui-J ctiitr bjkinifjvwutr. MART1H KALEFLEISCK'S SONS, EstahlisliCd 1???. 53 FULTON ST., S. Y. For sale by all leading Grocers, D .A. BOHLEN & vSON, ARCHITECTS, ornct: U.IKDIWAPOLIS IND. 83 Et Wf-htnctan S i-lenbont "4. WANTED. LOST Any article ot value, not exceeding three lines, inserted two times FREK Under the bead "Situation Wanted," four linea or 1p. interted FREE. WANTED A situation ty an exceheat fa'in hand: uood waej expected. Addres JOHN, Sentinel ctV.ce. G 3 WANTED Situition by cxrerienoed drovsmaker io sew in families. Call or adJr(s .347 West Michigan street. S WANTED Situation by a fJrit-clafs oook. In hotel or retfluisnt. Call on or allr MATHILDE ALLEN, 11a Nortn .Mctlartny street. G-;; WANTED Ry youn laay of rtpe rlence, situation in dreOTÄBi nr 6b.p: rathtr te a machinist. Call or address D. A. II ,13 Kist Micbtsau street. -3 WANTKD-üooJ agents wauled t introduce tte Co opejatlTe tyhten. a now and certain method of incre&.'-lnj; cah sales of ntrcliaol:e, cainine acri retaining cFh enstorners. Acents care $r.01 month. Won h millions to de:era. iddrfsp, ulth Eta nip, J. 11. LWn, Daaa. Ind. ANNOUNCEMENT. THOSE polng to Hot b'prinps lor the treatment U syphilis, gleet, scrofula, and ail cutaneous or blood d:eaes, can be cured for one third the ccstcf:ucb a t'ip at theold reliable stand. I have been keted here for twenty-three years, and witu the advantage of lopg and successful experience can warrant a cure In all cases. Sjrraatorrne ai.d imretency, m all their fctages. positlrelr cured. Otfre houn, 8 a. m. to 9 p. m., 41 Virginia avenue, Indianapolis. Pills sent wlta full directions at SI ptr box. DR. 11ENNETT, successor to Dr. Ewing. FOR SALE. OR SALE One fino draft sUUioa. RAL5TOH & CO. 15 17OR BALE Chetp A good wholesale notion j wagou. vith a'l latest improvements. Address F. VOGEL, Cohmbuj, Ind. 6 riNAOIAL. M ONLY At the lowest rate of lntsreat. J. W. WILLIAMS & Co., 3 and 4 Vinton Bloc. TO LOAN Honey with pnn'eee of prepayment: terms ieasonbie. TÜ09 C DAY A CO.. 73 üast Market tdrcet. Indianapolis. FOH REKT. FOR RENT Two or three unfurnished rooms on Last New York fctreel. Apply at 97 East Washington street. 2i mm ! . $1 22 1-2 1.12 1-2 67 1-2 62 1-2 dealBrazil Ie. bee - of this $rade). f I MO 2.' a -'.S 3.09 office. 14 Vance Block, Virginia Ave GO ELIJAH HEIi Ss HEDGES.

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