Indiana State Sentinel, Volume 23, Number 30, Indianapolis, Marion County, 10 February 1874 — Page 7
THE - INDIANA ST ATE , SENTINEL TUESDAY. . FEBRÜAEY JpTwCT
1
V
IX THE UNDERTOW.
TWO TOTTK 6 GIRLS SWEPT INTO THB SWIRL OP CRIME. Down with the Bourbons, down t The very stones do cry ; From end to end of Spain they shout, "We'll conquer or we'll die." "Without a home sh&il wander. As the scorned Hebrew race. As an outcast from her country, She of the shameless face. SOUL BE VELA TIOX. We live t.-.gf,ther years and years, And leave unsounded still Bach other's f prings of hopes and fears, Kaeh other's depths of will. We live togethc-rday by day. And some chance look or tone lights up with Instantaneous ray An lnnor world unknown. IrOSCELLANEOUS DRIFT FOREIGN OTES. Americans at Nice are to give a ball on lYashingUn's birthday. A third Alpine tunnel is now . proposed to Msa under St. .Bernard. English army officers fcave a 5,000 set of DU üllier tu ILIO f UiD vi uuiuuuigu o beautiful Russian Bride. The Swedish government has proposed to the Chambers an increase of 30 per ceat.on the salaries of all officials of the State The immense balloon, Le Condor Transtlantique, it is said, will soon leave France for the United States, under tho guidance of M. Foitevin. The Graphic has no connection with the enterprise. The oldest of t he trees in the Jardin des Plantes, the aoaesi virfönensiz spinosa, brought from America bv Jean Robin In
V The republican bimplicit j of tne French v government is well illustrated ia the ball J which was recently given by President Mac-
'- - - .. . J thousand dollar3. According to a recently published statement, there are 34S theatres in Italy, 337 in .France, 191 in Germany, 1GS in Spain, 152 in Austria, 150 in England, 44 in Russia, 34 in Belgium, 22 in Holland, 20 in Switzerland, 16 in Portugal, 10 in Sweden, 10 in Denmark, 8 in Norway, 5 in Greece, 4 in Turkey, 3 in Koumania, 3 in Egypt, and 1 in Servia. The general total of dramatic, lyric, and musical artists and employes is 2,157,800 women and . 3,027,000 men. At .a recent examination of candidates for gorernment offices in China, there were : 20 applications, the youngest 70 years of age .and the eldest 102. The elderly one showed fcla intellectual vigor by the brilliant manner in which he passed the arduous trials of bis examination, and his physical energy ty the rapidity and activity of his movement. That boy will make something yet. Z Fraternity is the watchword of communism and unions. It is a sad word, and has oet France dear. In the great revolution, "fraternity" cost 2,022,903 lives; in 1843, 30,563: in 1871, 57,627. The word is also expensive, as in February, 1848, 1,500 barricades were raised in Paris, which, allowing 845 paving stones to each,would make a total of 1,267,500 torn up by the 'sovereign people;" 3,013 trees were uprooted, 3,704 lamps broken, and innumerable police offices burnt down. Benighter Constantinople canjteach civilized New York a lesson In traveling accommodations : All persons using the Tramway Company's cabs recieve from the driver a printed slip bearing a number, and every two months a lottery is drawn,! the winning Tarious prizes. At tba last drawing the prise ot 20 fell to the lot of the luckyowner of No. 51,547. The lottery is, says the Xievanant Herald, not only an amusement So the public, for it enables the company to exercise a control over the pecuniary honesty of their drivers, as the books from which these numbers are drawn have counterfoils with corresponding members, and persons who use the cabs have an interest Jin preserving the tickets givan to them. A convention is in progress between the governments of Turkey and Greece for the suppression of brigandage on the TurcoGreek border. A fixed reward will be paid lor every captured brigand dead or alive. The London Athenaeum says: We are authorized to state that the letters and journals f Lord Macaulay are Jin the hands ot Lady Holland and Mr. Trevelyan, with a view to publication. '' A remarkable movement, headed by a native, has set in among the people of Eastern Bengal. The leader has a number of followers who read the Scriptures and endeavor to live after the example of the Apostles and early Christians. They are vegetarians and discard the use of Medicine, seeking the ore of sickness by prayer to Christ. An assault was made upon the King of Saxony while walking in the Great Garden outside Dresden, a short time ago, by a lunatic who has once before, in 1868, assaulted His Majesty very nearly in the same spot. The culprit is by trade an umbrella-maker, by birth the illegitimate son of a Saxon nobleman. He is under the belief that the King is his deadly enemy, and persecutes him with all hi power. He has been removed to a lunatic asylum. Minister Do well writing from St. Petersburg says of the banks there; Banks have been regularly chartered here now for about ten years, and pay all of them 8, 9, 10 per ent.-dividen'is. These stocks are all worth from 120 to 150. The Government exercises a strict watch over them, and a defalcation would be simply 'the army for life or the Siberian mines,' and criminals do not es -cape here. The Police force in the City of Paris costs an annual sum of about ten and a half millions of francs, of which the chief items' of expenditure are the following: 1 Commissioner, 1 Sub-Commissioner, 1 Chef de Bureau, 24 clerks, 5 Superintendents of divisions, and 38 Commissaries, receiving together 141,550 francs: 25 principal Inspectors and 100 Brigadiers, costing 180,000 francs, and 700 Sub-Brigadier and 6,MX) ordinary police offi--eera, whose pay amounts to 8,908.000 francs. . 1 . 1 . SI. 4 4. J 1 1
i iteports oi ice rrenca military inuuuais pt -engaged in trying Communists, have been
made. Up to the present the courts-martial have given 49,066 decisions, Including 24,000 declaring there to be no cause for prosecution, 2,300 axjoittals, and 23,000 condemnations. There remain, 750 cases of Individuals who have disappeared, and 1,100 which are still being Investigated. Seven cases are -disposed of every week, and all will be terminated In three months. The Committee of Pardons have given 6,000 decisions namely, 2,000 in favor and 4,000 against the persons under sentence. The press of North Germany, is making war on woman's inn aence in the elections. All the qualities of woman," says the organ of Prince Bismarck, " are made to disturb and bewilder the factors of man." The cause of the d i ead of the weaker sex exressed by the official journal, lies in the alegation that the women of Germany, as elsewhere, are. in general, subject te clerical dl etat ion. A roipeicn for Susan IS. and Co. Some of Gov. Dix'a admirers have given him a cheese weighing 300 pounds. U vToud like to "cheese it," but it la too, big. He
STRIKE COMMENTS.., . WHAT THE PRESS SAT. FACT. . (From the Frankfort Crescent.)
strike among the prirtersis prevailing at Indianapolis, caused by the combination of the members of the union. The dailies all appear half size, old typos are going back to the case, orlnters are coming in rroni other cities and all will soon be remedied. The strike will prove ineffectual. TOUCHING EXPRESSION ON SYMPATHY. From the People's Fund, Covington. We have looked at the Journal and Senti nel since the above strike, and cannot help but look with pity upon their weak effort in trying to " buck" against such an intelli gent and yorthy class of printers as belong . to the Indianapolis TypoeraDhical Union. It is impossible to do good printing without the employment of all good printers. in unian mere is strength. When editorsot ability seek to destroy and sever themselves from that union of intelligent helpers rather than pay the small pittance in advance of former "prices to which their helpers are justly entitled, they seek to destroy their own interests. Experience ha taught us that one good printer is worth two "botch" printers. It is not so much the advance of prices with tho publishers of those journals as it is a want to control and break up that organization which has so long been a boon of success to their business. Far better would it have been for the publishers to accede to the small advance proposed by the Union, rather than have their types, presses and other materials spoiled by "new botches," and the consequent depreciation in value of their journals. TIIE MISFORTUNE OF IT. From the Madison Courier. It Is one of the misfortunes of all organiz ations for the protection of mechanics ai d laborers that thev are almost nfcessarily undiscriminatlve, and that to enlist the sympathy and support all of the workmen they must recognize no ainerences Deiween the skill and habits of Industry and indolence among individual members. Thus demands for' increase of wages that might be conceded to superior workmen, are sometimes refused because the increase must be given to all or none to good or indifferent alike. For the first time, so far as we remember, a movement has been made, and by the master machinists, in London, to treat with their workmen, who have struck for higher wages, as individuals, and offer to raise the wages of these who are worth an increase, provided each man will treat with them personally. WAYS OF DARKNESS. Frnatht ßptodelaa Reporter. Indianapolis printers want higher wages now thaii they did during the war, when gold was away up above 2.90, and provisions bevond reason. The wavs .of some ''Unions" are past finding out, and the sooner all such associations are abandoned, the better it will be for the employed and the employer. NOT THK WAT TO IMPRESS HONKST HEN. From the Evansvllls Courier. - The type in the News was set up by Messrs. G. B. Thompson, city editor; Daniel Payne, associate editorjand others,assisted by three or four boys. Col. Holloway, the Postmaster of the city, took the foremanship of the office pro. tern., and succeeded admirably for an amateur. Mr. Holliday, the proprietor, has already secured compositors, who state that they will hold their places there to the end, although they have heretofore been members of the Typographical Union. As this matter is a question of business, we re gret to say that the printers' cause will be damaged by acts of violence, two cases being already reported : one in which a shot was fired about dark at one of the windows of the Sentinel Office. Two persons were working in the room near which the ball struck, but no one was injured; and the second at about half-past six o'clock in the evening, a pistol shot was fired through the window of the Journal engine-room, the ball passing close to Mr. John Mack, the engineer, and flattening itself on the fly-wheel ot the engine, and no one was injured. If the workiegmen resort to such lawless practices, no honest man will sympathize witn them, ana their cases should be settled in the courts of justice. But we knew that, as a body, they deprecate all such proceedings, and will probably visit just punishment upon the persons who committed the above outrages, if they can be ferreted out. Unless they do, they show that they are not men standing by honest convictions, but a gang of rowdies and bullies, whose onlv ambition is to kill the goose which lays the golden egg. They must clear their hands of all such transactions and see to it that they are not forced by unfirincipled men into such a disgraceful attiade. The Typographical Union at Indianapolis is a model Union, and the country will now hive an ooDortenitv of witnessincr the. manner in which a model organization carries on a general strike, which ought to make the printers very careful as to their course of procedure. . i ; THE ORJEOTIONABLB FEATURES. From the Evansvllle Journal. , . The strike among the printers at Indian apolis continues, though the daily papers have been able, in reduced formj to appear regularly. The objectionable feature of all such strikes has forced its way into this, however, and reports of attempted violence reach us. As will be seen by the extracts, reproduced elsewhere, from the Sentinel and Journal, attempts on the lives of the employes of both of those offices have been made by parties supposed to be working in the interests of the strikers. It is this sort of thing above all else that brings unions into bad odor and weakens an effectiveness that might easily be secured by more temperate action. That the printers had a perfect right to quit wortc can not be questioned; and that the newspaper pub lishers nave equal rights in the matter is also . plain. Believing the demands of the union for an increase of compensation for composition to be unu3t they refused to accede to them, and have employed other . printers, and will fill the vacant places as ranidly as possible. This they have an undoubted right to do,' and the dastardly attempts of the strikers above referred to will do the cause of the union men but little good. Acts of violence are not well calculated to elicit public sympathy. ' "scooped." From the Brookstone Reporter. The printers of Indianapolis are on a strike for an increase of pay for composition. They demand 50 cents per 1,000 ems. We know enough about such strikes to predict that the members of Typographical Union No. 1 will get gloriously "scooped.'! A BROEEH UNION. From the Rushvule Republican. Notwithstanding the hard times the Indldianapolis printers have struck for an increase of wages. Some time ago the Union advanced their scale of prloea, but agreed, in consequence of the financial panic, to suspend the advance for a certain stipulated time. Before the expiration of the time for which the advance had been suspended, the employing printers, including the Sentinel and Journal companies and the proprietors of the evening paper, appealed u the union, through an address, not to make the proposed advance
in prices, plainly stating that owing to the decrease ifl their business they would be unable to pay increased wages to employes. The address was couched in temperate and respectful language, and the truthfulness of iU statements could hardly fail to be convincing to sensible men; but the Union rejected the proposition by a vote of 106 to 4. The Sentinel failed to make its appearance al
together. The result win be that the Union wkl be seriously injured, if not entirely broken up. and the country towns will be overrun with trdmping jour" printers. KNOWS IT ALL. rFrom the Wabash Flaindealer.J The printers of Indianapolis are on a strike for an advance of 12 per cent, upon their wages, and consequently the papers of the Capital city come to us reduced to about one half the usual size. The strike is unlortunate for both the publishers and . printers, and whichever party may be successful will be none the gainer because of the victors. To an old printer who has worked on daily papers, some of the statements by which the Sentinel hopes to gain pnbhc sympathy äre simply ridiculous. For instance, it would have us believe that the printers in its office average 28.00 per week lor about seven hours daily serrice at light labor! Wo venture to say, that not one printer In fifty, however expert can make f2S.C0 in fifty hours, at the prices heretofore paid In Indianapolis, unless he is a special favorite of the managing editor. Our experience upon a morning daily is that fourteen hours constitute a day's work, and that very few printers can stand the strain for more than lour nights in succession, and we do not beneve there are over three bands employed upon the Sentinel who average over $20,00 a week. The Sentinel's books show the facts to be as stated notwithstanding the Plaindealer's doubt. Ed. Sentinel. UNCLE SAM'S FARM. " A RIGHT SMART LOT" OF K AND FOUR HUNDRBD MILLION ACRBS THB JTH HOMESTEAD LAW. A Washington dispatch to the New York Sun Says: The Committee on Public Lacds of the House of Representatives, in a recent report say that the whole arable public land remaining, after deducting mountains, alkaline plains, : sand and sage deserts, swamp lands and shoal lands, railroad grants, Ac., ean not exceed three hundred and fifty to four hun dred million acres. There was taken up by homestead entries alone last year nearly four million acres, and as our population increases this yearly amount will also increase and at so rapid a rate that in less than a century the whole arable land of the government will be absorbed by settlers. Although it has been the beneäcient intention of these preemption and homestead laws to afford cheap homes to the people, yet both laws and especially that which allows preemption, have been perverted from their original de sign and have been made the instruments whereby speculators have obtained large areas of land and hold them unimproved, waiting until the neighboring improvements of industrious settlers may advance their value and afford a profitable sale. In a limited degree the same abuses have grown up under the present homestead law. To correct these abuses, to insure to every one who wants it a home, to prevent frauds on the national government, and to bring under improve ment the puDiio lands, is the object of the bill reported by the committee. It repeals the pre-emption laws, except that it allows incohate titles under them to be completed according to their provisions. It also substitutes lor the present homestead law an entirely new one, retaining all the best features of the existing law, and adding others that the expec ience of the working of that law seemed to require. It does not in terfere witn the soldiers' and sailors' home stead law. ITS NEW FEATURES 8T6 as follows: It requires actual settlement and cultiva tion for dve years, after which, on due proof thereof, the settler can obtain a title to the 160 acres ot ;land, the whole cost of which will be 10 on entry of the lan j, and 93 on the final proof. If, however, the setter wishes to Main a title earlier than in five years' he can do so at the end of eighteen months on payment of the mlnii mum price of the land. The bill exempts "pine lands." with min eral, coal, and saline lands heretofore exempted, in order to save the vast tracts of valuable pine timber to the Government. that are now destroyed under the present laws, without Insuring settlement or cultivation. It extends to minor heirs, at the death of their parents, the right to continue the parents' settlement with the consent of the guardian, and allows widows, after settlement and before entry, to make entry in their own name. It provides for the determination ef controversies where two or more persons have settled on the same quar ter section or smaller legal subdivision; also that vacancies in tne omce of register or receiver shall not prejudice claimants as to any matter necessary to the establishment of their claims. Among ether provisions, it allows tte purchase by eash of small tracts of forty acres for sites for mechanical, com mercial or manufacturing dutdosos. after one year's occupancy thereof, and provides that all the United States reserved lands within the lateral limits of railroads shall be held at the double minimum price of fi50 per acre. BEHEADED. HOW MARTHALL MARTIN WAS HXTNO THH TRAP FALLS AND THE HEAD FLIES FROM THE BODY. The San Francisco Chronicle gives this ap palling account of the hanging of a murderer at Martinez in that state: Marshall Martin, the accomrjlice of the woman Elizabeth Eiscbler in the murder of her husband, Val entine Eipchler, near Antioch, in November, 1872, suffered the extreme penalty of the law yesterday in the jail yard at Martinez. On the platform were ten special deputies besides deputy sheriffs Hunsakar and Claen of San Francisco. In front of the platform, some distance from it, stood some any gen tlemen, including physicians, who were in vited to De present, 'ihe ceremonies on the scaffold were exceedingly short. Martlu was placed in a chair, while the Sheriff read the concluding portion of tho death-warrant. Dr. Hertel then offered op a fevent prayer, and at its conclusion Martin was requested to stand on the trap. As he did so. he said: - Qentlemxn: I want you i.ll to understand that I am here to die; but I am an Innocent man. 1 don't deserve this. The woi4ar that canwd me to do this deserves death a thousand times more than I do. That is ail 1 have to say. Straps were then securely adjusted about the limbs, the black cap drawn over the head, the fatal noose fixed about the neck the whole not occupying half a minute. An instant more, the arm of the sheriff went up, a man in the rear cut the rope which held the lever in place, the trap gave way, apd the body shot down with terrible force. The scene which followed almost beggars description. The body shot straight downward. The rope stretched with a sudden, elastic-like spring, the black cap flew into sir at least eight feet, and spattering the blood in great spots over the rope, the whitewashed wall, the trap, the chair in which the doomed man sat, and the Sheriff's boots, it rolled away in one corner of the In closure. The body of the poor man fell to the ground with a great thud, and two
red, geyser-like jets spurted up from the neck and fell down on the ground in tor a i . . . "
reuw. a cioser looK ana then THE HORRER-STRICKEN FACES of the spectators showed that the awful nature of the occurrence had burst upon them. The poor old man's head had actually beim jerked from his body, and was even then lying in the black cap where it had rolled in lUBwrner. ineneaoiess trunlc lay weltering in the blood which poured from the neck. After the first thrill of horror . strong .men turned away sickened at the horrible sight. The faces on the platform was blanched and ghaotlv. The poor Sheriff was as white as chalkbutbe was cool and collected, and did much to inspire those around him. Dr. nolbrook, who was present, first emptied the black cap of its sickening contents. He lifted the cap at the top and the head rolled avay over the ground like a cannon-ball. The ropo bad severed the neck as clear lv as though it bad been done with a knife. The vertebra had actually been pulled away from what the Doctor called the atlas. The larynx, the artery, the tendons, were all torn apart, the latter, only, showing straggling ends. Death, it is harily necessary to state, was instantaneous. From the time the headless trunk struck th ground there was not even a quiver of the little finder. The body lay like a lump of lead. The horrible remains were at once placed in a coffin and hidden from Sieht. TCf hlamoiaattriKntaKlo to Sheriff Ivory for this terriblo mishap. xne rope was aojustea lor a lall or six feet;, and it was said that this was no more than is usually civen. Dr. Holbrook, who made a critical examination of tho remains, testified before the Cororner's jury, later in the day, that, taking into consideration the physical condition of the man his soft, flabby at, and the weak condition of his muscular system it was not at all singular that his neck should give way. Any fall which would have broken the spinal cord, would have been pretty sure to have done just what was done. The muscles of the neck were found to be soft and wntrarfpd and rhrmtrVi tho body weighed but 143 pounds, still the neck WW a a (nnorvnVtlA a ti -v v s-y - i v rm i LEVEL HEADED. VIEW OF " THAT MAP " IN SOUTHERN INDIANA. The Cannelton Reporter gives a cordial tribute to "that map" and to Indianapolis that will not fail to be appreciated both for its good sense and good feeling. It says: "The reproduction of the "map" of Indianapolis by the Sentinel, to which we allude in a jocular manner, and which has been the occasion of many witty remarks by the press, is, after all, no laughing matter. The fact is, there are but very few localities of which such an illustration oi natural and artificial advantages are possible. As a citizen of the state we feel proud of the growing importance and future prospects of our capital. Nearly every state has its emporium of trade, of fashion, and of learning. Massachusetts has her Boston, New York her metrop olis of the same name, Pennsyl vania her Philadelphia, Ohio her Cinnati, Kentucky her Louisville, Missouri her St. Louis, and Illinois her Chicago. These marts of commerce and manufactures are justly the objects ot pride to the citizens of these several states, and give character and importance to the commonwealth in which they are located. Until quite recently our own state has had no one particular city of sufficient consequence to establish its claim to metropolitan character and importance. We have had several thriving cities of moderate dimensions, but none of them of first class imlwrtance. none or tnem sumcientiy weaitny and populous to give notoriety and character to the state.or to makelhem ot familiar reference to the inhabitants of the Union. This condition of things is rapidly changing. The introduction of railroads has bo turned the channels of trade that Indianapolis, although emphatically an' Inland city, without the advantage or a navigable river, strictly speaking, ' is rapidly drawing within her boundaries the trade, manufacture, wealth and influence that have heretofore centered in cities and towns situated upon large rivers, on the shores of seas aud lakes. Her system of railroads now so prominently located and established have nxed her prosperity ana future growtn bevond a possibility of failure or diminution. The original plan ot the city appears to have been prophetic of her artificial channels of trade, illustrated by her present railroads. . In the same manner that her streets diverge from the "governor's circle. so do her ra'lroads diverge from the city. They branch to the counry in every direction, and so constitute her one of the most remarkable distributing points to he found in the world. In the heart of the Union, in the midst of a country of unsurpassed fertility and already rich in its developments of agriculture, in close proximity to untold deposits of coal and other minerals, there Is no city of the United States that has a brighter future than our own capital. Her locality makes 'the traveling public at all times tributary to her prosperity. ' You cannot travel to any extent East or West, North or South, .without passing through Indianapolis. She stands directly in the way of the tourist, the emigrant and the business man, from all of whom she realizes toll. Her position now is the same as though she were tsitnated at the confluence of many navigable rivers and all those rivers free from the contingencies of low water or " ice. Seventy-six passenger trains of railroad cars enter the city daily. Her freight trains are much more numerous. The scream of the locomotive there is perpetual, and at ho time do you fail to realize the ground tremor of the rumbling ;ttam car. Within the last two years her increaein population and substantial Improvements, costly buildings and extensive manufactories, has been 1 remarkable, but by no means unnatural or fictitious. Real estate has advanced to such an extent that persons unacquainted with the Intrinsic cause thereof have predicted the usual results from overtrade and speculation. ;it is possible that there may be some truth in euch prognostics, but taking into consideration the many advantages already enumerated, and reflecting upon the natural growth and development ot the country and the absolute power possessed by the capital all ready invested there, and the vigorous enterprise of her citizens, we do not eee any reason for a decline in prices. With a present population of 80,000, her ratio of increase .based upon solid elements oi growth and properity . will in all probability eive her 300,000 inhabitants within the next twenty years. . NOTICE OF ANSIUJfEE OF MIS APPOINT HUNT. , District Court of Indiana, s.: At Indianapolis, the 10th day of January, A. D 1874. The undersigned hereby gives notice of his appointment as assignee or t rank A. Boyd, In th county of Marlon and State of Indiana, with In Bald District, who has been adjudged a bankrupt, upon his creditors' petition, by the District (Jourt of said District. JOHN C. BRUSH, Assignee. jOTICE OF ADJIIMSTBATIOX. Notice la hereby given that the undersigned has been appointed Dy the Marlon Civil Circuit Court of Marlon county, State of Indiana. Ad mmlstrator of the estate of William Mitchell, late of Marion county, deceased. bald estate is supposed tobe Insolvent. 11ÜWA1U) CALE, ArtmlnWttrator.
"VTEW ADVERTISEMENTS.
11 NEW YORKDAY-BOOK. A Democratic Weekly. Established in ISM. It supports White Supremacy, political and social. " yM. imr. iuuuusf uiue copies lor Hpecimen copies free. Address, DAY-BOOk, Aew lorx jiiy. Wood's Household Magazine. . THE BEST DOLLAR MONTHLY. ÖJC f A Cnr A day made by canvassing for U)J LU IsP-LvJ for thin mazazlce now In Its fourteenth volume with chromo, THE TOSEJIITE VALUET, Hx20 Inches, in 17 Oil Color. Magazine, one year, with mounted Chromo.?2 fO Magazlne.one year with unmounted Chromo 1 bd Maigazlne, alone, one year l uo r.xamme our Clubbing and fremium Lists. Two flrst-clas8 periodical for the wice of one We solicit experienced canvassers and others to Bena r.i once lor wrms anl specimen Magazine. Address H. ;. HUTE, Publisher, 41 Park Row, N. Y. City, or Newburp, N. Y. iifc&r EXTERMINATORS And Insect Powder For Rats. Mice. Roaches. Ant. Red-hn w. Mothn. etc. J. F. 11ENUY. CUKRAN A. CO.. jew lorK. boie Agents. $1,500,000 Fourth Grand Gift Concert For the Eeneßt of THE PUBLC LIBRARY OF KENTUCKY. Drawing deferred till 31st O F1 ARCH NEXT, To complete the sale of tickets and make a TTTJUiXj DRAWiNGr. 12,000 Cash Gifts will be distributed by lot among the ticket holders. LIST OF GIFTS. One grand cash One grand cash One grand cafh Ohe grand cash One grand cash 10 cash gifts, SO cash gifts, 60 cash gins, 80 cash gifts, 100 cash giits, 1-t0 esh gifis, Z'rtcvLhh gifts, 325 cash gifts, ll,0UO cash gifts, Rift gift .1250,000 100,000 . 50,000 ... 25,000 ... 17,500 100,140 150.000 50,000 giftlu,i00 each. 5,000 each.. 1,000 each. 500 each. 400 each., sou each.. 200 each. 100 each. bO each. 40,000 40,000 45000 50,010 32,500 550,000 Total, 12,000 gifts, all cash, amounting to..Jl,500,0U0 iWThe concert and distribution of gifts will positively and unequivocally take place on the day now fixed, whether all the tickets are Bold or not. and the 1.2,000 gifts all paid In proportion to the number of tickets sold. PHICE OP TICKETS. Whole tickets, 960; halves, f35; tenths, or each coupon, &5; eleven whole tickets, for ö00; twenty-two and one-half tickets for $1,000; 113 whole tickets for t),000; 227 whole tickets for 110,000. o discount on less that 500 worth of tickets. Application for agencies and orders lor tickets should be addressed to THOa E. BRAM LETTE, Agent Public Library Ky.. and Manager Gift Concert, Fublio Library Building, Louisville, Kentucky. s-a."w hvlxliIj hvleist Will prolong their Uvea, make better lumber and earn money easier and faster, by usiDg the "MEINER PATENT HEAD BLOCKS." Descriptive circular sent on application. SINKER, DAVIS & OO- Indianapolis. Ind. MARTIN'S IMPROVED BRICK MACHINE. Will make more and better bricks than any machine in use. Adopted and used by the leading brick manufacturers. Manufactured and sold by AXES UAXuTACTTJ&nra COMPANY, Chi co pee, Massachusetts. C x Ofi Per day! Agents wanted! All 30 LU classes of working people, of either sex, young or old, make more money at work for us in their spare moments, or all the time, than at anything else. Particulars free. Address U. STLNSON A CO.. Portland, Maine, The G-olden Egg For agents. Large income guaranteed. EnClose stamp for circular. R. ALLISON. 113 Chambers street. New York. in To $100 in Wall street often leads to a for4IU tune. No risk. Thirty-two page pamphlet for stamp. VALENTINE TUMBRIDGE& CO., Banken and Brokers, 39 Wall street, N. Y. QHEAP MUSIC For Adruioed Piano Pis jTer 8iaen and Totmf Piaaiits, Send 30 cents for Peters' Musical Monthly, and you will get $4 worth r& Pianists desiring good Music at a low price. should send 50 cents for a copy of "La Creme de la Creme. Every num of new muaie. Every number contains four or ber contains from S2 to six songs, and four or 13 worth of good Music. rive lnstrursentai pieces bysuch authors as Hays, by such authors as Heller, Liszt, Voss, JCuhe. stewart,Thonias,Dank&, etc. Kjnaei, etc Published monthly, 30 cents per number ; S3 per year. Published monthly, 50 cen ts per number ; H per year. PEARLS OF HELODT. A splendid collection of Piano Music of medi um difficulty. $3 in boards: cloth and gilt, ti. J tt Dtrlbu &aa Broadway, box .New lorx. 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The result of early indiscretions or other causes, producing nervousness,. pimple- on the faee, aversion to society. Impaired sight, loss of memory and manhood permanently cured. The cream of medical literature, illustrate d with chaste engravings, explaining who may marry, why not, why. The Impediments to marriage; their nature, cause and cure. Price 50 cents, sent In a plain, sealed envelope. Ladies requiring surgical aid, medical attendance or advice may call or address the doctor. Invalids provided with private apartments, board, attendance, etc. .Cure guaranteed. Rubber (roods on hand. TIT" AITTIED Females with cnronlc disease to oonff suit U&. M AJltt, Jtas vy aaiiiugkou lurri, Koun-ElihtA.Mtonlner.it. Bend lump! or circular.
jJLSSOERI STATE LOTTERT. Legalised Ij Stats Aithoritv and Drswa la PiUio Is St. Lottii. Grand Single Number Scheme. Claas B, to le Drawn Ieb. 28, 1ST. 5,880 Prises, Amounting to $300,000, 1 prize or 1 priee or.. 1 prize of-. 1 prize of.... ..F,r0 - l-i,4.'s 10,000 5W fUe of. i prizes of. BplT.f"f Of 9 Fr1 wfprise of. SC pr!t! of. 36 prizes of. lpr!z- of. 5.0O3 prizes of. 4 prizes of.. prizes or.. 20 prizes of.. 2) prizes of.. 4) prizes of. 2,3lO 250 Tickets. $10. Half Tickets $5. diarter . $151. WOui lottert are chartered by the State, are si ways drawn at the tiua named, and aj: drawings a nniVr the supervlslou of sworn coiunji:siorvrs. rTheoöiclal drawing will be puo;iüo4 iatheM Louis papers, and a copy of Irawlti rti to purchaser Of lirkeu. tWe will draw a similar eherne tho last da7c every month during the y ar 1C4. eKemtt at our risk by POTOFFICT': MOITCT ORPVKW, REUTSTEHi-D LETT hi R, DliJLirr. or VBS$. Bead fur aclrcvlar. Arrs, MCKKAY, MILLER 4 CO., PostoCice Box 244S Kr ni Mo. HP3 IOAL, SPECIALTIES 1 Twenty-five Years' Experience. MEDICAL OFFICE OF DR. ROSE, Xocm 4, Vlatou'i Block (up Btalu), cpp. PostclAoe. Ein trances on Pennsylvania and Market streets. OFFICE HOUR8-a A. x. to 5 p. M. Bundayu, 2 to 5 P. X. Dr. Hose, the great seoeclalist, devotes his attention exclusively to the treatment of Chronic snd'Long Standing Maladies. Dr. Hose's succew in the treatment ol all Throat and Lung complaints. Pneumonia, Asthma, Bronchitis, Consumption, etc., etc.. Is unprecedented. NASAL CATARRH ppeedilyand pernanentlr cured. Rapid relief alTorded in Dyspepsia, diseases of the Liver and affections of the blood Nervous Debility, Female Complaints of ever character receive especial care, and treated wltt. the most pleasing results. In performing speedy cures of Private Diseases or complaints of the Genital and Urinary Organs, Dr. Rose's rem ediet nkveb fail. Radical cures guaranteed without loss of time or change of diet. " l)r. Rose will be pleased to fhrnis h lnoviirers the most convincing proofs of his marvelona success. Private c nsultallon rooms connected with office. Charges In accordance with circumstances of patient. Consultation Fbkx. Address all communications to IK. F. W. ROSE, Patent Box 11, Indianapolis, lnd. FEVER AND AGUE CURED BY Cl.ft30HQ-QÖEfiaI3E which combines all the alkaloids of the Cinchom Barks, and is as effectual a remedy as the Sulphatt of Quiniue, wliiie it is much cli-ajer anl ruort palatable. Cl?Scnil stamp for descriptive circula with formula; for u.mj the Cincho-Quinine, an4 Testimonials from Physicians all over the country Prepar3d by BILLINGS. CLAPP & CO., Cliemists, Successors to Jas. U. Nichols & Co., Boston, Mass. . Represented In New York by S. II. Auetiu, at Oha F. Henry's, No. 8 Collese Place. N OTICE OF ASSIttlS'MFXT rOB BEXEFIT OF CRKDITOSU. Notice is hereby given that the undersigned has been appointed assignee of Katuuel B. Robinson, by virtue of an Indenture of alignment made upon the 3d day of January, 1874, lor the benefit ot the creditors of said assignor. That the undersigned has accepted said trust, to be administered accordice to law. Of which all p artles interested w i 1 1 take n oi i ce. JOHN 8. FORBES, Assignee. LOVERS' GUIDE Sili'ÄäJ Model Love Letters; art of gaining love ana marrying who and when you pleae; how to be handsome; Cures for hundreds of diseases. Also, many new secrets, arts, riy merles, money making methods, etc., that all should know. Prtee onlv 10 cents. Address UNION PUBLISHING COMPANY, Newark, .N.J. PORTABLE MIUTSAW Mlllt Buy b driven profltAbif ti? lb paver vf a Tttt-Hon PmrtaMt Sngm; aad cuu from UM to SUM fect f tanber per aay. It hu doible-rt Brad Black. Tw audi nm readilT mo th Mill an J EatiM. ft cab fee raaorvd la a acv locality aa 1 twa. aorw vuu. A TAYLOR, Indiaaapolia, lad. jICK HIFFLES ON THE WARPATH ONCE MORE! Glorious Old Nick Whiffled Hak Eis THIRD APPEARANCE , In No. 18 of the NEW YORK WEEKLY. NICK HIFFLES AND HIS TRICK DOG CALAMITY. Exhibit theirexploits in No. IS of the NEW YORK WEEKLY, Everybody has heard of Nick Whiffles, tk great Indian Fighter ana Scout, the hero of tat best Indian story ever written. Ak your New Agent to procure the opening chapters of NIC WHIFFLES, in No. 18 of the New York Weekly which will be ready next week. $1.50. THE NURSERY. A Monthly Magazine for Young Readers. Superbly Illustrated. Send for sample number. Now is the time to subscribe. JOHN L. 8HOREY, 36 Broom fie Id street, Boston. $72 K ACH WEEK. Agents wanted, particulars free. J. Worth & Co., 8L Louis, Uo. XDI1NAPOLI8 SEED STORE. TIMOTHY, MILLET, HÜNGAEIAU Kentucky Bine Gnus, English Bine Grass, Bed Clover, Big English 1 ? Alaike, and a full assoruuent of FIELD, GARDEN: AND, FLOWER J AT WHOLES ALK AND RETAIL, Agents wanted for 1. SC. Ferry aft CWb Se0. White Poland and Barley Seed Oatt HOUCK, GREEN & CO., M West Washington street, Indianapolis t For Calkin's Champion Washer, the Imperial Plow anl Bella. th Champion Reapers and Mo wer, Ui Western valklnr flow. A run line oi nrsireuos . ricuilural Implements always la stori
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