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The Indianapolis News from Indianapolis, Indiana • Page 2

Location:
Indianapolis, Indiana
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2
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

THE INDIANAPOLIS NEWS AX JNDEPENPESr KEW9PAPER, M-BJIf rVKMY AfTLMOOM XiCWT SVSDkY i i JOIIJC O. UOLL1DAV Tint News Uviijtyi. Ko. W. WaJmxcJo St.

Entered at the' postnflioe at Indianapolis, lud-, as focAnd-eunai RsrvM fcy carriers la Indlenspolis and snr. roundine Iotm at tea ccuu per week; single eoplfa, two MDH ty mall, postage prepaid, fifty eenU per month, i or per year, payable la advance. Kroall adiYttseiDm(A one erm a word foreTch 1 Insert 100; nothing Wa than tea words tun i-i. Insplay advertltementa vary In price, actus '1 to ibe tlma and position. No advertkasmeuts lu-) aertetl aa editorial maltar.

StKClnaen aura bars wnt tree on application. Postage on sluyie copies of turn News, la wrap-' peia, oue cent I Correspond nencsatalDinr newsof lnte'est and Importance Ji de-lred from all of the slate, end will ba paid for if tiawl Mo attention will ba paid, to anonymous cora-- unsiion. Tun itaws bu alargereverarad'aHy clreulktlou than any tiro dally newspapers jiubdidiel in Indiana oomblnedj. 1 twraona dealrinc Thb Pailt NawS served at Ihair bxir can xeun If by poul card I or order ibfougn telephone 161. Where do-j llrerr Imnjlar, please inaka immediate com- plaint lo thaoflBW.

1 turn data printed tba wrappers of each paper 'denotes Um Unit when tha awbsertpiwn expires, Kemittanrct.dmUji, cbe ktaud postofUoe orders Should bo made parable to th order of JOHN H. HOUJDAi CO.Z I TU.tmoi calls. Editorial room Business -1C1 MONDAY, MAY 17. 1S. I4TH Enqutrer-rtun, of Columbus, on of tha nat progressive papers of the aooth, baa recently been greatly improved by a change oil form, and now adds to it a aew dress, making it very haodsoma typographically.

1 OCR. export of breadstufla continue to fall off. Last mouth tbey amounted to $11,950,833, aiiia April of 1885 they were $14,051,554. tn JnnrT lhe decrease hasbiwa' nearly (14,000,000, and in tba last tea moVtlie over $10.000,000. fm.ll Mr.

Cleveland ever wed a second tlra be would seek a honielowl orptmu hii bad elation tnitridetba mi rlnco. trustor tbe Kravo (I'liilMdiilpbla Timca, Rather be not seek a society whera publlo opinion does not tolerate tba impertinent inTaion'of prirfto life, which isrul-gsrUlu? all life) in this country and fast killing tha traeral kdw of reipcct for indi Tldnal rlghly- irkortB wbb ara capable of. JuJkIuc, who aaft attended tntuical festivali at Ciocinnutl who are ogaizant of tha preparatory work for oar uasL-al the performance here next month will-be soperlor. to many that have been given at Cincinnati doubt, our musical festival, "will "a rrand to tbounands an oppr-1 tunity to heat such harmonies as baa n-'Ter beca theirs brore. mVm mi 11, y.xLi THK OrangiB frrand lodJa of Tfew York, aaye a London diTpatclt, ent a rable dispatch to Mr.

Johnson, il. offerina to assist the inhabitants of As this Offer la to aid Jin prenosed rrollUn aijalnst the Britbth pjovera'tA, at, we would like to bear aome of. the and indignation about that ia time? A have been expended at profiera of" merfcan askistanra of Ireland lrd'm Fen Lai ra to the contributions of sernvtol girl. I.ITV. always bi the fcpnnfttme In theeontitTr: mi do not know wlfa leal-lurm means unltnwvitu have M-ea the budx'buntt and tha youue leaves -Wvuthlna low hi he arid wondcrlug at the flrst idpw rain.

rtuskiu, That ia all rery aioe, but what ia tha average man to do -who hasn't time to even "breathe lw in the sunshine' and wonder at the first toWer of rain" lilmseif, let alone loafing ba the ooontry to see the young leaves do it? A universal picnic from to ia "prirl would be very nioe no doubt; but like good maay other panaceas it (s only avsV'eble te those who don't need them most, itrik anolUrr anggestlon, Bre'r Ruskin fTHENeirfjiaa the people's paper con-; i'auea to be jlhe most favored medium of eommnhlcutipn between buyers and sellers. ilAtnrtlay'a contained four hundred ninety-eight separate advertisements, a I umber eeldom inrpnssed by it and never 1 equalled by aay other paper in the1 state, They were ofjell kinds, reaching Into every branch of baxines, social and family life lo Indiana. jWith a circulation averaging it ia aaie to say The News ia read daily by froi 75,000 100,000 It distribute osier 5,000 copies in oyer 200 towns and villages of the state, which does not Include jnany copies sent by mail. Its circulation outside of Indianapolis is probably as large as the entire issue of any other state, daily, It American! workmen would poetess the good pinion ot the American people, let them shun the red. Use a tber would shun the Uuvd Ul--earnate.

(Ch lcao TUnes. Bill! Have you seen any American workmen who do iot shun the red Hag? Tbe only plaee that high-colored emblem has been, hoisted waa right under our eontemporary'a nose, so to speaa, ana ii lounu any American workraea beneath its folds they failed to report the fact. Aside, from the professional agitators, eveftr one known to be In anywise Mniite1l wi4h 1 a nul fliw waa' a foreigner, anij of these it ia altogether likely that the greater part were, brought here to take the place of American workmen. In tbe whole course of their existence Ameri-emn workmen have not indulged ia a tithe ot tbe redflagisin that, the Chicago Times ha AVhew visitors come to oar mttsical festi-: al next month, as! va -aJl hope and expect-they will, we can show them not only a new publlo hall, a noble state house building, a Ine court boase, the Morton monument and ether evidences ofj civilization, but in our broad and beautiful streets we can proudly point to graaa-eovered parka on each aide, whereon tbe gentle kine wander and grass from mora till night eo load are we of ay Iran soeneal To be sure the lowing herd, thus slowly winding o'er the lea, puts the eidswalka la ibe mucky and mellifluous condition of a barn-yard, and ia a source of vexation aod inconvenience and poaaibla dancer, particularly to women and children; but then we do eo lore the smell ot a cow that we eaa't dispense with tbe animal! Isn't It that that animal on the elate seal which la atUmpting to gore ther eetting sun, and which baa been "popularly supposed be a baffalo, ia a cow placed there to expresa the taste of tbe stale's capital city? TBI proposed city ordinaaoe limiting and licensing street peddlers and hawkers is good. The dealers ought to pay a proper price for their privllegea, and they ought to be restrained in their noise- making abilities but, unpleasant as- the erica of tbe street-Lawkera are, they are passiug.

Tliose leather-longed gentry do not atop on a street and bowl log aa hour at a time. At I asost their deiuoniacdivtlitraliuis split the air only a uiorneitt or before tbey die asr into nolhinjrnenS las the bowling hawker moves n. Xor yet do these noUe-makers ply tlc'r at noseemly hours. All those tiling tb honday mroinir newsboys do. Tliey not pa- up the street as the jiedJIers nor yet do they wait until lata'ia the day.

Tney are abroad aa early as flsmlct'a gliUt, ere yet "the mora in rust msotle walks o'er tba deer of yon hljb eastern bill" bark of the deaf and rfutub institute. Theydo congregate thus early on variou' street corners in the residence jparts of ttt city, where tlie tired workers of the weetj i re endeavoring to fulfill the customs of the early church and make a day of rest ont oti(Jay; and then and there tttey swap enrice iu "Marquis! of Queenibury" exercises and all the liftie bawl autl bawl and shriek and bowl to the capacity of sound lunc; the naiues of tbe var'lpuij Sunday morninic newspapers and tbeprice (hereof. The waking a msni up to tell Kirn such "old cjlur it-nuts as tbat!" jit is to bopedthisordiaance will be poI prompt! anil' the police dihecied 1'oenfprO it exuodly, with particular care aa to the Sunday moHuing naniacs. It has bern siiKscstcd riier for the prs anlMnprii tbat tlie aa) of lyiimit. rxceftt lot iHMrful purptjsesta rll rcpuiabk- imumi)i, khotild i T-tio trouble sLotit bln and l-eplnc dynamite lor jurfunual purism- ts tttHt'jltl (iilt)t'iilt jU" i-cium.

Any ibtlntr In the s-bnoeuis of practical t-huTuiftTy can- uiake it. ft eay ax to brew a bol of a.iitr lea. It liicato There is so trouble about that. The "dabsters" wpo make djjnaraiU lor fuu are few and far, between. Tli; preparation is attended with too much danger for any one not desperately! in earnest toijuodertake it.

let the authorlzisl manufctttref of the stuff be guarded ss cnnplctcly izel manufcturrr of a is the auibor- alcoliolic spirits, one could be as Ibe" suppression of tlip easily and irrly aeemplirhed by tta fa revenue service as that of tlie other, Tlxn it would be eawly traeedito all iauir poa-sesKiou. The great pinf in such julsiioo would be tbaf any m-A-Mt in bis possession, oilier than thri aujforixed, would be prima facia tuilly, just Jjhls the potfction of dies and plates for counterfeiting money makes, the-ir osHeer. I'fh use'need not, be waited for. The would con- stitute the cfime. a iicb a coii'iiuon 01 ai- fair would Jvfsva intu-h greater Uetcrreot VlVwTot tlinii our Cintciujiorury sccdis to iiuaiyf.

I Kvery putehase of dyaainite from a jTealer 'Wuiild bo Skuowi, and' where ita i1cit uifinufacture Is coutempluird the pen.ylitttniiheil to tbat let iisclf would bave'J elect of (iutlniiig it tulin-ly to dcniirrate 'utj, wlula tlie trsitt lis mere K)ses4 svt-a without ue would subject thrin to punishment would give Ibe law vastaJvnn-I To our botiou no JI iine should be lost ehber by the national or state legislatures iu thus restricting tbe presence of agent for evil. (I One of the worst biill pvtuling in congress is that! which extends iudeliuitely tbe period td bonding whiilLy and exempting it from taxation, while boo led, thu enabling the distiller comfortiitiiy slow away his product ai (he expensetof everybody who nitiiti puv just so much mure taxes be cause bis a liiiky piii's none. W'liisUy makers hive no more for their liianufacture They bavl (ess, for thei more mimtliievoiM of tl claim to exemption hail cigar makers, pr xluct is much the two aud instead of it should be- enjoying additional pri loaded with ad litiuu.l restrainti. ltuit it seems to be a fact, ao turf levonJ the explanation of any moral plsilosojiby we encountered, that the worae a muu's business, the lcs it it nuee lij, and the more ex pense and trouble it makes lor others, the surer it is to thrust it- If forward for more tliuu its. belter beihbors.

Toe retailer of liquor cosls the community five times as- much as his taxes, hen he pays taxeH, but be wants the privilege of selling free and eL-apin. all contribution to the payment of his own expenses. All tbe way through, froia the grain to the gutter, liquor ia-rrrriHy, troub c6me, mischievous, criminal, and yet all tb Itima it ji clamorous for privilege that noi other 1 buiiuess is allowed that is, it wutits exemption from burden Unit tbe rest the euiumuoitT bus little legal admoui-i reduced "bonded to bear for jts sake, A tiun in the shape of ieriod" for the munufud turer, and a Uigber license for tbe retailer, would do both li lines a'tU of linuor dealing -a service. Ifit didu would do everybody cUi a service, in equal lzing the tiurdens oi, butter products and the iKjiior with those of Itratlic in them. TtTR all-utilizing, allUbnorbiag American has began jlo spin thread, as closn'y and stron-; as silk, from tlje fiber of the 'finilk one if the few wtild products 'of fence corners andjopen grotiniii all over the.

country that ia never pretty tn stalk, leaf of pod, until the ojicns and the silk appears. That purt S'olhing in iiatiiro is prettier. lut nobody tll now bus been able to make anything of thb silk, though probably nobody, ever saw it. that didn't think it would tnak'e a vegetable silk in no point inferior to its vermlculai model. Tbe jeport of the Inyeiition says the thread has the consistency and tenacity of imported flax or linen thread, and can be produced at much less cost, fiber is long, easily corded, and may be readily' adapted to spinning upon tbe ordinary flax spinner.

Ill has the smoothness and luster of silk, rendering it vjtlnalde fo sewing machine use. The weed is eommou throughout the country, but grow profusely at "the south. Its-cultivation tosts nothing, and the gathering ousts no more! than cotton." "If rlie can be made prac- picking aqd spinning ticable at such dost at ill allow the thread or the cloth to outer the market iu reasonable competition with other fillers and their fabrics, it is noi unreasonable to guess that some of thcie days the tdng-despised outcast of tbe common and oj' the tbclter of old tums fences, may bej taken into the fields, cultivated into ajrival of king "cotton, aud made the source (of a big trade with foreign countries, are as likely as not to prefer vegetable to Vermicular silk, The cotton plant was as little thought of once iu the milk his always been, aij I the day of the exaltation pt the latter knay, be near, even to the upbuilding of our! national commerce, and the restoration of our merchant marine. Who shall say? Carvwbeefs and rails of paper may be accompanied ia tbeir spread round the iworld by silk of the milk weed and lumber of the -1 i The Progress of bo r. A nnadrtd years there came a eata-clyttu of atrial and potiiical force thai broke np tba which hafhirdcued over Christendom in ibe feudal ajes, and the times tbat modified Without rtmof ing their influences, and the World of civilization settled into a new condiaun, in which the rights of the peoaU war allowed soine webtht agaluat the tigin of their former masters.

The germs of popular government, advancing to. full growth in this country, showed green and hopeful in Europe The Irlh had obtained a concession of "home rate," which, without any adequate recognition kif popular rights, w.is yet a long step ahead if the servile on-d it ion in which tbey bad been held. Tbsj French soSn followed by repeating the leoa of the English to kTiigs, whiclt aa Theodore Parker jsaid, "firt eulighteaed these royal gentlemen as. to trie furt that they had Joints in theirjjnecks like other j)ole." When the tur.bulleDce of the great convulsion was over there as a well seltled idea in all christian lands knd nations, how-ever suppressed by accidental and individual resistance, that tlie people were meihing wore than the burir-d fonsatiuns on which the grand structure of and aris-tVcracy exhibited jtNelf. gripp ed dis.

torted aa it sit, 'on the 'jither 'le of the Atlantic, its yigo -and vitality here eo impelled the rf-cogiiition of Isnard declar-Isration to the French convention, "ICir.gs rule for the -people, and by peopl-." That was the elfttct of the storm and SooJ a century agn. A steady advaaee in the liue it marked haa carried on the power ot the eopIe to a poilit where it comes In eoi-l i. v. aide than tlie feiidil trn'lilioiii and prrludi that went down in'jtbe French and revolutions The jMiliticul rigbta and pw of the have been Grr.iV ev" here, and little leti firm1 a -ilaro-pean monarchies. Eat usavr ua ter' i-tjion has lain a which held labor iltc proerty of thote who hir-d! which the laborer could on'J-t tbj' peril of Idleness ant' dyftitjjtion.

lie wr coneeded bin Ciusl at Iravt irrtiiin antry, to a voIcJm. select in i the adniiaislrators of the lAreud publie pfjicy, aud in sumo measure fmma I Inu'-il ini tl i lint lil-r. and there ho was Conceded no right to a voice in fixing the Compensation of bis labor, and no right but that ff refuaihg it mid fiarviu. Against this ne form Ol oppression as against the old out, there have been for years ovceiional ontbriiiks of resUUm-e, of action, of oflen hoKtilily, olieu hnwitie mid futile, sometimes prudent and success-ful, us were the occasional preliminary revolts against feudalism aud its iuheritance by succeeding genernions. Now the seconi calaclrsm seems to be on the way and close nt hand, iu which labor to cuuijiel a requi-lliou of its riglits against its masters, as popular rights have done against the peoje's masters.

Whatever amelioration has jcome here and there and; 1 now and then Iu the relation of lulor to em-: pluyment, there isjno question that, until a very recent periojl, the employer too often gave little heed jto the4 rights or wrongs of the men he paid tn work for him." ''Ifjrou're nut satisfied yuu cku quit," and starve or go to the poor bouse were the open aud out spoken alternatives. The laborer bad no rcu'edy, unless be could be joiued his fellows, eijujl-rauke a "strike." As by. etiotiL-I of ly i oppressed, to we lit. ve somel. files au amelioration 'of this condition bas jeouie by wcJl-titued ami wcll-uiuuaeJ aud kometiuics tins; couie by ihe prudeucti or good feeling of.

em-; plovers, atrtiug on a principle of humstuily or the priucqile ibat a borne good condition: wiil do more work; than a worae ope. Hut still' there bus been no general uud final recognition of the Wiirkiuginen to au equal power in Ueferiniiiing bow they shall work and bat tbsy snull get. That rccog. nitiou is going to bo settled now or twin, aa riglits in tlie direction of government were settled in the; hut century. -1IUIJ1 l-l I Ilolmau'a Iitipeoveiii'ont on Scripture.

Cincl)inati Kixiulrer. "If 'thine enemy hunger, feed blm; if be: thirst, give bim drink," and tor a conclusion lo the orthodox sentiment W. llolinun, of Indiana, would add, if he wants an oltice'. get it lor bim uud be quick about it, parlleu-j luriy iljie has shown any strength in a can-! vuss for congress in the Lawrroceburg tli- tnct. Now- that Mr.

lloltuau has estab--lishrtl a precedent in securing his old k-litical Dr. L. Woollen, an oilioe, he is liable to have his hands There ure several other eueinies iu li con- gressiouul district Would like to baVe tneir top braius warmed una a tuw-coaI of tire. Tbey are hungry and tbcirtfejriit has lastedUhrough more than aquurlcrCT a ecu- tury.lj. Their apolitical euniiiy jgj not ctiun-terteiti That it may nut be man i lent fall, Mr.

Hoi man treat iheui as be has treated Dr. Woollen? i Ue-idrlcks and Itynuiu Were lUrceunebl Je'Jersoulau. We happen to know ibat whatever differ ence might have existed at any time between Mr. Hendricks and Mr. llvuuiu was tullv and satislactorily settled before1 the death oil the' former, and tbnl ut that time they were! lriciiuly toward each, other.

Our informal ton on this matter ia not tecond-baud by any means, and we believe mat ir the two. prin cipals; were atiuel with their relations uo other purties have any right to complain, Souielh lug Ailing tb AVhaat. Kvuvllla Journal. An olwerviug farmer Iroin the northern: part of this county, wbo does not want to get up any scare, reports tbe growing heat looking yellow in sont places- and appart rowlh. It is growing entlr checked in its too rank, aud in vital, equal to its bight niid does not seem to bii thickness of stalk, i AuarcliUU wt IelubL 3- lTlniPs.1 Delphi has a few die men men whoe highest ambition is to get through lite witM Outwork; men who wjii lounge aliout towti and evade a job pf work while their 'wives are at home wearing themselves but washing to earn a dollar witlt which to provide the necessities of 'lifej i 'One ICalentnaiL Cunietnporary.

I democrat. His little pee-wce I no doubt, is flop, ping around in bis ocoanut skullwiih as much aimless space in which to play as a iad-ole would have in tbe Pacific ocean, i favoring tlia I)ratlo Treatment. OraphlcJ Hemp and thei Catling gun administered wiili great proinptncka and vigor are thtf pnqer remedies in this country for socialising nihilism and dynamism. i A Fleswil Coiilntnporary. Marion Chronicle, i It crises pleasure to note that The Indianapolis News uow refers lo the late rebellion with considerable animation.

i Virginia's Army Tbe Virginia orgs ni red militia contains thirty-four white companies, nineteen cob bred companies, three batteriea of artillery and three troops 'of cavalry, (iraat Moral Truth. Hblbvllla Tlmea' No man can be successful in this world who thinks every man a fool, save himself. It Gives Him All a Chases. (Terre Haute Express. I The weather prophets say.

with truth, told you ao." The Way It Goes Here. It is said that With few exceptions the capv Itaiistaor LAUroaae were working men twenty Iars ago. l- I. -1JJ 11 IJ -IM ALL other rrmeilies failing, says Mr. Wm.

V. Webb, New York ity, I found iusuut relief from a xrveru tohl by tlie use of Ked btar (Jougb Curtt and can rvcoinmeb it as the best of do mn: Prlrw. let ranta. Tin? INDIAN ArQLIS NEWS, MONDAY, MAT 17; lS3a Kivera and larbra, I tickla rou, yotl tU kle me: Vou rote tor my eiaihi. i for JfoUrt, am tnui ouir mumiu sinity I'laoe at tlte teat iosnrcs.f No politics st sll in lh! N.i.

not a Miigie h1iiic And yet no u-sriul ttat wo miss. liul grab the boil" excewding quick. A firer yoin. a harbor mine. Wt luniD I he in in a lmir it.

And play a tiamo so neat and line 1 pi. ay? the (eopi whom we rob. There's million In It. as roil see, tt 11 no one mates a tliy iiw; i A you. a inci-, I.jr uie.

And all at no exouuso to ua. 1 i filled tiiuv we do uH rare! To count the general oo-tto allg bu knvcuii in iro And Ikmj.u bis onou. gilt of (lib Ko tiort or foutb or eant or wt-st. No jrty Jliie dlvj.l.- ua now, liul every ijiriot dovi lm bent io uiis and a rain the Surplus dow, There's much that ies undune. tlo doubt, somethiuu KOixl may dti still; But wears aura to not lruT- out i TUo iobbius nver un tfurbor bBl i-Vew Yoi VjtW crt Awfully rf" Con vent croib has a surfc.

Mount i to ktd to Wash- ington by ri r. i i jlor ji population of Key I7 akiag. I t)iw is preparidg to btiug if prohibition. i "i i ippolvinpiad ia the. name of a ten w-rcus in Carolina.

1 Murat llalstead has a son in each of theT four classes in Princeton "Duet death end all?" Abu! ho; th iie re ua tbe mouuuieut subscription fuml, More than six thousand apjilications for liquor licenses are on tile in tbe Philadelphia courts. The general assembly of the southern I'resbylcriao church will convene at Augusta, hursday. Tbe new Catliolic 'cathedral, will cot Ibe jcoruersioue will be laid July Nt is tbougtit Ir. Huntinglon, of Xew York, will be eio-ted to succeed liishop 1U1-erUou, of issouri. 1 A rattlesnake killed five cavalry horses in the United Mate stables at l'Wt oite-day recently.

pi J. Emmet, the actorj, is now bis own manager. They: take many a driuk Philadelphia Call. ji Itislu.p Taylor, ol the I M. E.jchiircb, baa eueirated over lour hundred mile into Angola, Africa, willi forty niissiouuries.

MisPolsom, the presideiit's li.uieee, isonn of the American ladies who will presented to Q'leen Victoria al the next drwiug-rooiu. Tue uew Jewish theological iieminnry in New York will lie 0iem-d in-1 he; fall' lib an eminent European Ileorew scholar at its bead. The Savannah News says that the, real reason why southern men wear tbeir hair long i to keep tlbj tuu from, tuuuing tbeir necks. The plenisphone, an instrument that unites the tones ot the violin, viola, Jcellb aud double buss is a receut tuveutiou of a DuUalo mukiciuu. All the Uoer and their re la-lives, descendants of the llogc-r Williams of long ago, will hold a reuuiou id ProviUeiicu oujihe Tl' of Juue.

econling to Dr. Mary Walker, there are limes as many women iu tlie world wbo wear troupers as there are men and woujeu Ut-geilier in the United States uud It was a chartuiug little linly who the other day said lo an Italian veuder uf Statuettes, who ollered an e'lhgy ot the Veiiiu olf Milo: "How is it mat Milo makes all bn Veumes wi.lioul The watch-making trade bas gone tftpirce so the Eolidifrf Times retor VVolch makers wbo loruierlv elirned good waits have now turned 'to other employ- I I mcuis, ur are appiyiot; lor rcnei V.lnie a southern military company was iu eatuj) receutly uear August one of tiici privatsit matiennore Iban his expeiiMcti by opening a bai-ler iiiop, wbre h) advertised "a Suave aud a' hard-boiled ecg lor. tun ccife." j. '11 fWarrt Fuller's old holne, and school bottle as well, in C'tnnbridge, is lo be pulWl down, ahd it is even more lumiius aa ihy.Milllin occupicifi by Mill! in in 1770, iwhen the American army waa eucumped at Cambridge, i The learned Dr. Fisch, of Vienna, Iras computed thai there are tweive million" oTd.

gs In Europe, being one dog to sixteen men, and very proiterly observes thut there can ho no iKissible use lor such an euoruious numlier oi me cuiiiue race. io woouer jinai nyaro- phobia i becoming an everyday disease. Mav is the mouth that was sscred to Apollo. Apollo was tilt- protestor the muses. He was a handsome young raau, who wore long hair and abort pants, and who went arounu ine country oenriug a now ana arrow.

He uwd these deadly weapoua to shoot spring poets who outraged the tn uses by writing ver-s about the luuutli of May. Baltimore American. The fact that Schopenhauer, the pessimist, is to tie honorel with a uinnuuic at ut Frankfort, where be died nearly Ultyl years ago. calls to mind some of bis peculiarities aud incongruities. His vanity and egotism were colossal, aud his manners brutal.

In his last illness, when be was asked where he would be buried, lie said: "ifury me where you may; posterity will liud nie.V "I'ato," says Mrs. Harriet Iieecher Stowe to a uegro uiun wbilewasbiug ou her Florida plantation, "now that, you are' free aud Cau vote, 1 hope that' yon will use your influence with tbe colored people Snd get ime the ballot." "Lor! Mit' Eeeoher," says; falo, roll-ing up hi ryes, while au iacrcdulous grin broadened bist kind-hearted, honest lace, "dux jyou reely" belebe that wiuimin is got sense enough to-know how to, vote?" The urwest Altuntadrink ii "milkshake." You get it at the soda fountains. 1 Tbe mixer of cooliug beverages pours out a glassof sweet milk, puts in a big spoonful of crushed ice, putsiu a mixture of unknown tngredieuts, draws a bit of any desired sirup, shakes the milk in a tin can like a barkeeper mixes lem-oeudCj sprinkles a little nutmeg on tbe foaming milk until it looks something: like a Tom and Jerry, sets it out for vwu, and you par five Atlauta Constitution. A man in laat year's clothes wits seated at a table in the reporter's room, writing. it was coating him great effort, apparently, for bis tongue waa sticking out four inches aud he shoVed the pen along as if it were a plow.

"Wbo is that?" whispered the city editor to onfe of the boys, who had bee a coaching tbe visiUir. "Anarchist," replied the reporter, with'-a warning shake of the bead. "The How do you know?" gaped the, city editor. "Saw his writing. Spells God with a lfltle And the reporter slipped out.

Washington Cm id. Stephen Girard, whose luaip of, gold more than counterbalanced hit own left the bulk ot a scven-millioo-five-bundred-thouaaud-dollar estato to charities in and around Philadelphia and for' other good fiurposes. The Astors gave 'the As tor i bra ry $1,000,000: Johns Hopkins gave tolound a great school; Inland Stanford $10,000,000 for a similar purpose; Exria Cornell $2,500,000 to Cornell University; Asa Packer $3,000,000 to Lehigh university; J. C. Green, $1,600,000 to Princeton college; James Lick $3,000,000 iu the uame of benevolence, and James II.

Itoosevelt spent (1,000,000 iu founding P.oosevelt; hospital in Kew York. 1 i According to a French paper, the Count do Lesacpa waa foretold by au ancient Egyptian oracle. It says: "Herodotus reiaVa that when Neco, kinirof undertook tue work of uniting tbe waters of the Medi-lerranean and lied seas by means ol a canal, 60,000 men perihed iu tbe work, ifsi then caused the work to be stopped ami consulted an oracle, receiving tbe reply, 'A barbarian will bnishtby i Thegeotle-man who alighted upou that bit of history copied upon a sheet of paper the paragraph from Herodotus and carried it to de Lose pa, who. bavins real it. took his pen aud apended, 'The barbarian prophesied' by the oracle r.

oe iwm- Tax lontjdst pole knocks tlie persimmont, and liiiiilow's IViaittve Cure knocks: all coughs colds, croup, hoarbenssa, brouch.tU, axthma, influenza and eutuumpttoa. I'W-asaxit fureluldreu. bale and do cents. i i i THE LABOR OUTLOOK. At DXSiEItTATIOXi MCBBtt.

1 II Itoasons That the Klcht-llour Law Injures tha tVorkiutnisn, and sbawt Why In Ion fa. In Ion. ICorrespondencai of Tba Iifllanauolla Kw VAhlilsoToxJ May 15. The eondition'of labor in lhia.couhlry is now attracting cm-sidcrable attention from the thinking men jit "both bonnes of congress. Recent collisions between certain cluases and the autton in Various cities of the this mental exerciw arn "woulr- f-J not Ur wonderful if It t' Ui another etorf to interpose eori5riUoiinl JnKbtrls in -jlu-tion cf'te diificokjei.

There is a brbad dtverifvf of viw, on thij subject, though ihe gjrmniajority oi' publie men here evidently 4ieve tti sa.ti.-st course is for congrej to rirve it alone, home of these, however, w.lllug to give the presidential plan ot arbi tration a trial. The uprising of socialist and anarchists and all sons of riff-raff jnp-iioaed to any constitutional farm of govern ment brings new elements into the problem, The line between the wset and the abucii of liberty can not le' sharply drawn, nor i-au, the reipective righ: (ot the capitalists Sndt laborer be So clearly defined that, men ioay read as Ihry run. When the legislator cVks to mediate he knows not where, to begin. There are no precedents to fit the conditions. Jt is true differences betwecu capital fnd llibor have existed as far f'k a the tune a couple of thousand year ago when jibe brick-makers of Israel klruck went tiut to look tor a new job.

There have bjcu strikers and lockouts as far back as we Can go, aud there bare been legislative alteuij.ts to solve these ditliciillies from time immemorial. Yet the coardilious'of to-day are widely different from auy previous conditions, 'f bo I'ongressiouul philosopher knows not wbicii way lo rn for pn.iniies ou which to biise calcubitions. There is no parallel in bUtory with the gi'antio combination ot labor; as illustraled bjrheigbts. Underlyiug-Jil are socialistic princijes whicU, culeftaincd byf tiat class of iijcu known an imported labor, become daugcroiis. The- culuratiou of the i seutimenl tuiit all capital is oppressive; the idea thut otily those who belong to certain organizatiiiu bhali have a right io earn a liviug by fhtir labor; the declaration thut a contractor'or cou.

party shall not employ and diniuias ucn as circumstances may require; the asertjou ot the "alleged right to cloo ituy eslabusli-inent, or ruin the busiuehs of anybody wlio may ilimk ditlcieutly; the demand of a shrti ol tl.e proliis iu a business without bavaig liartd the risk all of these priucipjles 4ie social isiic. Now, Kucialisliu principles ire not always aud necessarily wrouRaod barjn-ful, but the means taken to force lbiu muy be wrong, illegal and inlamoiis. Iu rjlie minds of many men all is 'lair that a. coin -plisues a desire 1 'The man or combination that succeeds iu making a corner'in one "ot the necessaries of lite and reapibg great profit, thereby no heed luf the suffering lof hundred of thousuudsiof people out of whose "bard carnius I liat jtrobt comes. So thu earnest laborers wbo "order out" thousands' of other workmeuin order to gain u.

disputed jn.int with their own particular employer consider not tie privation aud suffering that act brings jto many homes. Under thfc '-'decree of a vtry large proportion of tailoring men of this country, the individual luborer has a haVd aud risky lime of He muxt jolu a.umou and le ordered in and 'it at the pleasure of men whom be does not know aud lor reasdns he dot not undemlaml, or he Is ostracized as a "st ub" and perhaps be compiled to beg, Steal or starve. Tbe'lrength thut is.in this uuion of musi'le uinl braius cau iiot jbe overestimated, and tlie power for good lor evil I is ilcult ble. Unfortunately for uuion 'most might pco-i those whom such etil, it i not alwajt wisely, directed. Iiiali-' vidual aod private rights must be'obserjied.

Wbeu tbey ure waulooly and forcibly Vio 1 lated by tailoring men, or labor orgauiXa-tiotts the wrong is just a palpably wrong; as if tiic Violations were commuted by capitalist or criiniuals. This may be accepted as a cardiuul principle. The lime is ripe for serious thought job Ibis jul Ject. I trust 1 shall pot bore or'ollmid readers by its discussion iu bne brtwi-pistle. Fbtur much of it just' now at thut naliopal center, and the llippnut and ctuperuoial ms'i-ner ol its distiosal ls'contetnptible.

-There are certain disagreeable facts which we are to-day forced to accept aa underlying the whole question, aud without them results tun not be" accurately indicated. jne of these tucts is tbat American labor is forced to coui-iiete with tbe labor of tbe world The lime has long siuce gone by hen their American market could stand independently alonejue-cure in its local supply and demand. It it aiact that has been ignored too long. In the fice ol the importations from abroad it is igmsreti to-day. Steam aud electricity hive annihilated the artificial boundaries of country.

Tbe "pauier labor of Europe," if wbicii we have heard for so many years in tariff speeches, is at our doors 1 a ruber of lour national family. Tlie very combinations lnpint.il An tbia aiile ol'tllA vatr In rtlm. Iia American labor above tbe "pauper labor of ana keep mm mere nave nai jtbo efleel, to a cerlaiu exteut, to briar that "pau per lubor" to this markets This class, of iinporlutions cau be in a Correct! sense only as its hiembersliip is poor financially. It embrace every variety of labor, skilled and It has been Kprrad all over the and now a Ipart of the force of mines, railroads, ruauu-jlacturing establikbmcuta and abbps. i lu jlarge cities there are so many of these aEens that entire sections are given up to men Who speak a loreign i tongue, who live alter1 the manner ot their owu country, who can i not understand our language, and have nothing in common with our people save tbe one aim to make a livelihood, by tbeir iabor.i in the miuiiig regions ot Pennsylvania they have been employed in numbers, and form a turbulent crowd, taking tbe plaueot the American laborer, native-born -mid naturalized alike.

Tbey have been ituoi ted by hundreds by contractor and mauulaCtur-ers iu the west. They swarm, in every state iu the union where labor find a aud are coming daily and all the time by tRe'ahin load. Where is this to end? What condition of things is chargeable with it? Who is responsible? The answer to these queries ia not lo be made in a tingle sentence. it Swill manifestly end only when tbe condition labor at home aud abroad'; is someV. bat equalized.

if is tbe natural result Of a' di turbed equilibrium. Am the atmosphere rushes iu to fill a vacuum, so the oppressed and pauperized labor oi turope rushes in where wages are higher and the getting of a livelihood mora easy. Aud, too, the Uabger ol au industrial cyclone Iroiu this rtish of foreign labor is not less crest than when the disturbed atmospheric relations are iu process of evening up temperatures. Nobody is responsible, aud evrvboiy is responsible. That is lo say, nobody ia responsible) for natural causes, and everybody is responsible for aggravating tbe natural causes, i'l'he other day, when tbe pre-s was; teeming ja ith the socialistic riots at Chicago and Milwaukee, 1 met a very esitf lligent workman on tbe street, and we begin to discuss the He was "oul" with thirty out of forty workpien, striking lor ten hours' psy for eight hours' work.

We deplored the state of a 11 air who is responaible?" said J'We never brought them here. We don't Waul iuijHirted labor." This waa astunner at the moment, and I went on my way toward the capitol, thinking il over. True, tbe Knights ol Labor and jibe American nniaus did not bring the objectionable foreign labor to this country. True, the importers were and are the wealthy corporations (the capitalist), aod tbe others seek our shore of their own will and motion. They brought them because the competition for our products abroad made cheaper labor imperative, or because it could be done and increase profits.

Tbi laborers came because this i the land of prossiw-wbere life Umore tolerable and waeeS hiber. Tbat is the rause. should this strike tor eight hours or 25 per cent, increase ot wages prevail, and it will to a great extent, tbe importation of foreign labor will, in ill probabi. tr, greatly i tic re an. It wiil be known all over Europe within a wrsk or ted days, and every man wno is sore preed atnd wants to better i condition will pick up bu tools and fee t.j up bis wile and children, if be can that luxtfrv.

and come to t-f Ml Thv of freedom and eiirbi hours a If. Th' are enlisted by underrate I be J-juiini lo oro fortbamia tbc ff oredo. l'LV fh i country where a il th-j labor murarl dio- -i mm Urf a umble capital- ti mae t.r.kim. lor averv man ut couit thns is room for one American laborer les. 1 hey will bring, with them tne foreign institutions of socialism and communism, Ibe dynamite bomb and tbe stilettay and over thrm'wili float the blood-red standard of anarchy.

In a little while tbe laln-r market ill become overstocked, and wages will go down aod down.eveu tx low what has ever been in this couuiry, and suffering aud strikes. will follow. The red flag will coma torth and tbotisaud of socialists, loreign and domestic, will imu from their quarters, and the si reels of American cities Wiil run with blood, while the government itself will rock from center to circuuilerence Willi the shock. 1 this a disnt'reealde piclute? Hut it is plainly outlined by the order of tbiug. To lore wa'es up by ninin atrrngth of combined labor isposaible ai(J now probable.

Hut to keep theid at such a standard .11 lie louud not in tbe power ol kuorlal man, unieW waes rise correspondingly ahroud or the iuiMrtutuu of Ibreigu labor be prouib-itcd. To assume otherwise, is in defiance of I lie stent logic of commercial laws, i Wlmt, then, is the legitimate coacluslon? Tins: That not lie arlilicially forced bayond a certain point ithout certain de-strnction lo lalHr itself. That certain point-just how tar wagescaH be properly pushed is Hie real labor problem. For tout point is what labor wauls aud should have, and what capital can afford to and will puy. I am not prepared to sayr what that jioAit is.

It I could say it, 1 woQld solve the lalxir problem, in theory, at least; Capital will take care of itself, it goes, like lalior, where it can make the most profit. Ht that ia in the Amefican market, it will conic here; il Capital will protect ilseU. 1 understand thai certain lines of trade have put in motion a scheme to combiue interests lor self-protection. They propose to form uaions, I he same as I heir employes, and unite these tinioorttll over the country. With the labor markets of the world ojeu to them and a coiubinaiion of interests at home they would meet the combinations of labor with the certainty ot success.

It would tic, a great luisforluiio if Thcke pissibililic are worth the careful attention of every lav borinir man in America. Il'hcy are foreshad- owed by public, opinion, hicii is invariably lor tbe right and aiaiusl ilia wroiig.x I AtC RAT. Tbat Awful l.ittln ilrollier. 1 1'hlladclpbla Cafl.J "Do you Jike 'winter, Mr. Litewaii?" "Not very much.

Freddie." "Then whytlo you alway go buggy riding on a cold "I don't. VVlint makes you think ao?" 'Why, sister Clara said would be a cold day wbeu yuu olivred to take ay girl out bue'gy riding." Uiuber Do Not lake Itlght. Illuslivllle ltepulillcau.t If one mail bas not the riuht to eamp out unoilier place of business and say tb tbe public, You shall not trade here," tlieu two hundred men have not, no by what name they coll themselves. The boycott must go. TO IiIliKST VL'LC'ANITK Iteqiiirci acids more rxitcnt than the solvent Juices ol the human stomach.

And yet, in the lonn of medicine Intended to torm the vary eviMhey dysiepsla, solid and tluids, irrecoiicllitb in their constituent Unit have no rhcmicul sOmlty one with tho other, are bitioduced Into it. Are these so-called ruuie-d ant any lielter thau To-ltlvely uol lltelter's Moiuach lillterx. on the other band. a siuiplu niedleliie, harmonious In it c'oiiikim. tiou una rem my assimuaoie.

is active, ami iro- lu es marked ax'Well us apcedily nppn-ciable elici Ucuiik" Its a- rational reuimty suited to the stonnteh. It i a tonic In the true wtise, her cause it bariiKinizi'S and Insures reKiilarltv of tho o(M-iations ol (ll Not the leaat ol the leu- etiw winch it coiners, is a tnoroiiijh repair ol the ilainiiKe Intlicli mi the stomach by ill-chosen reim-dii 1'or biliouMicss, ennsilpution, nialur-ial couipluints, rheumatism and kidney troubles it la alike invaluable. 1 Hulford f-'uuco mifkesyoiirlood more nutritious. RxiTTiTTiMCiiosTir" itkk i.ivin il, witii Mvroritfiei-iiiTra KsMMlally dusirabn for children. A lady physician at tha Child's Inrfpltnl at Albany, N.

T-. says: "We have been using Scott's with great success; nesrly all nt our patients are xull'eilng Irom bone diseases, and our physicians lind It very Ix-nelleiul." I HIUI.HJWWII I i KKMOVAU We have remoTed our tk of Hardware to l-chniiil' blot southwest ctmier MerMlan and Maryland tin t-, which aflord us Inereiu-ed liu'illlh lor handling our(0Hls. We have largely reituccd price ol' awn Mowers, and lupld b-e, t'ruaiii 1 reexers, aud oiler a full aibortment of the lVrlci-tion lU trif i ralors nt lowest market prices. Also, (iardcu Una-, lloso Carts, Htep ljuiders, ater Kjlwrs r-ets, tirnnitu Iron ware, lollies muter, and a complete assortment of fulliteiV Ibirdwure at bottom 'rices, Mii.Pl-Mttsn A rcoATt, Achnull's lilockj b2 Irouijh Mcliillou street. Ti J.1I0DGEN COi, IB ERS, I U3 South IVloriatan St.

STOCKS, GRAIN PROVISIONS. kcfcrenCcs: First Nstlonfil Bank. Iudiaiiapolla. l.oulsviiie Co Ky. tivniLton City bank, ovliirton.

Ky. l'eorla National Hank, i'oorio. 111. Citizens Natkimil Ky. lutl Mational liuiik, tvuiuivillu, lud.

Direct Wires (a New York an! Chicago. -'The lest thing for the Hair la 33 6 it Poes not chani; the color. Krom baby-Lood to old it is alika buueiicoal. There Ara Few Itruicaists Wbo rjtr mora lo make a lar (fVollt on a wortb-less article than to wait lor the prosperity that ul-timately re.uli irom nut dealing, these are the men who, a lien asked lor a lieuson'si Capcina I'iaster, will rvcomuieuU solus cheao and txaslijr iitsiuul nr Imliutluu, Mtylua It "Just as eod." hom. uieattiay still doup and atril tne nd-erable lmliatlon wtibout remark, allovtlna tba niaioniar to suppoao lie baa UenMon'a, I If the valurlaas plaster Is retiiruml, Cbe tp John Will aay ba ba' mails a mistake II not.

be baa uoue-a good stroke of bust-new. The utillc ara cautioned against John ami all his life, liuy or respectable dru(ls(s only. Tha Kenuine i ften-on's pluaier has tba Three Heals" Iriularoark aad tho word "Capetn covin tba Center. 1 I INDIANAPOLIS jWATER CO, 12 8. 1'eunsylvania St, Indianapolis, j- Is prepared to fumbh excellent water for drink-lnjr, coos' nit, laundry, bathing and steam boilers, at a cost very trilling for such, a necessity, coup venience aud luxury.

DAlil A Hit I AG SETvT C. T. vopi a i ikiok. i I'A rxm ew liarce to all pnlnu with lore mllt-a. I.liv earrutam to selwt from.

Mend tw-cnt atauip lor II lumraied catalogue. ManUualbiapaprr. L.U- TOY FACTORY. tU W. XAltlaQX KT CUXCAQU.

Bewam of Scrofula 8crofulaIssasiwr.ViyvivryfeDerat tkan any ether dl'ca 1- niJCle character, and 'yrfi sores, pustular erT' 4. enlarged Joints, tti tf. Hood's Sanaparilla i scrofula from the blood," 1 I'tira, enriched, and healthy. I was severely afflicted with terofala, and a year naa i wo running sores on my necg. Took five bottles Hood' Barsapartlla, and am E.

Lovjot, Lowell, Mass. CX. Arnold, Arnold, bad scmfnlons sores for seven yexim, spring and talL Hood Saisapaxllla cured htm. Salt Rheum Isoneof the moat disagreeable diseases eansad by impure blood. It Is readily cured by Uoud a fcartaparllla, the great blood purifier.

William Spies, Elyrla, sdlTered irreatly Imnt erysipelas and salt rheum, caused by bundling toliaoco. At times bis binds would crack open and bleed, lie tried various pre aiatlobs without aid; finally took Hood's Bar-saparllla, and Bqw says: I am entirely srelL" Hy son bad salt rhrnta on bis bands and ea the calves of. his legs. He tood Hood's Sarsaparllla and I entirely cured." J. tt, Mt.

Vernon, Ohio. Hood '3 Scrsaparilla Pold by alt (ImsKltts. 1 1 six fo Mads only t7 C. I. HOOD Si CO, IOO Doses Ona Dollar AMEUICAX BALL BLUE 11KST-WASHING BLUE.

It ia not poisonou, aiJs Llont'hing of wash and gi fi it ji ricli tQrTo bo had of jour grocer. Crab Orchard CWATERs 4 TIIRI.IVK". Till; KIDN TIIICHTOM Tin: ituwiab A POSITIVE CL" It It VX'It 3 DYSPEPSIA, CONSTIPATION, SICK HEADACHE Ona tt1-a teiiiipnfnl. (i-lmliK Cast Osi'uisa Kalts livwat-etl psrkssos st J'l nt io gsn Blue Kali sole in knik. Crsk 0resrd Water Cc Preprs.

S. M. IONt. Miuiii, Lonili. K.

K3T33TC3T HMOKK CITY CIGAK iw 'Wi 7f I'l rada Mark.) JOUN RAl'dt, MA.NUKAOTtrRER, tS W'aaiiinauia HlrseC THE MEIICAIN TILE AGENCY Jt. ti. liL'N Jt I It. ITrrprletom. I Rooms 2 and 3 rciitiiicl HiilMlna.

Theoie- tnu lt. Iho iniMt progressive and the In i-t rdialdol esjuniiMiuiom oi tlie kinu in the. world, hsvm: branch olll Uly e.julpiwd and in ko.I niiinniK orticr, orf-tnree lo one more than ally oilier aeney bus Mf actually live ofiiivs. For over J2 years wo have enj yed an unsullied' reputation for honesty, rcliabl fly anil fair dellu, and we have utdlmitwl tesourres lor (onducttturoiir busl-lu-m Vie Invito a U-t of our quail-tics by the merchant ol Ind'StiapotK It. UU.V Ac CO.

1 si i i inn ww l. i.i im iiw. i Kend stamp tor eataioirna tit aud sssino-oand HICYC 1 0 TolndUna KlcyctaCo. (aleritllan Kttik) lii'llauapolia, lud rtUSInr ti luol oM-n day and evenlns No. B5 Maiden Lane, New York 7 2 2,2 a.

Rta MA LOOK OUT FOR BARGAINS! Only 30 doxen thote LLla Com left ut ICic; wt rtli 45c 43 dozen Black Jcncja, all wool, at 81.23. 1 0 ii.ctsj lefl of ttose fast-colof Turkey -ml Tableclotha it ilJJc: w-ortl 40c 100 doxon lltick Towels at 22c: wortk 43c 2 casca Satocn Print at 5c; wortli 8 60 icoca Sutia Hurbcr, li-ht aliadc, 23c; worth 40a A bcautirul line of Tr'niges all th Litest bhaJca and st 1. I a all tho latest litj lon. BLACI( DRESS G0QDS1, 14 tiicccs Black Caahrncrp 4Sq worth 75c i 10 pieces Fancy "Weave at C3jj worth tl.25. 20 riccca mack at $1 Jot-cheap at $1.50.

II 100 dozen Gents' Unlaun Jered ShirU ut 4ic; cheap at DOa. A Lig job ia 7 Make no iniVtuko, but call and nmiiio theMO (KkIm and save Jouracll l'roui 23 to 40 k.t icuf 43 and 50 North Illinois St. 1 GAS STOVES BO t23 rV JsTo ICIndllny lien al No Coal to Carry. ZsTo to 2tsmovea 1 flss Frplnes from horse-power mi. We sell toaas eonsutners In tills cat eolvi Osi exhibition and lor sale by the GAS'COMPANY, rennsylvaula Bireet.

Tf lluita's Health Helper" 11. jku unequal od Kesioratlve, k'aw-lator anS Turtle. Ki'fKkio, laver, rioii.aab jkiw.i, Kitney, l-amal lnwtws, CttiMtiptutn Kcrofuu, moiI all ItlooU lunpiiiilKss 1 snillj. proHiok isMitlve and ptitent. auars io oisirtsM, ieni-a or chaiistt-ol liablu 'J asUlMa; Id small rau sulns Ml In bos who ful dlreetiona.

fl: at UruaaisU or fr by. wall. Kenl lor ieerlptlv cin-ular. Afenut everyw liartt. I all ou or ailUreas (I.

W. II OK I-VAN, fcUJi. Waau.M., Indianapolis IIAIUTY, Tlie only I rnbrella and Parasol TnanurM'ttin-r In I 'tho city. Covering of all La kinds dime lo ottler. L'mbreilaa, araaolsan4 caues repairwu.

iririiiln Avenue. atawvvACTCBKaa axs. xtsuinr GRY CASTINGS. LADIES' HAND TURNED SOOES. and ealettshoe worn.

Vo Lave them on and widths, aizes 1 to comrnon-aenso or opera too. lricc, $3.50, $4 and $3. STORE, Corner Washington and. Illinois Sta. FTJKEKAE DntECTOIa, 77 North Delaware) Street.

FltKK AMUULANCR. Ii. ITlH'J' Wt ITVf! 1 i i GOzn Ha tlni! POUNDS F1! VICi CKXTH. MP STORE. I V.

Njfl is IS 1 "FOitJNIJRYa; I is 1 1 ii ITS'SUUTlt a' a a a yj KREGELO. Telephone 6(34. I v'S -f 1 (' TUTEWILEI1.1 uEmMIR. "Open day aad night Trer.rciiio?irK -ill. I PTPfi VT I TVP iP I A- iiaiuw axsu.

tl nil jt A .11 AXJkg at wholehido prices. INDIANA PAPEIl COMPANY, 21 EAST JtARYLAND STREET. ii Ira it OXK AN I A IIALy ERS' PAINT STORE llenioved to 77 East Market Street. TtEE OI DELIVER TT-.

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