Bloomington Telephone, Volume 7, Number 37, Bloomington, Monroe County, 26 January 1884 — Page 7

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BLOOMjOiGTON, INDIANA. A lvt,Y eoUoqu9t'KMSTiTi:d between Ben Butiertaad MJey,5oounsal the Sprague tmhW ii RfexTe Tnai The former objected to s proceeding on toe part of the latter: -ii woyernpr Butler wtD. but allow me" said Mr, Bipley. "Iam Mr. Butler in court replied . the GovernSt' i was not aware your term naa expired, con tinned Mr. Bipley. . "Itneyer ' Khode Island," said Mr. Butler,

am yery aaoxnat, rejorteji r.tgrt comngenro.fce41i

Bipley. The city bf St. Paul, Minnesota, seems to be enjoying' a healthy growth at present. Thirty-five, bundled residences and M3 business houses were erected m.tW thriving towp during the past year, at a cost . pf nearly $12,hapi W city of tho. same gizein country can .exhibit. For several years her lively neighbor, Minneapolis, bfd, the lead in . building, bat o late St. Paul seems to Jmve otrippd all rivals. Bt. Paul ioneof thdse suburbs which Chicago is proud of. , The women's ..department .in : the Boston lair has created surprise among those- who think that woman cannot invent. Some of the contrivance are ingenious. A California woman oas devised a table bedstead: There are a double piano stool, a bridle rein, an improved chimney, a birch bak. life I preserver, a ventilating screen, life-sae

doll babies, carnet stretchers. flodrMJHiCAGO

cimgmg dustpans, . Kidney cures, m dampers, a photograph, album,- a .ps greaser; a lc against burglars, and; an autumn leaf catcher for cisterns. Lohd Oveestoioe,. who, lately died in England at the age of 87,-and who was immensely wealthy, it is said had constantly & dread of having to spend his last days in the workhouse. ' To pacify, the cravings and heartburnings of the old gentleman, who in-his day was. a poKtical...efionomist,.o-.celebxity,.. son-in-law, Col. Lloyd Lindsay, was obliged to grant "him a little annuity of 17 shillings per week. As Mrs. Lindsay was left $30,000,000 by her father it is not thought that her husband will be much out of pocket by his generosity. Mb. Carlisle, the new .Speaker of the House of Representatives, is most happy in his domestic relations. He defers in eyerything to his genial and dignified wife; and frankly acknowledges his obligations to her for the success of his public career. Their home in Kentucky is proverbial for hospitality and good cheer. Ever since his entrance into public life at the capital Mr. Carlisle has had rooms at the Biggs Hoase, fronting to the Treasury Department but his elevation to the Speakership may lead him to secure a house where he can be master of the receptions expected of one holding such an advanced position. , - Mb. Tabob, of Colorado, who was once a temporary Senator of the United States, is to build a -mansion- in Washington which will eclipse any other in the city. It is to- be very large and very magnificent, and Mr. Tabor's fondest hope is to make it a scene of great social gayety. The Tabors are not admitted into the choicest social circles at home, it is said; but Washington society is not so fastidious, perhaps, and at any rate his lavishhospitality and the curiosity regarding his resplendent night-shirts a room for the display of which will probably be provided will doubtless insure prompt social recognition. The English journal which last year announced with reference to a convention of Dunkards in a western state, that 10,000 drunkards had assembled, and which indulged in various solemn comments thereon, showed on the whole less ignorance than was lately exhibited in the Paris Tenuis. That journal translated a brief dispatch describing a recent cyclone as follows: "An election riot broke out in Springfield, Mo. The rioters destroyed two houses, killed five persons and injured thirty. The American Register, lies in its ignorance of the fact that the word "cyclone" is a French as well as an English word, and has the same meaning in both languages. A cohtsibctob to the Boston Herald says: A record of the busy and eventful life of Gen. Simon Cameron would make volumes of important history. His political career has spanned nearly three-quarters of a century of the national life. To-day he is a great and picturesque character. In March he will be 86 years old;butyetheisas jnuch in love with life as a man of 30, lut has a seat for the affairs of his country that few men of middle age can feel. He lives in a beautiful house, solid and unpretentious. An old stone house, with a wide porch and gable

roof, hann

fcever bnimf IfU bf AI MObo tree ani&JJiile InlJJlCuifc a 4 tone'fjwi, BtftemdeHyH erect m--;jmr juia m only strengthened "in coroTr&nd bfforJPgb mofct 4,clock ojd fee?tam day; said 4 o'olock, and Colonel Ma'sbtf think: ClBCMjAi aCBfer. noon. and Union a eyet d and the odiuti offiaer sft4i?ori W son a?d and his men to the front at -tra- earlier hour. Mason said - the order -read o'clock and he moved accordingly! ' The comnu m. in: clear against; jason mm iMtory tfffiu&j il l l. (1. r !. j 1 n.. cn, wnrenne, qsna, wtraia oy . awj h all mist&kes,and which he carried in the; jpemainder of the, ' war ' Several years h$ nephew $T- H' Masouf, , got posfeessidn i, qf ,te wach' and his.since ca3ed,.it no. Tribune: onnell, the J . us tX 3h v( I 'l .V" filler of Carey, was. hanged' in Lon fbn at 0'cXosk.hj, thft.ftrnjng The enterprising New York papers of that morning, without exception, contained long and detailed accounts bf the preparations at Newgate for the execution of ODonnelPs conduct during the previous night, of 3iis appetite and how it was gratified, of his religious ministra. tions, of the anxiety that was felt about Binns' drop, of Victor Hugo's letter of intercession, of the correspondence beSecretary Frelinghuysen, Minister Lowell, and LoSrd Granville, of the views of Gen. Pryor and of everything else about . the event except thie event itself. The old slowcoaches, though they had a margin of four hours in their favor actually waited until Tuesday morning before they printed a line about the execution, whereas the Chicago papers fcjpth the big blankets and the little napkins, contained all the details of the execution Monday morning, so that the readers at their breakfast-tables were furnished with an account of the important event which had transpired across the water the same morningThe failure of the New York papers to get important news comes from cutting down prices so that they cannot aiford to take it, necessitating an economy which gives their readers the same amount of white paper as before, bnt without the news, and compelling them to wait a day. or two after an event has transpired before they can know anything about it. And yet there are about fifty Bohemians in that city who make a living as penny-a-liners by writing letters to the country press, reciting the doings and habits of the editors of those slow-going newspapers, extolling their enterprise in getting news, and puffing them as prodigies and their papers as marvels of industry and alertness. .Such enterprise, however, as they displayed in hearing of the ODonnell matter and giving it to their readers would be scouted at even in Oshkosh or St. Lonis. Unreasonably Early Rising. I never could see where anything was gained by getting up two or three hours before daylight and moping around in the dark. It is a waste of fuel and light and a miserable waste of time that should be passed in sleep "nature's sweet restorer." It is cruel to compel the young to violate the laws of nature in this manner, and none bnt the most healthy and robust can do so without serious injury. But we are a fast people and this is one of our failings. People would accomplish more in the end to rise as soon as it is light and have breakfast at seven. This gives the children time to get an early start for school, and they are fresh from a good night's rest and a warm breakfast to begin the duties of the day. Going to school is a hungry business, and when the boys and girls come founding home with glowing cheeks, they are ready for a warm, nourishing supper. We find that a kettle of good soup just fills the bill at our house. Bread and butter and some kind of fruit is all they need besides the soup. Give the rising generation plenty of sleep, and wholesome food with less rich pastry, and we shall develop fewer dyspeptics and better educated men and women. Oermantmon Telegraph. . Sporting Item. A rather frivolous lady told her husband not to go hunting, as, in her opinion, it was a cruel pleasure. "How can it be a cruel pleasure ?" returned her spouse. WI enjoy it, and my dogs enjoy it. I know you enjoy yourself when I am absent; and even the quail enjoy it, for I can't hit one on the wing to save my life." Texas Sitings.

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LSHLGTONN MOTHER'S

'he grave of Washington's mother at derickslrarar, Va is mikopt, neff:lAnarl fintl thn favnrito rnsnrt of rfilic .hunters, who' mutilate the partially hppxppleted monument and deface the wrgve, .witl ;iaipuoity. J Wr4 . tv ashing-' 354n seieta,d dnriug. tljer t)ie spoj wre Bue wisiiea to ue ounea. iz was wmt fio'nl the house 'in which she lived, on the edge of this citv, within the horate imit$, on the Eenmore estate,, owned py W. Kev Howard, of rylahtlf owned1 at 'the time of her th tMMswtiwr jewM,'from whose hands it passea tliBtpossession't 4her'orin'ftim$ ny 4 t -vmr i04iennQreji(we e owe to aloija.down aiuever-vwde ih Sfitlley below is le grave,, eouwaadfng. of aFretJericksbure?.- Including the now famous 'Marve'n Hi&hts;- fJifwthward a flji hundred Yards is the- Confederate netery, and from the hill beyond Ajaryes, HHjb$sjnov,the Naj&Hial Oeine,ed looks down; upon Marv Washing" fco the left ofthe-nioniimeM' as yon faee northwest is a private graveyard of ' ainjdl size,wifwmnded try a bridrtralt This is the last rastinguplaQe ofl.many of the-Gordons. A'etak and Mppcn trees shade thisacreflpeJl Cheionent was commenced bv Mr. Silas trrows.f : wealthy! meiihano -Ngw rk, and 'all: Wat -has ever ded on it was given by lum. It has rer been completed. .Near toe un shed monument lies an' enormonsf cbne-shaped piece of marble that Was to ihave been the capstone, so to spealc, yf themonumemt. It was never iut on top. of its place, and lies half buried in ilia.' ground, a sad spectacle of wasted effqrts. .The .monument is square, tlie base large and massive, surmounted by a smaller square of solid marble blpqks, built in imitation of a temile, the four sides being ornamented with two fluted columns, eaeh of marble. It is sadly defaced. The marble columns are thrown down, broken, and some of them have been carried away. The corners are chipped and broken. Bullet, shot and pencil have helped in the disfiguration. Grass and weeds crown the summit, and here it stands, a fitting emblem of the futility of hu? man hopes, aspirations and works. The foundation of the monument was laid on May 6, 1783. In digging for the foundation the coffin was exposed. It was of black walnut. It ; had decayed and fallen apart, exposing the bones of Mrs. Washghvton. It is said that one rel.ie-hunting citizen, Mr. Anthony Bnck, seeured one of the finger bones, and that for years he showed it as a curiosity. The corner stone was laid on the 7th of May, 1783, amid a grand civic and military display in the presence of the President, Andrew Jackson. It was on his way to attend the ceremony that Lieutenant Randolph, of tho av3', pulled the President's nose. I have talked with a gentleman who was present when the President addressed the people from the steps of Dr. Wallace's house on Main street. He -tells me that an old negro man, George White by name, a vender of cakes and fruits, pressed up close to Jackson and called out, "Bress yer heart, honey ! did dey hurt yer nose ?" Old Hickory looked like a gamecock as he drew himself up, his eyes flashing, and his white, bristly hair standing straight up, and. thundered out, "No, by the Eternal!" Correspondence New York Telegram. Newspaper Row Palmy Days. If I should say that Newspaper Bow is not what it used to be, a lot of mon: keys vill begin to chatter and think (if monkoys can think) that it is a bit of vain glory on my part. Bnt let me tell you, in the old days of the Bow the greatest men in Washington visited it. Charles Sumner used to come into the Tribune office and sit for half an hour or an hour, talking -with the correspondent on public questions. Speaker Colfax was almost a nightly visitor to the Row. Harry Wilson came nearly every night to Tribune rooms. Conkling was a frequent visitor to the office of the Philadelphia Inquirer when Mr. Painter was in charge, and ,it was not uncommon to see Mr. Blaine on the Bow, eagerly scenting the columns of newspapers on file. Mr. Edmunds also visited several of the offices of old Newspaper Row. Even General Grant, in his term as President, did not think it beneath his dignity togo into some of the offices of the famous Row. Foreign ministers also sought the Row. In my humble way I have answered question and shown paper to Lord Lyons, Sir Edward Thornton, Prevost Paradoi, the French minister who committed suicide one hot summer day here, and to other foreign ministers who visited the Row. I do not pretend to give tho reason, but the class of people who used to visit tho Row do not go there now. The bors on the Row to-day are just as bright and just as respectable, no boubt, as they were ten or fifteen years ago, but certain it is that public men now avoid newspaper offices. Washington Letter. A Strange Religious Sect. In several provincial districts of Finland a religious sect has appeared based upon the fundamental principles of "female supremacy and male subjection." Husbands and lovers bind themselves by oath to wear whatever yoke their partners choose to place upon them, and, further more, to make unreserved confession once a week of all delinquencies. A woman who has been chosen by her sister rulers to exercise unlimited authority within the community allots the penalties, which are prompth inflicted by robust and resolute matrons. Those childlike the best of every caresses which are sweet woman, who tas begun by showering kisses on the hard pate of her bald doll, creating a lappy soul within that woodenness from rhe wealth of her own love. George Eliot. Whek our hatred is too keen it places us beneath those we h ate, La Roch foucauld.

rtmfW ..Lneiflier England, since

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pf Jhe Stafford Hills" and b,f "tlfe inghts The sentiment of e

Win. Black on th Wt Highlander ; It wouId,fbebu1;a poor retutwior

many nd many ansaot df - kindness if 1 were to f ajl tp say a. word about the West Highlanders' when asked to do so. I may say that I know a little about them ; for, as a boy, I have slept in crofters; hu,ts Jn Islay ; as, a lad I wan-, dered through and over glen and hill, jn -search of botanical rarities, from? Avon to Inverness : while, later on, and nartlv fdf 'MHnb. ahd'''TkTtly lot the maKing ot dooks, I nave explored prewy nearly veyy bay And creek from the Mull of Cantire to the Butt of L'ewis .The (fiftkurlty is to "know hW i set opput it. It must be next. to-impossible for an Englishman or an American to midersthnd,' arid still niore t6ympai thisse with.i trait of character which are. t Inanely, heresult, as isems to me, of a rihase or civilization through which she becante ever passea. lanshin a sentiment which habitually showed itself to be stronger than any tie of blood, or the common love of life was not altogether eradicated from the Highland character when the government disbanded the elans after Culloden : i though now it .exists but passively, or reveals itself in Lpecuiiarmes'wuicn tneiiowiana ocoicn" man, ior example, regaraa as oniy so hiJiny childish weaknesses. Indeed, no two races could be more markedly distinct than the inhabitants of the south and the jnbabitauts of.jthe northwest (I . am less familiar .with the northern LHjghlanders, and this rambling gossip jtiist -be - riences) of confined to personal expeScotland. There is as much ditterence between a Lowlanaer ana a Highlander as there is between a Prussian drill-seugeant and Neapolitan lazzarone. The Lowlander, of broad and sturdy Saxon build) is ti'ardy, economical, ahd industrious ; an enterprising and excellent colonist; reticent of speech, opinionated, and not overcivil to stranger's f theological to a' degree, and argumentative ; humorous in a grim and sardonic fashion; and generally of an uncompromising, self-assertive type ; whereas the Highlander, with his pensive Celtic temperament, is snperstitious rather than theological; not humorous at all (all the best Highland stories are told as against Highlanders by the Lowlandersjj he is a most unwilling emigrant, though the poorness of the soil has &om time totime (and greatly to his own .ultimate advantage) forced him away from the glens and the hills he can never forget; he is gentle and pleasant in niaflner and speech, but at the same time quicktempered at? any fancied slight; he is hospitable, obliging, and ready to do a stranger any service, yet always with a certain self-respect '; too courteous to be strictly veracious, for he will tell you not that which is, but., that which he thinks will please you ; lie is content with the poorest living, and has but little enterprise ; while I fancy that the traditions of clanship are responsible for his willing dependence on any superior power, his devotion to a good master, coupled with a curious sense of equality, and a touch of communism as regards food and drink. Wm, Blaeh, in HarpeiJs Magazine. Women '011(1 Mice. In this age of the world in this peculiarly exciting epoch of the nineteenth centurv. it is impossible for the most robust and astute man to stand still in one position for the space of five minutes and exactly comprehend the nature of a woman's fear of a mouse. Perhaps a mouse looks larger to a woman than to a man. But we don't know. At any rate, no matter how large the woman is, she is just as skittish in the presence of a mouse as a little woman, and the smaller the mouse the greater the terror it inspires. A woman . who has got sufficient muscle to grab her husband by the scruff of the neck, dust off the parlor furniture with his coat-tails, throw hiui over a gas jet, catch him on the first bounce, pass him to the third base and get him back again to the home plate in less than no time, will cut up and shiver like a vibrator threshing machine at the sight of a mouse an inch and a quarter long. Even the Amazonian mother-in-law who can knock out the delicately organized husband of her own and only daughter in less than four rounds, who, like a cyclone, sweeps through the wrecked remains of a flourishing family, and scatters terror and blue ruin wherever she treads, she of the iron jaw and sinews of steel, even she has a soft spot in her adamantine heart for. mice, and will ki-yi with any school girl at the harrowing spectacle of .a live mouse cutting its way between the kitehen table and a hole in the pantry floor. All this is inexplicable, and can only be accounted for by the patient investigation of the hard-headed scientist or medical expert. Texas Sifting s. That "Far-Awnr Look." There is a tendency in some folks to see only the far away. They insist upon using a teleseope. Let me give an illustrative anecdote. It is that ancient story of a pensive young girl, who sat looking into an old-fashioned oven roaring with the blaze of dry split wood. Her mother noticed an unusual sadness in her face, and soon observed tears trickling down her cheeks. "Jerusha Ann, my pet, what is the matter?" "Nothing, ma, nothing!" Soon the unhappy child sighed, and the mother observed a large increase of the aqueous flow. "Jerusha Ann, my sweet, tell your trouble to your ma." "O, ma, I was thinking, suppose X should live to grow up and get mar ried, and have a little daughter, and sh6 should live to bo as big as I am, and then she should crawl into an oven all on fire like that! O, ma, it would be dreadful, Monthly. dTeadfol.,,--iKb Lewia' CitiCKET-r-LAYraf is traced back to th fourteenth century, when it was indulged in under the name of "club ball." Pedantiiy crams our ears with learned lumber, and takes out our brains to make room for it. CoMon.

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. HEALTH IS WEALTH. Dr. E. C. West's Nerve and Brain treatment, a faiiteburfpecifid -iti Hysteria, Dizziness, Convulsion' Fits, alcohol or tobacco, Wakefulness, Vakefu ning c Mental Depression, Softening of the Brain renujtinfc in Jnaanity,anl leadV ing to misery, HX:f$' fnciTJqH rrePT ature Ulu age, Barrenness, Loss ot Tower in either sex, Involuntarp Lo'sfeetfand Qpermajtorahoea caused Ivy over-exertion of the brain, self-abuse or overindiilgenee. Each box con' tains one month's treatment. One dollar a box, or six boxes for five dollars: sent by mail prepaid on receipt ot price. We guaranpe six boxei cure any case. With- each orderi ceived by us for six boxes, accomf purchaser onr written guarantee ti f und the money if the treatment not effect a cure; Gu aran tee issued only by H. LINDLET. BJjOo.Diiiigton, Jnd. If Sororelgn Bemety for all Camplidati paasHar l ' Mishawaka, Ind, Deo. 1, 1882. Dr. Pkngetlit: Dear Sir. Overwork has done for me what it does for many. Desiring to benefit suffering women, I add my testimony to the value eif ZoB-Piiora.. For Ave years I suffered greatly with Prolapsus, being obliged to mo a supporter during all those painful, weary years; but, thanks to your medicine, I wear it no more. I laid it off after using one and a half bottf 3S. I am not well, but I work all' the time, iftid am better than; I ever expected to be. You may use -my letter, an if any one wishes to write mo for more Information, give them my full address. Mrss C. O. J EussxvxUB, 111., April 25, 1882. Db, Pexgelly: . Dear Sir:- I am more than pleased with tho effect of your Zoa-Piiora in our daughter's rase. I am surprised to see how she has improved. She is gaining la weight and color, nnd I think iteels better than she ever did; her nerves are steady, and the distress in her chest Is entirely gone. I firmly believe that Zoa-VHora is all that has saved her life. I sir willing you should use my letter, for I am not afraid to tell what a wonderful cure your medicine Is. Yours respectfully, -r t, r. Mrs- Sarah Randolph, N. u. This was a case of suppression. From Mrs. John Spi tier. No. 28 Wilt St, ?ort Wayne. Ind. I have suffered for sixteen ycaiWwIUfBsasmodlc pain In my head and geuferat nervous debility. Recently I had severe attack of pain in my head, caused, bj TreawaejflSand f nervous exhaustion. 1 1 Sought I shoWd'dle.' v liiicKonH u.f1 mA lJ . rw kM thoroughly. He gavelt to me acdbrdlnFto directions fisr severe cases, and In less than two hours 1 had complete relief. J- advise all ladies who suffer from nervous or sick head-, ache, or anyform of female weakness; to useoaPhora. slThereis no medicine to compare with it. ' , Way 15, 1832. 1 Our Pamphlet on 'Diwmses of Women and Children;' 3knt gbatis. Every woman above 15 years of age, especially Mothers should read it. Address R. PKXGEHY &, CO. Sold by Druggists. Kalamazoo, Alien. AH letters marked private arc read by Dr. PessgelL only Sold only by H. Lindley and J. M. Faris. Pdles are frequently preceded by-a sense of weight in the back, loins' and lower part of the abdomen, causing the patient to suppose he has some affection of the kidneys or neigh ing organs. At times, symptoms of indigestion are present, as flatuloney, uneasiness of the stomach, etc. A moisture, like perfpiration, producing a very disagreeable itching, particularly at night after getting warm in bed, is a very common attendant. Blind Bleeding and Itching Piles yield at once to the application of Dr, Bosankos Pile Remedy, which va directly upou the parts affected," absorbing the Tumor?, allaying the intense itching and effecting a permanent cure, where all other remedies have failed. Do not delav until the drain on the system produce? permanent disability, but try it and be cuied. Price, SO cents. Sent prepaid on receipt of price. Address. The Dr. Bosanko Medicine Co., Piqua, Ohio. Sold by Hiram LiNDusr, WANT OF FAITH. 7 If H. Lindley' s, the Druggist, does cot succeed it is not for the want of fkiih. He has such faith in Dr. Bosanko's Cough and Lung Syrup as a remedy for Coughs, Colds-, Consumption, aud Lung affections, that he will give a bottle free to each and every one who is need of a medicine of this kind. 5 CAUSE OF FAILURE. Want of confidence accounts for half of the business failures of to-day H. Lindley's, the Druggistf is not liable to fail for the want of confidence in Ihr. Bosanko's Cough and Lung Syrup, for he gives away a bottle free to all who are suffering with Coughs, Colds, Asthma, Consumption and all affections of the Throat and Lungs, FREE! RELIABLE SELF-CURE. A favorite nrescrintton of onn of the most noted Mild 8iiwestul spfcUlists in the TJ. 8. (now retired) tor tin-euro of Ntarvoum 0eMHy( t,mt itlanhootl, Wralcnema autl Mtevaw. Kent luplttiuauuleUi-uvclopelree. BrugelstscanflUlt. Addren OR. WARD & CO.. tatiisiana. Mo. VE3ETABLE PILL3 Secure Healthy action to the Liver ,nd relieve all bil ious troubles. Puiilj VigtUWe; NsQrlplag. Frlc 3Ss. All Srugsirth

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The Indiana TJniversitv:

BLOOMINGTON, LVD

Tuition Free. Both eexes admitted . on equal conditions. For catalogue and otu'erm&fWaiion w Address, ' K R.W.MIEBS, J.H LOUDEN Mtornes at Law,

Office over Rational Bank. s W. P. Rogers, ! ; - Jos, p. Hjaijty Rogers &. Hepley jbUeSBfa JQ secernent of esttftl areinal& IfepeCtflltre. Ufflce Mh m fill! ottfmn-e; ik Mayors building. . ,'f r. , . , pv6W. Friedly, ' Hafinbn H. FrldJy. : FRIEDLY & FBIEDLY, ATTORNEY AT LAW, Offiec over the Bee Hivew Store. BloomiBon, Indian ; j ! Henry li Bates, BOOT AND SHOE MAKER BtooMiKGTON-.' i .... Ind. Special attention given to Boleingand patcbipg. ' ; C. R, AYTorneV Ati Law BtooMiNaTOif, - - '-; - - Jnd. t . ' Office: West Side oyer McCallas . . , ORCHARD HOUSE S, M. ORCHARD, Proprietor. f The traeJipgjfpblte! 4lass accoiia sample roona gOaite dept. aav or week NATIONAL HOOT Eat of the Square. ' LEROY SANDERS, Proprietor Hotel has just been remodeled, and is convenient in every respect, Rates reasonable. " 6-1 C, Vaazandty Undertakers DEALERS IN Metallic Burial Caskets, and Cases Coffins, &c. Hearse and Carriages furnished to order, Shop on College Avenue, nerth snd W. O. Fee's JUuiUtiDg. tOS Bloomington, Indiana. RESIDENT OENTST DrJ. W. GRAIN Offiee over McCada Co.'s' Store loomington, Ind All work Waranted. 17ft W. J .Allen, DEALER IN HARDWARE, Stoves, Tinware, Doors, Sash, Agricultural Implements. Agent for Buckeye Binders, Reapers, aud Mowers. Also manufacturer of Van Slykes Patent Evaporator. South Side the Square. BLOOMINGTON, IND. THE BEST AUD CHEAPE&T WATCH REPARING GO TO JOHNP.SMITH. This work is made speciatt by him and much care is taken that all work is satisfectorly done.

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