Marshall County Independent, Volume 1, Number 43, Plymouth, Marshall County, 16 August 1895 — Page 3

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THERE are few young men who do not expect to achieve some degree of success or greatness during the course of their lives. The young man who entertains this ambition should keep a weather eye open on the question of matrimony. It might be thrown out as a matter of advice that every young man ought to marry with the idea that he might become famous some day. The girl who will make a good wife while "they two" are living in a threc-roora flat will be pretty safe to be trusted to be a good wife in a brownstone front, for the chances of happiness in a brownstone front would not be very promising if the woman in question was not qualified to be a good wife in a three-room fiat. The married life of the great men of the world is full of lights and shadows. In fact, woman can make happy or miserable the life of a great man just as easily as she can that of a man "to fortune and to fame unknown." It all depends upon the woman and the man. Tea, dyspepsia and a scolding wife made the life of the famous essayist, Ilazlitt, miserable. Tea, dyspepsia and a scolding wife these three, but the greatest of these Is a scolding wife. Fielding married a maidswvaut and was miserable. Goethe married his housekeeper and was contented and happy. Lcssing married a widow and was singularly happy that is, he was, singularly, happy! Moliere, at 40, married an actress of 17, but it was a farce and the curtain was soon rung down. Steele was twice married and both times bxppily. The married life of Prince and Princess Bismarck Is one of the world's sweetest stories, while Milton drew from his personal experience the material for a vigorous pamphlet advocating divorce. Abraham's married life was made very unpleasont by the jealousy of Sarah for Hagar. If Julius Caesar and Alexander the Great had lived in Delaware they would have been whipped about three times a week, for they were chronic wife beaters. Racine was about to turn monk through disgust at the failure of one or his plays, but was persuaded to marry and he never regretted it. The music of Mozart's happy wedded life was sweeter than any he composed. The story of the married life of James Fenimore Cooper and his wife is one of the idyls in the annals of Hymen. Richter married to get a good housekeeper and he got one. And right here it might be suggested that the true sweet Marie is not she whose cliLf claim is that she has a face that is fair to see. The girl who can make biscuits that can be opencd without using a "jimmle" discounts by a very large per cent the grand dame who never saw the inside of a flour barrel. Heine wrote to a friend that he was "frightfully" happy. Cato married a poor girl that she might be wholly dependent upon him and found her disagreeably independent. David married the daughter of Saul, but had to get rid of her on account of her temper. Napoleon's misfortunes were intimately connected with the divorcement of Josephine. The list might be gone through with, and at the end we should find that before the great problem of human happiness the prince Is as helpless as the peasant and the philosopher as the mechanic. The Wheel a Teat of Character. Certain disgruntled philosophers have contended that the woman you see is seldom the woman you think you see. Mounted upon her bicycle, most women liave to tell the truth about themselves. One can distinguish at a glance the daring, wilful beauty from the timid, tender girl. The woman is reduced for the moment to the plane of a boy, whose good looks or lack of them, health, vigor of mind and body, are apparent I will even go so far as to advise a man not to get married until he has seen the object of his choice disport herself upon a bicycle. A New Corset. A tape corset has lately been Intro--duced which is meeting with a most decided success. The tape takes the place of a foundation, and Is about ihree-quarters of an inch wide, and is placed in horizontal rows with narrow spaces between, whalebones being stitched Into sheaths of the tape. They are designed to take the iHace of the summer ventilating corsets, and, as they are a novelty, are strong, cheap and comfortable, keeping the body well ventilated, they have become very popular. A New Trunk. A new trunk that Is finding favor with many women who dislike the lifting of heavy trays, or the turning of the contents of a carefully packed trunk topsy-turvy In order to reach something placed In the middle or bottom of It, is constructed like a dresser, with the trays like so many drawers that can te drawn out as easily as the drawers

of a well-made bureau. It has not th appearance of a piece of bedroom fui niture, however, when closed, as th lid forms part of the side of the trunk, locking near the bottom. These trunks are very strong and light, being clamped with iron and made of a cellulose fibre, with the woodwork a three-ply veneer. The drawers run on metal slides. Ode to the ''Old Woman." Don't you remember sweet Alice, old man? Sweet Alice, who lived long ago. Who wore skirts and ruffles, bonnets and curls; And always had smiles and a beau? We liked her much in those days, old man The days only few can remember. Before women became new and men were old. And we always knew a he froi a her. We may have become old-fashioned, old man; We may be of the time long ago; But I long for the days of bonnets and curls. When skirts reached to l-oots and below. Alice was one of that sort, old man; You remember her so modest and neat. She never wore bloomers nor rode on a bike. And did not buy margins on wheat. But in nil this there is comfort, old man Comfort for me and for you. I am glad I was young when women were old And am old when women are new. The boys of to-day may be pitied, old man; To them ignorance only is bliss; While you and I can never forget The thrill of an "old woman's" kiss. Marry Iiis on $50 u Month. A young man asked me if it would bo safe for him to marry on five hundred dollars and a salary of fifty dollars per month. I told him I could tell better when I saw the girl. There are girls who have grown up In ease, and who have kicked great black and blue welts In the lap of luxury, yet who are more ready and willing to accept a little rough weather than the poor girl who has stood for eighteen years looking out through the soiled window of life waiting for the rain to rinse it off and let the sunlight through that she might see her approaching lord. Ladles' Home Journal. Laughing an an Art. A whimsical sort of woman was ask(Ml lately why she took Icssojis from air elocutionist. "To acquire a pleasant, pretty, hearty laugh," was her prompt response. "There is no accomplishment so rare In society, nor, it seems to me, so desirous. A jolly. Interested, refined peal of laughter is worth paying considerable to obtain, I think, and Miss So-and-so is teaching aie how to give one that sounds natural, but' Is all artificial." Mrs. Alva Vanderbilt and her daughter have gone Into bicycle training.

1Pw N'OW WOMEN AKE NEW.

SWEET ALIO", WHO LIVED I.OXO AGO.

AGRICULTURAL NEWS

THINGS PERTAINING TO FARM AND HOME. THE Any Species of Weeds Can Be Subdued Keep Farm Machincrj Clean The Wife Should Be the Farmer's Partner-Camphor to Dry Up Cows, Subduing the Weeds. Any species of weeds can be subdued and controlled within the limits of an ordinary farm, and. unless the value of the land is low from other causes, may be profitably undertaken. If the weed is an annual, reproducing Itself from the seeds only, it may be subjected by preventing seed production. For permanent pastures, lawns and roadsides this is quite sufficient, If persistently followed. In cultivated fields the land thus seeded should first be burned over to destroy as many as possible of the seeds 011 the surface. It may then be plowed shallow, so as not to bury the remaining seeds too deeply in the soil. The succeeding cidtivation, not deeper than the plowing, will Induce the germination of seeds in this layer of soil, and kill the seedlings as they appear. The hind may then be plowed deeper and the cultivation repeated, until the weed seeds are pretty thoroughly cleared out to as great a drpth as the plow ever reaches. Below that depth, eight to ten Inches, very few weed seeds can germinate and push a shoot to the surface. A thousand seedlings can be destroyed by the cultivator with less effort than a single mature plant can be destroyed, and every seedling killed means one less weed seed iu the soil Philadelphia Press. The Care of Farm Machines. To get the most out of a machine care must be taken to keep clean. Dust in the journals or working parts increases the wear very materially. Another thing about which care should be taken is not to strain a machine. A light wagon Is not Intended for heavy loads, neither Is a light plow intended for deep, heavy plowing. Select machinery, advises the Farmer's Home, adapted to the kind of work required for It, and do not expect that it will do ail that Is to be done. Whenever a machine of any kind is working under a strain heavier than it was intended to do, there is an increased wear. Our rule is to bring an implement to the machine shed whenever the task for whk-h it was taken out is completed, although vo are aware that it will be needed again in a few days. In this way much exposure to storms and sun is a roided, and then when it is needed we inow just where to find it, and no time need be lost. Then the machine is always in a better condition for use, and this is often no inconsiderable Item. The Former's Partner. We should not forget that we have pariners who are equally Interested in all our business transactions. The wifft's efficiency in the home will be increased by a knowledge of and interest Jn the husband's business. As no other branch of business owes so ni"ich of its prosperity to wives as does the farmer's, do not be selfish In this matter. See that your wife has all the modem improvements for lessening ber labors. Ohio Farmer. Camphor in Drying Up Cows. A French Agricultural paper publishes the following recommendation for the use of- camphor as an aid in drying up cows which are very persistent milkers: Camphor administered in powder socio weeks before parturition, says Hoird's Dairyman, dries up the milk of cows, which is something very important Two cows, one being three weeks, the other four, before the term of parturition, and giving five litres of mlk and four litres respectively, wee? treated with powdered camphor put on their tongues at the back of the mouth, three times dMly, In doses of thirty grammes. In ten to fourteen days both had run quite dry. As the milk diminished they were milked once in two milkings, then in three, and finally odco in five. The milk must not In any case be defective, hence the necessity of milking thoroughly. To run a cow dry when continuing to supply milk was, previous to this experiment, an Impossibility. Camphor, it is needless to remark, has the same effect on mares. Without Impairing health or the udder, camphor causes dr3ness In a few days without difiieulty. Plant Lice and Cabbage Worms. The plant lice on cabbage (Aphis brassiea) and the common melon plant lice (Aphis cucumeris) may be destroyed by spraying with kerosene emulsion, taking pains to reach the colonies of lice, especially on the underside of the leaves, where they are likely to congregate. To do this It is necessary to have a nozzle arranged so as to throw lite spray upward to the underside of the leaves, or, in the case of cucumber vines. It may be most convenient to turn the ines carefully over while the spray Is being applied. The cabbage worms will also be killed by the kerosene emulsion. If wet with the solution, but when on the inner leaves, or burrowing Iu the heads of cabbage, It Is difficult to reach them with any direct application. London purple, In a solution of one pound to two hundred gallons of water, can be used until the cabbages ar weli headed out, and even then. If applied around the lower leaves on which the worms are numerous, there will be no danger of poison. Hellebore for Currant Worms. Hellebore Is now so cheap that It Is not worth while trying anything else to keep the eürrant worm in check. Sprinkling slaked lime on the leaves will only make it unpleasant for the worms and destroy a few of them; but the hellebore kills every worm that gets a taste of it The bushes are more

easily kept free from worms If only two or three stalks are allowed to grow together In a clump. Where there Is a large mass of foliage and many stalks the lower leaves escape the dustlng. The hellebore may be put in wter and sprinkled on the leaves. It U poisonous to the worms, though only very slightly poisonous to people, and there is no possible danger that it can affect the fruit. The same remedy is equally good for the worm that attacks gooseberry bushes.

Best Age to Set Apple Trees. One year old trees cost less than oler ones. They can be lifted from the nursery without any loss of roots, and if properly set will make about the same growth as if in the nursery, says the Pittsburg Dispatch. The head can be formed at any desired h',:Ght. This is difficult to do with older trees. They can be set in the orchard in less than half the time required for older trees, and no necessity for staking. The transportation on such trees (if necessary) is a small item compared with larger ones. The older and larger the tree the greater the loss in roots. They will Invariably be more or less mutilated. They have to be both root and top bound, and will require time to recuperate from this loss, and In windy loaclities will have to be staked another expense or loss of time. Now, in conclusion, if anyone having no experience with one-year-old trees will give them a test, I doubt not he will be like myself, prefer this ago to any other. How to Destroy Sorrel. Says Trofessor Massey in the Practical Farmer: Lime will have no effect in driving out sheep sorrel on land that Is deficient In vegetable matter; but if there is a large amount of decomposed vegetable matter in the soil, lime will bring about conditions favorable to the growth of better things that may smother out the sorrel. Sorrel, liko cheat, is usually more abundant after a hard winter that has killed out grain or clover, and the sorrel comes in to occupy the vacant places. With a rank growth of clover on the land there is seldom any trouble from the sorrel. If I had a clover field infested with the sorrel I would mow it very early, before the sorrel had ripened its seeds, and would give the land a good dressing of acid phosphate and potash and at once sow it in some smothering crop like peas or buckwheat. Farm Hints. I made a mistake when I began farming, writes a contributor to Hoard's Dairyman, by not locating the permanent pasture where a part of it would adjoin the barnyard. This mistake caused me to walk many miles jenrly to and from the pasture gate, which was about 100 yards from the barn. Last year I fenced each side of a 30foot strip from pasture to yard, and this saves the daily walks after the cows. By kindness and good caje the cows can soon be taught to come to the yard gate every evening. Plowed under a heavy growth of rye the latter part of May, '04, on one-half a civ. Harrowed fine and planted to beans. Dry weather set in, and half the beans failto germinate. The thick layer of rye underneath made land so loose it dried out easily. I should have used a heavy loaded roller before and after harrowing, to make the laud firm. Milk for Chickens. Milk contains everything nee?sary to the growth of chickens. Skim milk. If mixed with meal, Is equal to fres-h milk, says the Philadelphia Ledger. Curd, made by heating soured milk, and draining off the whey. Is ato a good food, but should be slightly mltcd, as If for the human palate. The whey may be heated to scalding and thickened with meal. Add to this dough a small quantity of dripping or lard, salt to taste, and bake in a slow oven. Or, Instead of separating the curd from the whey, mix all together, thicken the meal, add shortening and salt, then bake slowly for a long time. To make chickens grow there Is nothing like variety of foods. Sleep in Orchards. Persons vho pasture sheep In their orchards do not, as a rule, use enough sheep to do the most good. The sheep can add nothing to the land but what they take from it, but if a large number, say fifty, are put in eight acres of trees seeded with orchard grass, and are fed a little bran, say about one pound a day to each sheep, something like 134 pounds of nitrogen, 104 iounds of phosphate acid and SO pounds of potash would be distributed during the season over the ground in the best possible way, while the sheep would keep down every weed and sprout, gnaw the grass close and eat every fallen apple as soon as it strikes the ground. Rural New-Yorker. m Orchard Grass. Those who grow orchard grass sl'ould remember that it needs to be cut early. If cut just as the stem is forming and before It becomes hardened orchard grass will sprout readily, and may be cut several times in a season. It will also thicken under tlds treatment, and cover vacant spaces in the soil. The seed should always be sown with some kind of clover, which will furnish nutriment for It after the clover has died out. Close Plnntini; and FroHt. In one pear orchard .'n a neighborhood where nearly all pear blossoms were killed by spring frosts there Is this year a full setting of fruit. The trees are only twelve fct apart, and their foliage covers all the surface of the ground, as the branches are Interlocked on every side. This mutual protection and the confined warm air under the tree saved most of the blossoms from Injury, and there will be a full crop.

HISTORICAL RELIC.

iLinks from th Chain Which Barred the Kiver at West Point. Xo visitor to West Point falls to nojtice the few links of the iron chain that lie around the monument up near the hotel. They are the remains of the great chain which was stretched across the Hudson river during the Revolution, to prevent British warships from sailing past the forts and lauding an may or marauding parties. Few people know that just above the entrance 10 Tuxedo Park, on the east side of the railroad track, are the ruins of the building in which that chain was made. They are known as the old Augusta ftfr. IMli. 1l-ictikl11 or.ilil Itlil Iii Willltll ! wall are all that are standing. It was I '.ever anything but a low stone build;ig, a few feet square, and built by a 1-ountry mason. It was -allMl a forge ecatise there iron was reduced front (lie ore by the old-fashioned charcoal (nethod. and its counterparts were eomnon all over the country within the last Jialf century. It was owned by the Sterling Iron Mine Company, one of the large iron manufacturers of the day. H'Te was reduced the iron taken from the mine, four miles west, and the links hammered out by hand. When it became apparent to the Continental War Department that a chain was necessary to prevent vessels going above the neutral ground. Secretary Pickering consulted Mr. Townseud, one if the iron kings of the day and an owner of the mine, and shortly after (Jen. Putnam gave an order for the chain. In less than six weeks the links were .lelivered to the army engineer at New Wkisor, just west of Xewburg, ready to put together. The carting was done by 1 he neighboring farmers with their ox learns. The links were '2 feet long and 2 Vi inches square, each weighing about !." pounds. When put together the j-hain had a swivel at every hundred feet. It was about l.riOO feet long and sveighed ISO tons. It was buoyed up .v 10-foot logs, pointed at each end, so is to offer as little resistance to the tides as possible. It was put in place in 177S. The part which Is preserved was fished jp from the bottom of the river in 1ST.", Diit the greater part was sold for old .ron to the West Point foundry years before. The Value of Minutes. A party of ladies and gentlemen were lately visiting a large carpet factory. i and the manager took them over the different floors of the establishment. On ascending one of the staircases they came to a locked door, on which the following inscription was painted In white letters: "Strangers not admitted under any '.ireumst? mces." The curiosity of the ladies was excited to a high pitch, and they inquired, almost in one breath, "Whatever is to be seen above?" "That is one of our workrooms, iu which l."o women are employed in embroidering carpets," answered the manager. "Oh. how we should just like to have a peep at them!" exclaimed the ladies. "I am sorry I cannot comply, with your wish." said the gentleman, with a shrug of his shoulders, "but our rules do not admit of the slightest exception. Truth to say, and there is nothing spe cial to be seen, nor is there any question of trade secrets. The reason why admission is forbidden to strangers Is imply because every woman naturally looks up and her attention is distracted from her work for from one to live minutes. Supposing, now, each woman wastes a couple of minutes in this wa, that wvil make in the case of lo0 women a loss to the firm of Ö00 min1 ntes, or live hours, and we cannot al low that." She Had Her Revenue. A newly married couple on tho train the other day attracted a good ileal of attention by their peculiar behavior. A lady got on the train at a station and took a seat in front of them. Scarcely was she seated before they commenced making remarks In loud whispers about her wearing last season's hat and dress. She was severely criticised by them for some moments. Presently the lady turned around. She noticed at a glance that the bride was older than tho groom, and without the least resentment in her countenance, she said: "Madam, will you please have your son close the window behind youV" The sou closed his mouth instead. ; and the madam did not giggle again ! until the brakeman hollered out "Lula!"' A Slight Mistake. A gentleman who has recently returned from England regales a reporter with this bit of gossip: "There was nn Englishmen who prided himself upon his ability as an amateur plumber. lie decided to put gas connections Into his house, and do it himself. He went ' to work with a great flourish; hammered and soldered and fitted away, and at last came the final hour of triumph. He called the family into 4 he parlor. i beneath the great chandelier. lie turnI ed on the taps, with taper in hand and vigorous showers of water gushed forth over them all. He had made the mistake of connecting with the waterpipe Instead of the gas-pipes." A Hereditary Talent. Belletield Young Halfback gets his ' atheletic tastes legitimately, lie comes of 1 very athletic family. Hloomfield-Is that ho? liellefield Yes; his father once held up a train, lie had an aunt who did some shoplifting and an uncle who was quite noted for Jumping board bills. Exchange. J list What He Wanted. Steamship Clerk Do you want a saloon passage? Col. Wlnterblossom (from Kentucky) Well, I should say I did. You didn't iiimno T trmibl irr nnr nthr wk did ' jou? Detroit Free Presa,

HUSTLING- IIOOSIERS.'

ITEMS GATHERED FHOM OVER THE STATEAn Intfrestln; Summary of tli Mortvlm. porUnt Ooiu-s of Our Neighbor Wed. dins and Ie:it Iis Crime. C'usualtle, and Gcueml Indiana News Note). Minor State New. A compan y of men are digging silver hear Bichmond. Tin; divorce business at Tort Wayne is en an alarming increase. Simcki.axi is to have a new bunk headed by Murray WiMman. A wim-st(ii:m unroofed houses ar.d damaged crops at Brazil. Sami i'.i. 1ooi, an aged veteran, was found dead at Logansport. TmiiTY valuable hunting dogs have been poisoned at Englih. recently. Br.owx, the only comity in the state without a railroad, has Ü,rö voters. Mr.. Aim hiuam Thai m.nof Martinsville, said to be 104 years of a je, is dead. A Company has been organized at Lafontaine to develop the oil territory in that vicinity. Mus. Emzauktii Iavis. said to be 101 years old, is dead at t lie Delaware County Infirmary. Wm. M( Qi KAitv attempted to board a?: electric car at Evansvilie, recently, ami was killed. Tin: little son of Perry McDonald was caught in the machinery at Schimm-r's cooper -shop, at CohimLu, ami may dk'. Pi:osi: rrou Bai.imvin of Nolile-ville, says he will Mop the sale of the Indianapolis People, ar.d other ol. scone papers, in that city. A "oas r.Kir" brigade of (J. A. II. men is being formed at Anderson to attend th national encampment at I.ousville in a body. Tin: closing of saloons at llobart.on Sunday, has resulted in the shutting up of all candy and cigar toro$. barlier shops, Stahles, etc. Fkaxk Trrn.K's barn was burned, south of Muncie. recently. A self-binder, wheat, corn, anil fifty tons of hay burned, with no in.Ni'.ranee. JriHiE FitAxi'is T. Iloi:i is making a collection of pictures of the Judges of Bartholomew County who have . served on the bench, going back to I Valparaiso is getting rather sporty judging frou the number of sporting societies it now supports. The late.-t feature is the "Pointing dun Club." Tiik One hundred and twenty-fourth Indiana Regiment ami the Fifteenth In liana Battery will hold their annual joint reunion at Lynn. Sept. 4 an 1 .". Pi iiaiu) Wit. urn: of Fountain County, was a drummer loy during tho war. lie is now insane over the delusion that he is again plying the sticks on the battlefield. Hakvkv Lawsox, son of a wealthy farmer living near Lapel, while stealing a ride on a freight train over the Big Four, at Anderson, fell between thecals and w;:s fatally injured. Coxvn r John Smith in the prison south, set fire to the bed in Iiis cell, hoping to cause a stampede among th prisoners and thus gain his liberty, lie was nearly suffocated by the smoke. Wm. IlriJr.K, and employe of the Beeves foundry, at Columbus, walked out of a second-story window at Mrs. Bell's board-ing-house, and was very seriously injured alout the feet and back. Foi: a week Ben Boss, who reside near Coburg, Porter County, had been suffering excruciating pain in the ear. A physician was called and a large, healthy bed-bug was taken out of the drum. Davii Maktix, aged 15, and Al. Binkin of Ciieen town, aged 11. were on a led playing with a revolver, when the weapon was discharged, tearing away the jaw of Piiiskin. Th" injury is probably fatal. Wai.tki:, the 17-year-old son of A..T. McPike of Paragon, was stealing a ride 0:1 an I. fc V. passenger train recently. In jumping from t lie train, his iiead struck against a car en the side track and he died fiom the effects. One farmer in St. Jo-'eph County report three kinds of potato bugs, the last variety leing to all apjH-arantcs poison-proof. These, with cabbage worms, grasshoppers, chinch bugs. Hessian flies, tho early drouth and the late frost, made things quite interesting forthat farmer, ami he is philosophically wondering, '-What next ?" J A mks M. Saxkkv of Torre Haute. Ceo. W. Hall of Buleigh, ami Samuid Bowan of South Bend, representing th 1 state Liv Stock Sanitary Commission, hae just completed an investigation of the extent of t It 1 Texas cattle fever in Putnam County. They report that the disease has spread and now apjcars in four counties Putnam, Hendricks, Park, ami Morgan, and that 250 head of cattle have loen quarantined. Fifteen deaths have occurred so far, and every effort is being ma le to suppress the disease. Dr. F. A. Bolsar of New Castle. State Veterinary, was present during the investigation. Patkxts have leen issued to the following residents of Indiana: Charles iL Anspach, Cedar Cirove.tliill coupling and support; William K. Bellis, assignor to Belli Cycle Company, Indianapolis, bicyclo frame; James Bennett, dnvneastle. running gear for wagons; Cecilia A. Brewer, La Porte, washing machine: Peter Dcxille, Huntington, frame for barns or other building; Lewis Fetch. Van Düren, jotato digger; diaries Helm, Indianapolis, electric alarm lock for tills; Leon .1. llousee, Hartford City, hose coupler; John J. Kirkham, Torre Haute, process of and apparatus for manufacture of gas; Herman Lauter, Indianapolis, desk for typowriter machine; William M. Leads, Walnut, land marker; Edward Miller, jr., Evansvilie, rail chair and nut lock; William Xutt, Craw fords ville, circuit closer; Jacob V. Hewlett, Richmond, hand wheel plow; dottlieb Schnasse, jr., and T. Paffrath, Elwood, pneumatic press; Jcs.se Warrington, assignor of one-half to Xordyke & Marmon Company, Indianapolis, hominy mill; Henry Westphal, Indiana)lis, plow. Oi.ivkk Xewcomis, son of John Xewconib, of Howard County, died recently from a peculiar cause. Nine years ago th boy was buried by a cave-in at a gravel pit, but apparently recovered from his injuries. A short time ago he complained of his head hurting him and death followed. The regimental reunion of the Xinetyninth Indiana w ill Ihj held at Logansport, beginning on the 27th inst. Business sessions will be held iKith on the 27th and 28th, and there will Ik? a campfire on Tuesday evening. Orlando Powell, D. M.Vannice, J. A. Miller, G. W. Julian and J. C. McGregor of Logousport, will welcome Siting delegations.