Indiana State Sentinel, Volume 23, Number 26, Indianapolis, Marion County, 13 January 1874 — Page 3
THE INDIANA STATE SENTINEL, TUESDAY, JANUARY 13, 1874.
IV I SHOULD I1 B TO-XJUHT. If Uhould die to-night. My friends would look upon my qrüet face IV fore they laid It In its resting place. And deem, that death had left It almost fair: And, laying now-whlte flowers against my hair. Would smooth It down with tearful tendering. And foid my hand with lingering caress, l'oor hand , "o empty and cold to-night! If I should die to-nl ht. My friends wo aid call to mind, with loving tnouaht. Some kindly deed the icy hand bad wrought ; Home senile word the frozen Up bad Maid ; Krrand ou whlcu Uie willing feet had ped ; Ihe memory of my wlnshneHs ami pride, My hasty wrd. would be all put aside. And ho I iiould be loved and mourned tonight. If 1 shooJd die to-nicht. Kven hearti estranged would turn once more to me. Recalling other days remorsefully, The eye that chiU me with averted Rlance Would look upou me as of yore, percnauce. And softe. In Mie old, familiar way. For who couit war with dumb, uuconious clayt Ho I might rest, forgiven of all, to-night. Oh, friends I pray to-night. Keep not your Lis for my dead, cold brow, Th wy In looety.let me feel the m now. Thiult geulty ofiue; lam travel-worn; My falierinj are pltrced with many a Fnrlve.oh.herU estranged, forj;ire, I plead! When drsju less rest is mine I hall not neeti The tenderness for whlcli 1 long to-night.
MISCELLANEOUS DRIFT. NEWS AND GOSSIP. Will Sickles lecture, is the query. American cranberries are to grace Victoria's table. Gerrnany is constructing a number of ironclad gunboats for the protection of the Rhine frontier. The Swisw women, like the young idea, are all taught how to shoot. A Newburyport mother and her ten children weigh, together, a ton. The bady tips the scales at 150. Love is a thing of four letters, yet sometimes in a breach of promise case hundreds are produced. -- Judy. Sir Garnet Wolsely finds the women on the Gold Coast much more valuable allies than the men. What man doesn't? A correspondent of the Chicago Time speaks of ladies "anxious to be taught the way to salvation in trois temps time." Every white man in the Indian Territory who marries a squaw is given 100 acres of land, and thereby become a squaw-ter sovereign. People don't care for small pox in India. A funeral of 20,000 person recently followed the remains of an Indian princess, in Cashmere, who died of that disease. England proposes to construct an eighty ton rifled gun. The largest ever yet made there weighs only thirty-eight tons. The caliber of the new gun will be about seventeen inches. It is related that a Massachusetts man felt so badly about the recent Cuban outrage, that he erected a guillotine in his poultry yard and beheaded all his Spanish fowls. It relieved him. A Cincinnati woman owns two bouncing pairs of twins. She was a triplet, her mother and father both being twins, and her grandmother the mother of five pairs of twins. Malthers was right after all. "Neatly finished shirts furnished to order by express C. O. D. on furnishing the color of the hair and circumference of the thumb," -- Boston Post. If these data be not accessible, a tintype of any of your wife's relatives will answer. Great Britain has forty-six colonial governments scattered over the four continents, the West India and Pacific Islands, under twenty-eight Governors, eleven LieutenantGovernors, one Inspector, two Administrators, and four Captain-Generals. The Chinese are not book-worms by any means, yet they like their cosy little library, with encylopoedias and books of reference. The new enclopoedia, begun 100 years ago, is to contain when completed, 160,000 volumes. Seventy-eight thousand seven hundred and ten of these are already out, and the others are forthcoming. The publishers hope to introduce this neat little work into every well regulated family. The Amazon is 4,000 miles in length and 180 miles wide at its mouth. Thirty-five miles inland it is ten miles wide, and 2,800 miles from its mouth its width measures 500 yards. It exceeds in length and breadth every other stream in the world. There are now three monthly lines of steamers from Para to Havre, Liverpool and New York. Within twenty-five years Para has arisen from nothing to a populous city of 70,000 inhabitants. The Amazon is now navigated by a British company which has absorbed the Brazilian and Peruvian steamers, and is constructing ten new ones for the same trade upon the Mersey of various burdens, from 367 to 751 tons. Such rapid growth of commerce could not be stimulated in a wilderness without the presence of the greatest natural facilities. Henry Ward Beecher thus beautifully symbolives the purity and innocence of unsullied youth, and its fragile character: "Over the beauty of the plum and apricot there grows a bloom and beauty more exquisite than the fruit itself; a soft, delicate flush that overspreads its blushing cheek. Now, if you strike your hand over that, and it is once gone, it is gone forever, for it never grows but once. The flower that hangs In the morning, impearled with dew -- arrayed with jewels -- once shake it, so that the beads roll off, and you may sprinkle water over it as you please, yet it can never be made again what it was when the dews fell lightly upon it from heaven. On a frosty morning you may see the panes of glass covered with landscapes, mountains, lake and trees, blended into a beautiful fantastic picture. Now lay your hands upon the glass, and by the scratcrh of your finger or by the warmth of the palm, all the delicate tracery will be obliterated." "Who put dat Money on dat Ace?'' -- The Chicago Inter-Ocean makes bold to print the following: The recent plan of one enlightened Secretary of the Treasury for resuming specie payments with a teapotful of silver halves and quarters, to be paid out in sums not exceeding $5 to each billholder as long as they lasted, reminds us of an incident said to have occurred at a small faro bank kept by a colored gentleman in St. Louis, at the beginning of the war. The proprietor, a haughty old house servant from Virginia, and who had somehow got his freedom and had strayed westward, although his capital was small and his banking house a humble shanty in the suburbs, inspired immense awe in the crowd of blacks who came to woo chance under his roof by wearing a terrible frown, a suit of seedy black, a vast shirt collar and a ruffled shirt, to which last garment the boldest African mind surrendered at discretion. The stakes, as may be imagined, were exceedingly small, being nicely proportioned to the meager capital of the bank, and ranging from half
dimes to quarter dollars, the last being the highest single bet that was permitted. The son of the Proprietor acted as dealer, while his dignified sire paced the room during the evening sessions, and kept a general oversight of the gamesters. One evening a couple of army officers induced their black servant by the presant of a small fee to smuggle them into this temple of luck, where whites were not commonly tolerated, and, providing that facile menial with ten silver dollars, instructed him to put them on the ace. The proprietor, who was absorbed in spelling out the news from the evening paper, had not observed the entrance of the strangers nor the queer turn the game had taken. Presently, however, he lifted his eyes and espied the fabulous pile of specie glittering over the painted cards. For a moment be was struck dumb, but recovering his voice, be cried out in a tone of thunder: "Who put dat money on dat ace?" There was a dead silence. The trembling darkies were all afraid to answer. "Who put dat money on dat ace" repeated the outraged son of Guinea. There was still no answer, and he went on: "Whoever put dat money on dat ace had better take dat money off dat ace, and be dam quick about it, too. You niggahs mus' think thah's some of dese Roffchiles roun' dis bank."
AN INDIANA BANKER. HUGE M'CULLOCH IN LONDON -- HIS HOUSE RE-ESTABLISHED. A London letter says: The news of Mr. McCulloch's return, and his determination to remain and reorganize his banking house, gratified a great number of friends, both English and American. The Times in its financial columns, welcomed him back in this fashion: "The announcement made yesterday that the London correspondents of Mr. Jay Cooke & Co., of New York, are now entirety dissociated with that firm, and that their business will henceforth be carried on under the style of McCulloch & Co., has been received with much satisfaction. On the 18th of September last, the news was telegraphed of the failure of Jay Cooke & Co., with liabilities estimated at nearly £2,000,000 sterling, and the first impression was that the London house of Jay Cooke, McCulloch & Co. must inevitably be so far compromised as to be forced, even in the best, to a temporary suspension. It was ascertained, however, that their immense business had been conducted with such safety and precision that they were able not only to meet all the acceptances which the failure of Jay Cooke & Co., at New York, would leave them for the time to provide for, but likewise every other liability. Such a result, with totals of the magnitude involved, is almost, if not entirely, without precedent, and constitutes a most creditable feature in mercantile history. If the house had stopped, even but for a short period, the indirect consequence might have been most serious in the then state of the London stock and money markets. That this diaster was avoided is due to the self-posession displayed by the partners, acting as they did under the best legal and other advice, and the gratification felt here at the future prospects preserved for the house must be experienced in an equal degree in America, Mr. McCullouch having been Finance Minister at Washington through four most trying years, and the firm holding the most important position of agents in London for the Navy Department of the United States. ROUTING THE COHORTS OF SIN. A HUNDRED WOMEN MARCH THROUGH THE STREETS AND BESIEGE THE SALOONS -- SIX DAYS' LABOR, WITH PRAYER FROM NIGHT TILL MORN, AND THE SPIRITS ARE VANQUISHED. A correspondent of the Chicago Tribune, from Washington, Ohio, tells the remarkable scenes which were enacted there last week: Washington is the county seat of Fayette, is a flourishing town of some 3,000 inhabitants, located on the Cincinnati and Muskingum Valley Railroad, and about seventy miles northeast of Cincinnati. For years an effort has been in progress to banish from the place ail intoxicating liquors, or, at least, to prevent the sale of it according to the laws of the State; but only with partial success. For some two years, an ordinance prohibiting the sale of alcoholic spirits within the corporate limits kept the demon at bay; but the new board of councilmen dropped this ordinance, since which time our town has been at the mercy of the dram-seller, and young men and old. and even women, were to be seen at all hours staggering through our streets and alleys, and there seemed to be no alternative or redemption tor us. But there was 'a good time time coming" which we little dreamed of one that every town can have the benefit of, and secure to itself a life of happiness, just as easily as- did this place the plan of which was" brought into existence as follows: On Christmas Kve, Dr. Dio Lewis, of Boston, lectured betöre the Literary Society of this place on the subject of "Our Girls," at the close of which he offered to deliver a free lecture on temperance at one of the churches on the following day, and In that address be would give his hearers a phn by which the women of the town, themselves alone, conld abolish the liquortraftlc from their midst, and forever keep it out. At the appointed hour on Christmas morning, the citizens assembled en masse at the Presbyterian Church, eager to bear and see what was to be done. The meeting opened with singing and prayer; after which came the address; then committees were appointed AN ArrEAL TO THK LIQUOR SELLER, ( Was drawn up, read, and adopted, and the meeting adjourned to meet the following morning (Friday) at the same place; and then and there the women were to start out upon their errand of mercy. .The hour-having arrived, the women from the families of the leading citizens of the place met and formed in procession, lifty or sixty of them, andthecQtrch commenced; new accessions being - made to their ranks daily. Drug stores and saloons are visited each day, and singing and prayers were held in them, until the drug stores all signed the pledge, and the saloons were broken up. - When a saloon keeper surrendered,- the fact was made known by the ringing of all the bells In town ; people would gather at the scene of action to the number of several hundred, to witness the destruction of King Alcohol. Women whose husbands, sons, or brothers had suiferf d most were selected as the ones to demolish the whisky barrels, which deed was done with axes; aad they never worked harder in a more noble cause. One man, who had . suffered much from the evil effects of intemperance, while assisting in getting the barrels of whisky into the street, mounted the top of ! one and remarked that he had often been ! under the stutf contained in the barrel, but ! now he was on top of it, and he intended to I keep on top. His wifo broke in the bead of I the barrel, and lot the whisky Hood the gutter. During the entire time that the women have been praying and singing in the taloons, the Cbrbtian men of the place have been holding a protracted prayer meeting at the church; and that the women might better jiidjfe of the e.irnfttnc88 and Mnoerity they feel in their behalf, they caused the bell of the church to 1 tolled at the close of each prayer. Tne work that is being done here is creating quite a sensation throughout this prt of the State, and already the ministers and several of the leading women in the work have received letters from neighboring towns, urging them to come and start the ball to rod in tr in those towns; and they hive consented to go, and set the time for the meetings.
THE OLD LO VE. ' ' r. You love me, enly nie. Do I not know ? If 1 were gone your life would be no more Than his who, hungering on a rocky shore. Shipwrecked, alone, observes the ebb and flow Of hopelexs ocean widening forth below. And is remembering all that was before. Dear, I believe it, at your Mroug heart's core 1 am the life; no need to tell nie so. And yet Ah husband, though I be more fair. More worth your love, though you loved her not, (Ebe must you have some different, deeper name For loving me) dimly I seem aware. As though you conned old trie long forgot, Tuom; daysjnre with you ners before I came. ii. The mountain traveler. loyous on his way, looks on the vale he left and calls it fair. Then counts with prld licfw far he ls from there. And Ftlll acend. And when my fancies ftray, 11 eased with light memories of a bygone day, I would not have again the things that were. a breathe their thought like fragrance lu the air Of flowers I jrathered In my childish piay. And thou, my very soul, can it touch thee ir I remember her or 1 forget? Does the mm ask if the w hlte stars be set ? Yes, I recall, shall many times, maybe, Kecall the dear old boyish days again. The dear old boyish paKtdon. Love, what then?
ON TO RICHMOND. GET OUT YOUR TAX LISTS -- BRING FORTH THE SABER -- LIKEWISE THE STOUGHTON-BOTTLE -- FOR EVERYTHING MUST BE LISTED IN THE WAYNE COUNTY CAPITAL -- WOMEN ON THE WAR-PATH. A telegram from Richmond yesterday says that the war over the new assessment law culminated Tuesday night In the adoption of a resolution by the Common Council suspending the operation of the act for two weeks, in order to give time for a full expression of the people on the subject. To appreciate the merits of this row, be it known that the Common Council of Richmond, by reason of the power vested in them, passed a city tax law and made a schedule of taxable personal property. So far, so good. But imagine the horror of the quiet and Quakerish inhabitants of the Quaker City when their eyes rested on that list. They rose up with a sigh and said: Can this be? The tax list specified every article of that human invention could suggest in the way of running a well regulated household. Chandeliers and lamps and the oil that was in them, chickens and the food they were fed with, wearing apparel, who they were for, age and sex, garden products, pawnbrokeis' property, and then the whole was lumped and clutched by the item "any property not included in the foregoing items." How the people did howl at this. They got out hand bills, of which the following is a copy, and stuck them all over the aforesaid personal property, and everything else big enough to hold a hand bill: "Citizens awake! The inquisition about to be renewed. There will be a mass meeting at Lyceum Hall on Monday night, January 5, of the citizens of Richmond, to discuss and protest against the iniquitlous, odious and pimping tax schedule, recently passed by the City Council." And so they had their meeting. Previous to this meeting one had been held on Thursday evening at which some resolutions were adopted. The following of which will give an idea of the situation: 1. That we protest against said tax law, and especially against the assessment list for 1874, as being unjust, impracticable, oppressive and inquisitorial in character, and that in our sovereign capacity as citizens we hereby declare our purpose, while asserting our readiness to submit cheerfully to all just and proper taxation for the support of our municipal government, to resist and refuse to list our property under the absurd, impracticable and inquisitorial provisions of said assessment list. 2. Believing that a fairer, more honorable and less offensive list would produce equally as much or more revenue, we hereby firmly but most respectfully ask of our City Council the repeal of section sixty-three of the city tax ordinance (which is the schedule above alluded to), and the substitution therefor of a schedule in conformity with the State and county schedule, with such alterations and exceptions as a prudent regard for the growth and encouragement of our great manufacturing interests as wisdom and experience may suggest. HOW THEY PUT DOWN THE INQUISITION. The first of the above resolutions was adopted at the Mondav night meeting. The Richmond Independent gives a report of what occurred, from which the following extracts are taken: Major Popp being called for all over the house, made a short speech which was well received by the audience. He referred to the inquisitorial nature of the law -- how under it an assessor might invade a man's home and demand to see the wardrobe of a man's wife and children. He had five chickens, and under the law they were not only subject to taxation, but the half peck of corn he had procured to feed them. The flour in the barrel and the potatoes in the cellar were subject to taxation, even his jar of sour kraut was not exempt. The Major's remarks were telling, and were applauded by the audience. Atter one or two other speeches of similar import, and one which favored the law, the following was submitted by a lady and unanimously adopted : To thet Honorable Mayor and Common, Council of the City of Richmond: Inasmuch as women are tax-payers, but have no voice in making laws, yet by courtesy are allowed the right of petition; we, a class of persons fortunate or unfortnnate as the case may be, viz : Old maids, widows, and wives whose husbandsare "not of sound mind," or have absconded, most earnestly petition your honorable and august body to appoint an equal number of female assessors as there are male assessors, for the obvious reason that we feel much delicacy in permitting a man to enter our houses and "list" not only what is generally understood as household furniture, but our bedding, dresses and our baby's clothes ; and that these persons be such as shall be fully capable of giving a righteous estimate of the value of such articles as may constitute our bedding, be found In trunks and drawers, or on the persons of those "listed." In consideration of the binding and solemn oath to be taken, and under the "pains and penalties" of perjury," we submit the foregoing to your candid consideration, on behalf of the above named class of persons, old maids and wives whose "husbands are not of sound mind," or have absconded. All of which was to explain the reason of the telegram mentioned at the beginning. SUPREME COURT. THE HON. A. O. DOWNEY, CHIEF JUSTICE. The Toledo, Wabash and Western Railway Company v. Cohen. Miami C. C. Downey, C. J. Action against a railroad company to recover the value of a horse killed by its locomotive and cars at a point where, it is alleged, the road was not fenced. The trial was by the Court, who found the facts and stated its conclusions of law upon them. The Court found that the defendant had a fence on each side of its road at the point in question, except that on Thursday next preceding the Sunday on which the horse was killed, the fence bad been set afire by sparks from a passing train, and a space from four to six feet wide burned out, through which the horse had gone upon the road; that the section boss, with hands under his charge, passed along the road at that point twice each day while the fence was so open, and that it was the duty of the section boss to repair the fence when accidently injured;
and that the general office of the defendant was at the time at Toledo, Ohio. The conclusion of law stated upon this point was
that the defendant was entitled to a reasonable time in which to repair the fence, and until after the lapse thereof it would not be liable; but that as the burning of the fence took place on Thursday, a delay to repair until the Sunday following was an unreasonable delay, and therefore the defendent was liable under the statute for the animal killed. Exception was taken to the conclusions of law. The plaintiff had judgment Held, the conclusions of law upon the facts found were correct. The Court could not sanction as applicable to the case the rule suggested by counsel, that Thursday and Sunday were to be excluded in the computation of what was reasonable time to repair the fence. In the light of the evidence with regard to the trips and the duties of the section boss, it was foreign to the question to talk about the location of the principal office of the defendant and the necessity of communicating with it with reference to the restoration of the fence. There was ample time, under the circumstances, to repair the fence from Thursday until Sunday. Affirmed. THE SUPERIOR COURT. Indianapolis, Cincinnati and Lafayette Railroad Company vs. Hamilton. Decatur C. C. Worden, J. There is no statute in this State that the Supreme Court is aware of that requires railroad companies to blow their whistle or ring their bell before reaching the crossirjg of a highway, but that duty may devolve upon them without any statute. Ordinary care may require it. When the jury found by their verdict that the omission of a railroad company to blow the whistle at the crossitgof a highway was, under the circumstances, negligent, the Supreme Oxmrt was not disposed to distrust their verdict. Where the train of cars which caused the iniurv. the killimr of two mules of the nlain. till" which were in a drove that the plaintiff and his servant were driving across the railroad on a highway, was running at a high rate of speed, the grade being a down grade, and the train was not so held in check that it could have been stopped after the mules were discovered by those having the train in charge and before reaching the crossing, held, it was perhaps not necessary that it should have been thus held in check. Complaint for negligently killing stock. It was alleged that the delendant'a locomotive and train of cars while being run as aforesaid through the county of Dearborn. and through the fault, misconduct and negligence of the servants and employes of the defendant in running the locomotive and train out of their regular time and at a high rate of speed, to-wit, at the rate of forty miles per hour, and without giviug any of the proper signals of their approach, struck and killed two mules of the plaintiff and Injured 1 a third, then and thero upon the railroad j track, without the fault of the plaintiff, at a point where a puDiic bignway crossed the railroad. A demurrer was overruled. Held, (see form 14. and 2 (I. II. P. 373. 377). the complaint was suthcient. It sets forth with sufficient particularity and ortainty the gegligence imputed to the defendant. ((Uher questions aroo upon the sufficiency of the evidence, which was lengthy.) Af firmed. GOING TO POVT. THK RErunLICAN TARTY PRIFTINOi TO THE DEMJflTION HOW-WO WS. Tho Nashville Republican Ra ner says, with singular force: The- Republican party is fast going to the dogs. Of course this is not to be understood as applying to individual members of a onco powerful organization, bnt simply to the political faction, as sucn, which has ruled the country for a decade and a half. The signs of the times, exhibited in all soils ot ways, manifestly portend the coming collapse. A special telegram, published elsewhere, speaks of the party demoralization which prevails in Congress, something that has not )een known in that body for years. The causes of this are transparent enough to even the casual reader of the dailv newspaper. A disatisfied. turbulent and rebellious constituency must produce more or less effect on the average Congressman, and when the whole country raises its voice against the thieving and corruption which has disgraced the National Legislature, is it not to be wondered at that high officials, wise in their generation, and with an eye to the future, should be making their preparations to stand from under, or like rats, be ready . to desert the sinking ship? The corruption and abuses of the dominant party produced the reaction which found forteable expression in the fall elections. The hard times of the last few months is naturally enough mainly attributed to the inefficiency and mismanagement of those in power, so that, added to all Its other sins of ommission and commission, if a general election were to be held to-morrow, the Republican party would be hurled from Its high estate, and forced into an oblivion which knows no waking. Notice the political rumblings which precede the inevitable doom, ihe election, or Gov. Booth, of California, to the United States Senate, and the public withdrawal of the Illinois farmers from all existing party or ganizations, are fruit of the same tree. They are the result of a movement in politics which may be seen everywhere, but which the farmers have espoused with such hearti ness as Co make it almost sure of success In the agricultural States. . THIS NEW POLITICAL ACTIVITY lias been at work only a few month?, but has permanently destroyed the ascendency of the Republican party in more than one State, and prepared the way for the su'tom acy ot an opposition party in a majority of all the States. Whether this coming party is to bear a new name, or seek a filiation with the Democratic party, reiormed and remodeled, is, as we remarked the other day, one of the unsolved problems of the hour. At any rate the results already achieved, show that the future is in the farmers' hands. They hold th balance of power now in the greater part of the country, and their political strength will be pretiy fully developed and Illustrated in the next years elections. In the meantime Republican party leaders crack their whips louder than ever, as they see their power gradually but surely passing away. It is really mirthmoving to read the comments of the Republican newspapers and politicians of California on the dreadful crisis in their affairs. Tbey are aghast at the treachery of a Republican who dared bo a candidate for the Senate on an independent platform; they lack words to express their amazement that other Republicans could vote for such a candidate. The' Republican members of the Legislature' who voted for Booth are held up to scorn In the party journals. When Governor Booth became prominent as a candidate for the Senate. notb?c could be said against him but thi-: "He is an enemy ot tbe party that elected him." x Now, aftr his eleciou, say the paitians, "the Republican legislators who voted for Booth were chosen to serve our wrty; they have not done so; let tbem rigu." Says one of the party rgan: '"The official must not change bis partv waiiout resigning his office. He ls not ch isen to t-erve the public- aloue; be ha pledged himself to the party as well as to th State." And no on. All of which shows the d"perit straits to which the Republican magnates are reduced on the Pacific sl.tpe. U h. blecs your soul, just wait till the p..l of the other States get a chance at the c rrupt party leaders I Won't tLere be slauLUr, though!
FINES, FEES AND
AN IMPORTANT TABLE FROM ATTORNEY GENERAL BENNYS KEPOirr. C0.MPBKni2S.SIVB SHOWING OP HIS LABOR UN0ER ONE " Si-XTION OF THE LAW JOR AMOUNT OP MONEY COLLECTED BY THE ATTORNEY OENERAI I vnrR tiik onv? m - THK A (TT OF MARCH 10. 1873, UP TO AND INCLUDE, S l Tsk PW
C P. Court Fines and C. c. court Docket Forieit'rs. Fees. Fte . S 49 0.1 . 152 '. $ 131 UO ... 44 . 41 0U SJ Ui & 11 CJ OU 28 9) 0 t :M i 25 : l-ja a .:. 791 10 315 401 i:W 05 14J 0U IV) ' 114 24 moo! 143 mi 15 OU 121 SO 00 40 lS ?0 löl du 4t IX i 715 tX' lift) OU 1 UO .1,158 o5 4i;VVii' 'ii'riTJTi m ou j ou 78 ä :äu ou 2'v! 00 122 5vij w 01' . - iih . :iiu Jo f! r li" uu 2W Z 13 40 50 0t 14 :. is .' 477 4V 173 00 300 Kt - l.U.'V 50 W 1K 4M 35 . 1,0m i m oo i-T 4. S 201 70 69 00 - 147 01 10 U0 413 a 2?l 80 144 00 S U 1,212 7j JS7 OU tfJT u 1.5 00 00 1 0'J 4-Vf 9 I . 159 Ot- .19 1 1 K! i.V Sil 1 j HtJ! OD1 1 Sä I! I tl 00 II OOi 1. Oil. Ill 77 00 lid 00 314 .5,5 S-JJ 45j I iUi 5(i ti9 00 57 00 llW 1.1 74 00...... ! 51 75 217 0i! I 1,272 41 r U0 ..l 100 74 279 oo! ....J 129 UO :il 50 I 20 Old 3" OOj ' 112,019 ml Vi o:ii yifflr, 21
Counties. Adams...... Itartholomew Hentou . . lloone l!ro wi . Carroll Cass c 1ft y Clinton lJearburn lKall ....... Fayette... Floyd Fountain... ...... Franklin , (rant.-...... Hamilton llRnlwt, ,, , Harrison Hendricks...... Huutlugtou.... Jasper Joy . Jefferson Johnson 1 iHirrange Miuliaon M anon Marsh.-ill....... Morgan Newton Joble...-......., Drange Owen Poller ItandolpU Kipley Rush Shelby Ktarke . Hteubeii...... Tippecanoe Vermillion Vljro Wabash Warren Wayne . White .... Whitley Total ReKiden this amount the Attorney Ueneral taa makes the Kraud total amount collected 47,. W. orders, which will be reported when paid. Ayers Vigor, air For restoring to Gray Hair its natural Vitality and Uolor. . A dressing wliioli is at once agreeable. healthy, and effectual for ,l.-V-,,-T preserving ino soon gloss and freshness of youth. Thin hair is thickened, fallen hair checket?, :rnd baldness often, though not always, curetl by it use. Nothing oati restore the hair where the follicles ai-e destroyed, or tho glands atrophied and decayed; but pitch as remain can le saved by this application, and stimulated into activity, so that a now growth of hair in proilticel. Instead offoulfng the hair with a pasty pediment, it will keep it clean and vigorous.' Its occasional uso will prevent the hair from turning grey or falling oil, and consequently prevent baldness. Tho restoration of vitality it gives to tho scalp arrests and prevents the formation of dan Irnff, which is often js uncleanly and offensive. Free f ruin thoso deleterious substances which make pome preparations dangerous and injiv rious to the hair, tho Vigor can only benefit but not harm it. If wanted merely for a HAIR DRESSING, nothing else can bo found so desirable. Containing neither oil nor dye, it does not soil white cambric, and yet lasts long on the hair, giving it a rich, glossy lustre, and a grateful perfume. Prepared by Dr. J. C. Ayer k Co.t Practical aad Analytical CThemiaU, LOWELL, MASS, $20 SAVEDI To meet the urgent demand ot the tlmeo, tk Florence Söwing Machine Co. Have determined t REDUCE PRICES, And will hereafter neU their f&p Machine for 145, and otaer styles in proportion. -X II K y H. O Tt TC N" C 2 In the nal8ewlng Machine that feeds the work backward aud lor warn, or to rirfnt and left, aa me pnrcnaser may prerer. it nas Deen greatly improved and almpllfied. and lalarbettei man any oilier macnine in tne market. IT IS HOW THE CHEAPEST. Florence, Mas, Nov. 1, 7.T. Agent wanted, '- - - - M PORTAIIE MOIAT SAW Mllli kit b tliiriu roUiaui ir Hi rar r a Tta-Uar frtaU t.ihjl-r. and ciiu fmta 15) to Sum) ret mt I MB Wer nrr tr. It hat do.bKrt Hra4 Blue. Two rrkdilT ni ttat Mll ! Eoii. (i cn be rrai4 ciiamx.fr TAYLOR. laJiiaapoii. lud OTICK Of A I 31 1 X ISTU ATI OX. JOtlee I herebv irlren that th tinlfri1ffTivl has been appointed by the Marlon tlvlt tlrcult tourt of Marlon county, tat of Indiana, admt.vlstrator of the estate of JohnU. Alj ert, late of Marion connty, deceased. taJa estate is Huppvi to be solvent. MALINUA M YE1W, Administratrix. E. TU. UULLER, BKAxra ix ' Midifloa XX lie, Pittahorg ' Pale Ale, Forter inj lAger Beer, la Bottles or Keea. W H. Delaware t. Moxart TTU RnlHlnc. In1lanrelt TO Til I.AIUEO-A flny-to pae book containing annwers toanewtlonaof trar Im portance, pent free for two ai&oaps. Address Mrs. Ii. MtlZG tit, Hanover, Pa.
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-Moneys UiK-Uiin ' fnelaii et! ou Ks- j el Wit- ijury KefS. I IH'lalm- I nMo m. T W mies. i uetis i ees. f ti 1,T-J rj l.7T, 4 ?- l at () 2.414 .TT. Ml j.i l;rt :.!27 w 1,115 11 i-.7 it 1,4M (Ml 2.1 Tl K44 :;i u. "I Z.Ii 4tI M 05 15 Mil 44 2 ;;s 70 Gl 01 01 M f;i 91 ÖK Ji5 u .Vi w - t :.i 25 is 50 25 K2 1 ; Mj 70 Cs 00 2.1 75 00 07 HI IXJ t't 2S 15 11 OS v 00 14 02 Zi til N !! ::x im' i;w 7 119 :ii :tt 'Ü Kii 435 .TO l'I 00i 50 00 21 0 75 50 679 20 4!i K iiSi 7k Ü71 1 !2 2i :w, 7o 45 U0 50.075 54 f lO.Wia 09 rnvivnl v: oi a-. in ..i A iorlion Is In bankable uöil ind cÄYr - -..v ' - 874. BETTEE THAU EVER! 137. j MOORE'S RURAL N EW-YOR'KEH, THE GKeAt ILLVSTTtATED Rural, Literaiy and Family "Weeüy. Tills famous Weekly, which fca been tli idInijand largest clrculatlnic journal of 1U o'a.a for over twenty year, not only "hUH livm," but purpo.se to render its ensuing (XXlX!h vAume better than any yet publinhrd. M .- Kural Is the Standard Authority on Azricc.ure, Horticulture and Domestic AffairH.and allioiee, lli(?h Toned aud Popular Literary and F.nlly l'aper. No other Journal in its mpbere baiuoh a large aud able corps of Editors and t'oa".fibutor, and noue comprises ko many lVpartaiMits or ko errat a variety of KuhjctM, llluAtniia, etc. National in cbaraeWr and obl-ct. and adapted to both town and country, it hat .-rieat admirers In every .State, Territory and Prviace. on the Continent. Ever earnestly advo-MMr-.g the Rights and Interests of tiie Juluw rll ClasH?s. Moore's Kural New Yorker liaa ' e been the FARM AMD FIRESIDE FAVORITE -And tolay lias no peer In its Important sph-re of JournaliMii. Hellevin!? In tact, talent kci the diHCUKKionof such timely topicM tu are ot ;xxmount interest to prrHlucing eople, it ninlo the ablest talent lu the land, and furnish Ue 15est I'aper for . i-iJt?l THK FARMER, Till: HORTICULTURIST, TIIK STOCK OROWKR, THK DAIRYMAN, THK HOUSEWIFE, ITf. In tke future no pains will be spared to render the paper indlspensible to the rural and induf.trirl Mpulation of the country, aud a welcome Kunst at every fireside It may visit. The tvedlai lor the family aud young people, with appropriate illustrations, will receive increased car? and attention, while none of the practical deprt inents will be neclected, our aim bei nit to xo-l In every and all ffstnreM, and to furnish toe t4 coiublDed Rural, Literary and Family evpA" per otta! nable. STTLE, TERMS, ETC Moore's Rural New Yorker contain sltn quarto penes, weekly, Onely and profusely lüuätrated and neatly printed, üuly vi per jrvar in elubs of ten or more, 2 per copy. Now lthe time U) subscribe for 1K74. Ureat Premluma or Cash Commissions to Club Ageuts. FpeclBLens, Premium Lists, etc., sent iree to all dispol to act as Agents. Address . D. T. MOORE, w York CHy. PMoXoXo) 1 aaaar Bf V I ISSOUBI STATE LOITEXT. Lsftlljai I7 Btcto ittaoritr aad Draw ia Tx&Lm is St. Loiia. Grand Single Number Schefrva Class A, t be Drawn Jan. l, 1S7. 6,880 Prises, Amountuiar to S3001OO3 1 prise n.ono too prlssa f.. prlxss of.. . t prises of.. prises of.. nrlBa or. 1 prlie ot. 13.4.10 1 prise oC. 1 DTlM of ... lU.'JOO 7 1,0 0 4 prlMa of.. so eso to 4 prises of.. 6 primes of.. 20 prises of.. AS rrtss Of. pnses 01.. -) prises OL u pnsea or.. äa i tjM prises of. 10 Tickets, $10. M Mela, f S. Qarttr . 15? sXsTOnr lotteries are chartered bv ths Buts. srs ml wars drawn at tht time namod. and ail draw1nn tr oder ttae su perviHioa of sworn oomml3Hioivra. s-Tbe otUcisl drawing will pGbiitlied la tt fv Loais papers, and a coo of Drs-lnc seat to dotcom of tickets. -W, will draw a similar srbems ths last Cy u ewrr month durin the sva-Kemit at our rtnt by rttfrrorriCR V0:-TT ORDKKS. RKUISTR:D LZTTKS, DRAfT, ot &X PKLää. bead for a circular. AdJra, Ml'KUY, it 1L1.FR A CO. PostotBce Box S44S - i AHESTä WANTEl) FOit TUB HISTORY Or THE OB TUB rtelnu a fall and authentic account ol lh fctrjsrg'cs of the American farmer Mgunistthe extortions of the Uillrond Companies, ilh the niRtory or in rise and progress of the order of Patrons of llasbandry: Its ohlecis aud ens. Pects. It sellsat SiuhU Knd lor mxrlmon num and terms t sgents. and Bee why it e'is f-tsier than any other biolr. Address NATIONAL. PUKL'JSHINO VO., Cincinnati, O. WANTED-lMMKUlTELY-27 jouni? men to learn and enenee In Teleerain Orwr. atln for new railroad and oommerclal-oitiaea, Permanent and good paying positions ruaraa teed as soon a qualified. Address
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