Bloomington Telephone, Volume 8, Number 41, Bloomington, Monroe County, 13 December 1884 — Page 3

Bloomington Telephone BLOOMINGTON, INDIANA, WALTER & BRADFUTE, - - Pcbushk

A large number of immigrants from France to Southern California by -way of New Orleans is reported. They are mainly experienced wine-growers. The immigration-, to Southern California from all sources is reported by the immigration Commissioners of that State at 700 or 800 a week. Wilkzs Coixncs wrote a letter to Lotta while she was in England complimenting her and saying he wondered why people laughed at her representation of the little starred child, the "Marchioness, tearing and swollowing food like a ravenous animal. The great novelist said it made him cry. It is noted among the peculiarities of the Philadelphia city directory that a man named Shanks teaches dancing, one Drinkwater inconsistently keeps a liquor saloon, Black is a coal merchant, one Saylor is a mariner, Painter is an artist, Law practices his name, Birch teaches school, and Lamb sells beef. Bismabck has not yet gained the highest honor the Kaiser can bestow There is another German order of merit, founded in 1866, of which the badge is a star bearing the portrait of Frederick the Great. Those only who are privileged to wear it are Kaiser Wilhelm; "Unser Fritz," Prince Frederick Charles, and "Moltke, the Silent.0 Mme. Lypia Fashxoff, the traveler, says in her "Notes on China Women" that those selected for the imperial harem are not subjected to the barbarous feet-cramping process. They are the daughters of Tartar officers, and do all they can to avoid being selected for the palace at Pekin, inasmuch as the life there is tolerably dull. Tebbapin was introduced into England by Wormley, the deceased Washington caterer, while steward to Bev erdy Johnson when the latter was Minister to England. Poker was afterward introduced by Minister Schenck. No wonder Englishmen try to recover the money they have lost through indulgence in these expensive luxuries by marrying rich American girls. Gkk. Kobebt Toombs has been talking about his old associates. Of Gen. Joe Johnston he said: "Johnston would

have been the most successful general of the late war if he hd been let alone Jeff Davis was continually moving him from one place to another" Referring to Jefferson Davis, Toombs said : "-He is contumacious and incompatible, and a man of diminutive information." Iris said that the sand used in the manufacture of mirrors is now used by a Paris company to make white bricks and blocks, said not to be injured by frosts, rain, etc, and to be very light, the specific gravity being only 1.50 to 1.80 of day bricks. The sand is first strongly pressed by hydraulic power, and then baked in ovens at a very high temperature. The brick are almost pure silica. Notice posted by a Deadwood husband in the postoffice: "My wife Sarah has Shot my ranche When I didn't Doo a thing Too hur an I want it distintly Understood that any man That takes her in an' keers for her on my account Will get himself pumped so Full of lead that Sum tenderfoot will locate him for a mineral dame. A word to the wise is sufficient, an' orter work on iools. P. Smith."

s TuimEi, 5,000 feet long, that was constructed at least 900 years before Christian era, has been discovered on the island of Samoa. It is mentioned by Herodotus, and was excavated to supply the old seaport with drinking water. It is completdy preserved, and contains irate tubes of about twenty five centimetres in diameter, each one provided with a lateral aperture for cleansing purposes. A schooucastbb in Iowa called his prettiest pupil to his desk ' and asked her if she would marry him. She replied promptly that she would not. "If you v-ere the last man on earth, and I was 40, instead of 16," she added. "I wouldn't take you." Besuming his character of pedagogue, he decided that her language was disrespectful, and ferxuled the hand which he could not, get matrimonially. The girl now sues him for damages. Tjsr Mudir of Dongola, in the Soudan, is a slight, delicate man, with a pale, pensive face, lighted up by two large black, luminous eyes, which seem to be always looking in space, and from between which projects a preternaturally large nose, hooked lite a vulture's beak. The affect of his extreme piety on the Mussulman population is very marked, and has enabled him to maintain himself in power almost within armstroke of the Mahdi He is only visible for a abort time each day before public prayers. Thebe are about 90,000 dwelling houses in Paris. A recent municipal law ordains that henceforth no fiats shall be less than 8 feet high; that in the streets 25 feet wide the height of the houses must not exceed 50 feet, in Streets between 25 ald 32 feet ide the

height mustnot exceed 50 feet.in streets between 32 and 63 feet the height must not exceed 60 fee!-, in streets above 05 feet wide the house must not exceed 65 feet, and no buildings are to have more than three stories, all include;!.

A TEaiPEBANCE lecturer in London has given recently some curious statis; tics in regard to the amount expended in intoxicating liquor. He estimated the annual average thus spent in the last ten years at $120,000,000. This gives an expenditure of $60000,000 every month, of $15,000,000 every week and of $25 very second, day and night There was 3,508,48Q letters in the Bible; and if $205 was place on every letter this would represent the annual ex penditure. The grain consumed by the brewers and distillers is sufficient to provide four loaves of bread per week to every family in the United Kingdom. These certainly are starting facts. The French Monitenr Universe after remarking that the United States is the home of eccentricity, says that no church bells are rung by hand in New York. "The Angelus is sounded by steam : night and morning the machine operates with the regularity of a clock for fiye minutes." Another interesting piece of information from the same trustworthy source is that when money is needed for a charity the come liest and most proper young ladies in a town ascend a platform, where the passers by may kiss them at a $1 a head. No, one, however, must take more than ten kisses for his $1. "Even the busiest men of business snatch time to perform this act of gallant charity." A large number of married couples living in Bio de Sul, Brazil, awoke lately to find that their marriages had been illegal. They were mostly German Protestants, and in the absence of

clerics of their denominations they had resorted to civic marriages up9n the assurance of an officer of the city that he could perform the ceremony legally. Meanwhite there is still an absence of proper clergymen to perform the functions. The Catholic clergy will do nothing for them, iior does the govern ment in any way intimate that it will relieve their distress. If only some of the philanthropic missionary societies would send out a parson, here is a

chance for him to do good and pay his way in doing it. The Countess of Walewska, once maid of honor to the Empress Eugenie, says the San Francisco Argonaut, anticipated. Whistler's 'harmonies" in her dress, which was always black, and she believed that color showed off the beautiful white of her neck and shoulders and the carnation of her cheeks One day, owing to an accident at a hunt, this lovely and ingenious lady of honor was forced to keep her bed, but she received her friends all the same, and astonished them somewhat by wearing a loose poplum robe of black foulard silk, which covered her neck and arms, and pillow cases and sheets also of the same fabric. The coverlet was of a pale pink brocade, bordered with swan's down.

A South Amebxcan traveler has discovered near the Biver Dramanta a little stream issuing from a hard me tamorphic rock that was hot and sticky. It is like a stream of thick petroleum. While engaged in examining this natural curiosity he came upon two small birds caught in the sticky substance at the edge of the stream; they were still alive, but upon releasing them both the feathers and the skin came off where they came in contact with the bituminous matter, so that he had to kill them to put an end to their suffer ings. No doubt they had been taken in by the appearance of water which the stream presented and had alighted to drink, when they discovered their mistake too late.

Speaking of the opening of the quail season in California, the San Francisco Bulletin says: "They are now so abundant that they 1&rong the roadways. While rewards are offered by farmers in southern counties for killing this bird, which destroys much grain,, the Alameda and Contra Costa farmers say the quail is useful' to them. It attacks their grain only as a last resort, and chiefly subsists on insects. Their destruction of nuts is of incalculable importance. The quail's great foe is the wildcat. The latter animal is .prolific in the counties named. A quail nesting will cover from fifteen to twenty eggs, and nearly every egg will hatch. They nest once a year, and during those periods the male is a most pugnacious defender of the mother and young A man may almost strike him with a club. The wily wildcat, as large as four ordinary cats, will stretch himself out and put out his tongue; the male quail will approach and peck it, whereat the cat seizes his toothsome P"J

An Unfeeling Father A bevy of girls were looking at a bridal trosseau. "How exquisite!" "How lovely! "How supremely sweet!" etc., ad nauseam, were the exclamations made. "You ought to be extremely happy, Clara," said one of the girls to the bride elect. "I suppose I ought,19 said Clara, discontentedly, "but papa won't bring a newspaper reporter to look at them." Chorus "What a shame l"-New York Sun.

AGRICULTURAL.

eral thousand churns have been patented, and doubtless tha inventor nf

A hay crop of two and a half tons each -honestly believed that his own was

carries oif 400 pounds of mineral matter the beat. The very best of butter can

to tne acre. jje niade in several styles of churns, The first point to be learned in sue- and the same may ' be said of buttercessf ul stock raising is, never to allow workers ; there is no one inventor's an animal to lose a pouud of flesh, make that is so far ahead of all its comThis is equivelant to throwing two petitors as to convince the public of its pounds away. superiority. In a general way we A farmer in Maryland has been ex- should advise the use of a churn that perimenting with barbed wire fences has very little gearing, and few, if any, for the telephone use, and announces floats to strike or grind the cream that farmers and others will soon adopt while churning. A square box or a them for this purpose. barrel will show as good butter as can Considerable difference should be 1)6 made, and a float, or dash churn, if made in the feed of poultry, according properly handled, will make butter aa to the breed. Brahmas,' Ccchins and 8ood as the best- A Kood buttertheir crosses are quiet, and consequent- maker can make good butter- iff almost ly fatten very easily, while the lighter- any kitl of a churn, while one unac-

breeds are more active. It is not a good quaimea n Business may spoil rule, therefore, to feed too much corn to cream in the best of churns. An obi'owla when in confinement. jertion to the dash churn is the severe An exchange asks why it is that New lpr required in using it, and in the Zealand spinach is not more extensively f"? YePw? the cr?am a 1 un' grown? It is superior to all others as der the dash. The revolving boxes regards flavor, and an abundance may .nd ba"eJs keep all the cream in mobe had from one sowing all through tlo and b"BG he butter ev17 the season, no matter how dry the wfllonJ waste f cr?am' Prided the weather may be. Two dozen plants "f Properly tempered It must will supply a large family. It should aot be to th'ck ? ?! be raised on a hot-bed and transplanted cream me" to L bu"er msido a ba! three feet apart each way in rich soil. llour- "J,0? I6, of cream. lfc 18 Improvement in Milk OANs.-Some S!fnif. tbat he.churn.19 a Sod aouivu.p.iu-y v a. umo one jfothmg in the f orm of a butterEnglish manufacturers place wrought vorker ia m're si le tbftn la iron stays to strengthen the bottoms of slab of ol hard j their railway milk cans. These radiate the butter is seg outFinto thin from the center, and are riveted into sheets and then salted and folded over the strong undermetal that projects upon itself and in sed and fold. below the bottom The necks are made ed until the salt is evenly distributed, of wrought steel all to a common pat- Butter is often worked far too muchtern, so that the lids are interchange- New England Farmer. abJe, fitting close to keep out dust, and rolling without spilling. HOUSEKEEPERS' HELPS. White birch bark appears to be a A . . ... , , very desirable object in the arts. An fAtpalmmom U be,?f" oil taken from it imparts to the leather J?c ual m rfmS gase from the made in B,ussia the peculiar odor the disl-pan and !t is a good plan once m i i j. a while to add a little to the water used origin of which was long a puzzle to 7 thVdnk leather manufacturers in other coun- cleanse tne sink, tries, "When the oil is dissolved in while it is .conceded by most cooks alcohol it can be applied to preserve Winter squash is beat when baked, frabrics and render them waterproof. It it is always necessary to use judgment keeps insects from the products of the about it, for if the squash is very dry it loom, and does not affect the pliability of is -rendered almost tasteless by baking, cloth. In this case it should be steamed. Red-eyed or speckled beans are very To MAKE a nice breakfast dish of delicious, cooked in the same way as Beet potatoes, parboil them the day white beans, and are much richer. Thev bwe, then in the morning slice them are best when parbolied, and the water and flT them until brown, in butter, changed. The small black beans are sprinkle pepper and salt over them; cut still better. We have used them for t16?1 lengthwise, so that they will keep soup in the same way as split peas, their shape. boiling thoroughly, and changing the Fried ham for breakfast is particnwater more than once, then squeezing larly nice when the slices are cut the or straining them through a colander, night before and are allowed to soak all Both are better for winter use than are night in a cup of water into which a taLima beans. blespoonfnl sugar of has been added. All cellars should be ventilated. This softens the meat and takes out the There is a great deal of foul gas that oppressively salt taste, accumulates from the decay of vegeta- Graham puffs for breakfast are richer ble matter in them that too often is al- and a great deal nicer than the plain lowed to pass into the rooms above, to gem. Take one pint of sweet milk, one the injury of the health of their occu- pint of graham flour, half a teaspoonf ul pants. The best way to secure pentila- of salt and eggbeat the egg tl)en tion is to have communication between add the milk and then the flour graduthe cellar and the chimney by means of ally; beat it very briskly for four or

a pipe or other opening. The upward hve minutes; then pour into buttered

draft will remove all foul air as it ao gem pans and bake in a hot oven.

cumulates, ana render it nearly or quite A shall currant cake to be eaten

as pure as in the rooms above. fresh for tea is made of half a cup o

A new industry nasiust been started butter, one cup of sugar beaten to-

in East Kent, England that of crow- gether, two eggs., half a cup of sweet

ing crops of lavender and peppermint I milk, one and one-half cups of flour,

and extracting the oil. A large piece one teaspoonf ul and a half of baking-

of land at Grove, near Canterbury, was powder; stir in one cup of well-washed,

planted with lavender and peppermint I drained and dried English currants; if

by way of experiment, and the result they are not quite dry, sprinkle a little proved in every way satisfactory. It flour over them.

utt tuexeiuiw ueeu ueueiunueu 10 eBiau-1 apples tnat are Quite tart are con-

lish works on the spot (which ia in close sidered a great addition to a suet pudproximity to the Southeastern railway; ding, and will be highly regarded by in order to carry on the process t of ex- any one who finds that kind of pudding

tracting tne ou xrom tnese plants. too rich. A good receipt is here given: Spaying. Dr. Otis Mann, a veterin- one cup of molasses, one cup of sweet arian of Springfield, Massachusetts, miik, two-thirds of a cup of suet, chop-

says there are four essential considera- ped very fine, and with every particle

tious m favor of spayirg old cows and of equal size, so that there will be no heifers that are undesirable to breed danger of lumps, one cup of tart apples from. 1, they will grow one-fourth peeled and chopped, though not fine :

larger. 2, they will give a better quali- two and a half cups of flour is about ty of beef. 3, the beef will bring from the right quantity. The mixture should 1 to 2 cents more per pound. 4, a be like cake dough. Mix two teaspayed scrub heifer will thrive and spoonfuls of baking powder with the take on fat equal to a steer. The risk flour, spice to your taste; add salt also, is nominal if the animal is in good con- Steam for two hours. Serve with any dition and the operation is performed good sauce. in moderately fair weather. Some New Notions in Cooking. According to some experiments re- Epicures have directed fowls and small ported in the London Times, it is esti- turkeys to be boiled with oyters in mated that 100 pounds of hay are equal bladders. The suggestion contains the 275 pounds of green Indian corn, 4U0 principle of preserving the juices of the pounds of green clover, 442 pounds of birds, and preserving perfect freedom ry3 straw, clOO pounds of wheat straw, 164 from scum. Another suggestion is to pounds of oat straw, 180 pounds of bar- oi! with either rabbits, fowls, chickens, ley straw, 153 pounds of pea straw, 200 lwb, a piece of a crumb of bread, a pounds of buckwheat straw, 400 pounds little shred suet, aud a slice of lemon of dried cornstalks, 175 pounds of raw without peel ; the object being to keep potatoes, 504 pounds of turnips, tf00 ke article white and to attract all the pounds oi carrots, 54 pounds of rye, 46 impurities that might arise in the form pounds of wheat, 59 pounds of oats, 45 of scum. They are, we consider, rathpounds of mixed peas and beans, 64 er fanciful notions, as careful skimming pound -i of buckwheat, 57 pounds of In- and slow boiling will generally compass dian corn, 68 pounds of acorns, 105 the desired effect. Whenever nracticapounds of wheat bran, 167 pounds of le9 boil fowls in veal stock. The wheat, pea, and oat cliaff, 179 pounds liqnor in which birds are boiled should of mixed rye and barley, 59 pounds of used for broth or soup, linseed, 339 pound of mangel wnneL &uppfTwWt Essen. Woodman, Spabb That Tree. We The t iron and cannon-fonndiag heartily indorse these sentiments from establishment of Herr Krupp at Essen a Kura Isew Yorker correspondent : ia con8tantly enlarging its space and The glory of our grounds is an old personnei. In i860 it contained but black walnut, or three walnuts, I don't 1160 workmefl aud this number had know which, for there are three trunks increased by 1870 to 7,084, while at the and one grand .top which a good soul pre8ent time it ia over 20 000. if also with a black body left standing, or set fhe women and children dependent on out when the ground was new. I he establishment are included, a popuwou d say : Blessings on the old ation of no less than 65,381 is gathered man' ; but that last wu.ter he went to together, of which 29,000 persons are rest beyond the care for, or influence of, aofuallv liviDg in hou8e8 belonging to any benediction of mine. 'Old trees t0e woJ.ka . in their living state,' said Landers, 'are Tfae Vttrioua departments of the

tue only unrigs mat money cannot com-1 K undertaking aro eight in num-

ber, and embrace the workshops at

ha rein. So

tie throughihe;

tiro frt m ma.TJ?

cracking

fore the

Njiiss

wradk

xnand Let the vounff man think of

this when deciding upon his home. A great sacrilege was committed a little while ago; a beautiful oak grove, with noble trees, and near town, fit to be a park for poor people's children to get happy in, was mostly cut down, so far as it appears at present, for nothing but its firewood. 'Spare that tree! spare that tree!' cries out all the esthetic nature within us ; and 'spare those forests V cries out a cyclone-devastecl aud flood-troubled country. The world may bo growing wiser, hut it has had a terrible Bpell of folly. Yes, spare the Adirondack?, and spare some of the errand old pine and hardwood timberland ia our Northern Michigan! PJant walnut groves on the prairies, and keep a fourth of your quarter-section in woods, and cultivate the remainder the better. Churns and Butter Making. Scv-

Essen, three collieries at Essen and Bo-

chum , 547 iron m ines in G er many mines in the north of Spain (in the neighborhood of Bilbao), the smelting iurnaces, a trial ground of 17 kilometres at Meppen for proving cannon, together with others at different placo3 with an area of 7f kilometres. There are 11 smelting furnaces, 1,542 puddling and heating furnace, 439 steam boilers, and 450 steam engiuea of 185,000 horse-power. At Essen alone the works connected with rolling stock comprifie 5i) kilometres of rail, 28 locomotives, 883 wagons, 09 horses, 191 trolleys, 65 kilometres of telegraph lino, S5 telegraphic stat.ons, and 55 Morse apparatus, London Times. The golden rod is now popular for house decoration. The golden mle would bo better.

A Hunt in Nen Guinea. It was given out that a large track of

' country, about six: milei from here, j was to be hunted. About 7 o clock the j native begai) to move, the men with

nets nrst.' These are coarse-mesho.f, strong nets, about four feet deep, of various h-ngths. Far, away to the leeward of the grass to be burnt tueso nets are stood up with short stakes, each man's net joined to his neighbor's. The grass is pulled up iu front cf the nets to prevent them catching firo. The owners of the nets stand by with spears in silence and awaiting their prey. It is the fashion for all the young man to wear their head-dresses and tinery to the hunt. They shave the jiair, too, off their temples, every hair from their eyebrows, and any other about their faces. All carry several spears roughly made from hard white wood. The points are sharpened, aud every one has a boar's tusk or piece of glass bottle to scrape them as often as they require it. Little boys of 3 and 4 years o.d, with their ornaments on, faces printed, and spears on their shoulders, march along with the crowd. A number of young girls go, too, to carry water for the men. It being a grand hunt,? we foreigners joined the company on ; horseback, Mrs. Lawes being one of the party. The natives always walk in; single file, and the hunting procession wasi a very long one. The meet was. at a creek halfway to the Laroge river. This was the rendezvous, where at rested and waited for a strong, steady , wind. The nets had gone on and were in position. The master ot ceremonies was a Koitapu chief named SivarL When I first knew Sivari, some years ago, he was a fine-looking man, agile, and active; now he is pitiable object his toes and fingers &aten away by leprosy and his arm 4 an4 legs in a dreadful state. He can hjobble about on a stick, but he can notalk far. Two of his wives carried jn by turn in a netted hammock on tj $ir backs, suspended by a band across ' forehead. These aire some of the ha ' :rs which fall to the shares of the tfves of New Guinea. The right to ej y their husbands to the hunting-tie j 4s one of the woman's rights undisput I here. The old sinner, miserable i iect though he is, has had six wives, ss-' e of them young and

good-look infj-4 , sntly annexed to his

wind becran to whis-

es, and there was a ; The grass was set

places and was soon and blazing away beJhe air was full of

sparks, and aiie&se cloud of smoke

rose above. The natives shouted, the Pogs yelped, and P? dazed wallabies rushed here and the some escaping spears and dogs, but igt of them falling. It requires a goodfclW ,of practice to spear a wallaby goingjfull speed. Sometimes one would ruslast with two or three spears hanging frofen him and a bevy of dogs after him. TSere

was a gooa aeai or siaugnter and some

scores of wallaby carried in. One m

was badly gored by a wild boar. It is only very plucky men who will face these. They carry a circle of stout cane, in which is lashed a strong cord, so as to form several large meshes. This is held so that the pig rushes in and gets muzzled by it; then a man throws himself on the pig and grips him tight until he is dispatched. When they have tusks the hunter often gets very ugly wounds. The man we saw had a nasty hole plowed in his thigh by a short tusk. The pig, however, was overpowered and killed. New Guinea Con Sydney Herald. No Such a Thing as a New Pun. Whenever a young man finds that he has given expression to a pun, he should take a piece of asafoetida about as big as a hickory nut and chew it. He will not feel like making another pun as long s the taste of, the drug remains in his mouth. He should carry some of the drag in his vest pocket when he goes out in company, and keep a piece in his mouth constantly. It may be offensive to the company, "but it

will not be half so offensive as his old back-number, teeth-worn puns, and he

will become a favorite. If this course

will not cure him he had better go and drown himself.

There is no such a thing as a new

pun, as every word that is susceptible

of a pun has been punned upon for

thousands of years, so when you hear a

person make a pun you can be sure that it is a thousand years old. If a man or woman, when making a pun on a word, realized that the Egyptian mummy in the museum, when alive, hd made the same pun, and laughed at it boisterously he would be ashamed of his own attempt The. English language is good enough if you take it straight, and it is foolish to torture it. The man who imagines he is smart, as you can see by watching him as he laughs at his own smartness. As good a way as any to squelch a punster is to listen to his pun, look thoughtfully and say, "B. C," or "Credit it to Adam." Young men who get in the habit of making puns on all occasions lose their positions, girls go back

on them and they go throug life alcne,

except m rare instances. A girl hates

to face the prospect of a hfetime of

poor puns, and they will think twice before marrying a punster, as he is lia

ble to practice his puns on his wife.

A druggnst in western Wisconsin had

a great habit of making puns a few years ago, and no customer was safe to

go to the store to buy anything. They

all got a twin with their medicine, and

sometimes the pun was worse than the

drug to take. One night a man named Otto Padman was stabbed in the breast,

and was taken to the drug store to be

sewed up. While the doctor was at work on the man the druggist came up and after looking at the wound he said; "You Otto had a liver Pad-man. w The wounded and dying man heard it, and

it was too much. He could stand the

stab of cold steel, but to be stabbed

with a pun was too much, and he hauled back one foot and kicked the

druggist in the nose. The druggist

has never made a pun since, and we

don't know but a kick in the nose is

about as good a cure as any. Peck's

Sun.

Tw nther'a misfnrtnnfla rtat-AriWJ mnn

from lyushmcr ahead ..over the hnafAn

path, lev successes would be won.

The Indiana TJnivemlV

IJLOOMINGTON,

IND

College Year begins September Cth. Tuition Free. Both sexes admitted on equal conditions. For catalogue and other information Address, W. W. Spanoleb, Lemuel Moss. Secretary, President. K. W. M1EKS, J. H LOUDEN LOUDEN fc MIEB&; V Mtornes at Law, LOOMINGTOIT, INDIANA.

Office over National Bank.

W. P. Rogers, Jos. E. Henlbt, Rogers & Henley ATTORN1ES AT I AW. Bloomington, - - Ind. Collections and settlement of es

tates are made specialties. Office North east side of iSquare, in Mayort

building.

nv5t

W. Friedly, Harmon H. Friedly. FRIEDLY & FRIEDLY, ATTORNEY AT LAW, OiEec over the Bee Hive" Store. Bloomington, Indian

Kerry L Bates; BOOT AND SHOE MAKER Bloomington, .... .... Ikd. JEST" Special attention given to soJeingand patching. C. R. Won rail, Attorney at Law NOTARY PUBLIC. Bloomington-, - - - - Jnd. Office: West Side over McCaUas t - r ORCHARD HOUSE

& M. ORCHARD,

Proprietor.

The traveling public w ill find firstclass accommodations," a spleudtf Sample room, and a Good table. Op-

noaite depot. Board furnished by the

ayiy or wees tzo

MtMAL HOUSE Easttof the Square. .

inis Hotel m just oeeft remodeled, and is convenient in every

respect, l&ates reasonaow. o-i

C, Vanzandt,

2

v

XT 21 d e r t a ke DEALERS m

Metallic Burial Caskets, and C

Collins, &c. Hearse and Carri furnished to order,

Shop on College Avenue, n ma W, O. Fee's liuihaug. , ' u

Bloomington, Indi RESIDENT OENTST

mm

II

WHS

Br J. W. GRAIN

Office over McCad Ca'sJ Stow bloomington, lud. Ali work Waranted. 17ft

W. J .Men, JpST DEALER l!X fl hardware; Stoves, Tinware, Dooi-8, Sash, Agricultural Implements. Agent for Buckeye Binders, Reapers, and Moweirs. Also "manufacturer of Van Slykes Patent Evaporator. South Side the Square. BLOOMINGTON, IND.

THE BEST AND CHEAPEST WATCH REPARING GO TO r JOHN P. SMITH.

S8S This work is made spocialt by him and much care is taken that ali work is satisfactory done.

8.

v

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mm,