Ligonier Banner., Volume 36, Number 40, Ligonier, Noble County, 2 January 1902 — Page 8

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AT G R fff%‘fi&é SO e | i;‘ i AR SR oy ke ety g Ei‘“fs-ff{fifj, ev i ;mmi; A WT o EA: N:fi.m! R | e ” ' JONATH : \ , e F Indiana. f Indiana. . V i vern or of : First Gove

union soldiers alone numbered 2,772 408, or 1,352,210 more than were engaged In {_:.‘l(i tha ofhier wars of the country. : . it vas ip thls great strugele for the preservation of the union that Ipdiana acquired imperishahle fame. Comparisons are not odious nor ili-timed if made to yerify hilstorical facts Indiana, with a population in 1860 of 1,350 423/ furnished to the union armies 208 307 volunteers, while New York the “"Empire state” with a population of 3880735, furnished. 467,047, when to have equuled Indiana she should have fumished 82000, To extend such comparisons would serve still further to demonisirate that Ixdiana, considoving population, stood in the front rank of per cent. of eoldiers to population sent to the fronf escieding in per cont. all the New Yngland states. as also Now York, Now Jersey. Penrsvivania and Ohlo. If| Indiana is boastful, as she has a right %(: be, s i e N ¢ . % - el L 2 ey A Sl e Vi 5 TR s i R G e D . el 5 ‘v{a S i e e e - B R e e e e T e e ey e e e i R T DIRRTR L e B s o e s T Sl el el J&'% RGeS e A ‘gvkaf‘*v.»?'rele&;:}:f%z;;;x-v;‘:‘ht.x; i »:r»‘gwwai,fi R SRI Bere e w 0 s e i e s b D %:;53?’-I’s'%':;".:-'—‘:sss%:'x;-'w;s.x';E?f—'e-;m.-‘ S G e i i%-wé,r*“'*iig B R S L i »h:?«;fk;‘«.%f%’:ifi»;1‘:":”:“?1?2:-“3’3'?‘?:1 3{ g il i et i e A r%‘f;f R e o A e N b R e D BRI e eu ey e B T %fi%%fififlw‘ AR B e e e et s e lae e i L e Bl e peniiie: BiE e e e SRR e R R S R e ,u\“,“;‘s o el s Bl S e e R P b e famngli i e b mee T R S e ¥ w’fmfgivw %‘fif{;%x e T e i S e s e o s L frooms. o bR L e e e e R Smges R B e E%rsz-:,«;f,: SRR T s T it el e ] BRI SR SRR i U BT e Pt B e R LG e B e Rocirider g z"f,;*g‘ww%fi PPk R o e e SN L e oLI e, :?-?\\\:\\\_‘ L St ooy TN g S R ey ARI e EESSSSET fiav*‘ e AR L e - BE. =SSR e i’f""{é””},%"i?ig}w\ s it : TG E h aad geee Lo gofean T % d SR B o e E e BN = T 0 et e T o INDIANA SOLDIERS? AND SAIL- ~ ORS? MONUMENT. ——-‘E* = ""“"”‘."‘ ‘”"“““"‘ ey ";““f“""‘“‘ 5 of the part she took in the war to save the unlon, she can show that hor patrieti{sm placed ber in ;uh'zmée of the great states I havae npnamed, as aiso of Now Eng}and—~historigz;l fae & vwhichk sdamit of Yo controversy and maie her place forever secure in history. = A Camping Ground. : Generally, the people of Indiama are informed as to the position of thelr state i N Ty s 1 during the civil war. ~ Thév know that from the Ohio to the lake, and from eastern to western boundaries it was one vast recrulting and camping pround; that the fiag, ‘Old Glory,” was everywhers ' unfurled and fivine in every wind that EWeDE across the state: -that war drums were ceas&lass}:{'beavzilmg, edlling men to arms, and the resull was that enlistmehts reached 205,367 mern—infantry, 17,%i 6 cavalry, 21,605, and artillery, 10.956— &nd thess enllstments wers for terins of getvice as follows. ~ lar three years, 16,011; for one vear, 21643, for nlue months, 742 for eis months, 4,082; for 110 aays (4o lor three months, 630%; for mixty days, 657, and for thirty days, 1,874; & total of 208,367. : ~ Indiana not only furpished men, but in patrioti¢ generosity, which ¢hallanges eulogy, contributed in the way of bounties, and relief in verious ways, 820,258,640, It was a fime when the great fountaing of patriotic charity were ceaselessly flowfng. Ihe men at the frontjiwers not forgotgen for ap hour. The women, “(od jeds eni - let the foast go round forever, wers as patrforic as the men who ‘parried the musket, and if all their gifts

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| and services to the soldiers could be ;’ known and recorded, it would be a contribution to history which would atiract the altention of angels, | . | Gifts and Services, ¢ : ' 2 . The total af Indiarna's contribiitions, as ‘ i yiuye 2 ¥ L reécorded by William Henry Smith, In , his. History of Tlndiana’’ amounted t 0526,886,712, $26,886,712, ag follows:. 2o : : - Paid by counties, townshlps, o . citles and towns for the re- : - Hef of goldicrs’ famllies ... § 4,506,398 00 - Pald for bounties ... i 10492, 875:00 ‘ s 2 e . Pzid for miscellancous, jmili= . -~ o fasg MiPDoses o 0 G 0 2 108,066 60 State appropriations for relief- . of fammilies .oo ... 646,600 00 - Contrihuted to sanitary com- - : Coamiesten. C s T 606,570 00 L Pald by the staté and charged : . to the Lailed States ... 0.0 4373593 80 L U RS TS 00 [ . There stands Indlana, look at her, confi templats her grandeur! Sho W:as}r:cliffied to achieve greatness fromherinfancy. 'She ‘ grew stately and strong. likke the “brave - old oak’ until, in®l36s. she was the most E,'sta.te!i: tree that embeliished the national ‘vllzz,nclsca;‘w+} tfrom the Pine Tree state to the | Golden Gate, or to change the flgure, the most luminous star that flamed upon the. blue feld of our natlonal flag, a subject for an epic. such as Homer did not have when ‘he marshaled the gods of Greece to destroy Troy—a. state the deeds of whose song are to illve in story when a tholisand wears are gone—deeds that are written a;’z ‘Seith an dron-pen and lead in the rock forever,” as hmperishable as l the eternal, hills. 3 o l . The States Part. : i | But it is eminently proper in this conr,i,e(?t,lqn to permit a distinguished soldiexf of Indiana to recite the part I’ndlana,_ playved in the clvil war. . e . 'Oa the 4th of July, 1866/ says Wil llam }I. Smith, ‘“the flags of Indlana's sulc’&iers were presenied to Governor Mor.ton to be deposited In the state house at ‘lndianapolls. = The presentation address was made by Gen. Lew- Wallace, who, ! among other things said: | ‘fl'nree of our regiments took partin the I first battle ef the war. while -unother, in view of the Rio Grande, fought its last baitie. The Twenty-first regiment was the @irst f 9 land in New Orleans. The Thirteenth first waved the stripes and stars over Ft. Fisher. . The Seventy-ninth first showed the flag at Mission Ridge: Two Indlana regiments helped storm Ft. AMoeAllister near Savannah., Another was armong the lirst in the assaulting line at I't. lisher. Another Indiana regiment, converted into enginedrs, built all of ;.Sherman‘s bridges from -Gattanooga to | Atlanta and from Atlanta to the sea and !from the sea northward. Indiana reglI_mcms were in the battle of Pea Ridge, Mo. 'Fhree regiments -were ' with Mel’("‘.k\nan. five were engaged in the salvatlon of Washington, five were with Burnside at PFrederitcksburg, five were at Chaneellorsville and six- were almost annihilated at Gettysburg. © One Tregiment of infantry marched. nearly 10,000 miles, fizhting ds It woent. Four regiments were with Bheridan when he swept the Shenandoah valley, ahd five regiments wero = e »E i ~ P under Grant in the W 11(1@:1@&;’5, at Laurel [ Hill, at Spatsylvahia, at ®o river, at North Ann rivm’,‘# Bet'hef;:‘.}t chureh, at ( Cold Harhor, in front of Petersburg, at Clover Jlill and down to. Appomattox, -wiero Lice surrendered. - : At shileh. _ , ¢ ‘At Shiloh Indiana had thirteen regiments: at Vicksburg, twerdty-four; at Stone River, . twenty-five; at Chick- | amauga, twenty-seven. .From = Chatltanooga to Atlanta Indiana had fifty regiments. Twenty-five of these went with Sherman to the sea and twenty-five were with Thomas in the battle of Nash-

ville, when Hood’s army was annihilated. Of the 205.367! soldiers contributed to the civil war by Indiana, 5817 were killed in battle and died of wounds and 19,592 died of disease, a total of 24,406 who responded to the call of their country and gave up their lives on a hundred flelds of carnage to save the union.’ !’ : : - Pensions. - . ; Patriots of an early period in the history of the republic sang: “Let independence be your boast, Ever mindful what-it cost.” ~ What » cost in blood, in sacrifices and suffering, from Lexington, along all the track of gioom and glory, to Eutaw Springs and back to Yorktown, cannot be known nor conceived. And now the sonz should be: “Let the union be our boast, ‘Ever mindful what it cost.”” No statistician will ever give the cost of the union in the blood that was shed, in the lives that were offered up, in the sacrifices that were made and in the suffering that was endured during the four years of war, from Bull Run to Appo‘matox. nor will'it be known till the seals .are broken and the books of the final judgment reveal thelr secrets—a-war in which 61,362 Wwere killed in battle and 34,727 died of their wounds, while 189,287 died of disease, a total of 279.376. But the cost of tne union in money may be appreximated. The expenditures by the general government exceeded. $2,000.000,000 and the amount expended by the loval states in bounties amounted to $287,941,056. In .addition to such’sum total the government, in its vast expendltures for pensicns, is still paying the cost of.the union, which from 1868 to 1200 for the army and pavy amounted to §2,628.373,044, which, together with fees and salaries, swells the sum total to $2.615.866,785, and the cost of the union is still mounting up at the rate of more than $150,000.000 a year. : : How Stands Indiana?

In this connection the question is forced—How stands Indiana?

And the answer is, that as a pension state, according to population, she stands at .the head of all- the &states of the ungofi. It hag been stuted that Indiana fummished 208,367 s=cldlers for the civil war, and 183 881 survived {ts perils. Death has been busy thinning the ranks of these survivers at the rate of about 2.13 per cent. for tv:en?yrfive veéars, leaving 61,921 still marching, tb the muflled drum beats of their hearts, to their final discharge. But it Is shown at the pension office that there are 65,928 Indiana pensloners on the rolls. Of these 6,767 are widows, leaving 59,161 veterans the wards of the government, who fought to save the union. These Indlana pensioners cost the government in 1891 $10,164.648, and the amount represents approximately the average yearly pavments since 1865, twenty-six vears, Therefore, up to date, . Indiana veterans have recelved as thelr share of the cost of the union §264,332 8:8. The aquestion ariscs. how long will the government be required to&pay pensionp

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. Firet Home of The Indianapolis. Sent to Indiana soldiers, veterans of the civil war? The question cannot be answered. .Of the pcnsinnefs of the revelution, after the lapse of 123 vears, five widows and. seven daughters were on . the pension rolls. Of the war of 1812 there were three veterans and 2,407 widows réceiving pensions elghty-three vears after tle close of the war. And it is safe to say that long before the nation celebrates the centennial of l.ee's surrender at Appomattox the pension account of Indiana’s civil war veterans will have been finally closed, and the cost of the union will be known to the world. : Collins’s Tribute. And here with eminent propriety mdy be introduced the universal epitaph written by “William Collins for all soldiers -who offer up their lives .in the cause of Überty: ‘ » ! “Now sleep the brave who sink to rest Bj»' all their country’s \j\tishos blest! When spring, with dewy fingers cold, Returns to dbck their hallowed mould, - She then will dress a sweeter sod Than fancy’s feet have ever trod. : “Ry fairy hands their knell is rung, - By forms unseen their dirge is sung; - Then honor comes, a pilgrim gray, ‘ To bless the turf that wraps: their clay. And freedom shall awhile repair To dwell a weeping hermit there.” ’ The Soldiers’ Monument. Bome men, and they are not few, would like 'to live forever. As this is not_ the order of nature, they resort to all sorts of devices to perpetuete their names and their deeds and many of them have succeeded much better than great warrlors or great monarchs. There are exceptions, but the rule s still in force. During the civil war Indiana produced warriors of renown. Their names and deeds are preserved in history. But what of the ‘“rank and file’”’-—the common soldiers —the men who carried the musket, did the fighting, won the victories and saved the union? Their names are on the muster rolls. They are kriown to fame only in the aggregate—‘‘the army.” This fact was® appreciated by Indiana. She built thein a monument. Boundlessly generous and as patriotic as liberal, she resolved that, {f she could not rescue the names of her soldiers from oblivion, she could and wQuld, perpetuate their deeds. She put her mighty hands into her capacious pock(;*:% and Brought forth $600,000, ‘and, as if'in response to the commands of some tutelary deity, the monument rose 263 feet. high, the grandest memorial of the heroism of the rank and file .of -armies the whsrld has ever seen. It is approvriately built of Indiana stone, and will etand, unless overthrown by seismic convulsions, for a thousand years. Shakspeare sayvs there are ‘‘sermons in gtones’” —something more than a fancy, for the Indiana soldiers’ ymonument will preach sermons on patrfotic themes to rigsing generations until the nations “beat their swords into ploughshares and their gpears into pruning hooks,’ and “learn war no more.”’ 5

INTERESTING DISCUSSION . OF HORTICULTURE OF STATE. Fruit Growing as Seen by Warder W, Stevens, President of State ' Horticultural Society. : —_— By Warder W. Stevens, President of State Horticultural Socie{y. There s no truer saying than that ‘we know less abou* the things near us than thay far away.” The possibilities of horticulture in Indiana are simply wonderful when we begin seriously to study the question of fruit growing. There fs ro frult except the citrus or tropical varieties that cannot be grown within her borders with some degree of satisfaction and profit. 'Tis true there are portions of Declaware and Georgla that are now produeing more bushels of peaches than we are; the ozark regions of Missourl and central Illinols more apples, but not because they can do Il ‘either better or more cheaply, but because these lands nave been ‘boomed’ by capitalists, railroads and land agents for all they are worth. Even granting thaf special crops -can be grown in certain localities to the very highest state of perfection only goes to prove that those are special purpoese states, while Indiana is an all-purpose hortfcultural state. ¢ : Necessary to Success. There are a few absolutely necessary conditions tb make commercial orchardIng' a success; these are cheap lands, nearness to large rivers or lakes, air drainage, suitable solls and market facilftles. The more of these essential conditions that can be combined the more profitable will be the venture along horticuitural lines. All up and down the Ohlo river there are to be found cheap lands with soils especially adapted to the growing of tree fruits and small fruits as well. In the central part of the state, with Brown county ns a center, we find .cheap hill lands where -most all kinds of fruit can. be grown abundantly and profitably. The lake regions of the North are bound to develop some pro.fl_taple fruit industry when. directed. aright. These lands will’ only remain r,ohoa.p until enterprising horticulturists discover their possibilities. ‘Observant horticulturists have always known that hill or knob land was best suited. to orcharding-—that fruit ‘hit” oftener and was of better quality than in the valley or flat lands. They discovered that cold, damp air flows down hill as readily as water, and where the hills are cut into by frequent ravines, gulches or vallevs the cold alr is quickly drawn oftf the hill tops, the surface lils quickly drained and the loss from: late frosts or winter heaving is reduced to the mini-

inel, Corngr Missouri and Maryland. mum and nual crops may be expected with a fain\ degree of certainty if the orchard receives proper attention. Most of our low, flat lands are high- | priced because they produce the cereal cropg most profitably, but alluvial socils do not contain the mineral elements ot plant foeod in right proportion to give us gatisfactory fruit crops. But when we go ‘to the clay lands of the hilltops and slopes we find full compensation for what once was thought to be the niggardliness of nature. Here we have the conditions necessary to grow the finest fruits the country produces. - Southern Indiana produced the apples that carried off the honors at the recent ‘world’s fair at Paris. It was Indiana fruit that capturcd the best premiums at the .Buffalo exposition the past season. We were told recently by the largest handler of fruit in the state that Illinois and Missourl might boast of their fine red apples, but:lndiana grows redder and better ones. California might grow larger fruit, but it was inferlor in quality and looks when compared with the best produced in the Hoosier state. , Lack of Fruit. | While we can produce the very best of fruit to be found in the country we don’'t grow it in sufficlent: quantity to ~even meet home demands, for during the past ten years over $10,000,000 have gone to other states for fruits of various kinds. What we need is a boom along horticul-

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P 44 4 4444004009420 H 440044 PPPEL 4P E 0 L 4 04SED DRSO4 I : It would have taken "a wiser man than any of our forefathers to have + prophesied that, at the weginning of the twentietn century, the little area : in the middle West," compassed by the boundary lines of Indlana would 4 » have been stripped of wild forests, divested of sasagery: and changed as + : by a conjurer's strategem into one of the most perfectiy cultivated ‘aéad'l advanced commonwealths of the western world. Men still live who knew > + much of this region as a wilderness of wood and plain. Less than oig}‘;(y;*’ % years ago the very spot where lhe.majostiv;o:miu,»l of Indiana holds its : ‘ stately head proudly high among the capitols of the earth’ was liftle 4 '+ moreé than a trading post in a primiti\'e' expanse hardly reclaimed from t gavage domination. Men who have participated in and have been elose 4 observers of the marvelous developments that, vear by 3'eavr, have been 4 unfolded to their gaze, have g,f'arcnl,\" realized tha vast importance In- I diana has been assuming in the realm of commerce and: industry and 4 in ;111 human arts and employvments. Those most deeply concerned in the v state's material progress, even up to the past two decades, could not z have foretold that today Indiarna would rank sixth among the agricultural 4 - states of the nation, fifth in manufactures, fourth in literature and edu- z cation, second in electric railroads,” and occupy the highest place in- many -4 zof the best elements of present-day proficiency. i < + . o" i * . ) : I This edition affords a birdseye view of Indlana and its capital, showing + i,not only its material conditions and resources, but all that gvnzé to malke : + up the life of 'its people, industrially, soclally, ml::::'.'mn;xz';il_\', etc. . No 1 I"me can read these pages without having a better appreciation of the 1 % ~reatness of Indiana, its opportunities fu;‘ living and its wonderful pos- 4 4 cibilitles for the future. No other state can claim more or greater ad+ 4% fé vantages for the development and sustenance of a noble, free and happy 1 *, people. lis history fs a story of wonderful expansion on symmetricalt” 4 x lines anu the century of past effort, so rich in results, is but an earnest ¥ ))010 i . . % 1 5f what the present century may unfold. Probably the most sanguine predic- .4 tions would fall short of the reality of a hundred vears hence, for the .possi- ‘f z bilities of great achievments in the arts and industries are incalculable. I Practically everyvthing that pertains to the medern civilization of Indiana was i ~accomplisned during the nineteenth century.- All back of -that period is 9 4 chiefly interesting as historical” reminiscence. * The state has thus entered i upon -2 new epoch with the prestige of a previous century of remark-' & q,:ble improvement—a. pericd that has transformed a practically uninhabited < < :regiox¥ into a great commonwealth, vivified by industry and representing i I American‘ci\'iliZa(iou in its most progressive phases. : . . o e:®*s = . -+ 1 : Rges 5 2 2 Indianapolis did not become a. great .city by any process of organic < i‘ evolution. There was, in fact, nothing to distinguish the site of this' clty I from hundreds of other tracts in the dense forest. Its rapid growth to its present high distinction was brought about by the vigilance and acute < foresight of its. citizens. Its record of increase -has been astonishing: In 1 ‘1540 the populaticn was 2,603; 4n 1850, §091; in 1860, 18.611; in 1870, 48,244; fn 1880, 75,044; inm 1890, 105,426 in 1000, 19,164 . During the past decade the i ratio of growth was 60.4 per cent., -or greater than that of any other of the ‘+ larger cities of the country during the same period. = < % Indianapolis is now the largest inland city in the United States; 1t is i the chief railroad center of the middle West; its manufacturing, jobbing & ‘4. and retail trades, as described in this edition, present a record of sub-éf‘ stantial prosperity not equaled by any similar community {n this country i or Europe: .ts bank deposits exceed $18,000,000 and its clearances average 4 over ‘51,000,000 for every day in the year; it is one of- tne best buiit and 4 " most éttractively laid out citieg in the country and enjoys the appellationp, i i of ‘the cits} of homes;" it ig, next to Boston, the largest capital city in 4 the United States. i . o - T . . W . o+ The enterprise that has developed the resources of Indlana must "not i abate, nor is it likely to. but 1t must be remembered that 'material pros- - perity is only an aid to .Dbetter conditions of life. To secure a fair dis- 4 tribution of the advantages wealth can /produce; to educate the people; <4 x to inculcaté moralitv: to preserve the love of liberty; to -secure.good I ana equal ‘government which shall be pure and honest; to make the op- < portunities ci lifé easier anu petter for all the people—these are ~th,e,th_ings, i to be sought for. , Y The people o} Indiana are a sturdy race with sturdy qualities, unique in i some respects and free from some evils that prevail in other sections. They nLave solved many problems in the past and they will solve those »f the future. The generations of the twentieth century can do no better z ¢ than to follow in the footsteps of their predecessors of the mnineteenth, - - .eeking the same objects and being imbued with the same spirit. ¥ _ 1 : : © JOHx~x W. RYCKMAN. i Indianapolis, Jan. 1, 1902. - : i PP PRI SRR RS H e b 4

development of horticulture In Indiana has been a long continued struggle with little or no state aid. Most of our oldest and best workers have given their long life, time, money and energy to the cause and are now poor. We have their experience, and to a great extent it i 3 no longer experimental. We now need state aid as a necessity to place this experience with every one who owns land that is adapted to fruit growing. Many newer states devote vearly falr amounts for the furtherance of horticulture. Michigan, with nearly half her domain yet covered with the original forest, appropriates $4,000 yearly to horticulture, and even the blizzard-beswept states of the northwest, where only small fruits can be successfully grown, make liberal appropriations annually to the ecause. Our last legislature appropriated $l,OOO for the use of the State horticultural society. It ought to be made $4,000 or -$5,000 by the next general assembly. Through the enterprise of the State horticultural society Indiana now has the only experimental farm in the world devoted to the improvement of the apple, the leader of all fruits. Here the work of originating new variei ties is being .carried on in rather a small - way, of course, for lack of funds, but this farm is being watched carefully by ; leading horticulturists all over the world, | and great things are expected from it. - Another thing we need is more local | horticultural societies, extending out into such parts of the state wnere fruit farming could be made profitabla. By these organizations there would be an awakening to the possibilities of Indiana as a horticultural state, our fruit products would be greatly multiplied and millions of dollars annually added to her income. .Meanwhile, it is our duty, as well as it should be our highest aims as horticulturists, to go ahead in all I&nes of progress, letting our light shine into ‘the % ' - o .

dark places’ as much as possible, be ever on the alert in our profession -and hope for that reward that comes from good intentions and good works, superinduced by good and unselfish motives. ~ -

CRAND HOTEL...inDIANAFPOL!S, INDIANA. i ; ) ~ 1R e : (\vl [M’ ’&\-f;’// ) \v’ . % ; - »ff/’"flf s~ 2 - < S Y Y ~ LG 00~ b : o Ch I P RoX T 2 :1 o W g g S AFZLITE Rl = o A AT B s T LR (il FELVUL S el i, = Al eTR Rl w?% ’»*-%‘ 1) : E\%"‘"\#’f“fgija ol TLEENcO st oot e S SR T iyt ST e e L) r fl e b '."s' 34 fifi‘i;fid} S ‘;n@ & 'f“ f:?“.“%}f?l?%‘a’a;;égi‘\:%’-f? i : Qg: @3 ';:,;,’;,?_; e "’é‘ié%q S e T{fig B §;§ g 545 :,,is.:;sétg' 2-‘32'2?/'? B e ee Ll bi e ’{gf;sfrv,v"a AR ety I?,j R R ;fi.fi 3947 47'3”151.’;3&*;33«‘32:2:& R i 7 7 B A e L oty S PNy e goo O T T iBS Sel M’*"fis@iwg gl e i R T Tsßl | B SRR el B !eS S Sl te e SR *”rfifi e e %‘s’&" B fimgg 5 R ,‘,z{d:kz;i;{:r,",.n;:..s=:n;u::f§;;;\‘t ke TN RN e = sB A} ees S AT gt L S = %F“ Sathiba Aey et SR e = NEryY ie R VF SW T ==t eee A~ g | TR e e — RUDARNE ST e 7 API ) e e T NN T ee e , ] SRR LI ’ ; o T. TAGGART, Pres. E. J. OHMER, Vice-Pres. and Manager. . 11. 8. ONMER, Sec’y and Treas. ¥ LEADING HOTEL IN CITY. ' TWO BLOCKS NORTH OF UNION STATION. - . - 1 -, ! ‘ =—‘ DR. STERNE’'S SANITORIUT FOR NER.VOUS DISEASES, 1820 E. Tenth St. » - (Facing Woodruff Park), INDIANAPOLIS, IND. ) A thoroughly modern, well-equipped institution for the treatment of nervous and other constitutional diseases, the various drug habits. and . alcoholism, and mental maladies. Separd'te building for the latter.. Beautiful. location and extensive. grounds. For informa- : tion apply to S o . DR. ALBERT H. STERNE.

Diamond : S e o v:‘-vl: Rings | - Diamords in combination with Rubies, Emeralds, Pecarls, Turquoise and Opals. We have hundreds of them, in all the late style ‘settings, from $25 to 3300 each.. ey —\f\.f.f'fi\ X 2 e ‘\s\;‘, R kR I'/ ; ,'{% TT N & SERY ' TR - r i S, = TEEEE = SN ; S S CEe \\“ 4 AN NS = s B AN i '.’,?}'-3‘ h( So\ ey - 6’:' '\ ’Qf e ‘\" ,r}‘/\.\‘\ SR U i N TN = " T N "Single-stone Diamond Rings from %10 te $BOO each—almost an endless assortment at tempting prices. We buy fresh:-water pearls.. ~ J CSI pE Importer of ® ; ? & ) ,1 - ...DIAHONDS * Rooms 2, 3 and 4, 18 i-2 N. Meridian St. . INDIANAPOLIS. - g SR Lk e § 5-&s"@ 7B v D R BEET ) A B @] TN F il R g“,‘% -,n&‘x"?«,fw;};‘ il A h}x”\g f‘-‘?’ / A\t LT (8 RS T / G} ALL/KINDS-ALL GooD|(({ J A e s N\ F1:17 : '»_,j:-:a:’,».‘—g ERIDAN ST AR (T T T P ¥|o 5 Lo bl sl L| ) \ ‘EN,’G ‘,«,AJ;&" {fi]zf})& fi.%?’)?f/” (§ B R eS R e Vi < Bsl4e QY R NMarndoitins, Guitars T ;manidd I3aannjos ' ‘Areused exclusiveiy by the world's greatest players, their evidence attesting in the mosu emphatic manner thist i [ AMERICA’S LEAQ!NG . o INSTRUMENT ] Has become ‘l\»{ standard of the =orld. ~ - REGAL MANUFACTURING CO., . INDIANAPOLIS. i -‘Largest Mandolin. Guitar and Banjo makers in ths oo oworld, Correspondenca-solleited.

ALL ABOUT THE JREAT RORTIWES ¥ ¢ R (REAT NORTHA “OPPORTUN!TY,' a 20-page illustrated monthly ‘magazine, for one year, and our special “Good ‘News Package,” ¢ staining pictures and ‘fuil 'iu(ormationvaboqt' the fine climate, rich land, -magnificent crops.and grand epportunities of the wonderful Northwest, for ONLY TEN CENTS IN SILVER, if you mention this.paper. THE OPPORTUNITY COMPANY, 1’ 127 NEWSPAPER ROW, ST. PAUL, ®INN. - ONLY ED CrFNTS.

ndianapolis Lignt & Fower Lo, ' e 82l ¢ Electric dLigd . g L loooafidooco fon Electricw Powe CCUFIC u L"OWTH . .First-Class Service at , Reasonable Rates...... - Office, . . . 48 Monument Place Telephone 47 7---Both 'Phones. Ay Leagueof N=)~ - . » . (@\ \\ American | Rty | ’ i ‘%fl Eporismen O S T s e /<[ COrganized for the purpose ‘»’fzg Oof ' protecting. the gams : o and game- fishes; the song, : v insectivorous and ether y innocent birds. Its prime- object is” to enforce game laws, where such exist, ‘and to secure.and enforce such laws whers not ncw {n existence,. : Every. sportsman - should -be a member.. Write for printed matter and explanation from FRANK L. LITTLETOR, Chief Warden Ind. Div., Indianapolis, Ind: B The Prevention and Cure ¢ ' of Deformities, & Diseases of the Spine and Joints, B} § and of Paralysis is the special f! B grm’!n(‘e of the Wilson National bi R 4 Burgical Institute. Dr. C. A, Wil- & : gon was foryears associated with . the late Dr. .H. R. Allen and re- . - . celved the Facnlty Prize, 'a Gold Medal from the Medical College of Ghip “for éxcellence in all departments.” Many wonderful cures are made by him of cases pronounced incurable by good doetors. The latest and best appliances and braces are furnished: If you know any crippled or defermed person: please write for free illustrated circular, - WILSON NATIONAL sURGICAL INSTITUTE, 122 W. Ohio-st., Indianapolis. Ar m&tmng’ - No Experiment - , Every lot of Linen Laundercd makes -+ ~ gfriend, - Try us. i BOTH PHONES MEN—We pay $2O weekly straight salary and expenses to men with rigs to advertise and introduce Poultry Compound. Send stamp. Royal CoOp. Mfg. Co., Indianaypolls, Ind. DPept. 100. -