Indianapolis News, Indianapolis, Marion County, 20 October 1871 — Page 2

THE EVENING NEWS.

JOHN H. HOLLIDAY, POKJIKZX AMD nonXWKM. > — — —.—

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 20, 187L

Tn Krarnia News n fubulshec btkbt wzks»at Armutoojr.M four o’clock, at Uieoiaoe,«oatbw«rt comer of Meridian and Circle «treet».

Paid

.Two Cxam.

BDlSCRIF’nOKB: Bubecrtben •erred by avziert in any part [of the Mty at ten eenti per week. Bnbacriben •erred by maU, one copy one month j 10 One copy for three month* r r ,—. — — 1 20 One copy tor one yaw 100 THE WEEKLY MEWIV • aodaome eight column folio, published every Wedneeday. Price, SI 50 per year. Specimen copies sent free on application. Mo AnTzrnnau3m>jru2TX0 am anrroai^L*«At

jished a dangerous precedent and his influence bids lair to be as injurious in the future as it has been in the pest.

Tiih Chicago relief fund is estimated to amount to over fifteen millions.

It is gratifying to hear that Senator Harlan’s chances of re-election by the Iowa Legislature are very poor. Thr Massachusetts Commissioner of Insurance lias called on all the companies operating in that State to make an exhibit of their condition.

Governor Scott, of South Carolina, grumbles because the writ of habeas corpus has been suspended there. What he wanted, he says, was troops. If he is opI>osed to it, the probability that the Pretsi" . dent’* action was right, is good. A Washington dispatch says the Postmaster General will advocate the postal telegraph proposition in his report. Creswell must have his little hobby. Last year it was the franking privilege, from which he has now dismounted in disgust. Collector Murphy lias finally denied that he is a thief and the Tribune proves it over again. Ex-V. 8. Marshal Murray, who is one of the authorities for the charges, says he is ready to substantiate them in Court.. Will Mr. Murphy now «I>eak ? Chicago has produced an image breaker already, being the woman who owned the stable where the tire originated. She says her cow never kicked over a kerosene lamp, that she had no lamp, and that she was not in the stable, being asleep in bed at the time. l o The feeling against Tammany is reviving in New York as the election draws near, and the opposition is working actively. At a meeting of the reform Democracy last night, threats of hanging repeaters or " fraudulent inspectors, were openly made. Thr Sentinel of this morning, in an article on “Indianapolis and its Future,” has the following paragraph, to which we call the attention of our readers: A wide field is open in indlanupolif for manufacturing enterprises. A plow and agricultural implement factory, an establishment upon a lar/e scale for the making of railroad cars and Bessemer steel works, would prove profitable investments. There is an immense sale here of plows and agricultural implements, nearly all of which are made abroad, and. although we are a great railroad renter, there are no railroad cars made in our city. And there is no place in the country that jKissesses equal advantages for Bessemer steel works. All these enterprises will t>e established here, and the only wonder is that the large surplus capital which the bank deposits show to be here has not been invested in these industries, which would do so much for the growth and prosperity of the city. Indianapolis is bound to be a large city, but the extent will depend much upon our capitalists and property holders appropriating the advantages within our reach, and before rival interests occupy the fields that now hold out their arms invitingly hitherward.

Gkn. Ballock, treasurer of the Freedman’s Bureau, is the latest defaulter to tlie government, having invested several hundred thousand Alars of funds belonging to his deparMient in government bonds and pocketed the coupons. He justified his course by saying that he had lost money in paying colored soldiers’ bounties to the wrong persons and wished to reimburse himself, and Secretary Boutwell says he imputes no criminal intent to Ballock. This moral obliquity is pleasant to behold. Ballock through blundering, ignorance, or matter lion pays money to the wrong persons and becomes responsible for it. Not liking to pay it, he saddles the loss upon the government and the Secretary of the Treasury sees no evil intent in it. He intended to make himself whole at the expense of the government, and if that isr not criminal under the existing laws, it is time then we had a change. Ballock should go the wav of Hodge. To procure an injunction to prevent a corporation from using its own property, and to appoint a receiver to take charge of it, lias been a favorite device in New York for a long time. The Erie managers have carried this game to a point where one would have supposed improvement on it to be impossible, but nothing seems impossible to Fisk if the Courts can be applied to for aid. He has just procured an injunction against the Herald forbidding it to publish certain letters written by him to a former mistress, the identical lady who caused tears to flow from his gaielle-like eyes by forbidding him to deposit his gum shoes in the hall of the house he had given her. As usual in such cases, a receiver has been appointed to take charge of the property, the receiver of course being one of Fisk’s employes. This is a decidedly novel plan and one that can be recommended to all offenders or committers of notorious acts. If they don’t want to get into the papers and can control a court, they can get an injunction and stop all publication. Fisk has estab-

The death of Queen Victoria at the new arrival,

present time would probably cause some commotion, for the heir apparent is not only very obnoxions to the people, hut there is a growing disposition to cut off some of the privileges of royalty, if not to abolish it altogether. But the people who imagine that an attempt would be made to establish a republic are very much mistaken. Such a thing would be talked of, is talked of now, and some meetings might be held to resolve in favor of it, but the mass of Englishmen would oppose it It takes a long time to educate men up to the point of making a change in the form of their government, and with its pauper labor and aristocracy, with the class divisions and the accumulated prejudices of a thousand years, England is far from being ready for a republic. There can be no real republican government where the social distinctions are so great and so distinctly defined as in F.ngland, and where the people have always been accustomed to such conditions. That the Crown will be shorn of some of its prerogatives after the death of Victoria there can hardly be a doubt, but there will be no sudden, sweeping change, no

violent revolution.

drove a young lady up to the wrong house. The mistake was not discovered until after she had cordially kissed a young gentleman who had come down to the gate to meet the

ing began to smoke hi spots. I felt invaelf, and. seizing E-—. tried to

awav. Alas' what could my worifoa’al

- r,i—r

ooklng for Pearl*. AN ORIENTAL LEGEND. The Matter came one evening to the gate Of a fair <rny—it wa* growing late, And acndinghip disciples to buy food. He wandered forth intent on doing good As wu his want. And in the market place He saw a crowd, close gathered in one space, Gazing with eager eyes upon the ground Jesus drew nearer, and theron he found A noisome creature, a bedraggled wreck, A deed dog with a halter round his neck. And those who stood toy mocked the object there, And one said seotfing, “It pollutes the air!'* Another jeering asked, “How long to-night vhall suefc a miscreant cur offend our sight?” ‘ Look at his t »rn hide,” sneered a Jewish wit, ‘•You eonld not cut even a shoe from it.” And turned away. 1 Behold his ears that bleed,” A fourth chimed in, “An unclean wretch Indeed:” “He hath been hanged for thieving,” they all

cried.

And spumed the loathsome beast from side to

side.

Then Jesus standing by them in the street, looked at the poor spent creature at hia feet, And. bending o’er him, spake uato the men, "Pearls ar» not whiter than his teeth!” And then The people at each other gazed, asking, “Who is this stranger pitying the vile thing?” Then one exclaimed, with awe-bated breath, “This surely is the Man of Nazareth; This must be Jesns, for none else but he. Something to praise in a dead dog could aee!” “SCKAJPa.” Wilson, the murderer, wore a 1034 collar. A doctor Sid is “exposing spiritualism” in Atlanta. Dubuque has a “half-eel half-crocodile,” with crimson ears. The Chicago ruins have been photographed for the stereoscope. Barbers make many friends, but scrape more acquaintances. A colored conservative club is to be organized in Richmond, Virginia. The Hospodar of Roumania has a beautiful and accomplished wife, but she will steal. The father of John B. Gough died in Lonnon last month at the advanced age of nine-ty-four. John Daniel Perry, of Boston, is executing a commission for a bust of Hon. Horace Greeley. The San Diego Union mentions squashes of one hundred and thirty pounds in weight raised in the Tia Juna Valley, California. Mr. Julian Movius, of Buffalo, well known as the former General Agent of the Great Western and Michigan Central Railroad, is dead. A crusade against kerosene oil, or rather against those who manufacture an unsafe article, so called, is likely to rise out of the Chicago disaster. America and Kngland are the countries selected by several congregations of Roman Catholic orders in Rome for the establishment of conventional institutions. The Superior Court in Maine has decided that, in a civil case, a party has no right to a jury trial if he does not pay the jury fees. The decision was in a case of slander. A cattle disease has broken out among the cattle and horses in the vicinity of Owens Lake, California, and on the ranches on the Owens River Road. Numbers have died. Grant Place Methodist Church is the only church edifice of that denomination left standing on the North Side, in Chicago. Rev. Mr. Boring has been appointed its paa-

tir.

A Portland, Oregon, dispatch says: “A decree of forfeiture has been issued against the schooner Louisa Simpson for violation of the revenue laws in importing liquors into Alaska.” * The Greenupsburg Independent hopes that, with the advent of frosts, ’possum fat and hominy, the various forms of bilious diseases will somewhat abate ia that part of Kentucky. An Englishman named Easton, who has recently settled in the neighborhood of Gordonsville, Va., will soon open there “a monthly cattle sale and market, on the English principle.” . Samples of mesquit or Texas grass four feet high have been obtained on a ranch near Bloomfield, Sonoma county, California. Notwithstanding the drouth there waa a luxuriant crop. Those who best know the man say that Brigham Young knows so well when to yield and when to oppose, that his extrication from his difficulties with the United States judiciary is certain. The “Battle of Gettysburg” is certainly a much saved picture. Already three separate and distinct individuals claim the honor of having rescued this great work of art from an untimely end in the great fire. The Mayor of Chicago has, within the past three or four days, revoked one or two hundred saloon licensee, the holders having violated the order recently promulgated regarding the sale of spirits and early dosing. A Philadelphia paper asserts that fully half the servant girls in that city are perpetually “half seas over.” It is probably because the average Philadelphian “missu*” only half oversees her household.—[N. Y. World. An Oshkosh hackman, the other evening.

All fears for the safety of His Imperial Highness the Grand Duke Alexis will be allayed when it is known that Prince Yakoff Schakofstri is flag officer of the squadron, and that Peter Venotoruff, Jtrif Melefsky and

£hepan Kusmin are also along.

If Miaadasippi'B Lieutenant Governor, R. C. Powers, is not an ignoramus five times, a coward three times, a liar eight times, and “parts his hair in the middle,” then the editor of the Vicksburg Herald tells an un-

troth.

I vezanca Toretenoff, Joan Lebedoff and Paul Nicolaeff engineer the Svetlana which brings Alexis Alexandrovitch to our shores. We hope for the sake of woman's rights in this countiy and in.Russia that Joan will be able to outdo all the other buffers at engin-

eering.

The firing of cannon on the streets of Vicksburg, Miss., has again been resumed by order of the Mayor. Tar is being burnt freely through the streets, and the air is thoroughly impregnated with its scent These actions are deemed advisable, so says the Times, ms some of the citizens are still appre-

hensive of yellow fever.

A 'Woman's

Chicago

Account of the

Fire.

From a letter in the New York Tribune, which only want of space prevents us from publishing entire, we take the following graphic picture of that fascinating horror, the Chicago fire: About 934 in the evening our neighboring fire telegraph sent forth some little tintinnabulations, and we lazily wondered, as D. played the piano, and t watered my ivy, what they were , burning up now. At 10 o'clock the fire bells were ringing constantly, and we went to bed regretting that there must be more property burning up on the West side. Eleven o’clock 12 o'clock, ami I wake my sister, saying, “It s very singular; I never heard anything like the fires to-night. It seems &s if the whole West Side must be a-fire. Poor people, I wonder whose carelessness set this a-going!” Oneo’clock—2 o’clock, we get up and look out. “Great God! the fire has crossed the river from the south. Can there be any danger here?” And we looked anxiously out to see men hurrying by, screaming and swearing, and the whole city to the south and west of us in one vivid glare. “Whare are the engines? whv don’t we bear them as usual?” we asked each other, thoroughly puzzled, but even yet hardly personally frightened by the strange aspect of the brilliant and surging streets below. Then came a loud knocking at the back-door on Erie street. “Ladies, ladies, get up! Pack your trunks and prepare to leave your house; it may not be necessary, but it’s well to be prepared!” It was a friend who had fought his way through the Lasalle street tunnel to warn us that the city is on fire. We looked at each other with* white faces. Well we might. In an inner room slept an invalid relative, the object of our ceaseless care and love, the victim of a terrible and recurring mental malady, which had already sapped much of his strength and life, and rendered quiet and absence of excitement the first prescription of his physicians. Must we oalt the invalid? and, if we* did, in the midst of this fearful glare and turmoil, what would be the result? We determined to wait till the last minute, and threw some valuables into a trunk, while we anxiously watched the ever-approaching flame anil tumult. Tnen there came a strange sound in the air, which stilled, or seemed to still, for a moment, the surging crowd. “Was it thunder?” we asked. No, the sky was clear and full of stara, and we shuddered as we felt, but did not say, it was a tremendous explosion of gunpowder. By this time the blazing sparks and bits of burning wood, which we had been fearfully watching, were fast becoming an unremitting fire of burninghail, and another shower of blows on the doors warned us that there was not a moment to be lost. “Call E (the invalid); “and do not let him stay a minute, and I will try and save our poor little birds!” My sister flew to wake un our precious charge, and I ran down stairs repeating to myself to make me remember, “Birds, deeds, silver, jewelry, silk dresses,” as the order in which we would try to save our property, if it came to the

worst.

As I passed through our

how my heart ached. Here the remnant of my father’s library', a copy of a Bible printed in 1637, on one table; on another, my dear Mrs. Browning, in five volumes, the gift of a lost friend. What should I take? What should 1 leave? I alternately loaded myself with gift after gift, and dashed them down in despair. lively pictures and statuettes, left by a kind friend for the embellishment of our little rooms, and which had turned them into a bower of beauty—must they be left? At last I stopped before our darling, & sweet and tender picture of Beatrice Cenci going to execution, which looked down at me through the dismal red glare which was already filling the rooms with a saintly and weird sweetness that seemed to have something wistful in it. I thought, “I will save this, if I die for it;” but my poor parrot called my name and asked fora peanut, aud I could no more have left him than if he had been a baby. But, could I carry that huge cage? No, indeed; so I reluctantly took my poor little canary, who was painfully flutterring about and wondering at the disturbance, and, kissing him. opened the front door and set him free—only to smother, I fear. But it was the best I could do for him if I wished to save my parrot, who had a prior right to be considered one of the family, if sixteen years of incessant chatter may be supposed

to establish such a right.

What a sight our usually pretty, quiet street presented. As far as I could see, a horrible wall—a surging, struggling encroaching wall—like a vast surface of grimacing demons—came pressing up the street; a wall of fire, ever nearer and nearer, steadily advancing upon onr midnight helplessness. Was there no wagon, no carriage, in which we could coax our poor E , and take him away from these maddehing sights. Truck

pretty parlors,

the rei

loaded with goods dashed up the street, and. as I looked, flames burst out from the sides, and it burned to ashes in front of our door. No hope, no help for property; what we could not carry in our hands we must lose. So, forcing my reluctant parrot into the canary bird’s cage, I took the cage under one arm and a bag, hastily prepared, under the other, just as my sister appeared with E—, who, thank God, was calm and sel f- {possessed. At last the good friend who had warned us appeared, and, leaving all his own things, insisted on helping my sister to save ours, and he and she started on, dragging, a Saratoga trunk. They were obliged to abandon it at the second comer, however, and walk on, leaving me to follow with E . “Come E , let us go,” said I. “Go where? I am not going. Where is the use?” he answered, and he stood with hia anus folded as if he were interested merely as a curious spectator. I urged, I begged, I I went on my knees. He would stir, but proposed going back into the bouse. This I prevented by entreaties, and l besought him to fly as others were doing; but no. A kind of apathetic despair had seized him. and he stood like a rock while the flames swept nearer and nearer, and my entreaties, and even my appeals to him to save me. were utterly in vain. Hotter ami hotter grew the pavement, wilder the cries of the ctowd. and my silk and cotton cloth.

cried, I not

-was gene.

half a block away and E

‘ tem poor wor

not utterlv. was my prayer.

Oh

God. pity these poor worms of the dnat, and

crash them i ‘

’K—'•

The dog of the Ardennes accompanies the flock when it leaves the penfold in spring, only to return when the winter’s snow drives the* sheep home again for shelter. Each shepherd possesses one or two of tne»3 dogs, according to th? size of the flock, to act cs sentinel?. Their office is not to run about and bark, and to keep the sheep In order, but to protect them from outside foes. When the herdsman has gathered hia flock in some rich valley, these white, shaggy monsters crouch on the ground, apparently half asleep; but now and then the great sagacious eyes will and passing over the whole of their remain for a while fixed bn the disrizon, as though they followed a train of thought which led them aWay from earth —so sadly do they gaze into the intinite. But let the mountain breeze bear to his evermoving nostril the scent of the hated wolf, or his quick ear detect an unknown noise: then is the time to see one of these dogs in his glory. His eyes become black with fierceness: his hair stands erect: his upper lip becomes wrinkled, showing a range of white, formidable teeth, while a low growl alone escapes from his throat. When his keen faculties hare detected the whereabouts of his foe, he rashes forward with a bound that overleaps all obstacles, and a bark that echoes from all the surrounding hills. Every dog of the like breed that may be near takes up the note and rushes gleaming through the brushwood to join the attack. Tender as the childhood he protects, woe to him who dare lift a hand on one of the little ones with whom he has been bTonght up. It is not he who buys him who is big master; it is he who fed him when a puppy, who petted and shared his pittance with him

—he it is who has his love.

THE INDIANA MUSH! STORE,

!»#. 4 Mmtm MtMe Stock,

A Tarkinh Breakfast. A Turkish breakfast comprises about thirty dishes, Soon after the first dish come* lamb, roasted on the Spit, which must never be wanting at »ny Turkish banquet. Then follow dishes of solid and liquid, sour and sweet, in the order of which H certain kind of recurring change is observed, to keep the appetite alive. The pillau of boiled rice is always the concluding dish. The externals to such a feast as this are these: A great round plate of metal, with a plain edge, of three feet in diameter, is placed on a low frame, and serves as & table, about which five or six people can repose on rags. The left hand must remain invisible; it would be improper to expose it while eating. The right hand is alone permitted to lie active. There are no plates, or knives, or forks. The table i» decked with dishes, deep and shallow, covered and uncovered : these are continually being changed, so that little can be eaten from each. Some remain longer—as roast meat, cold milks, and gherkin, are often returned to. Before you an attendant" slave kneels, with a metal basin in one hand, and a piece of soap on a little saucer in the other. Water is poured by him oyer the hands of the washer from a metal jug; over his arm hangs an elegantly embroideiW napkin, for drying the hands upon, An Australian Romance. Australia is a convenient region of romance, being too distant for close < nvestigation by the skeptical. For example: An English nobleman falls in love with his mother’s pretty maid, a sort of Becky Sharp. She avoids her noble lover and complains that she is “persecuted.” So milord takes a year’s trip in Europe, becomes love sick as well as sea sick crossing the Channel, and writes her an offer of marriage. She doubts, he swears fidelity, and marries her privately. A'daughter is born, the mother dies and the father weds again. Twenty-live years elapse; the girl falls in love with one who has the misfortune to kill his superior and is transuorted. She follows him to Botany Bay. In an “unfortunate afl'air” her lover loses his life, and his disconsolate lady love becomes a hand-maiden in the house of a poor settler. Her father dies childless, a persevering solicitor seeks the daughter so long disowned, and she becomes Lady Elizabeth Morton, with $200,000 a year. Don’t Do It. Resist the temptation of circulating ill rereports; spread them not at all. If you can not speak well of another, at least do not speak ill of him. Never speak ill of another behind his back. Why should you consider his character of less value than your own ? bpeak of others as you would were they present; speak as a friend of him who is absent, and can not speak for. himself.

NMAST DIXIE

Tickets To and From Europe, BT THE INMJLN LINE, Carrying the British and United 8tat» Mails. We are prepared to issue Tickets by this popular and well established lineof Clyde-bmlt Iron Steamships, to and from all the principal points in the United Stales and Europe. Applv to WOOLLEN, WEBB A CO., Banker*. No. SI West Washington St.

Only Reliable Gift Distribution

IN THE COUNTRY!

$60,000 00 In Valuable Gifts!

TO BE DISTRIBUTED IN

Im. D. SINE’S

152 Regular Moatkij

Grift Enterprise, To be drawa Monday, Soy. 27,1871. TWO OBAMD CAPITALS, Of $5,000 Each in Greenbacks.

Two Prizes $1,000 2 Five Prizfs 500 * Ten Prizes 100 2

WHOLE NUMBER 0E CASH GIFTS, 1,000. 1 Hoise and Buggy, with stiver-mounted Harness, worth S600; One fine-toned Rosewood Piano, worth 2500 CTen Family Hewing Machines, worthflOUeacn; Five heavy cased Gold Hunting Watcnes and heavy Gold ' haius, worth $300 each: Five Gold American Hunting Watches, worth $125 each; Ten Ladies’ Gold Hunting Watches, worth $100 eacn; 8n® Gold and Silver Lever Hunting Wavhes (in aliV worth from |20 to $300 each Indies' Gold Leoutinc Chains, Gents’Gold Vest Chain r. .^Over-plated Castors, Solid rtlver and Double-plated t able and Teaspoons, Ivory-handled Dinner Knives. SUver-fdated Dinner Forks, Silver Vest Chains, Photograph Album*, Ladies’ Gold Breastpins and Ear-rings.Genta’ Gold Bresstpia*, Shirt Studs and Sleeve Burtons, Finder-rings. Gold Pena (silver extension.) etc. Whole number Gifts, 6,000. Tickets limited to 00,000. Agents wantrd to sell tickets, to whom Literal Premiums will be patd. Single Tickets $1; Blx Tickets, $6; Twelve Tickets, $10;^ Twenty five Ticket nrculars con tain lag a full list of prizes a description of the manner of drawfnsr, and other information in reference to the Distribution, will be sent to any one ordering them. Ail letters must be addrered to A. D. ftI«K, Be* M t to dAw Office, m West Fifth 8L. Cincinnati O

GREENBACKS!

WILLIAM A. BRADSHAW, Proprietor. a gam. which we will sell vxsv O*. •ct-Old Pianos taken is exchange for new. Pi* bos for rent , , .. ... WAll order* for repairing and inning left with

L“ c “ General

WEBB,

Commission Merchai.'ts

QST DEB, A

Stock, Boad, Bote and Beal Batata Brek«f

1$ NORTH MERIDIAN 8T. W« hava, at iH time* money mortgage to Number 1 pame*. FOB SALE—House* and vacan

For the S*le and Purchase of flour: gf.ain. pork, lard. Seeds, and General Produce. Wholesale Dealers in euaar-cur d Hams Butter, Egy*, Poultry, and Fiuits of all kinds.

No. 43 S Felewarft St..

IVDll.MPOLlS,

Similia Similibus Curanter.

MU WPHRBnr’SI

Homeopathic Specifics Have proved, from the moat ample experience, an #niire success: Simple—Prompt—Efficient and ReThey are the only Medicines perfectly adapt to popular use—so simple that mistakes can not made in urine them; so harmless ss to be free ..cm danger, and so efficient as to be always reliable- They have raised the highest commendation from all. and will always rtnaer satisfaction.

“t

Dy»f iflerv, Gripiug, oilious Lolie... 25 Cholfra'Jhirbus, vomiting. -25

toughs. Colds, Bronchitis....

i

»IM*, a, Bilims stomjc.v-.. •»

Supuresstfi, or Paimul Pfflrrfris.

from all, and will always

Noe Cents. i e T* 5SS.^M«°SSS&::r:-S

3, 4, 5, 6, 7, A

10. a u, & I IS. 19. 20, 21, i ft 25, 26, 2?,

29, W, 31, 32, 33, 5),

.25 .25

,vi.

*Bhc»«aur«.Rlieum5ic Pains * Fever and Agse, Chill Fever, Agues FHe*. blind or bleeding — SC Optoa'amy. and soie or weak JHyes 50 Catarrh, acute or chionic Influenza oO Whoeping-Coagh, violent coughs '0 A ultima, oppressed breathing... 50 Kar Discharges, impaired hearing 50 Scrofula, enlarged glands, Swellings 50 «f»erai Debility, physical weakne«-...50 1»reasy and scanty Secretions 50 Sed'SItftnewb sickness from riding— 50 kidse)-msea-f/ Gravel....... ■&> Nervass RebllltD hmlsal Emissions, der, verv necessary in serious cases~5 00 Sore Mouth, Cankar. 50 Frinary Wrakses*, wetting bed.„,,.......50 Painful Periods, with Spasms Sufferings at change of life....... I Epl epsj. Spasms. St Vitos Dance.....1 cw iiiptbfrtn, nicerated sore throat 50

FAMILY CASES.

Of 35 to 60 large rials, Morocco or rosewood case, containing a specific for every o dinary disease a family is subject to. and books of directions from $10 to $So Smaller Family and Traveling Cases, with 20 to 28 vials - .........from $5 to $3 Specifies for all Private Lit cases, both for Curing and Preventive treatment, in vials and pocket coses - $2 to 50

FOND’S EXTRACT.

Cures Bums, Bruises, Lameness, Soreness. Sore Throat, Sprains, Toothache, Earache, Neuralgia. Rheumatism, Lumbago, Piles, Bolls. Stings, Sore Eyes, Bleeding of the Lungs. Nose, Stomach, or of piles; Corns, Ulcers, Old Sores, Price, 6 oz., 50 ets.;

Pints, $1 fO; Quarts. $1 75. x

These Remedies, except Pond s Extract, by the case or single box, are sent to. any pan of the country, by mail or expre s, free of charge, on re-

ceipt of the price. Address

Humphrey’s N perl He Homeepathfe

Medicine Co.

Office and Depot, No. 562, Broadway, New York. For Sale at Wholesale by Browning A Sloan; at retail by Wm. C. Cox. Chas. Sage, J.B Reynolds, Haskett & Morris and Charles Dennis.

vacant tots im all psr

of the city. .

FOR SALE—Two fine lott^on^Sroadway at• **FGR*$ALE—Four lota on North Delawars stosat ^RYENGTON^lSt^Two 1 acrea^rery cheap, oa 1 °??ne I cotta*e on North Mlndsalpni; 7 .-earns summer kitchen; gas all through the ho ne; werta ^^OR SALEWA fine^oottaga in northeast part o( the city on Plum street: house IK story frama,* rooms, cellar, well, cistern, stable, abundance ot Suit; lot 49 east front by 140 south treat $5,000. ^oETnaLK OR TRADE—A two-story framehauae 03 North East atreet; 8 rooms, gaa, orilar, w«u wood iffied, everything complete. Price HteO.

TRAD

A stock to toSh®- ( *iatoia A haSdi^T totofnorth of Washington street tor a

A nanason

weH improved, to ^ propen7, , 4 'OR BAER. ~ ^ yt street. $3,600 to $4,000eesfe. 'frtreet f4,000. 006 C0tUfc!J6 OH 5h. v/Ul. •-a#* Nnrth TnniiMBMhA * *1^ A new house of S.rooms * r,orui

Several hundred lots in different parts of the olty

to sell on long time at low prices. w

D, 8- McKERNAN, 39% W.

John UAcrrsn. Notary Public.

ASTER * WRIOHT,

pABTE JEX.SLA.Lt

KST-ATE

HO. 14 NORTH DELAWARE EJOUHR

(Lengsdale’s Block.)

‘ <XTUSI JLtiat CfeMtcoa XtahUjr; NO. 386. FOR EXCHANGE—A large vacant M on North Tennessee street very desirable, to ere-

change for improved property worth about 94,000.'. The north or northwest part of the city preferred.. WAbHINUTON STREET—Busineae houses east between Alabama aud New Jersey streets, and west, between Mississippi and Missouri streets, at rates. Shat will make good permanent interest-paying investments. The attention of capitalist* is invite*

as good bargains can be had.

EAST 8T. CLAIR STREET—A new frame cottage cf 7 rooms, cellar, well and cistern, good barn, etc. „ all tii good trim, at $2,800—one-fourth dowa, baftance tobr years. We think it is cheap. ON ]/>NG TIME- A good two-story frame housa of 8 rooms, cellar, well, cistern and wood house^Mt

^OTICE TO CITIZENS. Office City Clark, V Inpiawapour, September 30,1871. j Notice Is hereby given, that any citizen or citizens, who are deslroas of having private fire alarm boxes nt their residenoes or places of business, can hare the same, at their own expense, by making early application to the Chief Firs Engineer, in C B‘y orde^of the Common Connell, ' JOHN R. CLINTON, City Clerk.

Ail advertisements under the head oi Warnts, For hale. For Bent, ete., will he inserted at the rate ot Five Cents per line, eaeh Insertion, payable In advance In every case.

IVBRYBODY CAN

i daily paper now, ■ [ Neva ia calc taa —uts a

AFFORD TO.

O TAKE A

daily paper now, when the price of The Bvoo-

« fc jg E E LI H E.”

CLEVELAND, COLUMBUS, CffNCINNAT

AND INDIANAPOLIS RAILWAY,

ett wjly on- oHjnorrx^iirja. On and after MONDAY. May 15,1871. Pfewenger

re INDIANAPOLIS and arrive at

Trains will leave

points named below as follows:

No. 4.

10:56 am 1:05 p m 4 :30 p m *2:18 pm 4:30 p m 4:20p m *6:30 pm 9:45 pm 4:10 a m lOrltKa m «7:iSCam 4:10 pm 5:50 a m 6:30 pm

FOR KXCHaNGEfrom city on a g-ood pike, with good house of tf rooms, well, ciste,*u and cellar, barn, and all kindst of staple and small fruits, etc. Price $6,000 on long time, or would take »'n exchange some property in south part of city. NO. 364. FIN’S FARM ttf 200 acres ta Marion county—one of the best in the county—all under fence; 120 acres cleared, balsnoe In good timber; good springs, plenty of stock water; house of six rooms.celler, well; large barn; good orchard ha bearing. Only $60 per acre on the usual terms. ROOMS ON THE GROUND FLOOR.—We hava taken a lease of the rooms at No. 14 Norik Delaware street in Langsdale’s Block, where wo will b3 found in future, glad to see all our former patrons and cuttomcrs and ready to give bargains iu Real ^"staUL . . . . . NO. 861. FOi? EXCHANGE—A gooU brick btnft> nees house on BV«t Washington sheet, worth $6,000, In exchange for a residence property In an* good location in tbo city. FOR Ti 1 ADR—A good frame cottage of 5 rooms,, cellar, weir, cistern, ttc., in the north part of the< city, worth $3,000, for a farm of about the saxaa value; cither in Marion, Morgan, or Hendxtoka “foiT ^XCHANGE-We .have a new frante cottage of 4 rooms, cellar, well, etc... in the norti isast part of the city, to exchange for property in tb* south part of the eWy, and per cash difference if any. lv.ee, 41,am- CABKSR * wiacara.

A No. 1 farm of 80 acres, six miles west of ths* city. * Price $75 per acre; dty property taken la part payment

Thirtv acres within 1% miles of ihe city; location none better; improvements are choice in everyway. I’rioe $14,COO. A great many building lots on the Madison load and South Meridian street, on payments to suit— in 1, 2, 3 and 4 years if desired. These lots will all b e sold in a ver» short time as their situation la convenient to manufactories; only two squares from* Dean A Brother’s foundry and the new lecsttion c'f the Western Furniture factory. A On e ‘-k cottage of three rooms and summer ^Anew frame house of three rooms, etc., on almost renting payments. Price lUOo. No. WAi East Washington street. Next to the New York Store.

jyjrOZART Ha LL B1LXJLARP BOOM. ot ron,8T sJS? ^ aS 0KAllLB 1

WXDD BtTKKKIO. ..-fooprfoto*:

rAKES E. HIMBAUU,

Attorney at Law and Notary Pdblh.

S5Ss^S2S2a.lS5?!U-F. — W. H. Knelisb ^

J^EEBY PAUL. Manufacturer and Dea.'* r 1x1 boots ^isriD s^TOibb: Ooraer Pennsylvania St and Madison AC** INDIANAPOLIS. END.

STATION'S.

Indianapolis...' Muncie Fort Wayne.... Union

BeS^main^^Z

Chestline Cleveland....a. Buffalo...™.,. Niagara Falls Rochester Albany

••••••***»«•••*•.«

* • • * • **•*»* rite

No. 6, *7:4Spm 10:12 p m 1:45 am 11:25 p m 1:45am 1:45 a m 4:20 am *7:30 am 2:00 p m 4:30 p m 5:20 pm 1:30am 11:00 a m 6:40 a m

Indianapolis.... Toledo Detroit™ Crestline... Pittsburgh

». 10:55a m ~ 3:32 p m

5:40 am

.. 9:10 am — *6:30pm — 1:25 a m ... *11:25 am

3:06 p m

— 5:00 pm .. 8:05 pm

6:00 pm

*7:45 p m 12:52 am

4:20 am 12:10 pm

10:35 pm,

2:30am 6:50 a^n 3:00 am 6:40a xn

Washington Philadelphia..... New York..

PALACE DAY AND SLEEPING DATta ..J tPr !., TH £ orGH A8 follows: and from Crestline to Pittsburgh, Harrisburg, Phila-

CrettUo,

changef d ’ Bu ® il0 ’ Alban y and New York, without

“ Ka ®” nms through as usual,

eltoeiSby way of Cleveland or Pittsbi’bgh, reach-

except

leaves Union

D ™;?»VA 0 ““ MODAmj ' tor Tickets ow Uu “BBSUNI,"fto

8. FLINT, Gen’l Sup’t, Cleveland.

Indianapolis. ^

^CfcvKnd.

jg * L L. HEDGE*, (E Hedges late of the firm of TTssrm ftlTsfl—ij TTJSriDIEIE&TJLIK: SIRS 16 W. Maryland St, 2d door west of TIHmda A'full supply of Undertaking Materials always on hand, and are prepared to attend orders day el night A18 OMD OREIK, 44 WEST WASHINGTON STREET. The Larder supplied with the choicest dellosotoff of the season. The best of Wines, Liquors snd Cigars dispensed at the bar. The cuisine and other arrangements of the establishment are the most oo»--£—'--a»wast SIMON McCARTY, Proprietor.

wefortrit right to trothfuim*. 4^Many worn-

Titf IH EVl.

I

if lib'll r '***> otta* MS otter, fko ^ e««r WM*. So superior r " t " *«** THORPSO; £ STKELK A PRICE NT® CO.. Outage aad ft. Loafe