Yale University Library igw| tD'S >>§.¦ >B P „ _s If * N Manufactory, No. 14 R. l_pl->w--e St, |j. 1_ IMANAPf. .. .. [,\_, ij Orders fn.in tho .rn-1 tillml ,vi INSURE WITH THE LORiLLARO FSRE IKS. CO. | Ot New fork, CASH CAPITAL AND ASSETS, ! $1,600,000.00. ¦). S. DOtVLOP _. €0., Agents, (KOJANAP0M9, I] Kutrauee, Merulitin Siroef, over Bee.Hi r- j^^f '3 -Aj^r^y -_-* Q ~a < I^X-.iiiil-iFOLIS ^ ti m%A % f"CCA_/\T\l^- fto _&p_0%_J l 8 f ; 8 o.. . PUBLICATION OF -Hot*: .N' TA' VPM.1S, INDIANA. fe 1 $<£• - IIMDI.'.NA Daily and Weekly Sentinel M AM MOT-.fl PRINTING ESTABLISHMENT + AND BLANK-B^OK MAIMUFAC TOR _f*Vr rticular nitration f/iveii to Print- 'lit*/ it*. C6lf\ffi% '**¦. A large stuck of J.tpcr for npi- utK^rurtug Blattk-BuDks kept cutis raiilly un hiinri 16)'/ Ea&t Washington St., Indianapolis. It. J. BRIGHT. Proprlistor- $%xEm Si-.^»- -lii-s-**-- -.. H- «t> t __; ."Fi GROVEH& BAKER! ELASTIC -STITCH _ LOCK-STITCII Sewing Machines! No.. _l k EAST WASHINGTON STREET, Intliaibtvolix, Indium*. c SEE ]>AGl. -vIV !._; A YALE UNIVERSITY LIBRARY LOGAN'S INDIANAPOLIS CITY DIRECTORY. CAPITOL TOBACCO WOEKS. #¦•. VEITH & CLARK, PROFS. MANUFACTURERS OF MS, FIJI GOT 5 SIOOHfi TOBACCOS! NOS. 19, 21 AND 23 NORTH TENNESSEE STREET, (OPPOSITE STATE HOUSE,) Indianapolis, Indiana. M. I. BARKER, SOLE AGENT. LOGAN'S INDIANAPOLIS CITY DIRECTORY. lrfte«tlf) Wmw® n»i Mm AN INDEPENDENT PAPER! THE CHEAPEST JOURNAL I_ST THE WEST ! feMif Mai's lifi€iti WBSTER]_T Commercial Eeview -AND- RAILROAD JOURNAL. ISSUED 3_Z<_>_V*THH_^_r. DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF WESTERN MANUFACTU RERS, MERCHANTS, MINERS, SHIPPERS, INSUR ANCE COMPANIES, FINANCES, AND THE WORKING MAN. HAS A CIRCULATION IN WESTERN OHIO, INDIANA. KEN TUCKY, ILLINOIS, MISSOURI, KANSAS, NEBRASKA. IOWA, AND IN THE MINING REGIONS OF COLORADO, UTAH, IDAHO, MON TANA AND DACOTAH. $1,00 PER "¥"_E_.A.:R,. LOGAN & CO., PUBLISHERS, Indianapolis, Ind,. and St. Louis, Mo. All communications should be addressed to P. O. Box 1,441, Indianapolis Ind. , LOGAN'S \* \ yj EUDBACKC AST ^^Jf ALPHABETICAL LIST OP CITIZENS NAMES, GATHEBED AND COMPILED EXPRESSLY FOE THIS WOBK. r Also, a carefuly written and closely detailed HISTORY OF INDIANAPOLIS FROM 1818 TO 1868, BY IGNATIUS BROWN, GIVING A RECORD OF EVENTS OF THE CITY FROM ITS FIRST SETTLEMENT; ITS MERCANTILE, MANUFACTURING, POLITICAL AND SOCIAL PROGRESS, DEVELOPMENT, PRESENT IM PORTANCE AND FUTURE PROSPECTS. WITH A COMPLETE MUNICIPAL RECORD, GIVING NAMES OF CHURCHES, INSTITUTIONS, COL LEGES, SOCIETIES AND ASSOCIATIONS, &c, _c. FOR THE YEAR COMMENCING JULY 1, 1868. PRICE S3. SO LOGAN & CO. COMPILERS, PRINTERS AND PUBLISHERS. OkTBTCB, No. 16 J. East Washington Street. 1 s e 8 . Entered according to act of Congress in the year 1868, by Logan _ Co., In the Clerk's Office of the United States District Court, for the district of Indiana. (A) Tiii LOGAN'S INDIANAPOLIS GEOEGE M. JENISON & CO. (S-CCE880BS TO W. H. Talbot. & Co.) E S TA B X. I £3 II _"* D 18SO. Importers, Manufacturers and Jobbers of PIHB WATCHES, DIAMONDS, Jewelry, Watch Materials, Wateli Glasses, TOOLS, &c. AMERICAN AND FOREIGN WATCHES, COIN SILVER WARE, Best Quality Plated Ware. ENGRAVING, WATCH AND JOB WORK EXECUTED By Skilful Workmen. No. 24 East Washington St. INDIANAPOLIS, IND. &n 5 5« 27 & CITY DIRECTORY. A. L. LOGAN, PUBLISHER Western Commercial Review and Railroad Journal : also. Directories of Indianapolis, Columbus, Springfield, Terre Haute, and other Cities. INDIANAPOUS, INDIANA. CONTENTS. PAGE. ADVERTISING DEPARTMENT FOLLOWING 254 ALPHABETICAL LIST OF NAMES 1 ALTERATIONS, CORRECTIONS AND REMOVALS 238 BANKS AND BANKING HOUSES 251 CHURCH DIRECTORY 243 CITY OFFICERS, COUNCILMEN, ETC 239 CONTENTS x HISTORY OF DIDIANAFOLIS, after Advertising Department following page 26 INDEX TO ADVERTISEMENTS x INDIANA STATE GOVERNMENT 249 INSURANCE DEPARTMENT 252 INTRODUCTORY xii MARION COUNTY COURTS AND OFFICERS 248 MUNICIPAL RECORD 239 PUBLIC HALLS, BLOCKS AND BUILDINGS 237 RAILROAD DEPARTMENT, in back of book, following history SOCIETIES AND ASSOCIATIONS 243 STREETS, AVENUES AND ALLEYS 232 TITLE.. vii UNITED STATES OFFICERS IN THIS CITY 250 INDEX TO ADVERTISEMENTS. CONSTITUITNG A MAJORITY OF THE SUBSTANTIAL BUSINESS HOUSES OF INDIANAPOLIS , " THEY WHO ADVERTISE CONSTANTLY WILL SUCCEED BEST." PAGE. ALBERSHARDT H. F., Boots and Shoes 138 ALLEN, ABBEY _ CO., Wholesale Stone Ware 136 ALLEN MRS. N. M., Dress-Making 34 ATKINS E. C. _ CO., Saw Manufactures.front paster BARKER W. S., Tailor 118 BATES HOUSE, Indianapolis, Adv. Dept 5 BATHHOUSE 66 BE AULIEN C. S., Physician, Adv. Dept 6 BECKER _ BROTHER, Confectioners..., 100 BERKSHIRE LIFE INSURANCE CO., Adv. Dept. 22 BINKLEY S., Trunk Manufacturer 102 BLAKE JAMES _ CO., Commission Mer chants 110 BOEDEKER &. NEEMAN, Carpenters 48 BREMERMAN & RENNER, Carriage Manufac- V turers 128 BRINKMEYER J. C. & CO., Wholesale liquors 50 BUCKSOT WILLIAM, Billiard Hall and Saloon. 231 PAGE. BURKHART A. J., Ice Merchant 78 BUTTERFJDELD & CO., Ale Dealers 40 BYRKITM. _ SONS, Planing Mill 2 CAPITAL TOBACCO WORKS v CARPENTER B. O., Marble Works, Adv. Dept. 6 CHAPMAN D. C, Painter 84 COBURN & JONES, Lumber Yard 22 CONKLIN J. N., Groceries and Teas, Adv. Dept. 19 DAVIS _; WRIGHT, Auction and Commission. . 164 DONALDSON _ ALVEY, Wholesale Hats, Caps and Furs 90 DORSEY, LAYMAN & FLETCHER, Wholesale Hardware 130 EGGER <_ MUECKE, Painters n _ ELDRIDGE & VAN BUSKIRK, Conveyancers. ! 58 EMMONS W. _ CO., Marble Works, Adv. Dept... a ENOS & HUEBNER, Architects 4, EXCHANGE STABLES, Adv. Dept 10 INDEX TO ADVERTISEMENTS. FRANKLIN LIFE INSURANCE CO., ..Adv. Dept. 28' FRANKLIN TYPE FOUNDRY, Cincinnati, Adv. Dept 15 FRAUER, BIELER _ CO., Saddles and Harness 70 FRIEDGEN C, Boots and Shoes 14 GEBH ARD AUGUST, Upholstery 122 GIBSON HOUSE, Cincinnati, Adv. Dept 16 GIBSON W. T., Insurance Agent, Adv. Dept — 12 GLICK _ SCHWARZ, Hoop Skirt Manufactur ers 231 GROVER & BAKER SEWING MACHINE CO., opposite letter A HANNING JOHN G., Gas and Steam Fitter.... 10 HAERLE WILLIAM, Trimmings and Dress Goods, Adv. Dept 2 HEIDLINGER JOHN A., Tobacconist 104 HINESLEY WILLIAM, Livery and Sale Stables, Adv. Dept 10 HUGELE JOHN, Billiard Hall and Restaurant. . 74 INDIANA FIRE INSURANCE CO., Adv. Dept.. 12 INDIANA TRANSFER CO., Adv. Dept 4 INDIANAPOLIS INSURANCE CO 206 JENISON GEO. M. _ CO., Jewelers, Index op posite Photograph viii JONES A. _ CO., Wholesale Groceries 30 JONES & CHILDS, insurance Agents 42 KENE ASTER N. D., Hotel, Adv. Dept 5 KNOTTS NIM K. _ Co., White Fawn Saloon, Adv. Dept 21 LANG LOUIS, Wine House, Adv. Dept 21 LAMBERT JAMES M., Hotel, Adv. Dept 13 LELEWER _ BROS., Fur Manusacturers 94 LENOX EDWARD, Tailor 86 LOGAN _• BROWN, Attorneys 62 LOGAN & CO., Publishers, Adv. Dept 21 LOSLE J. M. & CO., Spring Bed Bottom Manu facturers iii LOWE WILLIAM A., Attoiney 68 McCREERY & FAY, Housekeeper's Emporium 96, 120, 200 McGINNIS & GRAY, Tailors 124 MASTEN & INGLE, Salt Agents and Coal Deal ers. 26 MAYO E. H. _ CO., Boots and Shoes 72 MEDINA F. J., Hair Works 82 MELSHEIMER A. W., Hotel, Adv. Dept 11 MITCHELL _ RAMMELSBURG FURNITURE COMPANY ii MORTON, MARTINDALE & TARKINGTON, At torneys 64 OSGOOD, SMITH «l CO., Wheel, Hub and Spoke Manufacturers, Adv. Dept • 24 PALMER HOUSE, Indianapolis, Adv. Dept 1 PERRIN GEORGE K., Attorney 66 PORTER T. R., Merchant Tailor 60 RAILROAD JOURNAL, A. L. Logan, Editor. ... vi RASCHIG CHARLES M., Tobacconist 108 REED & CO., Soda Water Manufacturers, Adv. Dept 23 REYNOLDS _ HOLIDAY, Lamps, Oils, &c 106 RIKHOFF _ BROS., Wholesale Liquors 92 ROOT DELOSS & CO., Stove Foundry, Adv. Dept. 14 RUSSELL ic KASBERG, Founders 114 SCHMEDEL & FRICKER, Brush Manufacturers 36 SCHNEIDER &. CO., Brass Founders 38 SCOTT, WEST & CO., Glass and Queensware. .. 88 SE ATON E. A., Hats, Caps and Furs 162 SELKING WILLIAM, Saloon and Restaurant. . . 112 SHAW B. C, Carriage Manufacturer 126 SHOVER & CHRISTIAN, Carpenters and Bnild.- ers, Adv. Dept 23 SIMS, MILLER & HOSKINS, Gravel Roofers. . 18 SINKER _; CO., Western Machine Works, Adv. Dept 24 SINKS JAMES M., Carpenter 80 SMITH, 1TTENBACH _ CO., Stone Cutters, Adv. Dept 6 SMITH N. R. _ CO., Wholesale Dry Goods...: i SMITHMEYER JOHN L., Architect 44 SOUTHERN HOTEL, St. Louis, Mo., Adv. Dept. 3 ST. NICHOLAS HOTEL, Springfield, Ills., Adv. Dept 20 SPAULDING J. L., City Laundry, Adv. Dept... . 18 SPENCER HOUSE, Adv. Dept 23 SPRINGFIELD FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY, of Springfield, Mass., Adv. Dept 17 STIERLE CHARLES _ CO., Brass Founders.. . . 210 SWEINHART WILLIAM, Merchant Tailor, Adv. Dept 2 TATE WARREN, Planing Mill 54 TAYLOR _ CRA1N, Clothiers 6 THOMPSON WILLIAM, Physician and Surgeon, Adv. Dept 9 TRAYSER GEORGE, Piano Manufacturer, Adv. Dept _ TUTEWE1LER BROS , Stoves, Tinware, _c, Adv. Dept 8 VAJEN J. H. & CO., Hardware and Cutlery 132 WEGHORST HENRY, Gardener 98 WERBE CHARLES _ CO., Patent Right Agents 52 WESTERN COMMERCIAL REVIEW AND RAIL ROAD JOURNAL, Logan & Co., Publishers, vi WESTERN FURNITURE COMPANY iv WHITE RIVER IRON CO., 222 WILDER C. P., Bookseller 76 WOODBURY U. T., Dentist, Adv. Dept 23 INTRODUCTORY OUE Motto — Justice to all and Injustice to none. In presenting this, our second volume of the city directory of Indianapolis to the public, we have, as in the previous volume, suffered great inconvenience from the ir regularity in the numbering of houses upon different streets, finding some with two numbers, others with none, while perhaps one-half are correctly numbered; all the re- sult'o'f a neglect in enforcing obedience to an ordinance passed by the city council in 1864, regulating the; numbering of houses, which has met with nearly the same suc cess as an ordinance passed to regulate the naming of streets upon the corners, neither of which have been sustained by an appropriation sufficient to secure their completion. But to obviate this difficulty we have made a careful personal canvass of the entire city and suburbs, extending from the Insane Hospital west, to the Blind Asylum east, and from Camp Morton north, to the extreme limits south; covering an area of not less than twelve square miles, at an enormous cost of money and time; sparing no pains or expense to get the names of all heads of families, and all others whose names should properly occur in a work of this kind. If any have been omitted in our list of citizens, we trust they will pardon the omission as unitentional, and look upon the matter with the mind of a true philoso pher, knowing as any one must, that it is absolutely impossible to get the names of all correct, however much we should desire to do so. In the compilation we have made some changes in this volume, placing an adver tising department near the center, where a book naturally opens, and substituting in lieu of classification, a complete chronological, statistical and local history of the city of Indianapolis and vicinity, from the date of the territorial government up to the present time; which is written after careful investigation, by one of Indianapolis' native born citizens, Mr. Ignatius Brown, to whom the citizens are indebted for the production of this impartial history. POPULATION, STATISTICS, 4C. The following is a brief summary of the statistical importance of the city as shown by our recent thorough canvass of the entire city and suburbs, covering an area of over twelve square miles. In the following table the figure set opposite the different letters of the alphabet, indicate the number of different individual names of persons occurring in this book of which this is the initial letter of the last or parental name ; these exclusive of names of institutions, corporations, buildings, associations or business firms, occurring as follows : A. B.C. D. E. F.G. 390 1,271 944602 231 512 565 H,.. I... J.... _.. L...Mc.M... 1,116 88 343 506608354 1,061 INTRODUCTORY. N. 0., P.. Q. It. S.. T . 244 214 536 W 21 Y 789 7, 1,593 398 '24 124880 60 20 Total number of names 14,000 Whole number of population (estimated by the average ratio,) 56,000. This is proof beyond question that our city and suburbs have in the past year en joyed a substantial increase in their permanent resident population, of twenty per cent. over that of a year ago, which is ns large au increase as any city in the Western States has enjoyed, except St. Louis, Mo., and Omaha, Nebraska. The number of business men have largely increased, notwithstanding the large number of cases in bankruptcy, occasioned by a failure of crops for the last two years in Indiana, added to an unnecessary closeness in the money market of the West, which are now being materially changed by an immense crop of all kinds, soon to be realized, with a partial if not an entire change in the financial policy of the entire country. In public and individual improvement there has been something accomplished iu the past year, in the completion of two new school buildings of large capacity; three churches at extravagant expense; a fine public building for the use of the State officers, Supreme Court rooms, law library, &c; a large brick building for the use of county officers; a handsome addition to the Hospital for the Insane, increasing its capacity fully one-third; a convenient addition to the Union Depot buildings, furnishing room for a magnificent dining hall, sleeping parlors, general ticket office, express and telegraph offices; one cotton mill; one iron works, for the manufacture of bar, band and hoop iron, nails, nuts, washers, &c, built by a joint stock association known as the White.ARiver Iron Co.; the completion of a new saw manufactory, by Messrs. Farley & Sinker ; a very large addition to another saw manufactory, known as Sheffield Saw Works, owned by Messrs. E. C. Atkins _ Co.; (there are now more saws manufactured here than in any other city in the west,) a large addition to Messrs. Osgood, Smith & Co.'s wheel, hub and spoke manufactory has been made ; several magnificent wholesale houses have been completed and others built, added to numerous fine business blocks, private residences, small stores and shops toward the outer portion of the city. Two new railroads, the Indianapolis & Vincennes and Cincinnati, Connersville & Indianapolis, have been completed to this city, and are now preparing to build their freight depots, shops, _c. ; another road, the Indiana & Illinois Central Railroad, is being built, and will be completed between this city and the Illinois State line during this year. There is also another road being pushed to rapid completion, between this city and Terre Haute, there to ferm a united line with the Terre Haute, Alton & St. Louis Railroad, making one consolidated road between Indianapolis and St. Louis. Those two roads, when completed, will make twelve distinct lines of railroad leading to and from this city, making it the greatest railroad center in the United States of any city of equal or double its popu lation. We lay the present work before our patrons and the public with an easy con science, believing that our efforts to produce it will be appreciated by the enterprising citizens, officials, business men, mechanics, laborers and others, and manifest the same by obtaining a copy at the earliest moment, as by so doing they will be able to secure our history of Indianapolis, which alone ia worth the price of the book. To the advertising patrons of this book we tender our highest regards for their enterprise and liberality, and having done for each as we obligated ourselves to do, feel satisfied that the benefits which will inevitably accrue to each in an increase of business, will richly repay them many times their investments; and as we have Bhown that we have an honest purpose in the publication of the Directory of this city, we hope to ever receive the liberal and undivided patronage of its citizens, from year to year, as we shall continue to issue a Directory of the city annually, as heretofore. To the Press, and obliging friends, we return our best wishes for the kindness and patience shown our agents in the canvass, and wishing all success through life, we are, Very respectfully, \ Indianapolis, July, 1868. LOGAN & CO., Compilers, Printers and Publishers . LOGAN'S INDIANAPOLIS C3fK;0"V_____£; &o 33j_____I3_3__^7S SEWING MACHINES Were Awarded the Highest Premiums at the State Fairs of KENTUCKY, TENNESSEE,MISSOURI,ALABAMA,MISSISSIPPI, VIRGINIA, N. CAROLINA, CALIFORNIA, OREGON, At the Fairs of the American Institute, Franklin Institute, Maryland Institute, Massachusetts Mechanics' Association, Pennsylvania Mechanics* Institute, St. Louis Agricultural and Mechanics' Association, and at numerous Institutes and County Fairs. First prizes have also been awarded ihese Machines at the exhibi tions of London, Paris, Dublin, Lins, Besancon, Bayonne, St.Dizier, Challons. And they have been furnished, by special command, to the Empress of France, Empress of Austria, Empress of Russia, Empress of Brazil, Queen of Spain and Queen of Bavaria. THE GROVER & BAKER ELASTIC-STITCH SEWING MACHINES Are Superior to all others for the following reasons : 1. They sew direct from the spools and require no rewinding of thread. 2. They are more easily understood and used, and less liable to derangement than other machines. 3. They are capable of executing perfectly, without change of adjustment, a much greater variety of work than other machines. 4. The stitch made by these machines is much more firm, elastic and durable, especially upon articles which require to be washed and ironed, than any other stitch. 5. This stitch, owing to the manner in which the under thread is inwrought, is much the most plump and beautiful in use, and retains this plumpness and beauty even upon articles frequently washed and ironed until they are worn out. 6. The structure of the seam is such that, though it be cut or broken at intervals of only a few inches, it will neither open, run or ravel, hut remains firm and durable. *J. Unlike other machines, these fasten both ends of the seam, by their own operation. 8. With these machines, while silk is used upon the right or face side of tlie seam, cotton may be used upon the other side without lessening the strength or durability of the Beam. This can be done on no other machine, and is a great saving upon all articles stitched or made up with silk. 9. These machines, in addition to their superior merits as instruments for sewing, by a change of adjust ment, easily learned and practised, execute the most beautiful and permanent embroidery and ornamental work. GROVER & BAKER S. M. CO., No. 21 East Washington Street, Indianapolis, Ind. LOGAN'S ANNUAL INDIANAPOLIS DIRECTORY. 1 ® e ® . ABBREVIATIONS USED IN THIS BOOK. agt agent. asst assist an t. av avenue. bet between, bds boards. bldg building. blk block. com. mer commission merchant. (col) colored. cor corner. Co .-. .Company. e east. e. s east side. Ind Indiana. lab laborer. manfs manufacturers. n north. n. e north-east. n. s north side'. n. w north-west. opp opposite. p. o post-office. prest president. propr proprietor. rd road. res residence. H. R railroad. By railway. Rev reverend. s south. a. e south-east. s. s south side. s. w south-west. secy secretary. sup t superintendent. treas treasurer. w ..west. w. s west side. (wid) widow. ABASEGRAL F ., servant, 40 n. Califor- . ma. Abbett Charles H., (L. & C, H. A.,) 35 Vjr. ginia av., res. same. Abbett John B., Grand Scribe Sons of Tem perance, res. 164 Virginia av. Abbett John D., photographer, 36} e. Wash ington, res. 35 Virginia av. Abbett John W., (col.,) lab., res. Howard, bet. Second and Third. ABBETT L. & C. H., (Lawaon A. & Chas. H. A.,) physicians and surgeons, 35 Virginia av. Abbett Lawson, (L. & C. H. A., ) 35 Vir ginia av., res. same. Abbett Wesley, (col.,) lab., res. 116 Ash. Abbett William A., (J. W. Adams & Co.,) 49 and 53 w. Washington, bds. 35 Vir ginia av. Abbey G. N., (Allen A. & Co.,) 86 8. Meri dian, res. Cleveland, 0. Abbott D. H., musician, bds. 263 s. Meri dian. Abbott Miss Eliza, dress-maker, bds. 171 s. Alabama. Abbott James M., tinner, Munson & John son, res. 343 s. East. Abel Charles, driver Schmidt's beer wagon, res. 401 s. Delaware. Abishier Arvilla, occupant Deaf and Dumb Asylum. Abistrier Lodoska A., occupant Deaf and Dumb Asylum. Abker Henry, Cabinet-Makers' Union, bds. 485 e. Washington. Abker William, Cabinet-Makers' Union, bds. 485 e. Washington. Abner John, varnisher, res. 38 Henry. Aborn Orin, physician, office 68 e. Market, res. 116 Broadway, cor. Cherry. Abraham Coffin, spoke-maker, Osgoods, res. 389 s. East. Abrams John, book-keeper, J. George Stiltz, res. 129 n. Noble. Abrams John, (col.,) lab., res. cor. North and Bright. Abrams Milton, engineer, Journal Office. Abrams Wm. J., carpenter, res. 419 n. East. ABROMET ADOLPH, agt. _Etna Fire and Life Insurance Cos., of Hartford, Conn., office „__a bldg., near p. o., res. 21 w. North. Achas Frederick, lab., res. 130 n. Noble. Aohert Geo. F., clerk, 76 e. Market. Achey Mrs. Francis, res. 328 w. Washing ton. Achey Mrs. Henry, res. 17 Kentucky av. Achey James, res. 17 Eentuoky av. Achey J., speculator, bds. 17 Kentucky ft v. Achey Mrs. Mary, (wid. Henry,) 17 Ken tucky av. Acht John, painter, res. 877 n. Missis sippi. Ackles Mary, waiter, dining room Bicking House, 89 s. Illinois. LOGAN'S [A.] INDIANAPOLIS Ackleman Andrew, varnisher, res. 285 u. Noble. Acres Thornton, plasterer. Adams Alexander, (A. & Minthorn,) 296 e. Ohio, res. 268 e. St. Clair. Adams Andrew J., clerk, 296 e. Ohio, bds. 268 e. St. Clair. Adams Armstrong, carpenter., bds. 140 cor. Elm and Grove. Adams Barney, (col.,) servant, e. Washing ton, near Arsenal av. Adams Bertie, lady boarder, 36 s. New Jer sey. Adams B. F., bds. Neiman House. Adams Charles A., bds. Neiman House. Adams Charles E., cooper, res. 198 Minerva. Adams Churles S., tinner, bds. 83 .. Mc- Carty. Adams Erin, (col.,) lab., res. 182 w. Geor gia. Adams Express Office at Merchants' Union Express Office, 44 e. Washington. Adams' George W., reB. 26 Iowa. Adams G. F., lumber dealer, 169 Bates, res. 175 e Market. Adams G. H., (Asher A. & Higgins,) 76 e. Market, res. Mineapolis, Minn. ADAMS HENRY C, deputy sheriff, res. 115 s. New Jersey. Adams Harriet A., inmate Deaf and Dumb Asylum. Adams Hubbard S., ex-policeman, res. 149 Winston. Adam J. G., student, N. W. C. University, bds. 408 n. New Jersey. Adams John, (col.,) lab., Elizabeth, bet. Blake and Minerva. Adams John W., (G. W. A & Co.,) 49 and 53 w. Washington, res. 430 n. Illinois. ADAMS J. W. & CO., (J. W. A. & William A. Abbett,) whole- sale and retail boots and shoes, 49 and 53 w. Washington. Adams Levi P., cooper, res. 196 Minerva. Adams Mrs. Mary, (wid. Reuben,) res. 115 s. New Jersey. Adams Thomas H., cooper, res. 248 n. Blake. Adams & Minthorn, (Alexandria A. & John J. M..) grocers, 296 e. Ohio. Adams Samuel, lawyer, room 3, over 45 o. Washington, res. 297 n. Delaware. Adams Samuel C, brick-maker, res. 297 n. Delaware. Adams T. J., book-keeper and cashier, Trade Palace, bds. Bates House. Adams Wesley M., carpenter, 441 n. Mis sissippi. Adam William, lab., res. 465 n. Alabama. Adams William, plasterer, res. 7 Peru. Adams William C, farmer, res. National rd., IJ miles n. s. river bridge. Adams William L., (Hume, A. & Co.,) 26 and 28 w. Washington, res. 165 n. Al abama. Ademyer Frank, clerk, Metzner's drug store, bds. 263 e. Washington. Adolphus Aaron, salesman, 2 w. Washing ton, res. 213 n. Pennsylvania. Adsit C. S., clerk, 40 s. Meridian, bds. Pyle House. Aeger John, painter, res. 390 n. West. Aenhorn Godlit, varnisher, res. Court, bet. East and New Jersey. _Epker Henry, Cabinet-Makers' Union, bds. 520 e. Washington. _Epker William, Cabinet-Makers' Union, bds. 520 e. Washington. Affantranger S. G., blacksmith shop, 189 Indiana av., res. 215 w. North. Afterhyde F., painter, res. 277 Davidson. Aftong N. D., German book store, 151 e. Washington, res. 270 s. New Jersey. Afton Henry, res. 277 s. new Jersey. African M. E. Church, 176 w. Georgia, Enos Mcintosh, pastor. Afunk Andy, res. 277 s. New Jersey. Ager Samuel, lab., res. 24 Jones. Ahern Michael, works City Gas Works, res. 48 s. Alabama. Ahern Michael, lab., res. 264 s. Alabama. Ahern William, lab., res. on alley, bet. East and Liberty. Ahlders Ahlrich, saddler, works 224 c. Washington, reB. same. WOOD-WORKING MACHINERY DEPOT. _»__. BYRKIT & SONS, MANUFACTURERS OF G%_<.*» AND GENERAL AGENTS FOR WOOD-WORKING MACHINERY. MILLS: COR. OF TENNESSEE AND GEORGIA STS., INDIANAPOLIS. Orders by mail will receive prompt attention. CITY [_*.] DIRECTORY. Ahlbrand Ephraim, wagon-maker, 237 s. Delaware. Ahlbrand William, blacksmith, bds. 240 s. Delaware. Ahrenz Henry, cabinet-maker, res. 415 e. Washington. Aikins Edward, brakeman, J. M. & I. R. R., bds. 146 e. McCarty. Aikman John B., (Roll, Kimble & A.,) 123 s. Meridian, res. 38*2 n. Tennessee. Aker Ellis L., carpenter, res. 9 Forest Home av. Akers John, brakeman, I. C. & L. R. R., bds. 99 Benton. Akers John C, student, commercial college, bds. 75 Norwood. Akin Daniel, varnisher, res. 42 Rose. Akin G. B., patent right dealer, bds. Mar tin House.. Akin Lewis, clerk, Ludorff & Co., bds. Mar tin House. Akin Lewis G., clerk, 42 s. Meridian, bds. 33 w. Maryland. Akin Margaret, cook, Macy House, bds. same. Akin Mrs. Martha, (wid.,) res. 280 w. St. Clair. Akland Miss Abby, servant, 498 n. Penn sylvania. ALBEBSHABDT H. P., boots and shoes, 139 e. Washington, res. same. Albersmeier Daniel, lab., res. 172 "Union. Albersmeier Miss Mary, bds. 266 s. Penn sylvania. Albert Ephraim, res. 72 Plum. Albert John W., carriage trimmer, works Miller, Mitchell & Stough, res. cor. Ash and Vine. Alberts Lawson, res. 211 n. Missouri. Albertson A. C, printer, bds. 164 Mary land. Alberty Miss Frances, res. 2d floor over 162 w. Washington Alberty Mrs. Matilda, (wid. Frederick,) res. over 162 w. Washington, Albrecht George, carpenter, res. 332 s. De laware. Albright George, varnisher, works Union Factory, res. 182 Davidson. Albright John, brewer, bds. 94 e. South. Albro Henry, foreman, Chandler & Taylor, res. 311 s. Delaware. Alcorn Sarah J., inmate Deaf and Dumb Asylum. Aldag A., shoe-maker, res. 581 e. Washing ton. Aldag .has., boots and shoes, 175 e. Wash ington, res. in rear of same. Alday Louis, shoe-maker, res.78 n. liberty. Aldred John, res. 219 e. Washington. Aldred Mrs. Salina, (wid.,) res. Boyd's blk., Massachusetts av. Aldridge Aaron, res. 212 w. Ohio. Aldridge Frank, res. 280 w. Market. Aldridge P., (col.,) lab., 219 Madison av. Aldrich Cbauncey, carpenter, res. 425 e. St. Clair. ALDRICH & GAY, (Franklin A. & Alfred G.,) wood yard, , cor. Indiana av. and Canal. Aldrich John, stair-builder, res. 244 David son. Alexander Christina, (wid. John,) res. s. s. National rd. Alexander Eli, groceries, n. Illinois, res. 133 w. New York. Alexander Mrs. Elizabeth, (wid. David,) res. 176 n. East. Alexander Elvira, (wid. Archibald,) res. 146 e. McCarty. Alexander Mrs. Emma, (wid. James C.,) res. 287 e. Market. Alexander Eugene, book-keeper, 24 s. Me ridian, bds. Pattison House. Alexander George W. & Co., real estate agts., 30_ w. Washington, res. 550 n. Tennessee. Alexander George W., (col.,) barber, 157 w. Washington, res. 181 w. Washington. Alexander J. D., salesman, Hays, Rosen thal & Co., 64 s. Meridian, bds. Palmer House. Alexander James T., carpenter, bds. 33 w. Maryland. Alexander Mary, servant at 104 west Ver mont. Alexander Nort. E., traveling agt. Sen tinel office, 16} e. Washington, bds. 44 s. Tennessee. Alexander Theodore T., salesman, Tyler's Bee-Hive, bds. 37 Kentucky av. Alexander William, farmer, res. 233 Wins ton. Alford A. A., trunk-maker, res. 175 _. Alabama. ALFORD, TALBOT & CO., (Thomas G. A., Richard L. T., William H. Morrison, John P. Patterson & Joseph A. Moore,) wholesale grocers, 2 Morrison's opera blk., s. Meridian. Alford Thomas G., (A., Talbot & Co.,) 2 Morrison's opera blk., s. Meridian, res. 175 n. Alabama. Alfred William F., marble-cutter, res. 175 n. Alabama. Alfrey A., lab., res: 40 Catharine. Algoe Samuel, shipping clerk, Foster, Wig gins & Co., res. 288 e. South. Algia John, lab., Commercial Hotel. Alinger Jacob, lab., res. Kansas, s. city limits. Allair Andrew, blacksmith, East, near Virginia av., res. Clinton, bet; Ohio ond New York. ALLAIB JAMES P., dealer in lime, coal and cement, 24 Virginia av., res. 96 Jackson. LOGAN'S [A.] INDIANAPOUS Alleman Felix, painter, res. 242 s. Missis sippi. Allemong Charles, physician, res. 303 e. Louisiana. Allen A. C, traveling agt. Wheeler & Wil son's manf. co., res. 448 n. New Jersey. Allen, Abbey & Co., wholesale stone-ware, brown and yellew-ware, fire-brick, &c, 86 s. Meridian. Allen Austin W, (Dow & A.,) 18 n. Dela- ware, res. 107 n. Noble. Allen Miss Blanche, student, Indiana Fe male College, 146 n. Meridian, bds. the same. Allen Charles, (col.,) lab., res. 22 Elm. Allen Cyrus M., (D. A. Branson & Co.,) bds. Bates House. Allen D. B., (Abbey & Co.,) 86 s. Meridian, res. 56 s. Pennsylvania. Allen Edward, (col.,) waiter, Bates House, res. Douglas alley. Allen Edward G., salesman, 86 s. Meridian, bds. 56 s. Pennsylvania. Allen Miss Ellen, seamstress, bds. 160 s. Noble. Allen Firman, traveling agt., Connelly, Wiles & Co., res. 316 n. Illinois. Allen George, res. 31 w. Georgia. Allen George, (col.,) lab., res. 490 s. Illinois. Allen Henry, (H. A. & Co.,) 25 "and 27 e. Pearl, res. 130 w. Vermont. ALLEN, H. & CO., (Henry A. & Hugh O'Donell,) livery and sale stable, 25 and 27 e. Pearl, rear Glenns' blk. Allen Henry S., salesman, Tyler's Bee-Hive, bds, 60 w. Market, cor. Illinois. Allen Jacob B., brick-mason, res. w. end Morris. Allen James, lab., res. 218 n. Mississippi. Allen James R., tin-smith, Bellefontaine shop, res. 173 Winston. Allen Jerome, (col.,) servant, W. P. Fish- back, e. Washington. Allen J., (col.,) lab., res. Camp Carrington. Allen Joseph, (col.,) lab., res. 346 w. North. Allen Miss Laura, lady boarder, 289 e. New York. Allen Mrs. Mary, (wid. Larew,) res. 271 e. Ohio. Allen Millia, servant, over 246 e. Wash ington. ALLEN MRS. N. M., dress and cloak maker and dress-fitter, 86$ e. Washington, over Benham's music store, res. same. See card, page 34. . Allen William, (Sinkor & Co.,) res. 134 Virginia av. Allen William A., clerk, 36} e. Washington, res. same. Alley Miss Ruth, student, Indiana Female College, 146 n. Meridian, bds. the same. Allington John, res. 162 n. Illinois. Allison Joseph, plasterer, res. 30 Fletcher av. Allison Robert C, res. 171 s. New Jersey. Allison Thomas S., plasterer, res. 94 Liber ty. Almon Charles, grocer, 203 Massachusetts av., cor. North, res. Cincinnati R. R., bet. Noble and East. Aired Garrison W., sexton city cemetary, Kentucky ov., res. 215 w. South. Altog Louis, shoe-maker, res. 78 n. Liberty. Altenburger Jacob, lab., res. e. side Blake, bet. New York and Washington. Altland Hiram, constable, res. 173 e. St. Joseph. Altland Samuel T., carpenter, shop near first ward school, res. 179 Spring. Altland Miss Sarah, seamstress, 179 Spring, res. same. Altman Herman, groceries, 185 Bluff rd., res. same. ALVEY JAMES H., (Donaldson & A.,) 54 s. Meridian, res. * 10 e. Michigan. Alvord E. B., res. 334 N. Illinois. Alvord Elijah S., prest. Citizens' Street Ry, office cor. Tennessee and Louisi ana, res. 92 n. Pennsylvania. Alvord James C, res. 92 n. Pennsylvania, cor. Ohio. Alward Samuel, salesman, 58. s. Meridian, res. 247 n. East. Amach Anna, (wid.,) res. 83J e. Washing ton. Amberg Charles, machinist, res. 422 n. New Jersey. Ambrose Thomas, (col.,) barber, cor. Wash ington and Kentucky av. AMERICAN EXPRESS OFFICE, 34 e. Washington, Edward W. Sloan, supt., J. W. Butterfield, agt. American Horse Insurance Co., office room 13 Vinton's blk., n. Pennsylvania. Amos A., gas fitter, 77 e. Market. Amick Miss Jane, cook, Orphan ABylum. res. 711 n. Tennessee. Amos Aquilla, gas-fitter, Coulter & White, res. 432 e. North. Amos Ann., (wid.) George, seamstress, res. Stringtown, near river bridge. Amos Isaac, gas-fitter, res. 497 n. Alabama. Amos James, spinner, res. 27 n. Blake. Amos Mr. Nancy, (wid. Aquilla,) res. 432 e. North. ,; Amberg Charles, shipping clerk, Spiegel Thorns _ Co., res. 141 n. New Jersey. Amos Samuel, works Geisendorff Woolen Factory, bds. n. s. New York, bet. Blake and Minerva. Amos Thomas D., Bailiff Criminal Court, res. 218 Davidson. Amos William, brick-mason, res. 124 e. St Joseph. CITY [___] DIRECTORY. Ampy Nancy, (col.,) servant, 255 n. East. Anarcher John, carpenter, res. 124 Hos- brook. Andany Mrs. Caroline, (wid. Henry,) res. 318 Winston. Anderegg John, conductor, I. C. & L. R. R., bds. Ray House. Anderson Miss Ann E., student, N. W. C. University, bds. 297 Winston. ANDERSON, BULLOCK & SCHOF1ELD, (Jas. T. A., Jas. B. B. & Nash M. S.,) wholesale hardware, 62 s. Meridian. Anderson Charles, carpenter, res. 28 n. New Jersey. Anderson Charlotte, servant, Palmer House. Anderson Mrs. Cynthia, (wid. George,) res. 177 e. Market. Anderson David, carpenter, res. 70 Indi ana av. Anderson Edward, plasterer, res. over 182 e. Washington. Anderson Miss Fidelia, principal sixth ward school. Anderson George, carpenter, res. 48 n. New Jersey. Anderson George P., (A. & Jones,) 19 n. Meridian, res. 279 e. South. Anderson Harry, moulder, bds. Ray House. Anderson Harry, (col.,) hod-carrier, res. 163 Cedar. Anderson Henry, carpenter, bds. 177 e. Market. Anderson James D., plasterer, res. n. Penn sylvania, beyond city limits. Anderson James T., (A., Bullock & Scho- field,) 62 s. Meridian, res. 367 n. New Jersey. Anderson Jerome S., (Horn, A. & Co.,) 31 w. Washington, res. 162 n. Tennessee. Anderson John, clerk, American Express Co., res. 387 s. Illinois. Anderson John, carpenter, bda. 34 n. New Jersey. Anderson John, shoe-maker, 22 Virginia av., bds. 364 n. Mississippi. Anderson John J., plasterer, bds. 519 s. Illinois. Anderson J. W., agt. American Express Co., Union depot, res. 378 s. Illinois. ANDERSON & JONES, (George P. A. & Barton D. J.,) real estate and life insurance agts., 19 n. Meridian. Anderson Martha, (col.,) servant, 85 Mas sachusetts av. Anderson Martin, plasterer, res. 315 e. Merrill. ; Anderson Randolph W., carpenter, res. 435 e. Georgia'. Anderson Reuben, (col.,) porter. Downey, Brouse, Butler & Co., res. 79 Ann. Anderson Robert, brick-layer, res. 348 w. Washington. Anderson Robert, cook, Union depot din ing Hall, res. 189 s. Illinois. Anderson & Ross, grocers and produce dealers, 77 w. Washington. Anderson Thomas, oarpenter, res. 413 n. Mississippi. Anderson James, lab., bds. 177 e. Market. Anderson William, 82 e. Washington, res. 177 e. Market. Anderson William, brakeman, C. C. & I. C. R. R., fads. 58 Benton. Anderson William R., teamster, res. 139 w. Second. Anderson W. H., (A. & Ross,) 77 w. Wash ington, bds. 80 s. Tennessee. Andra John, saddler and harness-maker, 224 .. Washington, res. 326 e. New York. Andrews Alfred A., cigar-maker, 141 s. Illinois, bds. 126 n. Mississippi. Andrews Henry, (col.,) porter, 18 w. Pearl, res. 225 w. Ohio. , Andrew John B., clerk, 10 w. Louisiana, bds. same. ANDREWS LYMAN N., general freight agt., P. & I. R. R., res 434 n. Tenessee. Andrews Robert, heater, rolling mill, res. 236 s. Missouri. Andrews Samuel B., photographer, 94 e. Washington, res. 92 Ft. Wayne av. Angle A. R., conductor, Bellefontaine Ry., bds. Bates House. Angus Walter W., teacher, Deaf and Dumb Asylum, bds. e. Washington, beyond city limits. Anhaus Charles, lab., rolling mill, res. 895 s. Meridian. Anhorn E., painter, res. 54 Oak. Anhorn Ibet, painter, res. 99 Ft. Wayne av. Ankcny Sarah, student, select school, bds. 202 e. Market. Annoger John, carpenter, res. 124 Hos- brook. Annan C, book-keeper, 39 s. Meridian, bds. Pyle House. Annan Otto, res. 244 s. Delaware. Anspire Frank, lab., res. 226 n. East. Ante Jacob, res. 299 s. Delaware. Anthes Jacob, janitor, Metropolitan Thea ter, res 470 s. New Jersey. Anthony Alexander, lab., res. e. Georgia, n. s. Anthony David, carpenter, bds. 240 e. Ohio. Anthony Frederick, railroader, res. 60 .. Noble. Anthony Joshua, carpenter, res. 256 n. Blake. Anthony William, carpenter, res. second floor, 186 w. Washington. ANTLEES MRS. ESTHER A., res. 373 e. Georgia. Anton K., second-hand clothing store, 295 e. Washington. LOGAN'S [A.] INDIANAPOLIS Antonio Early, lab., res. 75 w. South. Antrim Levi, teamster, res. 58 Cherry. Antrim William, driver, M. U. Ex. Co., bds. 58 Cherry. Antrobus John B., cooper, res. Georgia, near Helen. Apzar Jacoh, cooper, res. 34 Helen. Apsey Elizabeth, servant, C. N. Todd, 228 n. Tennessee. Apperson Isaac M., bds. 256 Madison av. Apperson I. H., street car driver, res. 256 Madison a v. Apperson Miss Mary, milliner, over 6 w. Washington, res. 256 Madison av. Apperson Miss Sarah, bds. 256 Madison av. Appleby Robert, car-builder, res. 310 w. Washington. Applegate A. J., clerk, 16 Bates House blk. Applegate A. W., troveling agt., J. C. Green, res. 175 e. Washington. Applegate Berg., general com. mer., res. 194 e. Michigan. h, 'Arbuckle Matthew, (Witt & __,') s. w. cor. Meridian and Washington, res. n. Del aware, out city limits. Arbuckle S., carpenter, res. 228 w. Ohio. Arbuthnott Thomas, painter, res. Minerva, bet. New York and Vermont. Archer William, carpenter, bds. 73 n. Illi nois. Archibald 0. A., occupant Deaf and Dumb Asylum. ARDEN J., boots and shoes, 65 s. Meridian, res. same. Armbruster Frank E., saloon, 439 w. Wash ington, res. same. Armbruster John J., bar-tender, 215 w. Maryland, res. s. West, bet. Georgia and Maryland. Armentrout Lavina, (wid. David,) res. 313 n. Noble. Armers Miss Mary, servant, 462 n. Penn sylvania, cor. Pratt. Armstrong George F., agt., Merchants' Union Express Co., Union depot, res. 331 s. Pennsylvania. Armstrong James, clerk, New York store, res. 274 n. Alabama. Armstrong John S., student, N. W. C. University, bds 402 n. New Jersey. Armstrong Mary, German Sisters, bds. 124 Duncan. Armstrong Mrs. Mary, (wid.,) seamstress, res. 78 Fayette. Armstrong Rev. William, pastor, Second Presbyterian Church, res. 197 n. Meri dian. Armstrong William, supt. Young Men's Christian Association, res 497 n. Meri dian. Armstrong William S., (Vinnedge, Jones & Co.,) 66 s. Meridian, bds. 180 n. Illi nois. Arna Sarah, (wid. Presley,) r«s. Green, bet. McCarty and Stevens. Ar nan Otto, engineer, Sloan's chair factory res. 244 s. Delaware. Arnault A. H., (A. & Gregoire,) 129 s. Illi nois, res. same. Arnault & Gregoire, French dyers and scourers, 129 s. Illinois. Arnett Miss Emma, bds. 239 n. New Jersey. Arnett Mary, (col., wid.,) res. 179 Eddy. Arnett Samuel N. S., inmate Deaf and Dumb Asylum. Arnholter Henry, harness-maker, 225 e. Washington, res. 31 s. New Jersey. Arnholter William, bar-tender, res. 98 Rus- sel. Arnold John, lab., res. Michigan rd., be yond city limits. Arnold Martha J., (wid. Willie,) res. Michi gan rd., beyond city limits. Arnold Miss Rhoda, bds. 35 Indiana av. Arnold Peter, clerk, 210 e. Washington, res. 17 n. New Jersey. Arnold Peter, moulder, res. s. New Jersey. Arnot Jacob F., inmate Deaf and Dumb Asylum Arnot Jesse R., Asylum. Arnot Sarah C, Asylum. inmate Deaf and Dumb inmate Deaf and Dumb SAMUEL TAYLOR. W. N. CHAIN. TAYLOR & CRAIN, CLOTHIERS, MERCHANT TAILORS, And Dealers in GENTS' FUBNISHING GOODS, MO. 3 BATES HOUSE BLOCK, INDIANAPOLIS, INDIANA. CITY [_S_] DIRECTORY. Aaron A., salesman, Tyler's Bee-Hive. Arskin Bridget, Bervant, 260, cor. West and Washington. Arthur Thomas, moulder, res. 75 Norwood. Arthur William, stone-cutter, res. 25 Cali fornia. Arthur W_. A., moulder, bds. 75 Norwood. Artis William H., (col.,) barber, 197 w. Washington, res. same. Arthy Samuel C, clerk, 151 w. Washing ton, bds. 9 s. Mississippi. Asbury Chapel, Rev. J. H. Lozier, pastor, w. side New Jersey, bet. Louisiana and South. ASHER, ADAMS & HiGGINS, (John R. A., S. H. A. & Charles J. H.) book and map publishers, and dealers in school furniture, 76 e. Market. Asher, John R., (A., Adams & Higgins,) 76 e. Market, res. 1-89 e. Ohio. Ashley George F., res. cor. Michigan and Davidson. Ashley George F., carpenter, res. 404 e. Michigan. Ashley Thomas, res. 126 Spring. Ashmead Jaoob N., miller, bds. 350 n. Noble. Ashmead John S., carpenter, res. 360 n. Noble. Ashmead Sely W., engineer, Bellefontaine R. R., bds. 360 n. Noble. ..skins Mrs. Bessie, (wid. Patrick,) ser vant, 257 n. East. Asmus Christian, res. 15 Lord. Asm us Louis, saloon, 199 Indiana av.,'bds. 269 n. West. Asten Joseph, stock-drover, res. 560 n. Illi nois. Atam William, wood-sawyer, res. 465 n. Alabama. Alherton Fenton, brakeman, C, C. & I. C. R. R., bds. 58 Benton. Atherton H. F., traveling agt. Miller & Frank, res. Indiana av. Atherton Samuel, carpenter, res. 28 Center. Atherton William F., compositor, Journal, res. n. Pennsylvania. ATHON JAMES S„ physician and surgeon, office, room 5, McOuat's blk., Kentucky ave., res. n. e. cor. Meridian and First. Athon James S., Jr., druggist, room 5, McOuats blk,, Kentucky av., bds. cor. First and Meridian. ATKINS E. C. & CO., (Elias C. A., J. Henry Kappes & H. Knippenberg.) proprs. Sheffield saw work, 215 s. Illinois. Atkins Elias C, (E. C. A. & Co.,) res. 283 n. Pennsylvania. Atkins George W., saw-maker, E. C. Atkins & Co., bds. Pyle House, Atkins Martin, conductor, Bellefontaine R. R., bds. 466 e. Michigan. Atkinson Benjamin, meat-market, 153 w. Washington, res. 207 w. Washington. Atkinson Joseph IJ., engineer, Bellefon taine R. R., res. 237 s. Delaware. Atkinson Thomas J., house-painter, res. 181 Virginia av. Attridge Richard, carpenter, Bellefontaine Shop, res. 236 Winston. AUDITOR OP STATE, office, s. Tennesse, in new State bldg., T. B. McCarty, Auditor. Aufderhide Gottfried, painter, res. 275 Davidson. Aufderhide Henry, carpenter, res. 241 Davidson. Aufderhide John H., wooden shoe-maker, res. 241 Davidson. Aufderhide Joseph, expressman, res. 432 e. Vermont. Aufderhide William, turner, works Union factory, res. 235 Davidson. Aug Adolph, hack-driver, res. 310 e. New York. Aughinbaugh Charles R., bds 20 w. Michi gan. Aughinbaugh E. S., salesman, Browning & Sloan, bds. 75 n. Illinois. Aughinbaugh Mrs. Sarah, (wid.,) res. 75 n. Illinois. Aughinbaugh W. M., clerk, Stewart & Morgan, bds. 75 n. Illinois. Augstein Charles, varnisher, res., 344 Rail road. Aukembrock Henry, res. 351 s. Delaware. Ault. Mrs. Elizabeth, seamstress, res. 150 n. Blake. Aultnand Louisa, servant, 295 n. East. Ausbuttle, Louis, gun-smith res. over 174 e. Washington. Austin Carle, varnisher, res. 344 n. Rail road. Austin George T., traveling agt., Singer manf. co., res. 424 n. New Jersey. Austin George F., res. 189 s. Alabama. Austin John, res. 190 s. East. Austin John, gardner, res. 287 8. East. Austin J. S., clerk, Moody & Bro, 180 Indi ana av., bds. 148 Indiana av. Austin Samuel C, cabinet-maker, res. 166 n. Delaware. . Avels George, clerk, 59 s. Illinois, bds. 357 s. Delaware. Avels Joseph H., flour and feed store, 59 s. Illinois, res. 178 Madison av. Avels Mrs. Margaret, (wid.) Henry, res. 357 s. Delaware. Averill Joseph, checkman, T. H. & I. R. R., res. 183 w. South. Averill (Rev.) M. V., res. with J- O. D. Lilly, n. Tennessee, bet. Second and Third. Avery Elizabeth, servant, C. G. French, e. Washington, near corporatin line. Avery Joseph, carpenter, res. 10 w. Pratt. LOGAN'S [B] INDIANAPOLIS AVERY JOHN L., secy Indianapolis Builders and Manfs. " Association, res. 256 n. Alabama. Avery John P., physician and surgeon, office 1 Massachusetts av., res. 250 n. East, cor. Michigan. Axen Phoebe, dining room girl, Roy House, Axley John, teamster, res. w. s. Tennessee, bet. Fourth and Fifth. Ayers Mrs. Anna, (wid. Franklin,) res. Court, bet. Alabama and New Jersey. Azd Waldo, carpenter, res. McGill. BAAR B. J., (B. & Markwood,) 20 w. Maryland, res. 172 e. market. Baar G. L., scroll sawyer, res, 339 s. Dela ware. Baar & Markwood, tailoring and repair ing, 20 w. Maryland. Baarraan & Henry, lab., res. 134 s. Mc Carty. Babbitt Samuel, shoe- shop, (B. & Malli han,) 18 Virginia av., res. 378 e. Michi gan, Bach John, porter, Spencer House, bds. same. Bacher Conrad, groceries, cor. Illinois and Tinker, res. same. Bachtel Jacob, lab., res. 247 s. Delaware. Back Clemens, (B. & Wenkin,) 209 e. Wash ington, res. same. Back _ Wenkin, (Clemens, B. & Ernest W.,) cigars and tobacco, 209 e. Wash ington. Backer Frederick, gardner, res. s. e. cor. Walnut and Illinois. Backer Henry, blacksmith, res. s. e. cor. Walnut and Illinois. Backer Mary, servant, 226 e. Ohio. Backsther Martin, clerk, Weinberger & Co., res. 342 Virginia av. Backster William, (col.,) lab., res. Howard, bet. Second and Third. Bacon E. H., physician, office s. w. cor. Meridian and Washington, bds. 299 n. Mississippi. Bacon E. J. (wid. Elisha,) res. 307 n. Ala bama. Bacon Mrs. Elizabeth, (wife Robert,) dress maker, 70 e. Ohio, res. same. Bacon John I., lab., 'res. 61 Dacota. Bacon John L., blacksmith, res. 307 n. Al abama. Bacon R. D., clerk, J. E. Fawkner, res. 70 e. Ohio. Bacon T. L., clerk, U. S. Arsenal, bds. 510 n. Delaware. Bacon William, clerk, M. U. Ex. Co., 42 and 44 e. Washington, bds. De Ruiter's restaurant. Bade Anthony, lab., res. 209 s. Alabama. Bade Charles, clerk, 125 e. Washington, bds. 209 s. Alabama. Bade William, clerk, C. Frederick, bds. 209 s. Alabama. Badger John C, drug store, 172 w. Wash ington, res. same. Badger Theodore, lab., 163 w. Washington, res. 156 w. Washington. Bagget Patriok, lab., res. 86. Delaware. Baggerly C. W., cigars ond tobacco, 35 s. Meridian, res. 160 e. Market. Baggs Frederick, book-keeper, Kennedy, Byram & Co., res. 125 e. Ohio. Bagley Mrs. Jane, (wid.,) boarding house, 36 w. Maryland. Bagley Mrs. Sophia, bds. 431 n. Tennes see. Bagman Mrs. Henrietta, (wid.,) servant, 295 n. East. Baier Casper, lab., res. ever 178 e. Wash ington. Bailey George W., painter, res. 307 e. Washington, 2 up-stairs. Bailey Hamilton, coal-driver, res. 332 w. Washington. Bailey Julius, carpenter, res. 14 Bates. Bailey Robert, engineer, res. 332 w. Wash- Washington. Baine Mrs. Jane, (wid.,) seamstress, reB. 87 s. Pennsylvania. Baines James, varnisher, 38 e. Washing ton, bds. Brady's boarding house. Bair Leonidas, harness and saddlery, 248 w. Washington, bds. cor. Mississippi and Maryland. Baird William, cooper, res. 2 Indiana av. Bakemeir Frederick, lab., res. 148 Bluff rd. Bakemeir Henry, lab., Union depot, res. 419 Virginia av. Baker A. H., (B. _ Surbey,) res. 228 e. South. Baker Mrs. Anna, (wid.,) millinery, fancy goods and dress-making, 42 s. Illinois, res. same. Baker Miss B., millinery, 46 a. Illinois, res. same. Baker C, varnisher, bda. 174 w. New York. BAKER CONRAD, governor State of Indiana, office State house, bet. Washington and Market and Tennessee and Mississippi, res, 149 n. Pennsylvania, cor. New York. Baker Edgar, painter, bds. 84 Massachu setts av. Baker Edward, pressman, H. C. Chandler & Co., bds. 48 w. Maryland. Baker Eugene S., clerk, 48 n. Pennsylva nia, res. 873 n. Pennsylvania. Baker Miss Eveline, dress-maker, 42 s. Illinois, bds. same. Baker Fred., butcher, bds. 367 e. Washing ton. Baker G. J., helper, B. F. Haugh, bds. 307 n. Alabama. Baker Henry, helper, B. F. Haugh & Co., res. 203 n. Illinois. CITY [B] DIRECTORY. Baker Henry, drives coal cart, res. 321 Madison av. Baker J. M., salesman, 22 e. Washington, res. cor. East and New York. Baker Elijah, res. 138 Maple. Baker James, breakman, C. C. & I. C. R. R., bds. 58 Benton. Baker J., H., carpenter, res. 22 Douglas. Baker John, machinest, res. 194 e. McCarty. Baker John II., boot-maker, 63 Massachu setts av. Baker L. C, harness-maker, 24 n. Delaware, bds. 36 n. Pennsylvania. Baker Lena, servant, 109 Virginia av. BAKER N. S., upholster and furniture dealer, 73 e. Washington, res. 75 s. Noble. Baker S., salesman, New York store, res. 215 n. Mississippi. Baker S. ,F., res. 373 n. Pennsylvania. Baker Sarah A. E., (wid., ) 392 n. Alabama. Baker & Surbey, (A. H. B. & I. S. S.,) gro ceries and provisions, 199 Virginia av. Baker Thomas M. C, tailor, res. 170 e. Michigan. Baker Thomas W., huckster, res. 281 In diana av. Baker Winfield S., bds, 117 e. Michigan. Baldruff Miss E. A., teacher German in ward schools, bds. 146 n. Meridian. Baldwick F., restaurant and eating house, 32 w. Louisiana, res. same. Baldwin , Auctioneer, bds. 73 n. Illi nois. Baldwin J. Herman, (J. H. B. _* Co.,) 62 e. Washington, res. 396 n. Meridian. Baldwin J. H. & Co., (J. Herman B. & George S. Warren,) yankee notions,, fancy goods, trimmings, toys, etc., 6 e. Washington. Baldwin M. T., res. 41 Russel. Babester Charles, (col.,) res. Michigan, bet. West and Indiana av. Baley Frank, brakeman, C. C. & I. C. R. R., bds. 58 Benton. Baley Julius M., wheel-tightner, patent right, res. 14 Bates. Balk Frederick, lob., res. 16 Chadwick. Balke Charles, saloon, 231 e. Washington, res. same. Balke Henry, piano- varnisher, 159 and 161 e. Washington, res. 16 Chadwick. Ball Anton, bakery, 178 s. Illinois, res. same. Ball Miss Catharine, lady boarder, 169 n. Noble. Ball G. A., carriage-maker, res. Shelby ville pike, 1 mile s. corporation. Boll J. A., telegraph operator. W. U. Tele graph office, 135 w. Maryland. Ball William, carpenter, res. 137 w. Mary land. BALLARD AUSTIN, seal engraver, 28 Circle, res. same. Ballard C. E., agt., William P. Wallace, 28 w. Louisiana. Ballard G. M., dealer in Universal Clothes Wringer arid Doty Washer, 14 n. Del aware, res. n, Alabama. Ballard G. W., works Junction R. R., bds. Wiles House, Ballard Jesse, painter, bds. 70 e. Market. Ballard John, lab., res. 232 s. Missouri. BALLARD SAMUEL, boarding house, 70 e. Market. Ballard W. L., works Junction R. R., bds. Wiles House. Ballard William, shoe-maker, 41 e. Wash ington, res. over 45 s. Illinois. Ballard William P., special agt. Phoenix Mutual Life Insurance Co., of Hart ford, Conn., 3 Talbott & New's blk, n. Pennsylvania, res. 487 n. Mississippi. Ballersty Charles S., railroader, C. C. & I. C. R. R. bds. 61 s. Noble. Bollinger Miss Emma, book-keeper, bds. 244 s. Alabama. Ballinger James, (Greer, Miller & Co.,) bds. 112 s. East. Ball man Herman, groceries and provisions, 408 Indiana av., res. same. Ballman Henry, painter and grainer, bds. 23 Kentucky av. Ballweg A., manf. guns, pistols and rifles, 105 w. Washington, res. same. Ballweg Fred., eating saloon, 17 n. Illinois, res. 28 Ft. Wayne av. Bals C. F., saloon-keeper, bds. 110 e. St. Joseph. Bals Charles H. G., (Hahn & B.,) 25 s. Meridian, res. 110 e. St. Joseph, cor. Delaware. Balwick Frederick, eating house, 32 w. Louisiana, res, same. Balz Peter, (B. & Bro.) 427 n. Illinois, res. same. Balz Philip, (B. _ Bro.,) 427 n. Illinois, res. same. BAMBERGER HERMAN, hats, oaps, furs and straw goods, 16 e. Washington, res. 1 Ft. Wayne av. Bamberger Isaac, clerk, 16 e. Washington, bds. 18 Circle. Band William H., harnegs-maker, bds. 80 s. Mississippi. Banghart Isaac, teamster, res. 779 n. Mis sissippi. Baning Wm., teamster, bds. 472 s. West. Bank Rudolph, painter, res. 6 Elm. Banke Henry, carpenter, res. e. Georgia, n. side. Banning Ernest, teamster, res. 472 s. West. Banningberg James, teamster, res. 175 e. South. Cannon James, works Gates, Pray & Co., res. 65 s. Meridian. Bannwarth B., shoe-maker, res. 48 Mas sachusetts av. 10 LOGAN'S [B] INDIANAPOLIS Bansa William, wagon-maker, 379 Virginia av., res. 193 s. East. Banta John P., (Indianapolis Banking Co.,) 28 e. Washington, res. Franklin, Ind. Baptist Mission Chapel, cor. Noble and South. Barbee Albert, moulder, works D. Root & Co., res. 348 s. Delaware. Barbee Henry, fireman, Bellefontaine R. II., res. 348 s. Delaware. Barbee Robert B., policeman, first ward, res. 385 n. East. Barbee Sampson, market-master, res. 348 s. Delaware. Barber Albert H., life insurance agt., res. 75 Elizabeth. Barber Andrew, (col.,) servant at 210 n. Meridian. Barbour Miss Anna, teacher, fourth ward school, bds. 215 n. West. Barbour Charles, (col., ) farmer, res. Lenox, bet. Eighth and Ninth. BARBOUR & JACOBS, (Lucian B. & Charles J.,) lawyers and notary public, 14 n. Delaware. Barbour Lucian, (B. & Jacobs,) 14 n. Dela ware, res. n. Meridian, out city limits. Barbour S., clerk, P. 0., res. 216 n. West. Barbour Thomas F., saw-maker, bds. Pyle House. Barbour Thomas 0., clerk, Democratic State Central Committee, bds. 216 n. West. Barclay James, stone-cutter, res. 181 n. Liberty. Bard J. F., works at 175 w. Cumberland, bds. 26 s. Mississippi. Barett Patrick, res. 232 w. Maryland. Barger George W., lab., res. 583 Maple. Baris Robert, machinest, bds. California House. Capital Tobacco Works, 19, 21 and 23 n. Tennessee. Barker Mrs. Jane E., (wid. Byron E.,) res. 227 e. Market. Barker John, bds. National rd., near White river bridge. Barker Louis E., traveling agt. capital to bacco works, res. 227 «. Market. BARKER M. I., _ ,,.„ , wholesale tobacconist, office, Millers blk., res. 502 n. Illinois. Barker Mrs. Mary T., (wid. Enoch,) res. 227 © Market. Barker S. M., meat market, 210 e. St. Clair, res. same. Barker W. S., merchant tailor, 10 n. Penn- sylvnnia res. 35 n. East. Barker William W., teacher penmanship, Bryant & Stratton college, s. e. cor. Washington and Meridian. Barkley Abram, (col.,) lab., 308 Indiana av. Barkley James, (col.,) lab., res. 276 Elm. Barkley Miss Mariah, bds. 76 n. California. Barkes Mrs. Sarah E., (wid. William,) boarding house, 271 West. Barksahlte Martin, baker, res. 340 Vir ginia av. Barlow Liberty, (col.,) shoe-maker, res. 225 n. Tennessee. Barlow Thomas J., res. 84 s. Mississippi. Barmann William, bar-tender, 332 Vir ginia av., bds. 334 Virginia av. Barmeier Bernard, clerk, 178 e. Washing ton, bds. Mozart Hall. Barnaby Catharine, (wid.,) res. 39 Dacota. Barnacla Henry, fireman, I. C. & L. R. R., res. 56 Bates. Barnacla, Mrs. John M., res. -56 Bates. Barnacla Lorenzo, machinist, Eagle Ma chine Works, res. 156 s. Noble. Barnard J., insurance agency, office in Chamber of Commerce. BARNES A. A., photographer, 30 e. Washington, res. 782 n. Illinois. Barnes Alexander II., bds. 377 n. Illinois. Barnes George W., huckster, res. 69 n. Elizabeth. Barnes H., blacksmith, res. s. Illinois. Barnes H. F., physiciou and surgeon, room 6 McOuafs blk., res. 197 n. Alabama. Barnes Hiram, cooper, res. 209 Union. cro_=_:i_r a-. _=_:_A.isr__Tiii_v.3sr_»._?o"_is, i_*._>x__._t.a.. Post-Office Box No. 1362. Used, where desired, the Asphaltic Booflng Felt. JBST Also, Agents for Boone _ Stafford's Patend Elastic Stone Booflng. CITY [B] DIRECTORY. 19 Bolton Jomes, railroader, res. 289 Winston. Boman Wm. C., carpenter, res. 418 s. Illi nois. Bomberger David, carpenter, res. 287 Ind iana av. Borne Levi, saloon, 101 s. Illinois, res. 83 w. South. Bond Alonzo S., engineer, I. C. & L. R. R., res. 56 Bates. Bond A. V., shoe-maker, works at 32 e. Washington, res. 273 n. Tennessee. Bond Mrs. Carlin, (wid. Clamson,) res. 457 cor. Huron and Noble. Bond Edward, carpenter, Bellefontaine shop, res. 270 Railroad. Bonham B. M., actor, Metropolitan Theater, res. e. Market, between East and New Jersey. Bonham Thomas A., special agt., North western Mutual Life Insurance Co. Bonnell Miss India, student, Ind. Female College, 146 n. Meridian, bds. same. Bonsack John It., carpenter, res. 426 and 428 n. Meridian. Bonse William, wagon-maker, res. 193 8. East. Booker Miss Margaret, bds. 31 w. Michi gan. Boomer Elizabeth, servant, E. G. English, 48 Circle. Borgart Anton, lab., res. 342 8. Delaware. Borger Julia, servant, 124 n. Alabama. Borgner Charles, clerk, over 35 e. Wash ington, res. 31 Chatham. Boriger John, stone-mason, res. 31 Chat ham. Boring Ephraim, plasterer, res. 345 n. West. Born John, cooper, bds. 259 s. West. Born Wm. F., rope-maker, res. 259 s. West. Borodes Homer, student, N. W. C. U., bds. 22 Gregg. Borst Frederick, meat market, 22 n. Illi nois, Bates House, res. on Canal, out side Corporation line. Bosart Timothy G., clerk, 151 w. Washing ton, bds. 9 s. Mississippi. Boss John, drayman, res. 144 Union. Boss John, carpenter, bds. 84 Massachu setts av. BoBsert John, baker, 112 Bluff rd., res. same. Bost George, tanner, res. 276 Bluff rd. Boswell J. K., patentee, Boswell patent fruit dryer and room heater, 16 s. Pennsylvania, bds. 52 s. Pennsylvania. Botameir Williom, lab., res. 339 e. Mc Carty. Bothwell Henry, groceries and provisions, Mississippi, between First and Second, res. e. side Mississippi, between First and Second. Bott Gotlieb, baker, works 150 n. East, bds. same. Bottehest August, saloon keeper, res. 307 e. Washington, No. 5 up-stoirs. Bottom Nelson G., lab., res. 22 Dougherty. Bonchet Mrs. Sophia, French dye house, 42 Kentucky a v., res. same. Bower Albert, brick-maker, bds. Shelby- ' ville pike, £ mile a. Corporation. Bowen Benjamin, bds. s. w. cor. Missis sippi and Sixth. BOWEN CORNELIUS, engineer, C. C. & I. C. R. R., res. 141 Meek. Bowen Curts J., res. 141 Meek. Bowen Gilbert, bar-keeper, 87 s. Illinois, bds. 89 s. Illinois. BOWEN GEORGE M., general agt., American Life Insurance Co. of Philadelphia, Penn., over 35 e. Washington, bds. 346 n. Meridian. Bowen John F., teamster, res. cor. Ellen and Indiana av. Bowen Oliver T., (Tull & B.,) 96 Indiana av., res. s. w. cor. Mississippi and Sixth. Bowen Silas T., (B., Stewart & Co.,) 18 W. Washington, res. 82 w. Vermont. BOWEN, STEWART & CO., (Silos T. B., Charles G. and Mrs. So phia W. Stewart,) book sellers and paper dealers, 18 w. Washington. Bowen Williom, pointer, res. 22 Fatout's blk., up stairs, w. Washington. Bower Conraid, lab., res. n. s. National rd., near Insane AsylHm. Bower George, lab., res. s city limits. Bower J. W. _ Co., (J. W. B., J. C. Hoss & W. W. Marshall, ) groceries, 67 and 78 Massachusetts av. Bower J. W., (J. W. B. & Co.,) 67 and 78 Massachusetts av., res. 180 e. Vermont. Bower Moriette, occupant Deaf and Dumb Asylum. Bowers Albert A., brick-setter,' res. end Virginia av., beyond city limits. Bowers Frank, teamster, res. 26 Center. Bowers Frederick, helper, McClane, Moc- Intire & Hays. Bowers George, helper, McClane, Macln- tire & Hays. Bowers William, bds. s. s. Douglas, be tween Woshington and New York. Bowes W. R., special ogt. p. o. dept., bds. Palmer House. Bowker C. B., salesman, 50 Virginia av., bds. 154 s. New Jersey. Bowker Harrison, grocer and produce dealer, 50 Virginga ov., res. 154 s. New Jersey. Bowles Mary, servant, 98 w. Vermont. Bowles N. E. D., book agt., office Stewart & Bowen, bds. 169 n. Illinois. BOWLES THOMAS H., lawyer, res. 493 n. Meridian. Bowler Wm., salesman, New York Store, bds. 36 w. Maryland. 20 LOGAN'S [B] INDIANAPOLIS Bowman Henry, lab., res. 122 s. Noble. Bowman J. S., mechanic, bds. 211 s. Illi nois. Bowman Jacob, res. one mile w. White river bridge, n. s. National rd. Bowman Jeremiah, farmer, res. n. _. Na tional rd., w. White river bridge. Bowsy Abram, tinner, D. Root & Co., res. Forest av. Bowser Levi C, groceries, 275 Virginia av., res. 277 Virginia av. Bowser Henry, (col.,) lab., res. cor. How ard and Second. Boyce Angeline, servant, J. D. Condit, 54 Circle. Boyd Miss A., 2d floor 172 w. Washington. Boyd David M., potent wright dealer, res. 177 s. Alabama. Boyd Mrs. Esther, (wid.,) bds. 94 n. Cali fornia. Boyd Frank A., (Wood & B.,) 22 s. Meridi an, res. 440 n. Meridian. Boyd George W., clerk, C. C. C. &, R. R., res. 177 s. Alabama. Boyd James M., fireman, I. C. R. R., res. 200 Bates. Boyd James T., physician and surgeon oculist, 17 Massachusetts av., res. 117 Massachusetts av. Boyd Miss Lucy, bds. 60 n. California. Boyd R. M., res. 182 n. Missouri. Boyd Wm. H., operator, T. & I. R. R., bds. Botes House. Boyd Wm. H., of the firm of Edwords & B., that were the heavy directory publishers, now played out, having vanished like the glittering tints of the rainbow. Boyd W. T., Trode Poloce, bds. 440 n. Meridian. Boyer John, currier, 49 s. Delaware. Boyles Miss Carrie, book-binder, Journal office, bds. 177 s. New Jersey. Boyles Catherine, (wid.,) res. 177 s. New Jersey. Boyles M. W., res 335 n. Alabama. Boyles Miss Sollie, dress-maker, bds 177 s. New Jersey. Boyle Barney, peg and last factory, res. 156 High. Boyle Isabelle, servant, 78 e. Ohio. Boyle James, (A. Reed & Co.,) bds. 63 w. Maryland. Brackebush A. C, agricultural warehouse and seeds, 75 w. Woshington. Brackebush C. J., manfs. plows and imple ments, office 75 w. Washington, res. 220 n. Tennessee. Brackebush Otto, clerk, Union depot ticket office, bds. same. Brackebush Mrs. T. L., (wid.,) bds. 204 n. Illinois. Bracken Susannah, (wid. Jones A.,) cor. California and Georgia. Bracken Thomas E., (Isgrigg & B.,) 180 w. Market, res. 403 w. New York. Braddock Joseph, general agt., Donaldson & Co., 57 s. Illinois, bds. Oriental House. Brademeyer Anthony, switchman, Belle fontaine R. R., res. 279 Davidson. Brademeyer Charles, lab., res. Clinton, bet. Ohio and New York. Brademeyer Christian, brakeman, Belle fontaine R. R., res. 279 Davidson. Brademier, John F ., teamster, res. 315 e. New York. Braden David, assessor sixth district inter nal revenue, room 15 p. o. bldg., res. 393 n. Pennsylvanio. Braden James, (W. & J. B.,) 24 w. Wash ington, res. 469 n. Illinois. Braden Leroy W., clerk, assessor's office internal revenue, bds. 393 n. Penn sylvania. Braden M., compositor, Downey, Brouse, Butler & Co., res. 269 e. New York. Braden Patrick, moulder, res. 2 Henry. BRADEN W. & J., (William & James B.,) blank-book manfs., printers, stationers, paper deal ers and lithographers, 24 w. Washing ton. Braden William, (W. & J. B.,) 24 V. Wash ington, res. 473 n. Illinois. Bradford George, (col.,) lab., res. 86 n. Mis souri. Brafford L. M., tobacconist, bds. Ray House. Bradford Mrs. Mary, (wid.,) res. 52 Fletcher av. Bradie George H., pastry-cook, Bates House, bds. same. Bradley E., clerk, general freight agt., office C. C. & I. C. R. R., bds. Oriental House. Bradley James S., student, commercial col lege, bds. 44 s. Tennessee. Bradley Jeptha W., corpenter, res. Ill Massachusetts av. Bradley Leland J., second-hand furniture, over 196 w. Washington, res. 231 Mas sachusetts av. Bradley Williom, lab., Smith's brewery, res. bet. East and Noble. Brado Joseph, salesman, Tyler's Bee-Hive, res. 25 Fletcher av. Bradshow George W., cooper, res. 309 Win ston. Bradshaw J. W., teacher, Blind Asylum, res. same. Bradshaw James M., bds. Bates House. Bradshow John A., res. 26 e. Vermont. Bradshaw Miss Mary, teacher, fourth ward school.j bds. 264 n. Tennessee. Bradshaw William A., assignee in bank ruptcy, rooms 10 and 11 Tolbott & New'sblk, n. Pennsylvania, res. West ern av., w. of N. W. C. University. CITY [B] DIRECTORY. 21 Bradshaw Mrs. Margaret, res. 264 n. Ten nessee. Brady Miss Ellen, dress-maker, bds. 154 w. Market. Brady John, brick-mason, res. 100 s. East. Brady Michael, brick-layer, res. 673 n. Illinois. Brady 0. H. P., grocer, 546 e. Washington, res. same. Braham Otto, (B. & Zink.) barber, Sher man House, res. 18 Willard. BRAHAM & ZINK, barbers and hair-dressers, under Sher man House. Brake John S., fireman, C. C. & I. C. R. R., bds. 424 on Central R. B. Bramble Hamilton G., brick-mason, res. 128 n. East. Brame Arthur, barber, res. 18 Willard. Brambamt Henry, lab., res. n. Pennsylva nia, beyond city limits. Brammer William F., carpenter, works Sinker & Co., res. 322 s. Delaware. Bramon Patrick, porter, Sherman House, bds. some. Bramwell John M., res. 68 s. Mississippi. Bramwell Zenas T., res. 124 n. Missouri. Branch Eighth ward School, basement As- bury Chapel, Miss Sarah Railsbach, teacher. Brandt Henry, huckster, bds. 518 e. Wash ington. Brandt Hermon, draftsman, D. A. Bohlen, room 19 Talbott & New's blk., n. Penn sylvania, res. 222 East. Branham David C, (D. A. B. & Co.,) bds. Bates House. Branham D. C. & Co., (David C. B., Cyrus M. Allen _ John M. Cravens,) Vincen- nes R. R. contractors, office, old bank bldg. Branham Edward, (Mayhew & B.,) 129 s. Meridion, res. 240 n. Tennessee. Brannel John, lab., res. 71 Maple. Branson Anna, occupant Deaf and Dumb Asylum. Branson David A., (D. A. B. & Co.,) room over 23 n. East. BRANSON D. A. & CO., monfs. and wholesale and retail deal ers in inks, writing fluids, shoe-black ing, stove-polish, &c, 23 n. East, (D. A. Branson & J. W. Hos man.) Brant Augustus, works Washington Foun dry, bds. 222 n. East. Brant John B., minister, Presbyterian church, bds. 331 _. Meridian. Brantley C. C, occupant Deaf and Dumb Asylum. Brantley H. H, occupant Deaf and Dumb Asylum. Brattain J., expressman, res. 362 n. West. Brattain W. J., huckster, res. 70 n. Dela ware. Bratton Jesse, printer, Sentinel office, bds. 89 8. Illinois. Brawns Charles E., works Cabinet-Makers' Union, bds. 518 e. Washington. Bray John S., cabinet-maker, res. 240 n. East. Bray William H., clerk, res. 240 n. East. Bray P. L., minister, Roberts Chapel, res. 176 Massachusetts av. Breedlove Bales, farmer, res. 143 Davidson, cor. New York. Breedlove Thomas J., real Estate agt., res. 35 s. Bright. Breen James, division boss, Bellefontaine R. R., res. 339 Winston. Breening Frederick, carpenter, res. 379 s. Delaware. Brem Francis J., carpenter, works H. Recker, res. 98 s. Delaware. Breman Ward, servant, 183 e. Ohio. Bremerman Benjamin, carriage-maker, 123 e. Washington, bds. 125 e. Washing ton. Bremerman Cass, (B. & Renner, ) 123 e. Washington, res. n. w. city limits. Bremerman Frederick, works ogrioulturol works, res. 295 h. Alaboma. Bremerman & Renner, (Cass B. & John B. R.,) carriage manfs., 123 e. Washing ton. Breman Daniel, porter, Hume, Adams & Co., res. 27 Thomas. Brend, Christian, dry goods peddler, res. e. Michigan rd., beyond city limits. Brener John, cooper, res. 362 w. New York. Brennin Patrick, lab., res. w. Seventh, near Michigan rd. Brennan Thomas, painter, 26 e. Georgia, bds. 204 Buchanan. Brennan William, porter, p. o., res. 204 Buchanan. Brenton Oliver W., soldier, U. S. Arsenal res. Arsenal grounds. Bresnehem Mary, servant, 172 New Jersey Brester William, carpenter, bds. 222 e Washington. Brestean Hannah, servant, 63 n. Alabama Brett Mathew, miller, res. 21 e. Michigan. Brettin H. J., huckster, res. Buchanon, be tween Wright ond McKernan. Bretz Adam, dealer in groceries and no i tions, 44 w. Louisiana, res., 18 s. Illi nois. Brewing George, book-keeper, City Clerk's office, res. cor. Forest Home av. and Jackson. Brewer A. V., student, commercial college, bds. 44 s. Tennessee. Brewster John H., supt. Central Transpor tation Sleeping Cars, Bellefontaine R. R., res. 191 e. Market. Brickie S., (wid.,) res. 392 n. Alabama. Brickner Robert, brewer, Schmidt's brew ery. 22 LOGAN'S [B] INDIANAPOLIS Brickus Jeremiah, lab- res. n. s. National rd., w. White river bridge. Eriden bough Miss Susan, bds. 77 Broad way. Briddie George H., baker, Bates House, res. cor. Blake and New York. BRIDGMAN P., paymaster U. S. army, room 14 Tal- bott and New's blk., n. Pennsylvania, res. cor. Virginia av. and Alabama. Bridgman Miss Mollie, res. 78 Huron. Bridihop Richard, expressman, res. 213 Virginia av. Brien Teddo, lab., bds. 327 Winston. Brier Charles H., lab., res. 520 e. Wash ington. Briggs Alfred, boarding house, 198 s. Illi nois, res. same. Briggs Charles H., conductor, C. C. & I. C. R. R., res. 88 s. Liberty. Briggs Erastus, carpenter, bds. 36 Cherry. Briggs Mrs. Elizabeth, res. Geisendorff, near Geisendorff's Woolen Factory. Briggs James A., carpenter, bds. 638 n. Mississippi. Briggs Mrs. Olive, res. 88 s. Liberty. Brigham Charles E., supt. W. & J. Bra- den's printing office, 24 w. Washing ton, res. 37 Indiana av. Bright Charlotte E., seamstress, res. s. e. cor. Tennessee and Third. Bright David L., teamster, res. on alley, e. Peru and St. Clair. Bright George A., boiler-maker, Washing ton foundry, res. 353 s. Delaware- Bright Mattie, (wid. Jesse,) res. 67 Eddy. BRIGHT RICHARD J., propr. Doily and Weekly Sentinel, 16J e. Washington, bds. Bates House, res. Madison, Ind. Brill John, carpenter, res. 479 s. Illinois. Brink Christian, clerk, 29 w. Washington, res. 131 d . New Jersey. Brink William, tailor, res. 393 e. Michi gan. Brinker William, cooper, res. 343 n. New Jersey. BRINKMAN CHARLES, livery and sale stable, 33 s. Dalowore, res. 131 n. New Jersey. Brinkmon Frederick, carpenter, bds. 284 e. Market. Brinkman Williom, lob., res. 131 Davidson. Brinkmeyer Frederick, salesman, 80 s. Meridian, res. 234 n. Davidson. Brinkmeyer George, (J. C. B. & Co.,) 80 s. Meridian, res. 238 n. Davidson. Brinkmeyer John C, (J. C. B. & Co.,) 80 8. Meridian, res. 288 n. Liberty. BRINKMEYER J. C. & CO., (John C. B., Charles Kemker & George Brinkmeyer,) propr's of bonded ware house No. 1, ond wholesale liquor deal ers and distillers, 80 s. Meridian. See card, page 50. Brinning Fred., drovmon, res. 141 Bluff rd. Brison J. D., farmer, bds. 460 8. West. Brison James Wm., farmer, bds. 460 s. West. Bristor Anthony J., res. 59 w. Maryland. Bristor , engineer, C. C. & I. C. R. R., bds. 58 Benton. Bristor Samuel M., retired carriage-maker, res. 135 n. Delaware. Bristor Wm. A., boots and shoes, 75 e. Washington, res. 135 n. Delaware. Britt Thomas, lab., alley between West and California and Georgia. Brittney Mrs. Elizabeth, (wid.,) res. w. s. Douglas, between New York and Washington. Brittney Eugene, res. w. s. Douglas,, be tween Washington ond New York. Brittney Williom, clerk, Bellefontaine freight depot, res. w. s. Douglas, be tween Washington and New York. Brizins Adolph, inmate Deaf and Dumb Asylum. Broadhurst, Isaac, piano action and tone regulator, 159 and 161 e. Washington, res. 22 w. St. Clair. Brock James M., blacksmith, 175 s. Ten nessee, bds. Nagle House. CO_3TT__^2sr <«c JOlsTES, -DEALEKS m- Pine, Oak, Ash and Poplar Flooring. —AISO, DRESSED PINE AND POPLAR SIDING, &C _ AKD NEAR TEBRE HAUTE DEPOT, INDIANAPOLIS, IND. CITY [B] DIRECTORY. 23 Brock Robert, carpenter, res. 352 Virginia av. Brock Thomas, brick-maker, bds. 352 Vir ginia av. Broden James, moulder, works Sinker & Co., res. 271 e. New York. Broden John, tinner, works Tutewiler Bros., res. 271 e. NewvYork. Broden Michael, printer, works Downey & Brouse, res. 269 e. New York. Brodrick Miss Mary, bdB. 142 Indiana av. Broderick John, machinist, central shop, res. 146 Bates. Brogen James, lab., Bellefontaine R. R. track, bds. 248 Winston. Broils Moses, (col.,) res. 227 n. Minerva. Brooker David, inmate Deaf and Dumb Asylum. BROKING C. W„ supt. Indiana Transfer Co., 403 Mary land, res. 143 Union. Broking E. H., Indiana Transfer Co. Broking Frederick, driver, Indiana Trans fer Co., res. 71 s. Pennsylvania. Bromhamp Mrs., (wid.,) res. 281 s. Ten nessee. Bromwell Zeains, engineer, res. 180 n. Missouri. Bromson Miss Druzzillo, bds. 508 n. Mis sissippi. Bronyon Sarah, (wid.,) res. 278 s. Missis sippi. Brooks Bennett, carpenter, res. 178 Mas sachusetts av. Brooks Coleman, (col.,) lab., res. Camp Corrington. Brooks G. C, salesman, 22 e. Washington, res. 160 b. New Jersey. Brooks Thomas, groceries and provisions, 774 n. Tennessee, res same. Brooksmith ~ Henry, blacksmith, res. 122 Huron. Brooksmith Louis, finisher at Washington Foundry, bds. 122 Huron. Brother Mrs. Elizabeth, (wid. John,) res. 560 e. Washington. Brough George W., butcher, res. 312 n. Noble. Brough John W., res. 333 8. Alabama. Broughton Miss C, principal of primary department, Indiana Female College, 146 n. Meridion, bds. some. Brouse Andrew, carpenter, 136 e. New York, res. 138 e. New York. Brouse Charles W., (Downey, B., Butler & Co.,) cor. Meridian and Circle, res. s. w. cor. n. Meridian and Walnut. Brouse David W., clerk, Tutewiler Bros., res. 138 e. New York. Brouse Rev. J. A., (Downey, Brouse, But ler & Co.,) res. 92 e; Market. Brouse Olin R., attorney at law and nota ry public, over Bee-Hive, 2 w. Wash ington, res. 92 e. Market. Brouse Joseph, student Bryant's commer cial college, bds. 444 n. New Jersey. Brouse Thomas W., Indianapolis Builders' Association, bds. 274 n. Alabama. Bromer Frederick, painter, res. 570 e. Washington. Brower George, job printer, Journal office, bds. 39 Ellsworth. Brower Theodore, printer, W. & J. Bra- dens', bds. 39 Ellsworth. Bruner Roman, lob., res. 26 w. McCarty. Brown A., plasterer, bds. 89 s. Illinois. Brown Miss Augusta F., asst. fifth ward school, res. 145 n. Meridian. Brown Albert, grocer, 387 s. Delaware, res. same. BROWN AUSTIN H., Collector Internal Revenue, sixth dis trict, room 15 p. o. bldg., res. 290 s. Meridion. BROWN BENJAMIN _*., (Logan & B.,) over 4 w. Washington, res.|294 w. St. Clair. Brown Benjamin F., book-keeper, W. & J. Braden, bds. 204 n. Illinois. Brown C. H., tailor, works 31 n. Pennsyl vania, bds. 58 s. Pennsylvania. Brown Carrie V., occupont Deaf and Dumb Asylum. Brown Charles P., lab., bds. W. P. Noble, e. Market, near corporation. Brown Charles W., occupant Deaf and Dumb Asylum. Brown Charles H., carpenter, res. Indiana av. Brown Charles, (col.,) barber, bds. 343 n. Alabama. Brown Charles L., head cook, Bates House, bds. same. Brown Christopher, (col.,) lab., bds. 156 Douglas alley. Brown Daniel R., (Evans & B.,) 75 s. Me ridian, res. Noblesville, Ind. Brown Mrs. Ellen, (wid. Ernest,) res. 286 n. Noble. Brown Ellison, pointer, 25 s. Meridian, res. 564 n. Illinois. Brown Francis M., groceries and provis ions, 59 w. Washington, res. 322 n. Illinois. Brown George, res. 392 n. Alabama. Brown G. P. C, (wid. G. P. C.,) res. 383 n. Alabama. Brown H. C, carpenter, res. 48 w. Market. Brown Henry P.. salesmon, Hume, Adams & Co., bds. Pyle House, n. Meridian. Brown Henry (col.,) minister, Methodist church, res. 311 n. Alabama. Brown Henry, (col.,) blacksmith, res. 79 s. Missouri. Brown Henry, (col.,) well-digger, res. Camp Carrington. , Brown Henry, (col.,) dining-room boy, Ori ental House. 24 LOGAN'S [B] INDIANAPOLIS BROWN IGNATIUS, lowyer, 8i e. Washington, res. 243 e. South. Brown Isaac I., plasterer, res. 179 Massa chusetts av. Brown J. C, blacksmith, bds. 213 s. Hli- nois. Brown J. W., (Goth, B. & Co.,) 489 n. New Jersey, res. 401 n. New Jersey. Brown J. H., druggist, with Kiefer _ Vin ton, 68 s. Meridian, res. 181 Massa chusetts av. Brown John L., policeman, second ward, bds. 54 s. Pennsylvania. Brown James J., carpenter, res. 274 Mad ison av. Brown James B., plasterer, res. 229 Mas sachusetts av. Brown James H., clerk, Kiefer & Vinton, res. 181 Massachusetts av. Brown Jesse B., agt., Pan Handle R. R., res. 106 Broadway. Brown Miss Jennie, tailoress, bds. 274 Madison av. Brown Mrs. Julia A., (wid. Phillip,) res. 351 Massachusetts ov. Brown Jerry, (col.,) expressman, res. 349 n. Alabama. Brown John, plasterer, res. 229 Massachu setts av. Brown John, shoe-maker, res. 61 Indiana av. Brown John, janitor, p. o., res. 439 Vir ginia av. Brown John, egg-packer, 18 w. Pearl, bds. 92 e. Washington. Brown John, shoe-maker, res. 148 w. Ver mont. Brown John, salesman, New York Store, bds. Oriental House. Brown John, lab., res. 567 s. Illinois. Brown John, works Street Ry., bds. 229 Massachusetts av. Brown John (col.,) lab., res. rear 343 Mas sachusetts av. Brown John G., grocery dealer, 300 n. New Jersey, re's. 302 n, New Jersey. Brown John H. F., tinner, Tutewiler Bros., res. 366 n. Alabama. BROWN KINSEY, teamster, res. 107 s. Noble. Brown Lafayette, bds. 157 w. Maryland. Brown Lizzie, lady boarder, 36 s. New Jersey. Brown M. L., book-keeper, 147 e. Wosh- . ington, bds. 80 s. Mississippi. Brown Mrs. Mary L., (wid. Gardner,) res. 118 s. Mississippi. Brown Mary, servant, 34 Lockerbie. Brown Mrs. Marioh J., (wid.,) seamstress. res. 356 w. North. Brown Miss Mollie, tailoress, works 32 s. Meridian, res. 308 e. Ohio. Brown Mrs. N. A., boarding house, 54 s. Pennsylvania. Brown Nathan T., carpenter, bds. 274 Madison av. Brown Patrick, lab., 341 s. Delaware. Brown Philip A., sawyer, res. end Virginia ov., beyond city limits. BROWN MRS. R. T., (wid. Richard T.,) dress-maker and milliner, 124 n. East, res. same. Brown R. F., prof. N. W. C. University, res. Western av., near city limits. Brown R. H., bds. 54 s. Pennsylvania. Brown Rabbi, (col.,) plasterer, res. First, bet. Howard and Lafayette R. R. Brown Richard, blacksmith, bds. n. e. cor. Georgia and Liberty. Brewn Miss Sarah, lady boarder, 281 e. New York. Brown Miss Sallie A., school teacher, bds. 356 w. North. Brown Samuel, (col.,) bds. 172 w. Georgia. Brown T. B., clerk, Sheridan House, bds. same. Brown Thomas, works C. C. & I. C. shop, bds. n. e. cor. Georgia and Liberty. Brown Mrs. William, (wid. John,) bds. 170 w. New York. Brown Williom H., clerk, M. U. Express Co., 42 ond 44 e. Washington, res. Madison rd., outside city limits. Brown William P., hot manufactory, Mil ler's blk. Brown William P., lithographer, W. & J, Braden, bds. California House. Brown Williom, Journal office, bds. 204 n. Illinois. Brown William, (col.,) barber, Dr. Frank lin. Brown W., (col.,) barber, res. 85 Eddy. Brown William, barber, works 143 w. Washington, bds. some. Brown William, (col.,) barber, 286 w. Washington. Brown Willis, (col., ) lab., res. 172 w. Geor gia. Brownlee John Q., law student, bds. 162 n. New Jersey. Browning Edward, register land office, res. 109 Virginia av. Browning Frank, clerk, 7 and 9 e. Wash ington, bds. 172 n. Illinois. Browning Gordon, hopper clerk, p. o., rooms Yohn's blk., Meridian. Browning John, conductor sleeping cars, Terre Haute R. R., bds. 229 n. New Jersey. Browning Robert, (B. & Sloan,) 7 and 9 e. Washington, res. 172 n. Illinois. BROWNING & SLOAN, (Robert B. & George W. S.,) Druggists' and Apothecaries' Hall, 7 and 9 e. Washington. Brubaker, Henry W., physician and sur geon, cor. West and Washington, res. 43 Kentucky av. CITY [B] DIRECTORY. 25 Bruckner Robert, lob., Schmidt's brewery, res. some. Brueggemamm William, school teacher, res. 67 n. Noble. Bruel Edward, prof, of instrumental mu sic, Indiana Female College, 146 n. Meridian, bds. same Bruening Edward, (E. & J. B.,) 6 e. Wash ington, res. same. BRUENING E. & J., (Edward & Joseph B.,) photographers, 6 e. Washington. Bruening Joseph, (E. & J. B.,) 6 e. Wash ington, res. same. Bruening Mary, servant, 238 Davidson. Brummer Charles, music teacher and or ganist, res. 25 w. Pratt. Brundage E. H., livery, boarding and sole stable, 223 e. Washington, res. cor. East and Washington. Bruner A. (Loucks & B.,) city sealer, res. 402 n. New Jersey. Bruner Adam, carpenter, res. 129 Massa chusetts av. ^runer Jacob M., corpenter, works Belle fontaine shops, res. 402 e. Michigan. Brunner Joseph, choir-maker, res. Court, between East and New Jersey. Bruner Mrs. Margaret J., (wife Adam,) mil liner shop and res. 129 Massachusetts av. Brunner Joan, groceries and provisions, 660 n. Tennessee, res. same. Brunnemer W. F., policeman, fourth ward, res. 384 w. North. Bruning Rev. George A., elder, German Methodist, res. Jackson, out city limits. Bryan A. H., physician, office 126 s. Illi nois, res. 420 n. Delaware. Bryan F. A., dealer in drugs and medi cines, cor. Massachusetts av. and Ver mont, res. same. Bryan. John M., clerk, J. W. Bryan, bds. 420 n. Delaware. Bryan J. W., druggist, cor. Illinois and Louisiana, res. 420 n. Delaware. Bryan Joseph, cooper, res. n. s. New York, between Blake and Minerva. Bryan Miss Maggie, linen-keeper, Bates House. Bryan Richard O., varnisher, res. 77 s. East. Bryant G., book agt., bds. 225 s. New Jer sey. < Bryant Theodore, lab., res. 205 e. Market.. Bryant John S. conductor, Bellefontaine R. R., res. 47 n. East. Brydon R. p.,, clerk, general tciket office C. C. & I. C. R. R., bds. 73 w. Mary land. Bryer J. F., actor, Metropolitan Theater, bds. 120 n. Mississippi. Buelt Frederick, lab., res. 563 e. St. Clair'. Buchanan John, lob., res. 298 s. Missouri. Buchanan Andrew, wagon-moker, opp. Spiegel, Thorns & Co., res. 314 e. Washington. Buchanan Mrs. Catharine, (wid. Thomas,) res. 314 and 316 e. Washington. BUCHANAN CYRUS, corpenter, res. s. s. National rd., near Insane Asylum. Buchanan Frank, (col.,) lab., cor. Brett and Benton. Buchanan George W., carpenter, res. 131 s. East. Buchanan James, occupant Deaf and Dumb Asylum, Memphis p. o., Clark county. Buchanan James, wagon-maker, opp. Spie gel, Thorns & Co., res. 314 e. Washing ton. Buchannon John A., carpenter, res. 182 e. McCarty. Buchanan Oliver, brick-layer, res. 70 Ind iana av. Buchey Fred., boots and shoes, res. 171 Bluff rd. Buchner Frederick, blacksmith, E. S. Dougherty, first h. s., res. rear. Buchorn Christian, wagon-maker, works cor. Washington and Benton, res. 98 Davidson. Buchorn Fred., collar-maker, 20 w. Wash ington, bds e. Washington. Buck Christian, carpenter, res. 166 e. Michigan. Buck Charles, section boss, Cincinnati R. R., res. 30 Biddle. Buck Mrs. Elizabeth, dress and cloak mak ing, res. 69 w. New York. Bucheye Fire Insurance Co., of Clevelond, Ohio, J. S. Dunlop & Co., ogts., 16 and 18 n. Meridian. Buckhart A. F., occupant Deaf and Dumb Asylum. Buckland H., artist, bds. 17*j Virginia av. Buckley C, servant, 112 n. Meridian. Buckley John, lab., I. & C. R. R., res. 32 Lord. Buckley Mrs. Morgaret, res. 303 Indiana av. Buckley Patrick, tobacconist, works J. Cahall & Co., bds. Ray House. Buckley Timothy, railroader, res. 124 Meek. Buckner Alexander, (col.,) lab., res. w. Washington, between Canal ond Mis sissippi. Buckner Lewis, (col.,) lab.,, res. Camp Car- rington. Buoksot J. W., clerk, 9 w. Washington, bds. 482 n. Illinois. Bucksot Wm., propr. Gem Billiard Room, 9 w. Washington, res. 482 n. Illinois. Buckstahler Charles, clerk, J. W. Bryan, bds. 72 w. South. Buckstahler Sarah, (wid.,) res. 72 w. South. 26 LOGAN'S [B] INDIANAPOLIS Budd & Hinesley, egg-packers and poultry dealers, 18. w. Pearl, Budd J. R., (B. & Hinesley, 18 w. Pearl, res. 334 n. Alabama. Budd Milton, brick-maker, res. 308 Win ston. Budenz Henry, tailor, 266 s. Pennsylvania, res. same. Budenz Louis, tailor, works over 168 e. Washington, res. 229 Union. Buddenboum Henry, (Charles Prange & Co.,) res. u. w. cor. Ohio and Davidson. Bruddenbaum Henry C, (Charles Prange & Co., res. 396 e. Ohio. Buegin A. S., works Junction R. R., bds. Wiles House. Buehler John, lab., Schmidt's brewery, res. 28 Wyoming. Buehrig Henry E., saloon, 37 e. South, res. some. BUELL C. H., propr. and monfr. Buell's patent med icines, 75 e. Market, res. cor. Western and Forest Home avs. Buell J. R., corpenter, res. 15 Madison av. Buemmele Jas., news store, 153 e. Wash ington, res. 120 w. Maryland. Buford William B., clerk, W. & J. Braden, bds. Macy House. Bugby Mrs. Mary A., (wid. Lyman,) res. 262 n. Noble. Bugby Miss Metty, dress-maker, res. 262 n. Noble. Bugby Parker E.. engineer, Bellefontaine R. R., res. 262 n. Noble. Bugg Samuel, (col., ) res. 451 e. Georgia. Bughter George, grocery, 52 s. Californio, res. some. Bughter Theodore, student, bds. 52 s. Cali fornia. Buhhoby John, shoe-maker, bds. 17_ Vir ginia av. Buist Mrs. M. D., (wid. Thomas,) r,es. 60 n. ' California. Bulach John, bar-tender, Mozart Hall, res. Wabash, bet. Liberty and Noble. Bulk Louisa, servant, 26 n. Noble. Bull George W., clerk, White Line freight office, bds. 16 e. Michigan. Bullord Mrs. Emily, (wid. Charles G.,) res. 62 Greer. Bullen Mrs. W. S., (wid. William S.,) res. 74 e. Ohio. Bullock D. D., occupant Deaf and Dumb Asylum. Bullock Jamee B., (Anderson, B. & Scho- field,) 60 s. Meridian, res. 276 n. Ten nessee, s^ Bulsoc John, bar-tender, Mozart Hall, res. 6 \T_LrlxGt Bullock Sarah, servant, 97 n. Delaware. Bulsterbaum Mrs. E., (wid. John,) grocer ies, 239 s. Meridian, res. same. Bunce Alice, occupant Deof ond Dumb Asylum, Lafayette, Tippecanoe Co. Bunker Alexander, blacksmith, res. 129 e. Walnut. Bunte John B., (B. & Dickson,) e. Market, res. 114 w. Vermont. Burbank J. A., (Scott, West & Co.,) 127 s. Meridian, res. Richmond, Ind. Burch Leonard B., grocer, 50 n. Noble, cor. Market, res. same. Burch William R., paper-hanger, Hume, Adams & Co., bds. Macy House. Burchgraf Mrs. Louisa, (wid. Henry,) res. 384 e. Market. Burchers John F., harness-maker, 425 n. East. Burchfield Lewis, lab., res. 74 Massachu setts av. Burcke Herman, currier, 17 s. Delaware, bds. 82 Harrison. Burestine Asa, pedler, res. 117 w. McCarty. Burgess Miss Adelade E., student, Indiana Female College, 146 n. Meridian, bds. same. Burgner Miss Alice, bds. 183 n. Tennessee. BURGESS C. C, dentist, room 1, Odd Fellows Hall, res. 429 n. Pennsylvania. Burgess Rev. Otis A., pastor Christian Church, s. w. cor. Delaware and Ohio, res. 324 n. Delaware. B. F. MASTEN. M. "W. INGLE. MA.STEJST PEOPRIBTOBS OTTER, CREEK COAL. Y__.R,I_». BEPEBENCES— E. J. PECK, President City Gas Works. W. N. JACKSON, Sec'y V. K. E. Co. Office No. 28 South Meridian St. Post-Off ice Box 41. INDIANAPOLIS, IND. CITY [B] DIRECTORY. 27 Burgess Cornelius N., compositor, Journal office, res. 98 n. East. Burgess Rev. Conrad S., minister, Strange Chapel, res. 183 n. Tennessee. Bnrgess W. G., compositor, Downey, Brouse, Butler & Co., res. 98 n. East. Burgoinhe Stephen, saloon, 139 B. Illinois, bds California House. Burk A. E., works Junction R. R., bds. Wiles House. Burk Cook, (col.,) lab., w. side Mississippi, bet. Third and' Second. Burk Catharine, servant, J. D. Condit, 54 Circle. Burk, Earnshaw & Co., (William C. B., Joseph E. & James H. T.,) manufs. of furniture, 251 s. Pennsylvania. Burke Henry, shoe-maker, res. 94 n. East. BURK JOHN, coal dealer, office 23 Virginia av., res. 254 n. Tennessee. Burk Lemuel, teamster, res. 285 n. Liberty. Burk Mrs. Mary, (wid. Martin,) res. 70 Railroad. Burk Martin, soap manfr., s. city limitB, res. 112 Dacotah. Burk Patrick, works Junction R. R., bds. Wiles House. Burk S. M., carpenter, res. 71 Jackson. Burk W., railroader, bds. 470 e. Georgia. Burk Wesley, lab., bds. 94 n. East. Burk William C, (C. Earnshaw & Co.,) res. 254 n. Tennessee, Burkart John, chair-maker, bds 146 e. Mc Carty. Burke Dennis, porter, Landers, Pee & Co., 58 s. Meridian, bds. Palmer House. Burke George, saloon, 24 w. Pearl, res. 164 s. New Jersey. Burke Henry, stone-mason, res. 344 s. Del aware. Burke Thomas, boarding, 31 B. West. BURKERT ERASTUS J., secy. American Horse Insurance Co., room 13, Vinton blk., bds. Pyle House. Burket Milton, baggageman, C. C. & I. C. R. R., bds. 33 Meek. Burkert W. S., actuary, American Horse Insurance Co., room 13 Vinton blk., bdB. Pyle House. Burkenthaw David, wholesale iron store, res. 201 n. Liberty. BURKHART ANDREW J., ice merchant, res. 248 n. Mississippi. Burkhart John, bds. National rd., half mile from river bridge. Burkhofer George, show case manfr., res. 354 Virginia av. Burkle J. G., machinest, B. F. Haugh, bds. 62 s. Pennsylvania. Burkes J. W., sawyer, McCord & Wheatly, bds. Ray House. Burley George W., traveling agt., reB. 22 w. St. Clair. Burner Charles, clerk. 173 w. Washington, res. w. New York. Burnett Miss Addie, bds.235 n. Mississippi. BURNETT JEROME C, deputy auditor of State, Insurance and Bonk department, office, new State bldg., res. 235 n. Mississippi. BURNHAM A. G., physician and surgeon, homoepathist, 38 w. Market, res. same. Burnside Henry M., contractor, Indiana polis & Vincennes R. R., res. 280 n. Mississippi. Burnworth Miss Jennie, book-binder, res. 22 Elm. Burnworth Mrs. Mary, (wid. George,) res. 22 Elm. Burnworth Zilid, blacksmith, res. 22 Elm. Burns Ann, servant, 230 e. Vermont. Burns Annie, servant, Reinheimers, 175 s. Delaware. Burns Catharine, servant, 115 n. Illinois. BURNS & CARTER, (David V. B. & Vinson C.) attorneys at law, 74 e. Washington. Burns David V., (B. & Carter,) 74 e. Wash ington, bds. Pottison House. Burns Edward, brakeman, J., M. & I. R. R., bds. 143 e. McCarty. Burns Miss Emily C, res. 18 Douglas. Burns G. H., baggage-master, J., M. & I. R. R., bds. Ray House. Burns James, dealer in furs, res. 18 Doug las. Burns James, huckster, res. 61 s. New Jersey. Burnes John, engineer, C, C. & I. C. R. R., bds. 58 Benton. Burns John, cooper, res. 259 8. West. Burns John F., clerk, Geisel _ Enners, res. 345 n. Noble. Burns John, Capitol Garden, 8. w. cor. Kentucky av. and Tennesssee, bds. same. Burns & Klingensmith, attorneys at law, 115 e. Washington. Burns Mathew, lab., res. 252 s. West. Burns Miss Mary J., dress-maker, bds. 317 e. Ohio. Burns Miss Mary H., res. 18 Douglas. Burns Michael, lob.,T. H. & I. R. R. Freight Depot, res. 252 s. West. Burns Owen, lab., res. 251 s. Tennessee. Burns Patrick, lab., res. 13 Henry. BurnB Peter, engineer, Downey, BrouBe, Butler & Co., bds. Boston Bakery. Burney Thomas, puddler, White River Iron Works, bds. California House. Burns Thomas E., mill- wright, bds. 255 w. Washington. Burns William, porter, Bates House, res. 218 w. Georgia. Burns Williom, works Junction R. R., bds. Wiles House. 28 LOGAN'S [B] INDIANAPOLIS Burns William V., (B. & Klingensmith,) 115 e. Washington, res. 18 w. First. Burris Emily, (col.,) res. cor. Blake and Center. Burroughs George F., salesman, 6 e. Wash ington, bds. Pyle House, n. Meridian. Burrows G. W., traveling agt., Cincinnati House, res. Shelby ville pike, 1} miles s. corporation. Burrows Louis, (col.,) white-wosher, Wa bash, bet. New Jersey and East, res. same. Burrowes Thompson, porter, Trade Palace, lives 446 w. North. Burns Patrick, porter, Bates House, bds. same. Burt Alphonso S., traveling agt., I. & C. R. R., res. 264 e. Ohio. Burt Frederick, butcher, res. Kansas, s. city limits. Burt G., (col.,) lab., Terra Cotto Works, res. w. s. Tennessee, bet. Fifth and Sixth. Burt James C, M. D., trustee, Deaf and Dumb Asylum. Burt William N., A. B., instructor, Deaf and Dumb Asylum. Burtlesman Jane, (wid.,) res. 266 Massa chusetts av. Burton Daniel, cooper shop, w. end New York, res. 427 w. New York. Burton George H., cooper, 138 a. Missis sippi, res. some. Burton Henry, tobacconist, bds. Ray House. Burton John C. _ Co., (John C. B. & WU- liam A. Pfoff,) wholesale boot and shoe dealers, 38 s. Meridian. Burton John C, (J. C. B. & Co.,) 37 s. Me ridian, res. 445 n. New Jersey. Burton Martin, res. 346 n. Illinois. Burch Michael, blacksmith, 83 Kentucky ov., bds. 221 s. Pennsylvania. Busch Jacob, saloon-keeper, 251 w. Wash ington, res. same. Buscher Henry, saloon, 89 e. South, res. same. Buscher Henry, Jr., brewer, bds. 26 s. Ala bama. Buscher Henry, brewery, Cumberland, res. 26 s. Alabama. Buscher Mrs. Mary, (wid. Henry,) res. 189 8. Alabama. Buschman Williom, (Goth, Brown & Co.,) 489 n. New Jersey, res. 469 n. New Jersey. Buser George, policeman, fourth ward, bds. 148 Indiana av. Buser Jacob, night watchman, Union de pot, res. 74 w. Louisiana. Buser J., policeman, bds. 74 w. Lousiana. Buser Frederick, saloon-keeper, s. Dela ware, bds. 293 e. Washington. Buser Samuel, policeman, fifth ward, res. McOuot's blk. Bush Adam, corpenter, res. 77 n. Illinois. Bush David, (col.,) white-washer, res. 112 Benton. Bush Christian, boots and shoes, 165 w. Washington, res. some. Bush Jerry, fireman, C. C. & I. C. R. R., bds. 66 s. Benton. Bush Mrs. Nancy, (col., wid.,) wash-wo man, res. Railroad, bet. Ffth ond Sixth. Bush Williom, bds. 215 n. Mississippi. Busher Jacob, switch-man, Union R.R. Co., res. 432 s. East. Bushong George L., shoe-shop, 195 Indiano ov., res. s. e. cor. Walnut and Fayette. Bussell Erastus T., patent wright business, res. 258 n. Tennessee. Bussell Reu., printer, bds. 258 n. Tennes see. Bussell William M., agt., Evening Commer cial, bds. 258 n. Tennessee. Buswell John, carpenter, res. 24 Wright. Butler Charles C, printer, Meikels' office, bds. 105 n. Noble. Butler George, traveling agt., I. & C. R. R., res. 222 s. Noble. Butler James, fireman, I. C. & L. R. R., bds. 58 Benton. Butler James 0., printer, bds. 105 n. Noble. Butler Marcus B., occupont Deaf and Dumb Asylum, Lagrange p. o., Lagrange Co. Butler Mary, servant, 377 n. Illinois. Butler Mary, nurse, 229 n. New Jersey. Butler Ovid, Sen., (Downey, Brouse, B. & Co.,) cor. Meridian and Circle, res. Forest Home ov. Butler Ovid D. Jr., (Smith, Harlan & B.,) res. 257 n. East. Butler Scott, (Downey, Brouse, B. & Co.,) cor. Meridian and Circle, res. Forest Home, n. of city. Butler Wm., salesman, New York Store, bds. Commercial Hotel. Butler William, (col.,) lab., res. n. Missis sippi, bet. Third and Fourth. Buts Mrs. D. A., (wid.,) res. 83J e. Wash ington. Butsch Elizabeth, servant, Mrs. M. A. Al vord, 334 n. Illinois. BUTSCH & DICKSON, (Valentine B. & Jas. D.,) dealers in lime, coal, cement, plasterers' lath and hair, office Georgia, bet. Meridian and Pennsylvania. Butsch J., ice dealer, res. 68 w. South. BUTSCH VALENTINE, (V. B. & Co.,) propr. Metropolitan Theater ond Acodemy of Music Hall, office 27 e. Georgia, res. Meridian, bet. First and Second. BUTTERFIELD C. S. & cto., (Cyrus S. B. & J. F. Thompson,) ogts. for Lill's Chicago Brewery Cos. Ales and Porters, 72 w. Washington. See card, page 40. CITY [O] DIRECTORY. 29 Butterfield Cyrus S., (C. S. B. & Co.,) 72 w. Washington,, res. same, up-stairs. Butterfield T. H., bill clerk, American and U. S. Express Cos., 34 e. Washington, res. 175 n. Tennessee. Butterfield J. N., upholster, Hume, Adams & Co., res. 475 n. East. BUTTERFIELD JEREMIAH, agt. American and U. S. Express Cos., 34 e. Washington, res n. Pennsylva nia, bet. Pratt ond St. Joseph. BUTTERFIELD S. A. & SON, (S. A. & W. Webster B.,) physicians, office 366 n. East. Butterfield W. Webster, (S. A. B. & Son,) physicians and surgeons, office 366 n. East, res. 382 n. East. Button Miss Gertie, hair-worker, 50 s. Illi nois, res. same. Button Jessie W., principal fourth ward school, bds. 126 n. Tennessee. Byers Thomos J., student, N. W. C. Univer sity, bds. 40 Christian av. Byers William C, clerk, Blind Asylum, bds. same. BYINGTON W. W., State agt., New York Life Insurance Co., of New York City, 11 s. Meridian, res. 78 w. North. Byrd Frank, engineer, bda. 280 Chestnut. Byram Norman S., (Kennedy, B. & Co.,) 108 b. Meridian, res. 466 n. Meridian. Byrd J. A., mechanic, res. 280 Chestnut. Byrkit Albert, machinist, cor. Tennessee and Georgia, bds. same. Byrkit D. Y ., book-keeper, cor. Tennessee and Georgia, res. same. Byrkit E. M, (B. & Son,) res. 165 s. Ten nessee. Byrkit Frank, moulder, res. Ill w. South. Byrkit Hiram, candy-maker, 26 s. Meri dian, res. 143 Ft. Wayne av. Byrkit Hiram, lab., res. 86 e. Pratt. Byrkit Jacob, carpenter, res. 29 Grant. Byrkit John W., (Martin B. & Sons,) res. 71 Norwood. Byrkit Martin, res. cor. Tennessee and Georgia. BYRKIT M. &; SONS, (John W. & Edwin M. B.,) planing mill and sash, door and blind factory, cor. Tennessee and Georgia. See card, p. 2, Byrkit Socrates, wood engraver, bds. Mar tin House, 33 w. Maryland. Byrne Mary, servant, 158 u. Mississippi. CABEL CHARLES, works Union Starch Factory, res. 224 Winston. Cady Mrs. Abigal A., (wid.,) res. 24 Circle. Cady Christie, (col.,) servant, 252 n. Meri dian. Cady D., (D. C. & Co.,) 9. n. Pennsylvania, res. 227 s. New Jersey. CADY D. & CO., (D. C. & — ) boots and shoes, 9 n. Pennsylvania. Cady Elmer E., salesman, 25 e. Washington, bds. 227 s. New Jersey. Cady Nelson W., student, high school, bds. 24 Circle. CAHALL & CO., tobacco manfs., 175 w. Cumberland. Coholl James, (Cahall & Co.,) 175 w. Cum berland, res 26 s. Mississippi. Cahaline Mary, servant, Botes House. Cahew John S., res. 519 s. Illinois. Cahill Ellen, servant, 190 e. Market. Cahill John, policeman, third ward, res. 81 St. Clair. Cahill John, weaver, res. 247 w. Washing ton. Cahill Joseph, spinner, res. 347 w. Wash ington. Cahill J. B., pressman, Sentinel Office. Cahill Mrs. Mary, (wid. Hugh,) res. 347 w. Washington. Cain Bridget, servant, 473 n. Illinois. Cain George W., book-binder, bds. 11 n. West. Cain Hannah, (wid. John,) res 335 n. East. Coin Henry, servant, J. D. Condit, 54 Circle. Coin John, occupant Deaf and Dumb Asy lum, Osgood p. o., Ripley co. Cain Oliver J., fireman, I., C. & L. R. R., bds. 99 Benton. Cain Mrs. Rebecca,, (wid. Samuel,) res. over 274 e. Washington. Cain Rose, servant, bds. 335 n. East. Cain William A., engineer, I., C. & L. R. R. bds. 99 Benton. Caldwell & Detrich, dealers in furs, &c, 61 s. Illinois. Caldwell Edward, lab., bds. 408 w. Wash ington. CALDWELL H. W., flour, feed, commission house and gro cery, 149 Indiana av., res. 180 w, Michi gan. Caldwell Jesse, salesman, H. Doily & Co., 41 s. Meridian, bds. 378 s. Meridian. Caldwell John, (Crossland, Maguire & Co.,) 52 s. Meridian, res. 54 n. Mississippi. Caldwell John M., grader, res. 54, cor. mar ket and Mississipi. Caldwell J. W., (C. & Detrick,) 61 .. Illi nois, bds. Wiles House. Caldwell Thomas G., tailor, res. 292 e. Michigan. Caler Frank, lob., res. 135 n. Noble. Caler Henry, lab., res. 227 n. West. California House, Adam Kistner, propr., 184 B. Illinois. Call Joseph, lab., res. U5 Oak. Callahan Daniel C, lab., bds. 199 Meek. Callahan David, lob., res. 23 w. Washington. Callahan James, carpenter, res. 68 Fayette. 30 LOGAN'S [C] INDIANAPOLIS Callahan John P., engine driver, engine No. 3, res. 167 e. South. Callihan Mrs. Margaret, (wid.,) bds. 80 Fayette. Callihan Michael, lab., res. 202 w. Walnut, cor. Missouri. Callahan Michael, lab., res. 36 Lord. Callahan Patrick, lab., res. 130 8. Noble. Callahan Samuel, lab., I. & C. R. R., bds. end Lord. Collemeyer Henry, lob., Central Depot, res. 249 s. Alabama. Callison P. S., occupant Deaf and Dumb Asylum, Union Mills p. o., LaPorte co. Callon James, reel-driver, No. 2 Engine, res. 44 Massachusetts av. Callon R. F., paper-hanger, bds. 35 Indiana av. Calloway Mary E., occupant Deaf and Dumb Asylum, Roosville p. o. Calloway N. E., inmate Deaf and Dumb Asylum. Calvert Charles L., farmer, bds. 375 n. West. Calvert James, farmer, res. 375 n. West. Calvert R. C, student, commercial college, bds. 375 n. West. Calvin Miss Mary, servant, n. side]e. Geor gia, near city limits. Cambee J. B., clerk, 19 Virginia a v., res. 23 Pratt. Cambren Hattie, (col.,) s. side North, bet. Blackford and Bright. Cambridge Mrs. Harriet, servant, _. w. oor. New York and Alabama. Cameron George K., brick-yard, end Vir ginia av., res. 413 s. East. Cameron J. J., medical student, 15 e. Wash ington, bds. beyond city limits. Cameron William D., printer, bds. 278 n. Alabama. Cameron William S., steam book and job printer, 8 e. Pearl, res. 278 n. Ala bama. Camlin W. B., pastor Fifth Presbyterian Church, res. 35 n. California. Campbell Andrew F., tailor, res. 334 w. Washington. Campbell Charles C, trader, res. 2 w. North. Campbell Dennis, lab., res. 321 Davidson. Campbell Dennis, lab., res. 116 Oak. Campbell Duvaull, butcher, res. 322 e. Mar ket. Compbell Ezekiel, carpenter, res. 262 s. Delaware. Compbell George H., law student, 3 Odd Fellows Hall, bds. 2 w. North. Campbell & Green, (John T. C. & Perry M. G.,) druggists, 149 w. Washington. Campbell Henry, traveling agt., room 4, Cobern's bldg., w. Washington. Campbell Rev. J., pastor Christian Church, res. 23 Bright. Campbell John A., tailor, bds. 334 w. Wash ington. Campbell John D., publisher, bds. 346 n. Illinois. Campbell John T., (C. & Green,) 149 w. Washington, bds. 130 n. Mississippi. CAMPBELL J. G., passenger agt., Bellefontaine Ry. line, office 53 s. Alabama. Compbell McCobe, upholsterer, bds. 130 n. Mississippi. Campbell Miss Margaret, res. 334 w. Wash ington. Campbell Miss Martha, teacher A., pri mary, first ward school, bds. 357 a. East. Campbell Mary, (wid. George,) washing and ironing, res. 226 Massachusetts av. Campbell Mrs. Mary, (wid.,) dress-maker, 87 n. Delaware, res. same. Campbell Miss Mory, res. 334 w. Washing ton. Campbell Richard, employe, Vinton blk., res. 34 Union. Campbell Robert, merchant policeman, bds. 34 Union. Compbell Samuel L., book-binder, bds. 2 w. North. ___.. 0"O__T___S <3c OO. WHOLESALE GRGGERS, Nos. 74 and 76 SOUTH MERIDIAN STREET, INDIANAPOLIS, INDIANA. A. JONES. H. CLAY. E. P. JONES. J. W. JONES. H. C. HOLLOWAT. CITY [C] DIRECTORY. 31 Campbell Samuel, messenger, Inndiana- polis Branch Banking Co., res. cor. Washington and Pennsylvania. Campbell Thomas, student, commercial col lege, bds. 96 w. Market. Campbell Thomas S., foreman, Sentinel , bindery, res. 246 n. Illinois. Campbell Wm., student, commercial college, bds. 69 w. Market. Campbell William, blacksmith, res. 243 Mississippi. Canan J. T., clerk, Spencer House, bds. same. Canan Johnson, bar-keeper, Bates House, bds. same. CAM AN J. W., propr. Spencer House, cor. Illinois and Louisiana. Canan W. S., clerk, Spencer House, bds. same. Cane Mrs. Mary A., (wife Machael,) res. 175 e. Louisiana. Canfield Bridget, servant, W. H. Hay, 222 n. Tennessee. Canby John, engineer, B. Line R. R., res. 114 s. East. Cannell Miss Eliza C, first asst. City High School, n. w. cor. Christian ond Col lege av. Cannon L. G., clerk, freight office I. P. & C. R. R., bds. Pyle House. Cannon Mary, servant, 201 n. New Jersey. Cantana John E., cigar manfr., res. Orient, bet. Michigan and Notional rd., beyond city limits. Canton Thomas, drayman, res. 94 Fayette. Cantrell Mrs. Ann, (wid.,) bds. 132 w. Ver mont. Cantrell David M., printer, res. 132 w. Vermont. Cantwell Jeremiah, tinner, bds. 128 Win ston. Cantwell Michael, pattern-maker, works Sinker & Co., res. 132 Winston. Capen Nathan B., Jr., stone-mason, res. 121 n. Noble. Capital City Varnish Works, cor. Missis sippi and Kentucky av., H. B. Mears, propr. Capp A. B., (Franklin & Co.,) 24J e. Wash ington,. res. 87 n. Noble. Carokoff Hamlin, lab., res. foot Michigan , near National rd. Card Mrs. Martha, bds. Vermont, bet. Me ridian and Illinois. Cardington Alexander D., groceries, n. s. National rd., res. s. 8. same, near In sane Asylum. Cardder Henry, carpenter, res. n. Douglas. Carey Albert J., plasterer, bds. 82 e. St. Clair. Carey Andrew J., traveling agt., res. 27 Chatham. Carey B., white-washer, res. 58 Oak. Carey Anna, inmate Deaf and Dumb Asy lum. Carey Hannah, servant, 260 cor. West ond Washington. Carey Harvey G., (J. S. C. & Co.,) res. 284 n. Meridian. Carey James, stove-moulder, res. 151 High. Carey Jason S., (J. S. C. & Co.,) res. 191 n. Delaware. Carey J. S. & Co., (Jason S. & Harvey G. C.,) coopers, foot w. Georgia. Carey John, lab., res. Michigan rd., beyond city limits. Corey Joseph, res. 141 Meek. Carey Patrick, lab., res. 493 e. Georgia. Carigg Mary J., inmate Deaf and Dumb Asylum. Carigan John, teamster, res. 87 s. West. Carle Michael, res. 369 s. Missouri. Carleton George T., clerk, W. & J. Braden, res. 174 e. New York. Carleton James M., traveling ogt., Fair banks' Scales, res. 174 e. New York. Carleton Phillip J., messenger, American Express, res. 174 e. New York. Carley George, miller, res. 52 Bright. Carlisle Mrs. Ann M., (wid. Daniel,) res. 117 n. Mississippi. Carlisle Hugh T., printer, Journal office, bds. Commercial Hotel. Carlisle H. D., (J. Carlisle & Sons,) res. 77 w. Ohio. Carlisle John, (J. Carlisle & Sons,) res. 260 w. Washington. Carlisle J. & Sons, (John H. D. & William Carlisle,) flouring mill, n. e. cor. Mar ket and Canal. Carlisle William, (John Carlisle & Sons,) bds. 260 w. Washington. Corliss Carydon T., Homeopathist, office 72 e. Morket, bds. 60 w. Morket. Carlon John, foreman press room, Downey, Brouse, Butler & Co., bds. 41 Kentuoky av. Cormichael Jesse D., (Todd, C. & Williams,) 33 e. Washington, res. 456 n. Meridian. Carnahan McDonell A., student, bds. 410 n. Delaware. Carman Johnson, bar-tender, Bates House Saloon, bds. Bates House. Carney Mrs. Nellie, lady boarder, 131 n. East. Caroun J.M., physician, res. 140 Bluff rd. Carpenter Mrs. Anna, (wid. George,) res. Court, bet. Alobomo and New Jersey. Carpenter B. O., dealer in tomb stones and monuments, 36 e. Market, res. 515 n. Mississippi. Corpenter Catharine, inmate Home of the Friendless. Carpenter Conrad F., painter, bds. 354 s. Delaware. Carpenter Edwin, dairyman, res. end Vir ginia av. 32 LOGAN'S [C] INDIANAPOLIS Carpenter Edwin, (C. & Co.,) res. 357 n. East. Carpenter E. C, coal dealer, bds. 35 Cherry. Carpenter Frank, dining-room boy, Orien tal House. Carpenter Hnry, lab., Insane Asylum, bds. n. s. National rd., w. White river bridge. Carpenter John, (Craig, Powell & Co.,) Boyd's blk., Massachusetts av., res. 197 n. Illinois. Corpenter I. H., book-keeper, 40 s. Meri dian, bds. 165 n. Tennessee. Corpenter Mrs. Mary A., (wid.,) res. 133 n. Mississippi. Carpenter Nathaniel, supt. Indianapolis Coal and Mining Co., 19 Circle, bds. 440 n. New Jersey. Carpenters' Union, cor. Meridian and South. Carr Alexander, bds. 190, second floor, w. Washington. Carr Christian, teamster, res. 288 e. Market. Carr E. M., carpenter, res. 423 n. East. Carr George W., machinist, C. C. & I. C. shop, res. 420 Central R. R. Carr James, lab., res. 109 Cherry. Carr* Jomes M., (R. S. & J. M.,) 9 Botes House blk., bds. 490 n. Meridion. Carr John, brick-layer, bds. 82 e. St. Clair. Carr Mrs. Mary, (wid.,) res. 180, second floor, w. Washington. Carr Moses, bds. 180, second floor, w. Wash ington. Carr Omar B., book-keeper, 9 Bates House blk., bds. 490 n. Meridian. Carr Patrick, peddler, res. 26 John. Carr R. S. & J M., (Rolander & James M. C ,) saddle and harness-makers, 9 Bates House blk., w. Washington. Carr Rolander S, (R. S. & J. M. C.,) 9 Bates House blk., res |490 n. Meridian. Carr Richard, street contractor, res. e. Mc Carty, near Virginia av. Carr Thomas, groceries, 276 s. Missouri, res. same. Carr Willis, mason, bds. 82 e. St. Clair. Carratt Albert, (A. C. & Son,) 257 e. Wash ington. Carratt Albert _ Son, second-hand cloth ing, 257 e. Washington. Carretson S. M., physician, res. 142 n. Mis sissippi. Carroll J., plasterer, bds. 404 Virginia ov. Carroll Mary E, inmate Deaf and Dumb * Asylum. Carroll . M. E., milliner, 307 e. Washing ton, res. same. Carroll Michael, lab., T. H. & I. R. R., res. 369 s. Missouri. Carroll Thomas, lab., freight depot T. H. & I. R. R., res. on s. Missouri, s. Mc Carty. Carron Peter, works J. Cahall & Co., bds. Ray House. Carson John, engineer, Botes House, bds. some. Carson Henry L., conductor C. C. & I. C. R. R., res. 183 Meek. Carson Peter, stone-cutter, res. 199 w. Maryland. Corter Albert, barber, 229 e. Washington, bds. 225 e. Washington. Carter A. B., cosh boy, 68 e. Washington. bds. 440 n. New Jersey. Carter Beice M., carpenter, res. 540 n. Mis sissippi. Corter C. A., cigar-maker, William Wal lace, res. 181 s. Delaware. Carter Charles A, candy-maker, 40 w. Washington, res. 123 n, West. Carter David E, physician and surgeon, 51 Indiana av., res. 213 n. Mississippi. Carter Edward, (Hill & Co.,) 14 Bates House, n. Illinois, bds. 756 n. Tennessee Carter Miss Emma, seamstress, res. 9 Eng lish's blk., e. Washington. Corter Enoch B., carpenter, res. 198 s. Mis sissippi. Corter Frank, clerk, 27 n. Pennsylvania, res. cor. New Jersey and South. Carter Geo. G. (C. & Haynes,) 40 w. Wash ington, bds. 169 n. Illinois. Carter George, (Leathers & C) room 3, Odd Fellows' Hall, res. 544 n. Tennes see. Carter Hannah, (col.,) servant at 210 n. Meridian. Carter & Haynes, (George H. C. & Philip H ,) wholesale and retail confection ers, 40 w. Washington. Carter Henry, paper-maker, bds. Nagele House. Carter James, bds. 236 n. Illinois. Carter John, (John S. Spann & Co.,) 2 Brown's blk., res. 440 n. New Jersey. Carter John B., clerk at 25 u .. Pennsylva nia, bds. cor. New Jersey and South Carter John W., express messenger Adams Express Co., res. 199 s. New Jersey. Carter Pleasant, (col.,) servant at 78 w. Market. Carter Richard, (col.,) white-washer, res. 38 Bates. Carter Robert, Jr., (col.,) waiter Bates House, res. Howard, bet. Second and Third. Carter Robert A., (col.,) works Bates House, res. Geisendorff. Carter S. A., engineer, bds. 288 Chestnut. Carter Vinson, (Burns _ C.,) 74 e Wash ington, res. 79 e. St. Joseph. Carter William, (col.,) lab., res. on Alley rear 115 Davidson. CARTER WILLIAM E., Palace Saloon, 87 s. Illinois, bds. Com mercial Hotel. Carton Andrew, helper White River Iron Works, res. Sinker. CITY [C] DIRECTORY. 33 Cartwright Tom E., bookeeper, 82 w. Wash ington, res. n. Mississippi.'' Carter Chas. P., store-keeper, Bates House. Carver Mrs. Mary, seamstress, res. e. side Blake, bet. Washington and New York. Case David H, engineer, res. 252 e. Market. Case Elon E., (E. E. C. & Co.,) 84 w. Wash ington, res. 246 n. Meridian. CASE E. E. & CO., (Elon E. C. & Pennell Sharpless,) agri cultural implements, stoves and tin ware, 84 w. Washington. Case Henry C, carpenter, bds. n. e. cor. Mississippi and Michigan. Case John L., engineer on C. C. & I. CR. R., res. 128 Botes. Case John V., engineer, res. 252 e. Market. Case Lyman, salesman, E. E. Case & Co., res. n. e. cor. Mississippi and Michi gan. Case William 0, oarpenter, res. 9 Fatout's blk., w. Washington. Casey Michael, harness-maker, 24 n. Dela ware, res. 114 w. Georgia. Casey Patrick, lab., res. 107 Hosbrook. Cashen William, lab., 317 w. Market. Caskey Jacob, watchman, Bellefontaine Shops, bds. 456 e. Michigan. Caskey J ames, fireman, Bellefontaine R. R., bds. 456 e. Michigan. Casman Michael, lab., res. 39 e. McCarty. Gasman Michael, lab., res. 33 Buchanan. Cass F., hostler, 16 n. Pennsylvania. Cassebaum Mary, servant, 456 e. Michigan. Cassels William, works Junction R. R., bds. Wiles House. Cossidy Miss Frank, clerk, 10 w. Washing ton, res. cor. New York and Meridian. Cassidy Mattie, lady boarder, 36 s. New Jersey. Cassill Harry, printer, bds. 444 n. New Jersey. Cassing Michael, lab., res. 63 Wyoming. Cassien William, res. 317 w. Market. Casson John, engineer, Bates House, res. 218 w. Georgia. Costell Haman, cigar-maker, res. Blake, bet. New York and Vermont. Casteele Joshua, last-maker, res. 36 Dough erty. Casteter Hiram D., druggist, 40 E. Wash ington, bds. Palmer House. Castin Henry, teomster, McCord & Wheat- ley. Castor Edward A., carpenter, res. Colum bia, bet. East and New Jersey. Cathcart Andrew, engineer, res. 258 8. New Jersey. Cathcart Robert W., book-keeper, 6 e. Wash ington, res. 258 s. New Jersey. Catherwood Joseph, traveling agt., bds. 314 w. New York. Catlin Mrs. Martha, (wid.,) res. 298 w. Market. CATLIN MRS. M. J., millinery, straw goods, laces ond trim mings, 46 w. Washington, res. 44 n. Mississippi. Catlin W. W., millinery, w. Washington, res. 44 n. Mississippi. Cothin William W., 46 w. Woshington, res. 44 n. Mississippi. Cathro David R., salesman, New York Store, bds. Oriental House. Catterson A. E., policeman, eighth ward, res. 276 e. south. Catterson H., salesman, 24 w. Louisiana, bds. 276 e. South. Catterson Robert F., foreman, McOuat's tin shop, bds. 80 s. Tennessee. Cotterson Sarah, (wid.,) res. 57 Maple. CAVEN JOHN, ex-mayor and attorney at law, over 23 e. Washington, bds. Bates House. Coven Miohael, lab., res. 124 s. Noble. Cavanaugh Lawrence, works Indiana Cen tral rd. shop, res. near Jeffersonville Round House. Cavanaugh Mathew, res. 55 Eddy. Cavanaugh William U., turner, bds. Wiles House. Caylor Ann, servant, 221 e. Ohio. Caylor Allen, flour and feed store, 185 Ind iana av., bds. 379 n. West. Caylor Jacob, butcher, res. 321 n. West. Caylor Otho, expressman, res. 274 Rail- rood. Coylor Miss Jane, lady boarder, 281 e. New York. Cearsy John Sol., res. 24 Kingan. Cecile Sister, superioress St. Mary's School, Georgio, bet. Tennessee ond Illinois. Ceiter C, cooper, McCarty, bet. Meridian and Union., res. 183 Madison av. Ceiter Christoph, cooper, bds. California House. Cemp Margaret, servant, 70 e. Ohio. Cetinger John, painter, bds. 202 s Illinois. Chamber of Commerce, Vinton's blk., n. Pennsylvania, J. Burnard, secy. Chambers Abraham, melter, Root's Found ry,' res. 682 n. Illinois. Chambers Miss Anno, ladies' boarding- house, 201 e. Market. Chambers Charles, brakesman, J. M. & I. R. R., bds. Globe House. Chambers Charles S., res. Blake, bet. New York and Vermont. Chambers Thomas, hostler, W. W. Weaver, 238 n. Illinois. Chomberlin James, former, res. 677 n. Ten- DCS8C6 CHAMBERLIN JAMES H., carpenter, Osgood, Smith & Co., rea. 225 Virginia av. Champie Joseph, salesman, Gall & Rush, res. 130 n. Illinois. (3) 34 LOGAN'S [C] INDIANAPOLIS Champion William, pressman, Sentinel office, res. 345 s. Meridian. Chance Harry C, clerk, 7 and 9 e. Wash ington, res. 43 Bluff rd. Chandler Mrs. Eliza, (wid.,) bds. 172 w. Michigan. Chandler F, general ticket-agent, C. C. & I. C. R. W., bds. Bates House. Chandler & Field, (William C. & Edward S. F.,) wholesale paper dealers, 24 s. Meridian. Chandler George R., printer, W. & J. Bra den' b, res. 172 w. Michigan. Chandler Henry C, (H. C. C. & Co.,) s. e. cor. Meridian ond Pearl, res. 278 w. Vermont Chandler H. C. & Co., (Henry C. C. & George Merritt,) engravers ond book and job printers, s. e. cor: Meridian and Pearl. CHANDLER & TAYLOR, (Thomas E. C. & Franklin T.,) Phcenix Foundry and Machine Works, 870 w. Washington. Chandler Thomas E., (C. & Taylor,) res. 34 California. Chandler William, (C. & Field,) 24 s. , Meridian, res. 278 w. Vermont. Chandler W. E., paper-maker, res. 293 w. Vermont. Chapman Mrs. C. M., (wid. Rufus,) res. over 248 e. Washington. CHAPMAN D. C, sign and house painter, 20Virginia av., res. 33 Ellsworth, see card page 84. Chapman George H., judge Marion Crimi nal Circuit Court, 3 Lang-dale's blk., res. e. side n. Meridian, beyond city limits. Chapman Jane, seamstress, 130 n. Ala bama. Chapman John, wagon-maker, National rd., half mile from river bridge. Chapman Newman, finisher woolen fac tory, bds. 75 California Chapman N. J., inmate Deaf and Dumb Asylum. Chapman Samuel, res. National rd., w. White river bridge. Chapman S. E., inmate Deaf and Dumb Asylum. Chapman Thomas S, carpenter, res. 75 Ca lifornia. Chorles Abraham B., carpenter, res. 311 n. West. Charles Alexander, (col.,) lab., bds. Mis sissippi, bet. Second and Third. Charles Mrs. Emily E., (wid. Daniel B.,) boarding-house, 27 w. Ohio. Charles Joslyn D., oarpenter, res. 123 Meek. Charles Mathew, teacher city academy, res. 335 n. East. Charles T., hack-driver, res. 109 s. Noble. Chorter Oak Fire Ins. Co., of Hartford, Conn., Davis & Greene, ogts., 27 s. Me ridian. Chorter Oak Life Ins. Co., of Hartford, Conn., W. H. Hay, gen'l agt, for Indi ana, office 6 Blackford's blk. Chase A. S., bds. Pyle House. CHASE DAVID H., boots and shoes, 25 e. Washington, bds. e. Michigan rd., beyond city limits. Chase William, salesman, 25 e. Washing ton, bds. e. Michigan rd., beyond city limits. Chasteen Charles, cooper, res. 62 Huron. Cheatham Washington, (col.,) lab., res. Howard, bet. Third and Fourth. Cheek Mrs. Elizabeth, (wid. Wm. B.,) res. 40 n. Mississippi. Cheney G. E., telegraph operator, 11. s. Meridian, bds. Oriental House. Chenoworth Miss Sarah, tailoress, res. 199 e. Washington, up-stairs. Chepus Felix, piano-maker, res. 325 e. New York. Chepus John, stone-cutter, res. 325 e. New York. Chering Charles, street sprinkler, res. Orient, bet. Michigan and Notional rd., beyond city limits. m_rs. rv. m:. allen, Bun a.tt& SHoal Haling, ROOMS, No. 36 1-2 EAST WASHINGTON ST. INDIANAPOLIS, INDIANA. Over Benham 's _usic Store, opposite Glenns Block. *@**-CUTTINC AND FITTING AND ALL ORDERS ATTENDED TO PROMPTLY. CITY [O] DIRECTORY. 35 Cherry Andrew, driver, American Express Co., 34 e. Washington, bds. 138 e. New York. Cheesler Conrad, watchman, Eagle Ma chine Works, res. 93 n. New Jersey. Chester Albert A., stair builder, res. 273 Winston. Chester Charles C, music teacher, res. 749 n. Illinois. Chessler Ella, servant at 487 n. Illinois. Chettle M. G., telegraph operator, 11 8. Meridian, res. 176 n. Missouri. Chevalier Alfonso, painter, 304 e Wash ington, res. 125 n. Noble. Chew Mis. Mary, (wid.,) servant, 269 e. Market. Chidsey Robert A., brakesman, C. C. & I. C. R. R., bds. 58 Benton. Child M., Jr., (Jones & C.,) 25 w. Wash ington, bds. Botes House. Childers Mrs. E. J., (wid. John,) res. 235 s. Noble. Childers James, teamster, bds. 235 s. Noble. Childers Joshua, lab., res. 50 Elm Childers Levina. (wid.,) res. 3 Vine. Childers Mary j., (wid. William,) res. 231 8. New Jersey. Chill Thomas, house carpenter, res. 302 Madison av. Childson Sarah E., occupant Deaf and Dumb Asylum. Chittenden Horace N., special agt., Putnam Fire Ins. Co., of Hartford, Conn., office 17 n. Meridian* Chives E. B., Bhoe-moker, res. n. Bide New York, bet. Minerva and Blake. Chives James A., shoe-maker, bds. New York, bet. Minerva and Blake. Christ Mrs. Nancy, (wid. William,) bds. 494 Virginia av. Christ Church, (episcopal,) n. side Circle, cor. Meridian. Christian Church, s. w. cor. Delaware and Ohio. Christian Wilmer F., (Shover & C.,) bds. 278 n. Pennsylvania. Christison David, brick-layer, res. 103 Hos- brook. Christman Ferdinand, teller, Merchants' Notional Bank, 48 e. Washington, bds. 27 w. Maryland. Christopher , architect, carver and designer, 141 w. Washington, res. Ken tucky av., near Washington. CHRISTY ALBERT, saloon, 26 Louisiana, res. 13 e. South. Christy Albert, (col.,) servant, 38 w. Mar ket. Christy Israel, (col.,) lab., res. 29 n. Harris. Christy James A., cook, Moffitt's Saloon, res. 281 n. Mississippi. Christy Sophia, (col.,) res. n. Blake, bet. North and Elizabeth. Christy William, lab., res. 344 h. Blokei Church Henry E., employe Journal office, res. 121 n. west. Church Joseph, saw-maker, res. Sinker, bet. Alabama and New Jersey. Churchman F. M., (S. A. Fletcher & Co.,) res. 130 n. Alabama. CHURCHMAN W. H., supt. Institute for the Education of the Blind, res. same. Cinnick Frank, student, N. W. C. Univer sity, bda. 444 n. New Jersey. Cincinnati Bakery, Fred. Bollman, propr., 107 e. Washington. CINCINNATI, CONNERSVI'LE & INDIANAPOLIS JUNCTION R. R., office 112 Virginia av., freight depot in rear passenger depot, at Union de pot, J. M. Ridenour, vice-prest., J. A. Perkins, general freight and passen ger agt. Cisco Isaac, freight conductor, C. G. & I. C. R. R., res. 605 e. Washington. Cishm Robert, (col.,) cook, 350 w. North. City Academy, 13 e. New York. City Auditor's Office, Glenn's blk., e. Wash ington. City Cemetery, Kentucky av., bet. Louisi ana and River, G. W. Allred, sexton. City Clerk's Offioe, Glenn's blk., e. Wash ington, D. M. Ransdall, city clerk. City Council' Chamber, Glenn's blk., e. Washington, Daniel Macauley, mayor. City Judge's Office, Glenn's blk., e. Wash ington, J. N. Scott, city judge. City Treasurer's Office, Glenn's blk., e. Washington, R. S. Foster, city treas urer. CITY DIRECTORY OFFICE, Logan _ Co., publishers, 16 J e. Wash ington, Herald bldg. See introduc tory in first, part of book. City Hospital, n. w. city limits, terminus Indiana av., G. V. Woolen, supt. City Flower Garden and Green House, cor. Canal and Kentuoky av. City High School, n. w. cor. Circle and Morket. Citizens' Nationol Bonk, 4 e. Washington, I. Mansur, prest., Joseph R. Haugh, cashier. Citizens' Street Ry. Co., E. S. Alvord, prest., general office, cor. Louisiana and Tennessee. Claflin Charles C, (Treat & C.,) 30 n. Pennsylvania, res. 489 n. Meridian. Cloffey Christian F ., drayman, res. 328 u. Noble. Claffey Conrad, drayman, res. 69 Huron. Claffey Frederick, machinist, Central shop, res. 38 Dougherty. Claffey Mrs. , (wid.,) res. 48 Bick- ing. Clancey & Holmes, milliners and dress makers, 30 s. Delaware. 36 LOGAN'S [C] INDIANAPOLIS Clancy John, tobacconist, bds. Ray House. Clancey Mathew, (C. & Webb,) 18 s. Meri dian, res. 82 w. Market. Clancey Mrs. M., (C. & Holmes,) 30 s. Dela ware, res. same. CLANCY & WEBB, (Mathew C. & Ira C. W-) house, sign and ornamental painters, 18 s. Meri dian. Clark Benjamin, cooper, bds. end Lord, be yond city limits. Clark Catharine, servant, 222 n. Illinois. Clark Charles, railroader, 193 w. South. Clark Chos., works Capital Tobacco Works, bds. 502 n. Illinois. Clark D. L., operator, Miller & Franks, over 45 e. Washington. Clark Franklin, (col.,) lab., res. w. Eliza beth, near City Hospital. Clark George, clerk, W. P. & E. P. Gallup, bds. 78 n. Tennessee. Clark George A., physician and surgeon, with D. Hole, bds. Macy House. Clark Hampton, grocer, res. 266 Indiana ov. Clark Henry M., railroader, C. C. & I. C. R. R., bds. 61 s. Noble. Clark Henry W., soldier, U. S. Arsenal, res. Arsenal grounds. Clark Hugh, carriage-maker, works 231 w. Washington, res. 213 Massachusetts ov. Clark Isaac brick-moulder, bds. Notional rd., w. White river bridge. Clark John, blacksmith, res. Plum, bet. Vine and Cherry. Clark John, blacksmith, res. 301 s. Penn sylvania. Clark John, blacksmith, 83 Kentucky av., res. 222 s. Pennsylvania. Clark John T., miller, res. 222 Bluff rd. Clark Mrs. Mary, (wid. Jones C.,) res. 2 n. Douglas alley. Clark Michael J., shoe-maker, 223 w. Wash ington, res. 272 w. Washington. . Clark Milton L., blacksmith, 175 s. Ten nessee, res. 222 Union. Clark M., fireman, J. M. & I. R. R., bds. Ray House. Clark Levi, com. broker, bds. s. New Jersey. Clark Mrs. , tailoress, res. 177 w. Vermont. Clark Orville B., ' express-messenger, res. 115 e. Ohio. Clark Reuben 0., carpenter, res. 176 w. Michigan. Clark 'Richard A., (col.,) lab., res. 183 Douglas alley. Clark Miss Sarah, milliner, 15 Massachu setts av., res. some. Clarke Thomas F., traveling agt., Fair- bank's Scales, 43 and 45 n. Tennessee, bds. Spencer House. Clark Timothy, fireman, C. C. & I. C. R. R., bds. 58 Benton. Clark William, (Veith & C.,) 19 and 21 n. Tennessee, res. 502 n. Illinois. Clark Williom, (W. & W. H. C.,) 26 n. Illi nois, res. 180 w. Ohio. Clark William H., (W. & W. H. C.,) 26 n. Illinois, res. 180 w. Ohio. Clark W. & W. H., merchant tailors, 26 n. Illinois. Clark William T., 94 Virginia av., res. 27 Lockerbie. Clory James, lab., res. 127 Maple. Clary Jasper, lab., res. 61 McCarty. Clary JaBper, res. 127 Maple. Clarey Jeremiah, lab., res. 241 s. Tennes see. Clarry Patrick A., porter, Palmer House, res. 104 n. Blake. Clary W. J. P., lab., 61 McCarty. Clay Benjamin, (col.,) res. s. Elizabeth, bet. Blake and Harris. Clay Henry, (col.,) lab., res. Second, bet. Howard and Lafayette R. R. Clay Henry, cook, Roy House. Clay Hilary, (A. Jones & Co.,) 74 and 76 s. Meridian, res. 23 w. Ohio. Clay John H., (col.,) moulder, bds. 24 w. Georgia. Clayton B. F., painter, bds. 52 s. Pennsyl vania. Clayton L. W., salesman, D. Root & Co., res. 131 e. New York. SCHMEDEL & FRICKER, Manufacturers of all styles of No. 194 EAST WASHINGTON STREET, INDIANAPOLIS, INDIANA. J8§*5*»A__ KINDS OP BRUSHES ON HAND AND MANUFACTUEED TO OBDEB. FAIB DISCOUNT MADE TO CASH BUYEBS.— **"* CITY [C] DIRECTORY. 37 Clem Aaron, (Clem & Bro.y) 143 and 145 n. Delaware, res. 173 Massachusetts av. Clem & Bro., (Aaron & W. F. C.,) groceries, flour and feed, 143 and 145 n. Dela ware. Clem Williom F., (Clem & Bro.,) 143 and 145 n. Delaware, res. 266 n. Alabama. Clements Augustus R., engineer Bellefon taine R. R., res. 138 Davidson. Clements Williom A., lob., res. 275 w. Mer- ril. demons Catharine, servant, 121 n. Dela ware. Cleveland J. B., real estate agt., room 5, Odd Fellows Hall, res. Christian av., bet. Broadway and College av. CLEVELAND, COLUMBUS, CINCINNATI & INDIANAPOLIS RY. CO., general office, 53 s. Alabama, shops, e. end Michigan, freight depot, n. e. cor. Alabama and Virginia av., passenger depot at Union depot, Ed- word King, vice-prest. ond treas. Clifton C. W., student, eommercial .college, bds. 289 s. East. Clifford Betsey, laundress, Bates House. Clinas Isaac, painter, res. 234 s. Missouri. Cline Miss Annie, 40 n. Mississippi. Cline Peter, plainer, Hill's plaining mill, res. 116 s. East. Cline Miss Sarah, servant at Moore's, e. side Liberty, bet. Meek and Georgia. Cline William, butcher, res. Helen, bet. Georgia and Maryland. Clinton Ellen, (col.,) servant, J. M. Max well, 330 n. Meridian. Clinton James, (col.,) waiter, Bates House. Clinton J. R., deputy city clerk, Glenns' blk., bds. 148 n. Tennessee. Clippenger George W., physician, 28 n. Delaware, res. 335 n. Pennsylvania. Clockey Christopher, lab., res. cor. Fourth and Howard. Cloky Alexander W., pastor United Pres- . byterian Church, res. 110 n. Delaware. Close William H., (Robertson & C.,) 10 e. Washington, bds. 335 n. East. Clover James, brakeman, C. C. & I. C. R. R., bds. 58 Benton. Cluck Wm., pump-maker, works 57 Mas sachusetts av., bds. 450 n. Tennessee. Cluck Wm., well-digger, res. 344 n. Blake. Clune Michael, groceries, 174 s. Meridian, res. same. Clune Patrick, grocery, 174 Bluff rd., res. 454 s. Illinois. Clycket John, shoe-maker, bds. Martin House, 33 w. Maryland. Coal Albert, engineer, C. C. _ I. C. R. R., bds. 33 Meek. Cobb Mrs. Dilsey, (col.,) res. oor. Missis sippi and Fifth. Cobb Edward A., (Hay _ Co.,) 48 w. Wash ington, bds. 222 n. Tennessee. Cobert William, lab., res. 443 s. Illinois. Coble Daniel, produce merchant, res. 99 Hosbrook. Coble David A., (D. A. & G. C.,) 157 w. Washington, res. 265 n. Mississippi. Coble D. & G., (David & George,) grocers, 167 w. Washington. Coble George, carpenter, res. w. side Blake, bet. Washington and New York. Coble George, (D. _ G. C.,) 157 w. Wash ington, res. 272 n. Blake. Coble Mrs. Elizabeth, bds. 150 n. Blake. Coble Jane, servant, H. Griffith, 78 n. Illi nois. Coble Samuel, carpenter, res. n. Douglas. Coburn Adeline, ladies boarding house, 273 n. Noble. Coburn Henry, (C. & Jones,) cor. Missis sippi and Georgia, res. 125 e. New York. COBURN & JONES, (Henry C. & William H. J.,) dealers in lumber, lath and shingles, cor. Missis sippi and Georgia. Coburn Hahneman, res. cor. Georgia and West. Coburn John, lawyer and U. S. representa tive, office 5 Langsdale blk., res. 126 e. Ohio. Coburn Mary A., (wid.,) res. cor. Oak and Vine. Cochran A. J., res. 420 s. Illinois. Cochrane Miss Emily B., saleswoman, G ro ver & Baker Sewing Machine Co., 21 e. Washington, bds. 187 e. Ohio. Cochrane Samuel W., carpenter, res. 424 n. Mississippi. Cochrane Thomas M., general agt., Grover & Baker Sewing Machine Co., 21 e. Washington, res. 187 e. Ohio. Cochrom Wm. W., carpenter, res. 420 s. Il linois. Colclazer Jacob H., watch-maker and jew eler, works 50 e. Washington, bds. 121 n. Delaware. Coen John, boarding house and paper han ger, 169 s. Tennessee. Coen Sarah A., inmate Deaf and Dumb Asylum. Coesby Mrs. Julio, (col., wid.,) wash- woman, res. Missouri, bet. Indiano av. and North. Coffie Miss Emma, ladies boarding house, 57 n. Douglas alley. Coffie Miss Jennie, bds. 57 n. Douglas al ley. Coffield Thomas, musician, bds. 235 e. Ver mont. Coffrin Abraham, res. 389 s. East. Coffin B. S., (Wheat, Fletcher & Co.,) room 1, Vinton blk., res. 410 n. Pennsyl vania. Coffin Charles E., book-keeper, L. R. Mar tin, bds. 37 Kentucky av. 38 LOGAN'S [C] INDIANAPOLIS Coffin David W., (Connelly, W. & Co.,) 149 s. Meridian, res. 26 w. Pratt. , Coffin Miss Eliza T., teacher, public schools, bds. 171 Jackson. Coffin Julius V., shipping clerk, 149 s. Meridian, bds. Spencer House. Cofflin George, meat morket, 306 w. Wash ington, res. same. Coffman Charles W., traveling agt., Vin nedge, Jones & Co., 66 s. Meridian, bds. 188 s. Mississippi. Coffman George, (C. & Poland,) 306 w. Washington. Coffman Jacob, corpenter, res. 255 s. New Jersey. Coffman & Poland, (George C. & John P.,) butchers, 306 w. Washington. Coffman Samuel, carpenter, res. 305 Vir ginia nv. Coffey A. E., with Downey, Brouse, Butler & Co., cor. Meridian and Circle, bds. Mrs. Shannon, n. Delaware. Cogle Mrs. Clarinda, (wid. John,) res. 229 Virginia ov. Cogle Samuel, brakeman, C. I. & C. R. R., bds. 103 s. New Jersey. Cogle William, res. 223 Virginia av., old No. 186. Cohick Samuel, porter, California House, bds. same. Colden J. E., real estate agt., rooms 10 and 11 Talbott & News blk., n. Pennsyl vania, res. 129 Union. Cole A. B., res. Western av., near city lim its. Cole Miss Augusta T., dress-maker, 15 Mas sachusetts av., res. Boyd's blk. Cole B. W., Trade Palace, bds. Oriental House. Cole Ernest B., clerk, 68 e. Washington, bds. Macy House. Cole Howard, low student, Porter, Harrison & Fishhook, res. 1 _ mile east of ar senal. Cole Miss M. E., teacher D. grade inter, Ninth Ward School, bds. 115 Massa chusetts av. COLE JAMES, _ carpenter, res. rear 84 n. Alabomo. Cole Oscor F, clerk, T. H. _ I. R. R. freight depot, bds. Pyle House. Coles Miss Susan C, dress-maker, 15 Mas sachusetts av., res. some. Cole Wm., (col.,) lab., res. Camp Carring- ton. Cole W. B., olerk, Trode Palace, bds. Ori ental House. Coleman Allen M., farmer, bds. 367 n. West. Coleman Benjamin F., works cemetery, bds. 367 n. West. Coleman Henry, messenger and porter Governor Baker, res. n. Tennessee, bet. Ohio and New York. Coleman Henry C, farmer, bds. 367 n. West. Coleman James, lab., res. 432 s. West. Coleman John G., book-keeper, L. R. Mar tin, res. 367 n. West. Coleman John G., bds. cor. Blake and Eliza beth. Colemon Louisa, (col.,) servant, 228 e. Market. Coleman Mary, servant, 51 Madison av. Colemon Nathan, (col.,) lab., res. 344 w. North. Coleman Mrs. Ruhamah, (wid.,) res. 367 n. West. Coleman William, lab., Bellefontaine shop, bds. 382 e. Michigan. Colestock Ephraim, carpenter, res. 250 n. Illinois. Colestock George N., book -binder, W. & J. Braden, bds. 250 n. Illinois. Colestock Wesley A., carpenter, bds. 250 n. Illinois. Colgan Henrie, principal FifthWard School, res. cor. College and Christian ov. Colgan Henry, farmer, res. 77 Christian av. Colgan Henrietta, teacher 5th Ward School, res. cor. College and Christian av. Coll Dominick, bar-keeper Bourbon Saloon, bds. s. Illinois. JOHN SCHNEIDEB. CHRISTIAN KABLE. SO_=3:_-TEI_D_3K; Sc OO. INDIANAPOLIS fornix Itall anS Mmn Wmnhq 26 UNION RAILROAD TRACK, HALF SQUARE EAST UNION DEPOT, INDIANAPOLIS, INDIANA. JSSTThis establishment, has constantly on hand a complete assortment of Brass Goods for Engine Builders, Steam and Gas Fitters, and are mansfacturers of Water, Steam, Gas and Beer Cocks, Whistles, Couplings, Oil Cups, Globe Talves, and all kinds of Brass Work. CITY [C] DIRECTORY. 39 Colored School, 642 n. Mississippi, J. M. Williams, teacher. Collard Isoac W., moulder, works Chandler & Taylor, reB. 121 e. Ohio. Collas August, cabinet-maker, bde. Ray House. Colett Moses M, (John Furnas & Co.,) 68 e. Washington, res. cor. Broadway and Forrest Home av. Collet Maurice, clerk, 100 e. Woshington, bds. Circle Restaurant. Coller S. A., lawyer, 16J s. Meridian, res. 338 n. New Jersey. Collier William S., res. 113 s. New Jersey. Collins Miss A. E., teacher B. Primary Ninth Ward School, res. St. Joseph. Collins Miss Anna M., student Ind. Female College, 146 n. Meridian, bds. Bame. Collins B., saw-maker, bds. 64 s. East. Collins Catharine, servant, 83 n. Tennes see. Collins Cornelius, lab., res. 223 s. West. Collins Hezekiah, capitalist, res. 134 e. St. Joseph. Collins Ira F., olerk, 348 e. Woshington, bds. 26 n. Noble. Collins James A., clerk, A. Abromet, _Etna bldg., n. Pennsylvania, bds. 306 n. Delaware. Collins James Levi, railrooder, res. 457 e. Georgia. Collins Jeremiah, lithographer, W. & J. Braden, res. 39 s. East. Collins John, carpenter, 239 Buchanan. Collins Julia, servant, L. Hills, 208 n. Illi nois. Collins J. G., boarding-house, 52 s. Penn sylvania. Collins Mrs. Lizzie, bds. 250 Madison av. Collins Martin, lab., bds. cor. West and Maryland. Collins Mary, servant, Gen. Love, 81 n. Tennessee. Collins Norah, servant at n. e. cor. Illinois and Pratt. Collins Thomas, works Street R. R. Co., res. 20 n. Noble. Cullins William, salesman, 14 n. Delaware, bds. 426 e. North. Collins William, works U. S. Arsenal, res. 20 n. Noble. Collopy Hannah, cook, 38 w. Maryland. Collord Mrs. Elizabeth, (wid. George,) seamstress, 121 e. Ohio, res. same. Columbus,. Chicago _ Indiana Central Ry. Company, office s. e. cor. Delaware and Virginia av. Colter Eliza, servont at 288 n. Tennessee. Colter John, works Rolling Mill, res. 345 s. Meridian. Colvin George L., works Junction R. R., bds. Wiles House. Colvin Scott, (col.,) servant, J. O. D. Lilly, n. Tennessee, bet. Second and Third. Colton Wm., lab., C. C. C. _ I. R. R. shop, bds. 270 Railroad. Colwell Jesse B., olerk, H. Dailey & Co., bds. 378 n. Meridian. Collwell Somuel H., fireman, C. C. C. & I. R. R., res. cor. Plum and Vine. Comber John, heater, White River Iron Works, bds. California House. Comegys Levy, carpenter and house-mov er, res. cor. Sixth and Illinois. Commercial, (Evening,) 17J w. Washing ton, Commercial Co., proprs. Comingore J. A., (C, Reissner & Co.,) 17 w. Washington, res. 335 n. Liberty. Comingore John A., physician, res. 335 n. Liberty. Comingore, Reissner & Co., (J. A. C. M. A. C. & G. A. R.,) dealers in boots and Bhoes, 17 w. Washington. Comingore W. H., book-keeper, 17 W.Wash ington, res. 405 n. New Jersey. Comly D. J., clerk, Gen'l Ticket Office C. C. & I. C. Ry., res. Michigon rd., e. city limits. Commercial Hotel, cor. Georgia and Illi nois, George McCormick, propr. Commons John M., private secy. Governor Baker, office State House, res. 80 n. New Jersey. Compagne Louis, carpenter, res. 118 Hu ron. Compton Amanda, inmate Deaf and Dumb Asylum. Compton Christiana M., inmate Deaf and Dumb Asylum. Compton Eliza M., clerk, 152 w. Washing ton, res. cor. Fort Wayne av. and Cherry. Compton Israel, groceries, 152 w. Wash ington, res. 167 Fort Wayne av. Compton A. B., lab., bds. 174 w. Ohio. Conoly Luke, lab., res. 113 n. West. Conan Thomas, works Junction R. R., bds. Wiles House. Conart E. P., fireman, C. C. & I. C. R. R., bds. 61 s. Noble. Conaty James B., millinery, bleaching and manufacturer straw goods, 44 s. Illi nois, res. 64 w. Maryland. ¦ Concordia House, cor. Meridian and South, F. Mottery, prop. Conde Henry T., book-keeper, 47 and 49 n. Tennessee, bds. 74 w. Vermont. Conte Winfield, printer, Sentinel Office, bds. 89 Indiana av. Conden Nora, cook, Institute of the Blind, bds. same. CONDIT ALICE A, inventor of feather cloth, also paten tee, res. 36 e. Market. CONDIT JOHN D„ attorney at low, 1 Blackford's blk., 9. e. cor. Woshington and Meridian, res. 54 Circle. 40 LOGAN'S [C] INDIANAPOLIS Condit AmziB., patent agt., res. 36 e. Mar ket. Condon J. Frank, special agt. American Life Ins. Co., over 35 e. Washington, bds. Avenue House. Conduitt Alexander B,, (Landers, Pee & Co.,) 58 s. Meridion, bds. Sherman House. Cone William S., agt. J. M. & I. R. R., bds. 207 w. Maryland. Cones Charles E., salesman, 129 s. Meri dian, bds. Pyle House. Conger Emanuel H., brick-maker, bds. 281 n. Noble. Congregational Church, n. w. cor. Meri dian and Circle. Conklin Miss Jane, dress-maker, 36 n. Illi nois, bds. 148 Indiana a v. Conklin H. N, (Hogelond, Durfield & C.,) ' 75 s. Illinois, res. 252 n. Mississippi. Conkwright Charles, expressman, res. 295 Coburn. Conlen Michael, bible agt., res. 323 Indi ana av. Connell Thomas, lab., res. 45 8. Benton. Connell Maurice, bar-tender, res. 45 s. Ben ton. Connely Robert, (C, Wiles & Co.,) 149 s. Meridian, res. 296 n. Alabama. Connely Wiles & Co., (Robert C, William D. & Daniel A. Wiles & David W. Cof fin,) wholesale grocers, 149 s. Meri dian. Conner A D., (Witt & Co.,) s. w. cor. Washington and Meridian, bds. 385 n. East. Conner A. II., (Douglass & C.,) Journal bldg., res. 515 n. Pennsylvania. Conner Bridget, (wid. Michael,) res. 146 Stevens. Conner Bridget, (wid.,) res. 384 s. Dela ware. Conner Bridget, servant, Edward King, n. Meridian. Conner B. F., reg. clerk, p. o., rooms Eden's blk. Conner Catharine, cook, Indiana Female College, 146 n. Meridian. Conner Miss Elizabeth, bds. 73 n. Illinois, Conner Mrs. E. L., (wid. Robert,) res. 229 s. Alabama. Conner George, shoe-moker, res. end Vir ginia av. Conner James, soldier, U. S. Arsenal, res. same. Conner John, lab., res. 288 s. Delaware. Conner John, works rolling mill, res. 384 s. Delaware. Conner John, lab. res. 360 s. Delaware. Conner John, lab., res. 14 n. Noble. Connell John S., switchman, Union R. R. Co., res. 103 s. New Jersey. Conner Miss Lucinda, bds. 73 n. Illinois. CONNER MBS. MARY, boording house, 73 n. Illinois. Conner Michoel, lob., bds. 199 Meek. Conner Morris, works rolling mill, res. 384 s. Delaware. Conroy Bernard, lab., res. 76 s. West. Conroy John, cool cart driver, res. 49 a. West. Conroy Patrick, tailor, 72 s. West, res. same. Conrad Rufus, (col.,) minister and school teacher, res. 500 n. Mississippi. Converse Joel, carpenter, res.' rear 293 e. Market. Converse Miss Lou., lady boarder, 27 n. New Jersey. Conway Margaret, (wife Michael,) Insane Asylum, res. 332 s. Delaware. Conway Michael, lab., res. 245 8. Tennes see. Conway Thomas, expreBS-meesenger, Union depot, bds. 213 s. Illinois. Cook Miss Belle, bds. 83 n. Missouri. Cook Charles, bds. cor. North and Dunlop. Cook Charles, works Skillen's Mills, bds. 366 w. Washington. Cook Charlotte, servant, 86, old number, e. Vermont. Cook Christian, baggageman, Union depot, res. 26 Bicking. Cook E. 8., pastor United Brethren Church, bds. 435 n. East. THE SAMPLE ROOM, No. 10 BATES HOUSE BLOCK, WEST WASHINGTON ST. T_£3_:H3 O No. 33 North Illinois Street, in Exchange Building. C. S. BUTTERFIELD & CO., PROPRIETORS, INDIANAPOUS, INDIANA. AGENTS FOR LUX'S CHICAGO BREWER. CO. CITY [C] DIRECTORY. 41 Cook & Demmier, (William C. & Charles Demmier,) groceries and dry goods, 249 e. Washington. Cook Frank, lab., res. 235 w. South. Cook Frederick, porter, res. 79 s. Liberty. Cook G. B., traveling agt., Judson & Dodd, bds. Bates House. Cook George W., painter, res. 376 w. North. Cook Henry, car inspector, res. 295 e. Geor gia. Cook Henry, lab., res. 22 John. Cook Ignetz, machinist, res. 278 Bluff rd. Cook John M., agt., W. & J. Braden, bds. 469 n. Illinois. Cook John V., wholesale notion peddler, res. 224 n. East. Cook John W., mill-wright, 132 8. Penn sylvania, res. 115 n. Tennessee. Cook Mary, servant, e. end Market. Cook Mary, (wid. John,) res. 38 Chatham. Cook Rose, servant, 302 n. Delaware. Cook Samuel M., teamster, Byrkit & Sons, res. 115 n. Tennessee. Cook Sylvester, carpenter, res. 376 w. North. Cook Thomas, lab., res. 16 Lockerbie. Cook Thomas V., house, sign and orna mental painter, 58 n. Pennsylvania, res. s. e. city limits. Cook William, (Cook & Demmier,) res. 83 s. East. Cook William G., salesman, A. Wallace, res. 30, -old number, n. Delaware. Cook W. H., hack-driver, res. 376 w. North. Cook William H., cooper, res. 376 w. North. Coon Peter, real estate agt., office 88 e. Market, bds. 39 e. Louisiana. Coons John W., deputy city treasurer, Glenn's bit., res. 274 e. St. Clair. Cooney Bridget, servant, 81 w. Ohio. Cooney Dennis, works Sinker & Co., res. 27 n. East. Cooper Charles, engineer, C. C. & I. C. R. R., res. 185 Meek. Cooper Edward, pressman, Downey, Brouse, Butler & Co., bds 257 e. McCarty. Cooper Hamilton, tailor, 2 Bates House blk., res. 260 w. St. Clair. Cooper Job., gas-fitter, bds. Macy House. Cooper John J., farmer, res. 422 n. Illinois. Cooper Joseph, gas-fitter, 77 e. Market, bds. Macy House. Cooper Joseph, inmate Deaf and Dumb Asylum. Cooper J. M., (L. Werbe & Co.,) res. 253 n. Illinois. Cooper Miss Lotto, lady boarder, 201 .. Market. Cooper Mrs. Rebecca, (wid. John,) res. 257 e. McCarty. Cooper William H, clerk, W. P. & E. P. Gallup, bds. 257 e. McCarty. COORS A. F., grocer, 151 w. Washington, res. 9 s. Copeland Joshua W., straw and millinery goods, 39 s. Meridian and 8 e. Wash ington, res. 372 n. Meridian. Copeland W. J., salesman, 78 & 80 e. Mar ket, res. 127 Chatham. Coffman Henry, saddler, res. 96 Fletcher ov. Corboley Will H., notary public, cor.Wash- ington and Meridian, res. 15 Fayette. Corbet Catharine, servant, Institute of the Blind, bds. same. Cordes Frederick, lab., bda. e. end Virginia ov., beyond city limits. Corden John, porter, Spencer House, bds. some. Coridan Laurence, res. 354 s. West. Coridon Mary, servant, Palmer House. Coridan Thomas, saloon, res. 334 s. West. Corlon John, pressman, Downey & Brouse, 27 J s. Meridian, res. 164 w. Maryland. Corn Martin, currier, 49 s. Delaware, res. 249 Davidson. Cornelius Cassius, plasterer, res. 254 s. Alabama. Cornelius Edward G., (Kennedy, Byram & Co.,) 108 s. Meridian, res. 398 n. New Jersey. Cornelius & McElvano, house and sign pointers, alley rear of 72 w. Washing ton. Cornelius Wilbur F., (C. & McElvano,) rear 72 w. Washington, res. 112 Hu ron. Cornwell Carlos, engineer Bellefontaine R. R., res. 312 e. North. Corney William, hack-driver, res. 315 n. Blake. Cort Anthony, asst. carpenter Metropolitan Theater, bds. 144 n. Tennessee. Cortland Anna, servant, W. P. Fishback, e. Washington. Corran Peter, tobacconist, J. Cahall & Co., bds. Ray House. Corwell Mrs. Nancy E., res. 350 Indiana av. Corwin W. R., occupant Deaf and Dumb Asylum. Corrydon Bridget, servant, 172 e. Ohio. Cosly R. M., carpenter, res. 138 Christian av. Cosier David W., carpenter, works Eden & Co.'s Planing Mill, res. 195 Davidson. Costello Louisa, servant, 76 n. Noble. Costigan Frank, propr. Oriental House, Il linois, two squares n. Union depot. Cottingham Sidney D., horse dealer, res. 336 n. Noble. Costigan Theodore G., clerk, Oriental House. Costelo John, finisher, Sinker's Foundry, res. 276 w. Maryland. Costelo John A., boiler-maker, bds. 114 Meek. Costom Sarah, servant, 419 n. East. 42 LOGAN'S [O] INDIANAPOUS Coston Henry, lab., res. alley, bet. Ohio and New York, and East and New Jersey. Cattman David F., door-keeper Metropol itan Theater, bds. 176 Virginia av. Cottrell & Knight, (Thomas C. and John K., ) dealers in tinners' stock, tools and machines, 108 s. Delaware. Cottrell Thomas, (C. _ Knight,) 108 s. Delaware, res. 160 s. New Jersey. Cottrell Tony, fireman, Peru & Indianapo lis R. R., bds. 325 e. Ohio. Couch Walter R., minister, (christian,) preacher at Oakland, Belleville, North Liberty, Arcadia, res. 393 Massachu setts av. Coughlen Elizabeth J., res. 282 w. New York. Coughlen William, (Merritt & C.,) res. 282 w. New York. Coughlen William F., clerk, Merritt & Coughlen, bds. 282 w. New York. Coullert John, lawyer, bds. 67 s. Misouri. Coulon Charles, lawyer, res. Arsenal av. Coulter Archibald, lab., res. 256 s. Dela ware. Coulter James, (C. & White,) 77 e. Market, res. 372 s. Alabama. Coulter & White, (James C. & Charles H. W.,) plumbers, gas-fitters and fixtures, 77 e. Market. Coulter William, lab., res. 256 s. Delaware. Council John, res. 100 Jackson. Counnach Loyton, student, commercial college, bds. 180 Massachusetts av. Counseler H., servant, 496 n. Meridian. County Auditor's Office, Court House bldg., J. R. Wright, county auditor. County Clerk's Office, in Court House bldg., W. C. Smock, county clerk. County Jail, Court House square. County Recorder's Office, Court House bldg., W. J. Elliott, recorder. County Treasurer's Office, Court House square, F. Erdelmeyer, treos. Court House, Marion co., e. Washington, bet. Delaware and Pennsylvania. Cousins Mrs. Tathee, (col.,) wash-woman, res. Second, bet Howard and Lofoyette R. R. Courtney Catharine, dining-room girl, Ind iana Female College, 146 n. Meridian. Courtney Cornelius, lab., res. over 356 Winston. Courtney Mary, waiter dining-room, Ind iano Female College, 146 n. Meridian. Coval Alexander, cooper, res. 84 Benton. Covault Erostus J., salesman, 78 s. Merid ian, bds. Bates House. Covenanter Church, South, bet. Virginia av. and Noble. Covert Isaac, silver-plater, res. 277 n. Noble. Covert Wm. T., res. 443 s. Illinois. Covington Delia, (col.,) res. 231 n. Min erva. Covour Anna, res. 120 s. Noble. Covour Catherine, (wid. Daniel,) res. 120 s. Noble. Covour Isaac, carpenter, res. 120 s. Noble. Cowen Alexander, res. 300 e. St. Clair. Cowen Hariet, (wid. Wm.,) res. 240 s. Missouri. Cox Ann, (wid. David,) res. 18 Chathom. Cox Miss Ann, bds. 252 cor West and Mar ket. Cox A. J., salesman, 60 s. Meridian, res. 237 e. South. Cox Albert W., patent right agt., res. 174 e. Walnut. Cox Charles, dealer in stoves, tin and hol low-ware, 57 w. Washington, res. 71 s. Meridian. Cox Charles H., solesman, 57 w. Washing ton, res. 71 a. Meridian. Cox Criterd, brakesman, J. M. & I. R. R-, res. 18 Chatham. Cox David, tinner, 57 w. Woshington, bds. 71 s. Meridian. Cox Edward, works Qeisendorff Woolen Factory, res. 149 n. Blake. Cox Edwin, engineer, Merritt & Coughlen, res. u. Blake. Cox John F., bds. 96 Fletcher av. INSURE WITH THE WINNESHEIK INSURANCE CO. CAPITAL, .... $500,000.00. JOMES & CHILDS, State Agents. Office, NO. 29 West Washington Street, Indianapolis, Indiana, OPPOSITE TRADE PALACE. CITY [] INDIANAPOLIS Cusick Joseph, saloon and groceries, 75 s. West, res. same. Cusick Julia, (wid. John,) res. 71 s. Mary land. Cussick John, groceries, 75 s. West, res. some. Cuater Detrick, lob., res. 225 Bluff rd. Custeter H. D., bds. Mocy House. Cutler David, res. 195 n. East. Cutsinger Augustus, servont, Dr. Bobbs. Cutsinger Charles, res. 23 Bates. Cutsinger John, fireman, I., C. _ L. R. R., res. bet. Noble and Benton. Cutter A. F., railroad-man, bds. Ray House, e. South. Cutter H. P., watchmaker and salesman, 24 e. Washington. Cuykendall Warren A., engineer, res. 330 e. Louisiana. DADE TOWNSON, (col.,) lab., res. 228 n. Missouri. Dade William (col.,) lab., res. 39 n. Har ris. Dadert William, lab., B. &. I. Depot, res. e. Michigan rd., beyond city limits. Daerffel Herman, saloon, 199 s. Illinois, res. same. Daffee Thomas, moulder, res. 199 e. Wash ington, up stairs. Dagett & Co., (William D., Geo. C. Web ster & J. W. Smither,) wholesale manfs. and dealers in confectionery, fruits and nuts, 26 s. Meridion. Dagett William A., (D. & Co , ) 26 s. Me ridian, res. 280 n. New Jersey. Daglish John, clerk, Bee Hive, res. 504 n. Mississippi. Dahna William, clerk, 300 e. Washington, res. 215 Davidson. Dailey Miss Jennie, ladies' boarding-house, 36 s. New Jersey. Daily Bridget, servant, Palmer House. Daily Catharine, servant 243 n. Penn sylvania, Daily Eugene, lab., res. 246 s. West. Daily Harrison, (H. D. _ Co., ) 41 s. Me ridian, Morrison's Opera Hall, res. cor. St. Mary and Fort Wayne av. Daily H. & Co., (Harrison D. & William Hasson,) wholesole druggists, 41 s. Meridian. Daily Josephine, servant, Sherman House. Daily Julia, servont, Palmer House. Daily Mary, (col.,) servant, 36 s. New Jer sey. Doisey Potrick, lab., res. 17 Maple. Daily Philip M., salesman, H. Daily & Co., bds. Bates House. Daily Telegraph Co., office 16 w. Mary land. Daily Thomas, conductor, J. M. & I. R. R., bds. Sherman House. Dain Robert C, paper-hanger, res. 423 n. New Jersey. Dain Thomas, pump-maker, res. 114 e. St. Mary. Dale Catherine, servant, 252 e. Washing ton. Dale John, lab., res. 199 n. East. Dales Elizabeth, (wid.,) res. 67 Eddy. Dallas Miss Bell, clerk, 68 n. Illinois, res. 316 Indiana av. Dattmer Frederick, chair-maker, res. 336 s. Delaware. Dalton George, carriage-painter, res. 174 8. Tennessee. Dalton Michael, lab., res. 391 s. Missouri. Dalton Thomas, lab., Sinker's Foundry, res. 214 Buchanan. Doly Mrs. Anlina, (wid. Peter,) res. rear 288 Railroad. Daly D. N., piano- varnisher, 159 and 161 e. Washington, bds. Pattison House. Daly John, lab., res. 258 s. Delaware. Daly Michael, lab., res. 258 s. Delaware. Daly William, Insane Asylum, res. 343 Winston. Dame Jason, Marble Yard, 71 e. Washing ton, res. 287 s. New Jersey. Domond James, bar-tender, 284 w. Wash ington, res. same. Danforth A. J., res. 432 n. Pennsylvania. B. V. ENOS. ENOS & HUEBNER, H. E. HTJEBNEB. ARCHITECTS AND SUPERINTENDENTS, ROOM 7 EDEN'S BLOCK, 77 1-2 EAST MARKET ST., INDIANAPOLIS, INDIANA. Special Attention Paid to Chnroh Architecture. CITY [_>] DIRECTORY. 47 Daniels Charles, candy-maker, bds. 22 w. North. Daniels D., salesman, New York Store, bds. 58 s. Pennsylvania. Daniels Henry, (col.,) lab., res. 170 Doug las alley. Daniel John, lab., res. 498 e. Georgia. Daniels Samuel, res. 109 s. New Jersey. Danningbur George, teamster, res. Madi son rd., near toll-gate. Darbecker John, barber, res. 77 n. New Jersey. Darby John, (J. Hauck & Co.,) 11 W.Wash ington, res. w. New York. Darby Mary, servant, Gen. Love, 81 n. Tennessee. Darby S. F., saw-maker, res. 476 n. Ala bama. Danger Simon, plasterer, res. 313 _. Geor gia. Dark Charles, teller, Indianapolis Branch Banking Co., res. a. e. cor. Tennessee and Walnut. Darnall William W., carpenter, res. 342 e. New York. Darnell Calvin F., carpenter, res. 738 n. Illinois. Darrigan John, lab., res. 37 Dougherty. Darr William, brick-layer, res. 532 e. Georgia. Darrow B. C. salesman, 38 s. Meridian, res. 24 w. Michigan. Darter Jasper, lab., res. 1 Thomas. Darrow James, trader, res. 19 Cherry. Darrow Milton, compositor, Sentinel news room, res. 19 Cherry. Dougherty Bernard, driver, City Ry., res. 126 New York. Daugherity Frank L., Spinner, Merritt & Coughlen, bds. 272 w. Maryland. Daubenspeck Nelson, stock dealer, res. 121 u. Delaware. Daumont H., dealer in clocks, looking- glasses and pictures, 15 w. Washing ton, res. 439 n. Pennsylvanio. Daumont P. A., jewelry and watches, 47 s. Illinois, res. same. Davenport Theodore, lab., res. 115 Huron. Davenport Thomas, saw-maker, 217 s. New Jersey. David George T., clerk, C. C. C. & I. R. R., res. 117 e. Washington. David George, checkman Bellefontaine R. R., res. 273 e, Market. David Thomas, butcher, res. 210 Union. David -N. C, bds. 110 Union. David W. C, clerk, room 6 P. 0. bldg., res. 273 e. Market. David William, farmer, res. 723 u. Illi nois. Davidson George, carpenter, res. 188 Dougherty. Davidson James, printer, res. 36 Massa chusetts av. Davidson John, collector, Indianapolis Journal, res. 170 Davidson. Davidson N. N., propr. Highand Nurser ies, Highland Home av., res. same. Davidson Rufus, carpenter, res. 148 n. Blackford. Davis Abel E., (Baxter & D.,) cor. West and Washington, res. 326 n. West. Davis Amos, (col.,) lab., res. 747 n. Ten nessee. Davis Anna, (col.,) bds. 126 n. Missouri. Davison Athen, carpenter, res. 360 e. St. Clair. Davis Augustus G., traveling ogt., 310 Indiana av. Davis Bortholomew, bds. n. Mississippi, bet. Fourth and Fifth. Davis Benjamin, road-master Terre Haute R. R., res. cor. East and Louisiana. Davis C. B., (D. & Greene,) 27 s. Meridian, res. 139 Indiana av. Davis Charles W., painter, bds. 35 Indiana av. Davis Charles S., butcher, bds. 129 _.. Pennsylvania. Davis David, lab., res. Ninth, bet. Pittsfield and Lenox. DAVIS EDWIN A., lawyer, U. S. commissioner and notary public, room 3, Talbott & New's blk., n. Pennsylvania, bds. Bates House. Davis Edward W., butcher, bds. 129 n. Pennsylvania. Davis Emma, servant, Palmer House. Davis Ernest G., salesman, 13 n. Meridian, res. 139 Ind. av. Davis Fleming, moulder, res. 118 Forrest av. Davis George, watch-maker and jeweler, 37 w. Washington, res. 40 a. Califor nia. Davis George, (col.,) porter, B. G. Stout & Bro., 7 and 8 Bates House blk. Davis Gilbert W., clerk at office Florence Sewing Machine, 27 n. Pennsylvania, bds. 78 n. New Jersey. Davis George W., painter, works 172 s. Tennessee, DAVIS & GREENE, (C. B. D. & James G.,) general insur ance agts., 27 s. Meridian. Davis Horace H., (H. H. D. & Co.,) 13 n. Meridian, res. 139 Indiana av. DAVIS H. D., meat market, 71 e. Washington, res. 129 n. Pennsylvania. Davis Horace H. & Co., (Horace H. & C. B. Davis,) general agts. American But ton Hole Sewing Machine, 13 n. Me ridian. DAVIS ISAAC & CO., (Isaac D. _ Berry Self,) hots, caps, furs and straw goods, 12 e. Washing ton. 48 LOGAN'S [D] INDIANAPOLIS Davis Ira, machinist, res. n. e. cor. Forest and Illinois. Davis Irene, (col, wid,) res. 32 Ann. Davis Isooc, (Isaac D. & Co,) 12 e. Wash ington, res. 426 n. Pennsylvania. Davis J. M, (ool,) blacksmith, res. 242 Indiana av. Davis Jacob, carpenter, res. 90 California. Davis James E, shoe store, 239 e. Wosh ington, res. 299 n. Liberty. Davis Jane G, servant ot 172 n. Meridian. Davis James, res. 82 Greer. Davis John R, shoe-maker, res. 299 n. Liberty. Davis John M, engineer Bellefontaine R. R., res. 176 Davidson. DAVIS JOSEPH W., steam gas fitter and brass founder, 110 s. Delaware, res. 221 u. Tennes see. Davis Levi, butcher, 71 n. Pennsylvania, res. 129 n. Pennsylvania. Davis M. J, (col,) milliner, res. 242 Indi ana av. Davis Mrs. Mary, (wid. Owen,) res. 168 Winston. Davis Miss Maria, bds. 199 e. Washington, up stairs . Davis Mrs. Martha, (wid.,) res. 181 Virgi nia av. Davis Milton, carpenter, res. 45 e. Mc Carty. Davis Nathaniel, carriage smith, works S. W. Drew & Co, res. 128 w. First. Davis Noble, res. 386 n. New Jersey. Davis Oliver, bds. 273 n. Noble. Davis P. L, mill-wrigbt, res. 361 Massa chusetts av. Davis Q. A., student, N. W. C. University, bds. 408 n. New Jersey. Davis R. P., carpenter, res. 215 Massachu setts av. Davis Robert, brickmaker, res. 11 Cedar. Davis Robert S., saw-grinder, res. 308 s. Illinois. Davis Samuel, lab, res. 81 cor. Huron and Pine. Davis Sarah A,' (col,) servant, 280 e. North. Davis Smith, painter, bds. 147 w. Mary land. DA VIES T. J., photograph-gallery, rooms, third floor Talbott & New's blk, n. Pennsylvania, res. 150 w. New York, cor. Missis sippi. Davis Thomas K, shoe-maker, res. 277 n. Liberty. Davis Wesley, coach trimmer, 26 e. Geor gia, res. n. Illinois, beyond city limits. Davis William, heater, White River Iron Works, bds. California House. Davis William A, engineer, Hand's Foun dry, res. 68 s. Noble. Davis William E., brick-layer, res. 123 Davidson. Davis William H, student, N.W.C. Uni versity, res. 361 Massachusetts av. Davis Williom M, (D. & Wright,) 88 e. Washington, res. 430 n. New Jersey. Davis William W, engineer, C. C. & I. C. R. ft, res. 37 Bates. Davis William H, pump-maker, 133 n. Tennessee, res. 128 w. First. DAVIS & WRIGHT, auctioneers and com. mers, 88 e. Wash ington. Davey Daniel, machinist, white River Iron Works, bds. s. West, bet. Meridian ond McCarty. Davy W. W., compositor, Sentinel news room. Donald Matthew, drayman, Holland, Oster- meyer & Co, res. 236 Railroad. Daney D, machinist, bds. 183 s. Illinois. Dawson Henry, manfr. drain tile, res. 191 n. Liberty. Dawson Luther C, machine-tender, res. 273 s. West. Dawson Madison, lab, res. over 300 e. Washington. Dawson Louisa, (wid. Daniel,) res. 113 For est av. BCEDEKER & NEEMANN, »» »»¦»_» __••_••_ W_M» ._..-_. _#»_,__«__«¦», No. 418 EAST NORTH STREET, BETWEEN DAVIDSON AND WINSTON STS„ INDIANAPOLIS, INDIANA. This firm are thorough practical mechanics, amply responsible for any contract they may make. The city and private individuals will do well to give them a call. CITY [D] DIRECTORY. 49 Dawson T, saloon, 132 s. Illinois, res. 317 a. Delaware. Dawson Thomas B, night watchman, res. 161 Maple. Dawson William, driver, American Ex press Company, res. 140 n. Delaware. Day Cynthia, servant, 163 n. New Jersey. Day D. S., tinner, bds. 202 n. West. Day D. T, shoe-maker, shop 302 s. Illinois, res. same. Day John, (col.,) cook, Sherman House. Day Richard L, agt., life insuranoe co, ree. 547 n. Illinois. Day William W, butcher, res. 438 e. St. Clair. Doylish John, salesman, Tyler's Bee- Hive, res. 504 n. Meridian. Dayton J. F, blacksmith, B. F. Haugh, bds. 307 n. Alabama. Deaf and Dumb Asylum, e. Washington, beyond city limits. Dean Charles, foundryman, bds. 154 8. Noble. Dean Charles, brick-layer, res. 233 w. South. Dean Charles C, (col,) lab, res. e. s. n. Meridian, beyond city limits. Dean David, (col.,) lab, bds. 160 Huron. Dean Ellen, servant, 169 w. New York. Dean Harrison, (col.,) lab, res. 89 Hos- brook. Dean Henry, machinist, bds. 154 s. Noble. Deao Fielden, (col.,) hod-carrier, res. 160 Huron. Dean Margaret, servant, Frank Kennedy, 247 n. Meridian. Dearinger David D, carpenter and builder, res. 437 n. Mississippi. Deas Mend, servant 76 n. East. Death James C, traveling agt, Scott, West w Co., 127 s. Meridian, res. Knights- town, Ind. Deaver George W, clerk, res. 14 e. Michi gan. Debey Charles, lab. Central depot, res. 39 Meek. Decatur House, and Basement Saloon, e. Washington, near railroad crossing. Decgar Conrad, blacksmith, Bellefontaine shops, res. 248 Winston. Decker Miss Belle, servant, Dr. Abbett, 35 Virginia av. Decker L. H, tinner, 308 Virginia av, bds. end Virginia av. Decker Mrs. Laura, (wid. John B.,) res. 181 n. Noble. Dedrick George, student, bds. 194 n. Illi nois. Dedert Charles, hostler, John M. Lord, 297 u. Pennsylvania. Deer Catharine, servant, 156 e. Washing ton. Deer Phillip, hod-carrier, res. 250 David son. Deer John, lab, res. 684 e. St. Clair. Deery Alice, (wid. Heury, ) res. 81 Jackson. Deery John, expressman, res. 89 Jackson. Deery Mrs. Bridget, (wid,) res. 95 Jack son. Deffauld Louis, piano-maker, res. 259 _. Liberty. Degant John, clerk, bds. 309 e. Market. DeGroat Chas. P, actor, bds. Macy House. Dehave Edward C, porter, 187 w. Wash ington, res. 118 w. Georgia. DeHaven Andrew J, charge of wall-paper department, Trade Palace, res. 118 w. Georgia. DeHaven Jesse, plasterer, res. near Insane Aslum, 8. s. National rd. DeHart Austin, teamster, res. 27 Fayette. Dehne & Bro, (Charles Dehne & William D.,) flour and feed, 300 e. Washington. Dehne Charles, (D. & Bro,) bds. East Street House. Dehne William, (D. & Bro,) res. 211 Da vidson. Deilch Claronce, clerk, 162 w. Washington, res. 173 e. Market. Deitch Charles, clerk, 162 w. Washington, res. 173 e. Market. Deitch Felix, dry goods, 162 w. Woshing ton, res. 173 e. Market. Deitch Joseph, horse-dealer, res. 85 n. Ala bama. Deitoh Joseph L, wholesale liquor dealer, 14 s. Delaware, res 382 w. New York. Deiter William, lab, res. beyond city lim its. Deilger Joseph, works Cabinet- Makers' Union, bds. 518 e. Washington. Deitrich Miss Louise, Trade Palace, res. 123 w. Market. Deitrich William, cigar dealer, res. 34 n. Delaware. Deitz Adam, surgeon, res. 116 Ft. Woyne av. Deitz Ferdinand, leather store, 17 s. Dela ware, res. 390 e. Market. Delafield Myer, (Rothschild & Co,) 34 w. Louisiana, res. 227 s. Delaware. Delaney Michael, lab, 133 n. Noble. DELANO J. A., constable, res. 349 e. McCarty. Delaney Michael, lab, res. 301 w. Merrill. Delony John, lab, res. 258 s. Delaware. Delany Margaret, (wid,) 268 s. Tennessee. Delany Peter, lab., res. 611 e. Tennessee. Delany Tracy, servant, 180 n. Illinois. Delany William, lob, rolling mill, res. 199 High. Delany Thomas, lab, res. alley, bet. West and California and Georgia and Mary land. Dellart Charles, upholster, 38 s. Illinois, bds 8. East. Dellart John C, saddler, bds. 65 s. East. Dell Frank, bds. 135 e. Washington. Hair Work, all kinds, at Medina's, 50 south Illinois st. (4) 50 LOGAN'S [I>] INDIANAPOLIS Dell Edward, clerk, 135 e. Washington, bds. same. Dell James W, oil speculator, bds. Oriental House. DELL WILLIAM, propr. Union Hall Hotel, Saloon and Restaurant, 135 e. Washington. Dell William H, clerk, Union Hotel, bds. same. Delong J. M., cooper, res. 314 e. Georgia. DeLong Mrs. E. L, packer, Moore & Frink, res. 164 e. Washington. Deller Frederick, pointer, 184 n. Noble, res. some. Belles Isabella, clerk, bds. 316 Indiana av. Delles Jane, (wid,) res. 316 Indiana av. Delles Frank, bds. 151 Bluff rd. Delles William, blacksmith, res. 316 Indi ana av. Dellington William H, (col,) plasterer, res. w. s. Tennessee, bet. Fourth and Fifth. Delzell Hugh, livery and sole stable, 42 e. Maryland, bds. Commercial Hotel. Delzell Samuel, res. 276 n. Delaware. Demint S. E, works Junction R. R, bds. Wiles House. Demmy Martin, saddler, Sulgrove's, res. 219 w. North. Demmy W. H., collar-maker, 20 w. Wash ington, res. 206 Huron. Demmy William, saddler, res. 206 Huron. DEMOCRATIC STATE CENT RAL COMMITTEE, headquarters at Washington Hall, w. Washington, near Metropolitan Theater, Lafe Deve- lin, chairman, J. J. Bingham, secy. Demos Lean Jer, checkman, T. H. & I. De pot, res. 123 w. South. Demond J, miller, bds. 366 w. Washington. DeMotte Mrs. C. H.. domestic supt. Indiana Female College, 146 n. Meridian, res. same. DeMotte W. H, A. M, prest. and prof, of moral, mental and natural sciences, Indiana Female College, 146 n. Merid ian, res. same. Dennier Charles, cook, res. 310 e. Georgia. Demunn George, railroader, res. Ill Meek. Demmy Martin, harness-maker, 20 w. Washington, res. 219 w. North. Denk Andrew, manfr. cider vinegar, 183 Indiana av, res. same. Dennes Caroline, servant, J. N. New's, 425 n. Mississippi. Deneen James M, tailor, 125 _. Liberty, res. same. Deney Austin F, lawyer, room over 31 w. Washington, bds. s. e. city limits. Deney Robert, D. S. claim agent, res. 18 Bates. Dennis C. C, clerk, J. C. Green's, bds. 17.1> Virginia av. Dennis Charles C, book-keeper, Hume, Adams & Co., res. 230 s. Alabama. Dennis John W, clerk, Gen'l Freight Office C. C. & I. C. Ry, res. 234 s. Alabama. Dennis James M, artist, over 45 e. Wash ington, bds. 314 a. East. Dennis Miss Mary F, bds. Ill Indiana av. Dennis Peter, brick-layer, res. 26 Bucha nan. Denney Hosiah, works Insane Asylum, bds. Nationol rd, u. White river bridge. Denney Joseph W, mill- wright, res. 424 e. Vermont. Denney Moses, teamster, res. 380 s. Mis souri. Denny James, mill- wright, bds. 189 n. Noble. Denny Joseph W, mill wright, res. n. w. cor. Walnut and Fayette. Denny John E, (Ebert & D,) 44 Kentucky av, res. 584 n. Mississippi. Denzelmann Henry, piano-maker, works George Trayser, n. e. cor. New York and Davidson. Deputy Clark, dental student with M. Wells, bds. 35 Kentucky av. 1 eRuiter & Bro, (White & Derk,) whole sale oyster bay, 65 s. Illinois. DeRuiter Derk, (W. DeRuiter & Bro,) 65 .. Illinois, res. same. J. C. BRINKMEYER. C. KEMKER. GEO. BR1NKMEYEB. J. C. BRINKMEYER & CO. HUM EONDEQ WAREHOUSE, HO. 1, DISTILLERS AND WHOLESALE DEALERS IN Pure Old Bourbon, Copper, Rye and Wheat Whiskies, OFFICE, SO SOTJTH M___=tI**DI.__._>*r ST. For Illustrated cards of Business Firms, see CITY [I>] DIRECTORY. 51 DeRuiter Whitey, (D. R. & Bro,) 65 s. Illi nois. Dersch John, lab, res. 157 Winston. Derringer Allen, lab, res. u. Michigan rd, near Tenih. Dervald Mathew, drayman, res. 236 Rail road. Dervis N. J, (wid,) res. 83J e. Washington. Desby Adrian, well-digger, res. 444 w. North. Deschler J, (Western Furniture Co,) 109 e Washington. Deschler Joseph, Aslor Saloon, 15 n. Penn sylvania, res. 20 Cherry. Desjardins Joseph, carpenter, res. (164 Vir ginia av. Despa Ernest, painter, res. 50 Lockerbie. Despo Isidore, cnrpenler, res. Harrison. Despo Mrs. Wilhdniina, (wid. Ernest,) miil-wife, res. 60 Lockerbie, cor. Lib erty. Dessar Adolph, (D, Bra. & Co,) 60 s. Me ridian, res. New York Cily. DESSAR, BRO. & CO., (Adolph, Joseph B, David & Lewis Dessar,) wholesale clothing and piece goods, 60 s. Meridian. Dessar David, (D, Bro. & Co,) 60 s. Me ridian, res. New York City. Dessar Joseph B, (D, Bro. & Co,) 60 .. Meridian, res. 213 n. Illinois. Deesar Lewis, (t>, Bro. & Co,) 60 s. Me ridian, hds. 1 72 e. Ohio. Detrick C. W, (Caldwell & D,) 61 s. Illi nois, bds. Wiles House. Dettmer Frederick, chair-maker, res. 402 s. Delaware. Deusch A ugust, barber, bds. 280 e. Market. Deusner William, carriage-maker, works S. W. Drew _. Co, bds. 67 n. Alabama. Develin Lafe, chairman Democratic State Central Committee, Washington Hall. Dever Charles, driver M. U. Express Co., 42 and 44 e. Washington. Dever James, res. 58 Massachusetts av. Devenish Solomon, res. 219 e. South. Devenport Mrs. Melinda, (wid,) res. w. s. Minerva, bet. New York and Brewery. Devenport Daniel, fireman, Sherman House, bds. same. Devenport William, printer, res. w. s. Min erva, bet. New York and Wright's Brewery. Devey John, salesman, 30 s. Meridian, bds. 213 s. Illinois. Devine William, tailor, res. 160 s. Noble. Dewald Frank, clerk, German Dry Goods Store, bds. Martin House, 33 w. Mary land. Dewdney William, blacksmith, works Sin ker & Co., reB. 176 e. South. Denight Mrs. C. L, (wid. Henry,) dress maker, res. 20 Fatout's blk, w. Wash ington, up-stoirs. Dixon John, book-keeper, Smith, Howard & Co, Trade Palace, 26 and 28 w. Washington, bds. Bates House. Dias Anthony, tailor, 8 w. Washington, bds. 73 n. Illinois. Dial Frank. A, (Lindley & Co,) over 8 e. Washington, res. 376 n. Tennessee. Dibble Eddy M, book-keeper, res. 163 Spring. Dickbout V. G, trunk-maker, 29 s. Illinois, res. 169 s. Eddy. Dickens Mrs. Rachel; (wid ,) res. 128 w. Ohio. Dicker Sarah, asst. cook, Wiles House. Dicker Miss Sophia, res. 70 n. California. Dicker Mrs. Harriet, (wid,) res. 70 n. Cal ifornia. Dickerl Jacob, cabinet-maker, res. 220 _. West-. Dickerson Frank, (col,) lab, res. rear 75 s. Missouri. Dickerson Sarah, (wid,) res. 400 s. Mis souri. Dickey James B, carpenter, res. 47 Dough erty. Dickey Thomas, news stand, p. o, bds. 47 Dougherty. Dickison Irvin, teamster, res. cor. Ninth and Michigan rd. Dickman Charles, saloon, 208 e. Washing ton, res. same. Dickman Francis, farmer, 775 n. Illinois. Dickmond Andy, carpenter, res. Kansas, d. city limits. Dickson C. & Co., (Carlos, James C. _ Wal lace E. D.,) dye stuffs and woolen factory findings, 47 and 49 n. Tennes see. Dickson Carlos, (C. D. & Co,) 47 and 49 n. Tenessee, res. 74 w. Vermont. Dickson James, (Butsch <_ D,) 27 e. Geor gia, res. 60 s. Pennsylvania. DICKSON JAMES B., treasurer Metropolitan Theater and book-keeper V. Butsch & Diokson, res. n. Pennsylvania, bet. First and Second. Dickson James C, (C. D. & Co,) 47 and 49 n. Tennessee, res. 110 Indiana av. Dickson Myron, salesman, 47 and 49 n. Tennessee, bds. 110 Indiana av. Dickson Thomas M, book-keeper, W. B. Dickson, bds. 196 n. Tennessee. Dickson Wallaoe E, (C. D. _ Co,) 47 and 49 n. Tennessee, bds. 110 Indiana av. Dickson William B, lumber dealer, e. Mar ket, res. 196 n. Tennessee. Didion C, carpenter, res. 152 Madison. Diekmonn Charles W., engineer, Jefferson- ville R. R, res. 91 n. East. DIEKMANN FREDERICK W., carpenter, works Wabash, bet. Liberty and EoBt, res. 91 n. Eost. Diebert Charles, drives Merchants' Express Wagon, bds. 23 Kentucky av. Advertising Department, following Directory of Citizens. 52 LOGAN'S [I>] INDIANAPOLIS Diehl H. C, chief clerk, general freight office, C. C. & I. C. Ry, bds. 72 w. Maryland. Dieter Ernest, shoe-maker, res. 25 Biddle. Dieter John, tinner, bds. 25 Biddle. Dietrichs Chas, jeweler, 76 n. Pennsylva nia, res. 123 w. Market. Dietrich Christian, cabinet-maker, res. 77 Davidson. Dietrichs Miss Louisa, clerk, Trade Palace, bds. 123 w. Morket. Dietrichs Mrs. M, milliner, 68 e. Wash ington, res. 36 n. Pennsylvania. Dietrichs William, German salesman, 33 e. Washington, res. 36 n. Pennsylvanio. Dietz C. L, utility at Theater, bds. 161 Ft. Wayne av. Dietz Ferdinand, (D. & Reimer,) 17 s. Dela ware, res. 390 e. Market. Dietz Frederick, saloon-keeper, 255 e. Wash ington, res. National rd, beyond city limits. Dietz Henry, bds. 251 w. Washington. Dietz John, barber, 37 s. Illinois, bds. Ft. Wayne ov. Dietz Peter, saloon and boarding house, 60 s. Delaware, res same. DIETZ & REISSNER, dealer in leather and oil findings, 17 s. Delaware. Dietz Mrs. Sarah, (wid. H. W,) res. 7 Mas sachusetts av. Dietzel Charles, express-driver, res. 271 n. Liberty. Ditzell Adam, expressman, res. 156 David son. Dikeman William, carpenter, res. 91 n. East. Diffinhaum Jacob, carpenter, res. 472 n. Alabama. Dile Ann, (wid. Lowrance,) res. 229 s. West. Dilg Charles A, sign and ornamental painter, 20 Virginia av, bds. Orien tal Honse. Djll E. B, (E. B. D. & Co,) 87 e. Market, res. cor. Broadway and Cherry. Dill Gertrude, (wid,) res. 328 n. Illinois. Dill E. B. & Co.. (E. B. D. & W. C. Means,) Indianapolis Cider Vinegar monfis, 87 e. Market. Dill John P., compositor, Sentinel news room, res. 328 n. Illinois. Dill Mary J., (wid. Charles,) res. 228 w. Maryland. Dilley Mrs. (wid. Capt. Dilley,) res. 112 s. East. Dilley John, engineer, bds. 213 s. Illinois. Dillie Jasper, clerk, 7 Odd Fellows Hall, bds. 256 n. West. Dillon Ann, res. 600 n. Illinois. Dillon Daniel, lob, res. 61 Maple. Dillon John, lab, res. 179 Madison av. Dillon Mary A, occupant Deaf and Dumb Asylum. Dillon Thomas, brick-layer, res. 463 n. East. Dillon Thomas, brakeman, bds. Ray House. Dillon Sarah, (wid. Patrick,) res. 30 Wil lard. Dingeldey Theodore, principal German Deutsch School, bds. 124 n. Alabama. DINNIN SAMUEL, Court Street Hall, bet. Pennsylvania and Delaware. Dippel Conrad, piano case-maker, 159 and 161 e. Washington, res. 499 s. New Jersey. Dippel Frederick, engineer, 159 and 161 e. Washington, res. 499 s. New Jersey. Dipple Henry, clerk, res. 21 Wyoming. Dipple Henry, bar-tender, 9 w. Washing ton, bds. 17 Kentucky av. Deppel L, piano case-maker, 159 and 161 e. Washington, res. 499 s. New Jersey. Dippey T, machinist, bds. Wiles House. Dipple John, carpenter, works Bellefon taine shops, res. 425 e. Vermont. Dipple Joseph, lab, rea. 195 n. Noble. Dishon J. M. & Bro, (James & William A,) city bill posters, oflice Journal bldg. Dishon James M, city bill poster, res. 262 s. Missouri. Dishon William, city bill poster, res. 326 s. Missouri. CHAS. WERBE. c_ E- McDONALD. CHAS. WERBE & CO. SOLICITORS OF PATENTS COUNSELORS OF "E*__.TE_.T LAW, Model Builders and Manufacturers of Patented Articles, No. 83 EAST MARKET ST., INDIANAPOLIS, IND. Read Logan's History of Indianapolis, in after part of this book. CITY [IJ] DIRECTORY". 53 Dixon George, (col,) lob, 225 w. Ohio. Dixon John J, (col,) lob, bds. Fourth, bet. Mississippi and Tennessee. Dixon Homer W, res. 215 n. Mississippi. Dixon James, tobacconist, bds. Roy House. Dixon James, works Junctien R. R, bds. Wiles House. Dixon Miss Lou, res. 142 s. East. Dixon Mrs. Minerva, (wid.,) dress-maker, bds. 60 w. Market. Dobbins Miss. Thirza, student, female sem inary, bds. 299 n. Liberty. Dobson Jane, lab, Ricketts, near city lim its. Dochat Gotthart, stone-maeon, res. 175 n. Minerva. Dockweiller Jacob, works Bellefontaine R. R. Shop, res. 501 e. Market. Dodd Harry, conductor, C. C. & I. R. R, bds. Sherman House. Dodd J. W, res. 214 n. Illinois. Dodd John, lab, res. 178 Meek. Dodd William S, clerk, Judson & Dodd, bds. 214 n. Illinois. Dodson James, engineer, T. H. R. R., res. 151 w. South. DOEPFNER CHARLES P., justice of the peace, 139_ e. Washing ton, res. 52 s. Alabama. Doerboker John, barber, res. 77 n. New Jersey. Doerr George, boarding-house, 267 e.Wash- ington. Dok« James, agt. Wheeler & Wilson's Sew ing Machine, bds. 34 Union. Dohn Philip, furniture manfr. and dealer, 246 s. Meridian, res. same. Dohn Peter, cabinet-maker, 246 s. Merid ian. Dolan James, lab. White River Iron Works, res. 313 w. Merrill. Dolas John, carpenter, res. 54 Hosbrook. Dolbey John, farmer, res. 44 Dougherty. Dolph Mrs. Elizabeth A, (wid,) res. u. Minerva, near City Hospital. Doleon David L, clerk, Commercial Hotel, res. same. Domanget Miss Rose, dress-maker, works 300 e. Market, bds. same. Domon Jack, lab, res. 414 s. Illinois. Domon Oliver, planer, res. 385 e. Georgia. Domon Peter E, Delaware Saloon and Beer Hall, 18 s. Delaware, res. same. Donahue Ellen, servant, Palmer House. Donahue Honora, servant, Bates House. Donahue James, fireman, G, I. & C. R. R, bds. 149 s. New Jersey. Donahue Mary, chambermaid, Bates House. Donahue Potrick, lob., res. 2 English's blk., e. Washington. Donahue Peter, lab, res. 21 Maple. Donahue Patrick, lab, res. 14 Willard. Donahoe Patrick, lab, res. 209 e. Market. Donahol Timothy, lob, res. 480 e. Georgia. DONALDSON & ALVEY, (C. S. D. & J. H. A,) jobbers of hats, caps, fure, gloves, straw goods, umbrel las and parasolB, 54 s. Meridian. See card page 90. Donaldson C. S, (D. & Alvey,) 54 e. Me ridian, res. 180 n. Illinois. Donoldson Edwin C, clerk, Donaldson & Alvey, bds. 180 n. Illinois. Donaldson & Co, (Donaldson & Elms,) pic ture store, 57 s. Illinois. Donavan Morris, switohmon, Union R. R. Co., res. 114 Meek. Donavan Obid, painter, works Webb & Glancey, res. 8 English's blk, e. Wash ington. Donavan John, engineer, C. C. & I. C. R. R, res. 45 s. Benton. Donovan William, moulder, res. 114 Meek. Done Peter, lab, res. KanBas, beyond city limits. Donley Francis, groceries, 347 b. Delaware, res. same. Dopley John, tanner, bds. Wisconsin, s. city limits. Donley Michael, boiler-maker, Sinker's Foundry, bds, 114 w. Georgia. Donnan Mrs. Barbara, (wid. David,) res. 126 s. Tennessee. Donnan Theodore, clerk, 56 s. Meridian, bds. 126 n. Tennessee. Donnan Wallace, tinner, bds. 126 n. Ten nessee. Donough Daniel R, clerk, Union Depot Ticket Office, res. 335 s. Meridian. Donovan Robert, carpenter and builder, res. cor. Christian av. and Broadway. Dooley Bridget, servant, Martin M. Ray, n. Pennsylvania. Doran Henry, lightning rod manfr, res. 21 cor. Pine and Forrest av. Doran John, wholesale linen store, 69 s. Illinois, bds. Oriental House. Doran M. W. E, life insurance ogt, res. 21 cor. Pine ond Forrest av. Dorland Mrs. A, dress-maker, 67 n. Penn sylvania, bds. same. Dorsey G. W, (col,) servant, 340 n. Me ridian. Dorsey, Layman & Fletcher, hardware merchants, 64 e. Washington. Dorsey Miss M. E, student, Indiana Fe male College, 146 n. Meridian, bds. same. Dorsey Margaret, (col,) servant, 340 n. Meridian. Dorsey Thomas, contractor, res. 216 Bluff rd. Dorsey Robert S, (D, Loyman & Fletcher,) 64 e. Washington, res. Atlanta, Geor gia. Dorthy Morill, lob, res. 47 Benton. Doty Harriet, (wid. Carey,) res. 281 e. Geor gia. A Tabular List of the Sessions of Indiana Courts, in Logan's Business Directory. 54 LOGAN'S [D] INDIANAPOLIS Doty Lafayette, brick moulder, res. 117 8. Noble. Doty Oliver, bar-tender, res. 281 e. Geor gia. Doty R. M, salesman, H. Daumont, res. 23 w. St. Joseph. Dotson William, engineer, T. H. &, I. R. R, bds. 272 w. Maryland. Doty Miss Lucy A, bds. 176 n. Mississippi. Dougherty Barney, tanner, res. s. city limits. Dougherty Deborah, servant, Nichlas David son, Highland Home av. Dougherty Miss Elizabeth, dress-maker, over Quaker Store, bds. 70 e. Ohio. Dougherty James, lab, res. 5 Willard. Dougherty John, res. 226 e. South. Dougherty Mrs. Lucy, (wid,) milliner, bds. 109 n. Illinois. Dougherty Michael, tanner, res.Wisconsin, beyond city limits. Dougherty Wm, lab, res. s. city limits. Dougherty William, bds. 339 Winston. Doughty John G, foreman, Journal Office, res. 27*lndiana av. Doughty Otho, printer, res. 27 Indiana av. Douglass Augustus, (col,) barber, Dr. Franklin. Douglass Andrew, lab, res. 323 s. East. Douglass & Conner, publishers and propri etors Indianapolis Daily and Weekly Journal, cor. Market and Circle. Douglass James G, (D. & Conner,) Journal Company, res. 129 w. New York. Douglass S. M, (D. & Conner,) Journal bldg, res. 129 w. New York. Douglas Benjamin W, mochinist, res. 40 Hosbrook. Douglas E. P, supt. sleeping cor, B. R. R, bds. Sherman House. Douglas Frank D, gen'l agent, Continental Life Insurance Co, of Hartford, Conn, bds. 143 n. Delaware. Douglas Mrs. , (wid.,) res. 139 w. New Yerk. Douglas Miss Nellie, lady boarder, 289 e. New York. Douglas Miss Sallie, bds. 139 w. New York. Dove David M, carpenter, works Shover & Christian, res 120 e. New York. DOW & ALLEN, general agts. Lamb's Family Knitting Machine, dealers in knitting yarns, 18 n. Delawore. Dow Eli S, (D. & Allen,) 18 n. Deloware, res. 107 n. Noble. Downes Thomas, lab, res. 52 Maple. Downs William, (col,) barber, works 50 e. Washington, res. 70 Georgia. Dowling Jomes, lob, res. 313 w. Merrill. Dowland , book-keeper, bds. Com mercial Hotel. Dowling W. W. & Co., editors and publish ers, office second floor Journal bldg, res. 488 n. Mississippi. Downey, Brouse, Butler & Co., (James E. D, Charles W. B, Ovid & Scott B, George W. Hoss & J. A. Brouse,) book and job printers ond publishers, cor. Meridian ond Circle. Downey James E, (D, Brouse, Butler _ Co.,) cor. Meridian and Circle, res. 158 u. New Jersey. Downey James, lab, res. Wisconsin, a. city limits. Downey John, p. o, res. 183 e. Georgia. Downey Mrs. M. E, (wid.,) res. 241 Vir ginia av. Downey Robert, res. 92 e. Market. Dox William A, salesman, 108 s. Meridian, bds. Spencer House. Doxey Edward O, traveling agt, May- hew & Branham, 129 s. Meridian, bds. Spencer House. Doxon Miss L. V, teacher grade a, prima ry department, ninth ward school, res. 81 Christian ov. Doyle Andrew, brick-moulder, res. 307 w. South. Doyle Ellen, laundress, Indiana Female College, 146 n. Meridian. Doyle Miss Mary, manager cloak-room, Trade Palace, bds. n. w. cor. Meridian and Circle. WARREN TATE, DOOR, SASH AND BUND FACTORY, -Planing* sind. Flooring* Mill, Wholesale and Retail Dealer in FLOORING, CEILING, WEATHER BOARDING, Brackets, Mouldings, Frames, &c, Flooring Worked, Lumber Dressed and Sawed to order. No. 38 SOUTH NEW JERSEY STREET, INDIANAPOLIS, IND. A full illustration of Bates House on oaae 5. Advertisinn Denarfment. CITY [I>] DIRECTORY. 55 Dozenberger Oswell, tinner, 253 w. Wash ington, res. same. Drake Chester B, brakeman, Indiana Cen tral R. R, res. over 87 n. Noble. Drake Edwin B, res. 28 s. Mississippi. Drake Samuel, (col,) lab, res. Railroad, bet. Fifth and Sixth. Draper George, lab, res. 378 s. West. Draper Joseph M, carriage-maker, res. 320 s. Delaware. Draper Thomas, porter, Connely, Wiles & Co, res. 114 w. Georgia. Dreher Matthias, (D, Miller & Co,) res. 82 n. Liberty. DREHER, MILLER & CO., (M. Dreher, H. W. Miller & Jas. Bol- inger,) staple and fancy dry goods and notions, 250 e. Washington. Dremus George, carriage-maker, res. 101 e. St. Joseph. Drew John A, (Sulivan & Drew,) 10 e. Pearl, res. 88 Massachusetts av. Drew Harry E, clerk, p. o, bds. 86 Mas sachusetts av. Drew Samuel W, (S. W. D. & Co,) res. e. Market Square. DREW S. W. & CO., (S. W. D. & P. Sayer,) carriage manfrs, e. Market, bet. Delaware and Alabama. Drew Vanvelt, (wid,) res. 25 Maple. Driftmeyer Henry, drayman, res. 176 s. Noble. Driggs John, brick-mason, res. 248 cor. East and Louisiana. Drinkout William, waiter, Union Depot Dining Hall, res. same. Drinkout William, car-mender, C. C. & I. CR. R, res. 113 s. Noble. Driscol A. E, (wid. Wm. J,) res. 426 8. Illinois. Driscol Jerry, lab, res. 26 Willard. Drot. E, (D. & Steinhaur,) 136 s. Penn sylvania, res. 258 s. Pennsylvania. Drotz & Stienhaur, (Ernil D. & Michael S,) files and rasps, 136 s. Pennsylvania. Droege Charles A, salesman, 26 e. Wash ington, bda. 26 n. Mississippi. Drought John, lab, res. 109 Elm. Druff J. W, clerk, res. 333 s. Alabama. Drum Robert, fence boss, Terre Haute R. R, res. 188 Virginia av. Drummond Joseph M., teamster, res. 96 Greer. Drusler William, wagon-maker, res. 276 w. Michigan. Dryer J. W, druggist, cor. Noble and Washington, res. 26 n. Notile. Dryer Peter, blacksmith, 377 Virginia av. Dubach John, lab.. U. S. Arsenal, bds. 65 s. East. Duchene Charles, baker, res. 366 Virginia ov. Duck Andrew, lab, union factory, res. 96 s. East. Dudley J. M, lumber merohant, bds. Macy House. Dudley T, car service department, C. C. & I. C. R. R, bds. Bates House. Duell Thomas W, engineer, Wishmeier's Mill, res. 433 e. Vermont. Duffy John, tailor, 57 s. California, res. same. Duffy Joseph, stone cutter, works Scott & Nichol, res. Clinton, bet. Ohio and New York. Duffy Michael, tailor, Clinton, bet. Ohio and New York, res. same. Dugan Catharine, servant, 473 n. Illinois. Dugon MiBs Mary, dress-maker, bds. 305 s. Pennsylvania. Dugan Mary, servont, W. W. Lathrop, 310 n. Illinois. Dugan Neal, lab, res. 60 Oak. Dugan Thomas, 136 s. Illinois res. 305 s. Pennsylvania. Duckert Eugene, (col,) hair-dresser, bds. 235 n. Blake, Duffy James, lab, res. cor. St. Olair and Missouri. Dunavay Albert, (col.,) chair-bottomer, 187 Elm, res. some. Dunavan James, drayman, res. 360 w. North. Dunavan Lawrence, lab, res. 142 s. Noble. Dumont Ebenezer, farmer, res. a. city lim its. Dunbar Charles F, book-keeper, 56 s. Me ridian, res. 249 South. Dunbar Henry, (col,) lab, rrs. cor. Eighth and Michigan rd. Dunbar Miss Hannah, tailoress, bds. 254 s. Pennsylvania. Dunbar John M, 8. s. National rd, w. White river bridge. Dunbar Melgar, cash boy, Hume, Adams & Co, res. 254 a. Pennsylvania. Dunbar Miss Nancy, toilorese, bds. 254 s. Pennsylvania. Dunbar Miss Sarah, (wid. Melzar,) res. 254 s. Pennsylvania. Dunbar Miss Sallie, tailoress, bds. 254 s. Pennsylvania Dunbar William, lob, res. 719 n. Missis sippi. Dunoon A. W, lob, res. 382 s. West. Duncan David, carpenter, bds. cor. Michi gan and California. Duncan Mrs. Nonoy, milliner ond dress maker, res. 426 e. North. Dunoon John S, lawyer, proseouting attor ney, room 3 Brown's blk, n. Pennsyl vania, res. 240 n. Meridian. Duncan John, brick-layer, res. 426 e. North. Duncan R. B. & J. S, (Robert B. & John S. D,) lawyers, Brown's blk, n. Penn sylvania. Dungey '¦ , lab, George Stih, Shelby - ville pike, near corporation. La Victoria is the finest Cigar in the city. See card, page 104. 56 LOGAN'S [__>] INDIANAPOLIS Dunkin F. M, student, commercial college, bds s. Tennessee. Dunlop Elizabeth, (wid,) res. 297 n. Meri dion. Dunlop Miss Julio, (col.,) bds. 190 n. Mis souri. Dunlop Joshua, (col,) res. 190 n. Missouri. Dunlap Mrs. Livingston, res. 25 Virginia av. Dunlap Mary M, (wid. Robert,) res. 286 n. Pennsylvania. Dunlea Charles, porter, Am. and U. S. Ex press Co.'s, 34 e. Woshington, res. 35 n. Blake. Dunleavy Patrick, lab, Frank Wright's Brewery, res. near Wright's Brewery. Dulin Mrs. Elizabeth, (wid. Owen,) res. 332 s. Delaware. DUNLOP J. S. & CO., insurance and real estate agts, 16 and 18 n. Meridian, up-stairs. Dunlop J. S, (J. S. D. & Co,) 16 and 18 n. Meridian, res. 283 n. Pennsylvania. Dunlop Miss Lucy, (col,) res. 190 n. Mis souri. Dunlop Miss Mat , bds. 51 n. Douglas alley. Dunlop William, (col,) waiter, Bates House. Dunmire Anthony, groceries ond provi sions, e. Washington, beyond city lim its, bds. some. Dunmire Edward, shoe-maker, res. 171 Virginia av. Dunmire Frederick, drayman, res. 266 e. Ohio. Dunminge Robert, street-bolderer, bds. 104 n. California. Dunn Edward, puddler, Indianapolis Rol ling Mill, res. 275 s. Pennsylvania. Dunn & Franco, (Mrs. M. D. & Mrs. Sarah F,) millinery, 52 n. Illinois. Dunn Geo. W, at insurance office of E. B. Martindole, over 2 W.Washington, res. 196 w. Ohio. Dunn John C, (D. & Korney,) plumbers and gas-fitters, 70 n. Illinois, res. 544 n. Mississippi. Dunn Jacob P, (William Love & Co,) no tary public, room 1 Tolbott & New's blk, n. Pennsylvania, res. 410 n. Ten nessee. Dunn John E, salesman, Geisendorff & Co, res. 426 n. East. Dunn & Korney, (John C. D. & John K,) plumbers, ond gas ond steam-fitters, 70 n. Illinois. Dunn Robert C, tinner, bds. 15 n. Illinois. Dunn Tousey, bds. 410 n. Tennessee. Dunn William A, employee, State House, res. 778 s. Mississippi. Dunning Thomas, printer, bds. 144 n. Ten nessee. Durbin David T, clerk, res. 346 n. Merid ian. Durfee Mies Noncy, school-teacher, 3 miles n. of city, bds. 30 Biddle. Durfeld John F, (J. W. Blake & Co,) over 45 e. Washington, res. 2 miles n. w. of city, on Crowfordsville rd. Durgin Lyman W, foreman Bellefontaine Shop, res. 425 e. Michigan, over 52. Durham H. E, cigar-moker, res. 17 e. North. Durhm Miss Lotto, res. 328 w. Washing ton. Durkin Ellen, servant, 372 n. Meridian. Durie Henry, switchman, res. 320 s. West. Dury John, (E. H. Mayo & Co,) 23 e. Wosh ington, res. 184 Massachusetts av. Dutton George, works Gas Works, res. Madison rd, near toll-gate. Dutton & Green, (H. C. D. & E. S. G,) ogts, Connecticut Mutual Life Insur ance Co, 77$ e. Market, Eden's blk. Dutton H. R, (D. & Green,) 77_ e. Market, Eden's blk, res. 708 n. Tennessee. Duvall David C, salesman, 38 s. Illinois, res. 159 n. Illinois. Duvall Z. P., policeman, sixth ward, res. 260 Railroad. Duvall Mrs. Sarah, (wid. Joseph,) res. 337 s. Alabama. Duzon Jomes H, printer, res. 405 e. Wash ington. l_C33_5tir>I_VlV STREET BATH HOUSE AND BARBER SHOP, CORNER OP MERIDIAN AND CIRCLE STS. IN THE BASEMENT OF THE TILFORD BUILDING. Warm and Cold Shower Baths, with pure water, afforded at all hours of the day or evening, Sundays «- cepted. Shaving, Shampooning and Hair-Dressing done in the best style, at the Bath House and Barber Shop, Meridian St Merchandise transferred from one depot to the other, or CITY [E] DIRECTORY. 57 Duzan William H, cabinet-maker, Charles Williams, rooms MoOuot's blk. Duzan William N, physician and surgeon, office n.Ill, cor. Michigan, res. 163 n. 111. Dwyer John, teamster, res. 278 McCarty. Dwyer Thomas, lob, res. 36 Bick ing. Dwyer William, shoe-maker, E. H. Mayo & Co, res. 50 Wyoming. Dwyer William, lab, bds. 91 s. West. Dye & Harris. (John T. D. & Addison C. H.,) lawyers, rooms 8 and 9, Talbott & New's blk, n. Pennsylvania. Dye John T, (D. & Harris,) rooms 8 ond 9, Talbott & New's blk, n. Pennsylvania, res. b. terminus Virginia av. Dyer Charlotte, (wid. Volney,) res. Shel- byville pike, _ mile s. corporation. Dyer Frank P., salesman, 88 e. Washing ton, res. 27 w. X) hio. Dynes Joel A, printer. Evening Commer cial, res. 92 Broadway. Dynes L. G, res. 192 Broadwoy. EAGAN JOHANNA, chamber-maid ot Bates House. Eagen Daniel, lab, bds. 55 Fayette. Eagen Patrick, lab, res. 52 Fayette. Eagle J. D, (J. H. & Son,) bds. cor. Fort Wayne av. and Delaware. Eagle J. H, (J. H. E. & Son,) res. cor. Dela ware and Fort Wayne av. EAGLE MACHINE WORKS, cor. Louisiana and Meridian, e. end Union Depot. Eagle & Son, grocers and produce dealers, s. w. cor. Delaware and Fort Wayne av. Ealy Mrs. Anna, res. n. e. cor. Mississippi and First. Ealond John, works Junction R. R, bds. Wiles House. Earl G. G, local agt. Merchants Despatch, 39 Virginia ov, res. 412 n. East. Earl Simeon, lab, res. _. West, beyond city limits. Earley A, (col.,) lob, res. 223' e. Michi gan. Earley William A, clerk, Lesh & Tousey, bds. 89 Indiana av. Early Miss Lizzie, bds. 51 Madison av. Early Peter, lab, res. Stevens ond Vir ginia av. Early Samuel, (col.,) works at 24 n. Penn sylvania, bds. Robinson House. Earnest Fred, expressman, 132 Union. Earnshaw Frank, cabinet-maker, bds. Ray House. Earnshaw Joseph, (Burke, E. & Co,) res. 257 8. Pennsylvania. Easter B. W, student, N. W. University, bds. 76 Plum. Easter J. H, student, N. W. University, bds. 76 Plum. EATON GEORGE A., (Smith, Howard & Co,) 26 and 28 w. Washington, bds. Bates House. Eaton John W, clerk, Smith, Harlan & Butler, res. 279 n. East. Eberhart George, master of cabinet shop, Deaf and Dumb Asylum. Eberley Joseph, servant, Dr. Bobbs, beyond city limits. Eberline William, cabinet-maker, bds. 117 s. Illinois. Ebert & Denny, (John E. & John D,) car penters and builders, 44 Kentucky av. Ebert John, (E. & Denny,) 44 Kentucky av, res. 208 w. South. Eberts John, collector for J. Bntsch, res. 62 w. South. Eccies William, (Geisendorff & Co,) 22 w. Washington, res. 241 n. Alabama. Eccleston Norris P., painter, 26 e. Georgia, bds. 18 w. Georgia. Echols Harrison H, Clarkmann's Grocery, bds. 149 s. East. Echols Henry H, clerk, cor. East and Vir ginia av, bds. 149 s. East. Echlen Martha, servant, 125 e. Ohio. Echols William, conductor, Bellefontaine R. R, res. 229 Winston. Eck J. H, (McDonough & E,) 144 s. Ala bama, bds. 123 e. Vermont. Eck Joseph, wagon-maker, res. near e. end New York. Eckel Edward, gunsmith, res. 282 e. Wash ington. Ecord Alvin, occupant Deaf and Dumb Asylum. Eddy Morris R, book-keeper, Indiana Na tional Bank, 2 e. Washington, bds. Bates House. Eden Charlton, prest. and supt. Builders' and Manufacturers' Association, mill 225 n. Delaware, res. 340 n. Meridian. Eden Lavina, (wid. James,) res. 28 Rose. Eden Samuel C, carpenter, works planing mill, n. Delaware, res. 87 n. New Jer sey. Edmunds Edward, lab, reB. 279 s. West. Edmonds John, book -binder, Journal Office, bds. 350 n. Meridian. Edmunds William, (HendrickB, E. & Co,) 56 s. Meridian, res. 222 n. Illinois. Edsall Jehn, baggage-master, C, C. & I. C. R. R, bds. Commercial Hotel. Edson Rev. A. H, minister, Second Pres byterian Church, cor. Pennsylvania and Vermont, res. 157 n. Tennessee. Edward Beyerley, res. 194 Virginia av. Edward J. A, lab, res. 430 s. Tennessee. Edward William B, cattle-dealer, bds. 75 Kentucky av. Edwards David, saloon, 300 n. Blake, bds. same. Edwards E, saddles and harness, 33 8. Me ridian, res. 76 Kentucky av. Delivered to any part of the city by the Company. Page 4, Advertising Dep't. 58 LOGAN'S [E] INDIANAPOLIS Edwards John, (col,) plasterer, res. 31 n. Harris. Edwards Mrs. Martha, (wid. John,) board ing House, 75 Kentucky av. Edwards R, painter, res. 398 s. West. EDWARDS RICHARD, formerly of the directory publishing firm, EdwordB _ Boyd, long since played out, having gathered his traps and left for ports unknown. Edwards Wesley, carriage-maker, res. 249 n. Mississippi. Eerling Juda, bds. 216 w. New York. Effinger John, shoe-maker, bds. 202 s. Illi nois. Egelus Frederick, carpenter, works Hel- wig's Factory, res. 130 and 132 n. Noble. Egelus George, cash-boy. New York Store, res. 130 n. Noble. Egger J, (E. & Muecke,) res. s. w. cor. Alabama and Maryland. Egger & Muecke, (J. E. & William M,) house and sign painters, 152 e. Wash ington. Eggerton Charles, bar-keeper, Labelle Sa loon, bds. 386 n. Tennessee. EGGERT WILLIAM, homoeopathic physician, surgeon and accoucher, office 75 e. Ohio, res. same. Ehrensperger Frank, salesman, 66 s. Me ridian, res. 126 n. East. Ehrhart Joseph, baker, 80 e. Washington, bds. same. Ehrick Frederick, soap and candle-maker, res. 233 Daugherty. Eibell Frank, book-binder, bds. Wiles House. Eibell Joseph, book-binder, bds. Wiles House. Eighth Ward School House, cor Huron and Virginia av. Eisselt Lewis, cook, 92 e. Washington, bds. same. Eix Henry, (Pathos & E,) 228 e. Wash ington, res. e. Woshington, near cor poration line. Elbott Samuel, (col,) school-teacher, bds, 229 n. Tennessee. Elder Eli A, (E. & Ripley,) 49 n. Illinois, res. 133 w. New York. Elder James, salesman, New York Store, bds. Oriental House. Elder John R, ogt. for Indiano and Illi nois Central Railroad Co.'s Lands, office over 26 s. Meridian, res. 150 n. New Jersey. Elder Miss Margaret, school-teacher, bds. 150 n. New Jersey. Elder _ Ripley (Eli A. _ William G,) groceries ond provisions, 49 n. Illi nois. Elder Williom G, route agt. Daily Sentinel, 16J e. Washington, res. 234 n.East. Eldred Jos. E., occupant Deaf and Dumb Asylum. Eldridge Jacob E, (E. & Van Buskirk,) res. 74 s. Mississippi. ELDRIDGE & VAN BUSKIRK, (Jacob E. & Elias Van B,) real estate agts, over 30 w. Washington. See card page 58. Elect Mrs. Lucy, (wid. Jacob,) bds. 293 Winston. Elexonder Joseph, carpenter, res. 173 Hu ron. Elff Frank, barber-shop, 135 s. Illinois, res. 233 s. New Jersey. Elkins Miss Nancy, (wid. Hiram,) res. 8 n. Liberty. Ellenbogen E. N, (Strauss & E ,) 19 w. Washington, bds. Oriental House. ELLIOTT & BLACK, (Byron K. E. & James B.,) attorneys at law, 24§ e. Washington. Elliott Byron K, (E. & Black,) city attor ney, 24J e. Washington, res. 22 Cali fornia. Elliott CalviD A, bonded warehouse, No. 2, 143 s. Meridian, res. 180 n. West. Elliott Charles, bds. Oriental House. Elliott J. Perry, photographer, over 8 and 10 e. Washington, res. 293 n. Dela ware. ELDRIDGE & VANBUSKIRK, CONVEYANCER. Ai SEAL ESTATE AGENT., Boom No. 8, Temperance Hall, No. 30 WEST WASHINGTON ST., INDIANAPOLIS. Will attend to the payment of Taxes, rent Houses and Farms and collect rents. Also, attend to the collection of all claims (entrusted to onr care. On hand at all times, Houses and Lots in city to exchange for Farms, and Farms for City Property; goods for lands and lands for goods. All letters promptly answered if accompanied with a Stamp to pay postage. * Try Heidlingf*i-'« Nn »•*"• dinar CITY [E] DIRECTORY. 59 Elliott John, pair ter, bds. Wiles House. Elliott John M, salesman, 141 s. Meridian, bds. 54 s. Pennsylvania. ELLIOTT JOHN T., (Hon.,) Judge Supreme Court of Ind iana, office New State bldg, bds. Bates House, res. New Castle, Ind. Elliott Jonathan, deputy sheriff, res. 77 n. Noble. Elliott Joseph T, clerk, recorder's office, res. 22 Chatham. Elliott Miss Sue, bds. 180 n. West. Elliott N. K, conductor, C, C. & I. C. R. R, bds. Bates House. Elliott P. H, attorney at law, res. 22 n. California. ELLIOTT RUSSELL, paymaster, Bellefontaine R. R, res. 38 w. St. Clair. Elliott & Smith, (T. S. E. _ Francis S,) commission buyers, 35 e. Market. Elliott Taylor, city recorder, res. 22 Cha tham. Elliott T. B, (E. & Smith,) 35 e. Market, res. w. end Michigan. Elliott W. D, clerk, recorder's office, bds. n. Tennessee, beyond city limits. Elliott Wm. S, clerk, p. o, res. 98 n. East. Elliott William J, county recorder, res. n. Tennessee, beyond city limits. Ellis Mrs. Ellen, (wid,) res. 32 Helen. Ellis James, salesman, 24 s. Meridian, res. e. s. _. Meridian, beyond city limits. Ellis James, (col,) lab, res. w. Center. Ellis John S, salesman, 22 s. Meridian, res. n. of city limits. Ellis Thomas, cupalo-man, Sinker's Found ry, res. 35 Bradshaw. Ellison Fred, clerk, C. C. C. & I. R. R, res. 367 s. Alabama. Ellms Charles H, engineer, Bellefontaine R. R, 219 Davidson. Ellsworth Samuel W, trader, res. 213 n. Liberty. Elmer John W, shipping clerk, H. Doiley & Co, res. 192 e. McCarty. Elmer Nettie, inmate Home for the Friend less, w. s. n. Pennsylvania, beyond city limits. Elmer Wesley, clerk, res. 192 e. McCorty. Elmore Thomos, (col,) res. 78 Eddy. Elstone J. W, physician, office 252 n. Illi nois. • Elstrod Henry, cabinet-maker, works union factory, res. 184 Winston. Elvin Gardner W, messenger, Peru En gine House, res 500 s. East. Ely Henry, carpenter, bds. 148 Indiona av. Ely Joseph, carpenter, res. cor. Plum and Cherry. Embers Thomas, (col,) barber, works 50 e. Washington, res. on Wabash alley. Emenegger John, beer-brewer, res. 152 Madison av. EMENEGGER MATHIAS, prepr. Emenegger Hall, 111 and 113 e. Washington, res. same. Emerson John B, book-keeper, bds. 239 w. Market. Emerson B. B, (E, Beam & Thompson,) res. 239 w. Market. Emmons J. B, saw-maker, bds. 51 s. Ma ple. Emrich Andrew, tinner, Bhop 346 e. Wash ington, res. 109 Davidson. Emerioh Henry, cabinet-maker, foreman Helwick & Roberts, res. 109 Davidson. Emerich Henry, (H.E. _ Co,) 86 w. Wash ington, res. 224 w. Maryland. Emerich H. & Co., (Henry E, Frederick W. F. & John Osterman,) flour, feed, grain and seeds, 86 w. Washington. _ Emerich Nicholas, groceries and provis ions, 164 w. Michigan, res. same. Emmons John, carpenter, res. 168 Winston. Emmons Mrs. Sarah, (wid. John,) res. 168 Winston. Emmons William, (E. & Williams,) marble cutter, n. Tennessee, bet. Washington and Market, res. 168 Winston. EMMONS WILLIAM & CO., marble works, 27 n. Tennessee. See card in advertising department, page 6. Empire Line Fast Freight, 96 Virginia av, W. S. Tarkington, agt. Emslie J. A, prof, penmanship, bds. 23 Madison ov. Endecott John, (col,) white-washer, res. 182 Douglas alley. Ender Mrs. Mary, (wid,) res. 327 s. Penn sylvania. Endever Mrs. Mary, (wid,) bds. 22 Circle. Engelbach Herman, book stand, 2 s. Meri dian, bds. Union Hall. Engelhid W, shoe shop, 286 e. Washing ton, res. Bame. Enggass H, merchant tailor, 113 s. Illi nois, res. same. England George, carpenter, bds. 226 w. New York. Engle Mrs. Caroline, (wid,) res. 262 s. Delaware. Engle Rev. George B, clergyman Episco pal Church, res. 269 e. South. Engle George B, Jr., local agt. Terre Haute R. R, bds. 269 e. South. Engle Jackson, telegrophrOperotor, bds. 75 Kentucky av. Engle Willis D, olerk, T. H. & I. R- R- Freight Depot, res. 269 e. South. Engleman Mrs. Elizabeth, (wid. William,) res. National rd, beyond White river bridge. English David W, printer, res. 253 n. West. English E. G, vioe-prest. Street Ry., Lou isiana, res. 48 Circle. English Orlando, printer, bds. 253 n. West. English W. H, pointer, res. 21 e. North. Hair Work, all kinds, at 50 south Illinois st. 60 LOGAN'S [E] INDIANAPOLIS English William H, prest. First Notionol Bonk ond treas. Citizens' Street Ry, s. e. cor. Washington and Meridian, res. 48 Circle. Enkinbrook Henry, drayman, res. 351 s. Delaware. Enners Henry, brick-layer, bds. 287 Mas sachusetts av. Enners Louis, carriage-painter, works S. W. Drew & Co, res. 237 n. Noble. Enners Louis, butcher, res. 367 n. Noble. Enners W, (Geisel & E,) res. 369 n. Noble. Enners Mrs. Wilmina, (wid. Phillip,) res. 287 Massachusetts av. Enoch Mrs. Mary, res. 192 w. Ohio. Enos B. V, (E. _ Huebner,) 77_ e. Morket, res. 397 n. Alabama. ENOS & HUEBNER, (B. V. Enos & H. R. Huebner,) archi tects and supts, room 2 Eden's blk, 77_ e. Market. See card, page 46. Enos Robert, carpenter, bds. 397 u. Ala bama. Enos F. H. K, clerk, Bellefontaine R. R, res. 350 n. Illinois. Episcopal Church, cor. Illinois and New York. Episcopal Mission, 100 Fletcher av. Equitable Fire Insurance Co., office room 4, Odd Fellows Hall. Erb Solomon, cooper, William Beard, res. 337 w. Maryland. ERDELMEYER PRANK., drugs and medicines, 91 e. Washing ton, res. 263 e. Washington. Erenest Buhler, book-binder, bds. 65 8. East. Erhart Krachenfels, carpenter, bds. 248 Winston. Erie Tronsportation Co, 94 Virginia ov, William T. Clark, agt. Erick William, tinner, J. L. Frankem, bds. 25 e. Buchanan. Ervin E. P., teamster, res. 405 s. East. Ervin Thomas, lab, res. 337 s. Missouri. Eschmeier Henry, pastor German Reformed Church, res. 41 _. Alabama. Eschmeir Otis, cash boy, New York Store, bds. 41 n. Alabama. Esken Mrs. Sarah, (wid. Drury,) res. end Virginia av, beyond city limits. Essmann Misa Caroline, bds. 340 Madison av. Essmann Joseph, milk-oarrier, res. 340 Madison av. Essman William, propr. Illinois House, 283 s. Illinois, res. same. Essigke August, meat market, 285 e. Wash ington, res. same. Essigke Richard, dealer in fresh and salt meats, 170 s. Illinois, opp. w. end Un- ion depot, res. same. Etchison A, (col,) porter, Wiles House. Etherton Samuel, carpenter, res. 23 Center. Ettinger Gusta, flagman, res. 5 Graper. Eudaly James, carpenter, res. 325 e. Ohio. Eugene John, servant, 182 n. Meridian. Euller Mrs. Margaret, (wid. Phillip,) res. 232 Railroad. Eurich John L, saloon-keeper, res. 441 s. Illinois. Eurick Mrs. Rebecca, milliner ond dress maker, res. 109 n. Illinois. Eusey John, engineer, Bellefontaine R.R, res. 144 Winston. Evans A, res. Jackson, near city limits. Evans A. F, entry clerk, Evans & Brown, bds. 54 s. Pennsylvania. Evans Adolphus G, salesman, 75 s. Me ridian, bds. 257 Virginia av. Evans Andrew, pump-maker, res. 237 Mas sachusetts av. EVANS & BROWN, (John D. E. & Daniel R. B,) notions and fancy goods, 75 s. Meridian. Evans Charlotte, (col, ) bds. 73 Bright. Evons George A, book-keeper, 75 s. Me ridian, res. 257 Virginia av. Evans George T, (I. P. E. & Co,) 124 a. Delaware, res. 548 n. Meridion. Evans Henry W, machinist, I. & C. Shops, res. 25 Lord. Evans Isaac P, (I. P. E. & Co,) 124 a. Delaware, res. Richmond, Ind. T. IR,. POE/TER, CUSTOM TAILOR, No. 24 WEST WASHINGTON STREET, Over Braden**, next door to Trade Palace, INDIANAPOLIS, IND, Keasnres taken and a perfect fit guaranteed in all cases. A better fitting and more desireable gannent can be obtained by baying your own cloth and having it made to order in this way. Try it. - A Fine Card of Exchange Stables on page 10, Advertising Department. CITY [IT] DIRECTORY. 61 Evans I. P. & Co, (Isaac P, George T, William R. & Joseph R. Evans,) manfrs. linseed oil, 124 s. Delaware. Evans John, shoe-maker, res. 62 Grant. Evans John D, (E. & Brown,) 75 s. Merid ian, bds. 54 s. Pennsylvania. Evans Joseph R, (I. P. E. & Co,) 124 s. Delaware, res. 324 n. Alabama. Evans Mrs. Lucinda, seamstress, res. 75 s. Noble. Evans Luther, teomster, Hill & Wingate, res. 75 s. Noble. Evans Robert, brick-layer, res. 476 n. Me ridian. Evans S, tobacconist, bds. Ray House. Evans Mr8. Susanna, (col, wid. James,) res. 311 Massachusetts av. Evans Thomas, minister, presiding elder United Brethren church, Indianapolis district, res. 166 n. Liberty. Evans Thomas, brick-mason, res. 496 n. Mississippi. Evans Wm. R, (I. P. E. & Co,) 4 n. Dela ware, res. 23 Fori Wayne av. Evans William, brick-layer, res. 674 n. Mississippi. Evans Miss Winnie, dress-maker, bds. 237 Massachusetts av. Evans Zeb, (col,) res. 181 w. Elizabeth. Evening Commercial Company, publishers Daily Evening Commercial, cor. Me ridian and Circle. Everest Samuel A, pattern-maker, Sinker & Co., bds. 392 n. Alabama. Everheart J, carpenter, res. 142 s. West. Everling Mary, 216 w. New York. Everson Erastus, clerk, 323 n. Alabama, res. 158 e. Michigan. EVERTS EVERT, saloon, 222 e. Washington, res. some. Ewald Henry, blacksmith, res. 128 e. St. Joseph. Ewbank Roland R, carriage-painter, 123 e. Washington, res. n. Pennsylvania, beyond city limits. Ewing David, physician and surgeon, 33 Virginio av, bds. 74 n. Pennsylvania. Ewing Miss Helen, music teacher, res. 133 n. Liberty. Ewing James, baker, bds. 78 Indiana av. Ewing Jacob, grocer, bds. 78 Indiana av. Ewing Miss Nettie, seamstress, res. 183 n. Liberty. Ewing Richard H, gen'l agt. Enterprise Fire Insurance Co., Cin, office Jour nal bldg, res. 67 w. Michigan. Ewing William, corpenter, res. 78 Indiana av. Ewing Wm. M, clerk, bds. 78 Indiana av. Ewyer Lawrence, lab, res. 207 Kentucky av. Extober Thomas, lab, res. 424 s. West. Eymann Henry, shoe-maker, res. 221 w. Washington. FABER CATHARINE, servant, David Benson, 206 s. Illinois. FABER AUGUST, grocer, 405 s. West. Faber L , shoe-maker, res. 278 Railroad. Fagan John, yard-master, I. C. & L. R. R, res. 47 Bates. Fagan John, brick-layer, res. 30 Helen. Fahnestock Obed, bds. 92 s. Mississippi. Fohnley Frederick, (Stiles, F. & McCreo,) 131 s. Meridian, res. 86 n. Illinois. PAHRBACH PHILIP & CO., (Philip F. & ,) proprs. Wash ington Hall Saloon, 78 and 80 w. Washington. Fahrbach Philip, (P. F. & Co,) 78 and 80 w. Washington, res. same. Fahrion Christian, Western Furniture Co, res. 363 n. Noble. Fahrion George, flour and feed dealer, 90 and 92 e. South, res. same. Fair Christopher, carpenter, res, Seventh, bet. Illinois and Tennessee. Fair Rachel, (col,) servant, 176 e. Ohio. Fairest Milton, carpenter, res. n. Pennsyl vania, beyond city limits. Fairbank Andrew, carpenter, res. 230 8. New Jersey. Fairfield Miss Nellie, lady-boarder, 281 e. New York. Faler Henry, engineer, Washington Found ry, res 127 e. Merrill. Faljambe George B, messenger, American Express Co., res. 70 n. Liberty. Falk Mrs. Ellen, (wid. William,) boarding, 199 w. Maryland, res. same. Falkner J. H, master machinist, res. 29 n. Blake. Fallon James J, Oriental Saloon, 67 s. Illinois, res. 128 s. Tennessee. Falloon Wm. A, porter, Indiana Female College, 146 n. Meridian. Fonon Thomas, lab, bds. 112 Meek. Fanarn James, lab, res. 109 n. West. Fanker Mary A, servant, 440 n. Meridian. Farater James, lab, res. 8. s, bet. Noble and Benton. Faries T. C, dentist, 1 Odd Fellow's Hall, n. Pennsylvania, res. 144 e. New York. Faries Joseph, jeweler, 231 e. South. Farley Henry, teamster, Arsenal, res. 313 n. Noble. Farley Richard, lab, res. Second, bet. Howard and Lafayette R. R. PARLEY & SINKER, (Thomas F. & Albert 8,) proprs. Ame rican Saw Works, 98 s. Pennsylvania. Farley Thomas, (F. & Sinker,) 98 s. Penn sylvania, res. 84 s. Pennsylvania. Farlin Patrick, lab, res. 23, bet. Liberty and East. Forlow Matilda C, occupant Deaf and Dumb Asylum. A Directory of all Lawyers in the U. S. can be bought at Logan's Directory Office. 62 LOGAN'S [IT] INDIANAPOLIS Forman John H, stone-cutter, bds. 33 8. West. Farman F. L, stone yard, res. 149 w. South. Farmer Albert, works Indianapolis Rol ling Mill, bds. 290 Madison av. Farmer Miss Emma T, tailoress, bds. 290 Madison av. Farmer Frank, stone yard, cor Mississippi and Louisiana, bds 23 Kentucky av. Farmer J. B, patent right, res. 290 Madi son ov. Former John H, stone-cutter, works yord cor. Mississippi ond Kentucky av, res. 33 s. West. Farmer Miss Mary E, tailoress, bds. 290 Madison a v. Farmer Richard, (col,) lab, res. West, bet. Ohio and Market. Farnaer John A, contractor, res. 401 n. Pennsylvania. Farnsworth C. O, reporter, res. 107 e. Walnut. Farnsworth Theodore, physician and sur geon, 21 t w. Maryland, bds. f aimer House. Farnsworth Thomas D, potent-wright deal er, res. 431 n. Tennessee. Farror John, (Farrar & Co,) 208 w. Wash ington, res. 237 w. Ohio. Farrell Catharine, servant, 65 w. Michigan. Farrell Fergus, shipping clerk, res. 77 St. Clair. Farrell Mrs. Mary, (wid. John,) res. 169 Davidson. Farrer John, boot and shoe manfr , res. 237 w. Ohio. Farriter John, res. 331 e. Louisiana. Farrow James, (col,) painter, res. over 212 e. Washington. Fatout's Blk, s. w. cor. Washington and Missouri. Fatout Charles, blacksmith, 231 w. Wash ington, cor. Maryland and Tennessee. Fatout J. L, carpeuter, bds. 238 n. West. Fatout Percy H, carpenter, res. n. w. cor. Mississippi and North. Fatout J. L. & M. K, carpenters and builders, Lafayette, bet. Michigan and North. Fatout M. K, carpenter, res. 239 n. West. Faucet David, livery ond feed stable, 69 s. Mississippi, res. 147 w. Maryland. Faut Frederick W, (H. Emmrich & Co,) 86 w. Washington, res. u. East. Fawkner Ida, occupant Deaf and Dumb Asylum. Fawkner J. E, dealer in coal, lime, &c, 24 w. Maryland, res. 161 w. South. Fay Amos F, (McCreery & F,) 56 e. Wnsh- ton, res. 255 n. East. Fay Henry, with McCreery & Fay, bds. 255 n. East. Fay John J, res 101 n. Mississippi. Fearuley John, carpenter, shop 23 Circle, res. 186 w. Vermont. Feary Henry J, compositor, Sentinel news room, res. 129 Stevens. Feary Jeremiah E , carpenter, 318 e. North, res. same. Feary J.J, cigar-maker, bds. 318 e. North. Feary Thomas, shoe-maker, 76 Jackson, res. same. Feaiherhoff Warren, occupant. Deaf and Dumb Asylum. Fentherslon William _, auctioneer, 194 and 196 w. Washington, res. 165 Massa chusetts av. Feel Augustus, clerk, American Express, res. 43 Madison av. Fehi Catharine, servant, Institute of the Blind, bds. same. Fehi Susan, chamber maid, Institute of the Blind, bds same. Feifer George, wood-sawyer, res. 150 e. St. Joseph. Felbmm William, engineer, Lafayette R. R, res. a w. cor. Mississippi and Norih. Pelbeek Mrs. Lena, (wid. John,) res. 11 Buchanan. . Felbush Conrad, teamster, res. 426 e. Ver mont. Feld George, painter, 249 w. Maryland, res. same. E. D. LOGAN. LOGAN & BROWN, B.|F. BROWS. ATTORNEYS AT LAW, INDIANAPOLIS, INDIANA. Practice in the Federal and State Conrts. Prompt and carefnl attention given to collections, cases in Bank ruptcy, and Criminal Defenses in all parts of the State. Office in Bee-HiTe Block, over 4 West Washington Street. For a Directory of Societies and Associations, CITY [F] DIRECTORY. 63 Feldpush John, lab, res. 168 Davidson. Feles Charles, (col,) servant, S. Fletcher, res. 225 e. Washington. Felharber Daniel, shoe store, e. Washing ton, res. 21 n. New Jersey. FELLER GEORGE, watch-maker and jeweler, 114 s. Illi nois, res. same. Fellows Miss Margaret, student, Indiana Female College, 146 n. Meridian, bds. some. Fells Frederick, lob, res. 185 Harrison. Feltman Herman, shoe-maker, 396 8. Dela ware, res. same. Fenniman William, brick yard, Madison rd, beyond city limits. Fenton Catharine, servant, J. B. McChes- ney, 454 n. Tennessee. Fenton Franklin, saw-maker, E. C. Atkins & Co., res. 131 e. St. Joseph. Ferdinand Lewis, (col,) lob, res. cor. Blackford and Michigan. Fereth Adam, carpenter, res. 474 n. Ala bama. Ferguson Mrs. A. V, (wid.,) boarding house, 31 w. Ohio. Ferguson Clem. A, wotch-maker and jew eler, 7 w. Washington, res. n. e. cor. Meridian and Seventh. Ferguson D. F, .brick -layer, bds. 463 _. Meridian. Ferguson Mrs. E. A, (wid,) boarding house, 60 w. Market. Ferguson E. A, brick-lajrer, res. 463 n. Meridian. Ferguson George W, cabinet-maker, res. 19 Fayette. Ferguson J. F, brick-layer, bds. 463 n. Me ridian. Ferguson James A, book-binder, Sentinel office, bds. 60 n. Market. FERGUSON JAMES C, pork-packer, packing house e. s. Penn sylvania, bet. South and McCarty, res. 139 n. Meridian. Ferguson Kilby, sow mill, Madison co, res. 251 e. McCarty. Ferguson Ryan, Trade Palace, res. 155 n. Illinois. Ferguson Robert, plasterer, res. 27 w. Pratt. Ferguson William T, bds. 27 w. Pratt. Ferling George, barber-shop, under First National Bank, s. e. cor. Washington and Meridian, res. 126 e. Maryland. Feriter Morris, school teacher, res. 142 Bluff rd. Ferity Bridget, servant, Palmer House. Ferling William, cigar-maker, 108 s. Illi nois. Ferner Julius, salesman, J. G. Stiltz, res. 223 n. Noble. Ferobe Joseph C, clerk, 25 n. Illinois, bds. same. Ferrack John, lab, res. 18 Buchanan. Ferres Mre. Cornelia M, res. 254 e. Ohio. Ferree & Co, (F. M. & J. Carpenter,) flour and feed, 23 Massachusetts av. Ferree Jared D, printer, works Mirror office, res. 256 e. Ohio. Ferree F. M, (F. & Co,) res. 369 _. New Jersey. Ferree Louis, teamster, res. 300 n. Blake. Ferrel Bridget, servant, 150 n. New Jersey. Ferrel Francis, tailor, 131 e. Washington, bds. same. Ferrel Ezekiel J, agt. patent broom, res. 55 Massachusetts av. Ferrell Andrew, bds. 241 Indiana av. Ferrell Joseph K, res. 241 Indiana av. Ferrell Patrick B, bds. 241 Indiana av. Ferriter Patrick, lab, res. bet. East and Noble. Ferriter Thomas, lab, res. 3 cor. Botes and Noble. Ferry Henry, printer, res. 273 n. Liberty. Ferry Jane, (wid. Hugh,) res. 85 .. Pratt. Ferry John, brick-layer, res. 477 n. East. Ferry Pamelia, (wid. John,) res. n. s. Na tional rd, ope mile from White river bridge. Fertig Francis, house and sign painter, 6 e. Washington, res. 65 w. South. Fesler James N, carpenter, works cor. South and Delaware, res. 138 s. Dela ware. Fesler William, carpenter, res. 212 Bluff rd. Fetcher Mrs. Elizabeth, (wid,) res. 227 Union. Fetherling William, lab, res. 324 e New York. Fette Charles, machinist, Sinker's, res. 250 s. Alabama. Fette George, cleaning and repairing clothes, 38 Virginia av, res. 123 Dun can. Fette Conrad, tailor, res. 148 Virginia av. Fetzer Jane, servant, 264 n. East. Fiblemon C. R. L, clerk, room 11, p. o. bldg, res. 11 Lockerbie. Fil Cooney, lab, res. rear 277 n. Noble. Fieber William, clerk, Schmidt's Brewery, res. 359 s. Alabama. Fiel Augustus, clerk, Am. and U. S. Ex press Co.'s, res. 43 Madison av. Field Edward S, (F, Braden & Co. and Chandler & F,) res. e. s. n. Illiuois, bet. Second and Third. Field John, wagon-maker, res. 391 8. Illi nois. Fields John S, fireman, I. M. & I. R. R, bds. Ray House. Fielhauer John, lab, res. 31 n. East. Fifth Word-School House, w. Maryland, Henry Colgan, principal. Fike John W, farmer, res. Shelbyville pike, | mile s. corporation. Consult Logan's Business Directory of Indianapolis. 64 LOGAN'S [1. ] INDIANAPOLIS Fike Peter, teamster, res. 318 Madison av. Fike Thomas A, lab, bds. 318 Madison av. File S. J, salesman, Bowen, Stewart & Co, bds. 122 n Illinois. Fillbeck Miss Barbary, seamstress, W. A. Rockwood, 276 n. Illinois. Finch C. & E. & Co, butcher shop, 276 w. Washington. Finch Fabius M, (F. & F,) rooms 6 and 7, Talbott & New's blk, n. Pennsylva nia, res. 286 e. Ohio. Finch & Finch, (Fabius M. & John A. F,) lawyers, rooms 6 and 7, Talbott & New's blk, n. Pennsylvania. Finch Miss F. A, teacher, D. grade pri mary department ninth ward school, * bds. 286 e. Ohio. Finch John A, (F. & F,) rooms 6 and 7, Talbott & New's blk, n. Pennsylvonia, bds. 286 e. Ohio. Fines Julius, salesman, J. George Stiltz, res. 279 n. Liberty. Fink Mrs. Mary, (wid. Fred,) res. 51 Mc Carty. Finley Frederick, millinery goods, res. 231 Virginia ov. Finley S. C, bds. 438 s. Illinois. Finn Bridget, wash-women, res. 80 Maple. Finn J, yardman, Bates House, bds. same. Finn John, lab, res. 33 Dougherty. Finn John, cooper, res. 126 Union. Finn Miss Lizzie, bds. 126 Union. Finney Mrs. Catharine, (wid. Michael,) washing and ironing, res. 161 Huron. Finney E. W, lab, res. Shelbyville pike, _ mile s. corporation. Finney Jasper, salesman, 49 s. Meridian, res. 430 Virginia av. Finler Frederick, bakery, bds. 114 Fort Wayne av. First Baptist Church, n. e. cor. New York and Pennsylvania. First English Lutheran Church, cor. New York and Alabama. First National Bank, s. e. cor. Washington and Meridian, William H. English, prest, John C. New, cashr. First Presbyterian Church, s. w. cor. New York and Pennsylvania. First Universolist Church, cor. Maryland and Delaware, Wallace's blk. First Ward School HouBe cor. Vermont ond New Jersey. Fiscus Andrew, brick-layer, res. 140 Mas sachusetts av. Fiscus Frank, brick-layer, res. 43 Cha tham. Fiscus John, brick-mason, bds. 392 n. Ala bama. Fiscus Thomas brick-mason, res. 280 e. St. Clair. Fiscus William, brick-layer, res. 1 Vine. Fish Charles, clerk, w. Woshington, bds. 371 n. East. Fish Frank, clerk, Roach, McDonald & Roach, bds. 367 n. East. Fish George W, traveling agt, Grover & Baker Sewing Machine Co, 21 e. Wash ington. Fish William S, job printer, Journal Office, res. 367 n. East. PISHBACK JOHN, leather, hides, oil, shoe-findings and leather belting, 125 s. Meridian, res. cor. Walnut and Illinois. Fishback William, clerk, 125 s. Meridian, bds. cor. Walnut and Illinois. Fishback William P., (Porter, Harrison & F,) Yohn's blk, cor. Washington and Meridian, res. n. s. e. Washington, fourth house e. city limits. Fisher Andrew, music teacher, res. 286 e. St. Clair. Fisher Andrew, salesman, Helwig's furni ture store, res. 406 n. East. FISHER BENEDICT, propr. Union Depot Barber Shop, res. 189 s. Illinois. Fisher Charles, cooper, res. 123 Spring. FISHER CHARLES, justice of the peace and treas. Grand Lodge of Masons of Indiana, Yohn's blk, cor. Washington and Meridian, res. 26 w. North. O. P. MORTON. E. B. MARTINDALE. J. S. TARKINGTON. MORTON, MARTINDALE & TARKINGTON, ATTORNEYS AT LAW, INDIANAPOLIS, INDIANA. Practice in the United States Court, and in the Civil and Criminal Courts of Indiana. "WiU give special at tention to collecting and probate business. Office, N. W. Cor. Washington and Meridian Sts., over Bee-Hive Store. For a complete Church Directory, see Municipal Record. CITY [_F] DIRECTORY. 65 Fisher David, clerk, fish-store, s. Illinois, bds. 239 Louisiana. Fisher Erastus, switchman, I. C. & L.Yard, bds. 269 s. New Jersey. Fisher George, boot and shoe-maker, 119 Fort Wayne ov, res. same. Fisher James, bds. 26 w. North. Fisher John, barber, bds. 335 Virginia av. Fisher John E, bds. 269 s. New Jersey. Fisher Mrs. Julia, actress, bds. Macy House. Fisher P., lab, bds. cor. Woshington and East. Fisher Samuel, tailor, res. 269 s. New Jer sey. Fisher Mrs. Sarah, (wid,) res. 105 Bluff rd. Fisher William, lab, bds. cor. Washington and East. Fisher Wright C, occupant Deaf ond Dumb Asylum. Fisher Wm. S, boot-maker, 10 s. Pennsyl vania, res. same. Fiske Celia, servant, 230 w. Ohio. Fisk Mrs. E. I, notions, news room and circulating library, 62 n. Illinois, Mil ler's blk, res. same. Fisk Henry C, salesman, 62 n. Illinois, res. same. Fitch John E, book-keeper, Mayhew & Branham, res. 78 e. Pratt. Fitch Lewis, cabinet-maker, bds. 174 w. New York. Fitchey M. G, carpenter, res. 36 n. Cali fornia. Fitchey , carpenter, res. 210 w. Ohio. Fitzgerald Catharine, laundress, Institute of the Blind, bds. same." Fitzgerald David, lab, T. H. & I. R. R, bds. 387 n. Tennessee. Fitzgerald Edmond, lab, res. 156 Meek. Fitzgerald Isaac, stone-mason, res. 158 Blackford. Fitzgerald John, tinner, 63 e. Washington, res. 399 s. Delaware. Fitzgerald John, lab, T. H. & I. R. R, bds. 38 s. Tennessee. Fitzerald Joseph, lab, res. 158 Blackford. Fitzgerald Michael, soldier, U. S. Arsenal, res. same. Fitzgerald P. H, student, commercial col lege, bds. cor. Washington ond New Jersey. Fitzgerald Patrick, carpenter, res. 298 s. Delaware. Fitzgerald Wm. F, lab, rolling mill, res. 226 w. Merrill. Fitzgerald William, lab, res. 188 Maple. Fitzgibbon Michael, bds! Bates House. Fitzhugh Lee M, salesman, 149 s. Meridi an, res. 139 n. Alabama. Fitzpatrick James, tailor, works 66 s. West, res. same. Fitzpatrick ¦ -, brick-mason, bds. Shel by ville piko, three-fourth mile s. cor poration. Fitzpatrick Joseph D, carpenter, res. 240 w. New York. Fitzpatrick Peter, tailor, 66 s. West, res. same. Flager Ryman, works arsenal, res. rear 228 Winston. Flaherty John, lab, res. 688 n. Illinois, bet. Fourth and Fifth. Flaharty Joseph, railroader, bds. 470 e. Georgia. Flaherty Mary, nurse, 396 n. Meridian. Flaherty Mrs. Sarah, (wid. Michael,) res. 323 w. Maryland. Flaherty Thomas, clerk, 200 s. Delaware, bds. Ray House. Flaig Matthew V, carpenter, works War ren Tate's Planing Mill, res. 136 n. New Jersey. Flanner Charles W, salesman deliverer, Tyler's Bee-Hive, res. 801 n. Tennes see. Flanner Jacob Tyler,, clerk, Kahu & Bro, e. Washington, res. 801 n. Tennessee. Flanner Mrs. O. A, (wid.,) res. 801 u. Tennessee. Flapar John, colporteur, res. 287 n. Noble. Flathers J. B, carpenter, res. 151 Maple. Flatley P. B, lab, res. 39 s. Bright. Flauh Leopold, expressman, res. n. Douglas. Fleotz Charles, blacksmith, res. 187 Bluff rd. Fleotz Charles II, tailor, 41 n. Illinois, res. 123 w. Market. Fleit John, (col, ) works Bates House, res. rear 223 Massachusetts av. Flemer Peter, drayman, res. 480 e. Georgia. Fleming David, express-driver, res. 95 Bradshaw. Fleming G. H, city gas inspector, bds. 24 w. Georgia. Fleming John, press boy, Sentinel oflice, bds. West.40 Fleming John, hotel-tender, res. n. s. e. Georgia. Fleming John T, agt. Macauley & Co., res. 133 Railroad. Fleming Thomas, lab, bds. 91 s. West. Fleming Thomas R. W, student, commer cial college, bds. 289 s. East. Fleming V. M, bds. 181 s. New Jersey. Fieson Thomas, section boss, T. H. & I. R. R, res. 896 s. Missouri. Fletcher Albert E, teller, (F. & Sharpe,) res. Vinton's blk, n. Pennsylvania. FLETCHER'S BANK, 30 e. Woshington, S. A. Fletcher & Co, proprs. Fletcher Bertie, servant, 194 n. Illinois. Fletcher Calvin, asst. secy, and treas. Indi anapolis & Vincennes R. R, res. .. _. College, bet. Christian and Home ovs. (5) Hair Work, all kinds, at Medina's, 50 south Illinois st. 66 LOGAN'S [*F*] INDIANAPOLIS Fletcher David, lab, res. rear 121 n Noble. FLETCHER ELIJAH T., administrator and executor of the Cal vin Fletcher estate, res. 410 _. Dela ware. Fletcher Henry F, clerk, American Ex press Office, res. 189 e. Market. Fletcher Ingram, ^F. & Sharpe,) 49 e. Washington, res. 462 n. Pennsylvania, cor. Pratt. Fletcher John B, teamster, bds. 326 Vir ginia av. Fletcher L. W, (W, Fletcher & Co,) room 1 Vinton's blk, res. Franklin, Ind. Fletcher Mrs. Lucinda, (wid,) res. 72 w. Maryland. Fletcher Mrs. Phoebe, (wid.,) seamstress, res. rear 121 n. Noble. FLETCHER R. F., secy. Citizens' Street Ry, res. 477 n. Tennessee. FLETCHER & SHARPE, (Ingram F. & Thomas H. S,) bankers, 49 e. Washington. FLETCHER S. A. & CO., Sioughton A. F, Sen. & Francis M. Churchman, props. Fletcher's Bank, 30 e. Washington. Fletcher S. K, (Dorsey, Layman & F,) 64 e. Washington, res. n. e. city limits. Fletcher Stoughton A, Sen, Fletcher's Bank, 30 e. Washington, res. 180 e. Ohio. Fletcher Stoughton A, Jr., Fletcher's Bank, 30 e. Washington, res. cor. Virginia av. and South. Fletcher Thomas, stock-trader, res. 331 n. Alabama. Fletcher William H, res. 326 Virginia av. Fletcher William B., M. D, 135 n. Alaba ma, res 105 n. Alabama. Fleury Louis, tailor, works 168 e. Wash ington, bds. 18 s. Delaware. Flin Byron, porter, 62 e. Washington, res. 21 Dougherty. Flinn George, shoe-maker, 29 s. West, res. same. Flinn Thomas, city gas works, res. 336 s. Delaware. Flick Wm. B, res. s. s. National rd, w. White river bridge. Flock Samuel, carpenter, res. 40 Thomas. Flowers Mrs. Jemima, (wid. Aaron,) res. 320 e. Washington. Flowers Mrs. Naoma, (wid. Washington,) washing and ironing, res. 248 w. Mor ket. Flowers Samuel, carpenter, cor. Kentucky av. and Mississippi, res. 92 Kentucky av. Floyd W. T, (col,) bds. 63 s. Illinois. Fly P. M, painter, bds. Wiles House. Flynn Byron P., lab, res. 21 Dougherty. Flynn D, gas house, res. 305 s. Delaware. Flynn Dennis, brick-layer, res. 69 Maple. Flynn Mrs. Johanna, (wid. John,) res. 336 s. Delaware. Flynn Thomas, farmer, res. 81 Maple. Flynn Thomas, lab, res. 336 s. Delaware. Fodemyer Rudolph, chair-maker, res. 7 Buchanan. Fogle Frederick, lab, res. 260 Winston. Poland Valentine, cabinet-maker, res. 299 e. Merrill. Foley John D, lab, works Vincennes R. R, res. near Arsenal. Foley M, bds. 289 s. Delaware. Foley Patrick, switchman, I. C. & L. yard, res. 269 e. Louisiana. Foley Patrick, lab, res. 128 Winston. Foley Patrick, lab, res. 91 Fayette. Foley Timothy, striker, C. C. & I. C. shop, res. e. city limits. Folkening Charles, lab, McCord & Wheatr ly, res. 21 Coburn. Follett J. B,. (Martin, Hopkins & F,) gen'l. ins. agt, res. 344 n. Alabama. Folmer Godfried, butcher, bds. 207 w. Michigon. FOLSOM EDWIN S., gen'l ogt. Phoenix Mutual Life Ins. Co, of Hartford, Conn, room 3, Tal bott & New's blk, n. Pennsylvania, bds. Pyle House. GEORGE K. PERRIN, ATTORNEYAND COUNSELOR AT LAW, INDIANAPOLIS, INDIANA. Office— Nos. 5 and 6 College Hall Building, over Fletcher & Sharpe's Bank. •George Trayser's Card on page 4, Advertising Department, CITY [F] DIRECTORY. 67 Fondessor Wendol, blacksmith, res. 485 s. Illinois. Foose Thomas, baker, 123 Meridian, bds. same. Foote C. M„ clerk, 24 e. Georgia, bds. 126 e. Ohio. Foote Charles, machinist, bds. Wiles House. Foote Miss Fanny, student, Indiana Fe male College, 146 n. Meridian, bds. same. Foote Maria W, (wid. Jeremiah,) res. 18 e. Michigan. Foote W. A, book-keeper, 56 and 58 e. Washington, bds. Pyle House. Forbes J. R, watch-maker and jeweler, 34 Virginia av, res. 231 e. South. Forbs James, collector, Indianapolis Jour nal, bds. 170 Davidson. Forly C. H, trunk manfr, 109 s. Illinois, res. 175 e. Washington. FORD E. A., gen'l passenger ogt, C, C, C. & I. Ry. Line, office 53 s. Alabama, res. Cleve land, 0. Ford Miss Eliza T, teacher public schools, 188 w. Ohio. Ford Fletcher W, carpenter, res. 307 e. Washington, 5 and 6 up stairs. Ford T. S, carpenter, res. 114 Forrest av. Ford John, wood-sawyer, res. 188 w. Ohio. Ford Miss Laura, teacher, Fifth Word School, res. 188 w. Ohio. Ford Michael, shoe-maker, works 65 s. Me ridian, res. 326 n. West. Ford Nancy A, (wid, John E,) res. 114 Forrest av. Ford Tony, (col.,) lab, res. cor. Blackford and Michigan. Ford William, lab, res. 134 Harrison. Forge Mrs. Laura, (wid. Daniel,) res. rear 320 e. Washington. Forginly John, lab, res. 498 e. Georgia. Forsha Thomas, cigar-maker, 48 s. Penn sylvania, res. 76 Plum. Forsyth Alexander, clerk, Oriental House, bds. same. Fort John M, patent medicine dealer, bds. 89 s. Illinois. Fortnight Ernest, cabinet-maker, res. 338 Virginia av. Forwald John, lab, Cin. Engine Shop, res. rear 314 n. Noble. Forwald William, carpenter, bds. 314 n. Noble. Foster Mrs. Angeline, (wid. Roger,) res. old No. 17 n. New Jersey. Foster A. S, foreman, boiler shop Eagle Machine Works, bds. Ray House. FOSTER BENJAMIN F., (Rev,) State Librarian and pastor First Universalis! Church, office State House, res. 320 n Illinois. Foster Emely, res. 327 e. Woshington. Foster Cbapin C, steword, Deof ond Dumb Asylum. Foster Edgar J, (Hume, Adams & Co,) 26 ond 28 w. Woshington, res. 339 n. Pennsylvania. Foster George J, corpenter, res. 367 s. Missouri. Foster Isaac, carpenter* res. last house e. _. Short. Foster John, brakesman, I. & C. R. R, res. 31 Buchanan. Foster James II. , painter, res. Pearl, bet. New Jersey and Alabama. Foster James, lab, res. Pearl, bet. Alaba ma and New Jersey. Foster Henry, engineer, I. C. & L. R. R, res. 534 e. Georgia. Foster R, capitalist, res. 339 n. Pennsyl vania. Foster Robert, baker, 12 s. Missouri, bds. same. FOSTER ROBERT S., (F. & Wiggins,) city treasurer, office Glenn's blk, res. 454 n. Delaware. Foster Wallace, (Smith & F,) 27 n. Penn sylvania, res. 88 e. Pratt. Foster, Wiggins & Co., wholesale grocers, commission and storage merchants, 68 & 70 s. Delaware. Foudray John E, (Wood & F,) 16 n. Penn sylvania, res. 215 n. New Jersey. Foudry J. S, harness-maker, 109 e. Wash ington, bds. 215 n. New Jersey. Fourth Presbyterian Church, cor. Dela ware and Market. Fourth Ward School, cor. Blackford and Vermont. Foust Charles J, salesman, Foster, Wig gins & Co., bds. 454 n. Delaware. Foust Michael, teamster, res. 467 s. East. Fout Frederick, feed store, cor. Washing ton and Tennessee, res. 222 n. East. Fowler Benjamin, smithman, I. & C. R. R, res. 57 Harrison. Fowler James P., carpenter, res. 312 e. Washington. Fowler Miss Mary, dress-maker, bds. Sec ond, bet. Tennessee and Mississippi. Fowlers. B. V, (W. & B. V. F,) res. 300 n. Blake. Fowlers W, (W. & B. V. F,) res. 300 u. Blake Fowlers W.& Co, (W. & B. V. F,) grocers, 300 n. Blake. Fox Alois, shoe-maker, bds. Indiana av. Fox Benjamin, lab, res. 70 cor. Hosbrook. Fox Catharine, servant, May Gordon, 851 n. Alabama. FOX JACOB, o _, boot and shoe-fitter, over 8 Bates House blk, res. same. Fox Jacob, shoe-maker, 33 w. Maryland. Fox Jacob, shoe-maker, bds. 148 Indiana av. A Practical Piano Manufacturer. 68 LOGAN'S [IT] INDIANAPOLIS Fox James, engineer, rolling mill, res, 278 Madison av. Fox John, bar-tender, 202 e. Washington, res. 70 Hosbrook. Fox Judson, carpenter,' bds. 20 s. Pennsyl vania. Fox Mrs. Magdaline, (wid. Michael,) res. 177 n. Liberty. Foy Owen, machinist, Sinker's Foundry, res. 88 Benton. Francis George M, soldier, U. S. Arsenal, res. same. Francis H. N, news agt, res. 22 BateB. Francis James, (col,) teamster, bds. 435 n. East. Francis Jacob, porter, 34 s. Meridian, res. Clinton, bet. New Jersey and East. Francis Williom, pilot on Ohio river, res. 22 Bates. Francis Willman, (col,) res. Howard, bet. Second and Third. Franco Daniel, lost-maker, res. Bluff rd. Franco Mathew, last-maker, bda. Bluff rd. Frank G. H, engineer, C. I. & C. R. R, bds. 149 s. New Jersey. Fronk Henry, (Spiegle, Thorns & Co,) res. 118 w. Vermont. Frank James, real estate agt, over 35 e. Washington, res. 461 n. Tennessee. Fronk F. L, conductor, C, C. & I. C. R. R, res. 379 e. Georgia. Franks Francis L, (Miller & F,) over 45 e. Washington, res. cor. Cherry and Plum. Frankem I. L, stoves and tin-ware, 67 e. Washington. Frankem Jonathan, res. 249 n. Illinois. Frankenstein George, barber, works 326 s. Delaware, res. same. Frankenstein Jacob, barber, 326 s. Dela ware, res. same. Frankie Andrew, works Union depot, res. 176 Union. Franklin Ambrose, (col,) lab, res. Miner va, near City Hospital. Fronklin Benjamin, (col,) yardman, Ori ental House. Franklin Benjamin, (col,) barber, res. Eighth, w. Lafayette R. R. Franklin & Capp, (James E. F. & A. B. C,) principals National Business College, 24J e. Washington. Franklin Cyntha, (col, wid,) bds. 224 n. Missouri. Franklin James E, (F. & Capp,) 24J e. Washington, res. 195 n. Tennessee. Franklin James E, student, commercial college, bds. 223 w. South. Franklin John, pressman, Downey, Brouse, Butler & Co, bds. Mrs. Reed, n. Penn sylvania. Franklin Life Insurance Co., of Indiana polis, cor. Illinois ond Kentucky ov, James M. Ray, prest, Edward P. Howe, secy, William S. Hubbard, vice-prest. and treas, B. F. Witt, general agt. Franklin William, (col.,) white- washer, res. 161 Indiana av. Franklin William H, (col,) barber, n. e. cor. Washington and Meridian, under Indiana National Bank, res. 231 w. Ohio. Franklin William T, carpenter, res. 223 w. South. Frantz Jacob, works Maxwell, Fry & Turs- ton, res. Clinton, bet. Vermont and New York. Franz Peter, well-digger, res. 222 n. Noble. Franzman Mrs. Amelia, (wid. Adam,) res. 292 e. Market. Frary John C, compositor, Journal office, bds. 168 n. East. Frauer Albert G, (Thayer & F,) 248 e. Washington, res. city limits. FRAUER, BIELER & CO., dealers in saddlery hardware and manfs. of harness, saddles and collars, etc., 109 e. Washington. See card, page 70. Frauer Samuel C, druggist, 246 e. Wash ington, res. 257 e. New York. Frauer E. C, druggist, 246 e. Washington, res. s. s. New York, bet. East and Lib erty. WILLIAM A. LOWE, ATTORNEY AND COUNSELOR AT LAW, No. 16_ EAST WASHINGTON STREET, HERALD liUlMUNG, INDIANAPOLIS, IND. WILL PRACTICE IN THE STATE AND FEDERAL COURTS. SPECIAL ATTENTION PAID TO COL LECTIONS. Western Commercial Review and Railroad Journal, CITY [F] DIRECTORY. 69 Frauer Herman, clerk, 246 e. Washington, res. 257 e. New York. Frauer, Rudolph, (F, Bieler & Co,) 109 e. Washington, res. 85 n. New Jersey. Frazee Aaron, brick-layer, res. 317 Indi ana av. Frazee Frank, well-digger, res. 351, old number, e. McCarty. Frazee George W, carpenter, res. 759 n. Mississippi. FRAZER JAMES S., chief judge, Supreme Court of Indiana, office new State bldg, res. Warsaw, Ind. Frazee John W, carpenter, res. 303 n. Delaware. Frazee P, pay-master, C, C. C. & I. R. R, office 53 s. Alabama. Frazee Samuel E, pay-master, I. & St. L. R. 11., office Bellefontaine office, res, 176 n. Illinois. Frazer John H, carpenter, works I. C. R. R. shops, res. 271 e. Market. Frazer William, bridge builder, bds. 431 e. St. Clair. Fredericks George W., brick-moulder, res. 126 Bluff rd. Fredericks Godfrey, lab, res. 9 Willard. Free Frederick R, res. Columbia, bet. East and New Jersey. Free John W, cabinet-maker, Union fac tory, res. 25 bet. Liberty and East. Freeman Miss Claro, bds. 341 s. Pennsyl vania. Freeman David, lab, res. 74 Wilkens. Freeman George W, salesman, 40 s. Meri dian, res. 412 n. Delaware. Freeman Henry, machinist, bds. 341 s. Pennsylvania. Freeman Joseph W, carpenter, res. 56 s. Noble. Freeman Miss Mary, bds. 134 n. Meridian. Freeman Michael, pattern-maker, Eagle Machine Works, res. 341 s. Pennsyl vania. Freelish Williom, stone-mason, res. 165 High. Freese Anna, servant, 160 e. Market. Freidenberg Alex, occupant Deaf and Dumb Asylum. Freidenberg Amanda, occupant Deaf and Dumb Asylum. Freitschk William, clerk, 29 w. Washing ton, bds. 17J Virginia a v. Frelking John F, res. 469 n. New Jersey. Frendley Mary,, servant, 477 n. Delaware. French Amos, occupant Deaf and Dumb Asylum. French Mrs. Anna T, (wid,) bds. 676 n. Mississsippi. French Charles G, jeweler, res. e. Wash ington, near corporation line. French William M, instructor, Deaf ond Dumb Asylum. Frenzel J. P, Sen, (F, Will & Co,) 104 s. Illinois, res. 246 e. Market. Frenzel J. P, Jr., messenger, Merchants' National Bank, 48 e. Washington, bds. 246 e. Market. FRENZEL, WILL & CO., (John P., F, Francis W. & J. P. Si mon,) tanners and dealers in hides, leather and shoe findings, 104 s. Illi nois. Frese C. & Co, (C. F. & C. F. Hahn,) dealer in hardware, cutlery, &c, 27 w. Wash ington. Frese Charles, (C. F. & Co,) 27 w. Wash ington, bds. 28 w. Georgia. Frese Mothias, engraver, W. & J. Braden, bds. California House. Freshour Casper, stone-mason, res. 228 s. New Jersey. Frey A, Daily Telegraph Co., res. 340 s. Meridian. Frick John, saloon, 151 Ft. Wayne ov, res. cor. Massachusetts av. and Noble. Frick J, grocery and produce dealer, 300 Massachusetts av, res. same. Frick Philip, foreman, Jacob Voegtle, res. 15 s. Alabama. Fricker Jacob, (Schmedel & F,) res. Mor ris, bet. East and New Jersey. Fridolin Buscher, boot and shoe manfr, 122 s. Illinois, res. 135 Bluff rd. Friday John M, carpenter and builder, 254 railroad, res. same. Friech Henry, saloon, reB. National rd, near White river bridge. Friedgen C. H, merchant tailor, 41 n. Illi nois, res. 123 w. Market. FRIEDGEN CORNELIUS, manfr. and dealer in fashionable boots and shoes, 36 w. Washington, res. 36 n. East. See card, page 14. Friend G. gardner, Madison rd, near city. Friend Christopher, gardner, Richards, res. 550 s. New Jersey. Friend Mary, servant, W. O. Rockwood, 276 n. Illinois. Fries Martin, lob, res. 253 Union. Friersdorff Frederick, engineer, C. S. Ce- reys, *res. California, bet. Maryland and Georgia. Frink E. O, (F. & Moore,) 24 e. Georgia, res. 203 Massachusetts av. Frink Hiram S, tailor, works 32 s. Meri dian, res. 308 e. Ohio. FRINK & MOORE, (S. C. F, E. O. F. & H. A. M,) Union Novelty Works ond Foundry, 24 e. Georgia. Frink S. C, (F. & Moore,) 24 e. Georgia, res. 97 s. Meridian. Frisman Leo. S, cook, Capital Saloon, 14 e. Washington, res. same. Fristover Dorff, engineer, Cory & Co, res. California, bet. Maryland and Georgia. The Cheapest Journal in the West. $1.00 a year. 70 LOGAN'S [F] INDIANAPOLIS Fritsche Carle, printer, bds. 467 _. Dela ware. Fritz Charles L, traveling ogt, J. H. Vo- jen & Co., res. 137 Masachusetlg ov. Fritz C. L, traveling agt, J. H. Vajen & Co., bds. 372 Massachusetts av. Frizzell Allen, carpenter, res. 268 n. Blake. Frizzell Bushrod, carpenter, res. 266 n. Blake. Frizzell Jesse, well-digger, res. Eighth, bet. Lenox and Railroad. Fromeyer Henry, salesman, 56 and 58 e. Washington, bds. 134 n. Mississippi. Frommledt Peter, cabinet-maker, works Spiegle, Thorns, & Co, bds. 252 e.Wash- ington. Froscha_er Adam, lab, bds. 518 e. Wash ington. Frost Homar, works Junction R. R, bds. Wiles House. Frost Herman F, conductor, I. M. & I. R. R, bds. Bates House. Fruchtenecht Herman, teacher, German Lutheran School, s. East, res. 265 e. New York. Frumholt Peter, cooper, res. 167 Bluff rd. Fry Albert, (col,) hostler, res. 85 Eddy. Fry J. M, painter, 68 n. Pennsylvania, ids. Wiles House. Fry James C, porter, E. Over & Co., bds. Commercial Hotel. Fry Miss R. N, boarding-house, 204 n. Illinois. Fry Sarah, (wid. Robert,) res. 226 Massa chusetts ov. Fry Williom H, (Maxwell, F. & Thurston,) 34 s. Meridian, res. cor. Meridian and King. Fuchs Martin, bartender, Spencer House Saloon, bds. 280 e. Market. Fugate J. L, (J. H. Vajen & Co,) 21 w. Washington, res. 169 w. New York. Fullekanick Henry, lab, bds. 79 s. Liberty. Fullen S. W, salesman, 78 s. Meridian, bds. Sherman House. Fuller Miss Catharine, res. over 230 e. Woshington. Fuller Miss Emeline, res. 27 8. Alabama. Fuller Joseph A, operator Western Union Telegraph Office, bds. 75 Kentucky av. Fuller Joseph H, lab, res. 27 s. Alabama. Fulmer David P., silver-plater, res. 225 e. Market. Fulmer Miss Fanny, milliner, works 122 n. East, res. 225 e. Market. Fulmer Frederick, silver-plater, 39 Vir ginia av, res. 225 e. Market. Fulmer Leander, silver-plater, 30 Virginia av, res. 225 e. Market. Fulmer Leander, groceries and provisions, s. w. cor. Georgio and Benton, res. 399 Georgia. Fulmer Rachel F, milliner, res. 225 e. Market. Fullmore John, pointer, bds. 248 s. Penn sylvania. Fulton America, occupant Deaf and Dumb Asylum. Fulton Frank P, printer, 79 w. Washing ton, bds. 214 Union. Fulton Felix M, cabinetmaker, res. 214 Union. Fulton Homer, cabinet-maker, bds. 214 Union. Fulton Herman H, general clerk, T. H. & I. R. R. Freight Office, bds. Macy House. Fulton Miss Jennie, bds. 214 Union. Fulton Miss Sarah J, bds. 48 n. West. Fulton Samuel S, clerk, Macy House, bds. same. Fulton W. H, piono-moker, 159 and 161 e. "Washington, res. 84 Massachusetts av. Fulton William, fireman, I. C. & L. R. R, bds. 99 Benton. Funkhouser D, (Jameson & F, 19 s. Me ridian, res. 40 n. Mississippi. Funnelle Miss Amanda, principal Normal Department Fourth Ward District School, bds. 60 n. California. Furby Edith, servant, 74 e. North. FURGASON ALBERT G., cooper, 321 e. Georgia, res. Noble. 123 RUDOLPH FRAUER. J. L. BIELER. PAUL LOHRMAN. FRANK M. ROTTLEB- FRAUER, BIELER & CO. Wholesale Manufacturers of SADDLES, HARNESS AND COLLARS, AND DEALERS IN SADDLERY HARDWARE, WHIPS, BLANKETS, &c. No. 109 EAST "WASHINGTON STREET, Opposite the Court House, INDIANAPOLIS, IND. Livingston's Law Register can ha h^rf at ?•»"« _«**«>_ CITY [Gr] DIRECTORY. 71 Furgeson J. A, (W. J. Holiday & Co,) 59 s. Meridion, res. 270 n. Tennessee. Furgason James, works Junction R. R, bds. Wiles House. FURNAS JOHN & CO., (John F, Moses M. Collett & Horace McCoy,) dealers in dry goods ond no tions, 68 e. Washington. Furnas John, (J. F. & Co,) 68 e. Washing ton, res. 518 n. Delaware. Furn Franklin L, machinist, bds. 126 n. Mississippi. Fuss John, carpenter, works H. Recker, bds. 60 s. Delaware. Fyner O, lab. Hill's Nursery, Michigan rd. /~*i ABERT E. M, student.,;commercial col- \JC lege, bds. 369 n. New Jersey. Gabe Michael, lab, res. Kansas, s. city limits. Gabel Charles D, carriage-smith, works S. W. Drew & Co., bds. 8. e. cor. Winston and Michigan. Gabel Conrad, carriage-maker, works S. W. Drew & Co, res. 196 n. Noble. Gabel David, block-smith, bds. s. e. cor. Winston ond Michigan. Gabisel & Talbott, cooper shop, near Frank Wright's Brewery. Goen Christian, works Cabinet-Makers' Union, res. 83 Davidson. Gaen Mrs. Wilhelmino, (wid. Christian,) res. 83 Davidson. Gage Mrs. Mary, res. 136 w. Michigan. Gagg & Co, (Rudolph G. & Peter Leiber,) brewers, 215 s. Pennsylvania. Gagg Rudolph, res. 174 Madison av. Gahm John, groceries, provisions and saloon, 196 Indiana av, res. same. Gains Miss M, (col,) 247 cor. West and Ohio. Gainey Mrs. Nancy, (wid. Meredith,) res. 32 n. East. Gains P. 0, carpenter, bds. 11 n. West. Galaspie Miss Elizabeth, bds. 58. s. Cali fornia. Galbraith Arthur N, salesman, New York Store, res. 50 w. New York. Galbaith Richard ,M, carriage-trimmer, works S. W. Drew & Co., res. 46 s. Illinois. Galdon Marion, bds. 83 Indiana av. Gall Albert, (G. _ Rush,) 101 e. Washing ton, res. 65 n. New Jersey. Gall Caroline A, (wid,) res. 65 n. New Jersey. Gall Edmund, clerk, F. P. Rush, res. 65 n. Jersey. GALL & RUSH, (Albert G. & Charles R,) wholesale and retail dealers in carpets, oil cloths, wall paper, &c, 101 e. Wash ington. Gallagher Francis, pointer, res. 62 Massa chusetts av. Gallagher John, peddlar, res. 314 n. Noble. Gallagher Julia, cook, Commercial Hotel. Gallagher Mrs. Mary, (wid. Martin,) res. 59 n. Alabama. Gallagher Mary, servant, 416 n. Illinois. Gallagher Patrick, peddlar, res. 330 Rail road. Gallagher Patrick, salesman, New York Store, bds. 36 w. Maryland. Gallagher Patrick, lab, res. 5 Peru. Gallahue Warren C, notion dealer, bds. 326 e. New York. Gallahue Phoenix M, notion dealer, res. 328 e. New York; Galliton Sarah, (col,) res. 73 Bright. Gallivan Margaret, servant, 413 n. Illinois. Gallivan Michael, lab, res. 148 s. Noble. Calloway Mrs. Catharine, res. 204 w. Ver mont. Galloway Frank. M, res. 204 .w. Vermont. Indiana av. Galloway Mrs. Jone, dress-moker, res. 83 Galloway John, painter, bds. 69 w. Market. Galloway Miss Lizzie, res. 204 w. Vermont. Gallup Edward P, (W. P. & E. P. Gallup,) 43 and 45 n. Tennessee, res. 78 n. Ton n g _JS(_ _ Gallup William P, (W. P. & E. P. Gallup,) 43 and 45 n. Tennessee, res. 78 n. Tennessee. GALLUP W. P. & E. P., ( W illiam & Edword P. G,) groin deal ers, com. mers. ond agts. Fairbanks' Scales, 43 n. Tennessee. Galvin Albert, res. Little's Hotel. Galvin Eliza, res. Little's Hotel, cor. New Jersey and Washington. Galvin George W, lawyer, res. Little's Ho tel, cor. New Jersey and Washington. Galvin Mrs. Honnora, (wid. Moth,) f res. 90 railroad. Galzaulinchter John, lob, res. 340 Rail road. Gamm John, groceries ond saloon, 196 In diana av, res. same. Gammerdinger Jacob, blacksmith, res. 613 e. Washington. Ganshaw Charles, bds. 144 Virginia av. Gonter Coshum, confectionery ond bakery, 233 e. Washington, res. same. Ganter Daniel C, engineer, 188 e. Wash ington, res. 233 e. Washington. Gapen Philip M, traveling agt, 48 s. Me ridian, bds. 457 Bluff rd. Garber Henry, works at Arsenal, res. 112 Benton. Garden Miss Ella, student, Indiana Female College, 146 n. Meridian, bds. some. Gorden Mrs. Margaret, (wid. George,) res. Indiana av. Gardner Brime, carpenter, res. 426 e. Geor gia. Directories of any City furnished at Publishers' Prices, at this Offlce. 72 LOGAN'S [I_L_V_V_?01_IS. MEDICAL BOOKS AT PUBLISHERS PRICES. See the most Substantial Business Houses, in Advertising Department. CITY [GT] DIRECTORY, 77 Gooth Edward, machinist, res. 364 s. Illi nois. GORDON GEORGE E., attorney at law, 6 Odd Fellows' Hall, res. 230 n. Pennsylvania. Gordon Jonathan W, (G. & March,) room 4, Talbott & New's blk, n. Pennsyl vania, res. 351 n. Alabama. GORDON & MARCH, (Jonathan W. G. & Walter M,) at- torneys ot law, room 4, Talbott & New's blk, n. Pennsylvania. Gordon R, photograph gallery, 36J e. Washington, res. 60 w. Market. Qorham .Wm. H, awning monufr, 16 .. Washington. Gore James, res. 206 n. Delaware. Gorman Mrs. Sarah J, (wid.,) res. Court, bet. East and New Jersey. Gorman Thomas, blacksmith, Citizens' Street Ry. Co., res. Chesepeoke. Gorrell A. W, (H. F. West & Co,) 37 s. Meridian, res. Fletcher av., near Cedar. Goss William, clerk, Lukens & Hollowell, bds. 157 w. Maryland. Goss Mrs. Caroline, (wid. William,) res. 121 Spring. Goss Martin W, clerk, Union Star Line Office, res. 130 Virginia av. Goss Louis, stone-mason, res. 329 David son. Gossett T.F, salesman, 56 s. Meridian, bds. 169 n. Illinois. Goth, Brown & Co., grocers and produce dealers, 489 n. New Jersey. Goth Jacob, tinner, D. Root & Co., bds. 499 n. New Jersey. Goth L, tinner, bds. 499 n. New Jersey. Goth Peter, (G, Brown & Co,) 489 n. New Jersey, res. 449 n. New Jersey. Gott Charles H, farmer, res. 219 s. Tennes see. Gott Thomas, farmer, res. 219 s. Tennes see. Gottsehalk Charles, cigar-maker, bds. 23 Kentucky av. Gottsehalk John, foreman, C. C. & I. C. shop. res. e. city limits. Gottlieb Glock, lab, res. w. river bridge. Gottpeter Henry, lab , res. 162 Buchanan. Gough David, farmer, res. Kansas, s. city limits. Gough Jacob M., blacksmith, bds. 80 s. Gough John, apprentice, 277 w. Washing ton, bds. 58 s. California. Goul Andrew, carpenter, res. 231 e. South Gould Adam, groceries, 405 w. Washing ton, res. same. Gould G. B, student, commercial college, bds. 726 cor. New Jersey ond Fifth. Goulding John, lab, res. Sixth, bet. Ten nessee and Mississippi. Gould John J, lab, res. 46 Coburn. Goulding John, lab, res. u. s. Sixth, bet. Illinois and Tennessee. Gout Frederick, lab, T. H. & I. R. R. Eng ine House, res. 172 w. Union. Grabe Jacob, carpenter, res. 356 s. Illinois. Grabhorn Henry, varnisher, res. 415 e. Washington. Graden William, res. end Virginia av, be yond city limits. Grady Annie, cook, Ray House. Grady Martin, lab, res. 28 Helen. Grafenstein Frederiok, butcher, 105 Massa chusetts av, bds. 491 n. Alabama. Grafenstein William, butcher, 105 Massa chusetts av, res. 491 n. Alabama. Grafford Susannah, (col,) washing and ironing, res. 183 Douglas alley. Grafton John I, clerk, supt's office M. U. Express Co., bds. Bates House. Graham & Co., dealers in flour and feed, 62 n. Pennsylvania. Graham George, gardener, U. S. Arsenal, res. Arsedal Grounds. Graham J. J, (G. & Co,) 62 n. Pennsyl vania, res. 244 s. New Jersey. - Graham Miss Kate, head-laundress, Bates House. Graham Samuel J, railroader, res. 374 n. Tennessee. Graham Williom, brick-maker, res. 141 Huron. Gramble Edwin G, farmer, res. 394 Vir ginia av. Gramling Adam, salesman, 35 e. Washing ton, res. 39 Union. Gramling Anton, retired school teacher, res. 210 n. Noble. Gramling John, (J. & P. G,) 35 e. Wash ington, res. 210 n. Noble. GRAMLING J. & P.. (John & Peter G,) merchant tailors and dealers in ready-made clothing, 35 e. Washington. Gramling Peter, (J. & P. G,) 35 e. Wash ington, res. 212 n. Noble. Grand Army of the Republic, office rooms 2 /Etna bldg. Groney Dennis, lob, res. 17.5 Meek. Groney Ellen, servant, 175 e. Ohio. Groney Mary A, servont, e. s. n. Illinois, bet. Second and Third. Groney Moggie, servont, 182 s. New Jer sey. Groney Thomas, lab, res. 96 Railroad. Grandey J. C, painter, bds. Wiles House. Grasbey Frederick, baggage-master, res. 77 s. Liberty. Grass Adam, painter, res. Second, bet. Me ridian and Illinois. Gressfield Ezra, lab, res. Geisendorff, near Geisendorff's Woolen Factory. Grasson William, packer, 68 s. Meridion, res. 124 Noble. See Condensed R. R. Routes in last part of Book. 78 LOGAN'S [G.] INDIANAPOLIS Graves Alfred, (col,) lab, res. 164 Elm. Graves Cothorine, works City Laundry, res. 199 e. Washington. Graves C. E, clerk, Merchants' Union Ex press Co., 42 and 44 e. Washington, res. 22 California. Graves Highland, works Spiegle, Thorns & Co, res. 195 s. Alabamo. Graves Lewis W, farmer, res. 296 n. Meri dian. Groves Myro, brakeman, C, C. & I. C. C. R. R, bds. 58 Benton. Graves Richard, fruit stand, cor. Kentucky av. and Tennessee, res. same. Graves Virenda, (col,) res. 164 Elm. Gray George W, tailor, res. 172 Center. Gray Henry, works J. Butsch, bds. 68 w. South. • Gray Jonathan, brick-layer, res. 293 n. Liberty. Gray Robert, engineer, City Mills, res. 28 Lord. Gray Robert, carpenter, res. 78 e. St. Clair. Gray Robert P, (Lehr & G.,) 83_ e. Wash ington, res. 52 Greer. Gray S. F, ogt. Stor Union Line ond Al- lentown Line, 85 Virginia av, res. 70 =. St. Clair. Gray Stephen, (McGinnis & G,) 45 e. Washington, res. 84 Massachusetts av. Gray Talbott, (col,) waiter, Botes House. Gray William, druggist, res. 235 n. Illinois. Gray William, engineer, res. 57 Harrison. Gray William, baggageman, C, C. & I. C. R. R, bds. 33 Meek. Groydon Andrew, clerk, Central R. R. office, res. 287 e. Market. Graydon Alexandria, retired merchant, res. 287 e. Market Graydon William, clerk, 47 n. Illinois, bds. 492 n. Tennessee. Greany John, lob, res. 274 b. Tennessee. Greaney Patrick, grocer, 210 e. Washing ton, bds. 245 n. Liberty. Great Western Horse Insurance Co., office 7 Vinton's blk, opp. p. o. Greeley Michael, lab, res. 109 n. West. Greeley Horace, (col,) servont, Mrs. M. Achey, 17 Kentucky ov. Green A, chair- bottomer, reB. 199 Huron. Green Celia, (col,) bds. West, bet. Ohio and Market. Green D. M., salesman, 17 w. Washington, res. 364 n. Meridian. Green E. S, (Dutton & G,) 77} e. Market, Eden's blk, res. 704 n. Tennessee. Green Edmund, (col,) servant, James Blake, 308 n. Tennessee. Green George, tailor, 60 e. Market, res. n. Mississippi, beyond city limits. Green Geo. W, clerk, car depot, C, C. & I. C. R. R, bds. Pyle House. Green J. C, (J. C. G & Co,) 98 e. Wash ington, res. 370 n. East. Green J. C. & Co., druggists, 98 e. Wash ington. Green Miss Jennie J, bds. 39 w. Market. Green John, lob, res. 164 n. Delaware. Green John, (col,) lab, bds. 25 n. Illinois. Green M. J, (wid. Bird,)res. 37 Maple. Green Martha, res. 37 Maple. Green Mary, servant, 182 Davidson. Green N. Scott, individual book-keeper, First National Bank, bds. 364 n. Me ridian. Green P. M, (Cambell & G, ) 149 w. Wash ington, res. 130 n. Mississippi. Green Mrs. Sarah, (wid,) res. 145 n. Mis sissippi. Green Thomas C, clerk, Davis & Green, bds. 364 n. Meridian. Green Virginia, bds. West, bet. Ohio ond Market. Greenan Joseph, freight conductor, C, C. _ I. C. R. R, bds. 90 s. Illinois. Greenan Michael, fireman, C. C. & I. C. R. R, bds. 58 Benton. Greenawolt John G, clerk, Indiana Mili tary Agency, Gallup's bldg, res. 780 n. Illinois. Greene James, (Davis & G,) 27 s. Meridian, res. 364 n. Meridian. Greenewald Henry, (G. & Schindler,) res. 174 c. Washington. A. O". BURKHART, South-West Corner of Michigan and Mississippi Streets, -DEALER IN- BROAD-CUT ICE, Delivered to any Store, Manufactory, Besidence, Boarding Honse, Shop or Room, at Cheaper Bates than the game quality can be furnished by any other dealer. Subscribe for the Workingmen's Journal, P. O. Box 1441, Indianapolis. $1.00 a year. CITY [G] DIRECTORY. 79 . Greenewald & Schindler, (Henry G. & Robert S,) Indiana Dry Goods Store, 174 e. Washington. Greenfield Daniel C, deputy county clerk, county clerk's office, res. 323 w. Wash ington. Greenfield Robert, produce buyer, Carlisle's Mills, res. 323 w. Washington. Greenleaf Clement (A, G. & Co,) 255 s. Tennessee, res. 303 s. Meridian. Greenleaf & Co, founders and machinists, 325 s. Tennessee. Greenleaf Edward, machinist, res. 416 s. Tennessee. Greenleaf P. P., machinist, bds, 416 s. Tennessee. Greenleaf William, machinist, bds. 416 s. Tennessee. Greenlee James S, carpenter, res. 219 Vir ginia av. Greenway John, shoe-maker, 41 o. Wash ington, res. 112 e. McCarty. Greenwegen George, shoe maker, 41 e. Washington, bds. Cincinnati House, s. Delaware. Greenwood Joseph, teamster, res. end Vir ginia av, beyond city limits. Greenrod Timothy, stone-cutter, res. 31 s. West. Greensheet J. H, book-keeper, Wheat, Fletcher & Co., res. 110 Broadway. Greer Elisha, huckster, res. 433 e. Ver mont. Greer James, poet, 242 s. Mississippi. Greer Stephen H, clerk, n. .. cor. Noble and Market, bds. same. Greesher William, clerk, res. 393 s. East. Gregg James A, wagon-maker, res. 321 n. West. Gregor Chackley F, carpenter, bds. 83 California. Gregor Henry, belt-maker, Mooney & Co, res. 331 e. Georgia. Gregor William, lab, res. 396 s. East- Gregory Dennis, fur dealer, bds. 78 e. Mar ket. Gregory Miss May, lady boarder, 281 e. New York. Gregory Miss Martha M, training school, bds. 115 Massachusetts av. GREGORY ROBERT C, judge Supreme Court of Indiana, office New State bldg, bds. Bates House, res. Lafayette, Ind. Grenwald John G, clerk, State Military Agency, res. 780 n. Illinois. Gresbach August, brewer, bds. 94 e. South. Greshaber John, boiler-maker, res. 349 s. Alabama. Gresh B. J, professor string and brass music, res. 282 e. St. Clair. Greuzard & Loucks, (Logan S. G & C. L,) house, sign and ornamental painters, 328 e. Washington. Greuzard Logan S, (Loucks & G,) 237 e. Washington, res. 455 Virginia av. Greuzard Miss Rosa, utility at theater, bds. 454 Virginia av. Grewlioh William, cash-boy, New York Store, res. Fort Wayne av. Grey Jessie, conductor, J. R. R, res. 293 s. New Jersey. Grey Leonard, paper-finisher, McClene, Mclntire & Hays. Grey Robert, carpenter, res. 78 e. St. Clair. Grieb John, lab, res. 126 Spring. Grieb Gotlieb, stone-mason, res. 334 Rail road. Griesheimer & Bro, (Moritz G. & Louis G,) dealers in clothing and gents' furnishing goods, a. w. cor. Washing ton and Meridian. Griesheimer Louis, (G. & Bros,) 1 w. Washington, bds. Circle Restaurant. Griesheimer M., (M. G. & Bros,) 1 w. Washington, bds. Circle Restaurant. Grieshamer John, bar-tender, 156 e. Wash ington, bds. same. Grieves Clarance, printer, Evening Com mercial, bds. 314 w. Merrill. Grieves John S, printer, Evening Commer cial, bds. 314 w. Merrill. Griffenstien William, butcher, res. 491 n. Alabama. Griffin Miss Bridget, servant, 184 w. Ohio. Griffin James, lab, res. 2 Water. Griffin John, lab, res. 75 Fayette. Griffin Martin, lab, res. 115 Elm. Griffin Martha, (col.,) res. w. North, near Bright. Griffin Michael, drayman, res. 95 Fayette. Griffin Mary A, servant, 154 s. New Jer sey. Griffin Mary M, servant, n. w. cor. Fourth and Illinois. Griffin Mary, servant, 160 n. Meridian. Griffin Patrick, lab, res. e. city limits. Griffin Patrick, gardener, res. 376 s. Dela ware. Griffin Peter, compositor, Sentinel news room, bds. Palmer House. Griffin Mrs. Sarah, (wid. James,) res. 362 s. Delaware. Griffin Timothy, saloon, 48 s. Pennsyl vania, res. 886 s. Delaware. Griffin Thomas, lab, res. 142 s. Noble. Griffith Mrs. Catharine, res. 231 n. East. Griffith Charles, lab., res. 398 s. Tennes see. Griffith Dennis, lab, res. 252 s. Missouri. Griffith George, mail agt, L. & G. R. R, res. 645 n. Tennessee. Griffith Humphrey, real estate owner, res. 78 n. Illinois. Griffith J. L, brakesman, C, C. & I. C. R. R, bds. 61 s. Noble. Griffith J. J. F, book-keeper, 41 s. Merid ian, res. 126 e. Ohio. See Tutewiler . Card on page 8, Advertising Department. 80 LOGAN'S [GS-] INDIANAPOLIS Griffith James, engineer, I. C. & L. R. R, bds. 99 Benton. Griffith James, works 5 Pearl, bds. Pearl; bet. Alabama and East. Griffith Josiah R, res. 42 s. Mississippi. Griffith Pleasant H, bds. 78 n. Illinois. Griffith Sarah, servont, 330 e. Louisiana. Grigsey James, carpenter, res. 114 Michi gan rd. Grigsly Samuel, works Hill's Nursery, res. near Arsenal ov. Grimes Williams H. H, carpenter, res. 325 n. West. Grimm Casper, painter, bds. 174 e. St. Jo seph. Grimm Jacob, cistern-builder, res. 174 e. St. Joseph. Grimm Jacob, Jr., blacksmith, bds. 1 74 e. St. Joseph. Grimm Jacob, corrioge-smith, works S. W. Drew & Co., res. 174 e. St. Joseph. Grine John, bakery, 264 e. Washington, res. same. Griner J, shoe-maker, res. 38 s. Alabama. Grinsteiner George, undertaker, 276 e. Market, res. same. Grinsteiner Joseph, hackman, bds. 276 e. Market. Grior David, tailor, works 30 n. Pennsyl vania, res. Bluff rd, beyond city limits. Griswold Amanda, (wid. David,) res. 404 s. Illinois. Griswoold Mathilda, (wid.,) res. 38 u. Douglas. Griswold Thomas E, troveling ogt, Kiefer & Vinton, 68 s. Meridian, bds. Oriental House. Grobe Charles, eating-house, 12 w. Louisi ana, res. same. Graham A. C, messenger, American Ex press Co., res. 205 Union. GROOMS A. C, book-keeper, Journal Office, res. 412 n. Jersey. Grosch John, (G. & Strothman,) 37 8. Del aware, res. 203 n. Noble. Grosch & Strothman, (John G. & William S.,) commission merchants, 37 s. Dela ware. Gross Andrew L, occupant Deaf and Dumb Asylum. Grove Benjamin, dealer in lightning rods, res. 329 e. New York. Grove Henry W, mill-wright, res. 80 cor. Huron ond Pine. Grove Samuel A, clerk, Rout & Botes, res. 329 e. New York. GROVER & BAKER SEWING MACHINE CO, Thomas M. Cochrane, agt, 21 e. Washington. Grubbs Daniel W, general insurance agt., 19 n. Meridian, res. 282 n. Illinois. GRUENERT HERMAN, propr. Globe House, 164 s. Illinois. GRUENERT JOHN H., propr. Jefferson House, 8. s. South, bet. Pennsylvania and Delaware. Grund G, striker, res. 137 Bluff rd. Gruseman William, carpenter, res. 123 w. Fourth. Guardian Baptist Mission Sunday School, over 194 and 196 w. Washington, meets 9 a. m, H. Knippenberg, supt. Guenther C, shoe-maker, 168 a. Illinois, res. 142 e. Maryland. Guenther, Ernesto F ., res. s. e. cor. Tennes see and Third. Guetig Henry, propr. Spencer House Sa loon, res. 280 e. Market. Guezett A, house and sign painter, res. 297 s. Delaware. Guffin H. C, (G. & Porker,) n. Pennsylva nia, res. 'Northwood, near N. W. C. University. Guffin L. H, student, N. W. C. University, bds. 40 Christian ov. Guffin & Parker, (H. C. G. & R. P. P,) at torneys at law, rooms 10 and 11, Tal bott & New's blk, n. Pennsylvania. Guisinger Frank, stage carpenter, bds. 144 n. Tennessee. Gullett A, student, N. W. C. University, bds. cor. Plum and Vine. f JAMES M. SINKS, CARPENTER AND BUILDER CONTRACTOR __JN_D JOBBER- SHOP, REAR No. 240 NORTH MISSISSIPPI STREET, INDIANAPOLIS, INDIANA Contracting and jobbing in my line done promptly, and satisfaction guaranteed. Beference can Tbe given to many patrons when desired. See Cigar and Tobacco House, page 108. CITY [H] DIRECTORY. 81 Gulliver Aaron, barber, cor. Kentucky av. and Washington, res. same. Gulliver Leo, (col,) farmer, res. Tennes- Bee, bet. Michigan and Vermont. Gulliver William, (col,) barber, cor. Ken tucky av. ond Woshington, res. 75 Kentucky ov. Gum George R, plumber, 82 w. Washing ton, bds. Mrs. Reed, n. Pennsylvania. Gumpf Cristopher, gardner, res. n s. Na tional rd, w. White river bridge. Gumphry Joseph, farmer, res. 112 n. Noble. Gundelfioger Benjamin, res. 261 e. Mar ket. Gundelfinger Max, clerk, 1 w. Washing ton, bds. 157 e. Market. Gurley J. P., hat-blocker, 44 s. Illinois, bds. 33 w. Maryland. Gustetter Frederick, drives furniture wag on, res. 435 n. New Jersey. Gustin George, Western Union Telegraph Office, bds. 275 n. New Jersey. Gustin John, auctioneer, res. 27 e. North. Gustin L, physician and surgeon, office cor. Illinois and Louisiana, res. 275 n. New Jersey. Gustin Louis, fireman, I, C. & L. R. R, res. 82 s. Noble. Gustin Robert, carpenter, bds. 275 n. New Jersey. Gutchneoht Rudolph, shoe-maker, res. 562 n. Mississippi. Guthmann John, printer, res. 157 Fort Wayne av. Guthrie Edward A, compositor, Sentinel news room, res. 109 n. Illinois. Guthrie Miss Emma, bds. 312 Indiana av. Guthperle Peter, porter, Spiegle, Thorns & Co, res. 204 n. Noble. Gutig Henry, barber, shop under Odd Fel lows' Hall, res. 280 e. Market. Guttschaup George, cigar-maker, bds. 19 Lord. Guy James C, bds. 121 n. Delaware. Gwin Eliza, (wid,) res. 16 Henry. HA.AG CHARLES, peddler, res. 274 Massachusetts av. Haas George, baker, res. 428 s. East. Haciel Martin, section boss, I, P. & C. R. R, bds. 116 s. East. Hack George, blacksmith, res. 463 n. Ala bama. Hack John, gardener, Deaf and Dumb Asylum. Hacker Asbury T, res. 465 e. Georgia. HACKER WILLIAM, grand secy. Masonic Order, State of Indiana, office Masonic Hall, bds. 89 Indiana av. Hackersmith John, carpenter, res. 301 e. Georgio. Hackstein Christian, lab, res. 166 Union. Hackmann cigar-maker, bds. 23 Kentucky av. Hadley E, medical-student, bds. 302 n. Delaware. HADLEY WILLIAM, city assessor, office Glenn's blk, <=. Washington, res. 381 n. Delaware. Hadley Wright J, student, City High School, bds. 381 n. Delaware. HAEHL & MEANS, (John H. & Thomas A. M,) gen'l agts. Great Westers Life Insurance Co., of N. Y, 20 s. Delaware. Hael Mrs. C, res. 704 n. Tennessee. Haeman George, lab, Schmidt's Brewery, res. same. HAERLE WILLIAM, ladies' furnishing goods, hosiery, fancy goods and notions, 4 w. Wash ington, res. 342 _. Illinois. See card in advertising department, page 2. Haet Thomas, carpenter and builder, 26 Virginia av, res. 799 n. Tennessee. Haffield Robert A, engineer, bds. 103 w. South. Haffield Ulrich, teamster, res. 103 w. South. Hogor Edward C, book-keeper, Fletcher's Bank, 30 e. Washington, bds. 17 w. Maryland. Hagedon William H, Trade Palace, bds. 84 e. Michigan. Hager Fanny, waitress, dining room, 33 w. Maryland. Hagerdon H. F. E, brick-maker, res. 119 Buohanan. Hagerhorst Christina, res. 197 s. Tennes see. Hagerhorst William, machinist, Washing ton Foundry, res. 221 s. Alabama. Hagerty Cornelius, lab, res. 32 Helen. Haggerty James, currier, 125 s. Meridian, res. s. Meridian, near city limits. Haggon John, lab, res. 279 Kentucky av. Hahn Adolphus, commercial clothing store, n. e. cor. Illinois and Georgia, res. 184 Virginia av. Hahn & Bals, (Charles F. H. & Charles II. G. B.,) wholesale dealers in wines, liquors and tobacco, 25 s. Meridian. Hahn Charles F, (H. & Bals,) 25 s. Me ridian, res. 97 n. Alabama. Hahn Henry, boarding house, 65 s. East. Hahn Jacob, bds. 227 s. Tennessee. Hahn John, butcher, res. 10 Willard. Hahn Lewis, butcher, res. 227 s. Tennes see. Hahn Phillip, musician, Metropolitan The ater, res. 233 s. East. Haid Frederick, butcher, 59 n. Noble, res. IJ mile e. Notional rd. Haines Elizabeth, cook, 107 Virginia av. Haines Martha, (wid,) res. 39 Elm. Haines Thomas, road-master, Citizens' Street Ry, bds. Pyle House. (6) Hair Work of all kinds at Medina's. See card, page 82, 82 LOGAN'S [H] INDIANAPOLIS Hairmnn John, cabinet-maker, works Union Factory, res. 124 Winston. Haisch John, printer, works 164 e. Wash ington, bds. Union Hall. Hale A. C, dairyman, bds. end Virginia av. Hale Dennis, tobacconist, bds. Ray House, e. South. Hale H. J, Jr., machinist, 124 n. Missouri. Hale Herman, stone-mason, bds. e. city limits. Hale Henry J, machinist, res. 81 Massa chusetts av. HALE JUDSON, physician for diseases of the throat and lungs, n. Illinois, Miller's blk, second floor, res. 60 w. Market. Hale Mrs. Margoret J, (wid. William,) res. 65 n. East. Haley Oliver, engineer, Ben Franklin Of fice, res. 180 Dougherty. Haleeney H, lab, res. 184 w. New York. Haley Pat, saloon-keeper, bds. 18 Wil lard. Hall Adams, porter, Institute of the Blind, bds. same. Hall Allen G, works Street R. R, res. 5 English's blk, e. Washington. Hall B. R, upholsterer, bds. 423 e. St. Clair. Hall Charles E, clerk, 31 n. Pennsylvania, bds. n. Illinois, beyond city limits. Hall Mrs. C. S, res. 704 n. Tennessee. HALL E. A., merchant tailor, 31 n. Pennsylvania, res. n. Illinois, beyond city limits. Hall Earl G, patent-right business, res. 564 n. Tennessee. Hall Edward R, (Lawyer & H,) 49 s. New Jersey, res. Noblcsville, Ind. Hall Frank, farmer, res. Fifth, bet. Missis sippi and Tennessee. Hall Franklin, res. 283 Patterson. Hall Georgia, (col,) res. 129 n. Bright. Hall George T;, painter, bds. 240 e. Ohio. Hall Mrs. Hanno, (wid. William Q,) bds. 423 e. St. Clair. Hall Harry L, asst. supt, L. & I. R. R, bds. Botes House. Hall Henry, engineer, I, C. & L. R. R, res. 306 e. Georgia. Hall Isaac B, book-keeper, bds. Ray House. Hall Jomes, (col,) res. 107 Ash. Hall Jerome, works Street R. R, bds. 5 English's blk, e. Washington. Hall John, lab, res. 227 w. Market. Hall John K, blacksmith, bds. 124 s. Me ridian. Hall Leonard A., healer, Rolling Mill, res. 12 Henry. HALL NATHAN, (col,) (Jones H. & Brown,) 16 s. Merid ian, res. 258 n. Mississippi. Hall Reginald H, (Rand & H,) 24_ e. Washington, res. 210 n. Meridian. Hall Robert, carpenter, Citizens' Street Ry, res. 120 s. New Jersey. Hall Thomas Q, (Wilkens & H,) 38 e. Washington, res. 125 e. Walnut. Hall Wesley, lab, bds. Wiles House. Hall William, machinist, C. & I. C. R. VL. shops, res. 197 Bates. Hall William, driver, Spiegle, Thorns & Co., res. Wabash, bet. New Jersey and East. Hall William, (col.,) carpenter, res. 129 n. Bright. Hall William, express-messenger, I. & C. R. R, res. 423 e. St. Clair. Haley Jeremiah, hod-carrier, res. 68 Co- burn. Haley John, lob, res. 245 s. Missouri. Holler Leon, salesman, Trode Palace, bds. Capital Restaurant. Hallin Thomas, lab, res. Coburn, near New Jersey. Hallihan Daniel, lab, res. 349 Winston. Hallmich John, porter, Stewart & Morgan, 40 e. Washington. Halper Martin H, printer, Journal Office, res. 229 e. Vermont. Halstead Abraham, stone-cutter, res. 335 n. Pennsylvania. F. J. MEDINA, Manufacturer and Dealer in SWITCHES. GORtS, WIGS. AND ALL KINDS OF HAIR WORK, No. 50 SOUTH ILLINOIS STREET, INDIANAPOLIS, INDIANA. The Little Extra Golden Crown Cigar is manufactured CITY [H] DIRECTORY. 83 Holsey Benjamin, farmer, res, s. o. Coburn, bet. Wright and East. Halter Augustus, butcher, res. 207 w. Michigan. Halter William, shoe-maker, res. n. s. No tional rd, near Insane Asylum. ilalterman Joseph, house-mover, bds. 26 8. West. Hamilton Alfred, clerk, Willard & Stowell, bds. Pattison House. Hamilton Benjamin, stove-moulder, Root's Foundry, res. 58 Greer. HAMILTON CHARLOTTE, (wid. Kennard,) propr. Patterson House, 63 n. Alabama. Hamilton David, engineer, C, C. & I. C. R. R, bds. 58 Benton. Hamilton Eliza, (wid. John W,) res. 188 e. Pratt. Hamilton Elijah, lab, bds. Madison rd, near toll-gate. Hamilton Miss Elizo, lady boarder, bds. 131 n. East. Hamilton Miss Emma W, telegraph opera tor, bds. 63 n. Alabama. Hamilton T. J, engineer, res. 50 Fletcher av. Hamilton Frank W, dept. auditor Morion co, res. 291 s. New Jersey. Hamilton Henry H, carpenter, res. 81 w. Elizabeth. Hamilton J, works Junction R. R, bds. Wiles House. Hamilton James, (King & Co.,) 50 s. Mis sissippi, res. 517 Maple. Hamilton James B, brick-moulder, res. e. city limits. Hamilton John A, foreman, Bellefontaine shops, res. e. city limits. , Hamilton Miss Julia F, student, High School, res. 63 n. Alabama. Hamilton Mrs, house-keeper, Sherman House. Hamilton Mary, (col.,) servant; 339 e. Market. Hamilton Mrs. Nancy, res. Madison rd, near toll-gate. Hamilton Patrick, lab., 301 w. Market. Hamilton Robert A, machinist, King & Co., res. 517 Michigan. Hamilton Samuel, machinist, res. 114 Michigan rd. Hamilton Mrs. Sarah res. National rd, e. city limits. Hamilton Thomas D, agt, Universal Life Insurance Co., res. 166 e. Market. Hamilton William S, machinist, res. 74 a. Noble. Hamilton W. H, foreman Sheet's book- bindery, res. 138 e. Pratt. Hamlin Carlin, (H. & Johnson,) 62J e. Washington, res. n. w. cor. Circle and Meridian. Hamlin Richard, res. 26 Maple. Hamlin & Johnson, (Carlin H. & Thomas C. J,) attorneys at law and U. S. claim agts, rooms 62J e. Washington. Hamlin William H, Telegraph office, res. 129 Bates. Hamniil Andrew, blacksmith, res. 813 n. Mississippi. Hammill Bernard, lab, 34 s. Meridian, res. 498 n. Mississippi. Hammill Michael, lab, res. 271 McCarty. Hammill Jacob, piano -varnisher, 159 and 161 e. Washington, res. 181 s. Meri dian. Hammill George, cigar-maker, bds. 193 s. New Jersey. Hammond Abram A, ex-Governor, bds. Bates House. Hammond & Howland, (Lupton J. H. & Liv ingston H,) lawyers, room 4, Hereths' blk, n. Delaware. Hammond John, (col.,) servant, Thomas Sharpe, 239 n. Pennsylvania. Hammond Miss Julio, student, Indiana Female College, 146 n. Meridian, bds. same. Hammond Margaret, servont, 229 n. New Jersey. Hammond Sebea U, insurance agt, 19 n. Meridian, res. 174 w. Michigan. Hammond Upton J, (H. & Howland,) 20_ n. Delaware, res. 273 n. Pennsylvania. Hampton J. B, carriage-maker, res. 365 w. Vermont. Hanoh David, cooper, res. 466 e. Georgia. Hanawa Thomas, brick-layer, res. 145 n. East. Hancock Mary, (wid. Joseph,) res. 304 Massachusetts ov. Hand Adolphus C, brick-maker, res. Mad ison rd, near city limits. Hand Jesse, student, commercial college, bds. 390 n. Delaware. Hand Levi S, brick-maker, res. Shelby ville pike, 1 mile s. corporation. Handy Jacob, engineer, C. I. & C. R. R, bds. 142 s. East. HANEMAN J. & T., (John & Theodore H.,) grocers, 135 Massachusetts av. Haneman John, (J. & T. H,) res. 135 Mas sachusetts av. Haneman Theodore, (J. & T. H,) res. 135 Massachusetts av. Hones James, lab, bds. 149 s. New Jersey. Honey. Mrs. Mary (wid. John,) res. 334 s. Delaware. Hangs "Nicholas,- works D. Root & Co, res. 328 s. Delawore. Hahnorster Wilhelm cabinet-maker, bds. s. Meridian, bet. Louisiana and Georgia. Honkins Mary, (wid, col,) res. 116 Ash. Hankinson MIbs Martha, milliner, works 8 x a. Pennsylvania. Hanmen Ellen, servant, 466 n. Meridion. Only at 39 West Washington Street, for the trade. See page 104. 84 LOGAN'S [I_] INDIANAPOLIS Hanlin Mrs. Catharine, (wid. William,) res. 17 s. West. Hanlon James,, salesman, New York Store, res. North Tennessee. Hanlon Mrs. Mary, (wid. Matthias,) res. 324 e. New York. Hanly MrB. E. M, millinery ond dress making, 64 n. Illinois, res. same. Hanly Thomas, salesman, New York Store, bds. cor. Market and Illinois. Hanno John, (H. & Knefler,) 20J n. Dela ware, res. Greescastle, Ind. Hanno John L, deputy sheriff, res. 345 n. Noble. HANNA & KNEFLER, (John H. & Fred. K,) attorneys at law, 20_ n. Delaware, rooms 3 and 4 Hereths' blk. Hannah Mrs. Louisa, (wid. George,) bds. 345 n. Noble. Hanno Miss M. E, teacher, Institute of the Blind, res. same. Hanna S. C, (Crossland, Maguire & Co,) 52 s. Meridian, res. 388 n. Illinois. Hanna V. C, (col,) regular army, res. 172 n. Meridian. Hannan Edward, lab, rolling mill, res. 183 High. Hannaman William, Indiana Claim Agency, res. e. Washington, beyond city limits. Hanneman Jacob, lab, res. Wabash, bet. Liberty and Noble. HANNING JOHN G., plumber, gas and steam fitter and fix tures, 82 w. Washington, res. 135 e. St. Joseph. See card, page 10. Honnon Miss Jennie, Trade Palace,;, bds. 359 s. Alabama. Hanover Christian, wagon-maker, res. 2 Arch. Hanrahan Catharine, (wid,) res. 272 b. Tennessee. Hanrahan Frank, lab, res. 278 s. Tennessee. Hanrahan Miss Mary, tailor, over 28 s. Meridian, res. 272 s. Tennessee. Hanrahan Miss Catharine, dress-maker, 36 n. Illinois, res. 272 s. Tennessee. Hanrahan Patrick G, saloon, 267 s. Ten nessee, res. same. Hanrahan Michael, switchman, T. H. & I. R. R. Hansen Arsmus, porter, 52 a. Meridian, res. 430 s. Tennessee. Hansen John, pointer, res. 42 Virginia av. Hansen Miss Pamela, bds. 98 w. Vermont. Hansen Peter, lab, bds. 172 Madison av. Hanson Frank, lab, res. 51 McCarty. Hanson Mat, shoe-maker, 331 s. Pennsyl- sylvania, res. same. Hanson Peter, shoe-maker, 257 s. Dela ware, bds. 259 s. Delaware. Hanwoy Samuel S, contractor, res. 435 n. East. Happenny Theodore S, res. 32 w. St. Clair. Happy John, tinner, res. 58 Hosbrook. Harbison A. D, engineer, Journal office, res. 136 w. Vermont. Harbison R, master Transportation Union Depot, bds. 136 w. Vermont. Harbison Mrs. Sarah, res. 136 w. Vermont. Hard Frederick, butcher shop, 234 e. Wash ington, res. on Court, rear of shop. Harden George, harness-maker, bds. 31 s. New Jersey. Hardon Richard, (col,) barber shop, 286 w. Washington, res. same. Harden Thomas, coaeh-trimmer, works Geo. Dalton, res. 17 Kentucky av. Hardesty E. J, train-master, J. M. & I. R. R, res. 335 s. Pennsylvanio. Hardesty Levi, retired, res. 310 n. Illinois. Hardin A. G, turnkey at jail, bds. same. Hardin Ezra C, carpenter, res. 231 e. Mar ket. Hardin Richard E, carpenter, res. 229 e. Market. Hardin Samuel, confectioner, res. 231 e. Market. Harding George C, local editor Sentinel, (H. & Morton,) cor. Meridian and Cir- circle, res. 127 w. First. Harding & Morton, (George C. H. & John R. M,) publishers Saturday Evening Mirror, cor. Meridian ond Circle. D. O. CHAPMAN, (Successor to J. B. OSGOOD,) HOUSE AND SIGN PAINTEK, G-RAIETZMTC., G___\__XNC., &C. No. 30 VIRGINIA AVENUE, INDIANAPOLIS, INDIANA. Raschig's Cigar and Tobacco Emporium, II East Washington Street. CITY [H] DIRECTORY. 85 Harding Jacob, printer, cor. Meridian and Circle, res. 51 1 n. Mississippi. Harding Thomas W, lawyer, res. 17 Ken tucky av. Harding William, drayman, res. 230 Union. Hardwick John, carpenter, res. 33 Flet cher av. Hardy E. A, salesman, W. A. Bristor, 'bds. 68 s. Pennsylvania. Hare Mark L, horse dealer, res. 171 David son. Harfy Hannah, servant, 217 n. New Jersey. Hargin John, compositor, Sentinel news room, res. 26 Blackford's blk. Harich Frederick, servant, J. W. Vajen, 128 n. Meridian. Harkness Mrs. A, boarding house, 346 n. Meridian. Hark Frank, lab, res. 23 Bates. Harkness John, printer, res. 179 u. Penn sylvania. Harlon A. W, student, Kilgore & HelmB, bds. 271 e. Market. Harlan George W, (Smith, H. & Butler,) res. 199 Massachusetts av. Harlan L. W, physician, res. 142 Virginia av. Harlan Mrs. Susan, (wid. George,) res. 136 n. Tennessee. Horley James, porter, Ray House. Harman Mrs. Catharine, (wid. Conrad,) res. e. Washington, near Arsenal av. Harmening Christian, drayman, res. 66 Railroad. Harmening Christian, groceries, 283 8. Delaware, res. same. Harmening Herman, lob, res. 76 Railroad. Harmon Lorenz, lab, res. 44 Michigan rd, beyond city limits. Homes Miss Rosana, dress- maker, works 172 e. Washington, res. 39 w. McCarty. Harney John, gas and steam-fitter, 70 n. Illinois, res. e. side Delaware, bet. Merrill and McCarty. Harnung John, (J. T. & H,) res. 851 s. Pennsylvania. Harold I. W, salesman, 10 e. Washington, bds. 70 e. Market. Harper J. P., chief engineer, I. & V. R. R., res. 434 n. Delaware. Harper John L, (Ray, Mayhew & Co.,) 8 w. Louisiana, res. 269 e. Market. Harper Henry, lab, res. 162 Bluff rd. Harper Winfield 8, printer, bds. 162 Bluft Harrah Miss Celeste, student, Ind. Female College, 146 n. Meridian, bds. same. Harrold Isaac, clerk, Boston Store, bds. 70 e. Market. Harrier Delana, dining-room girl, 30J n. Pennsylvania. Harrigan Michael, lab. White River Iron Works, bds. near city limits. Horrimann Augustus, works Cabinet-Mak ers' Union, res. e. end New York. Harriman M. V., baggage-master, J. M. & I. R. R, bds. Globe House. Harrington John, lab, res. w. Seventh, near Michigan rd. Harris Addison C, (Dye & H,) notary public, rooms 8 and 9, Talbott & New's blk, n. Pennsylvania, res. n. Merid ian, beyond city limits. Harris Bug, (col,) white-wosher, res. 229 n. Minerva. Harris 0. E, carpenter, res. 140 e. North. Harris Davis, lob, res. 30 Helen. Harris Miss Frank, Trade Palace, bds. 126 Virginia av. Harris Harvey J, feed and boarding-sta ble, 163 w. Washington, res. country. Harris J. H, res. e. s. National rd, near Insane Asylum. Harris Jacob M., soldier, U. S. Arsenal, res. same. Harris Miss Jennie, bds. second floor, 152 w. Washington. Harris John, varnisher, res. Wabash, bet. New Jersey and East. Harris Jno. T, inmate Deaf and Dumb Asylum. Harris LouiB, hack-driver, res. Court, bet. East and New Jersey. Harris Marion, works 163 w. Washington, res. Mount Jackson. Harris Martha, servant, 385 n. Illinois. Harris Mrs. Mary A, (wid. Pleasant,) servant, 141 n. Alabama. Harris Obadiah, res. n. s. National rd, w. White river bridge. Harris Sophia, (col,) servant, 36 s. New Jersey. Harris T. W, plasterer, res. 380 s. West. Harris Theodore F, brakesman, I, C. & L. HARRIS W. H., commander U. S. Arsenal, e. of city, bet. Michigan and North. Harris William, (col.,) white-washer, reB. 75 Bright. Harrison , bds. 95 n. Pennsylva nia. Harrison Miss Aurelia, bds. 252 n. Merid ian. HARRISON A. & J. C. S., (Alfred & John C. S. H,) proprB. Har rison's Bank, 15 e. Woshington. Harrison Alfred, (A. & J. C. S. H,) 15 e. Washington, res. 252 h. Meridian. Harrison B. X, salesman, New York, Store, bds. Commercial Hotel. Harrison's Bonk, A. & J. C. S. Harrison, proprs, 15 e. Washington. Harrison Benjamin F, (Porter, H. & Fish back,) Yohn's blk, cor. WflBhington and Meridian, res. 299 n. Alabama, cor. North. Have you tried the fine No. 39 Cigar at Heidlinger's? 86 LOGAN'S [H] INDIANAPOLIS Harrison Edward G, clerk, Harrison's Bonk, bds. 252 n. Meridian. Harrison Erbone C, brick-layer, res. 49 Ann. Harrison F. P, engineer, I. C. & L. R. R, bds. Ray House. Harrison George, occupant Deaf and Dumb Asylum. Harrison John C. S, (A. & J. C. S. H.,) 15 e. Washington, res. 262 n. Meridian. Harrison Jno. T, inmote Deof and Dumb Asylum. Harrison R. E, attorney at low, office 19 w. Washington, res. n. e. cor. Oak ond Cherry. Harrison T. C, lawyer and claim agt, 19 w. Washington, res. 23 Cherry. Harrison Thomas, blacksmith, res. 6 Wil lard. Harrison W. B, clerk, New York Store, bds. Commercial Hotel. Harrison William H, (col,) cook, Oriental House, bds. same. Harrmann Francis J, undertaker, 26 s. Delaware, res. 272 e. Morket. Harry Edward, lob, res. end Virginia av, beyond city limits. Harry Thomas, teamster, res. second floor, w. Washington. Harshbarger Miss Sarah, bds. 119 Indiana av. Harsin Charles B, carpenter, bds. w. s. s. West. Horsman Henry, teomster, res. 186 Horri son. Hart Abraham, dealer in rags and old iron, 320 Railroad, res. same. Hart A. T, tinner, Tutewiler Bros, bds. Maoy House. Hart E. F, clerk, Am. & U. S. Express Co.'s, 34 e. Washington, res. 82 s. Illi nois. Hart James R, driver, Am. Express Co., bds. 82 s. Illinois. Hart & Mathews, (T. J. H. & C. M,) con tractors and builders, shop 26 Vir ginia av. Hart Michael, lab., res. 57 Dougherty. Hart Robert M, res. 18 Chatham. Hart T. J, (H. & Mathews,) 26 Virginia av, res. n. Tennessee, beyond city lim its. Hart Thomas, (col,) lab, res. w. Center. Hart Thomas, porter, 49 s. Meridian, bds. Webb House. Hartovig Henry, drayman, res. 128 David son. Hartcourt Theodore, cabinet-maker, res. 287 e. Georgia. Horter John A, (Nickum, Parrot & H,) res. 42 n. New Jersey. Hartford Steam Boiler Inspection and In surance Co., of Hartford, Conn, Davis & Greene, agts , 27 s. Meridian. Harting & Bro, (Henry H. & Frederick H,) brewers, cor Norwood and Bluff rd. Harting Frederick, (H. & Bros,) res. 62 Russell. Harting Henry, (H. & Bros,) res. 363 s. Illinois. Hartman Charles, farmer, res. 119 n. New Jersey. Hartman Christian, lab, res. 279 e. Ohio. Hartman ChristiOn, lob, res. 80 Railroad. Hartman Mrs. Ellen, (wid. Charles,) res. 119 n. New Jersey. Hartman Frederick, wagon-maker, 377 Virginia av, res. 377 e. GeorgiO. Hartman Herman, porter, H. F. West & Co, 37 s. Meridian. Hartman Henry, porter, 68 s. Meridian, res. 330 s. Alabama. Hartman Henry, works Central depot, res. 132 Union. Hartman Mathew, plosterer, res. 262 n. Alabama. Hartman Valentine, cigar-maker, bds. 90 Union. Hartman Williom, plosterer, res. over 351 e. Market. Hartman William, bar-keeper, 13 e. Wash ington, res. same. Hortney Patrick, salesman. 89 e. Market. bds. 61 Ft. Wayne ov. EDWAED LE_STOX_, FASHIONABLE MERCHANT TAILOH, Wo. 33 SOUTH ILLINOIS STREET, IUDIANAPOLIS, INDIANA. 8©** __ 3? E II *F E C X PIT OtTARANTBBD.'SI Hair Work, all kinds, at 50 South Illinois Stmet o_h , CITY [H] DIRECTORY. 87 Hartpence James, Everet blk, 20 s. Me ridian, bds. cor. Illinois and Market. Hartpence J. Walter, dealer in cigars and tobacco, 20 s. Meridian, res. cor. Illi nois and Market. Hartpence William R, confectioner, cigars and tobacco, s. e. cor. Georgia and Illinois. HART WELL E„ chief clerk, Bates House, u. w. cor. Washington and Illinois, res. some. Hortwig John, porter, 52 s. Meridian, res. 290 s. Alabama. Harty Michael, lab, res. 447 s. Tennessee. Hartzler Eliza Ann, res. n. s. National rd, w. White river bridge. Harvey Alonzo D, traveling agt, Indiana Insurance Co., bds. 89 n. Delaware. Harvey Alvin C, real estate, bds. 89 n. Delaware. Harvey Gideon, (eol,) works Buell's Fam ily Medical Depot, res. s. s. Wabash, bet. New Jersey and East. Harvey James R, brick-layer, res. 250 n. Minerva. Harvey Miss Marian, teacher, C Primary, Ninth Word School, bds. 146 n. Me ridian. Harvey J. S., (H. & Vanhorn,) 101 e.Wash- ington, res. 236 e. New York. Harvey Silas L, dept. county clerk, bds. 230 e. New York. Harvey Thomas B, physician and surgeon, office 53 e. Market, res. 302 n. Dela ware. HARVEY & VANHORN, (J. S. H. & Menolus H,) attorneys at law, 101 e. Washington. Harwood Irwin M, cabinet-maker, res. 67 Madison a v. Haselton Charles, C, C. & I. C. R. R, bds. 58 Benton. Haselton Charles, shoe-maker, bds. 345 n. Alabama. Haselton W. H, clerk, U. S. Pension Of fice, bds. 300 n. Alabama. Haskit William I, (W. I. H. & Co,) 14 w. Washington, res. n. Meridian. HASKIT W. I. & CO., (William I. H, S. A. Craig & E. B. Martindale,) wholesale and retail druggists, 14 w. Washington. Hasling Leonard, works Sinker & Co., res. 378 e. Washington. Hasseld Ernest, painter, works Spiegle, Thorns & Co, bds. 98 n. East. Hosselberry Chris, lob, res. 86 Eddy. Hosselman Louis W, res. s. w.'cor. Merid ian and Vermont. Hassclman Otto U, bds. s. w. cor Meridian and Vermont. Hastings Edwin L, foreman, Journal Of fice, res. n. Illinois, bet. First and , Second. HasSon C. E, salesman, 12 e. Washington, res. 504 n. Delaware. Hasson James, res. n. e. oor. St. Clair and Delaware. Hasson William, (H, Daily & Co,) 41 s. Meridian, res. 444 n. Meridian. Haston C. B, res. 77 e. St. Joseph. Hasty John, telegraph repairer, bds. 192 Virginia ov. Hatfield Calvin, res. McKernan row. Hatfield Frederick, lab, res. n. Mississippi, bet. Fourth and Fifth. Hatfield John B, foreman, U. S. Arsenal. Hathaway Alfred, (col,) hostler, Gates & Pray, res. 130 n. East. Hathaway Frank, lab. National rd., near White river bridge. Hathaway J. W, student, commercial col lege, bds. 44 s. Tennessee. Hathaway John, (col,) lab, res. near City Hospital. Hatten Elliott, bds. 144 n. Tennessee. Hatten John S, meat market, 399 n. Illi nois, res. n. e. cor. Mississippi and First. Hatten Miss Mary J, seamstress, res. e. s. Blake, bet. Washington and New York. Hatten William, tinner, bds. 144 n. Ten nessee. Hattenbach Joseph, dealer in tobacco and cigars, 51 s. Illinois, bds. 33 w. Mary land. Hattendorp Henry, merchant tailor, res. 317 e. Washington. Hattman John George, cook, Capital Res taurant, 14 e. Washington, res. 101 n. Noble, cor. Ohio. Houck John, (J. H. & Co,) 11 w. Wash ington, reB. 373 n. East. Hauck John _ Co,(John H. & John Darby,) groceries and produce dealers, 11 w. Washington. Haueisen Frederick G, agt. Mutual Life Insurance Co., res. 73 n. Tennessee. Haueisen Robert, clerk, 29 w. Washington, bds. 32 n. Mississippi. Haueisen W, (C. Mayer & Co,) 29 w. Washington, res. 32 n. Mississippi. Haufier John, lab, res. Indiana av, near Fall creek. Houg Michoel, saloon, 138 S.Pennsylvania, res. same. Haugh Adam, capitalist, res. 208 n. Ala bama. Haugh Alex, finisher, B. F. Hays, bds. 244 e. Vermont. HAUGH B. P. & CO., (Benjamin F. H. & Joseph R. H.,) inanfrs. iron railings and jails, 74 s. Pennsylvania. Haugh Benjamin F, (B. F. H. _ Co,) 74 s. Pennsylvania, res. 504 n. Pennsylva nia. Get your Watches Repaired at 24 East Washington Street. 88 LOGAN'S [H] INDIANAPOLIS Haugh Charles E, book-binder, bds. 224 e. Vermont. Haugh Emanuel, machinist, 74 s. Pennsyl vania, res. 244 e. Vermont. Haugh Joseph R, cashr. Citizens' National Bank, res. 175 n. New Jersey. Haugh William A, machinist, B. F. Hough, bds. 244 e. Verment. HAUGHEY THEODORE P., prest. Indianapolis National Bank, u. e. cor. Pennsylvania and Washington, res. 242 n. Pennsylvania. Haupt Robert, notion store, 151 e. Wash ington, res. 17 Chatham. Hausshelt Charles, printer, res. 60 Hos- brook. Hauk John, confectioner, res. 373 n. East. Hauk W. V, physician, res. w. s. College av, bet. Forest Home and Christian av. Hawkey John W, brick-mason, res. 136 Winston. Hawkey Nathan B, brick-mason, res. 136 Winston. Hawkins Albert, clerk, Sherman House, bds. same. Hawkins Benjamin, (col,) lab, res. 174 Douglas alley. Hawkins Edward, (col,) cook, Sherman House. Hawkins Frank, (col,) lab, res. Missouri, bet. Indiana av. and North. Hawkins Mrs, nurse, 422 n. New Jersey. Hawkins Mary, (col.,) servant, 164 Vir ginia ov. Hawkins James, Spiegle, Tboms & Co., res. 128 s. East. Hawkins Jesse F, trader, res. 208 w.WaBh- ington. Hawkins John S, carpenter, C, C. & I. C. R. R. Shop, res. 186 Meek. HAWKINS WILLIAM M., propr. Sherman House, Louisiana, opp. Dnion Depot. Hawkins William M, Jr., clerk, Sherman House, bds. same. Hawley Miss L. D, matron, Institute of the Blind, res. same. Hawley Miss P. W, teacher, Institute of the Blind, res. same. Hawthorn Charles E, retired merchant, res. 132 n. Alabama. HAY & CO., (Compbell H. & Edward A. Cobb,) drugs and medicines, chemicals and toilet articles, 48 w. Washington. Hay Campbell, (H. & Co,) 48 w. Washing ton, bds. Macy House. Hay John C, book-keeper, Wm. Sumner & Co, 10 w. Washington, bds. Macy House. Hay Lawrence G, receiver Sinking Fund of Ind, office New State bldg, cor. Tennessee and Washington, res. 21 s. Pennsylvania. Hay W. H, (Morrow, Goodwin & H,) law yers, room 8, Vinton's blk, res. 222 n. Tennessee. HAT W. H., state agt. Charter Oak Life Insurance Co, of Hartford, Conn, 6 Blackford's blk., s. e. cor. Washington and Merid ian. Hayden Horry, salesman, 41 s. Meridian, bds. 378 n. Meridian. Hayden J. J, attorney at low, New State bldg, res. 378 n. Meridian. Hayden William, (col,) lab, res. 47 Peru. Haynes Lewis, traveling agt. Fairbank's scales, 43 and 45 n. Tennessee, bds. Spencer House. Haynes Miss Lizzie, bds. 39 Elm. Haynes Mrs. Martha, (wid. James,) res. 39 Elm. Haynes Philip, (Carter & H,) 40 w. Wash ington, res. 169 n. Illinois. Haynes & Suddith, fish dealers, 107 s. Illi nois. Haynes Thomas, (H. & Suddith,) 107 s. Illinois, bds. Pyle House. Haynes Wm. H, foreman, Ben Franklin Office, bds. Oriental House. Hayman S. B, bill-clerk, U. S. and Am. Ex press Co.'s, 34 e. Washington, bds. 54 s. Pennsylvania. J. W. SCOTT. J. C. WEST. J. A. BUEBANK. SCOTT, WEST & CO. Importers and Wholesale Dealers in CHINA, GLASS AND QUEENSWARE FRUIT JAES, LAMPS, LOOKING GLASSES, &c. 127 South Meridion St, Indianapolis, Ind. City Directory OfAce, over 18 East Washington Street. Haywood Alfred, manufr. artificial limbs, etc., 237 e. Washington, res. same. Hays Barton S, artist, studio n. Pennsyl vania, up-stairs, res. country. Hays Betty, (col,) servant, 262 n. Merid ian. Hays E. M, (H, Rosenthal & Co,) 64 s. Meridian, res. 223 e. Ohio. Hays Francis M, occupant Deaf and Dumb Asylum. Hays Isaac C, (Snyder & H,) 17 n. Merid ian, res. 340 n. Alabama. Hays Margaret, laundress, Bates House. HATS, ROSENTHAL & CO., (E. M. H, H. R. & Moses R,) whole sale clothing, 64 s. Meridian. Hays S. D, engineer, res. 81 w. McCarty. Hays Miss Sarah, seamstress, res. Geisen dorff, near Geisendorff's Woolen Fac tory. Hoys Thos, (McLene, Maclntire & H,) end w. Maryland, res. 83 w. St. Clair. Hays W. M, agt. Erie Trans. Line, res. 16 e. Michigan. Haze James, (col,) lab, res. w. Center. Hazelrigg H. G, G. M. Masonic Order, res. Lebanon, Ind. Hazelton Miss Alice, student, N. W. C. University, bds. 383 Massachusetts ov. Hazelton Margaret, over 270 6. Washing ton. Hazzard Miss Belle, bds. 79 w. Ohio. Hazzard John W, bds. 79 w. Ohio. Hazzard Miles, agt. Security Life Insur ance and Annuity Co., bds. Pattison House. Hazzard Samuel P., western ogt. B. & 0. R. R, res. 166 n. West. Heoden Samuel, carpenter, bds. 144 n. Ten nessee. Heaf August, propr. New York Dye House, 14 s. Pennsylvania, res. same. Heaf John, dyer, 14 s. Pennsylvania, res. 55 s. California. Heoly Mrs. Anna, (wid. Jesse,) dress maker, 35 n. Alabama, res. same. Healy Oliver, engineer, Ben Franklin Of fice, res. 180 Dougherty. Heoley Patrick, bar-keeper, Oriental Sa loon, bds. 13 Willard. Hebble John W, propr. Bicking House, 89 b. Illinois. Hearth John H, carpenter, res. 243 w. New York. Hearth George L, clerk, bds. 243 w. New York. Heartline George, teamster, Spiegle, Thorns & Co, bds. 116 s. East. Heoten Eli, bds. 378 Indiana av. Heath Carydon A, traveling agt, J. C. Green & Co., res. 65 n. East. Heath John, res. 37 Chatham. Heath Sylvester, student, bds. 37 Chatham. Hebble Oran Z, bds. 89 s. Illinois. Heber T. L, clerk, 68 e. Washington, res. cor. Jackson and Christian av. Hecht Betty, servant, 160 n. Noble. Hecht Jordan, porter, Hays, Rosental & Co., 64 s. Meridian. Heck Peter, lab, George Stiltz. Heck Peter, file-maker, res. 80 s. Delaware. Heckel Frank, bar-tender, Spencer House Saloon, bds. 280 e. Market. Heckle Joseph, coach-trimmer, 26 e. Geor gia, res. 306 e. Washington. HECKMAN CHRISTOPHER, propr. City Flouring Mills, e.Washing- ton, near Railroad, res. 413 e. Wash ington. Heckman George, cigar-maker, 39 w.Wash- ington, res. 19 Lord. Heckman William, (col,) servont, 302 n. Delaware. Henchon William, carpenter, res. 252 e. South. Hedge Jesse, works Coburn & Jones, res. Wabash, bet. New Jersey and East. Hedge Samuel V, occupant Deaf and Dumb Asylum. Hedges Elijah, foreman, W. W. Weaver, res. 39 n. Illinois. Hedges Isaac L, revenue inspector liquors, res. country. Hedges James, res. 140 n. Tennessee. Hedges Vinton, tinner, 193 w. Washing ton, res. 140 s. Tennessee. Hedrich Miss Augustus, servant. Hedrich George E, cabinet-maker, res. 231 n. Noble. Hedrich John C, carver, res. 229 n. Noble. Hedrich Peter, cabinet-maker, res. 231 n. Noble. Hedrick John, works Spiegle, Thorns & Co., res. 120 n. Noble. Hedrick Wm. A, salesman, New York Store, bds. Macy House. Heeb Charles, saloon, 20 n. Delaware. Heevey Barney, lab, res. a. s. Coburn, bet. Wright and McKernari. Hefferman N, (wid. John,) res. 490 s. West. Heide Lewis, butcher, 71 s. Noble, res. 171 n. Noble. Heider Herman, clerk, res. over 198 e. Washington. Heider Mrs. Pauline, (wid. Julius,) dress maker, res. over 198 e. Washington. Heidenreich ChriBt, tailor, res. 128 Hu ron. HEIDLINGER JOHN A., manfr. and dealer in cigars and to bacco, 39 w. Washington, res. 14 n. Mississippi. See card, page 104. Heine Henry, shoe-maker, works 32 e. Washington, res. 304 Virginia ov. Hein Charles, works Spiegle, Thorns & Co, res. 160 n. Liberty. Call at 24 East Washington Street. 90 LOGAN'S [H] INDIANAPOLIS Heim Henry C, res. 552 e. Washington. Heim Jacob F, res. 552 e. Washington. Heim John R, res. 552 e. Washington. Heinbaugh George, sawyer, Union Factory, res. rear 287 n. Noble. Heinebach Samuel, printer, res. 121 Spring. Heiner Anthony, railroader, res. 60 s. No ble. Heiner Barbary, (wid,) res. 31 Bradshaw. Heiner John M, clerk, 156 s. Pennsylva nia, res. 31 Bradshaw. Heirler Jacob, I. C. & L. R. R. Shop, res. 97 Bates. HEISER CHARLES, saloon, 76 s. Delaware, bds. 176 s. Illi nois. Heiser Henry, plasterer, res. 356 n. Noble. Heiskell W. L, . dentist, 67 n. Pennsylva nia, bds. Pyle House. Heitkam Charles, saloon, 80 8. Delaware, res. same. HEITKAM G. H., merchant tailor and dealer in clothing and furnishing goods, 8 w. Washing ton, res. n. Winston, near corporation line. Heitkam Henry, barber, res. 184 s. Dela- wore. Heitkam John, Cabinet-Makers' Union, res. 112 Winston. Heits Louis, blacksmith, res. 62 Hosbrook. Heizer Cyrus C, township trustee, res. e. city limits. Heizman Mathias, saw filer, 63 s. Pennsyl vania, bds. California House. Heizer Conrad, carpenter, res. 377 e. Michi gan. Heizer John, lab, res. 350 Railroad. Heizer Thomas G, butcher, res. 64 Califor nia. Helcher Charles, cabinet-maker, res. 72 Coburn. Helle Jacob, tinner, works MoCreery & Fay, bds. Patterson House. Helle Louis, house painter, res. 248 s. Pennsylvania. Helm James H, brick-moson, bds. Ray House. HELM ADAM, carpenter and builder, res. 206 n. Lib erty, cor. North, shop on cor. of alley, in rear of same. Helm James, brick-layer, bds. 366 w. Washington. HELM JOHN, drovers and railroad exchange grocery and saloon, 272 Winston. Helm H. A, stone-mason, res. e. citylimits. Helms L. A, (Kilgore & H,) Miller's blk, bds. 60 w. Market. Helms Thomas M, chair-maker, Spiegle, Thorns & Co, res. 105 n. Noble. Helmstetter John, tailor, res. 68 s. Illinois, Helton James, lab. Arsenal, bds. 232 n. Noble. HELWIG CHARLES, wholesale and retail dealer and manfr. of furniture, 115 and 117 e. Washing ton, factory cor. New York and Canal, res. 122 w. New York. Helwig Jacob, shoe-maker, bds. 479 s. Illi nois. Helwig John, porter, Stewart & Morgan, res. 347 n. New Jersey. Hemily George E, lob, res. 461 s. New Jersey. Henderson Catharine, student, Female Col lege. Henderson Charles A, traveling agt, Kie fer & Vinton, 68 s. Meridian, bds. Ori ental House. Henderson George, machinist, bds. 404 s. Illinois. Henderson Miss Helen, student, Ind. Fe male College, 146 n. Meridian, bds. same. Henderson Lawrence, lab, Bellefontaine Shop, res. 23 John. Henderson William R, student, Hendrick & Hord's Office, bds. 134 n. Meridian. HENDERSON WILLIAM, prest. Indianapolis Insurance Co., res. '134 n. Meridian. C. S. DONALDSON. DONALDSON & ALVEY, J. H. ALTET. -JOBBERS OF- HATS. CAPS, FORS. GLOVES, STRAW GOODS. UMBRELLAS AND PARASOLS, No. 54 South Meridian Street, Indianapolis, Indiana. SCHN.LL* S BLOCK. Smokers' Emporium Complete. See nann ins. CITY [H] DIRECTORY. 91 Hendricks A. W. L, res. 125 e. Ohio. Hendricks Abram W, (H., Hord & Hend ricks,) 24} e. Washington, res. 296 n. Meridian. HENDRICKS, EDMUNDS & CO, (V. K. H, William E. & T. S. Stone,) jobbers in boots and shoes, 56 s. Meridian. Hendricks Miss Eliza S, bds. 419 n. Illi nois. Hendricks Emma, servant, 81 w. Vermont. Hendricks Henry, brakesman, C. I. & C. R. R, bds. 142 s. East. HENDRICKS, HORD & HEND RICKS, (Thomas A. H, Oscar B. H. & Abram W. Hendricks,) attorneys ot law, 24} e. Washington. Hendricks Isaac, well-digger, res. 72 Rail road. Hendricks James C, corpenter, res. 202 n. Blake. Hendricks M. D, solicitor and teacher of mathematics, National Business Col lege, 24} e. Washington, bds. 32} n. Pennsylvania. Hendricks Miss Sarah, student, Ind. Fe male College, bds. same. Hendricks Miss Sarah D, bds. 419 n. Illi nois. Hendricks Thomas A, (H, Hord & Hend ricks,) U. S. senotor, 24} e. Washing ton. Hendricks V. K, (H, Edmunds & Co,) 56 s. Meridian, res. 419 n. Illinois. Hennessy Daniel, lab. Gas Works, res. 276 _. Alabama. Hennessy John, lab, res. 97 s. New Jer sey. Hennessy John, machinist, bds. Ray House. Hennessy John, switchman, T. H. R. R, bds. 76 Huron. Henning Frederick A, barber, s. Illinois, res. 357 e. Market. Henning Gotlieb F, clerkr p. o, res. Wa bash, bet. Liberty and Noble. Henning Henry R, carpenter, works H. Recker, res. 357 e. Market. Henninger E,(E. & G. H,) 110 s. Illinois, res. 398 n. West. Henninger G, (H. & Bro,) 115 s. Illinois, res. 398 n. West. Henninger G. & E, groceries and fancy goods, 115 s. Illinois. HENRIE JOHN W., supt. Union Depot Dining Hall, w. end depot, res. same. Henrie Peter, watchman, bds. 286 s. East. Henry Charles D, cigar-maker, bds. Ori ental House. Henry Elizabeth, servant, 296 n. Merid ian. Henry Marshel G., printer, res. 75 s. No ble. Henry Lawrence, lab, res. 286 s. East. Henry J. K, carpenter, res. 253 s. Misis- sippi. Henry John, bds. 286 s. East. Henry Patriok, carpenter, bds. 272 w. Ma ryland. Henry Miss Sarah, seamstress, works 146 Davidson, bds. 161 Davidson. Henshaw Jerry, (col,) lab, res. 81 s. Mis souri. Hensil John, fireman, B. R. R., bds. 272 Winston. Henson Charles, clerk, res. 39 e. McCarty. Henson Hiram, carriage-painter, res. 157 Davidson. Henson Mrs. Sarah, (wid. Hiram,) res. 8 n. Liberty. Hensler Henry, grocery and saloon, 301 Massachusetts av, res. same. Hensler Isaac N, blacksmith, res. s. s. National rd, near Insane Asylum. Henaley John T., carpenter, res. 381 e. Georgia. Hensley Miss Susan, seamstress, bds. 174 Virginia av. Hensf Henry, lab, res. e. Pearl. Hepp John, clerk, Taylor & Sherwood, res. s. s. Michigan, bet. Liberty and No ble. Herd MrB. Gertrude, (wid. Alanson,) bds. Patterson House. Herder John M, cabinet-maker, res. 3 e. Pearl. Hereter H, res. 41 Kentuoky av. Hereth Adam, (A. H. & Co,) 24 n. Dela ware, bds. Pyle House. Hereth Ann, servont, 223 e. Vermont. Hereth David, bell-boy, Bates House, res. some. Hereth Henry, treas. Carpenters' Union, res. 241 w. New York. Hereth J. C. & Bro, (John C. & Adam Hereth,) saddle and harness manfrs, _4 ti I)elf_w__r6 Hereth John C, (Hereth & Bro,) res. 277 n. East. Hereth John L, carpenter, res. 155 Spring. Hereth Peter P., carpenter, res. 64 Bates. Hereth Philip, saddler, works Hereth & Co., res. 161 Davidson. Hering Philip, piono-tuner, res. 235 e. Vermont. Herford Miss B, bds. 220 n. Tennessee. Hernf Valentine, expressman, res. 140 Davidson. Herly John, expressman, bds. 22 Califor nia. Herrens Mrs. Mary, (wid,) res. 38 Dun lop. Herrman Charles, toll-keeper, w. Washing ton, res. some. Herrmann Gabriel, salesman, 26 e. Dela ware, bds. 272 e. Market. Herririgton Dennis, lab, res. 166 s. East. Real Estate Agents and Conveyancers' card on page 58. 92 LOGAN'S [H] INDIANAPOLIS Herrman Ignatius, works Oil Mill, res. 266 Union. Herrmann Jacob, carpenter, res. 277 Winston. Herrmann Jacob F, undertaker, 26 s. Del aware, res. 272 e. Market. Herrington Ellen, dining-room girl, Sher man House, bds. some. Herrington Mary, dining-room girl, Sher man House, bds. same. Herron Fred. M, (McLene & H,) Bates House blk, res. 416 n. Illinois. Herron Michael, lab, res. 24 w. McCarty. Hersh Nathan, merchant, res. 139 n. Dela ware. Hershey Wilson S, engineer, Wilkins & Hall's Shop, bds. Nagele House. Hershmon F. M, inmate Deaf and Dumb Asylum. Hert William, fireman, B. R. R, res. over 248 n. Noble. Herteh Ferdinand, works Charles Werbe & Co, bds. 300 e. Market. HeBhbarger Elizabeth, chamber-maid, Wiles House. Hespelt Charles, (C. H. & Co,) 150 w.Ver- mont, res. same. HESPELT CHARLES & CO., National Bakery, 150 w. Vermont, cor. Mississippi. Hess August, confectionery, res. 288 Modi- son av. Hess Augustus, book-binder, Meikel's, res. 126 w. Ohio. HESS CHARLES, principal Ind. Normal Academy of Music, 253 s. Meridian, office 35 e. Washington, res. 263 s. Meridian. Hess Coleman, lab. Sinker's Foundry, res. Madison rd, near city limits. Hess Henry E, book-keeper, Martin & Hopkins, res. 263 s. Meridian. Hess Gotfried, baker, res. 126 w. Ohio. Hess James W, merchant, res. 385 n. Illi nois. Hesse George, varnisher, res. 153 Huron. Heston Charles, lab., res. 141 n. Noble. Hesse Henry, varnisher, Burk & Woolens', bds. 298 s. Illinois. Hessling Barnhard, tailor, 225 Winston, res. same. Hester Mrs. Permelia, (wid,) boarding house, 35 Indiana ov. Hester W. W, asst. physician Insane Asy lum, two miles w. city, res. same. Heston Thomas, (col,) lab, res. 179 Eddy. Hetherington B. F, (H. & Co.,) 244 s. Pennsylvania, res. 239 s. Delaware. HETHERINGTON & CO., (Benjamin F. H., F. Berner & J. Kin- del,) machine works, 244 s. Pennsyl vania. Hetherington Christopher, lob, res. Ill Forrest ov. Hetselgesser Lucian W., cor. Illinois and South, bds. 595 e. Washington. HETSELGESSER SAMUEL, south side livery and sale stable, cor. South and Illinois, res. 395 e. Wash ington. Hever Theodore, clerk, Quaker Store, bds. 98 Broadway. Hewes Charles W, Jr., salesman, Bowen, Stewart <_ Co., res. cor. Michigan and Pennsylvania. Hewes Charles W, (Rev,) prest. Indianap olis Female Institute, n. .. cor. Penn sylvania and Meridian. Hewes W. C, machinist, res. 25 Biddle. Hewser Catharine, servant, 275 e. NewYork. Hewett William, harness-maker, 17 Vir ginia av, res. 205 Huron. HEWLING MISS CLARA, ladies' boarding house, 79 w. South. Heyer Frank, switchman, B. R. R, res. s. Liberty. Heyman Henry, (H. & Schwobacher,) 41 b. Delaware, res. 18 s. Mississippi. Heyman Herman, clerk, 41 s. Delaware, bds. 18 s. Mississippi. HEYMAN & SCHWABACHER, (Henry H. & Joseph S, ) wholesale dealers in wines and liquors, 41 s. Delaware. EIKHOFF & BEO. WHOLESALE DEALEKS IN COPPER MTILLED BOURBON ANB RYB WHISKY, ALSO, DEALERS IN FOEEIGN AND DOMESTIC LIQUOES AND CIGAES, No. 77 South Meridian St., Indianpolis, Ind. PINLAT & WILDER'S CELEBRATED TOLEDO ALE FOR SALE- A New Firm of Coal and Salt Dealers, on page 26. CITY [H] DIRECTORY. 93 Hiatte Calvin, inmote Deaf and Dumb Asylum. Hiatte John, bar-tender, Bates House Sa loon, bds. Bates House. Hiatte Naomi S, inmote Deaf and Dumb Asylum. Hibbard H. W, freight agt. T. H. & I. R. R, bds. Bates House. Hibben, Ethelbert C, attorney at low, res. 322 w. New York-.— HIBBEN, TARKINGTON & CO., (James S. H, William C. T, Coleman B. Patterson & Willis S. Webb,) job bers iWjSdry goods and notions, 112 8. Meridian. Hibben, James S, (H., Tarkington & Co.,) 112 s. Meridian, Tes. n. Tennessee Hickey John, switchman, res. 23 Wil lard. Hickman John W, (R. G. Thomas & Co,) 156 w. Washington, res. 110 w. Mary land. Hicks Miss Elizabeth, res. 338 w. North. Hicks J. M, potent right agt, res. 175 Eddy. Hicks John C, carpenter, res. Broadway, near city limits. Hicks Joseph, stone-cutter, res. 30 Grant. Hicks Mrs. Saroh A, (wid,) res. 338 w. North. Hicks William, lab, res. 338 w. North. Hickson Mrs. Lizzie J, dress-making, room 3, Fatout's blk, w. Washington. Hier Charles, switchman, J. M. & I. R. R, res. 317 s. Pennsylvania. Hierd Jocob, gardener, res. Madison rd. Hiet George, cooper, res. 398 e. Georgia. Higden Williom, carpenter, res. 105 Brad shaw. Higel Christian, carder, Merritt & Cough- Ion's woolen factory, res. 59 s. Cali fornia. Higgins C. B, agt. American Express Co., Union depot. Higgins Charles J, (Asher, Adams & H,) 76 e. Market, bds: 427 n. Pennsylva nia. Higgins Monroe, (col,) waiter, Bates House. Higgins Thomas, lab, res. 327 s. Dela ware. Higgins William B, silver-plater, 8 w. Washington, res. Morrison, bet. Dela ware and Alabama. Highland Conley, cobinet-maker, W. J. Woolen. HighBtreet John, lab., res. Madison rd, near toll-gate.' Hight William, (col.,) teomster, bds. 179 Douglas alley. Hild August, lab, Spiegle, Thorns & Co, res. 287 Davidson. Hild William, iron moulder, Sinker & Co., res. 287 Davidson. Hildebrand Clayton S, watch-maker, Mc- Lene & Herron, res. 51 Madison. ' Hildebrand J. A, bar-keeper, 40 w. Louis iana, bds. Sheridan House. Hilderbrand Henry, carpenter and build er, res. 308 n. Delaware. Hilderbrand J. M, stone-cutter, res. 951 n. West. Hilderbrand J. F, traveling agt, R. P. Crapo. Hilderbrand John J, stone-cutter, res. s. Noble. Hilderbrand J. S, (J. H. Vagen & Co,) 25 w. Washington, res. 51 Madison av. Hilderbrand William, stone-mason, res. 46 Massachusetts av. Hilgemeir C, (H. & Co,) 367 s. Delaware, res. 43 Wyoming. Hilgemeir & Co, (C. H. & R. Meggs,) gro ceries and produce, 367 s. Delaware. Hilkene H- W, harness-maker, bds. Court, bet. East and New Jersey. Hilkenbach William, shipping clerk, 149 s. Meridian, res. 494 n. Mississippi. Hilker Henry, gardener, res. 122 e. St. Jo seph. Hill Charles M, store-keeper, Bates House, bds. some. Hill & Carter, (col,) (John F. H. & Ed ward C, ) barbers and hair-dressers, 14 Bates House, n. Illinois. Hill Miss Ellen, res. 225 n. New Jersey. Hill Ellison C, (H. & Vinnedge,) 3 w. Washington, res. 477 n. Meridian. Hill George W, (H. & Wingate,) res. 110 s. East. Hill James, paper-hanger, bds. 148 Indiana ov. Hill James, groceries and produce, 346 w. Washington, res. same. Hill James B, (J. F. & Co,) res. Michigan rd _ ¦_•__ v Hill John F, (J. F. H. & Co,) res. 84 n. A 1 -Li-_.TV_ A Hill John f!, (col,) (H. & Carter,) 14 Bates House, res. 756 n. Tennessee. Hill John F. & Co., beech-wood nursery, Michigan rd. Hills Lucian, gen'l freight ogt. B. R. R, res. 208 n. Illinois. Hill Lucy, nurBe, n. Illinois. Hill Motson, book-keeper, Reynolds & Hol- liday,* 13 a. Meridian, bds. Pyle House. Hill Nathan, hostler, 16 n. Pennsylvania. Hill S. H, foreman, Journal Office, res. 183 w. New York. Hill Somuel, Btook dealer, res. 50 Cherry. Hill _ Vinnedge, (Ellison C. H. & George W. V,) dealers in boots and shoes, 3 w. Washington. Hill & Wingate, (George W. H. & William D. W,) planing mill and lumber yard, cor. East ond Georgia. See the most Substantial Business Houses, in Advertising Department. 94 LOGAN'S [H] INDIANAPOLIS Hill William 0,, insurance agt, res. 40 n. Pennsylvania. Hilldreth Joseph C, conductor, B. R. R., bds. Palmer House. Hillmon Charles, carpenter, res. 32 Water. Hillman Frederick, freight receiver, Peru depot, res. 36 Water. Hillman John, lab, res. 238 Union. Hillman Michael, nurseryman, res. 793 n. Illinois. Hillman Sophia, servant, F. Smith, Tennes see, bet. Third and Fourth. Hillman William, porter, 74 and 76 s. Me ridian, res. 226 Bluff rd. Hillman William, (W. H. & C. K,) grocer ies and provisions, 401 Virginia ov, res. 36 Water. Hilt Franklin, coach-blacksmith, res. 159 Spring. Hilton W. W, boarding-house, 86 s. Illi nois. Hinchman Jesse G, real estate agt, 24 { e. Washington, res. 210 e. Ohio. Hindman Sarah, (wid,) res. 73 w. Geor gia- Hindman William, bell-boy, Palmer House, bds. same. Hine Henry, painter, works 152 e. Wash ington, res. 160 n. Liberty. Hines Andrew, lob, res. rear 321 David son. Hines Cyrus C, judge Marion co. civil cir cuit court, office Langsdale's blk, res. 428 n. Tennessee. Hines Jesse, mason, res. 83 e. St. Clair. Hinesley A. J, (Budd & H,) 18 w. Pearl, res. 485 n. Tennessee. Hinckley David J, auditor, C, C, C. & I. R. R, bds. Oriental House. HINESLEY WILLIAM, propr. exchange livery and sale sta bles, 35 n. Illinois, res. 469 n, Tennes see. See card in advertising depart ment, page 10. HINESLEY & WOOD, (William H. & Herman W,) livery, sole and board stobles, 21 w. Peorl. Hinkley Christopher, spinner, Merritt & Coughlen, w. Washington. Hinkley Oliver W, book-keeper, Indianap olis Branch Banking Co., res. room 8, Vinton's blk, n. Pennsylvania. Hinkley Wood, clerk, Fletcher & Sharp's Bank, bds. 109 Virginia av. Hinniger Michael, machinist, Sinker's. Hinsdale Miss Emma, (Quimby & H,) 59 n. Illinois, res. some. Hinton Jomes S., (eol,) borber, res. 229 n. West. Hinton Rebecca, servont, 187 n. Alabama. Hippard George , F, BolesnJ*"*"n, Bowen, Stewart & Co., res. 104 w. Vermont. Hippard Mrs. Mary A, (wid,) res. 104 w. Vermont. Hipler William, varnisher, Spiegle, Thorns & Co, res. 347 n. Noble. Hippie Edword, oarpenter, works Warren Totes' planing mill, res. 136 n. New Jersey. Hire Frederick, switchman, Bellefontaine Yard, res. cor. Meek and Liberty. Hirsh Ii, salesman, 3 Palmer House, bds. 18 Circle. Hirt Albert, saw gummer, res. 383 s. Illi nois. Hiser William, painter, res. 82 Indiana ov. Hisler John, res. 43 Harrison. Hiss Sebastian, lob, res. 505 n. Illinois. Hitchcock Alexander, collector, res. 186 e. St. Joseph. Hitchen John, shoeing shop, 44 e. Mary land, res. 277 Massachusetts av. Hitchen Miss Marintha, bds. 439 n. Illi nois. Hitchen Theodore, book-keeper, 146 s. Pennsylvania, res. 267 s. New Jersey. Hizer Elizabeth, (wid. Edward,) res. cor. Plum and Vine. Hoag C. J, gen'l agt. Provident Life Ins. and Trust Co, of Philadelphia, over 8 e. Washington. Hoag Russell, bar-tender, 72 w. Washing ton, res. 36 Massachusetts av. D. LELEWEE. I. LELEWEE. NEW YORK FUR MANUFACTORY. LELJEWER. & BRO. Wholesale Dealers and Manufacturers of LADIES' AND CENTLEMENS' FURS, Fur Trimmings fer Ladies Hoods, Tassels, Silk Buttons, &c. No. 39 SOUTH MERIDIAN STREET, Morrison's Opera Hall, op-stairs, INDIANAPOLIS, INDIANA. Special attention given to repairing Furs and altering into the latest styles. Satisfaction guaranteed. Han Furs bought. P.O. Box, 33. A New China Store and Queensware Jobbing House, on page 88. CITY [H] DIRECTORY. 95 Hoogland John D, messenger, res. 176 n. Mississippi. Hoak John, bar-tender, 255 e. Washington, res. same. Hoalts John, bds. end Virginia ov, beyond city limits. Hobacker Anna, servant, 212 n. Noble. Hobbs Solomon, clerk, res. 384 n. West. Hobbs Walter, clerk, 98 e. Washington, bds. 230 s. Alabama. Hobbs William, engineer, I. C. & L. R. R, bds. Ray House. Hobmeister Nicholas, grocer, 150 n. Noble, cor. New York, res. same. Hoche Joseph W, carpenter, res. 112 Mad ison av. Hochstetter Christian, German Lutheran minister. Hockersmith Joseph, agt. Buffalo Scales, res. 301 e. Georgia. Hockersmith Thomas, conductor, I. & C. R. R, res. 58 Greer. Hodapp William, piano-maker, works Geo. Trayser, n. e. cor. New York ond Dav idson, res. 18 s. Delaware. Hodges Ambrose, carpenter, res. 267 Dav idson. Hodges Andrew, corpenter, res. 354 Rail road. HODGES JAMES A., actor, Metropolitan Theater, res. 127 Huron. Hodgson I, architect and supt, room 3, Brown's blk, n. Pennsylvania, res. 433 n. Illinois. Hodler Gotlieb, porter, 68 s. Meridian, res. 123 e. McCarty. HOEFGEN EMANUEL, janitor, Gymnasium Billiard Hall, res. 12 Indiana av. Hoefgen Samuel B, lowyer, over 20 e. Washington, res. 17J Virginia ov. Hoefler G. A. R, varnisher, piano factory, 32 s. Meridian, res. 178 s. Illinois. Hoefner August, shoe-maker, 127 w.Wosh- ington, res. some. Hoegus William, carpenter, res. 299 Indi ana av. Hoemeyer Frederick, saw-filer, bds. Con cordia House. Hoeckmann Henry, lab, res. on alley n. Michigan, bet. East and Liberty. Hoereth John A, carpenter, works John G. Hoereth, res. 474 n. Alabama. Hoereth John G, carpenter, reB. 263 n.East. Hofocker Charles, lob, Bellefontaine Shop, res. 271 n. Noble. Hofocker Gotlob, shoe shop, 262 e. Wash ington, res. same. Hoff Fred, lab, res. 159 Union. Hoffeld R. C, cigars and tobacco, 11 n. Pennsylvania, res. 126 Virginia ov. Hoffman Casper, blacksmith, res. 534 n. Alabama. Hoffman G. W, harness-maker, 24 n. Dela ware, bds. 263 e. Washington. Hoffman Henry, boot-maker, res. 137 Bluff rd. Hoffmann Michael, (Otto & H,) res. 131 Bluff rd. Hoffman M, machinist, Sinker & Co. Hoffman Samuel B, caTpenter, res. Mc Carty. Hoffmann Philip, groceries and provisions, cor. Sixth and Tennessee, res. same. Hofmeister Mrs. Margaret, (wid,) res. 150 n. Noble. Hoffmeyer Frederick, driver, M. U. Express Co., 42 and 44 c. Washington, res. 224 n. Davidson. Hoffmeyer William, brewerymon, res. 376 e. New York. Hoffmire Henry, tailor, res. 195 n. Liberty. Hoffne Frederick, butcher, res. near White river bridge. Hogan Bridget, servont, 260 n. Illinois. Hogan Edward, ( Millender & H,) 27 s. Illinois, bds. 82 s. Illinois. Hogan Johana, servant, 811 s. Delaware. Hogan John, lab, res. National rd, e. city limits. Hogan Mrs. Mary A, dress-maker, 80 8. Illinois, bds. 82 s. Illinois. Hogan Miss Mary, student, Ind. Female College, 146 n. Meridian, bds. same. Hogan Philip, tobacconist, bds. Wiles House. Hogan Mrs. Sarah G, works Capital To bacco Works, bds. Georgia, bet. Merid ian and Illinois. Hogeland, Durfeld & Conklin, (Israel H, J. F. D. & H. N. C,) manfrs. of the Hogeland Washing Machine and deal ers in patents, 75 8. Illinois. Hogerty Pat, teamster, res. 261 s. Tennes see. Hogshire W. R, res. 283 n. Meridian. Hohl Christopher G, book-keeper, 25 s. Meridian, res. Massachusetts av. Hohug Charles, insurance agt, res. 120 n. Mississippi. Hoke Lewis A, salesman, 21 w. Washing ton, bds. 372 Massachusetts av. Holahan Patrick, lob. Gas Works, res. 128 s. Tennessee. Holbrook H. C, (Ryan & H,) 48 s. Merid- • ion, res. 314 w. New York. Holbrook Preston, (D. Cady & Co,) 9 n. Pennsylvania, res. 96 New York, bet. Meridian and Illinois. Holden George, brakeman, C, C. & I. C. R. R. Holderman Henry, farmer, res. Shelbyville pike, one-half mile a. corporation. Holderman John, salesman, H. Daumont, bds. 126 e. Market. Holderman Montgomery, clerk, H. Dau mont, bds. -67 n. Alabama. .McCreery & Fay's Furniture Ware Rooms, on page 120. 96 LOGAN'S [H] INDIANAPOLIS Holbrook Thomos E, res. 242 n. Illinois. Holdman Henry, lab, res. rear 335 n. No ble. Holdman John, stone-mason, bds. rear 335 n. Noble. Holl W. H, driver, Spiegle, Thoma & Co, res. Wabash, bet. New Jersey and East. Holladay Elias G, (H. & Lingenfelter,) 16_ s. Meridian, res. 296 Virginia av. Holladay & Lingenfelter, real estate ogts, 16J s. Meridian. Hollahan John, bell boy, Sherman House, bds. same. Holland Arsa, box-maker, works 162 n. Noble, bds. 166 n. Noble. Holland Ellen, (col,) cook, Sherman House, Holland Calvin R, harness-maker, bds. 126 w. Sixth. Holland Catharine, (wid.,) bds. 20 Califor nia. Holland Charles W, lab, res. 20 Califor nia. Holland Cris, (col,) cook, Sherman House. Holland George B, minister, M. E. Church, res. 126 w. Sixth. Holland George G, blacksmith, bds. 126 w. Sixth. Holland George L, painter, res. 44 Coburn. Holland John, lab, T. H. R. R, res. 303 s. Delaware. Holland John, clerk, 75 s. West, res. 333 s. Delaware. Holland John, lab, res. 291 s. East. Holland John W, (H, Ostermeyer & Co,) res. 112 n. Pennsylvania. HOLLAND, OSTERMEYER & Co (John W. H. & Fred. 0,) wholesale gro cers and tea dealers, 27 and 29 e. Maryland. Holland Thomas, lab, C, C. & I. C. R. R. freight house, res. Meek, cor. Eetey. Holland T. F, book-keeper, 27 and 29 e. Maryland, res. 383 n. Illinois. Holler Phillip, machinist, works Indiana Central R. R. shops, res. 205 n. Noble. Holler William, second-hand store, 274 e. Washington, res. same. HOLLENBECK C. EDWIN, propr. of the Bryant & Stratton Busi ness College and Telegraph Institute, s. e. cor. Washington and Meridian, res. 169.n. Illinois. Holliday Cort F, (Reynolds & H,) 13 s. Meridian, res. 131 n. Meridian. Holliday E. G, gardener, res . end Virginio av, beyond city limits. Holliday Mrs. Eliza, boarding house, res. 56 w. New York. Holliday F. T, res. 242 n. Alabama. Holliday Rev. Fernandes C, res. 131 n. Meridian. Holliday J. D, salesman, 59 s. Meridion, res. cor. Delaware and St. Clair. Holliday John H, city editor. Holliday Wilbur F, (Reynolds & H,) 13 s. Meridian, res. 131 n. Meridian. Holliday William, (W. J. H. & Co, Mur phy, Johnston & Co.,) 59 s. Meridian, res. 241 n. Meridian. Holliday Mrs. William A, (wid,) res. 242 n. Alabama. Holliday William J. & Co, (William J. H, John W. Murphy, John A. Furgason & Henry W. Voigt,) heavy hardware, iron and steel, 59 s. Meridian. Hollingsworth Jonathan, farmer, res. 526 n. Mississippi. Hollingsworth Zeth, wagon -yard, 276 w. Washington, bds. Nogel House. Hollingsworth & Co 's Notional Business College, 24J e. Washington, Franklin & Capp, principals. Hollman Herman, butcher, Canal, bet. Maryland and Georgia, res. same. Hollman Jeremiah, lab, res. 44 Elizabeth. Hollman Merritt S, agt. Merritt _ Co., books and stationery, bds. 322 n. Illi nois. Hollman Mrs, (wid. Jacob,) res. 31 Brad shaw. Hollow Philip II, stone-mason res. 349 n. Noble. Holloway William R, (Douglass & Conner,) Journal Co., bds. 287 n. Alabama. M'OEEERY & FAY, WHOLESALE DEALERS US CHINA, GLASS AND QUEENSWARE Lamps and Lamp Famishings of all kinds, Cutlery, "Silver-Plated and Brittania Wares, rich Uantel Orna ments, Fancy Goods, Toys, fine Japanned and Planish Tin-Ware, _c, _c. HOUSEKEEPEKS' EMPOBIUM, adjoining Odd Fellows HaU, SG and. 58 EAST WASHINGTON ST. Read Logan's History of Indianapolis, in after part of this book. CITY [H] DIRECTORY. 97 Hollowoy Allen T, salesman, 127 s. Meri dian, bds. cor. Maryland and Tennes see. Hollowoy Henry C, (A, Jones & Co., ) 74 and 76 _. Meridian, res. 426 n. Dela ware. Hollowell Amos K, clerk, 34 s. Meridian, bds. 441 u. Mississippi. Hollowell James, groceries and produce, w. Washington, res. same. Hollowell James S, (Lukens & H,) 26 and 28 s. Tennessee, res. 172 Virginia ov. Hollowell N , clerk, bds. Martin House, 33. w. Maryland. Hollweg Louis, dealer in glass and queens- ware, 48 s. Meridian, basement. Holly Henry, works Sinker's Foundry, res. 264 Madison av. Holly & Schroder, boot and shoe manfrs. and dealers, 85 w. Washington, cor. Tennessee. Holly Theodore, (H. & Schroder,) 85 w. Washingten, res. n. bloke. Holly William, stone-mason, bds. 264 Mad ison av. Holman Miss Emmma, bds. 417 n. Tennes- HOLMAN G. a., gen'l com. mer, 6 Bates House blk, w. Washington, res. w. s. Weston, third house n. carporotion. Holman i. A, attorney at law, room 12, Talbott & New s blk, n. Pennsylvania, res. Western av., with G. G. Holman. Holman Merritt S, salesman, 5 e. Wash ington, res. 322 n. Illinois. HOLMES ANDRE vV J., secy. Indiana State Board of Agricul ture, office State House, res. Roches ter, Ind. Holmes Erastus, painter, res. 37 Rose. Holmes Henry A, mason, res. 64 s. Calfor- nia. Holmes James corpenter, Bellefontaine shop, bds. 248 Winston. Holmes Joseph, carpenter, Bellefontaine shop, bds. 248 Winston. Holmes Jonathan, res. 526 n. Meridian. Holmes Miss Mollie, lady boarder, 207 s. Tennessee. Holmes Robert, inmate Deaf and Dumb Asylum. Holsker Ben, watchman, res. 505 s. Ten nessee. Holsker Henry, lob, bds. 505 s. Tennessee. Holstein Charles L, attorney at law, 24J e. Woshington, bds. Macy House. Holt Charles, machinist, bds. 169. s. Ten nessee. Holt Francis, clerk, Indianapolis Gas- Light and Coke Co, cor. Maryland and Pennsylvania. Holt John R, carpenter, res. 37 Blake. HOLT MRS. LOUISA M., (wid. Joshua F,) res. n. e. cor. East and Vermont. Holtsman Israel, lab, res. 205 Kentucky av. Holtorf J. C, clerk, U. S. and American Express Co.'s, 34 e. Washington, bds. Pyle House. Holzbacher Augustus, cigar-maker, G. F. Meyer, res. 86 Indiana av. Holzbaoher John, cigar-maker, bds. Concor dia House. Holzerman Louis, clerk, 29 w. Woshington, bds. 283 s. Pennsylvania. Hoskins Robert S, gravel-roofer, res. 271 e. Ohio. Homan Jeremiah, cistern-builder and ce- menter, res. 130 s. East. Homan William J, cistern and cement- builder, 82 w. Washington, res. 130 s. East. Homburg Henry, baker, res. cor. Union and Pipps. Homburg K, physician, office 194_ e. Washington, res. same. Homburg William F, stone-cutter, bds. Macy House. Home Fire Insurance Co., of Columbus, Ohio, Davis _ Green, agts, 27 s. Me ridian. Home of the Friendless, n. Pennsylvania, beyond city limits. Horn udh Frederick, drayman, res. 3 Charles. Homyer William, slater and tinner, bds. Pearl. Honberger Christian, carpenter, res. 70 Jackson. Hondihon Timothy, lab. White River Iron Works, bds. 262 s. Tennessee. Hook and Ladder Co., n. New Jersey, bet. Washington and New Jersey. Hooker E. M. B, printer, H. C. Chandler. Hoover Alexander F, clerk, p. o, res. 135 n. East. Hoover Asa, (col.,) sexton, Second Presby- byterian Church, res. Walnut, bet. Meridian and Illinois. Hoover Miss Catharine, student, Ind. Fe male College, 146 n. Meridian, bds. same. Hoover Daniel, groceries and produce, cor. New York and Douglas, res. same. Hoover Jocob B, teamster, reB. 524 n. Mis sissippi. Hoover W, boiler-maker, B. R. R. Shop, bds. 241 n. Liberty. Hopkins H. C. (Martin & H,) gen'l ins. agt, res. 224 n. Alabama. Hopkins James H, foreman N. & J. Brad- en's book bindery, res. 340 w. Wash ington. Hopkins John B, tinner, res. 35 Center. Hoppe E. B, policeman, fifth word, res. 251 w. Woshington. (7) See the most Substantial Business Houses, in Advertising Department. 98 LOGAN'S [H] INDIANAPOLIS Hopp Aaron, lojb, res. 293 Kentucky av. Hoppe George, propr. Lafayette House, 179 s. Meridian. Hoppe John, tinner, DeRoot & Co, bds. 58 Hosbrook. Hoppe Jesse, (col,) porter, Tutewiler Bros. Hoppe Lewis M, carpenter, res. Jackson, second house n. Street R. R.f Hopson Samuel, lab, 600 n. Illinois. Hord J. M, real estate agt, 24$ e. Wash ington, res. 577 n. Tennessee. Hord Oscar B, (Hendricks, H. _ Hend ricks,) 24$ e. Washington, reB. n. w. cor. New York and California. HORN, ANDERSON & CO., (M. A. H. & C. J. S. A,) wholesale and retail grocers and tea dealers, 31 w. Washington. Horn H. J, with Horn, Anderson & Co, res. 72 n. Mississippi. Horn M. A, (H. Anderson & Co,) 31 w. Washington, res. 72 n. Mississippi. Horian James, wagon-maker, _. .. Notional rd, near Insane Asylum. Horney Susan L, matron, Home of the Friendless, bds. same. Horniday John E, carpenter, res. 365 n. Alabama. Horniday Thomas B, policeman, first ward, res. 365 n. Alabama. Hosbrook D. Bates, civil engineer, res. 439 n. Illinois. Hoshour Samuel K, professor languages, N. W. C. University, res. 172 n. East. Hoskms Robert S, (Sims, Miller & H„) Canal, near Kentucky av, res. 271 e. Ohio. Hosman John W, (D. A. Branson & Co.,) rooms over 23 n. East. Hoss David, lab, Peru Depot, res. 453 Vir ginia av. Hoss J. C, (J. W. Bower & Co,) 67 aDd 78 Massachusetts av, bds. 180 e. Ver mont.;; Hoss Nelson, deputy assessor, res. 35 Cherry. Hoss George W, supt. public instruction, (Downey, Brouse, Butler & Co.,) res. Jackson, bet. Forrest Home av. and Butler. Host Frederick, watchman, Planing Mills, res. 475 w. Michigan. Hottmann John G, cook, Capital Restau rant, res. 101 n. Noble. Hotz George & Co, (G. H. & W. Pope,) merchant tailors, 124 s. Illinois. Houck Franklin, blacksmith, cor. Indiana av. and Mississippi. Houck N. J, blacksmith, bds. i24 s. Merid ian. Hound Mrs. Amelia, (wid. William,) res. 21 n. New Jersey. Hough Charles, piano action and tune reg ulator, 159 and 161 e. Washington, res. Pattison House. Hould Mrs. Mary, (wid.,) res. over 182 e. Washington. Houpt Reuben, clothier, res. 17 Chatham. House Ben D, notary public, 16$ e. Wash ington, res. 193 s. New Jersey. Houston J. T, (J. C. Green & Co,) res. 370 n. East. Houston Robert, res. 370 n. East. Houts Christeniza, servant, w. s. n. Illi nois, bet. Sixth and Seventh. Hovey J. W, general merchant at Oakland, res. same. Howard A. B.. clerk and telegraph opera tor, Jeffersonville Depot, bds. 164 Vir ginia av. Howard Alice, (col.,) servant, 76 n. New Jersey. Howard Bridget, wash-woman, Sherman House, bds same. Howard D. W, res. 56 Thomas. Howard E, physician and surgeon, 80 s. Illinois, res. 326 n. Illinois. Howard Miss Elizabeth, boarding house, 298 s. Illinois, res. some. Howard Frank. A, blacksmith, bds. 343 s. East. Howard George W, finisher, Osgood, Smith & Co, bds. Ray House. HENRY WEGHORST, Florist and Vegetable Gardener CUT FIOWEKS AND BOQVETS CONSTANTLY ON HAND. SOUTH EAST STREET, NEAR CORPORATION LINE, INDIANAPOLIS, INDIANA. Subscribe for the Workingmen's Journal, P. O. Box 1441, Indianapolis. $1.00 a year. Howard Edward B, (Smith, H. & Co,) 26 and 28 w. Washington, bds. Bates House. Howard James, (col,) lab. bds. 276 e. North. Howard Liberty, telegraph operator, res. 164 Virginia av. Howard Mary, (col,) servant, res. 8 cor. Noble and Fletcher av. Howard Robert, (col,) lab, res. North, bet. Blake and Douglas. Howard William H, soldier at Arsenal, res. near Arsenal. Howder Jacob, currier, 78 e. Washington. Howes Charles A, (H. & Bro,) 50 cor. Virginia av. and New Jersey, res. 78 Huron. Howe Edward P., corresponding secy, of Franklin Life Insurance Co., res. 420 n. Pennsylvania. HoweB Henry, (Howes & Bro,) res. 78 Hu ron. Howe Joseph, res. 33 Harrison av. Howe Robert, 175 w. Ohio. Howe Miss Louisa, 175 w. Ohio. Howe William H, real estate agt, res. 33 Harrison av. Howell Elizabeth saloon and grocery, res. n. s. National rd, one-half mile from bridge. Howell John, book-keeper, Foster, Wiggins, & Co., res. First, beyond city limits. Howell Thomas F,- res. 376 s. West. Howes & Bro, (Charles & Henry H,) meat market, cor. Virginia av. and New Jersey. Howes Charles H. & Bro, res. 78 Huron. Howes Henry, (H. & Bro,) cor. Virginia av. and New Jersey, res. 78 Huron. Howie James, lab, res. 453 e. Market. Howie James, pattern-maker, Root's Foun dry, res. 127 Stevens. Howie William, machinist, works B. R. R. Shop, res. 453 e. Market. Howk Fred, blacksmith, cor. Indiana av. and Mississippi, res. 196 w. Vermont. Howk Newton J, carriage-maker, bds. 196 w. Vermont. Howland Miss Alice, student, Ind. Female College, 146 n. Meridian, bds. same. Howland James C, dental student, 39$ s. Meridian, res. n. Pennsylvania, bet. First and Tinker. Howland J. A, pressman, Downey, Brouse, Butler & Co , bds. 377 n. East. HOWLAND JOHN D., clerk, U. S. Circuit and District Courts, room 11, p. o. bldg, n. Penn sylvania, res. 98 w. Vermont. Howland Livingston, (Hammond & H,) 20$ n. Delaware, res. 109 Virginia av. Howland Miss Mary, student, Ind. Female College, bds. 230 n. Tennessee. Howsley David, (col, ) lab, res. Tennessee, bet. Michigan and Vermont. Hoyt Miss Clara, teacher, B. & C. Int. first ward school, res. 84 Massachu setts av. Hoyt Harriet, (wid. Benjamin,) res. 84 Massachusetts av. Hoyt JomeSj base ballist, bds. Bates House. HOYLE CLINTON D., pump manufacturer, well and cist ern-cleaner, 14 Virginia av, res. 321 e. Ohio. Hubbard Wm, lab, res. 273 s. Tennessee. Hubbard William S, (Whitsitt & H,) res. w. s. Meridian, bet. Second and Third. Huber Jacob, (Becker & H,) 77 e. Wash ington, res. same. HUBER JACOB, propr. Crystal Palace Saloon^ and Restaurant, 44 w. Washington, res. same. Hudson Mrs. E. G. & Tobitha Potter, dress making, 3 Indiana av. Hudson Miss Mary, bds. 121 w. Vermont. Hudson James W, res. n. s. Jones, near Da- Cotoh. Hudson Simon, blacksmith, res. 242 e. Washington. Hudson Thomas, lab, res. 140 cor. Elm and Grove. Huebner H. R, (Enos & H.,) architects, 77$ e. Market, res. 346 n. Noble. HUEGELE JOHN, saloon and billiard hall, 13 e. Wash ington, reB. same. See card, advertis ing depnit, page 2. Huett William, harness-maker, res. 100 Huron. Huey David, bds. 14 s. Delaware. Huey David E, cabinet-maker, works Spiegle, Thorns & Co, bds. 293 Win ston. Huey Milton S., varnisher, Spiegle, Thorns & Co, res. 293 Winston. Huey Temperance, (wid. William,) res. 310 e. Louisiana. Huff Andrew, lab, bds. n. a. National rd, w. White river bridge. Huff Andrew L, brakesman, B. R. R, res. 331 n. Noble. Huff David, lab, res. 24 Rose. HUFF J. T„ grocer and provision dealer, 298 u. Pennsylvania, res. same. Huffer Frank, saddler, 23 s. Meridion, bds. 69 Fletcher av. Huffer James M, (H. & Son,) 23 s. Merid ian, res. 69 Fletcher av. Huffer John J, (H. & Son,) 23 s. Meridian, bds. 69 Fletcher av. Huffer & Son, (James M. & John J. H,) saddlers, 23 s. Meridian. Huffington M, A, teamster, res. 31 Dough erty. A Tabular List of the Sessions of Indiana Courts, in Logan's Business Directory. 100 LOGAN'S [H] INDIANAPOLIS Huffman John, gardner, res. Shelbyville pike, 1} mile s. corporation. Huffman John T, moulder, Union Novelty Works, res. 332 w. Maryland. Huffman John H, leather tanner, res. 263 e. Washington. Huffman Mary C, occupant Deaf and Dumb Asylum. Huffman Valentine, lab, res. 110 s. No ble. Huffman William, saddler, res. 263 e. Wash ington. Huffmyer William, driver, City Brewery, res. 376 e. New York. Hufftailing Hiram, freight conductor C, C. & I. C. R. R, bds. 58 Benten. Hug Mrs. Christine, (wid. Martin,) res. 81 n. New Jersey. Hug Mrs. Sarah K, (wid. Joseph,) reB. 66 n. Noble. Hughbanks Phebe, (col,) servant, J. Sloan, 230 n. Tennessee. Hughes Mrs. Eliza, (wid. Nixon,) res. 161 Davidson. Hughes Miss Elizabeth, ladies' boarding house, res. 169 n. Noble. Hughes Isom, engineer, J. M. & I. R. RJ, res. 237 e. Delaware. Hughes Joseph, hostler, 27 s. Pennsylvania, bds. 24 8. Pennsylvania. Hughes Miss Lizzie, bds. 251 n. Liberty, cor. Michigan. Hughes Mrs. Missouri, (wid. Leander,) res. 27 n. Noble. Hughes Samuel A, conductor, C, C. & I. C. R. R, bds. Bates House. Hugler Samuel, lab, res. rear 313 Massa chusetts av. Hugo Mrs. Charlotte, (wid. Charles,) res 79 n. Noble. Hugo Henry August, plasterer, res. 359 s. East. Hull Absalom D, cigar-maker, res. 179 _. Noble. Hull Armstrong, carpenter, reB. 748. n. Ten nessee. Hully Charles, drayman, res. 146 Union. Hull Mrs. Jone, (wid.,) res. 725 n. Tennes see. Hultz August, lab, res. end Virginia av, beyond city limits. HUME, ADAMS & CO., (James M. H, Williom L. A. & Edgar J. Foster,) carpets and wall papers, Trade Palace, 26 and 28 w. Washing ton. Hume Mrs. Bulah A, (wid,) res. 6 Cali fornia. Hume James M, (H, Adams & Co,) 26 and 28 w. Washington, res. e. Ohio. Hume Jane E, occupant Deaf and Dumb Asylum. Hume Mrs. Maddison, (wid.,) bds. 673 n. Tennessee. Hume Newton, paper-hanger, res. 673 n. Tennessee. Humel George, cigar-maker, bds. 193 e. New Jersey. Humphrey John, bds. 168 w. Michigan. Humphrey John W, cooper, res. 294 Indi ana av. Humphrey Miss Rachel, bds. 383 e. Michi gan- Humphreys Chorles A, traveling agt, Stewart & Morgan, bds. Palmer House. Humphreys John, 89 w. Walnut. Humphreys William W, deputy clerk U. S. Circuit and District Courts, room 11, p. o. bldg, n. Pennsylvania, bds. 126 n. Tennessee. Hunsinger James, bds. 105 8. New Jersey. Hunt Albert, machinist, res. 119 w. South. Hunt Andrew, turner, bds. 390 n. Dela ware. Hunt August, farmer, res. 370 n. Dela ware. HUNT AARON L., auctioneer, 85 e. Washington, res. 294 n. Pennsylvania. Hunt Bertha, servant, 544 n. Tennessee. Hunt Charles, engineer, Capitol Tobacco Works, res. 79 w. So ith. Hunt E. W, printer, res. 165 n. Missis sippi. BECKER & BROTHERS, FANCY Confectionery, Ice Cream Saloon and Ladies' Restaurant, No. 17 North Pennsylvania St., Indianapolis, Indiana. Wedding parties and social gatherings supplied with everything in the above line in the most saperb style, on the briefest notice, at reasonable prices. Livingston's Law Register can be had at this Office. CITY [*__] DIRECTORY. 101 HUNT CHARLES C, cigars and tobacco, 61 e. Washington, res. 366 s. Alabama. Hunt Harry C, olerk, 85 e. Washington, bds. 294 n. Pennsylvania. Hunt Miss Jennie, cloak and dress-maker, Tyler's Bee-Hive, bds. Pyle House, u. Meridian. Hunt John P, book-keeper, res. 82 w. Mar ket. Hunt Lemuel C, printer, res. 270 n. Pat terson. Hunt Mary, (wid. John,) res. 520 s. Illinois. Hunt Walter W, book-keeper, 85 e. Wash ington, bds. 294 n. Pennsylvania. Hunt P. G. C, dentist, 76 J e. Market, res. 172 n. Delaware. Hunter James, (col,) lab, res. 134 Doug las. Hunter James II, clerk, Indiana Military Agency, bds. 254 n. Tennessee. Hunter John L, inmate Deaf and Dumb Asylum. Hunter Marselis, bds. 340 n. West. Hunter Ralph, piano planer, 159 and 161 e. Washington, res. 340 n. West. Hunter Thomas, cooper, res. California, near Helen. Hunting Edward B, salesman, 108 s. Me ridian, bds. Spencer House. Huntington James M, carpenter, res. 476 n. Mississippi. Huntley Norton, lab, res. 19 e. North. Huntzinger James W, student, commercial college. Hurd Mrs. Clarisa L, (wid. Daniel,) board- ng, 144 n. Tennessee. Hurd John, lab, res. Michigan rd, beyond city limits. Hurd Mrs. Lizzie, (wid. Eugene,) bds. 269 n. West. Hurley Frank, teamster, res. 132 Maple. Hurley J. W, physician and surgeon, res. Shelbyville pike, 1 mile s. corporation. Hurley Michael, driver, Indiana Transfer Co, reB. 23 Elm. Hurley Patrick, hack-driver, res. 1 cor. North and California. Hurley Richard, hack-driver, bds. 89 s. Illi nois. Hurley Thomas, teamster, res. cor.Elizabeth and Dunlop. Hurrle Ignatz, tailor, 168 e. Washington, res. 63 n. Noble. Hurst Herman, tailor, res. 317 s. Pennsyl vania. Hurt Albert, saw-maker, res. 383 s. Illinois. Hurt James R, brakeman, L. _ C. R. R, res. over 212 e. Washington. Husbands Lindsay, (col,) white-washer, res. 167 Indiana av. Huschild C, (Daily Telegraph Co,) 16 w. Maryland. Hust Jacob, butcher, res. 94 Eddy. Huskinson Thomas, carpenter, res. 145 n. New Jersoy. Hust George C, butcher shop, 576 e. Wash ington, res. same. Husted Hiram C, tanner, res. 255 e. Mc Carty. Hustis John, engineer, T. H. & I. R. R, bds. Macy House. Huston C. B, salesman, 66 e. Washington, res. 77 e. St. Joseph. Huston George W, gen'l stock agt, C. & I. J. and C. H. & D. R. R, cor. McGill and Louisiana. Huston Fielding, (col,) lab, reB. 230 w. Vermont. Huston James M, carpenter, res. e. Wash ington, beyond city limits. Huston Joel, stationary engineer, res. 552 n. Mississippi. Huston Mrs. , works Journal bind ery, res. over 10 Bates House blk. Hustow Eunice, (wid. Elijah,) reB. 283 e. Georgia. Hutchins H. H, book-keeper, J. K. Sharpe, res. e. Market, beyond city limits. Hutchins H. S, (Lemen & H. H. S,) gro ceries and provisions, 187 "w. Wash ington, rea. 386 n. Mississippi. Hutchinson Charles P., «upt. Sentinel es- tablisnmment, 16£ e. Washington, res. 289 n. New Jersey. Hutchinson David, engineer, J. M. & I. R. R, res. 192 e. McCarty. Hutchinson E. B, clerk, office gen'l supt. C. C. & I. C. R. R, bds Macy House. Hutchinson Miss Ann E, dress-maker, 299 n. East. res. same. Hutchison B, conductor, C, C. & I. C. R. R, bds. Sherman House. Hutchison Margaret J, servant, 157 n. Illi nois. HUTCHISON WILLIAM, machinist, Bellefontaine shop, res. 383 Massachusetts ov. Hutson James, lab, res. 66 Jones. Hutt John, grocer, 323 cor. Noble and Vir ginia av, res. same. Hut ton Eliza J, seamstress, res. 655 n. Tennessee. Hutton E. L. & Co, groceries and provis- isons, 94 n. Illinois. Hutton Edwin L, (H. E. H. & Co,) 94 _. Illinois, res. same. Hutton Geo, carpenter, res. 187 Dougherty. Hyatt Miss Jennie, seamstress, res. 85 n. Missouri. Hyatt John, barkeeper, Bates House, bds. same. Hyde Rev. N. A, ogt. Home Missionary Society, res. 116 n. Alabama. Hyland James, contractor, res. 730 n. Illi nois. Hyland Michael, contractor, res. 673 n. Illinois. A New China Store and Queensware Jobbing House, on page 88. 102 LOGAN'S [I] INDIANAPOLIS Hyman Mrs. Helena, dress-maker, 141 n. Delaware, res. same. Hyman Robinson, traveling agt. for patent gate fastenings, res. 141 n. Delaware. Hyner Amelio, (wid,) res. 344 Indiana av. Hyne William H, moulder, Root's Foundry, res. 257 Coburn. ICHNER WILLIAM, lab, 240 w. Mar ket. Iden William, bar-keeper, St. Nicholas Sa loon, bds. same. Idler William, master mechanic, T. H. & I. R. R. shops, res. 171 w. South. Igo John W, boarding house, 44 s. Tennes see, res. same. Igoe Martin, lawyer, office 83J e. Wash ington, res. 34 Lockerbie. ILG GEORGE, propr. Union House, cor. Illinois and South. Ili_ Charles E, salesman, 16 e. Washing- ington, bds. 73 n. Alabama. Ilifif Mrs. R. W, (wid. Richard W,) res. 73 n. Alabama. Iliff L. S, (R. W. I. & Son,) 24 w. Louisi ana, bds. 73 n. Alabama. Iliff R. W. _ Son, confectioners and fruit dealers, 24 w. Louisiana. Imille Max, house and sign painter, res. 143 s. New Jersey. ILLINOIS HOUSE, Wm. EBSman, propr, 183 s. Illinois. Ince Annie, (wid,) res. 228 Massachusetts av. Ince Thomas, soldier, U. S. Arsenal, res. same. INDIANA BANKING CO., (F. A. W. Davis, Willis S. Webb, John L. Ketcham, W. W. Woollen, Samuel C. Vance, John P. Banta & William Needham,) bankers, 28 e. Washington. Indiana Female College, n. Meridian, cor. New York, W. H. Demotte, principal. INDIANA FIRE INSURANCE CO, room 5 Odd Fellows Hall. Indiana & Illinois Central Railroad Co., office 30 J s. Meridian. INDIANA NATIONAL BANK, n. e. cor. Washington and Meridian, George Tousey, prest., D. M. Taylor, caBhier. Indiana Military Agency, William Hanne- man, agt, room 8, Gallup's bldg, s. e. cor. Tennessee and Market. Indiana State Offices, New State bldg, s. w. cor. Washington and Tennessee. INDIANA TRANSFER CO., 40 e. Maryland, C. W. Bucking, supt. See card in advertising department, page 4. INDIANAPOLIS BRANCH BANKING CO, Fletcher & Sharp, proprs, organized 1856. Capital $200,000, deposits received and dis counts made daily, from 8 A. M. to 4 P. M, office 49 e. Washington, cor. Pennsylvania. Indianapolis Builders' and Manufacturers' Association, 225 n. Delaware. Indianapolis Chamber of Commerce, Vin ton's blk, opp. p. o. Indianapolis, Cincinnati and Lafayette Freight Depot and Offices, 8. Delaware, cor. Louisiana. Indianapolis Coal & Mining Co., 19 Circle N. Carpenter, supt. INDIANA DIRECTORY PUB LISHING OFFICE, 16$ e. Washing ton, Logan & Co., publishers. See card. Indianapolis Female Bible Society, office at Todd, Cormichael & Williams', Glenn's blk. Indianapolis Female Institute, n. e. cor. Pennsylvania and Michigan. INDIANAPOLIS GAS LIGHT & COKE CO, s. Pennsylvania, cor. Louisiana, office coi. Maryland and Pennsylvania. INDIANAPOLIS GYMNASIUM, Billiard Hall, cor. Meridian and Maryland. MANUFACTURER AND DEALER IN Trunks, Valises, Traveling Bags, &c. WHOLESALE -A-JSITD RETAIL, Three Doors South of Palmer House, No. 29 SOUTH ILLINOIS ST., INDIANAPOLIS, IND. REPAIRING! DOSE ON SHORT NOTICE. ALL KINDS OF TRUNKS HADE TO ORDER. Read Logan's History of Indianapolis, in after part of this book. CITY [J] DIRECTORY. 103 INDIANAPOLIS INSURANCE CO, office in Company's bldg, cor. Virginia av. and Pennsylvania. Indianapolis Journal, doily and weekly, Douglass & Conner, proprs. and pub lishers, Journal bldg, e. Market, cor. Circle. Indianapolis Mission Sundoy School Cha pel, cor. Union and Madison av. INDIANAPOLIS NATIONAL BANK, n. e. cor. Washington and Pennsylvania, Odd Fellows Hall, The odore P. Haughey, prest, F. Williams, ooshr. INDIA.NAPOLIS ROLLING MILL COMPANY, office Blake's row, John M. Lord, prest. and supt. INDIANAPOLIS SENTINEL, daily and weekly, office 16 J e. Wash ington, R. J. Bright, publisher and propr. Indianapolis Tobacco Works, 87 e. South, R. May & Co., proprs. Indianapolis and Vincennes Railroad Co., office cor. Illinois ond Kentucky ov, A. E. Burnside, prest, D. R. Lamed, secy, and treas, C. Fletcher, oss't secy, and treas, J. P. Harper, chief engineer. INDIANAPOLIS WAGON AND AGRICULTURAL WORKS, office and manufactory 172 s. Tennessee, W. H. Jones, prest. Indicut Miss Lizzie, (col.,) bds. 66 Mis souri. Indies John, carpenter, res. 14 Jackson. Ingerson Charles, brakeman, C, C. & I. C. R. R, bds. 58 Benton. Ingersoll B. F, scroll sawyer, Builders' & Mauufactrers' Society, res. 129 e. South. Ingersoll Charles, engineer, 159 and 161 e. Washington, res. 224 e. Market. Ingersoll E. P., minister, res. 383 n. Penn sylvania. Ingersoll Miss Mary, third ass't, City High School, bds. 271 Virginia ov. Ingersoll Miss Selma, teacher, bds. 271 Virginia av. Inglas John, employee C, C. & I. C. R. R, Shops, bds. n. e. cor. Georgia and Li berty. Ingle J. 0, telegraph-operator, 11 s. Me ridian, res. 75 Kentucky av. Ingle Mark W, (Masten & I,) 28 s. Me ridian, res. 126 n. Tennessee. Inglehart Frank, clerk, 92 e. Washington, bds. same. Ingleking Fred, driver, res. 143 Bluflf rd. Ingleking William, driver, res. 208 Union. Ingraham C. B, photograph gallery, 32 J e. Washington, res. same. Ingraham J. P. T, (Rev,) pastor, Christ Church, res. 65 Circle. Inglicker John, lab, res. 453 s. Missouri. Insprucker John A, shoe-maker, bds. 237 w. Ohio. Inwolle Benjamin J, saloon, 367 Virginia av, res. same. Inwall Henry, bar-tender, res. 3 Rabb's blk, e. Washington. Ireland William H, stair-builder, bds. 195 s. Alabama. Iriok Adam, gas-fitter, bds. 18 w. Georgia. Irick Henry, soldier, U. S. Arsenal. Irick Joseph, stone-cutter, res. 167 Union. Irick M. C, carriage-painter, 123 e. Wash ington, bds. 210 n. Winston. Irick Morris, blacksmith, res. 210 Winston Irick Williom, printer, bds. 18 w. Georgia. Irick William H, res. 326 n. New Jersey. Irons Mrs. Catharine, (wid. Steven, ) res. 193 w. Maryland. Irons Henry T, book-binder, W. J. Braden, res. 193 w. Maryland. Irving A. B, (I. Bros,) 12 n. Pennsylva nia, res. 195 cor. New York and Mas sachusetts av. Irving Brothers, (C. L. & A. B. I.,) dealers in pianos, 12 n. Pennsylvania. Irving Benjamin, teamster, res. National rd, w. White river bridge. Irving C. L, (I. Bros,) 12 n. Pennsylva nia, res. 283 n. Alabama. Irving D. K, salesman, New York Store, bds. 58 s. Pennsylvania. Irwin Joseph W, carpenter, res. Eighth, bet. Railroad and Lenox. Irwin Roll C, compositor, Downey, Brouse, Butler & Co., bds. Mrs. Reed, n. Penn sylvania. Irwin W. B, carriage-blacksmith, 123 e. Washington, bds. 35 Circle. Isensee Albert, locksmith and bell-hanger, res. 72 n. California. Isensee Miss Sarah, bds. 321 n. Liberty. Isgrigg & Bracken, (James A. I. _ Thomas E. B,) lumber yard, 180 w. Market. Isgrigg James A, (I. _ Bracken,) 180 w. Market, res. 413 w. New York. Ishmell Frederick, lab, res. 43 Dacotah. Iska Gustavus, lob, Washington Foundry, res. 427 Virginia av. iBke William, packer, 16 w. Washington. Ittenbaoh Frank, (Smith, I. & Co,) bdB. 140 Madison av. Ittenbach Gerard, (Smith, I. & Co..) res. 140 Madison av. . Ivory Peter, teamster, res. 427 e. St. Clair. JACK CHARLES, engineer, McLene, Maclntire & Hays, bds. 302 w. Mary land. Jack Charles T, engineer, bds. 114 s. No ble. Jack M. W, boarding house, 74 n. Penn sylvania. Hair work, all kinds, at Medinas, 50 South Illinois Street. 104 LOGAN'S [J] INDIANAPOLIS Jackes Daniel, fireman, C. I. & C. R. R, bds. 142 s. East. Jackman Hermon, tailor, res. 110 Virginia ov. Jackson Alexis M, trader, bds. 89 n. Dela ware. JackBOB Andrew, (col,) servant, 262 _. Meridian. Jackson Andrew, egg-packer, res. 449 n. Mississippi. Jackson Charles P, res. 17_ Virginia ov. Jackson James, section-master, J. M. & I. R. R, res. 241 Union. Jackson John, clerk, bds. 223 w. Ohio. Jackson Mrs. Rachel, (col.,) wash-women, res. 207 w. North. Jackson Sarah, (wid. Jesse,) res. n. o. Na tional rd, half mile from river bridge. Jackson Thomas, (Van Camp, J. & Co,) res. 223 w. Ohio. Jackson Thomas, currier, Mooney & Co., res. cor. alley and Tennessee, bet. Georgia and Maryland. Jackson William, slate-roofer, res. 186 Da vidson. Jackson Willis, (col,) servant, Col. D. G. RoBe, res. 126 w. Michigan. JACKSON WILLIAM N., ticket agt. Union Depot, bds. 82 w. North. Jacob Israel, (wid. Joseph,) res. 156 n. East. Jacobs Charles P., (Barbour _ J,) 14 n. Delaware, res. 77 w. second. Jacobs Mrs. Elizabeth, (wid. William,) res. Court, bet. East and New Jersey. Jacobs Frederick, res. 369 s. Delaware. Jacobs Joseph, wholesale notions, over 6 w. Louisiana, res. 156 n. East. Jacobs Milton, engineer, Journal office, bds. 98 n. East. Jacobs Richard, trunk-maker, res. 440 Vir ginia av. Jacobs Stephen, trunk-maker, bds. 440 Vir ginia av. Jacoli Frederick, meat shop, 367 s. Dela ware, res. same. Jacobs Milton, bds. 145 a. New Jersey. Jacobs Valentine, saloon-keeper res. 145 s. New Jersey. Jocoby David R, potent-right ogt, res. 35 w. Georgia. Jacoby Jerome, confectioner, 26 s. Meri dian, res. 35 w. Georgia. Jacques Sarah, (wid.,) res. 76 Massachu setts ov. Joire Alexander, telegraph operator, bds. e. Georgia. James Miss Amanda A, res. cor. Illinois and Seventh. James Miss Betty, servant, Ray House. James Elizabeth, waiter, Dining Room Ray House. James E. M, (col,) driver, McCreery & Fay, res. cor. Vermont and West. James Frank, (col,) lob, res. 133 s. Ten nessee. Jomes J. W, shoe-moker, res. 620 n. Illi nois. James Miss Lou, res. 180 Virginia av. James M. C, salesman, New York Store, res. 69 w. New York. James Oliver, plosterer, res. 225 w. Ver- mont. James Robert, (col.,) lab, res. 86 n. Mis souri. James Seth C, marble-worker, works 136 s. Meridian, res. s. Alabama. JAMES & SPEER, (Thomas S. J. & H. P. S,) morble deal ers, 136 s. Meridian. James S. C, marble-cutter, res. 80 Vir ginia av. James ThomaB S, (J. & Speer,) 136 s. Me ridian, bds. Ray House. James William, (col,) lab, res. Camp Cor- rington. James William B, switchman Union R. R. Co., bds 127 s. New Jersey. James W. T, res. 35 Fletcher av. JAMESON ALEX. C, eecy. Indianapolis Insurance Co., res. 287n. Delaware. Jameson Frank, porter, Palmer House. ESTABLISHED IN 1854. JOHN __.. HEIDLINGER, MANUFACTURER OF ^ W£ , & m Wholesale and Retail Deoler in all kinds of Tohaoeo, No. 39 WEST WASHINGTON STREET, Next Door Blast of Palmer Honse, INDIANAPOLIS, INDIANA. Special reference to card on back of title page. CITY [J] DIRECTORY. 105 Jameson & Funkhouser, (P. H. J. & D. F,) physicians and surgeons, 19 8. Meri dian. Jameson L. H, wood-measurer, res. 139 w. South. Jameson Patrick H, (J. & Funkhouser,) 19 s. Meridian, res. 249 n. Alabama. Jameson Richard, res. n. s. National rd, w. White river bridge. Janeway Arthur, miller, res. 312 w. Wash ington. Janeway John, pattern-maker, Moore & Frink, res. in rear of same. Jaritz Thomas, painter, bds. 23 Ken tucky av. Jarrell Miss Frances E, dress and cloak- maker, 36 n. Ills, bds. 148 Indiana av. Jasper Aldridge, (col,) lob, res. Second, bet. Howard and Lafayette R. R. Jaybert Fred, lab. res. 228 Union. Jeffers James T, soldier U. S. Arsenal, res. same. Jeffers William, lab, r. rear 74 s. West. JEFFERS WILLIAM A., propr. City Bath House and Barber Shop, 16 w. Pearl, res. same. Jefferson Benjamin, (col,) carpenter, res. w. Center. Jeffersonville, Madison & Indianapolis Freight Depot and Oflice, South, bet. Pennsylvania and Delaware. Jefferson Edmund, broom-maker, bds. 82 e. St. Clair. Jefferson House, s. w. cor. South and Penn sylvania, John H. Gruenert, propr. Jefferson Robert, corpenter, res. 247 n. Minerva. Jeffreys Miss Cordelia, seamstress, bds 299 e. Merrill. Jeffries Mrs. Mary, (wid. John,) res. Mad ison rd, near toll-gate. Jehrling John P, cleaner and repairer of clothes, 3 Virginia av, res. 125 e. Mc Carty. Jemison James, lab, res. 8 Hosbrook. Jemison John, harness and saddlery, 180 w. Washington, res. same. Jenken Samuel W, book-keeper, Lukens & Hollowell, res. 165 Huron. Jenkins A. W, res. 72 Massachusetts av. Jenkins Charles W, conductor on switch track Ind. Central R. R, res. 294 e. Market. Jenkins Dennis H, messenger American Express, res. 331 s. Meridian. Jenkins Ebenezer, painter, 9 Massachu setts av, res. 129 e. North. Jenkins H. E, painter, bds. 11 n. West. Jenkins James, blacksmith, bds. 169 s. Tennessee. Jenkins John, moulder, res. 294 e. Market. Jenkins John R., painter, works 9 Massa chusetts av, res. 129 e. North. Jenkins J. W, painter, bds. 127 e. North. Jenkins Mrs. Julia A, res. alley bet. Fourth and Fifth, near Lafayette R. R. Jenkins Nellie, servant, 233 E. Michigan. Jenkins Rebecca, servant, 254 s. Alabama. Jenkins Mrs. Sarah, (wid. Nathaniel,) res. 166 «. Market. Jenkins Thomas, (col,) res. 157 Maple. Jenkins William F, farmer, res. 612 n. Illinois. Jenkins William J, tobacconist, J. Cohill & Co, bds. Roy House. Jenison Alexander F, (J. A. F. & J. H,) 19 n. Illinois, res. 19 w. Ohio. JENISON A. P. & J. H., (Alexander F. & John H,) groceries ond provisions, 19 n. Illinois. Jenison George M, (George M. J. & Co.,) 24 e. Washington, res. 356 n. Illinois. JENISON GEORGE M. & CO., watches, jewelry, silver-ware and watch-makers' tools, 24 e. Washing ton. See card, back of title-page. Jenison John H, (Jenison A. F. & J. H,) 19 n. Illinois, res. 19 w. Ohio. Jenks C. J, brakesman, J., M. & I. R. R, bds. Ray House. Jenks George N, engineer, I. & C. R. R, res. n. s. e. Georgia. Jenks Susan E, occupant Deaf ond Dumb Asylum. Jennings Benjamin, works at J. Cohall & Co.'s. bds. Ray House. Jennings Benjamin F, works ot J. Cahall & Co.'s, bds. 23 s. Mississippi. Jennings Patrick, school-teacher, res. 248 Davidson. Jennings Presly, butcher, res. cor. Morri son and Delaware. Jennings William T, foreman, Munson & Johnson, res. 277 w. Michigan. Jessie Samuel, fireman, J, M. & I. R. R, bds. 146 e. McCarty. Jewish Synagogue, Market, near East. Jillson J. M, olerk, C, C, C. & I. R. R, bds. Pyle House. Jimber Henry, teamster, rea. 132 Bluff rd. Jines Henry, (col.,) 247 n. Meridian. Jines Williom, lob, res. 83 n. Missouri. Joachimi August, res. 26 Biddle. Joachimi Julius A, cigor-moker, res. 26 Biddle. Job Alzier, wogon-moker, res. 99 Huron. Joeke Adolph, teomster, res. cor. Cedar and Elm. Johns Charles, ogt. Soldiers' Relief Fund, res. 273 n. Mississippi. Johns Samuel, bds. 392 n. Alabama. Johns Samuel E, book-binder, Wm. Sheets, res. 181 n. Delaware. Johns N, inmate Deaf ond Dumb Asy lum. Johnson Aoron R, huckster in provi sions, rea. 127 Indiana av. Directories of any City furnished at Publishers' Prices, at this Office. 106 LOGAN'S [J] INDIANAPOLIS Johnson Adelaide, occupant Deaf and Dumb Asylum. Johnson Albert, clerk, bds. 167 w. Mary land. Johnson Albert, tobacconist, bds. Ray House, e. South. Johnson Alexander T, carpenter, res. 394 n. West. Johnson Andy, fireman, Sherman House, bds. same. Johnson Angeline, occupant Deaf and Dumb Asylum. Johnson Mrs. Ann, milliner and dress maker, reB. 251 s. Alabama. Johnson Miss Ann M, res. 57 cor. Noble and Huron. Johnson A. W, carpenter, res. 57 cor. No ble and Huron. Johnson Benjamin, lab, res. 279 s. Ten nessee. Johnson Benjamin, (col,) lab, res. cor. He ward and Second. Johnson Benjamin F, carpenter, res. 800 n. Tennessee. Johnson B. F, hack-driver, res. 331 n. Blake. Johnson Berry N, salesman, 112 s. Merid ian, bds. Sherman House. Johnson Miss Carrie, bds. 139 w. Market. Johnson Charles, (col,) porter, H. C. Chandler, bds. 144 n. Douglas. Johnson Charles R, fish-dealer, 341 s. Me ridian, res. 476 s. Illinois. Johnson Christ, lab, bds. 172 Madison av. Johnson Mrs. Cynthiano, res. 434 w. North. Johnson C. F., inmate Deaf and Dumb Asylum. Johnson Edmund C, res. 341 s. Meridian. Johnson Edward, lawyer, res. 474 n. Penn sylvania. Johnson Edward, (col,) lab, res. 100 Ind iana av. Johnson Miss Emily, ass't teacher City High School, bds. 138 Massachusetts Johnson Edward, (col.,) servant, 222 e. South. Johnson Edward, book-peddler, bds. Wiles House. Johnson Mrs. Elizabeth, (wid. John B.,j res. 167 w. Maryland. Johnson Elizabeth M, occupant Deaf and Dumb Asylum. Johnson Mrs. Ellen, (wid. T. B,) reB. 27 Massachusetts av. Johnson Emily Jane,, (col,) bds. 141 n. Bright. Johnson Gabriel, (col,) lab, res. cor. Sixth and Lafayette R. R. Johnson George H, clerk, 64 e. Washing ton, res. 370 s. Alabom'o. Johnson G. W, fireman, J, M. & I. R. R., bds. Ray House. Johnson Henrietta, (col, ) res. 224 Huron. Johnson Isaac I, notary public and law yer, 17_ w. Washingtrn, bds. Palmer House. Johnson James, (col.,) porter, C. M. Lunt's office, bds. Wiles House. Johnson James, carpenter, res. 394 n.West. JOHNSON JAMES, carpenter, bds. 69 w. Market. Johnson James A, carpenter, res. 476 s. Illinois . Johnson James W, teamster, bds. 154 .. New Jersey. Johnson Jennie MisB, dress-maker, 68 s. Illinois, res. same. JohnBon Jesse, with H. S. Prier, bds. 14 e. Washington. Johnson John, tailor, res. 311 Massachu setts av. Johnson John, (col,) barber, 303 e. Wash ington, res. some. Johnson John, (col,) porter, 14 Bates House, bds. Douglas alley. Johnson John E, gardener, Hill's nurser ies, Michigan rd, res. same. Johnson John S, carpenter, res. 309 s. Me ridian. Johnson John W, writing teacher, Purdy's College, res. 491 n. Mississippi. REYNOLDS & HOLLIDAY, Wholesale Dealers in IKin LAMP., BRONZED CHAiEH AND _A_1P TRIIIIIIIINGS GENERALLY, No. 13 SOUTH MERIDIAN STREET, INDIANAPOLIS, IND. AGENTS FOR REFINED COAL OIL. The largest stock of Cigars, you will find CITY [J] DIP.ECTORY. 107 Johnson J. B, bridge carpenter, Vinoennes R. R, bds. 103 s. New Jersey. Johnson J. F, tobacconist, bds. Ray House, e. South. Johnson Joseph, carpenter, bds. 183 s. Illi nois. Johnson Julio, (col,) servant, 564 n. Illi nois. Johnson Julius W, plasterer and brick layer, res. 95 Benton. Johnson Lewis, (col,) lab, ros. 224 n. Mis souri. Johnson Lizzie, (col.,) servant, 222 e. South. Johnson Miss Lou. J, bds. 341 s. Merid ian. Johnson Lucy, (col,) cook, Wiles House. Johnson Marquis L,(J. & Turner,) 7 Black ford's blk, s. e. cor. Washington and Meridian, res. 546 n. Illinois. Johnson Miss Martha G, bds. 127 Indiana av. JohnBon Mrs. Mary, (wid. John,) res. 313 Massachusetts av. Johnson Mrs. Mary A, (wid. Thomas,) res. 175 e. Louisiana. Johnson Mary A,(col,) (wid,)jres. Eighth, bet. Lenox and Knox. Johnson Mary F, (wid. T. H,) res. 23 e. North. Johnson Milo, carpenter, res. 98 Broad way. Johnson M. L, inmate Deaf and Dumb Asylum. Johnson Noah, (col,) lab, res. camp Car- rington. Johnson Miss Oregon, dress-maker, works 172 e. Washington, res. 39 w. Mc Carty. Johnson Peter W. H, (col,) lab, res. 7 Athon. Johnson Philip A, carpenter, works Eden's Shop, n. Delaware, res. 256 n. East. Johnson Quillis, tinner, cor. Maria and Smith. Johnson Isaac, (col,) waiter, Bates House. Johnson Rachel, (wid, col, ) res. 270 Mas sachusetts av. Johnson Riley, occupant Deaf and Dumb Asylum. Johnson Robert, clerk, M. U. Express Co., bds. 27 Massachusetts av. Johnson Robt. B, tabaconist, J. Cahall & Co., bds. 341 s. Meridian. Johnson Miss R, res. 57 cor. Noble and Huron. Johnson Samuel, (Munson & Johnson,) rea. 220 n. New Jersey. Johnson Samuel L, compositor, Sentinel news room, res. 142 n. Mississippi. Johnson Mrs. Sarah, (col,) wash-women, res. 149 n. Bright. Johnson Mrs. Sarah M, (wid. Jomes B.,) seamBtress, 135 n. Noble, res. some. Johnson Richard, res. 471 s. Illinois. Johnson Sidney H, contractor, res. _. w. cor. St. Joseph and New Jersey. Johnson Sophia, (col,) servant, 287 e. Mar ket. Johnson Miss Susan, school-teacher, bds. e. s. Liberty, bet. Meek and Georgia. Johnson Thomas C, (Hamlin & J,) 62J e. Washington, res. 81 e. Michigan. Johnson T. E, attorney ot law and notary public, Blackford's blk, s. e. cor. Washington and Meridion, res. 474 n. Pennsylvania. JOHNSON & TURNER, (Marquis L. J. & A. H.T,) gen'l agts. Continental Life Insurance Co., of New York, 7 Blackford's blk, over First National Bank, s. e. cor. Wash ington and Meridian. Johnson Warren, (col,) lab, res. rear 420 e. St. Clair. Johnson Wesley, moulder, works D. Root & Co., res. 318 a. Delaware. Johnson William, (col,) waiter, Wiles House. Johnson William, (col,) lab., res. 160 Douglas alley. Johnson William, farmer, res. 332 Blake. Johnson William, hack-driver, res. 236 n. Blake. Johnson William, farmer, res. 328 n. Blake. Johnson William F, carpenter, res. 374 n. Delawore. Johnson William G, clerk, 68 e. Washing ton, res. Orphan Asylum. Johnson William H, (col,) lab, res. 249 n. West. Johnson William H. H, real estate agt, res. 38 w. North. Johnson William S, tailor, over 30 w. Washington, res. 315 e. Ohio. Johnson William S, farmer, s. s. National rd, near Insane Asylum. Johnson W. Soott, bds. 328 n. Illinois. Johnson , moil carrier, bds. 774 n. Tennessee. Johnston Charles, bds. 21 Fletcher av. Johnston George H, res. 21 Fletcher av. Johnston George W, clerk, People's Dis patch Fast Freight Line, 42 and 44 e. Washington, bds. Pyle House. Johnston House, n. s. National rd, two miles w. river bridge. Johnston John C, bds. 320 n. Alabama. Johnston John F, surgeon dentist, 39_ s. Meridian, res. n. Pennsylvania, bet. First and Tinker. Johnston John H, lawyer, res. 320 n. Ala bama. Johnston Lewis, (col,) hostler, 10 e. Pearl, res. 224 n. Mississippi. Johnston Robert, clerk, supts. office M. U." Express Co., res. Massachusetts av. At Heidlinger's. See card, page 100. 108 LOGAN'S [J] INDIANAPOLIS Johnston R. G, clerk, pension office, bds. 38 w. St. Clair. Johnston Samuel A, (Munson _ J,) 62 e. Washington, res. 220 n. New Jersey. Johnston William J, (Munson & J,) 62 e. Washington, res. 86 e. Vermont. Johnston William W, (Murphy, J. & Co,) 49 s. Meridian, res. 546 n. Meridian. Jolley James, night-watohmon, I. C. _ L. R. R. Shop, res. 86 Bates. Jolly John, lab, res. 14 Lord. Jolly William, brakesman, I. & C. R. R, res. 24 Lord. Jones Alexander, (col,) farmer, res. 824 n. Illinois. Jones Aquilla, Sr, (A. J. & Co,) treas. Indianapolis Rolling Mill Co, res. 187 n. Pennsylvania. Jones Aquilla, Jr., (Vinnedge, J. & Co,) 66 s. Meridian, res. 187 n. Pennsyl vania. JONES A. & CO., (Aquilla J, H. Clay, E. P. J, John W. J. & H. Holloway,) wholesale gro cers, 74 and 76 b. Meridian. See card, page 30. Jones Barton D, (Anderson & J,) 19 n. Meridian, res. 188 n. Delaware. Jones Benjamin, (col.,) servant, 498 n. Illinois. Jones Benjamin F, clerk, 74 and 76 s. Me ridian, res. 187 n. Pennsylvania. Jones Casper M, Jr., clerk, 188 e. Wosh ington, bds. 2 s. Alabama. Jones Charles, (col,) lab, res. n. Minerva. Jones C. H, (col,) cook, Rockwell's Din ing Rooms. JONES & CHILD, (L. M. B. J. & M. C, Jr.,) agts. Win- nesheik Fire Insurance Co. Jones Curtis, salesman, res. 130 e. St. Jo seph. Jones Edward B, engineer, B. R..R. res. cor. Massachusetts av. and Second. Jones Edward M, (col,) teamster, res. 205 n. West. Jones Evan, expressman, res. 131 Union. Jones Elizabeth M, occupant Deaf and Dumb Asylum. Jones Elisha P, (A. J. & Co,) 74 ond 76 s. Meridian, res. 187 n. Pennsylvania. Jones Flemming J, broom-maker, res. cor. Illinois and Seventh. Jones Geo. W, farmer, res. 787 n. Illinois. Jones Griffin B, carpenter, res. 19 Short. JONES, HALL & BROWN, (John W. J, Nathan H. & C. W. B,) barbers and hair dressers, 16 s. Me ridian. Jones Henry H, (col,) barber, res. w. s. Douglas, bet. Washington and New York. , JONES HENRY G., photographer with B. L. Rider, 16} e. Washington, bds. 60 w. Market. See card. Jones Hester A, (wid. Wm,) res. 395 s. West. Jones Horace, telegraph-operator, T. H. & I. R. R. Freight Depot, res. 15T n. Ala bama. Jones Jesse, gen'l agency business, 17J w. Washington, res. 488 n. Illinois. Jones John, (col,) lab, bds. end Fletcher av, beyond city limits. Jones John, hostler, 16 n. Pennsylvania. Jones John G, machine agt, res. 119 Ind iana av. Jones John L, bds. 430 n. New Jersey. Jones John P., traveling agt, res. 157 u. Alabama. Jones John P., lab, res. end Virginia av, beyond city limits. Jones J. P., clerk, 13 w. Maryland, res. 235 e. South. Jones John S, carpenter, res. end Virgi nia av. Jones John W, (A. J. _ Co,) 74 and 76 s. Meridian, bds. 187 n. Pennsylvania. Jones John W, teamster, res. 412 s. West. Jones John W, ((col,) (J, Hall & Brown,) 16 s. Meridian, res. n. Mississippi. Jones John W, yard-master T. H & I. R. R. 132 w. First. CITY CIGAR STORE, No. II East Washington Street, Indianapolis, Ind. CHAS. M. RASCHIG, - PROPRIETOR, AND DEALER IN CIGARS, CHEWING AI SMOKING TOBACCOS, SMJFF, CIGAR CASES, Pipes, Tobaooo Boxes and Smokers' Artioleu of all kinds. THE TRADE SUPPLIED AT LOWEST PRICES PROMPTLY. George M. Jenison & Co. Card on back of title page. CITY [J] DIRECTORY. 109 Jones J. W, resides 51 Maple. Jones Joseph, barber, works 143 w. Wash ington, res. Bame, up-stairs. Jones Julius, (Gilky & J,) 36 Kentucky av, bds. 69 w. Market. Jones Lemuel, carpenter, res. 70 n. Dela ware. . Jones L. M. B, (J. & Childs,) 25 w. Wash ington, bds. Bates House. Jones Miss Lizzie A, bds. 131 Union. Jones L. W, salesman, 123 a. Meridian, bds. Sherman House. Jones Miss Maria H, teacher, branch of Eighth Ward school, res. 201 n. Lib erty. Jones Marshall, (col,) teamster, rea. 462 s. Tennessee. Jones Martha, (col,) servant 434 n. Dela ware. Jones Mary,' laundress, Bates House. Jones Mrs. Mary A, (wid. Cadwallader,) res. 188 s. Mississippi. Jones Robert, (col,) barber, res. 228 w. Vermont. Jones Robert, (col,) servant, 133 w. New York. Jones Robert A, stair-builder, 232 Wins ton, res. 299 Winston. Jones R. L, (col,) barber, 14 Bates House, bds. Missouri, bet. Vermont ond Michigan. Jenes Miss Sallie, Trade Palace, bds. 160 e. Market. Jones Samuel, carpenter, res. 655 n. Ten nessee. Jones Miss Sarah, clerk Trade Palace, bds. 67 n. Alabama. Jones Miss Sarah M, student, Ind. Female College, 146 n. Meridian, bds some. Jones Spicer, farmer, res. 136 n. Tennes see. Jones Stephen, tobacconist, bds. Ray House. Jones Stephen G, works ot 175 w. Cum berland, bds. Ray House. Jones Steward, express messenger, Mer chants' Union, bds. 144 E. New York. Jones Sullivan, well-digger, reB. 170 w. Georgia Jones T. 5, planer, bds. 35 Fletcher av. Jones Walter D, student, commercial col lege, bds. 44 s. Tennessee. Jones William A, soldier, U. S. Arsenal, bds. same. Jones William B, switch-tender, Union R. R. Co, bds. 123 s. New Jersey. Jones William H, (Coburn & J,) agt. In dianapolis Agricultural Works, Ten nessee, bet. Louisiana and South, res. 273 n. Ills. Jones Williom M, freight ogt. I. _ C. R. R, rea. 144 e. New York. Jones W. T, works ot Osgood & Smith's, res. 35 Fletcher ov. Jones William W, 3 Odd Fellows' Hall, res. 332 n. Alabama. Jordan Miss Anna M., clerk, Willard & Stowell, res. over 40 s. Illinois. Jordan Miss Ella, res. 2d floor 186 w. Washington. Jordan Lewis, (Perkins, J. & Perkins,) room 4 JEtna bldg, n. Pennsylvania, res. n. Meridian. Jordan Michael, tobacconist, bds. Ray House. Jordan P. G, delivery olerk, American and United States Express Cos.' 34 e Washington, res. 492 n. Mississippi. Jordan Thomas, grain dealer, bds. 31 w. Market. Jordan Thomas, bds. 213 s. 111. Jordan William (Stelzel, Jordan & Co.,) 33J w. Washington, res. 206 Ind. av. Jordan Mrs. Elizabeth, bds. 175 n. Tennes see. Jordan Gilmore, clerk, Second Auditor's Office, res. 186 n. Tennessee. Jordan John, groceries, w. Waahington, res. 172 n. Mississippi. Jordan John, (col,) bds 224 w. New York Jordan P. works on Junction R. R, bds- Wiles House. Jordan & Redmond, (John J. & Samuel R,) grocers, 158 w. Washington. Jordan , res. 649 n. Tennessee. Jorion N, carpenter, res. 317 Davidson. Jose N., furniture dealer, 8 a. Pennsylva nia, res. s. city limits. Joseph Richard C, war claim agt, office s. w. cor. Meridian and Washington, res. 29 n. California. Josey A, frame-maker, H. Daumont, res... city limits. Jottnngen George, blacksmith, res. 290 e. Louisiana. Jongeon Mrs. Mary, (wid. Leon,) seam stress, res. 214 Huron. Journal bldg, e. Market, cor. Circle. Jout Wm, machinist, bds. Martin House, 33 w. Maryland. Jowett Samuel, moulder, bds. 42 Henry. Jowett William, saw-grinder, bds. Martin House. Joyce Benjamin, lab, res. Howard, bet. First and Second. Joyce Elizabeth, servant, 189 e. Ohio. Judah Jno. M, dep'y clerk supreme court, bds. 88 w. Ohio. Judd Frederick, carder, res. 233 n. Blake. Judge James, lab, res. 47 Wyoming. Judson Andrew, brick-mason, bds. 201 Da vidson. Judson Chas, book-keeper, Judson & Dodd, res. 135 n. Illinois. Judson Henry, clerk, res. 146 w. New York. Judson Mrs. Rebecca, (wid.,) bds. 135 n. Illinois. Chewing and Smoking Tobaccos. See page 108. 110 LOGAN'S [_3_] INDIANAPOLIS Judson Williom, bds. cor. Meridion ond New York. Julow Mrs. Amelio, (wid. Henry,) res. 176 Union. Julow Henry, shoe-maker, res. 373 s. Illi nois. Julow Mrs. Wilhelmina, (wid. William,) res. 50 Lockerbie. Junken Samuel W, book-keeper, 26 and 28 b. Tennessee, res. 165 Huron. Justice J. F, blacksmith, bds. 2 Arch. Justice James M, soldier, U. S. Arsenal, res. some. Justice L. L, carpenter, rea. 123 s. New Jersey. Justice Sylvester, bds. 123 s. New Jersey. KAAGAN HUBERT, plasterer, res. 49 Bradshaw. Rab Miss Catharine, servant, 519 n. Meri dian. Kaegle Mrs. Hannah, (wid. Frederick,) res. 341 e. Ohio. Kofoder Joseph, stone-cutter, rea. 461 s. Illinois. Kafinan Louis, butcher, bds. 252 8. Dela ware. Kahler Frank, clerk, Smith & Goodhart, res. Noble, bet. Ohio and New York. Kahler James, shoemaker, res. bet. E and Wright, s. s. Coburn. Kahn Abraham, clothing, 33 w. Washing ton, res. 226 e. New York. Kahn Adolphus, clothier, 6 w. Washing ton, res. 184 Virginia av. Kahn Charles, meat market, 207 west Michigan, res. same. Kahn Edward, machinist, Eagle Machine Works, bds. 80 s. Mississippi. Kahn Isaac, merchant, rea. 139 u. Dela ware. Kahn Jacob, gentlemens' furnishing goods, res. 193 n. East. Kahn Jacob, clerk, bds, 69 w. Market. Kahn Leon, (S. K. & Bro,) 45 and 47 e. Washington, res. 164 n. East. Kahn Lyon, salesman, 133 s. Illinois, bds. 184 Virginia av. Kahn Samuel, (S. K. & Bro.,) 45 and 47 e. Washington, rea. 283 e. Market. Kahn S. & Bro, (Samuel & Leon K,) Ger man Dry Goods Store, 45 and 47 e. Washington. Kaiser Christ, butcher, bds. 285 e. Wash ington. Kaissar John, machinist, bds. 23 Ken tucky av. Kalb Frederick, grocery and saloon, 310 Winston, res. same. Kalb Henry, lab, res. 164 e. St. Joseph. Kalb John, tinner, res. 164 e. St. Joseph. Kale John, lab, bds. 376 e. Market. Kaleter Martin, butcher, res, 338 Madison ov. Koling Henrietta, (wid,) res. 167 e. St. Jo seph. Kalleen Jane, servant, J. S. Newman, 243 n. Pennsylvania. Kambell John, cooper, bds. 213 s. Illinois. Kamel James, (col,) lab, res. 48 Henry. Kamm Gotleib, saloon, 560 Virginia ov. res. some. Kane Dennis, blacksmith, res. 900 e. Geor gia. Kane Patrick, clerk, bds. 325 s. Delaware. Kannan Augustus, marble corver, res. 104 Hosbrook. Kautlin Mrs. Mary, bds. 23 Madison ov. KAPPES J. HENRY. (E. C. Atkins & Co, and Indianapolis Piano-Forte Manufacturing Co.,) 161 e. Washington, res. 132 e. North. Kares Joseph, carpenter, works Cincinnoti car-shop, res. 113 Davidson. Karitzer Frederick, lob, bds. 197 Harrison. Karitzer Henry, lab, bds. 197 Harrison. Karkfoff Charles, street sprinkler, res. 25 Coburn. Karle Christian. (K. & Co., & Schneider & Co,) 83 a. Washington, res. 82 s. Delaware. Karle Christian & Co., boots and shoes, 83 e. Woshington. JAMES R. BLAKE & CO. >J0N MEBGHANTi WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALERS IN FLOUB, CORN MEAL, BUCKWHEAT AND RYE FLOUR, CORN, OATS, HAY, OIL CAKE AND ALL KINDS OF FEED. IVo. IS SOUTH _>E____W__RE STREET, INDIANAPOLIS, INDIANA. See Condensed R. R. Routes in last part of Book. CITY [___] DIRECTORY. Ill Kaaano Theresa, servant, F. Goepper. Kasberg Joseph, book-binder, W. Sheets, res. 71 Hosbrook. Kasberg Peter, (Russel & K,) res. 71 Hos brook. Kasimer Seiter, cooper, res 183 Madison av. Kassabaum Frederick, lab, res. 592 e. St. Clair. Kastle Jacob, baker, res. 267 n. Noble. Kaufman Aaron, aalesman, 213 e. Wash ington, res. 389 n. Pennsylvanio. Kaufman Abby, inmate of Deaf and Dumb Asylum. Kaufman Adam, collar-maker, 76 J s. Dela ware, res. same. Kaufman B, clothier, 111 s. Illinois, rea. some. Kaufman Louie, (Barthol & K,) res. 267 n. East. Kaufman Morris, butcher, _. e. oor. West and Indiana av. res. same. KAUFMAN S., wholesale hats and caps, 116 s. Me ridian, res. n. Pennsylvania, outside city limits. Kaufman William, butcher, 194 s. Illinois, bds. same, Kay Joseph, wagon-maker, res. 211 Mis souri. Kay Robert, wagon-maker, Ft. Wayne av. res. 295 Indiana av. Kayman B, rea. 182 Virginia av. Keaf John, carpenter, I. & C. shops, res. 43 Harrison. Keafer Jacob' machinist, res. 230 s. Penn sylvania. Kearn John, res. on Georgia, bet. Delaware and Pennsylvania. Kearna Catharine, servant, Palmer House. Kearney John, gas fitting, Miller'a Block, rea. 307 s. Delaware. Keaser J. M, inmate of Deaf and Dumb Asylum. Keating Jeffrey, lab, res. 207 High. Keating Miss L. A, school-teacher, 250 Dougherty, res. same. Keay William, stone cutter, res. 378 n. East. Keay William F, olerk, U. S. Arssnal, bds. 378 n. East, near St. Clair. Keedey J. A, inmate Deaf and Dumb Asy lum. Keedey Susan, inmate Deaf and Dumb Asy lum. Keefe Daniel, porter, Sentinel establish ment, 16 j e. Washington. Keeffe Daniel 0, sergeant U. S. Arsenal, res. Arsenal grounds. Keeffe Patriok, soldier,. U. S. Arsenal, res. same. Keehn Miss Mary E, attending school, bds. 204 n. Illinois. Keel Henry, carpenter, bds. 330 Railroad. Keely Daniel, brick-mason, bds. 370 e. New York. Keely Miss Ellen, music teacher, 124 n. East, res. same. Keely F. M, carpenter, bds. 74 Lockerbie. Keely Henry S, brick-layer, res. 146 Win ston. Keely Isaac, brick-mason, res. 370 e. New York. Keely Jefferson, carpenter, bds. 74 Lock erbie. Keely John, brick-mason, res. 124 n. East. Keely Joseph, carpenter, shop Michigan, bet. Alabama and New Jersey, res. 74 Lockerbie. Keely Mrs. Lou, (wid. Alfred,) res. 2d floor 152 w. Washington. Keely Marion, carpenter, res. 74 Lockerbie. Keely Oliver, brick-mason, res. 301 e. Ohio. Keely Samuel, brick-mason, res. bet. Mich igan and National rd, beyond city lim its. Keely Miss Sarah E, teacher of music, bds. 146 n. Meridian. Keely William, brick-mason, res. 309 e. Ohio. Keemer James, (col,) servant, 175 e. Ohio. Keen George, bar-keeper, Empire Saloon, 23 n. Illinois. Keenan Benjamin, jewelry dealer, bds. Wiles House. Keenan John, teamster, res. 105 s. Noble. Keenan Margaret, (wid. Thomas,) res. 105 s. Noble. Keenan Philip, jewelry-dealer, bds. Wiles House. Keenan William, teamster, res. 105 b. No ble. Keepers S. W, fireman, J, M. & I. R. R, bds. Ray House. Keers Samuel, flour-packer, Geisendorff Mills, res. 25 n. Blake. Kees Hiram, engineer, I, C. & L. R. R, res. 165 Bates. Keesee Mrs. Mary E, (wid,) res. 300 n. Blake. Keesay Andrew H, painter, 19 s. East, res. 22 s. East. Keeling J. J, res. 90 a. Illinois. Kegel Mary, clerk, 24 n. Pennsylvania, res. w. Ohio, bet. Noble and Liberty. Kehler Louisa, (wid. Gotlieb,) res. 156 e. St. Joseph. Kehling William, butcher, 137 s. Illinois, bds. same. Keiser Charles, cigar-maker, rea. 182 s. Delaware. Keiser George L, grocer, 225 w. Washing ton, res. same. Keistner Henry, shoe-maker, works 127 w. Washington, res. Tennessee, bet. South and Maryland. Kellerher William carpenter, rea. Mi nerva, bet. New York and Vermont. Keith James, res. w. White river bridge. Keith Julia, servont, 95 n. New Jersey. A Directory of all Lawyers in the U. S. can be bought at Logan's Directory Office. 112 LOGAN'S [K] INDIANAPOLIS Karle John, shoe-maker, res. 160 bluff rd. Karle Joseph J, shoe-maker, res. 59 e. South. Keith Samuel, (col,) lob, res. end Laird. Keightley John A, clerk, Dailey & Co, res. 176 n. East. Keleman Jeremiah E, lab, res. 267 w. Washington. Kell George, painter, bds. 52 s. Pennsyl vania. Keller Daniel, stone-cutter, res. 466 s. East. Keller Frederick, (Daily Telegraph Co,) res. 129 w. Maryland. Keller Susan, servant, 32 n. East. Keller Williom, lob. Rolling Mill, res. 230 s. New Jersey. Keller Z. P, engineer, res. 159 Meek. Kellersher David, res. Minerva, bet. New York and Vermont. Kellerher Miss Ellen, seamstress, res. Mi nerva, bet. New York and Vermont. Kellerher John, carpenter, res. Minerva, bet. New York and Vermont. Kellerher William, carpenter, res. Miner va, bet. New York and Vermont. Kellermeier Louisa, servant, 186 n. New Jersey. Kelley Albert, brakesman, C, C. & I. C. R. R, bds. 33 Meek. Kelley Andrew, compositor, book and job room, Sentinel Oflice, bda. 24 Bucha nan. Kelly Benjamin G, (Gates, Pray & Co,) gen'l agt, Buffalo Scale Works Co, bds. 91 n. Delaware. Kelley Cornelius, carriage-painter, works S. W. Drew & Co, res. 206 e. Ohio. Kelley Corneliua, lab, rea. 240 b. Missouri. Kelley Elisho, (col,) lob, res. 598 n. Mis sissippi. Kelley Mrs. Eliza, (wid. Ambrose,) res. 181 b. New Jersey. Kelley Hugh J, carriage-painter, works S. W. Drew _ Co, res. 216 e. Washing ton. Kelley John B, (Moran & K,) 12 s. Penn sylvania, res. 315 Virginia av. Kelley John, lab, res. 430 s. Illinois. Kelley Mary, (wid. Henry,) w. Maryland, bet. California and Helen. Kelley Mrs, (wid. Patrick,) res. 24 Bucha nan. Kelley Patrick, lab, res. 280 s. Tennes see. Kelley Robert, lab, res. 153 w. South. Kelley Thomas, porter, Commercial Hotel. Kelley Thomas, fireman, B. R. R, bds. 270 Railroad. Kelley Timothy, clerk, res. w. Marylond, bet. California and Helen. Kelley William, lab, rea. 430 s. Illinois. Kellogg Newton, edge tool manfr, 411 w. Washington, res. 47 n. West. Kelly Bernando, soldier, U. S. Arsenal, res. same. Kelly Daniel, fireman, B. R. R, bds. 272 Winston. Kelly James, peddler, res. 128 Bluff rd. Kelley Kate, dining-room girl, Sherman House, bds. same. Kelly Lauri, (col,) servant, 36 New Jer sey. Kelly R. H, coal-dealer, office 33 8. Merid ian, res. 483 n. Meridian. Kelly William, res. 225 Eddy. Kelly Wm. J, inmate Deaf and Dumb Asylum. Keiser Peter, bds. cor. Sixth ond Michigan rd. Kelsey S. R, student, commercial college, bds. 1152 s. New Jersey. Kemker Charles, (J. C. Brinkmeyer & Co.,) 80 s. Meridian, res. 190 n. East. Kemp Alice M, (col,) servant, 32 s. Illi nois. Kemp Armsterd, (col,) lab, res. 237 Michi gan. Kemp Grace, (col,) servant, 232 n. Illi nois. Kemp Jasper, lab, res. 245 Bluff rd. Kempf Robert, harness-maker, 109 e. Washington, bds. 60 s. Delaware. Kemper Lorenz D, carpenter, res. 192 s. New Jersey. WILLIAM SELKING, SALOON, RESTAURANT AND BEER HALL, No. 33 NORTH PENNSYLVANIA ST. One door South of Post-Office, INDIAN APOLIS, INDIANA. A place where the business man, mechanic and laborer, can assemble and enjoy an invigorating smile, a quiet smoke and talk, or a substantial lunch. For a complete Church Directory, see Municipal Record. CITY [El] DIRECTORY. 113 Kemper John M, carpenter, shop, South, bet. Alabama and New Jersey, res. 192 s. New Jersey. Kemper Wm. H, (Yandes & K,) res. 45 Madison av. Kemton Eliza, (wid. Thomas,) res. Natio nal rd, near Insane Asylum. Kenady John M, teamster, res. 340 Indi ana av. Kend John, cigar-maker, bds. 252 e. Wash ington. Kendall John, printer, res. 281 w. Merrill. Kendrick Robert, artist, res. 73 n. East. Kendrick William H, physician and sur geon, 73 n. East, res. some. KENEASTER, N. D., propr. Bates House, n. w. cor. Wash ington and Illinois, res. same. See card, advertising dept, page 5. Kennedy Byram & Co, (R. Frank _., Nor man S. B. & Edward G. Cornelius,) jobbers in dry goods and notions, 108 s. Meridian. Kennedy James, nurseryman, cor. Dela ware and Market, res. beyond city lim its. Kennedy James, lab, res. 43 Benton. Kennedy John, lob, res. 373 e. New Yerk. Kennedy Patrick, works Rolling Mill, res. 157 s. Alabama. Kennedy R. Frank, (K, Byram & Co,) 108 s. Meridianj res. 247 n. Meridian. Kennedy Thomas, res. 179 e. South. Kenney Mrs. Catharine, (wid. Nicholas,) res. 144 Steven. Kenney Thomas, tailor, 25£ w. Washing ton, rea. 58 s. West. Kennington John, lab. Gas Works, res. 286 s. Alabama. Kenington Moses, blacksmith, res. cor. Georgia and West. Kennington Robert, saloon and bowling alley, 178 a. Delaware, res. 325 s. Pennsylvania. Kenroy James, carriage-pointer, bds 269 n. West. Kensel George, porter, 43 s. Delaware. Kenseler Patrick, railroad section-boss, res. Howard, bet. First and Second. Kentmnn M, res. 236 Massachusetts av. Kenton John, blacksmith, res. 26 Center. Kenton James, blacksmith, res. 41 Ellen. Kenyon John H, dairyman, res, Shelby- villc pike, J mile a. corporation. Kepner M. J, inmate Deaf and Dumb Asy lum. Kepple Henry, lab, res. 272 s. Illinois. Kepple Joshua, lab, res. 270 a. Tennesaee. Kepple Martin, eating house, 36 w. Louisi ana, opp. Union Depot, rea. same. Ker John, (col,) gardener, res. bet. Cedor and Elm. Kercheval W. J, book-keeper, 64 e. Wash ington, res. 75 e. Pratt. Kerfoot Mrs. L. B, res. 378 n. New Jersey. Kerfoot Richard, salesman, 32 w. Wash ington, res. 78 n. New Jersey. Kerkhoff Fred, checkman, Madison Depot, res. 271 Union. Kerlin Frederick, chair-maker, res. 145 Bluff rd. Kerlin James M, dry goods, 186 w. Wash ington, res. 526 n. Illinois. Kern Casper, cabinet-maker, works at Spiegel, Thorns & Co.'s, res. 392 e. Michigan. Kern Charles, soda-water-maker, works n. e. cor. Railroad and Michigan, bds. 392 e. Michigan. Kern Jacob, (L. & J. K,) 26 Fort Wayne ov, res. 288 e. Michigan, Kern Louis, (L. & J. K,) 26 Fort Wayne av, bds. Winston, bet. Michigan and North. Kern L. & J, (Louis & Jacob K,) soda-wa ter manfs, 26 Fort Wayne av. Kern Mary, dining-room girl, 30_ n. Penn sylvania. Kerper Cbarles, boarding-houae, 73 w. Ma ryland. Kersey John, (col,) barber, 50 e. Waah- ington, res. West, bet. Michigan and Vermont. Kersey Mrs. Martha T, matron Orphan Asylum, res. Orphan Asylum, 711 u. Tennessee, cor. Fifth. Kersey Oliver, carpenter, res. 240 Union. Kersey Miss Priscilla, milliner, works 44 s. Illinois, bda. 157 Davidson. Keraey Shubal C, carpenter, res. 711 n. Tennessee. Kessner Fred, clerk, res. 311 s. Pennsyl vania. Ketcham John L, (K. & Mitchell and In diana Banking Co,) over 21 e. Wash ington, res. 164 Merrill. KETCHAM & MITCHELL, (John L. K. & James L. M,) attorneys at law, over 21 e. Washington. Ketcham William A, low student, Kotch- om & Mitchell, bds. 165 e. Merrill. Kettenbach Edward, (K. & Newmeyer,) bds. 279 Massachusetts av. Ketfenbach Henry, retired grocer, res. 279 Massachusetts av. Kettenbach &- Newmeyer, groceries, flour and feed, 273 and 277 Massachu setts av. Kettenbach William F, clerk, Kettenbach & Newmeyer, 277 Massachusetts av, bds. 279 Massachusetts ov. ¦¦ Ketzel Charles, works at J. Cahall & Co.'s, bds. Roy House. Ketzel Christian, works at J. Cahall & Co.'s, bds. Ray Houae. Keyser George, plumber, 82 w. Washing ton, res. w. Vermont, bet. Blackford and Bright. (8) See the most Substantial Business Houses, in Advertising Department. 114 LOGAN'S [K] INDIANAPOLIS Keveney John, soldier U. S. Arsenal, res. same. Kevers John H, groceries and provisions, 525 n. Mississippi, res. same. Key Thomas H, soldier U. S. Arsenal, res. same. Keyser Jno. N, carpenter, res. 869 w. Ver mont. Kiefer Augustus, (K. & Vinton,) 68 s. Me ridian, residence 483 n. Illinois. Kiefer Jacob, bds. 483 _. Illinois. Kiefer L. A, (K. & Son,) 2 Odd Fellows' Hall, bds. 463 n. Delawore. Kiefer Miss Phoebe, bds. 483 n. Illinois. Kiefer & Son, watch-makers and jewelers, 2 Odd Fellowe's Hall. KIEFER & VINTON, (Augustus K. & A. E. V,) wholesale druggists, 68 a. Meridian. Kiesel John, baker, works cor. New York & Delaware, bds Bame. Kightly John A, salesman, 39 s. Meridian, bds. 176 n. East. Kiker John C, carpenter, rea. rear 285 n. Noble. Kiley Daniel, engineer, res. 115 Davidson. Kiley John, engineer, res. 115 Davidson. KILGORE & HELMS, (J. D. K. & Lewis A. H,) dentists, Miller's blk, over 70 n. Illinois. Kilgore J. D, (K. & Helms,) Miller's blk, n. Illinois, res. 204 n. Illinois. Kilgore J. W, carpenter, res. 34 Thomas. Kilkeney Jacob, salesman, res. 124 e. St. Joseph. Killinger John G, cabinet-maker, 326 e. Market, res. 328 e. Morket. Killorme Thomas, drayman, J. H. Ross, res. 359 w. Washington. KIMBALL EBEN W., attorney at law, notary public, and U. S. commissioner, 46 e. Washington, res. 382 n. Meridian. KIMBALL NATHAN, Treasurer of State, office new State bldg, cor. Tennnessee and Washing ton, res. 475 n. Illinois. Kimball James N, deputy Treasurer of State, office cor. Tennessee and Wash ington, res. 475 n. Illinois. Kimble Thomas V, (Roll, K. & Aikman,) 123 s. Meridian, res. 275 Indiana av. Kindal Joseph, foreman, 24 e. Georgia, res. 19 Madison av. Kinder Mrs. Mario W, (wid. Isaac,) res. 27 Lockerbie. Kindler Chas, locksmith and bell-hanger, 60 n. Pennrylvonio, res. 225 s. West. Kinester Henry, cigor-moker, res. 167 Ma ple. Kiney Isaiah, blacksmith, bds. 424 Vir ginia av. , Kiney Robert, freight conductor I, C. & L. R. R, bds. 58 Benton. Kiney Thomas, tailor, res. 58 s West. Kiney Walter, lab, res. 486 e. Georgia. Kiney William, tinner, bds. 20 s. Pennsyl vania. King & Co., (Jacob K. & James Hamilton,) founders and machinists, 97 s. Missis sippi. King Cornelius, lumber dealer, cor. St. Clair and Peru R. R, res. n. city lim its. King David, ice dealer, res. 261 n. Missis sippi. KING EDWARD, vice-prest. and asst. treas. C , C. C. & Indianapolis R. R. Co, office 53 s. Ala bama, res. on national rd., 2 miles e. city. King George, operator, B. R. R, bds. 109 Virginia av. King George, butcher, res. 392 s. Tennes see. King Geo, carpenter, res. 272 c. St. Clair. King G. E, clerk Bellefontaine R.R. oflice, bds. 109 Virginia av. King Honora, servant, Palmer Pouac. King I. S, physician, oflice and res. 25 s. West. King Jacob, (K. & Co,) res. 217 w. South. King James H, salesman, 38 e. Washington, res. 113 Indiana av. DAVID BUSSELL. PETER KASBEBG. RUSSELL & KASBERG, FOTJ1TDERS, Corner of Market and Benton Streets, EAST OF BATES' CITY HULLS, INDIANAPOLIS, INDIANA. Castings of all kinds made to order, on the shortest notice. Also, keep on hand Sash Weights to sup ply builders, at cash prices Hair work, all kinds, at Medinas, 50 South Illinois Street. CITY [It] DIRECTORY. 115 King James M, (J. W. Blake & Co..) over 45 e. Washington, res. 248 a. Meridian. King James W, bailiff, res. 248 s. Meridian. King Jerome H, brakesman, Indiana Cen tral, bds. Commercial Hotel. King John, lab, res. 374 a. West. King John G, carpenter, res. 374 s. West. King John W, wool dealer, res. 69 n. Ala bama. King Mrs. Kate, (wife John H ,) seamstress, shop and res. 51 Peru. King Mrs. Lizzie, (wid. George,) res. 424 Virginia av. King Margaret, kitchen girl, Botes House. King Miss Martha J, bds. 294 _.. Tennes see. King Matthias, stone-cutter, res. 156 Ste vens. King Miss Mary, clerk, 4 w. Washington, res. 113 Indiana av. King Peter, moulder, Root's, res. 385 s. Del aware. King Robert, soldier, U. S. Arsenal, res. same. King Mrs. Sarah, bds. 261 n. Mississippi. King William, turner, bds. 20 s. Pennsyl vania. Kingan Thomas D, (Nofainger, K. & Co,) bds. Bates House. Kingham Joseph, broom-maker, 253 Mas sachusetts av. Kingleman William, 35 w. Washington, rea. 134 w. Waahington. Kingman Frank N, insurance agt, bds. 510 n. Delaware. Kingman Nelson book-keeper, 66 e. Wash ington, res. 510 n. Delaware. Kingsbury F. H, gen. traveling agt. Star Union Line, 85 Virginia av, bds. 97 w. Maryland. Kingsbury John E, clock-maker, 237 Mas sachusetts av, res. same. KINGSLEY R. S., groceries and produce, 200 a. Illinois, cor. South, bds. 198 8. Illinois. Kingston Samuel, painter, res. 231 s. Mis sissippi. Kinitzer Henry, cigar-maker, rea. 191 Ma ple. Kinley Samuel J, carpenter, res. 392 s. Missouri. Kinney Cornelius, work Cincinnati Freight Depot, res. 270 w. St. Clair. Kinney Joanna, servant, 78 e. Ohio. Kinsell George, lab, res. 233 w. McCarty. Kintz Adam, hostler, 23 s. Delaware, res. 483 s. New Jersey. Kipp Albert, elk, 29 w. Washington, bds. 29 Massachusetts av. Kirby James H, plasterer, res. 297 n. Mis sissippi. Kirby Mrs. Sarah, (wid. John H,) res. 808 e. Ohio Kirk N., res. 75 n. Pennsylvania. Kirby & Stevens, house and sign painters, 38 Kentucky av. Kirby Mrs. Susan, (wid. Zachariah,) seam stress, res. 153 Huron. Kirby William L, salesman, 131 s. Me ridian, bds. Sherman House. Kirk Daniel A, turner, Spiegle, Thorns & Co., res. 131 Meek. Kirk Mrs. E, milliner, 75 n: Pennsylvania, res. same. Kirk wood Adam, fireman, C, C. & I. C. R. R, bds. 149 s. New Jersey. Kirkwood John, bds. 28 Lord. Kirlin Miss Anno, res. 526 n. Illinois. Kirlin Jomea, dry goods, 186 w. Washing ton res. 526 n. Illinois. Kirlin John, lab, res. Stevens bet. Green and Virginia av. Kirly James, painter, 36 Kentucky av., res. 404 s. Missouri. Kisch John, sawyer, res. 104 Bluff Road. Kise John W, teamster, res. 94 Dunlap. Kise L. S, teamster, res. n. Smith. Kiser Catharine, (wid.) res. 68 Massachu setts av. Kiser Charles, meat-market, Fourth bet. Tennessee and Mississippi, res. same. Kishner Frederick, salesman, 125 s. Me ridian, res. 311 s. Pennsylvania. KISSELL FREDERICK, saloon, 98 Russel, rea. same. Kissell Jacob W, res. 22 s. West. Kistner Adam, propr. California House, 184 s. Illinois, res. same. Kistner John G, dealer in boots and shoes, S3 s. Illinois, res. 336 s. Meridian. Kitchel Moses, boarding house, 18 w. Geor gia, res. same. Kitchen John M, physician and surgeon, Vinton's blk. opp. P. O, res. 147 n. Pennsylvania. Kitler John H, varnisher, res. 22 Botes. Kitley Miss Lucy A , student, N. W. Chris tian University, bds. 297 Winston. Kittle Josiah H, carpenter, res. 172 Bu chanan. Kitsmiller William, engineer, 29 s. Illinois, rea. 244 w. Washington. Kizer Adam, shoe-maker, res. 127 e. St. Ma ry's. Kizer Herman, upholsterer, 38 e. Wosh ington. bds. Union Hall. Kloir Fred, saloon-keeper, res. 177 Union. Klanke Mrs. Margaret, (wid. John A,) bds. 266 n. East. Klein John George, (K. & Vandergotten,) 37 s. Illinois, res. 281 n. Liberty. Klein Mrs. Veronica, (wid. Michael,) res. 63 n. Noble. Klemm Louis, teacher, German English School, bds. 67 u. Tennessee. Kline Frederick, bar-tender, 397 cor. Me ridian and McCarty, reB. aame. Kline Henry, lab, res. e. Georgia. Special reference to card on back of title page. 116 LOGAN'S [_B_] INDIANAPOLIS Kline Jane, occupant Deaf and Dumb Asy lum. Kline Joseph, inmate Deaf rnd Dumb Asy lum. Kline Joseph, clerk, 67 e. Washington, res. 297 s. New Jersey. Kline J. George, barber, 37 s. Illinois, reB. 321 n. Liberty. Kline Madison, clerk, C. A. Furgason, bds. Pyle House. Kline Nicholas, shoe shop, 283 Massachu setts av, res. 351 Spring. Kline Solomon, carpenter, res. 389 n. West. Kline W. H, clerk, 3 Odd Fellow's Hall, res. 361 n. Spring. Klincshmit Christian, atreet -aprinkler, res. 284 e. Market. Klingensmith Frederick, lab, bds. 275 Da vidson. Klingensmith Israel, (Burns & K,) 115 e. Washington, bds. 478 n. Tennessee. Klingensmith Jacob, commercial broker, res. 478 n. Tenneaaee. Klumpp David F, brewer, 297 w. Wash ington, res. 202 w. Maryland. Klusmann Louis, salesman, 8 w. Washing ton, rea. 123 St. Mary. Knapp Miss Ann, music-teocher, bds. 483 n. Misaissippi. Knapp Gardner, book-keeper, Evening Commercial, cor. Circle and Meridian, rea. 483 n. Mississippi. Knouf Adam D, baker, 257 Massachu setts av, res. aame. Knaur George, gardener, rea. and garden, 8. s. National rd, near Insane Asy lum. Knarzer George, (Geis & K,) 62 s. Dela ware, bds. same. Knaur John, lab, bds. National rd, near Insane Asylum. Knaur William, lab, bds. s. 8. National rd, near Insane Asylum. Knefler Chorles, book-keeper, 64 s. Meri dian, bds. 18 Circle. Knefler Fred, (Hanna & K,) 20J n. Dela ware, res. 466 n. Pennsylvania. Kneip John, carpenter, rea. 294 n. Liberty. Knertzer Frank, blackamiih, res. 838 e. Ohio. Knierim Henry, painter, bds. 272 Wins ton. Knight E, boarding-house, 124 s. Merid ian. Knight Jasper N, painter, res. s. w. cor. Fourth and Tennessee. Knight John, (Cottrell & K,) 108 s. Dela ware, res. 304 n. Delaware. Knight William, moulder, bda. Ill w. South. Knighton Charles J, planing mill, cor. Market and Winston, res. 781 n. Illi nois. Knipe William, porter, New York Store, bds. n. Tennessee. KNIPPENBERG HENRY, (E. C. Aikins _ Co,) Sheffield Saw Works, 210, 212, 214 and 216 a. Illi nois, rea. 165 Massachusetts av. See card on outside. Knippenberg J, book-keeper, 159 and 161 e. Washington, res. 132 e. North. Knodle A, boots and shoes, 32 e. Washing ton, res. 8 Indiana av. Knodle Dora, (wid,) res. 154 e. St. Joseph. Knodle George, salesman, 32 e. Washing ton, res. 80 w. Ohio. Knoss William, Miller, rea. 297 e. New York. Knotta N. K, painter, 27 s. Illinois, res. 289 w. Michigan. Knox Clinton, train-boy, J, M. & I. R. R, bds. Sherman House. Knox Francis A, (col,) barber-shop, under Bee-Hive Store, res. Howard, bet. Sec ond and Third. Knox John W, soldier, U. S. Arsenal, res. same. Knox R. E, works 10 w. Washington, bds. Mra. Morrison's, n. Pennsylvanio. Koahler William, coffee-house, e. Morket, res. 106 Davidson. Koch George, shoe-maker, works 267 Mas sachusetts av, bds. 350 n. Noble. J. EGGER. EGGER & MUECKE, WM. MUECKE. Graining, Glazing and Varnishing, executed in good style on short notice. SHOP, 152 E. WASHINGTON STREET, North-East Cor. Alabama and Washington Sts, INDIANAPOLIS, INDIANA, Where can I buy a fine Cigar? CITY [K] DIRECTORY. 117 Koch H. H, grocer, 196 cor. Noble and South, res. same. Kochler August, piano sounding board- maker, 159 and 161 e. Washington, bds. Jaeger-Halle. Koehler John, (K. & Lodz,) res. 244 n. No ble. Koehler & Lodz, grocery and saloon, 247 n. Noble. Koehne Benjamin, bar-tender, Palmer House, bds. same. Koehne Charles, (H. Lieber & Co,) 21 n. Pennsylvania, res. 467 n. Delaware, bet. Pratt and St. Joseph. Koehnen Mary, servant, 342 n. Illinois. Koehring Bernhard, cooper, 287 n. Liber ty, res. same. Koehring Charles, lab, res. 93 Elm. Koerner Michael, lab, res. over 178 e. Washington. Koester J. M, worka Hill's nursery, bds. 518 e. Washington. Koestner D, lab, res. 225 Bluff rd. Koestner T, lab, res. 265 Union. Kofoaan Mrs. Caroline, (wid. Samuel,) res 261 e. Market. Kogemeier John, lab, res. 116 Winaton. Kohl Peter, porter, Hume, Adams & Co., bds. California House. Kohn Joseph, clothier, 80 w. Washington, res. same. Kolasheck George, lab, res. 22 Wyoming. Kolb Henry, tinner, bds. 164 e. St. Joseph. Kolb John, tinner, bds. 164 e. St. Joseph. Kolb Louis, job turner, e. South, bet. Penn sylvania and Meridian, res. 17 e. South. Kolb Philip, lob, res. 127 e. St. Mary. Kolb William, boarding-house, 23 and 25 Kentucky av. Kolb William, clerk, 10 w. Louisiana, bds. 138 s. Meridian. Roller E. H, grocer, 206 e. Washington, res. Arsenal, near Insane Asylum. Kolthoff Margaret, servant, 82 w. Ver mont. Kolthoff Mary, servant, 82 w. Vermont. Kolthoff Sophia, servant, 324 n. Meridian. Konkle Bernard, clerk, cigar-store, res. 253 Union. Konontz Herman, asst. cook, Bates House, res. same. Konsela Mrs. Maria, groceries and saloon, cor. Seventh and Michigan rd, res. same. Koontz George W, clerk, Post Office, res. 30 n. East. Koontz J. A, student, commercial college, bds. 726 n. Tennessee. Kom Martin, tanner, works 47 and 49 s. Delaware, res. 247 Davidson. Korner Christ, tailor, res. 228 s. Dela ware. Kraft Miss Mory, res. 207 w. Michigan. Kortepeter William, tailor, works over 182 e. Washington, res. 430 s. East. Kortpeter Henry, car-inspector, T. H. & I. R. R, res. 162 Buchanan. Koss Charle8, porter, Kennedy, Byram & Co., res. 121 n. Spring. Koster Charles, (K. & Moos,) 141 e. Wash ington, res. 181 Bloke. Koster & Moos, cigor-monfrs. and deolers, 141 e. Washington. Kothe William, grocer, 130 Davidson, res. Kotteman William, finisher, 38 e. Wosh ington, res. 327 e. Michigan. Kough Michael, works Street R. R. Co., res. 385 e. Ohio. Kowan William, street-contractor, res. 169 n. East. Krag August, traveling agent, bds. 22 w. North. Kramer Andrew, shoe-maker, works 175 e. Washington, res. 199 n. Liberty. KRAMER HENRY, butcher, 80 Fort Wayne av, res. same. Kramer William, bds. n. e. cor. West and Indiana av. Krasky Theodore, works glue factory, res. cor. Eighth and Lafayette R. R. Krau.e Henry, cooper, res. Bluff rd, near McCarty. Krauss Christian, works Cabinet Makers' Union, res. c. end New York. Krauss George, clerk, Gall & Rush, res. 140 n. East. Krauss Jacob, rea. 140 n. East. Krauss John, clerk, Gall & Rush, res. 140 n. East. Krauth Elmer, salesman, 14 w. Washing ton, res. 27 w. First. Krauth Ernest, salesman, 14 w. Washing ton, res. 27 w. First. . Kreamer Gotleib, soldier, U. S. Arsenal, res. same. Kregar William, carpenter, res. 92 s. Rus- sel. Kregelo Charles E, groceries, bds. 228 n. West. Kregelo David, res. 228 n. West. Kregelo Jacob, carpenter, res, 82 e. St. Clair. Kreger Christ, groceries, res. 343 e. Mc Carty. Kreger Henry, currier, Mooney & Co., res. 331 e. Georgia. Kreger William, currier, Mooney & Co., res. e. Ohio bet. New Jersey and East. Kregers Frederick, lab, res. 175 Union. Kreider R. G, clerk, shoe-store Glenns' Block, reB. 218 e. South. Kretsch Peter, manfr. and dealer in tobac co and cigars, 141 s. Illinois, res. 325 8. Meridian. Kreutzer John, tailor, res, n. w. cor. Fourth and Tennessee. Go to Heidlinger. Card on page 104. 118 LOGAN'S [IE] INDIANAPOLIS Kreis J. R, beer-garden, s. city limits. Krieger Henry, belt-maker, res. 331 e. Georgia. Kriger Frederick, tailor, 335 Virginia ov, res. 483 s. New Jersey. Kring Caleb, carpenter, res. 376 s. West. Kring John L, carpenter and stair builder, Byrkit & Son, cor. Tennessee and Geor gia, res. 374 s. West. Krist Delmain, lab, res. 296 n. Noble. Kristner Henry, glove-maker, 127 w. Wash ington, res. Tennessee, bet. South and Maryland. Kroff George, clerk, 104 s. Illinois, res. 176 _. Illinois. Krome Augustus, teacher, German Lu theran school, reB. 280 e. Georgia. Krome Christ, res. 280 e. Georgia. K rouse Jacob, lab, 325 e. Merrill. Kruder R. G, salesman, D. D. Chore, Glenn s' blk, res. 218 e. South. Krug Gotlieb C, grocer, 24 e. Georgia, res. 67 s. Noble. Kruger Christian, (W. H. & C. K,) 401 Virginia av, res. 343 e. McCarty. Kruger Henry, tailor, 191 n. Noble, res. same. Kruger Joseph, cistern builder, res. 267 e. Market.. Kruger Joseph, jr., gas fitter, works Coulter & White's, bds. 267 e. Market. Krugg Eliza, servant, 199 n. Pennsylvania. Krumm Jacob, tailor, Philadelphia Dye- House, bds. 50 n. Illinois. Kruse Christian, carpenter, res. 15 e. Mc. Carty. Kruse Henry, stone-mason, res. 84 s. Lib erty. Kruse John, lab, rea. 199 e. Washington, 2d floor. Krussy Henry, cooper, res. 116 bluff rd. Kudfeter William, tailor, res. 430 s. East. Kuder Herman, salesman, 2 Botes House blk, bds. Mr. Morse, circle. Kuehn Ernst, tailor, rea. 503 n. Illinois. Kuerst Henry, carpenter, res. 182 Madison av. Kuerst August, lab, res. 184 Madison ov. Kuhlenberg Bernard, butcher, bds. 170 s. Illinois. Kuhlman Charles, piano-maker, works Robinson & Co, res. 118 n. Noble. Kuhlman Mrs. Christinia, res. 105 Bluff rd. Kuhlman E. H. L, farmer, res. Shelbyville pike, _ mile s. corporation. Kuhn August, salesman, 131 s. Meridian, bds. Mozart Hall. Kuhn Philip, grocery-dealer, 160 Ft. Wayne av, res. same. Kuhn William, propr, Indiana Bakery, 150 n. East, cor. New York, res. same. Kugelman Henry, cooper, res. near Geisen dorff 's Woolen Factory. Kugelman William, (G. F. Meyer & Co,) 35 w. Washington, rea. 134 w. Mary land. Kull Frederick, carpenter, res. 64 Railroad. Kung M. A, miller, 9 s. Alabama, res. same. Kunkel Charles, lab, res. 434 Virginia av. Kunkel George, currier, 125 s. Meridian, res. on Bluff rd. Kunkel Henry, carpenter, bds. 434 Vir ginia av. Kunkel Jacob, currier, 125 8. Meridian, res. 451 s. Illinois. Kunkel John, lab, res. 451 s. Illinois. Kunkel John, lob, bds. 391 w. Washington. Kunkel J, cigar-maker, G. F. Meyer & Co., res. Concordia House. Kunrey Helen, milliner, 9 a. Alabama, res. same. Kuntz Jacob, carpenter, res. 25 Lord. Kuntz Herman, student, City Academy, bds. 9 s. Alabama. Kunz Nicholas H, student, City Academy, bds. 9 s. Alabama. Kuplman Charles, piano sounding-board- maker, 159 and 161 e. Washington, res. 118 n. Noble. Kurts H. P, blocksmith, bds. 258 n. Mis sissippi. Kutemeir Charles, carpenter, res. 817 e. Market. W. S. B^iR/KIIEIR,. MERCHANT TAILOR, No. 10 NORTH PENNSYLVANIA STREET, OPP; ODD FELLOWS HAIL, INDIANAPOLIS, INDIANA. Directories of any City furnished at Publishers' Prices, at this Offlce. Kuss Dora, servant, 156 n. East. Kuster Theodore, railroader, res. 265 Un ion. Kutzleb Robert, painter, res. 247 s. Dela ware, Kyle John, pedlar, rea. 117 Oak. Kyser George W, plumber and gas fitter, res. 369 w. Vermont. LAAZ IACOB, (KOEHLER & LA.AZ,) 247 n. Noble, res. 266 n. Noble. Labarre Lewis, moulder, at Root's foundry, res. 79 Elm. Lace Edward, works Junction R. R, bds. Wiles House. Lack Henry, mattrass manfr, 21 a. Meri dian, bds. California House. Lack Rudolph L, teller at Harrison's Bank, res. 623, n. Illinois. Lackey Joseph, farmer, res. 496 Virginia av. Lacy George J, paper-maker, McLene, Mc- Intire & Hays, res. 375 w. Washington. Lacy Lucy, (col,) washer, reB. 156 Douglas alley. Ladz Mra. Ann C, (wid. John,) res. 266 n. Noble. Laddy John, lab, res. 51 Wyoming. Ladies Christian Monitor, Mrs. M. M. B. Goodwin editress and proprietress, of fice Journal bldg. LaDow D, (LaD. & Lewis,) 120 s. Illinois, bds. 426 s. Illinois. LADOW & LEWIS, proprs. Indianapolis marble-works, 120s. Illinois. Latz Charles, bar-tender, Circle Restau rant, res. 15 n. Meridian. Lafayette & Indianapolis Freight Depot, cor. North and Canal. Lafayette House, 197 s. Meridian, George Happe, propr. Lafferty Charles C, patent-right agt, reB. over 223 w. Washington. Lagmann John F, works U. S. Arsenal, bds. 518 e. Washington. Lahman Frederick, shoe-maker, bds. 31 Madison av. Lahman John, lab, Schmidt's brewery, res. same. Loible Andrew, butcher, bds. e. Washing ton. Laing David, carpenter, res. 80 s. Missis- ¦ eippi. Lair Jacob, works at Arsenal, res. 151 Winston. Laird C. P., insurance solicitor, res. 36 Cherry. Laird John P., carpenter, res. 68 s. Noble. Laird Robert, tailor, bda. 554 n. Illinois. Laird Harrison, tinner, bds. 554 n. Illi nois. Lake Ellis R, huckster, res. 265 Bluff rd. Laird William H, book-keeper, 68 s. Me ridian, res. 554 n. Illinois. Lake John S, sealer, res. Bluff rd, s. city limits. Lake Joseph, machinist, bds. 183 a. Illi nois. Lake Miss Maggie, bds. 299 Indiana av. Lally Thomas, tailor, over 28 _. Merid ian, res. 525 w. South. Lamb Amos, salesman, 75 8. Meridian, bda. 102 Pratt, cor. Delaware. Lamb Peter, lab, res. 253 s. Tennessee. LAMB SAMUEL, sheriff Supreme Court, office new state bldg, cor. Tennessee and Wash ington, res. n. e. eor. Pratt ond Dela ware. Lamb William C, law student, Supreme Court rooms, cor. Tennessee and Wash ington, bda. 162 n. New Jeraey. Lambert David, lab, rea. 36 Rose. Lambert Eli F, lab, res. end Virginia av., beyond city limits. LAMBERT JAMES M., proprietor Ray Hou?e, cor. South and Delaware. See card, page 13, adver tising department. Lambert Joseph, lab, res. 373 w. Washing- ington. Lambert Peter, (col.,) lob, Minerva, bet North and Elizabeth. Lamotte Charles, (L. & Son,) 192 Massa chusetts av, res. same, Lamotte Joseph, (L. &. Son,) 192 Massa chusetts av, rea. same. Lamotte & Son, (Joseph _ Charles L,) dealers in stoves and tin-ware, 192 Massachusetts av. Lampheiner August, saloon, 191 e. Wash ington, res. same. Landcraft Jacob, tailor, res. 44 Dunlap. Landers Miss Anna, milliner, works 152 e. Washington, bds. n. Delaware, bet. Market and Ohio. Landers Elizabeth, servant, 422 n. Illinois. Landers Frank, (L, Pee & Co.,) 58 s. Me ridian, res. 402 n. Pennsylvania. Landers Jacob, livery and sale stable, 32 8. Pennsylvania, reB. 128 w. Maryland. Landers James, res. 687 e. St. Clair. Landers John, clerk American Express Co, bds. 213 b. Illinois. LANDERS, PEE & CO., (Frank L, George W. P, Alexander B. Conduitt, Milton Cox, John C. Mc- Cutchen, George W. Geiger and Jo seph P. Shipp,) wholesale dry goods, 58 s. Meridian. Landis Jacob, livery stable, bet. Washing ton and Maryland, res. 128 w. Mary land. Landis Milton M, asst. supt. and agt. White Line Central Transit Co, res. 506 n. Meridian. Wholesale and Retail Tobacconist. See page 108. 120 LOGAN'S [I_] INDIANAPOLIS Landis J. M, inmate Deof ond Dumb Asy lum. London William, lab., rear Lukens & Hal- lowell, 8. Tennessee. Landreth Miss Anna, milliner, works at Miss Wink's, cor. Washington and Al abama, bds. 89 n. Delaware. Lane Edith, (wid, col.,) res. 25 Vine. Lane John, conductor Bellefontaine R. R, res. 313 s. East. Lane John, (col.,) servant, 462 n. Pennsyl vania, oor. Pratt. Lone John A, salesman, 146 8. Pennsylva nia, bds. 369 n. Alabama. Lane Uriah, lab. Tea. 369 n. Alabama. Lane William, street sprinkler, res. 80 s. Liberty. Long Charles, works at Meikel's brewery, rea. 64 s. West. Long Doniel, (L. & Smith, ) 146 e. Mary land, res. 168 Davidson. Lang Daniel A, carpenter, (McCreery' & Fay,) 56 e. Washington, res. 166 Da vidson. Lang Frederick, lab, res. 71 Harrison. Lang Fred, porter, Browning & Sloan's drug house, res. 77 w. Third. Lang Fred. J, porter, Auditor of State's office, cor. Tennessee and Washington, res. cor. s. California and Georgia. LANG LOUIS, wine house and bottled liquors, 29 s. Meridian, res. 221 e. Ohio. Lang Samuel, tinner, bds. 80 s. Missis sippi. Long & Smith, (D. A. L. & H. H. S,) house carpenters and joiners, 146 e. Mary land. Long William W, book-binder, Journal Office, res. 80 s. Mississippi. Longan William C, special agt. American Express Co., bds. Bates House. Langbein Joseph, groceries, toys and fancy goods, 200 e. Woshington, res. same. Longenberg, Henry H, (L, Vogt & Rozier,) 244 and 246 w. Washington, res. Bluff rd, beyond city limits. Langdon Caroline, (wid,) seamstress, rea. w. Mario. Langdon Mrs. Mary A, (wid,) bds. 175 Bluff rd. Longenberg Mrs. Caroline, (wid. William,) res. rear 141 n. Noble. Longenberg Mrs. Margaret, (wid. Chris tian,) res. 175 w. South. Langenberg, Vogt & Rozier, (Henry H. L, Frederick V. and Aaron R,) grocer ies and provisions, 244 and 246 w. Washington. Langhorn A. T, telegraph operator, C, C. & I. C. R. R, bds. 229 s. Alabama. Langley Williom, works for Sullivan & Drew, res. Boyd's blk., Massachusetts av. Longsdale J. M. W, res. 225 e. Ohio. Langsdole Mrs. Mary M, (wid. John,) serv ant, 127 n. Alabama. Langsdale Thomas, rubber, Indianapolis piano factory. Langston Abby, chambermaid, Bicking House, 89 s. Illinois. Lanhan John, lab, res. 376 s. Illlinois. Lanigan John, clerk, 32 w. Louisiana, bds. some. Lanlertson Geo, physician, res. 121 Dun can. Lannay Miss Virginia, student, Indiano Female College, 146 n. Meridian, bds. same. Lannes David G, clerk, A. Clem _ Bro, bds. 126 e. Ohio. Lanpheter Jno, barber shop, 323 w. Wosh ington, res. same. Lansherger Andrew, gardener, bds. 518 e. Washington. Lanaingkamp William, coppersmith, rea. 176 a. Delaware. Lanthan C. W, copper-smith, res. 184 a. Delaware. Lapp Alice, servant, 298 e. Ohio. Lapp John, engineer, rea. 497 _. New Jer sey. Laport M. J, aawyer, bds. 266 s. Illinois. Large Michael, lab, res. 332 Indiana ov. FURNITURE ^i/~ _V R E R O O T_C S McCREERY & FAY. Special attention given to making to order the heat styles of PARLOR AND CHAMBER FURNITURE. Also keep constantly on hand of home and of Eastern manufacture, every variety of common furniture, ' Chairs, Tables, Bureans, &c, _c, Spring Mattresses, Patent Spring Beds, Hair and all other kinds of Mattresses, Feathers, Pillows, &c, fcc.^O—co and Library Furniture of latest styles. 56 AND 58 EAST WASHINGTON STREET, INDIANAPOLIS, IND. For bargains in Dry Goods, visit the Trade Palace. CITY [X_] DIRECTORY. 121 Large Theodore S, fireman, I. C. R. R, bds. 230 n. East. Larger Jerome, brakesman, C, C. & I. C. R. R, bds. 58 Benton. Larimore James, lab, bds. end Huron, be yond city limits. Larimore Thomas F, lab, end Huron, be yond city limits. Larkin John, lab, res. Ellen. Larkin M. L, brick-layer, res. 147 Ash. Larnes John W, (col,) barber, 286 w. Washington. Lorr Mrs. Elizabeth, (wid. John,) res. 136 n. Noble. Larr Henry, carpenter, res. 347 e. New York. Larr Samuel, watchman, I. & C. Depot, res. 263 s. East. Latham Charles, clerk, Fletcher's Bonk, bds. e. Washington, beyond city lim its. Latham Charles C, soldier, U. S. Arsenal, rea. Arsenal. Latham George W, machinist, res. 8 Lord. Latham Henry, clerk, Indianapolis Na tional Bank, res. e. Washington, near corporation. Latham W. H, A. M, M. D, instructor, Deaf and Dumb Asylum, reB. «. Wash ington, e. city limits. Latshow J. L, (Minnick & L,) 17_ w. Washington, res. 92 s. Missisappi. Lauck Mra. Mary, (wid. Michael,) rea. 391 s. Delaware. Lauer Charles, saloon, 202 e. Washington, res. 15 Bluff rd. Laughlin Eli, student, commercial college, bds. 133 Virginia ov. Laughlin Misa Jane, student, N. W. C. University, res. 113 Massachusetts av. Laughlin John, lab, res. 55 Fayette. Laughlin Margaret, servant, 284 n. Merid ian. Lauler William, porter, Union Depot, res. 288 s. East. Laughlin Misa Mary, student, Training School, fourth Ward, res. 113 Massa chusetts ov. Laurie Miss Susan, student, res. 113 Mas sachusetts av. Laurie William, salesman, New York Store, bds. n. Liberty. Lavery John, salesman, 10 w. Pearl, bds. 315 s. Delaware. Law Mrs. Caroline L, (wid,) rea. Fifth, bet. Mississippi and Railroad. Laubon H. W, clerk, C, C, C. & I. R. R, bds. Winston. Lowler Ellen A, nurae, Institute of the Blind, bds. some. Lawler James, expressman, res. 288 a. East. Lawler Mary, (wid. Richard,) res. s. s. bet. Noble and Benton. Lawler William, engineer, res. 289 s. East. Lawless Michael, (Michael L. & Co,) 138 s. Noble, res. same. Lawless Michael & Co, (Michael L. & Pat rick Curren.) groceries, 138 o. Noble. Lowrence Arthur V, commission merch ant, groceries and egg packer, 173 w. Washington, reB. 211 w. Ohio. Lawrence James, (col,) barber, 14 Bates House, res. 55 Maple. Law8on Aaron, farmer, res. 35 Jones. Lawson Mrs. Elizabeth, (wid,) res. cor. Patterson and North. Lawson Joseph, res. w. Market, rear State House. Lawson Milton T, farmer, res. cor. Patter- eon and North. Lawson Peter, rea. Broadway, near city limits. Lawton Watson H, checkman, Bellefon taine outer Depot, bds. 149 Winston. Lawyer & Hall, (Peter C. L. & Edward K. H,) grain-dealers, 49 s. New Jersey. Lawyer John A, engineer, 49 s. New Jer sey. Lawyer Peter C, (L. & Hall,) 49 s. New Jersey, bds. Little's Hotel. Lax Mrs. Elizabeth, (wid. Endrulix,) res. 191 n. East. Lax Jacob, printer, works Journal Office, res. 191 n. East. Laycock Chas. F, carpenter, res. 300 s. Missouri. Layman John, works Schmidt's Brewery, bds. same. LAYMAN J. P., (Dorsey, L. & Fletcher,) 64 e.Washing- ton, res. 379 n. Pennsylvania. See card, page 130. Layoery James, lab, res. 82 Bates. Loythem George, clerk, bds. Wile8 House. Layton Timothy M, shoe-maker, bds. 364 n. Mississippi. Leabarr Lewis, moulder, res. 150 Huron. Leach Alfred P, student, bds. 164 Virgi nia av. Leach George, bds. 230 n. West. Leach James, porter, Cottrell & Enight, bds. 268 s. East. Leach Jeremiah, lab, bds. 276 s. West. Leach Joseph, cloth manufacturer, res. 276 s. West. Leach Sarah J, occupant Deaf and Dumb Asylum. Leanaker Sada, servant, 78 w. Michigan. LEARNED CHARLES, dealer in lath machines and agt. for Marvin's potent safes, 57 s. Illinois, res. 630 n. Illinois. Leary Edward, lob, res. Bicking. Leory Jamee B , student, commercial col lege, bda. Macy House. Leary Patrick C, lawyer, bda. Pyle House. A Directory of all Lawyers in the U. S. can be bought at Logan's Directory Office. 122 LOGAN'S [I_] INDIANAPOUS Leary John 0, messenger-boy, West. Un. Tel. Co, 11 s. Meridion, bds. 114 Meek. Leos Barbary, (wid. Jacob,) rea. 454 8. Illi nois. Leathers & Carter, (William W. L. & George C,) lawyers and notaries pub lic, room 3 Odd Fellows' Hall, n. e. cor. Washington and Pennsylvania. Leathers William W, (L. & Carter,) room 3 Odd Fellows' Hall, res. 273 n. New Jersey. Leavaf Peter, boss brewer, res. 246 s. Penn sylvania. Leavitt William, carpenter, res. 302 e. North. Lechene Charles, shoe-maker, works 32 e. Washington, res. 160 Madison av. Leek Robert M, clerk, 37 e. Washington, res. 480 n. Mississippi. Leckner Max, salesman, Stewart & Mor gan, res. 36 n. Delaware. Leclair Henry, engineer, B. R. R, bds. 272 Win8ton. Lee Benjamin E , salesman, 37 e. Wash ington, bds. s. Meridian, bet. Mary land and Georgia. Lee Edward S, physician, res. cor. New York and Blake. LEE HENRY H., China Tea store and prescription drug store, 18 and 20 Bates House, new China tea store, 7 Odd Fellows' Hall, res. 189 n. Illinois. Lee James W, (L. & Replogle,) n. w. cor. Washington and Noble, res. 161 Spring. LEE MANDAVILLE G., editor, Evening Commercial, cor. Me ridian and Circle, res. 483 n. Missis sippi. Lee Michael, plasterer, res. 319 e. Mer rill. Lee Robert D, occupant Deaf and Dumb Asylum. Lee William E, saloon, 48 Virginia av, res. 173 s. Tennessee. Lee Mrs. R. J, matron, City Hospital. Leeds F. M, works Osgood & Smith, res. 131 Merrill. Leeds George E, produce dealer, res. 256 n. Mississippi. Leeds L. B, bds. 131 e. Merrill. Leenon John D. S, carriage-pointer, works A. W. Drew _ Co, bds. 89 n. Delaware. Lefever Samuel, contractor, 145 w. South. Leibhardt Joseph, dyer, Merrit & Coughlen. Leitz Theodore H, artist, res. n. East. Lelewer David, (David L. & Bro,) 114 s. Meridian, res. s. Delaware, near South. LELEWER D. & BROTHER, (David & Isaac _.,) fur manfs, 114 s. Meridian. See card, page 94. Lelewer Isaac, (David L. & Bro,) 114 s. Meridian, res. 227 s. Delaware. Lelsh Mrs. Elizabeth A, rea. 94 n. Califor nia. Lehr F. A, (L. & Gray,) 83£ e. Washington, res. 419 n. New Jersey. Lehr & Gray, (Ferdinand L. & Robert P. G,) real estate agts, 83_*e. Woshing ton. Lehr Philip, corpenter, res. 163 Davidson. Lehritter C. « Co, (C. & John A. L,) cap ital saloon ond restaurant, 14 e. Wash ington. Lehritter Conrad, (C. L. & Co,) 14 e. Wash ington, res. 213 e. Ohio. Lehritter George, saloon and restaurant, 143 e. Washington, res. same. Lehritter John A, (C. L. & Co,) 14 e. Wash ington, bds. 81 n. New Jersey. Leibe George, shoe-maker, res. 128 Spring. Leitham George W, machinist, res. 8 Lord. Lemman Mrs. John, res. 72 e. Ohio. Lemoine Louis, painter, res. 274 _.. Noble. Lemoine Victor, sign-painter, res. s. w. cor. Mississippi and Third. Lemmen Mrs. Jane, (wid. John,) dress maker, 72 e. Ohio, res. same. Lemon A. E, clerk, Ind. Fire Ins. Co, 5 Odd Fellows Hall, res. 305 e. New York. Lemon Charles P., fireman, Ind. Central R. R, res. 305 e. New York. J±. GEBHAED, GENERAL OPHGISTEBY AND PATENT SPRING MATTRESS MANUFACTORY. Mattresses of all kinds made to order. Old Mattresses made into new styles. No. 14 SOUTH DELAWARE STREET, INDIANAPOLIS, IND. ¦ OEDERS PROMPTLY ATTENDED TO. Dry Goods for the Million, at Trade Palace. CITY [__] DIRECTORY. 123 Lemmon Londo A, carpenter, res. 72 e. Ohio- Lemon Daniel A, (D. A. L. & Co,) 187 w. Washington, res. 46 n. Missiaaippi. Lemon D. A. & Co, (D. A. L. & H. S. Hutchens,) groceries, 187 w. Washing ton. Lemon 0. V, messenger, American Ex press Co., res. Richmond. Lemon Peter H, lawyer, res. 305 e. New York. Lemons William, brick-layer, res. 158 Win ston. Lemping John, varnisher, Spiegle, Thorns _ Co, bds. 182 Davidson. Lenork Joseph, fur-dealer, 31 w. Washing- ton, bds. 78 e. Market. Lendhan John, lab, res. 135 Huron. Lendormi Mrs. Diairel, (wid. Boail,) reB. 434 e. North. Lendormi Pauline, policeman, 9th ward, res. 434 e. North. Lenk Mathias, foreman, Schmidt' a brewery, rea. same. Lennert Mra. Sarah E, embroidery, stamp ing and fancy goods, 20 n. Pennsylva nia, res. 38 s. Illinois, up-stoirs. LENOX EDWARD, merchant tailor, 33 8. Illinois, res. same, see card page 86. Lerisman Henry, grocer, res. 492 Virginia av. Lenton James, teamster, res. e. s. Blake, bet. New York ond Vermont. Lentz Christian, servant, 263 n. East. Lentz John, packer, 37 s. Meridian, res. o. e. cor. East and Stevens. Lentz Williom, packer, H. F. West & Co., rea. s. e. cor. East and Stevens. Leon Adolph, boots and shoes, 27. n. Il linois, res. 301 s. Delaware. Leonard Mrs. Abigal, (wid. James,) res. 183 n. Liberty. Leonard Homer, student, Purdy's Commer cial College; bds. 297 Winston. Leonard Jome3, (Mattler & L,) 65 w. Wash ington, res. 213 s. Illinois. Leonard John, stone-mason, res. 26 Orient. Leonard Michael, works Gates, Pray &Co, bds. Mrs. Woller'a, n. Pennsylvanio. Leonard Morris, lab, res. 16 Willard. Leonard William F., horse-broker, res. 297 Winston. Leonhart Herman, cooper, bds. 90 Union. Leofer Miss M. E, teacher of German, Ind. Female College, cor. Meridian and New York. Leparn D, fireman, C, C. & I. C. R. R, res. 421 e. Georgia. Lepp Henry, tailor, Bhop Massachusetts ov, res. 320 e. Ohio. Leppert E. J, occupont Deaf and Dumb Asylnm. Leppert Leebold, tailor, 17 e. Washington, res. on Bluff rd. Leppert Nicholas, blacksmith, I. & C. shopa, res. 23 Lord. Lerkamp John, clerk, (John Helm,) bds. 272 Winston. Leser John, (Rose & L,) 90 e. Washington, res. 156 n. Davidson. Lesh Aaron B, (L, Tousey & Co,) 43 s. Delaware, res. 94 n. California. LeshLewis, (L, Tousey & Co,) 43 s. Dela ware, res. 48 n. California, old number. LESH, TOUSEY & CO., Aaron B. & Lewis L. & Wood T,) pork- packers and com. mera, 43 a. Dela ware. Leslie Samuel, worka Union Starch Fac tory, bda. 292 Winston. Lesmon August, lob, res. 413 Virginio av. Lesman C, lab, rea. bet. Pine and Cedar. Leaman Lizzie, res. 9 Forest av. Lester George S, boots and shoes, 15 s. Meridian, bds. Commercial Hotel. Letard M'lle. F, teacher of French and German, Ind. Female College, 146 n. Meridian, bds. same. Lethon Victor, painter, cor. Second and Missouri, res. same. Letrol Toney, fireman, P. & I. R. R, bds. 103 s. New Jersey. Letz Theobold, artist, Miller & Frank's over 45 e. Washington, res. 81 n. East. Levien Sigment, travelling agt., res. 212 e. Vermont. Levy Henry, second-hand clothing, 199 e. Washington, res. same. Lewellyn Arthur, (col.,) servant, 410 n. Delaware. Lewellyn Richard, carpenter, works Vin cent & Thompson, bds. 178 Davidson. Lewis Anderson, (col,) blacksmith, res. 21 Minerva. Lewis Anna, (col.,) servant, W. C. Tarking- ton. Lewis Archibald M, carpenter, res. Geis endorff, near Geiaendorff Woolen Fac tory. Lewis Cyrus, (col,) lab, res. Canol, bet. Maryland and Georgia. Lewis Edgar, railroader, bds.166 Buchanan. LEWIS GEORGE W., salesman, 98 e. Washington, res. 312 e. Louisiana. Lewis Hiram L, teamster, res. 407 a. East. Lewis John, teamster, res. 151 bluff rd. Lewis John, (col,) waiter, Bates House. Lewis John, inmote Deaf and Dumb Aay- lum. Lewis Jonathan W, carpenter, rea. 318 e. New York. Lewis Louisa, (col,) cook, 27 n. New Jer sey. Lewis Tompkins A, supt. Gt. W. Ex. Co., 80 Virginia av, res. n. w. cor. Merid ian and First. Lewis Walter W, bds. 14 e. Mississippi. Best monthly in the West! Logan & Co., Publishers. 124 LOGAN'S [!_.] INDIANAPOLIS Lewis William, (col,) lab, res. 157 Maple. Lewis W. H, (LoDow & L,) 120 a. Illinois, bds. Oriental House. Lewis W. H. H., printer, res. 32 e. Ohio. Lewitt William H, machinist, Grover & Baker Sewing Machine Co.'a Rooms, 21 e. Washington. Lex Jacob, printer, Journal bldg, bds. 191 n. East. Lex Lewis, printer, Journal bldg, bda. 191 n. Eoat. Lexouer Edward, groceries, 125 e. Wash ington, res. same. Liautey John, shoe-maker, 139 e. Washing ton, bds. 137 e. Washington. Liceman William, lab, res. rear 9 Peru. Lich Henry G, paster, German M. E. Church, res. 224 e. Ohio. Lickhart George, baggage-master, T. H. & St. Louis R. R, res. 395 s. Dela ware. Liddy Frederick U, salesman, Trade Pal ace, bds. Pyle House. Liden Thomas, railroader, res. 388 s. Mis souri. Lieber H. & Co., (Herman L. & Charles Koehne,) picture-frames, looking-glas ses, &c, 21 n. Pennsylvania. Lieber Herman L, (H. L. & Co,) 21 n. Pennsylvania, res. 404 n. Delaware. Lieber Peter, city brewery, 213 s. Penn sylvania. Lieble George, shoe-maker, works 204 e. Washington, res. 126 Spring. Liebrich Lewis, porter, Browning's drug store, res. 330 w. North. Liecbenfelt Henry, turner, bds. 272 e. Washington. Liegel Martin, breweryman, res. cor. South and Meridian. Lietz Theobold, portrait-painter, office A. R. Miller's Gallery, res. 83 n. East. Lightfoot Thomas, (col,) lab, res. Camp Carrington. Lightford J. G, machinist, res. 73 s. Penn sylvania. Lilly Ely, chemist, 38 s. Meridion. Likens Mohola II, occupant Deaf and Dumb Asylum. Likert Simon, express-driver, res. 271 n. Liberty. Lilienkamp Ernest, tailor, works over 182 e. Washington, bda. Union Hall. Lilly Herman, printer, . reB. 108 s. Meri dian. Lilly John O. D, agt. Car Spring Co, res. n. Tennesee, bet. Second and Third. Lilly Joseph D, pump-maker, res. 459 s. Missouri. Lilly Miss Mary E, bds. 73 w. Mary land. Linas Daniel, stone-cutter, res. 23 Rose. Linch Martin, turner, Spiegle, Thorns & Co, bds. 27, bet. s. Liberty and East. Linch Michael, lab, bds. 27, bet. s. Liberty and East. Linchan John, lob, res. 347 s. Illinois. Lincoln Charles, clerk, 38 w. Washington, bds. 73 n. Illinois. Lindeman Frank, clerk, 125 e. Washing ton, res. 293 e. Ohio. Lindenbower William H, real estate agt, oflice Temperance Hall, res. 682 n. Mississippi. Linder J. L, grocer, 395 s. East, res. same. LiDdemsn Bernard, lab, res. 475 e. Mar ket. Lindis M. M, asst. supt. White Lime C. T. Co., res. 506 n. Meridion. LINDLEY & CO., (Hiram L. & Frank A. Dial,) real estate and insurance agts, over 8 e. Washington. Lindley Miss Delia, milliner, over 8 w. Woshington, bds. 202 n. Davidson. Lindley Henry J, book-keeper, McKernan & Pierce, res. 71 Indiano av. Lindley Hiram, (L. & Co,)over 8 e. Wash- ington, res. 74 e. North. Lindley Miss Jane L, school-teacher, Fourth Word School, res. 203 David son. Lindley Lemuel G, conductor, B. R. R, res. 203 Davidson. McGINNIS & GRAY, MERCHANT TAILORS AND DEALERS ES READY-MADE CLOTHING, No. 45 VIRGINIA AVENUE, OPPOSITE WALLACE'S BLOCK, INDIANAPOLIS, INDIANA. Cigars from $20.00 per thousand up to $200.00, at CITY [I_] DIP.ECTORY. 125 Lindmon William, moulder, Root's Found ry, res. 109 Benton. Lindsay Lovino, inmate Deaf and Dumb Asylum. Line Isaoo M, brick-layer, res. 291 n. Li berty. Linens Daniel, brakesman, C, C. & I. C. R. It, bds. 58 Benton. Liner Charles, brakeman, C, C. & I. C. R. R, bds. 424 on C. R. R. Lines & Smelser, (J. W. L. & F. S,) whole- Bale dealers in tobacco and cigars, 6 w. Louisiana. Linea J. W, (L. & SmelBer,) 6 w. Louisi ana, bds. Bates House. Lingenfelter Archibald, Jr., carpenter, res. Shelbyville pike, one mile s. corpora tion. Lingenfelter Ashford, Sr, carpenter, rea. 271 Davidson. Lingenfelter Ashford, Jr., carpenter, bds. 271 Davidson. Lingenfelter Jefferson, carpenter, res. 271 Davidson. Lingenfelter John W, carpenter, rea. 32 Bradshaw. Lingenfelter W. H, boarding-house, 35 Circle. Lingenfelter , (Holladay & L,) 16£ s. Meridian. Link Andrew S, cabinet-maker, res. 280 n. Noble. Link George, lab, bds. 75 s. West. Link Mary, servant, 225 s. Delaware. Link Nathan, (col,) cook, Bates House. Link Olander, lab, res. 77 w. McCarty. Linnell Charles, works Junction R. R, bds. Wiles House. Linsemann Charles, clerk, Emenegger's Saloon, 113 e. Washington, res. same. Linser John H, bar-tender, Emenegger'a Hotel, bds. same. Linsey Aaron, cooper, bds. 269 n. West. Lintner Abraham, clerk, 184 Indiana av, bds. 269 n. West. Lintner Amos H, groceries, 182 Indiana av, res. same. Lindner Miss Ann, res. 269 n. West. Lintner C. H, dry goods, 184 Indiana av, bds. 285 n. West. Lintner Daniel S, groceries and produce, cor. North and Dunlop, res. same. Lintner John, res. 269 n. West. Lintner John, groceries and provisions, 395 a. East, res. some. Linton James W, soda business, res. 179 Indiana av. Lintz Benjamin, lab, bds. Court, bet. East ond New Jersey. Lintz Benjamin, porter, Stewart & Mor gan, bds. 62 s. Delaware. Lintz Mrs. Delia, (wid,) dealer in Boots and Shoes, 25 w. Washington, res. 70 w. New York. Lintz G, gardener, reB. n. a. Notional rd, w. White river bridge. Lintz John, lab, res. 112 Stevens. Lintz John, servant, Robert Butler. Lintz John K, clerk, 25 w. Washington, bds. 70 w. New York. Lintz William F. porter, West'a queens ware store. Lintzman Louisa, servant, George Stiltz, near corporation. Lions Adolph, shoe-maker, res. 301 a. Dela ware. Lipp Emanuel, carpenter, bds. 31 w. Ohio. Lipp Henry, carpenter, res. 315 Virginia ov. Lipp Henry A, merchant tailor, 13 Massa chusetts av, res. 320 e. Ohio. Lippert Mrs. Elizabeth, (wid. Henry,) res. 222 Railroad. Lish Arnold, bds. 94 n. California. Lister Roll, brakesman, I, C. & L. R. R., bds. Sherman House. Little George, moulder, res. s. Missouri near Rolling Mill. Little Joseph C, roller, Rolling Mill, res. 239 s. Mississippi. Little H. 0, inmate Deaf and Dumb Asy lum. Litte's Hotel, s. e. cor. Washington and New Jersey, Richard Pryor, propr. Little Washington, painter, res. 74 n. Lib erty. Litton Preston, grocer, 594 n. Illlinois, res. same. Livengood Edward, conductor Bellefon taine R. R, res. 383 e. Michigan. Livingston H, B, salesman, 2 Bates Houae blk, rea. 78 n Pennsylvania. Livingston Miss Josephine, bds. 275 Bluff rd. Lloyd Gideon, real estate agt, over 49 Washington, cor. Pennsylvania and Washington, res. 241 n. Tennessee. Lloyd S. C, teamster, Roberts' lumber yard, bds. 241 _. Tennessee. Lobee Christopher, driver, Simpson, bds. 325 a. Delaware. Locie Samuel, stationary engineer, bds. 58 Benton. Locke Erie, banker and broker, over 19 n. Meridian, res. 76 California, bet. Ver mont and Michigan. Locke James, lab, rea. 444 s. Illinois. Locke Josiah, capitalist, res. 463 n. Penn sylvania. Locke Otho, clerk, 65 a. Illinoia, bds. same. Locke L. S, painter, works 175 s. Tennes see, res. 444 s. Illinois. Locke William M, boarding-house, 266 s. Illinois. Lockland Mrs. Elizabeth, (wid, ) boarding- house, 111 w. south. Lockley Arthur, (col,) teamster, res. 39 n. Harris. Next door East of the Palmer House. 126 LOGAN'S [JL,] INDIANAPOLIS LOCKHART WILSON, M. D., Bupt. Insane Asylum, National rd, two miles weat of city. Locklaer Mra. Lavina, (col,) washerwo man, res. Lafayette R. R, bet First ond Second. Lockley Mrs. Elizabeth, (wid,) Elizabeth, near City Hospital. Lockwood Henry, cooper, res. 324 e. Louis iana. Lockwood Nelson, cooper, res. Minerva, bet. Vermont and New York. Loeble Wm, lob, res. Bluff rd, s. city limits. Loehman Charles, grocer, res. 376 Virgi nia ov. Loeper James W, machine draftsman, room 4 Vinton's blk, res. 173 n. Ten nessee. Loeper Mox, Jr., physician and surgeon, 188 e. Washington, res. same. Loeper William, Sr, physician ond sur geon, 88 e. Washington, res. same. LOGAN ABRAM L., (L. & Co.,) 16J e. Washington, res. same. Logan Bernard, grocer ond produce dea ler, 191 w. South, res. same. LOGAN & BROWN, (Reuben D. L. & Benjamin B,) attor neys and counselors at law, notaries public and collecting agts, over 4 w. Washington. See cord, page 62. LOGAN & CO., publishers Indianapolis, Terre Haute, Fort Wayne and other City Director ies ; also, State Gazetteers and R. R. Directories, U. S. P. 0. Directory ; and publishers Western Commercial Review and R. R. Journal ; oflice, 16$ e. Washington. See card. Logan John A, works Singer's sewing machines, bds. 321 s. Missouri. Logan Judge, lawyer, bds. 268 e. St. Clair. Logan Mathew, shipping clerk, Singer Manufacturing Co., res. 23 Fayette. Logan Patrick, lab, 321 s. Missouri. Logan Mrs. Mary, (col, wid.,) res. rear 276 e. North. Logan Reuben D, (L. & Brown, ) over 4 w. Washington, res. 422 n. East. Logan Samuel L, traveling agt. Grover & ~ Baker Sewing Machine Co., 21 e. Washington. Logan Thomas J, carpenter, res. 171 Meek. Logan Mrs. W, (wid. Martin,) res. 12 Sin ker. Logsdew Nancy J, (wid. David,) res. 7 Kentucky ov. Logsdon Thomas, painter, bds. 506 e. Wash ington. Logue J. H, harness-maker, 24 n. Dela ware, bds. 152 n. Meridian. Lohman William, drayman, Anderson, Bul lock & Schofield, res. 105 s. Missis sippi. Lohrman Paul, (Frouer, Bieler & Co,) 109 e. Washington, res. 25 w. St. Clair. Loines Timothy, lab, res. 46 Wyoming. Lollendine Leonard F, runner, Oriental House, bds. same. Lolly Ann, servant, 163 n. Tennessee. Lolly Thomas, tailor, res. 225 w. South. Loman Charles, carpenter, res. 577 e. St. Clair. Loman James, egg-packer, 18 w. Pearl, res. 152 .. St. Clair. Loman Nelson, pump-maker, works 87 Massachusetts av, bds. cor. Delaware and St. Clair. Louden Andrew, book-binder, bds. 572 n. Tennessee. Louden James S, clerk, Journal Oflice, bds. 572 n. Tennessee. Lonergon John, groceries, 154 n. e. cor. Pine and Noble, res. same. Lonergan Morris, boiler-maker, bds. 154 n. e. cor. Pine and Noble. Long & Birch, (Mathew L. & Richard B,) undertakers, 15 Circle, bet. Meridian and Market. Long Miss Caroline, bds. 81 w. Michigan. Long D. D, (S. Smith & Co,) res. 249 s. New Jersey. B. C. SHAJW, CARRIAGE MANUFACTURER, Nos. 26, 28 AND 30 EAST GEORGIA STREET, INDIANAPOLIS, INDIANA. Subscribe for the Workingmen's Journal, P. 0. Box 1441, Indianapolis. $1.00 a year. CITY [r_] DIRECTORY. 127 Long Eli C, grainer, works 9 Massachu setts av, res. 81 w. Michigan. Long E. F, salesman, New York Store, bda. 58 a. Pennsylvania. Long George, pastor, Presbyterian Church, Clermont, res. 202 e. Market. Long G. T, boot and shoe-maker, res. 475 n. East. Long Isaac S, lumber dealer, res. 264 n. Blake. Long James, plasterer, res. 74 Bicking. LONG JAMES H., (col,) barber shop, shampooing and hair dressing saloon, cor. Meridian and Circle, res. cor. Tennessee and Sixth. See card. Long Joseph D, local editor Journal, bds. Oriental House. Long Joseph, shoe-maker, res. Western av, near city limits. Long Mathew, (L. & Birch,) 15 Circle, res. n. New Jersey. Long Oliver L, grainer, works 9 Massa chusetts ov, bds. 81 w. Michigan. Long Robert, (L. & Birch,) 15 Circle, res. 353 n. New Jersey. Long, Snyder & Co, (David D. L, Adam S. & Madison Munday,) malt dealers, 214 and 216 s. Delaware. Long Thomas, grocer, 127 Indiana av, res. 119 Indiana av. LONG THOMAS F., feather renovator, 55 Indiana av, res. 462 e. Georgia. Long William C, works Osgood & Smith, bds. 154 s. Illinois. Longdorff Henry, res. 302 n. Bloke. Longdorff Mrs. Martha, res. over 320 e. Washington. Longdorff William, carpenter, res. Ill Mas sachusetts ov. Longrich Edward, tailor, works Goepper & Co, res. 284 e. North. Longrich Mrs. Margaret, (wid. Edward,) bds. 284 e. North. Loomis George B, music-teacher, public schools, res. 125 e. Vermont. Loomis J. K, conductor, J, M. <_ I. R. R, bds. Ray House. Loomis W. H, city councilman, res. 29 School. Loomis Margaret, servant, 165 n. Alabama. Loose Miss Annie, res. 117 n. Missouri. Loose Samuel, local engineer, C. & I. C. R. R. Lord Alice, lady boarder, over 270 e. Wash ington. LORD JOHN M., prest. and supt. Indianapolis Rolling Mill Co., res. 297 n. Pennsylvania. Losee Thomas V, master-machinist, C. I. & L. R. R. shop, res. 326 e. Georgia. Losey John, cooper, 102 s. East, res. 112 s. East. Lord John P., book-keeper, Ind. Banking Co., 28 e. Washington, bds. 297 n. Pennsylvania. Lord Ralph _., blacksmith, White River Iron Works, res. s. w. cor. South and Tennessee. Losey M. D, book-keeper, 88 e. Washing ton, reB. 112 s. East. LOSIE J. M. & CO., (J. M. L. & ,) manfr. of patent spring bed-bottoms, 83 e. Washington. See card. Louch Alfred A, painter, works George W. Dalton, cor. Kentucky av.and Ten nessee. Louck Mrs. Mary, (wid. Michael,) res. 391 s. Delaware. Loucks & Bruner, grocers and produce- dealers, cor. Cherry and Broadway. Loucks Calvin R, painter, 327 e. Wash ington, res. Michigan rd, beyond city limits. Loucks Charles, carpenter, res. 78 Benton. LouckB Christopher B, carpenter, res. 186 Bates. Loucks George, (L. & Greuzard,) 327 e. Washington, bds. 182 Bates. Loucks & Greuzard. (George W. L, & L. S. G,) pointers, 327 e. Washington. Loucks James, (Bruner & L,) res. 400 n. New Jersey. Loucks Joseph, moulder, bds. 187 Bates. Loucks W. W, carpenter, res. 341 n. Ala bama. Louden Andrew A, res. 572 n. Tennessee. Louden Henry A, clerk, Journal oflice, bds. 572 n. Tennessee. Louder S. T, salesman, 19 s. Meridian, res. 15 e. Ohio. Loughnen Dennia, lab, res. 40 Ellen. Louid Edward, turner, res. over 232 e. Washington. Louis Anderson, (col,) blacksmith, res. cor. North and Minerva. Louis Anna, (wid. Bradley L,) washer woman, res. 224 n. Missouri. Loucks Mrs. Elizabeth, (wid. David,) tailoress, res. 147 Union. Louney William, boiler-maker, bds. Ill Huron. Louney Edward, lab, res. Ill Huron. Louney Miss Margaret, res. Ill Huron. Louney, Michael, carpenter, bds. Ill Hu ron. Louney William, lab, res. Ill Huron. Loury Harry, blacksmith, bda. California House. Louthan David K, baker, works 188 e. Washington, res. 26 n. Pennsylvania. Louts John, painter, bds. 314 e. Georgia. Love John, rea. 81 n. Tennessee. Love William, (William Love & Co.,) room 1, Talbott & New's blk, n. Pennsyl vania, res. 506 e. Washington. Get your Watches repaired at 24 East Washington Street. 128 LOGAN'S [I_] INDIANAPOLIS LOVE WILLI A.M & CO., (William L. & Jacob P. Dunn,) real estate brokers, room 1, Talbott & New's blk, n. Pennsylvania. Lovejoy A. A, supt. Vincennes R. R, bds. Spencer House. Lovejoy J. H, printer, H. C. Chandler & Co., res. 35 8. West. Lovell Bass, (col,) huckster, res. 126 Ben ton. Lowe Albert, (col,) lab, res. w. Center. Lowe Charles G, (Lowe & Son,) 30 s. New Jersey, res. 318 n. Liberty. LOWE GEORGE, carriage repository, 46 n. Pensylvania, res. 321 n. Pennsylvania. Lowe George, lab, res. s. New Jersey. Lowe James, bds. 399 a. East. Lowe Nahum H, sr, (Lowe & Son,) 30 s. New Jersey, res. 308 e. North. Lowe Nahum H, Jr., carpenter, bda. 308 c North. Lowe N. H. & Son, (N. H. & Charles G- L,) carpenters and builders, 30 s. New Jersey. LOWE WILLIAM A., attorney at law, over 20 e. Washing ton, Sentinel bldg, res. 44 Christian ov, cor. Jackson. See cord page 68. Lowe William W, res. 560 n. Illinois. Lowery John, miller, res. 359 w. Washing ton. Lowder Samuel, salesman, 49 s. Meridian, res. 15 e. Ohio. Lowen John, wood-chopper, res. 59 Hos brook. Lower John, lab, res. 27 w. McCarty. Lower John, foreman, Coburn & Jones, res. 386 n. Delaware. Lower John W, foreman, Coburn & Jones' lumber yard, bds. 386 n. Delaware. Lowman Georgiana, occupant Deaf and Dumb Asylum. Lowman Nelson D, blacksmith, res. 112 e. St. Clair. Lowman William, blacksmith, res. 112 e. St. Clair. Lowrie William, clerk, New York Store, bds. 181 n. Liberty. Lowry Wiley W, druggist, 65 Massachu setts av, res. 73 Massachuseets av. Loy D. M, foreman tin-shop, D. Root & Co, bds. 126 e. Maryland. Lozier John H, (Rev,) pastor, Asbury Chapel, res. e. Washington, beyond city limits. Luallen James, (col,) lab, res. n. Douglas Alley. Luallen John, (col,) servant, 282 w. New York. Lucas Benjamin F, I. M. P., res. 82 s. Ben ton. Lucas James, (col,) white-wosher, res. 233 _. West. Lucas J. G, mill- wright, 132 s. Pennsylva nia, res. 84 s. Illinois. Lucas Walter A, book-keeper, Geisendorff & Co., bds. Oriental House. Lucesi John, terre cotta maker, bda. 23 Kentucky ov. Lucia John, lab, res. 358 s. West. Lucia Morris, railroader, res. 228 s. West. Lucia Morris, lab, 339 8. Missouri. Lucitt Bridget, pantry girl, Sherman House, bds. same. Lucky Willia, porter, Globe House, bde. same. Luddington W. H. H, traveling ogt,Whee- ler & Wilson's Sewing Machines, 10 w. Washington, res. 316 s. Delaware. Ludlow George, carpenter, res. 495 Virgi nia av. Ludlow Jason C, foreman, Warren Tates' Planing Mill, res. 136 n. New Jersey. Ludlow John, meat market, 34 n. Pennsyl- vonio, res. 268 a. New Jersey. Ludlow Silos, traveling agt, A. Jones & Co., rea. 97 Jackson. Ludlow Stephen W, clerk, Post Office, bds. 60 Market. Ludlum J. E, res. 49 Chatham. Ludorff Lewis, (L. L. & Co,) 42 a. Meri dian, res. 320 s. Meridian. Ludwig Lewis, res. 178 s. Illinois. C. BR__a____T. J. B. BENNER. BREMERMAN & RENNER, iliw"-«t:_f___-C. ¦___'"mj_sb_ej_»@_ No. 123 East Washington Street, Opp. the Court Honse, Indianapolis, Ind. Jg^Carriages manufactured on contract, when desired. Repairing neatly and promptly done. Read Logan's History of Indianapolis, in after part of this book. CITY [Xi] DIRECTORY. 129 Ludorff L. & Co, (Lewis L. & B. E. Thons- sen,) wholesale dealers in notions and general furnishing goods, 42 s. Meri dian. Ludwig James dyer, rea. Geisendorff, near Geisendorff's Woolen Factory. Ludwig Otto, wines and liquors, 131 e. Washington, res. Ill e. Washington. Ludwig Lewis, res. 178 a. Illinois. Ludwig Samuel, groceries, 142 Fort Wayne av, res. eame. Lueders Miss Catharine, (Lueders Sisters,) 74 J e. Market, res. 484 n. Mississippi. Lueders Miss Cornelia, (Lueders Sisters,) 74 J e. Market, res. 484 n. Mississippi. Lueders Miss Eliza, (Lueders Siatera,) 74J e. Market, res. 484 n. Mississippi. Lueders Miss Louisa, (Lueders Sisters,) 71,1 e. Market, res. 484 n. Mississippi. Lueders Sisters, (Catharine, Cornelia, Eli za & Louisa L,) stamping and em broidering, 74_ e. Market. Lueders Thomas C, res. 484 n. Missis- sippi. Luging James, dyer, res. 21 Douglas. Lukey Christopher, lab , Coburn & Jones' Lumber Yard, res. 474 e. Washington. Lukens Benjamin, res. 612 n. Illinois. Lukens & Hollowell, (R. L. L. & I. S. H,) agricultural Implements, 26 and 28 s. Tennessee. Lukens Robert L, (L. _ H. Hollowell,) 26 and 28 s. Tennessee, res. 281 Virginia av. Lukens Richard, ogl. implements, 25 s. Tennessee, res. 281 Virginia av. Luley Calvin, clerk, 152 w. Washington, res. 74 e. Pratt. Lumpkina Henry, (col,) lab, bds. Rail road, bet. Fifth and Sixth. LUNT JAMES M., gen'l supt. C, C. & I. C. R. R, office a. e. cor. Virginia av. and Delaware, rea. 360 n. Alabama. Luony Amanda, (wid. Dennis,) res. cor. West and Georgia. Lupton Elizabeth, res. cor. West and Geor gia, beyond city limits. Lupton George, dentist, res. 21 Indiana av. Luphart Joseph, dyer, Merritt & Coughlen. Lupton Misa Rebecca, res. n. Pennsylva nia, beyond city limits. Lupton William C, painter, res. 290 e. Ohio. Lureingler George, (col,) hod-carrier, res. 75 s. Missouri. Luther Alford, painter, res. 267 n. Missis sippi. Luther Robert, wagon-maker, res; 22 Cali fornia. Lutimer Herman, lab, Henry Weghorst, 8. East, near city ljmits. Lutman Samuel, conductor, C, C. & I. C. R. R, bds. Sherman House. Lutz George, shoe-maker, res. 400 Virgi nia av. Lutz John J, soldier, U. S. Arsenal, res. same. Lyden Thomas, works railroad repair shop, bds. 199 w. Maryland. Lyer Peter, blacksmith, res. 390 Virginia av. Lynn Josephine, servant, 144 n. East. Lybrand Christopher, machinist, res. 223 8. Tennessee. Lydon Thomas, lab, T. H. & I. R. R. En gine House, 388 8. Missouri. Lymonn John II, manfr. boots and shoes, 9 n. Illinois, rea. 223 w. Washington. Lynch Ann, servant, 23 w. Ohio. Lynch Bridget, wash- women, Sherman House, bds. same. Lynch Catharine, wash-women, Commer cial Hotel. Lynch Jacob, (L. & L,) 83 Kentucky av, res. 28 Chadwick. Lynch John, lab. White River Ironworks, res. 349 s. Missouri. Lynch J. S, grain-buyer, bds. Wiles House. Lynch & Lilly, (Jacob H. L. & Joseph D. L,) pump innnfrs, 83 Kentucky av. Lynch Martin, turner, bds. 281 e. Geor gia. Lynch Michael, brick-layer, res. e. s. n. Illinois, bet. Third and Fourth. Lynch Michael P., clerk, 68 s. Meridian, bds. Oriental House. Lynch Owen, lab, res. 20 California. Lynch Patrick, lab, bds. 115 n. Noble. Lynch Patrick, engineer, Sinker's Found ry, res. 109 Harrison. Lynch Patrick, porter, Spencer House, bds. same. Lynch Wesley, carpenter, res 556 n. Ala bama. Lynn Daniel, lab, res. 41 Dacotah. Lynn James, machinist, Sinker's, res. 346 s. Alabama. Lynn Miss Mary E, dress-maker, over 199 e. Washington, res. some. Lynn P. A, clerk, Union Line, office 85 Virginio ov, bds. Pyle House. Lynn Robert, lob, res. 123 Maple. Lynn William A, cooper, res. 426 Virgi nia av. Lynn Winfield S, salesman, Browning & Sloan, bds. Oriental House. Lyon Misa Catharine, wash-woman, res. 269 s. Pennsylvania. Lyons Annie, servant, Palmer House. Lyons Charles, engineer, B. R. R, res. 265 Davidson. Lyon Daniel, works Junction R. R, bds. Wiles House. Lyons George, works Pork House, res. 298 Madison av. Lyons James, lab, res. 145 n. Mississippi. (9) Hair work, all kinds, at Medina's, 50 South Illinois Street. 130 LOGAN'S [M] INDIANAPOLIS Lyons John, boiler-maker, Sinker & Co. Lyons John, lab, res. 243 a. Missouri. Lyons John, second-hand furniture, 243 e. Washington, res. same. Lyons Julia, chamber-maid, Bates House. Lyons Mrs. Mary A, (wid,) res. 500 n. Tennessee. Lyons Patrick, works City Gas Works, res. 147 s. Alabama. Lyons William, lab, 341 s. Delaware. Lyons William G. W, foreman, Furgaaon's pork house, res. 298 Madison a v. Lyter Elvira A, occupant Deaf and Dumb Asylum. Lytle Alexander, groceries and provisions, 52 Indiano av, res. same. Lytle Miss Phebe A, works Capital To bacco Works, res. 325 s. Meridian. Lytle Robert J, carpenter, res. 392 s. Mis souri. Tl/TcADAMS MISSJBELL, bds. 51 Douglas McAndrews Walter, bar-keeper, 132 s. Il linois, bds. Neiman House. Me-Jllie Jacob, wagon-maker, res. 234 w. Michigan. McAllister James W, soldier, U. S. Arse- nol, res. same. McAllister William, medical student, 3 Virginia av, bds. 936 s. Alabama. McAlpine, machinist, bds. 452 e. Michigan. McAlvano John, painter, res. 144 w. New York. McArthur James, salesman, New York Store, bds. 82 e. Washington. McArthur John B, councilman, fourth ward, res. 270 n. West. McAvir James, gas-fitter, worka 82 e. Mar ket. McBaker Thomas, tailor, res. 170 e. Michi gan. McBeth Alexander, stone-cutter, res. rear 172 w. Washington. McBride John, saloon, 159 w. Washington, bds. same. McBride Michael, pedler, res. 274 n. Lib erty. McBride Riley, corpenter, res. 237 w. Mer rill. McCabe John, bar-tender, 62 w. Maryland, bds. same. McCabe Matthew, (Simpson & McC.,) sa loon, 52 s. s. Illinois, res. 9 Forest av. McCaferry Thomas, lab, rea. 320 s. West. McCain G. W, book-agt, res. 676 n. Mis sissippi. McCain James, carpenter, bda. 73 n. Illi nois. McCain John, engineer, res. 224 s. Noble. McCall C. C, telegraph operator, bds. 348 n. Alabama. McCall Hugh, servant, at 112 n. Meridian. McCall Neenith, inmate Home for the Friendless, w. s. n. Pennsylvania, be yond city limits. McCalloy Jacob, res. 234 w. Michigan. McConn Miss Catharine, res. 27 Lockerbie. McCann Dennis, lab, res. 3 Bates McCann James A, Btudent, City Academy, res. 69 n. East. McCann Patrick, lab, reB. 100 s. East. McCann Samuel D, physician and sur geon, office 69 n. East, res. same. McCarey Robert, (col,) barber, bds. 756 n. Tennessee. McCorr Patrick, lab, res. 100 s. East. McCarthy Bridget, servant, 420 n. Ala bama. McCarthy H. B, octor, res. 80 n. Missis sippi. McCarthy John, works Spiegel, Thorns & Co. McCarthy Thomas, teamster, bds. 57 Wyo ming. McCarthy Timothy, teamster, res. 57 Wyo ming. McCarthy William, lab, res. 320 s. Dela ware. McCorthy William, iron-moulder, Sinker & Co., res. 137 Davidson. McCarty Mrs. Catharine, (wid. Michael,) rea. 199 n. East. R. S. DORSET. JAS. T. lATMAN. S. K. FLETCHER. DORSEY, LAYMAN & FLETCHER, Inpor ters and "Wholesale Dealers ia H ABDW ABE, GUTLEBY, NAIL WINDOW GLASS, &c, &_. No. 64 EAST WASHINGTON ST., INDIANAPOLIS. For cards in Logan's Business Directory of Indianapolis, circulating in McCarty Charles, lab, reB. 190 Harrison. McCarty Hannah, servant, 523 n. Tennes see, McCarty James, works rolling mill, bds. Burns House. McCarty Jame3, lab, res. 243 s. Tennessee. McCarty James, lab, Bellefontaine shops, bds. 248 Winston. McCarty John, turner, res. 281 Georgia. McCarty Joseph, metre and service regis ter, gas works, res. cor. Delaware and South. McCarty Mrs. Margaret, (wid.) res. 122 n. Pennsylvania. McCarty Mrs. Mary, (wid,) res. 2 n. Doug las Alley. McCarty Mrs. Mary, (wid. Daniel,) rea. 376 e. Market. McCarty Michael, lab, res. near Jefferson- ville Round-House. McCarty Nicholas, office s. w. cor. Wash ington and Meridian, res. 122 n. Pennsylvania. McCarty 0. P, clerk, general ticket office, C. C, & I. C. R. W, bda. 73 w. Mary land. McCarty Stephen, lab, res. 393 e. Michigan. Mccarty thomas b., Auditor of State, office new State bldg. cor. Tenneaaee and Waahington, res 194 n. Illinois. McCarty Timothy, lab, res. 57 Wyoming. McCarty Timothy, driver on street cars, bds. 88 8. Mississippi. McCarty William, moulder, Sinker & Co. McCary Robert, (col,) barber, 14 Bates Hou8e, res. 196 n. Missouri. McCay Elizabeth, (wid. Theodore,) res. 314 e. Georgia. McCay M. H, (John Furnas & Co,) 68 e. Waahington, rea. near Georgia. McCay Robert, propr. Favorite Saloon, 560 Virginia av, rea. aame. McChesney Edward, baggage-master, C, C. & I. C. R. _., bd8. 454 n. Tennessee. McChesney J. B, treasurer, C, C. & I. C. R. W, res. 455 n. Tennessee. McChesney Sarah, (wid,) res. 133 n. Penn sylvania. McChesney William L, asst. book-keeper, A. Jones & Co., 74 and 76 s. Meridian, bds. 454 n. Tennessee. McClain Albert, painter, res. 12 w. North. McClain John S, clerk, 225 w. Washing ton, res. same. McClain Miss Martha Ann, seamstress, res. Michigan rd, beyond city limits. McClain Miss Mary, res. 275 s. Noble. McClain Moses, drives express wagon, bds. 457 e. Georgia. McClain Mrs. Susan, (wid. Jacob,) res. 234 Huron. McClain William C, carpenter, res. 317 e. Ohio. McClain Miss Sarah, bds. 144 n. Tennessee. McClaren John, printer, res. 399 n. Ala bama. McClay C. S, clerk, 7 and 9 e. Waahington, bds. Spencer House. McClellan John, clerk, res. 331 w. Mary land. McClelland Joel C, res. 196 e. St. Joseph. McClelland Robert, carpenter, works Bel- fontaine R. R. shops, res. 68 Davidson. McClendock William, lab, res. 322 s. East. McClintock Edward, res. 307 n. Alabama. McClintock William, lab, res. 303 s. Dela ware. McCloskey George, boarding house, 315 e. Ohio. McCloskey John, carpenter, res. 88 s. Mis- siasippi. McCloskey John, carpenter, res. 140 w. Vermont. McCloskey J. H, clerk, 2 Odd Fellows' Hall, res. 80 Indiana av. McCloud Mahala, (col,) washing and iron ing, res. u. Missouri. McCloud Thomas, shoemaker, bds. 61 s. Noble. McClure Alexander, boiler-maker, res. 227 w. Merrill. McClure George H, carpenter, _es. James, in Meikel's division. McClure J. E, salesman, 89 e. Market, bds. 61 Ft. Wayne av. McClure Joseph F, carpenter, res. e. b. Mississippi, bet. Third and Fourth. McClure M. D, yard boss, Rolling Mill, bds. 347 s. Alabama. McClure Theophilus, printer, Journal Of fice, res. 66 w. New York. McClusty John, lab, res. 80 Indiana av. McCole Mary, servant, J. Tarlton, 492 n. Tennessee. McComb Samuel, telegraph operator, bds. Oriental House. McConnell William, works Junction R. R, bds. Wiles House. McCool William, box-maker, works cor. Delaware and South, res. 62 Greer. McCool William carpenter, res. 349, old number, c. McCarty. McCord Benjamin R, res. 92 e. New York. McCord R. B, (McCord & Wheatley,) 186 s. Alabama res. e. New York. McCORD & WHEATLEY, (R. B. McC. & William M. W„) deal ers in pine ond poplar lumber, 186 s. Alabama. McCorkle William, saloon and restaurant, 141 w. Washington. McCormick Allen, res. 257 s. Mississippi. Mccormick edward, Bourbon Saloon, 62 w. Maryland, res. s. Ilinois. McCormick Ephraim, teamater, re8. over 308 e. Washington. 100 towns surrounding, call at 16. East Washington Street. 132 LOGAN'S [M] INDIANAPOLIS Mccormick george, propr. Commercial Hotel, n. e. cor. Il linois and Georgia. McCormick J. A, res. 257 s. Missisaippi. McCormick James, tobacconist, bds. Ray House. McCormick Jediah R, carpenter and build er, cor. St. Clair and Railroad, res. 400 n. Mississippi. McCormick John, nurseryman, n. s. Na tional rd, one mile w. White river bridge. McCormick John L, carpenter and builder, rea. 726 n. Tenneasee. McCormick William, clerk, Commercial Hotel, bds. same. McCormick W. H,. conductor, C, I. & L. R. R, res. 240 s. Alabama. McCormick W. L, works Junction R. R, bds. Wilea House. McCowen Mary, (col,) servont, 456 n. Me ridian. McCoy Benjamin R, lumber merchant, yard cor. South and Delaware, res. 77 Kentucky av. McCoy Boykin, (col,) blacksmith, bds. n. Michigan rd, near Tenth. McCoy Charles, traveling agt. Wheeler & Wilson's sewing machines. McCoy John, physician and surgeon, 151 e. Washington, bds. Pattison House. McCoy Robert photographer, res. 299 e. New York. McCrea Rollin H, (Stiles, Fahnly & McC,) 131 s. Meridian, bds. Sherman House. McCready Frank, tinner, works Tutewiler & Bros,, bda. 240 e. Vermont. McCready James B, book-keeper, Indiana National Bonk, 2 e. Woshington, rea. 240 e. Vermont. McCreery A. A, salesman, 39 s. Meridian, bda. Pyle House, McCREERY & PAY. (John McC. & Amos F. F,) house keepers' emporium, 56 and 58 e. Wash ington. See cards, pages 96, 120 and 200. McCreery John, (McC. & Fay,) 56 and 58 e. Washington, res. Springfield, Ills. McCrossan Samuel, lob, rea. 234 n. Mis sissippi. McCubbins Miss Mary W, res. cor. Patter- eon and North. McCue Anthony, lab, 114 n. Tennessee. McCue Farrell, carpenter, bds. w. s. Mis- sisaicpi, bet. First and Second. McCue Jnmes, bar-keeper, 52 a. Illinois, bds. 259 s. west. McCue Thomas, lab, res. 104 Cherry. McCuit Mrs. Ellen, (wid,) res. cor. Patter son and Elizabeth. McCullough Jacob S, book-keeper, 112 s. Meridian, res. 308 e. New York. McCune Henry W, book-keeper, bds. 228 n. West. McCurron Thomas, lab, res. 107 Forest av. McCurdy Mrs. Catharine, (wid. Alexan der,) res. 230 e. Vermont. McCurdy George W, ouction and commis sion merchant, cor. Washington and Virginia av, res. 230 e. Vermont. McCurdy William H. H, (Geisendorff & Co,) 22 w. Washington, bds. 355 n. East. McCutchan Allen, night-watchman, C, C. & I. C. freight depot, res. e. s. Liberty, bet. Meek and Georgia. McCutchan Miss Elizabeth, res. e. s. Lib erty, bet. Meek ond Georgia. McCutcheon Cormill, carpenter, res. 214 railroad. McCutcheon George R, yard-master Peru R. R, res. 432 e. North. McCutcheon J. C, (Landers, Pee & Co,) 58 s. Meridian, res. 226 n. Meridian. McDola Osa, conductor construction train, T. H. & I. R. R, res. 79 w. Lousiana. McDaniel James R., driver engine No. 1, bds. Nagle House. McDaniel Reason, tenmster, res. 280 w. St. Clair. McDermott Ellen, servant, 180 e. Ohio. McDermott James, works Sinker & Co., res. 133 w. Maryland. J. H. TAJEN. J. S. HILDEBBEAND. J. L. FUG ATE. a*, h- xta. t:e__n_ db oo. Importers and dealers in FOREIGN and domestic HARDWARE & CUTLERY, No. 21 WEST WASHINGTON STREET, INDIANAPOUS. The largest and best stock of Goods can always CITY [M] DIRECTORY. 133 McDermott Joseph, stove-mounter, res. 159 s. Alabama. McDermott Mrs. Mary, (wid,) servant, S. C. Vance's, e. end Market. McDermott Thomas, lab, res. 321 _. Mis souri. McDevitt Edward, machiniat, Sinker & Co., bds. Roy House. McDole Oscar H, conductor, T. H. & I. R. R, res. 79 Louisiana. McDonald Miss Alice, ladies' boarding, 139 w. Market. McDonald Curran E, (C. Werbe & Co,) deputy U. S. marshal, res. 300 e. Mar ket. McDonald Hon. David, judge U. S. District Court for District of Ind, court rooms, p. o. bldg,, res. 203 n. Pennsylvania. McDonald E. M, (McD, Rooche & McD,) room 3 _!tna bldg, n. Pennsylvania, res. n. e. cor. St. Clair and Meridian. McDonald George, clerk, Lee's drug store, bds. 204 n. Illinois. McDonald James, pressman, Journal Of fice, res. 329 w. Maryland. McDonald Joseph E, (McD, Roache & McD..) room 8 iEtna bldg, n. Penn sylvania, res. 229 n. Pennsylvania. McDonald Mac, salesman, 43 s. Delaware, bds. 229 n. Pennsylvania. McDonald Martin, carder, Geisendorff & Co., res. 329 w. Maryland. McDonald M. A, inmate Deaf and Dumb Asylum. McDonald Patrick, teamster, res. 133 s. New Jersey. McDonald Patrick, lab, res. 20 Willard. McDonald, Roache & McDonald, (Joseph E. McD, A. L. R, & E. M. McD,) at torneys at law, room 3 _3tno bldg, n. Pennsylvania. McDonough D. B, (McD. & Eck,) 144 s. Alabama, res. 123 e. Vermont. McDonough & Eck, (D. B. McD. & John H. E,) lime, plaster and hair, 144 s. Ala bama. McDougal Mrs. Louisa, res. 156 n. Illinois. MoDougal William, brakesman, B. R. R, res. over 180 e. Washington. McDowell John, commission merchant, bds. 17 Kentucky av. McDowell Joseph, book-keeper, Bowen, 8tewort & Co., res. 75 n. Illinois. McElroy William, weaver, Merritt & Coughlen. McElvano John, (Cornelius & McE,) res. 144 w. New York. McElwee John, carpenter, Sinker's ma chine shop, res. 217 n. Mississippi. McFadden Lewis L, deputy sheriff, bds. 195 Davidson. McFadden William, lab, T. H. & I. R. R. Freight Depot, res. 16 Root. McFall David, res. 55 e. Maryland. McForland A. H, carriage-maker, bds. Union Hall. McFarland Miss C, res. 26 e. St. Clair. McFarland Chrietina, servant, 132 n. Ala bama. McFarland John L, pump-maker, bds. 271 Virginia av. McFarland Miss Laura, res. 26 e. St. Clair. McFarland Robert, carpenter, res. 164 Dougherty. McFarland W. H, compositor, Sentinel news room, bds. Oriental House. McFarren James, res. 22 Fletcher av. McGaiha Morionno, chamber-maid, Indi ana Female College, 146 n. Meridian. McGarahan James, lab, bda. Ray House, e. South. McGarahan Thomas, tobacconist, bds. Roy House. McGaroh Rebecca, servant, 38 w. Market. McGaw John A, cigars and tobacco, 16 Bates House, res. 182 n. Mississippi. McGee Bruce, clerk, 36 w. Washington, bds. Mrs. Morrison's, n. Pennsylvania. McGee David, carpenter, res. 387 a. Mis souri. McGee Edward, boiler-maker, Sinker's, res. 215 s. Alabama. McGee Mrs. Rachel, (wid. Samuel, bds. 344 n. Noble. McGee Thomas, book agt, res. 308 s. West. McGee William, engineer, res. rear 260 s. Alabama. McGerrie G, works dining-room, Ray House. McGibbon Mrs. Mary, house-keeper, Hees' Academy of Music. McGiffen Samuel, broom-maker, res. 74 e. St. Clair. McGill & Obenchoin, (William C. McG. & Timothy L. 0,) groceries, .. e. cor. St. Clair and Illinois. McGill William C, (McG. & Obenchain.) e. e. cor. St. Clair and Illinois, res. 413 n. Tennessee. McGinnis Misa Alice, tailoress, over 28 s. Meridian, res. 83 s. West. McGinnis Charles E, (McG. & Gray,) 45 Virginia av, res. 41 Virginia av. McGinnis Edward, salesman, 43 Virginia ov, res. 41 Virginio av. McGinnis Mrs. Eliza, (wid,) seamstress, res. e. a. Douglas, bet. Washington and New York. McGINNIS GEORGE P., county auditor, res. Perry Township. McGINNIS & GRAY, (Charles E. McG. & Stephen G,*) mer chant tailors and clothiera, 45 Virgi nia av. See card, page 124. McGinnis John, groceries, flour, feed and liquor, 280 e. Washington, res. same. McGinnia John, coal-cart driver, 23 Virgi nia a v., ree. 49 s. Weat. Be found at the Trade Palace, at reasonable prices. 134 LOGAN'S [IH] INDIANAPOLIS McGinnis John F, lumber merchant, res. 109 s. New Jersey. McGinnis Nicholas, tailor, over 83 s. Me ridian, res. 83 8. West. McGinnis Oliver, worka Junction R. R, bds. Wiles House. McGinnis Owen, 45 Virginia av, res. 41 Virginia av. McGinnis Peter, tailor, over 28 s. Meridian, rea. 83 a. West McGinnia Miss Sarah, tailoress, over 28 s. Meridian, res. 83 s. West. McGinnis William, freight-conductor, C, C. & I. C. R. R, res. 99 e. Georgia. McGinnis Wilson, brakesman, bds. 99 e. Georgia. McGinty Martin, railroad-flagman, res. 243 Kentucky av. McGinty Mary, servant, 419 n. Illinois. McGlen Michael, lab, res. 150 Douglas. McGlew T, book agt, res. 316 s. West. McGlochlan Chriatopher, atove-moulder, Root's, rea. 296 s. East. McGowan Daniel, works Junction R. R, bds. Wiles House. McGowan Thomas, works Junction R. R, bds. Wiles House. McGrath Daniel, lab, res. 290 e. Georgia. McGrath Dennis, lab, res. 474 e. Georgia. McGrew J. T, salesman, Hume, Adams & Co., res. 293 Virginia av. McGruder Moses, (col,) lab, res. 174 Douglas alley. McGrynn Martin, worka Junction R. R, bds. Wiles House. McGuire Mra. Hannah, (wid,) res. 408 Indiana av. McGuire John, lab, res. 268 Merrill. McGuire Miss Maria, bda. 408 Indiana av. McGuire Richard, gas-fitter, bds. Washing ton, bet. Tennessee and Mississippi. McHugh John T, hot-blocker, 44 s. Illi nois, bds. 104 Cherry. McHutcheon Peter, Trade Palace, res. 323 n. Liberty. Maclntire H. N, instructur, Deaf and Dumb Asylum. Maclntire John, (McLene, Mad. & Hays,) w. end Maryland, res. 25 s. West. Mclntire John, soldier, U. S. Arsenal, res. same. Mclntire Lucius, heater, rolling mill, res. 18 Henry. Mclntire Robert, tobacconist, bds. Ray House, e. South. Mclntire Thomas, (McLene, Mad. & Hays, ) supt. Deaf and Dumb Asylum, e. end Waahington, rea. same. Mcintosh Donald, boots and shoes, 63 Ind iana av, res. same. Mcintosh Enos, (col,) minister, bds. 229 n. West. Molver Mrs. Elizabeth, (wid. John,) res. 148 n. East. Mclver John C, hots, caps, furs and straw goods, 22 e. Waahington, rea. 148 n. East. McJanfina Alexander, carriage-maker, res. 59 e. McCarty. McKabe John, saloon, res. 35 Wyoming. McKabe Joseph, lab, bds. n. s. National rd, w. White river bridge. McKalvey Mrs. Ann, (wid. Joseph,) board ing house, 89 s. Pennsylvania. McKay James, gaa-fitter, 77 e. Morket, res. cor. Woshington and Liberty. McKay M. H, (John Furnas & Co,) 68 e. Market, res. cor. Broadway and For rest Home av. McKean John, engineer, rolling mill, res. 228 s. Noble. McKee James, gas-fitter, res. 307 e. Wash ington. McKee John W, agt. Grover & Baker Sew ing Machine Co., res. 76 Plum. McKee Robert, gardener, res. B. e. cor. Elm and Pine. McKeehan Benjamin, boss track layer, I, M. & J. R. R, res. 333 s. Pennsylvania. McKeehan Benjamin M, messenger, adju tant-general's office, res. s. Pennsyl vania. McKeehan James, railrooding, bds. 333 s. P.nnsylvania. McKeehan John, stock-yard master, C, C. & 1. C. R. R, res. 61 8. Noble. McKeehan Michael, wood-engraver, res. 55 Botes. McKeely D. S, conductor, B. R. R, bds. Sherman House. McKeely Frank, brakesman, Bellefontaine R. R, bds. 270 Railroad. McKena Dennis, lob, res. 3 Bates, cor. Noble. McKeeny Oscar, engineer, T. H. & I. R. R, res. 27 Henry. McKenzie, Mra. Rachel, res. Blake, bet. Vermont and Michigan. McKenzie S. L, belt-maker, Mooney & Co., bds. 18 w. Georgia. McKenzie William, carpenter, res. Blake, bet. Vermont and Michigan. MeKeon M. M, engraver on wood, res. 55 Bates. McKernan David S, clerk, P. O, res. 117 w. New York. McKernan Michael, lob, res. 96 Railroad. McKernan James H, (McK. & Pierce,) 2 Blake row, bds. Oriental House. McKERNAN & PIERCE, (James H. McK. & Winslow S. P..) dealers in real estate, room 1, 2d floor Blake row. McKibben J. R, carpenter and house- builder, res. 402 n. Eost. McKinney George, lab, builders and man ufacturers planing mill, res. n. e. cor. Third and Illinois. Sample copies of Review and Journal CITY [M] DIRECTORY. 135 McKinley A. D, lab, res. 150 Ft. Wayne av. McKinney H, clerk, Little's Hotel. McKinuey John A, lob, res. 25 s. Missis sippi. McKnight Mrs. Mattie, (wid. William,) washing and ironing, 27 California. McLofflin Miron, blacksmith, bds. 404 s. Illinois. McLane William, carpenter, res. 82 Benton. McLane William C, carpenter, res. 244 s. East. McLaren Duncan, groceries, 252 s. Tennes see. McLaren Emily, (wid. Duncan,) res. 254 s. Tennessee. McLaren John, printer, bds. 280 n. Ala bama. McLaughlin Christopher, moulder, res. 296 .. East. McLaughlin John A, gunsmith, res. 360 a. \ Alabama. , McLaughlin Philip, cooper, 102 a. East, bds. 8 n. Liberty. McLaughlin, Thomas H, lob, rea. 163 Ste vens. McLean JameB W, mechanic, res. 11 e. South. McLean Miss M. A, bds. 228 n. Tennessee. McLENE & HERRON, (Jeremiah McL. & Fred M. H,) watch es, jewelry, silver-ware, and watch maker's material, 1 Botes House blk., cor. Washington and Illinois. McLENE, McINTIRE & HAYS, (Jeremiah McL, John and Thomas McL. & Thomas H,) paper mill, w. end Maryland. McLene Jeremiah, (McL. & Herron, and McL, Maclntyre & Hayes,) 1 Bates House blk, res 139 n. Pennsylvania. McLue Dennis, lab, res. 23 Maple. McMahan Anna, waiter, dining room, Wiles House. McMahan Catharine, (wid. Martin,) res. 43 Henry. McMahan Dennis, lab, res. 71 s. Liberty. McMahan John, fireman, I, C. & L. R. R, res. 197 Bates. McMahan Thomas, lab, res. over 356 Win ston. McMahan Sarah, (wid.,) rea. 85 Maple. McMahan T. C, cabinet-maker, bds. 65 s. East. McManamon Bryan, lab, rea. 122 Stevens. MoManhan Catherine,(wid,) res. 41 Henry. MoMasters Robert, bds. 82 e. St. Clair. McMillin Charles, clerk, rolling mill coal office, bda. 74 e. Vermont. McMillin Jamea, chair-maker, bds. 199 Huron. McMillin Samuel H, pawn-broker, 17J w. Washington, rea. 74 e. Vermont. McMillin Thomaa, clerk, B. R. R. Co, bda. 74 e. Vermont. McMillin & Co, (Jamea McM. & William F. Comba,) real estate brokerB, 17 w. Waahington. McMullen Henry, bda. 75 n. Illinois. MoMulIen J. W, clerk, 42 n. Pennsylvania, res. 30} n, Pennsylvania. McMullen Otho II, occupant Deaf and Dumb Asylum. McMurray Robert, cigar-maker, res. e. side n. Illinois, bet. Third and Fourth. McMurray Samuel B__ carpenter, bds. c. 8. n. Illinois, bet. Third and Fourth. McNab Philip, phyaician, office ond res. 149 s. New Jersey. McNamarra Frank, lab, res. near rolling mill. McNamarra James, lab, bds. 38 s. Ten nessee. McNamarra John, salesman, New York Store, bda. Oriental House. McNamara John E, 8ervont, 209 w. South. McNamarra Mary, chambermaid, Institute of the Blind, bds. same. McNamarra Michael, conductor, Cincin- not i R. R, res. 165 e. South. McNmaa rra William, pressman, Sentinel office, bds. 60 n. Pennsylvania. McNamarra William C, stone-cutter, bds. 38 s. Tennessee. McNeal Barnet F, lab., res. bet. Michigan and Notional rd, beyond city lim its. McNeely Charles, salesman, Spiegel, Thorns & Co., bds. Wiles House. MeNeely Delia, servant, 332 w. Washing ton, McNeely Henry, lab, rea 50 Elm. McNeely John, carpenter, ahopl8 e. Pearl, res. 74 w. First. McNeely Miss Martha, teacher, eighth ward school, bds. 201 n. Liberty. McNeely John R, clerk, C, O, _I. C. R. R. freight depot, res. First, bet. Illinois and Tennessee. McNeely Elisha, barrel factory, St. Clair, bet. Railroad and Canal, res. 232 Il linois. McNoughton Misa Mollie, bda. 296 w. New York. McNutt Alonzo, brakesman, Bellfontaine R. R. bds. 229 Winston. McNatty Peter, speculator, bds. 204 n. Il linois. McOuat Andrew W, (R. L. & A. W. McO,) 61 and 63 w. Washington, res. _. e. cor. New York and East. McOuat George, bds. n. e. cor. New York and East. McOuat Mrs. Janet S, (wid. Thomas,) res. n. e. cor. New York and East. McOuat R. L. & A. W, dealers in stoves and house furnishing goods, 61 and 63 w. Washington. Can be had by addressing Logan & Co., Indianapolis. 136 LOGAN'S [M] INDIANAPOLIS McOuat R. L, 61 ond 63 w. Washington, res. 76 w. Market. McOuat Sarah, (wid. James,) res. 300 Pat tison. MoVeck David I, salesman, rea. 276 n. West. McPherson Caroline, servant, W. H. Jones, 273 n. Illinois. Mcpherson r. b., division supt MenJ_ontt' Union Ex press Co, 42 and 44 e. Washington, bds. Bates House. McPherson Williom M, pointer, bds. 184 n. Tennessee. McQuade Patrick, expressman, bds. 79 Fayette. McQuality William, works HineBley's liv ery stable, bds. 69 w. Market. McRoy Wm, weaver, bde. 336 w. Wash ington. McShepard Jamea B, clerk, rea. 2)5 w. Marylond. McSweeny Annie dress-moker, bds. 70 e. Market. McSweeny Miss M, dress-maker, bds 70 e. Market. McVeigh Hugh, clerk, 159 and 161 e. Wishington, res. 437 n. Mississippi. McVey David, blacksmith, 277 w. Washing ton, res. 58 s. California. McVey Joseph, carpenter, res. 24 Coburn. McVey Mary, aervant, 21 n. East. McVey William, clerk, Featherston'a auc tion rooms, res. 437 n. Mississippi. McVicker Achor W, cutter, Taylor & Crain, 3 Bates House blk, res. 176 w. Ohio. McWorkman Henry, clerk, p. o, rooms Eden's blk, e. Market. Maas Jacob, boording-hou*., 18 Circle. Maas Louie, (Koster & M,) 141 e. Wash ington, res. 12 n. New Jersey. Mabb Miss Maria, rooms 2d floor 186 w. Washington. Mabrey Randall C, farmer, rea. 285 Mas sachusetts av. Macauley John T, book-bindery, 13 w. Maryland, up stairs, bds. 18 w. North. Macauley Daniel, (M. & Co,) Mayor of Indianapolis, office Glenns' blk, res. 18 w. North. Macbeth Robert, blacksmith, bds. 103 w. South. Machel Guslave, lob, res. 85 n. Noble. Machett Robert, carpenter, res. 169 e. St. Joseph. Mochin Edward, lab, res. 280 Railroad. Mack John, lab, res. 193 High. Mack Michael IL, brakesman, Bellefon taine R. R, bds. 270 Railroad. Mack Miss Nellie, boarding, 83 n. Missou- souri. Mack Philip, lab, res. 300 w. Maryland. Mack William, pressman, Sentinel Office, bds. 165 e. Souih. Macon ica Jamea, carpenter, rea. 120 Christ ian ov. Macy David, prest. Peru & I. R. R, 101 e. Washington, res. 216 n. Delaware. MACY HOUSE, a. e. cor. Illinois and Market, A. W. Melsheimer, propr. See card, adver tising dept, page 11. Macy W. W, student, city academy, bds. 76 Fort Wayne av. Madden Catharine, servant, 245 n. Illi nois. Madden Mrs. E, (wid,) res. 37 Ellen. Madden Joseph, plasterer, res. 37 Ellen. Madden Miss Mary E, res. 37 Ellen. Madden Michael, lab, res. 239 _ Tennes see. Madden Thomas, deputy col. internal re venue, sixth district, room 15, P. 0. bldg, res. 131 w. First. Madden Thomas J, brick-layer, res. 112 Meek. Madison Chorles, (col,) lob, bds. 257 n. West. Mogee Henry, lob, ree. 263 Davidson. Magee John, lab, res. 263 Davidson. Magee Philip, carpenter, res. 263 David son. Magraugh Daniel, cellar-digger, res. 291 e. Georgia. D B. ALLEN. ABBEY _ CO. ALLEN, ABBEY & CO. WHOLESALE DEALERS ES AKRON ST0HE-WARE, Brown and Yellow Ware, t.lasx- ware, dee. No. 86 SOUTH MERIDIAN ST., INDIANAPOLIS, iND. The History of Indianapolis can be had in Logan's City Directory. CITY [M] DIRECTORY. 137 Mogrough Dennis, lob, res. 474 e. Geor gia. Maguire Charles, salesman, New York Store, res. 50 w. New York. Maguire Douglass, (Crossland, M. & Co.,) 52 s. Meridian, res. 78 e. Ohio. Maguire George, plasterer, res. 460 Virgi nia av. Mahan W. H, traveling agt, Rikhoff* & Bro, res. 28 w. Pratt. Maher William, tobacconist, J. Cahall & Co., bds. Roy House. Mohoney Daniel, atreet-grader, res. 51 Ellen. Mahoney Fanny, servant, 191 n. New Jer- Bey. Mahoney John, flagman, B. R. R, res. 10 Buchanan. Mahorney John _., (col.,) manfr. of orna mental hair work, 55 s. Illinois, rea. 235 n. Blake. Mai Auguat, carpenter, worka Many & Sona, rea. 349 s. Pennsylvania. Mai Frederick, lab, Schmidt's Brewery, res. same. Maier Jacob, barber, 143 e. Washington, res. 147 j e. Washington. Mair Francis, carpenter, res. 335 s. Dela ware. Major Stephen F, clerk p. o, res. 221 e. North. Makepeace Horace B, salesman, 26 a. Me ridian, rea. 54 Massachusetts av. Maker Thomas J, painter, res. 319 Mas sachusetts av. Malay James, marble-cutter, res. 31 Hen ry. Malkt Martin, engineer, rea. 576 a. Illi nois. Mallory Mra. Jane, (col,) rea. 267 n. Mis sissippi. Malone Abner J, corpenter, res. 128 Vir ginia av. Malone Abner J, Jr., machinist, bds. 128 Virginia av. Malone L. D, (col,) carpenter, res. 141 _. Bright. Malone Patrick, lab, res. 27 Wyoming. Malone William, clerk, 25 w. Washington, bda. 128 Virginia av, Maloney Edward, rea. 52 Huron. Moloney James, (J. M. & Rothj) , res. 43 Ellsworth. Maloney John, shoe-maker, res. 259 s. Mis sissippi. Maloney John, blacksmith, res.'Columbia, bet. East and New Jersey. Maloney Mary, servant, 75 w. Ohio. Malott V. T, cash. Merchants' National Bank, 48 e. Washington, res. 298 n. Delaware. Malound Thomas, lab, res. 331 e. Louisi ana. Maloy James, stone-cutter, res. 29 Henry. Mai pas Henry, bleachery, rooms 17 and 18 Miller's blk, n. Illinois. Monde Charles, res. n. s. National rd, w. White river bridge. Mandering Michael, brakesman, I, C. & L. R. R, res. w. s. Noble, bet. Georgia and I, C. & L. R. R. Mangle Joseph, moulder, bds. Globe House. Mangold Frederick, saw-grinder, res. 130 e. St. Mary. Mangold Jane, (wid. Henry,) res. 130 e. St. Mary. Manhattan Fire Insurance Co., of New York, Davis & Greene, agtB, 27 8. Me ridian. Manhattan Life Insurance Co, of New York, Davis & Greene, agts, 27 s. Me ridian. Manheimer David, auctioneer, 13 w. Waah ington, rea. 172 e. Ohio. Manheimer J. C, student, commercial col lege, res. 172 e. Ohio. Manheimer Louie, clerk, 13 w. Waahington, rea. 172 e. Ohio. Manker Lewie, physician, rea. National rd, near Insane Asylum. Manker William, painter, bds. 23 Kentucky ov. Manlove John T, res. Bethel pike, half- mile from end Virginia av. Manlove W. R, (Stanton & M,) 14 n. Dela ware, res. 346 n. Meridian. Mann Alford J, carpenter, rea. 53 cor. Pine and Fletcher av. Mann Henry C, (col,) barber shop, 10 s. Delaware, res. 361 e. New York. MANN J. A. & CO., (Joseph A. M. & F. Cunningham,) to bacconists, 67 and 69 w. Washington. Mann Jamea B, grocery and provision store, cor. East and Virginia av, rea. 149 s. East. Mann Joseph A, tobacconist, bds. Ray House e. South. Mann Lauren, carriage-maker, bds. 206 e. Ohio. Mann William, (col,) barber, bds. 242 w. Ohio. Manner Michael, works Junction R. R, bda. Wiles House. Manning Michael J, broker, n. e. cor. Washington and Illinois, bds. Palmer House. Manning Thomas S, carriage-painter, works S. W. Drew & Co, res. 76 w. Ohio. Mansfield George, (Goepper & Co,) 17 e. Washington, res. 336 n. East. Mansfield John L, res. 295 n. East. Mansfield Julius, tailor, res. 26 Chatham. Mansfield Oscar, clerk, 64 e. Washington, res. 295 n. East. Mansfield Thomas, blacksmith, res. 165 w. Maryland. City Directory Office, over 18 East Washington Street. 138 LOGAN'S [M] INDIANAPOLIS Manson M, shoe-maker, 350 s. Delaware, res. same. Mansur C. W, aalesman, 21 w. Washing ton, bds. 19 e. Ohio. Mansur Isaiah, prest. Citizens' National Bank, 4 e. Washington, res. cor. Ver mont and Meridian. Mansur John, farmer, res. 18 e. Vermont . Mansur William L, res. 19 e. Ohio. Many A. J, corpenter, res. 125 _. Noble. Many Charles, carpenter, res. rear 356 Winston. Many Charles J, (J. B. Many & Son,) res. 125 n. Noble. Many Camilla, carpenter, res. 214 Railroad. Many Gerard, teacher of French, bds. 125 n. Noble. Many John, switchman, res. 31 Maple. Many John, groceries, cor. Virginia av. and Noble, res. same. Many John B, (J. B. M. & Son,) rea. 125 n. Noble. MANY JOHN B. & SON, (J. B. & Chorlea J. M,) carpenters and builders, 120 Spring. Mapes Caleb F, horse- trainer, res. 124 u. Blackford. Mapes Henry, bleacher, Miller's blk, res. 159 n. Mississippi. Mapes S. H, physician, res. 232 Michigan. March Walter, (Gordon & M,) room 4, Tal bott & New's blk, n. Pennsylvania, res. 168 e. St. Clair. Marchel Mary A, servant, 493 n. Meridian. Merchant Isaac, clock-maker, 368 w. Wash ington. Merchant Isaac, Sr, bda. w. Waahington, bet. White River and Canal. Marchant Isaac, Jr., book-keeper, Merritt & Coughlen, res. w. Washington, near toll-gat*. Marcus Elias, carpenter, res. 191 w. Mary land. Mordick James Y, groceries, cor. Georgia and Benton, res. same. Mordock J. F, lottery agt, 22 w. Mary land, res. 347s. Pennsylvania. Marer John P, lab, res. 69 Elizabeth. Marion Catherine, servant, W. H. Latham's e. Washington. Marion County Jail, s. w. cor. Alabama and Market. Marion Engine House, No. 2, cor. New York and Massachusetts av. Market Fire Insurance Co., of New York, J. S. Dunlop & Co., agts, 16 and 18 n. Meridian. Market Nicholas, peddler, res. 460 8. Mis souri. Marks J. H, steward, Palmer House, rea. same. Marks Peter, (col,) lob, bds. 53 Hosbrook. Markwood T. M, (Baar & M,) 20 w. Ma ryland, res. same. Marian Miss Elizabeth, dress-maker, cor. Illinois and Maryland, res. same. Marmont Hall, cor. Illinois and Georgia. Marmpnt Hugo, (Schoettle & M,) saloon, 102 s. Illinois, res. same. Marnorn Kate, (wid. Timothy,) rea. alley rear 75 8. West. Marone & Behringer, (Toney M. & Joaeph B.,) saloon, 145 w. Washington. Marone John, res. 145 w. Washington. Marone Toney M, (M. & Behringer,) 145 w. Washington, res. aame, up stairs. Morot J. R, second-hand store, 87 e. Wash ington, res. 36 n. Delaware. Marot Lewis, with J. R. Morot, 87 e. Wash ington, rea. 36 n. Delaware. Moroney Margaret, servant, Palmer House. Marguert Jacob, butcher, res. 255 n. Noble. Marquis George, res. 372 s. West. Marra Annie, servant, Rev. E. P. Ingersoll, 383 n. Pennsylvania. Marrow Wilson, lawyer, res. 282 n. Penn sylvania. Marsee John M , (M. & Son,) bds. 203 s. New Jersey. Marsee Joseph, (M. & Son,) res. 203 s. New Jersey. Marsee & Son, (Joseph & John M,) steam ploning mill, e. New Jersey, near Mary land. H. __\ ALBERSHAEDT, Manufacturer of OSKTTS' FASHIONABLE MADE BOOTS AND SHOES OF ALL KINDS, ISo. 139 EAST WASHINGTON STREET, Opposite Court Heuse, Indianapolis, Ind. KEEPS CONSTANTLY ON SAND A FULL ASSORTMENT OF THE BEST MADE WOEK. Read card on page baok of title page. CITY [M] DIRECTORY 139 Marsee Louis, cigar store, near Union Hall, res. 12 n. New Jersey. Marsh Alfred S, occupant Deaf and Dumb Asylum. Marsh David M, traveling agt, Asher & Adams, rea. 370 n. West. Marsh E. J, compoaitor, book and job room Sentinel office, bda. 8. e. cor. Market and Circle. MABSH H. & H. B., (Herman & Henry B. Marsh,) occu- lists and aurists, room 2, Miller's blk, n. Illinois. Marsh Henry B, (H.& H. B. M,) Miller's blk, n. Illinois, res. 519 n. Meridian. Marsh Herman, (H. & H. B. M,) Miller's blk , n. Illinois, res. 519 n. Meridian. Marsh Misa Minnie, milliner, over 6 w. Waahington, reB. 89 Indiana av. Marsh P. James, claim-broker, n. e. cor. Washington and Illinois, bda. Palmer House. Marsh William S, harness-maker, Carr & Bro, res. 89 Indiana av. Marshal Benjamin, porter, Grover & Baker S. M. Co., res. 337 n. New Jersey. Marshall Benjamin, teamster, res. 319 n. East. Marshall Mrs. C, dress-making, 58 n. Il linois, bda. Macy House. Marshall Charles H, minister, Fourth Preabyterian Church, rea. 80 Chiatian av. Marshall Chas. L, clerk, Martin & Hop kins, insurance agts, bds. 222 n. Ala bama. Marshall Charles M, bath-house, 16 w. Pearl, res. 16 s. Mississippi. Marshall E, teamster, res. 32 Massachu setts av. Marshall Edward, soldier, U. S. Arsenal, res. some. Marshall Elizabeth, occupant Deaf and Dumb Asylum. Marshall Emma, (wid, col.,) res. 130 Mas sachusetts av. Marshall H. J, carriage-painter, 26 e. Georgia, bds. 24 w. Georgia. Marshall James M, with Martin, Hopkins, & Follett^ree. 124 Broadway. Marahall John; engine-driver No. 2, res. 46 Massachusetts av. Marshall Joseph, corpenter, works Maho ney & Ross, bds. 38 s. Tennessee. Marshall Levi, carpenter, Bellefontaine Shop, res. 344 Winston. Marshall Mary Jane, occupant Deaf and Dumb Asylum. Marshall N. Frank, paper-hanger, res. 15 Indiana av. Marshall P. J, occupant Deaf and Dumb Asylum. Marshall Susan A, occupant Deaf and Dumb Asylum. Marshall Isaac, res. 29 w. Georgia. Marshall William, teacher, Deaf and Dumb Asylum, bds. J. N. Phipp, near Arse nal av. Marshall Worlhington, clerk, 78 Massa- chusetta av, bda. rear 269 e. North. Marahall W. S. A. M, inatructor, Deaf and Dumb Asylum. Marshall W. J, (J. W. Bowers & Co,) 67 and 78 Massachusetts av, bds. 180 e. Vermont. MARTIN MRS. B., confectioner, 80 e. Waahington, rea. some. Martin Charles, foundryman, bds. 174 Vir ginia av. Martin Edward B, oarpenter, res. 323 Da vidson. Martin George W, painter, bds. 392 n. Alabama. Martin & Gibson, (John T. M. & Daniel C. G,) gen'l agts. Western Life Insur ance Co., of Cincinnati, Ohio, 2 Black ford's blk, 8. e. cor. Washington and Meridian. Martin Gilbert, blacksmith, rea. n. Michi- ' gan rd, near Tenth. Martin Gustav, olerk, C. Freese & Co., bds. California House. Martin H. C, (M, Hopkins & Follett,) of fice first floor Journal bldg, res. 224 n. Alabama. Martin, Hopkins & Follett, (Henrv C. M, Henry C. H. & J. B. F,) gen'l'fire in surance agts, oflice first floor Journal hldg. Martin James Otis, clerk, Martin, Hop kins & Follett, bda. 224 n. Alabama. Martin Jease, boarding-houae, 34 w. Mary land. Martin John, brick-maaon, rea. 54 Orient, bet. Michigan and National rd. Martin John G, bda. Batea House. Mortin John H, (col.,) lob, res. 570 n. Mis- aiasippi. Martin J. R, teamster, res. end Virginia av, beyond city limits. * Mortin John T, (Martin & Gibson,) 2 Blackford's blk, 8. e. cor. Washington and Meridian, bds. Macy House. Martin Joseph T, (M. & Myers,) 117 w. Washington, res. 14 Kentucky av. Martin Kallesh, butoher, with Fred. Borst, reB. 338 Madison av. Martin Lewis, clerk, 113 ond 115 W.Wash ington, res. some. Mortin Luther R, real estate and stock broker, oonveyoncer ond commissio ner of Deeds, 10_ e. Washington, rea. 97 e. Michigan. Martin Mra. Mary, (wid. John,) bds. 36 w. Miohigan. Martin & Myers, (J. T. M. & J. M. M,) tinners, 117 w. Washington. Fine Silks and Dress Goods at Trade Palace. 140 LOGAN'S [M] INDIANAPOLIS Martin Robert, cooper, res. 127 Duncan. Mortin Wesley, (col,) lob, res. cor. North and Bright. Martin William, carpenter, bda. cor. Cum berland and Pearl. Martin William, rea. 220 s. Noble. Martin William, bell-boy, Bates House, bds. same. Martindole Andy, res. 83 Bradshaw. Martindale C. F, salesman, S. Kaufman, 116 s. Meridian, bds. s. e. port city, near Virginia av. MARTINDALE ELIJAH B., (Morton, M. _ Tarkington and W.J. Haskit & Co.,) attorney at law and agt. Home Life Insurance Co, of N. Y, office over 2 w. Washington, res. w. a. n. Meridian, beyond city limits. Martindale Julia A, (wid. Austin,) res. 194 w. Georgia. Martindale Moaes A, occupant Deaf and Dumb Asylum. Martindale William, book-keeper, Lines & Smelser, res. 83 Bradshaw. Martlond Andrew M, res. 227 n. Illinois. Martz Charles W, student, N. W. C. Uni versity, bds. 361 Massachuaett8 av. Martz Miss Carrie C, dress-maker, 90 s. East, res. same. Martz Henry K, mill-wright, res. 189 n. Noble. Martz James M, student, N. W.C. Univer sity, bds. 361 Massachusetts ov. Martz Mrs. Sarah, (wid. Peter,) res. 90 s. East. Martz Sarah, servant, 384 n. Tennessee. Martz Sophia, servont, 98 w. Vermont. Marvin D. G, job printer, Journal Office, bds. 98 n. East. Marvin Sarah, (wid. Thomas,) res. 249 s. Tennessee. Maskill Catharine, servant, 25 w. First. Maskill Dennis, lab., res. n. Tennessee, bet. First and Seoond. MASON MRS. A. L., boarding-house, 17J Virginia av. Moson Francis, (wid. Robert,) dress-maker, res. 201 Meek. Mason George, butcher, rea. 297 a. Mia- aouri. Mason Hampton, barber, 143 w. Washing ton, res. 209 w. North. Mason James, carpenter, res. 161 David son. Maaon Jamea P, traveling agt, re8. 407 n. East. Mason Johnston, (col,) lab, res. rear 343 Massachusetts av. Mason Madison, (M. M. & Son,) s. e. cor. Illinois and Washington, rea. 809 w. North. Mason M. & Son, (col,) barbers and hair dressers, b. e. cor. Illinois and Wash ington. Mason Louisa, (col,) servant, 335 n. Lib erty. Mason Mrs. Maria, house-keeper, 222 n. Illinois. Mason Samuel, res. n. s. Ohio, bet. Illinois and Meridian. Mason Susan, (wid. Alexander,) res. 52 s. Pennsylvania. Mason William C, clerk, p. o, bds. 174 Virginia av. Mason W. L, rev. inspector tobacco and cigars, room 14 P. O. bldg, res. Ken tucky av. Masoner Simon, well digger, rea. 108 Hos brook. Masonic Hall, 8. e. cor. Washington and Tennessee. Massey Jackson, (col,) porter, 24 s. Meri dian, bds. 704 n. Illinois. Massey Melinda, (col.,) servant, 704 n. Il linois. Massey Miss M. S, res. 500 n. Tennessee. Massey Timothy, boot and shoe-maker, 66 Massachusetts av. Masten Benjamin F , (M. & Ingle,) 28 s. Meridian, res. Lafayette, Ind. MASTEN & INGLE, (Benjamin F. M. & Mark W. I,) agts, Saginaw Salt WorkB, and proprs. Otter Creek Coal Yard, 28 s. Meridian. See card, page 25. Mat Edward, tinner, bds. 23 Kentucky av. Matcke Edward, baker, bds. 117 s. Illinois. Mather Ann M, (wid. John,) res. 227 s. Pennsylvania. Matheus Cyrus, (Hart & M.,) 26 Virginia av, res. 338 a. East. Matheus Elias C, carriage-trimmer, 123 e. Washington, bds. Union Hall. Mathews Iris, carpenter, res. 337 s. East. Mathews John W, salesman, New York Store, bds. 126 e. Ohio. Mathews Mra. Martha, (wid. Granville M,) seamstress 237 n. Noble, res. same. Mathews William, carpenter, res. 96 Indi ano av. Matler Mrs. Anna M, (wid. John,) res. 314 e. Ohio. Matler & Leonard, saloon, 65 w. Washing ton. Matler Stephen, (M. & Leonard,) 65 w. Washington, res. 314 e. Ohio. Matlock James M, book-keeper, 49 a. Me ridian, rea. 328 n. Alabama. Matlock Dan. O, Trade Palace, bds. Pyle House, room 24. .Matlock Misa Susan, res. 361 w. Vermont. Matlock William, clerk, 22 w. Maryland, res. 244 n. Mississippi. Matlock William, res. 361 w. Vermont. Matlock William A, driver, street railway, bds. 244 n. Mississippi. Matlock William W., clerk, res. 244 n. Mississippi. See Condensed R. R. Routes in last part of Book. CITY [M] DIRECTORY. 141 Matthe Charles, blacksmith, bds. 292 e. Market. Matthe Mrs. F, (wid,) res. 335 n. West. Matthe Mrs. Margaret, (wid. Charles,) res. 292 e. Market. Mather Anna, dress-maker, bds. 189 Bates. Mather John, engineer, I, C. & L. R. R. Bhop, res. 189 Botes. MATTHES CLEMENS, propr. capital saloon, 92 e. Washing ton, res. same. Matthias Jacob, plasterer, res. 246 n. East. Matthias Mary, servant, 235 e. Vermont. Mattocks Mrs. Ada, dress-maker, bds. Lou isiana, bet. Tennessee and Illinois. Mat tun Rudolph, blacksmith, rex. 13 Wa ters. Matson Edward T, moulder, Root's foun dry, res. 129 Stevens. Matson John, shoe-maker, res. 42 Massa chusetts av. Matson S. 8, shoe-maker, 5 w. Waahington. Mat son William, lab, rea. 374 a. Tennessee. Matz John, boots and shoes, 182 w. Wash ington. Mauk Martin, tailor, res. 99 n. Noble. Maurer John, moulder, res. 50 Green. Maurice J. N, boot and shoe-maker, 71 n. Pennsylvanin, rea. 5 Dougherty. Mauzy Jamea S, salesman, 127 s. Meri dian, bda. cor. Maryland and Tennes see. Max Mr, res. 329 s. Pennsylvonio. Maxwell Charles D, cash boy, Tyler'a Bee Hive, res. w. First. Maxwell, Fry & Thurston, (John M. M. & W. H. F, Jr., & W. B. F,) iron mer chants, 34 s. Meridian. Maxwell John C, freight agt, B. & 0. R. R, res. 29 w. First. Maxwell John M, (M, Fry & Thurston,) 34 a. Meridian, res. 330 n. Meridian. Maxwell Samusl A, cash boy, Tyler'a Bee Hive, res. w. First. Maxwell W. D, farmer, res. First, bet. Me ridian and Illinois. May Alvin D, moiling clerk, Daily and Weekly Sentinel, 16$ e. Waahington. May Andrew, lumber dealer, res. 125 8. East. May Augustus, carpenter, res. 133 e. Mc Carty, May Edwin A, architect, res. 173 n. Penn sylvania. May Henry, drayman, bds. 365 s. Delaware. May Herman, soldier, U. S. Arsenal, res. same. May J. A, (J. A. M. & Co,) bds. 26 s." Mississippi. MAY J. A. & CO., (J. A. & R. A, M,) manfrs. plug to bacco, 85 and 87 e. South. May John, (Stoble & May,) grocers, 365 s. Delaware, rea. 360 a. Alabama. May Lawrence, aalesman, 103 e. Waahing ton, bda. Emenegger's Hotel. May Margaret, servant, F. M. Brown, 322 n. Illinois. May P. M, tobacconist, bds. Ray House. May R. A, (J. A. M. & Co,) res. 429 n. Meridian. Mayer Charles. (C. M. & Co,,) 29 w. Waah ington, res. 285 n. Illinois. Mayer Charles & Co, (C. M. & W. Hauie- aon,) dealers in toys, fancy goods and notions, 29 w. Washington. Mayer Francis, carpenter, res. 335 s. Dela ware. Mayer Jacob, works Root's foundry, bds. 23 Kentucky av. Mayer John F , dealer in umbrellas and parasols, 69 e. Washington, res. 123 e. St. Joseph. Mayer Joseph, (Rheinheimer & Co.,) 3 Palmer House, bds. 18 Circle. Mayer J. Henry, driver, Ind. Transfer Co., res. 71 s. Pennsylvania. Mayer Leopold, salesman, 3 Palmer Houae, bds. 18 Circle. Mayer M, cigars and tobacco, 96 s. Illinois, res. same. Mayer X. F, saloon and restaurant, 156 e. Washington, res. same. Mayerhoff Mrs. Mary, (wid. Henry,) res. 242 s. Alabama. Mayers Charles, brakesman, I, C. & L. R. R, bds. Ray House. Mayers Charles, blacksmith, bda. California House. Mayers George, clerk, rea. 170 Buchanan. Mayher William, tobacconist, (J. Cahall & Co.,) bds. Ray House. Mayhew & Branham, (Enoch C. M. & Ed ward B,) wholesale boota and ahoea, 129 s. Meridian. Mayhew Eliaha C, farmer, Michigon rd, north of corporation line. Mayhew Enoch C, (M. & Branham,) 129 s. Meridian. Mayhew Fronk, messenger boy, Western Union Telegraph Co., lis. Meridian. Mayhew James N, salesman, 50 e. Wash ington, res. 512 e. Washington: Mayhew O. F, solicitor of potents, office with sec'y State Board Agriculture, State House, res, 25 Circle. Mayhew Parish L, (Roy, M. & Co,) 8w. Louisiana, bds. 59 w. Maryland. Mayhew Royal H, entry clerk, 108 a. Me ridian, bds. 17$ Virginia av. Mayhew James, driver, Ind. Transfer Co., bds. 185 w. Maryland. Maynard C. E., telegraph operator, bds. Roy House. MAYO E. H. & CO., (Edwin H. M. & ,) boots, shoes and rubber goods, 23 e. Washington. See cord, page 72. Wholesale Cigar House, 39 West Washington Street. 142 LOGAN'S [Mi] INDIANAPOLIS Mojo Edward H, (E. H. M. & Co,) 23 e. Washington, res. 562 n. Pennsylva nia. Mayo H. S, (E. H. M. & Co.,) 28 e. Wash ington. Mayport Miller, sawyer, res. 34 Vinton. Mays Alfred, (col,) barber, shop 162 Indi ana av, res. Camp Carrington. Mays Calvin, (col,) barber, res. Howard, bet. Second and Third. Maya Philip, borber, 162 Indiana av, bda. Camp Carrington. Maya Thomas A, student, commercial col lege, bds. 26 n. Pennsylvania. Mead Frank, machinist, res. 39 McCarty. Mead James, mill- wright, McCord & Wheat- ley's, res. 50 Forrest av. Mead Laura E, occupant Deaf and Dumb Asylum. Mead Peter, (col,) lob, bds. 94 Elm. Mead William, runner, Neiman House, bda. same. Mead William H, traveling agt, Mayhew & Branham, 129 s. Meridian, bds. Sherman House. Meadows Williom H, carpenter, res. 19 Fatout's blk, w. Washington. Meager Miss Annosia, servant, 413 w. New York. Meagher Thomas, blacksmith, bds. Globe House. Means John, rea. 94 w. Market. Means Thomas A, (Haehl & M,) 20 a. De laware, res. 293 Virginia av. Means W. C, (E. B. Dill & Co,) 87 e. Mar ket, res. 238 Madison ov. Meors George W, physician, office s. w. cor. Meridian and Waahington, rea. 210 n. Meridian. Meara Henry B, Vorniah Works, s: e. cor. Kentucky ov. and Mississippi, bds. 210 n. Meridian. Meors Miss Rilla, lady-boarder, over 274 e. Washington. Meason William, works Junction R. R, bds. Wiles House. Meek Alonzo, engineer, I, C. & L. R. R, bds. 99 Benton. Meek Cornwell, retired merchant. Meek Robert L, railroader, rea. 117 s. No ble. Meehan Dennia, lab, bda. cor. Norwood and Tennessee. Meehan Peter M, paper-hanger, bds.Wilea House. Meeky Emma, servant, 79 Massachusetts av. Meconi Dennis, lab, res. 80 Elm. MEDINA FRANK J., manufacturer and dealer in human hair work, 50 s. Illinois, res. same. See card, page 52. Medor Mrs. Margaret, (wid. John,) res. 208 w. Vermont. Medsker William F, attorney at law, room 4, Talbott _ New's blk, bds. 162 n. New Jersey. Megge Richard, res. 37 Wyoming. Meier & Brother, (Valentine & Joseph M. M,) ale bottlers, 76 s. West. Meier & Co., (Lewis M. & William Busch- mann,) dry goods, &c, 151 Fort Wayne av. Meier Charles M, saloon, 156 e. Washing ton, rea. third floor Rabb's blk. Meier Joseph M, (Meier & Bro,) res. 76 a. West. Meier Lewie, (M. & Co,) 151 Fort- Wayne av, bds. 469 n. New Jersey. Meier Valentine, (M. & Brother,) res. 76 s. West. Meigs Charles D, book-keeper, 5 e. Wash ington, bds. s. e. cor. Circle and Mar ket. Meikel Misa Carrie, rea. 113 n. Missis- aippi. Meikel Charlea P., printer, Journal bldg, res. 500 n. Weat. Meikel Frederick J, (J. M. & F. J. M. & Co ,) 13 w. Maryland, rea. 113 n. Mis sissippi. Meikel J. M, (J. M. & F. J. M. & Co,) 13 w. Maryland, res. 113 n. Mississippi. Meikel J. M. & F. J. & Co, job printers, Btationers, blank book manufacturers, paper dealers, 13 w. Maryland. Meikel John P, brewery, 297 w. Wash ington, res. 213 w. Maryland. Meikel Mrs. Mary C, (wid,) res. 113 u. Mississippi. Meiners Cornelius, lumber dealer, rea. 240 n. Illinois. Meinke August, currier, 17 s. Delaware, bds. 60 e. Delaware. Meirhoff Mary, (wid. Henry,) res. 242 b. Alabama. Meisaer Frank, butcher, bda. 277 Virginia av. Meier John, brewer, res. 185 Madieon av. Melker Martin, engineer, Carpenters' Uni on, res. 575 8. Illinois. Melling Charles, lab, res. 47 Douglas. Melville Robert B , tailor, 2 Batea Houae blk, rea. 79 n. California. MELSHEIMER AUGUSTUS W., propr. Macy Houae, 45 n. Illinoia, cor. Market. See card, page 11, adv. de partment. Melton Thomaa, works 175 W.Cumberland, bds. 26 s. Mississippi. Mendel Moses, salesman, Commercial Clo thing Store, bds. 184 Virginia av. Mengas Frank, cigar store, 153 e. Wash ington, res. 182 s. Delaware. MENNINGER DANIEL, Labelle Saloon, 20 Kentucky ov, res. 386 n. Tennessee. Merchant C, corpenter, res. 461 n. Alabama Read card on age back of title page. CITY [M.] DIRECTORY. 143 Merchants Despatch Fast Freight Line, office 19 Virginia av. Merchants Fire Insurance Co., of Hart ford, Conn, Davis _ Green, agts, 27 s. Meridian. MERCHANTS' & MANUFAC TURERS' EXCHANGE, 27 s. Meri dian, James Green, secretary. MERCHANTS' NATIONAL BANK, 48 e. Washington, John S. Newman, prest, V. T. Malott, coshr. MERCHANTS' POLICE, office 85 e. Washington, up-8tairs, A. D. Rose, captain. MERCHANTS' UNION EXPRESS Co, office 42 and 44 e. Washington, Charles A. Parsons, agt, R. B. McPherson, div. aupt. Merche H. B, artist, 19 Miller's blk, res. 519 n. Meridian. Meredith Edward, foreman, E. C. Atkina & Co.'s saw factory, rea. 235 a. Mia- sissippi. Meredith R. 0, carpenter, res. cor. Oak and Cherry. Meredith Samuel C, mail clerk, Journal Office, res. 212 Blackford. Meredith William, printer, res. 124 n. Mis souri. Merousky Henry, lab, res. Fourth, bet. Railroad and Canal. Merick William, stableman, Citizens' Street Ry, bds. Neiman House. Mermann Mary, cook, Ray Houae. Merrifield Charles E, groceries, cor. Ten nessee and New York, res. 135 w. New York. MERRILL & CO., (Samuel M. & Mrs. J. M. Moorea,) publiahera; booksellers and stationers, 5 e. Washington. Merrill Miss Catharine, res. s. w. cor. Ala bama and Merrill. Merrill Miss Ella, bds. 244 w. New York. Merrill Mrs.|Lucinda,(wid. J. F, ) res. 244 w. New York. Merrill Misa Mino, res. n. e. cor. Alabama and Merrill. Merrill Miss Minerva A, bds. 244 w. New York. Merrill Nicholas, shoe-maker, res. 288 w. Washington. Merrill Samuel, (Merrill & Co.,) 5 e. Wash ington, res. u. e. cor. Alabama and Merrill. Merrill William H. D, plumber, res. 244 w. New York. MERRITT & COUGHLEN, (George M. & William C,) woolen nianfrs. and dealers in woolen and cotton factory findinga, w. end Wash-, ington, near White River. Merritt George, (M. & Coughlen,) res. 172 n. West. Merritt, Joseph J, (M. & Rosengarten,) 32 n. Pennsylvania, bds. 31 Cherry. Merritt & Roaengarten, (Joseph J. M. & Albert R,) newa stand and periodical nepot, 32 n. Pennsylvania. Merriweather Cameron, (col,) lab, rea. rear 378 n. Meridian. Merryhew Arter, shoe-maker, res. 505 n. Meridian. Merryman Daniel H, salesman, res. 146 Ft. Wayne ov. Merryman W. G, clerk, 298 n. Pennsylva nia, bds. 213 n. Pennsylvania. Merther William, butcher, n. e. cor. Noble and New York, rea. 358 e. New York. Mer? Fredarico, commercial editor, Daily Telegraph, rea. over 170 e. Waahington. Mescal Joseph, lab, Bellefontaine shop, res. 30 John. Meskamp William, lab, rea. 42 Elm. Me8senger Adna C, carpenter, res. 397 w. New York. Messenger Lyman, corpenter, res.318 Mas sachusetts av. Messersmith Mike, occupant Deaf and Dumb Asylum. Messick John, book-heeper, 24 s. Meridian, res. James Ellis, n. Meridian. Messick Thomas B, money order clerk, P. 0. Rooms, Eden's blk. Messier Christina, (wid. Frederick,) rea. 426 s. East. Metcalf George W, traveling agt.. Fair banks' scolea,. 43 and 45 n. Tenneaeee. METROPOLITAN THEATRE, n. e. cor. Washington and Tennessee, V. Butsch, propr. Metzger Alexander, real estate, claim, ins, foreign exchange and general collect ing agt, 6 Odd Fellows Hall, res. 385 n. Pennsylvania. Metzger Mrs. Catharine, (wid. George,) rea. 382 e. Michigan. Metzger Charles, tailor, 225 n. Noble, res. some. Metzger Conrad, shoe-maker, works 170 e. Washington, res. 225 n. Noble. Metzger Englebert J, propr. Daily Tele graph, res. 79 n. East. Metzger Jacob, brewer, bds. 404 n. Dela ware. Metzger Henry, brewer, 297 w. Washington. Metzger J, (Daily Telegraph Co.) res. cor. Delaware and St. Clair. Metzger John, bar-tender, Selking's saloon, res. 31 n . East. METZNER A, drugs and medicines, 127 e. Washing ton, res. same. Meyer Mrs. Caroline, res. 110 w. Vermont. Meyer Misa Caroline, seamstress, worka 146 Davidson, res. 180 n. Noble. Meyer Charles F, propr. brick-yard, res. end Virginia av, beyond city limits. Livingston's Law Register can be had at this Offlce. 144 LOGAN'S [M] INDIANAPOLIS Meyer, C. L, carpenter, res. 275 e. Ohio. Meyer Emir, book-keeper, Merchants Na tional Bonk, 48 e. Washington, bds 126 e. Ohio. Meyer Frank, drayman, (Connelly, Wiles & Co,) res. 278 n. Liberty. Meyer Frederick, works starch factory, bds. on Michigan rd. East. Meyer F. W, clerk, 397 s. Meridian, bds. 224 Union. Meyer George F, (G. F. M. & Co,) 35 w. Washington, res. 180 n. Delaware. MEYER GEbRGE F. & CO., (G. F. M. _, Wm. Kugleman,) manfrs. and dealers in cigars and tobacco, 35 w. Washington. • Meyer Henry, salesman, 45 and 47 e. Washington, res. 641 n. Tenneaaee. Meyer Jacob, barber, rea. 12 a. Alabama. Meyer Louisa C, bds. 78 w. North. Meyer Ludwig, drayman for Eagle Machine Works, res. 98 Davidson. Meyer Martin, umbrella making, fancy trimming, 19 s. Alabama, res. same. Meyer William, finisher, Eagle Machine Works, res. 98 Davidson. Meyers Mrs. Alethea C, (wid. William,) seamstress, res. 114 Railroad. Meyers Christopher, brass moulder, res. 89 s. Liberty. Meyers George, bar-keeper, 189 s. Meri dian, bda. same. Meyers Helena, servant, 451 n. Tennessee. Meyers J. G, real estate, res. 485 n. Ala bama. Meyers J. W, teacher, public achools, rea. Fifth, bet. Mississippi and Tennessee. Meyers Oscar, printer, rea. 399 n. Alabama. Meyers Philip, machinist, res. 383 s. Mis souri. Michael Mrs. Elizabeth, (wid,) res. 246 Madison av. Michael John P., brewer, at 297 w. Wash ington, res. 215 w. Maryland. Michael Philip, brewery, w. Washington, res. s. Mississippi, bet. Rockwood and McCarty. Michelfelder John, express driver, Union Factory, res. 377 e. Michigan. Michelby John B, carpenter, bda. 656 n. Tennessee. Mick James F, dealer in feathera, gin- seng, beeswax and rags, 21 w. Mary land, res. 170 Jackson. Mick William E , groceries and provisions, 251 n. Illinois, res. 26 Gregg. Middaugh Charlea L, painter, bds. 33 Ellsworth. Middaugh James W, fireman, C, C. & I. R. R, res. 483 e. Georgia. Middleton James (col,) lab, res. 239. Mas sachusetts ov. Mier Christian H, chair-maker, res. 31 s. New Jersey. Miers Charles, printer, res. 130 n. Black ford. Migga Richard, (Hilgemeir & Migga,) gro cers, 367 s. Delaware, res. 38 Wyoming Mihlenbeck Albert, clerk, Gall & Rush, res. 336 e. Market. Milan John, servont, Mrs. Ferguson, 60 w. Market. Milan Miss Mary, bds. 226 w. New York. Mileham Joseph N., master car repairs, Bellefontaine shops, rea. 261 Davidson. Miles, Anthony, (col,) lab, res. 32 Brad shaw. Miles Christopher, carpenter, bds. 183 s. Illinois. Milea James H, carpenter, res. w. side Mississippi, bet. First and Second. Miles Oscar, printer, Capital Job Office, rea. 280 n. Alabama. Miley John S , traveling agt, Foater, Wig- gins _ Co., rea. 77 Jackson. Millender & Hogan, (William B. M. & Ed- ward H,) painters, glaziers andcslcy- miners, 27 s. Illinois. Millender William B, (M. & Hogan,) 27 s. Illinois, rea. 72 w. Maryland. Miller Adam R, (M. & Franka,) over 55 e, Washington, bds. 143 n. Delaware. Miller Albert A, Trade Palace, bds. 239 n. Pennsylvania. Miller Amanda, (wid. Jacob,) rea. 423 w. Washington. Miller Andrew J, lab, rea. 395 n. West. Miller Anthony, carpenter, 227 e. Ver mont, res. same. Miller B, tailor, res. 412 s. Illinois. Miller B. W, asst. assessor int. rev, room 14, P. O. bldg, bds. 373 n. Delaware. Miller Benjamin, lab, bds. 75 s. West. Miller Mrs. Catharine, (wid. John,) res. 573 e. St. Clair. Miller Charles, porter, 101 e. Washington. Miller Charles, lab, rea. 330 Madison av. Miller Charles E, rea. 133 _. Mississippi. Miller Charles, carpenter, rea. 47 Orient, bet. Michigan and Notional rd, be yond city limita. Miller Christ, carpenter, 123 e. McCarty. Miller Christian, lab, rea. 219 Union. Miller Christian, watch-maker, works 226 e. Washington, res. same. Miller Christian, carpenter, rea. 489 s. East. Miller Christian, (M. & Paule,) res. 230 Davidson. Miller C, (col, lab,) res. 340 w. North. Miller C. W, messenger, res. 317 n. Dela- • wore. Miller Daniel, sawyer, res. 385 e.. Michi gan. Miller David H, physician, bds. 298 c. Ohio. Miller E. W, drayman, res. 170 Madison av. For a tine Cigar, call at II East Washington Street. CITY [Mj] DIRECTORY. 145 MILLER E. T., druggist, cor. Illinois and Maryland, rea. 30 Indiana av. Miller E. M, (wid.,) re8. 373 _. Delaware. MILLER & FRANKS, (Adam R. M. & Francis L. F,) pho tographers and artists, over 45 e. Washington. Miller Frank X, cooper, res. 249 s. Dela ware. Miller Frederick, cooper, bds. w. Washing ton. Miller Frederick, carpenter, rea. 21 Bid dle. Miller Frederick A, blacksmith, res. 172 s. Noble. Miller George, (M, Mitcheli & Stough,) cor. Kentucky av. and Georgia, res. 88 Kentucky av. Miller George W, apprentice Greenleaf Machinery Works, bds. 211 Union. Miller George B, blacksmith, rea. 211 Union. Miller George L, mlll-wright, res. 290 Winston. Miller Geo. W, preat. and aupt. Carpen- tera' Union, cor. Meridian and South, res. 256 a. Meridian. Miller George W, carriage-maker, res. 666 u. Missiasippi. Miller Harrison S, gaa-fitter, rea. 157 Da vidson. Miller Henry, stair-builder, res. 360 n. East. Miller Henry, currier, Mooney & Co., res. 304 s. Illinois. Miller Henry, lab, res. 206 w. Vermont. Miller Henry, saloon, 248 n. Noble, cor. Michigan, rea. 324 e. Michigan.' Miller Henry, brick-maker, rea. 18 John. Miller H. F, teacher, res. 18 Gregg. Miller Henry L, res. South, bet. Meridian and Pennsylvania. Miller Henry W, (Dreher, M. & Co.,) rea. 304 e. Ohio. MILLER JACOB, cigar manfr. and dealer, 138 s. Illi nois, res. 61 s. Russell. Miller Jacob, ahoe-moker, worka 65 a. Me ridian, bds. Martin House. Miller Jacob V, carpenter, res. cor. Illi nois and Indiana av. Miller Jeremiah, groceries, res. n. s. Na tional rd, w. White river bridge. Miller Jesse, corder, bda. 206 w. Vermont. Miller John, machinist, rea. 50 Fayette. Miller John, breweryman, rea. s. Tennes see. Miller John, gardener, res. n. _. Notionol rd, w. White river bridge. Miller John, saloon ond boarding, 123 s. Illinois, rea. same. Miller John, clerk, bda. 346 n. Meridian. Miller Joseph, bds. 293 Indiana av. Miller John A, book-keeper, Vinnedge, Jones & Co, 66 s. Meridian, bda. 188 a. Mississippi. >. Miller John A. D, carpenter, res. 468 n. East. Miller John S, machine-hand, bds. 265 s. Meridian. Miller J. Frank, Merchants' Police,' rea. 260 n. Noble. Miller J. F, teacher, M. E. Church School, 212 e. Ohio, res. same. Miller Mrs. J. R, seamstress, res. 231 w. Vermont. Miller J. S, bds. Macy House. Miller Laurence, cabinet-maker, works 83 e. Market, rea. 128 e. Maryland. Miller Leonard, tailor ond renovator, res. 412 s. Illinois. Miller Levi, student, N. W. C. University, bds. 22 Gregg. Miller Louis, blacksmith, res. National rd, beyond city limits. Miller Louisa, (wid. William,) res. 116 n. Noble. Miller Margaret M., (wid. Mathew,) rea. 149 cor. New Jersey and Louisiana. MILLER MARK D., Farmers and Mechanics Saloon, 320 e. Washington, res. 157 Davidson. Miller Mary, bds. 206 w. Vermont. Miller Mary, servant, 284 e. Michigan. Miller Mary E, milliner and dress-maker, 32 Virginia av, res. same. Miller Miss Mary F, aeamstress, res. 157 Davidson. Miller Miss Melinda, milliner, works 152 e. Washington, rea. 307 e. Washing ton. Miller Milton R, machinist, res. foot of Miohigan, beyond city limits. Miller, Mitchell & Stough, (George M, William M. & Charles A. S, ) carriage manfrs, cor. Kentucky av. and Geor gia. Miller Noah, salesman, Farmers' Store, bds. 89 n. Delaware. Miller Osiat, printer, bds. 84 Massachu setts av. Miller O. S, printer, Journal bldg, bds. 12 Indiana av. Miller Oliver T, occupant Deof and Dumb Asylum. < Miller & Paule, (Christian M. & Henry P.,) contractors and builders, 231 Railroad. Miller Peter, works Cabinet Makers' Uni on, res. 525 e. Market. Miller P. W, builder, res. 133 Mississippi. Miller Reinhold A, watch-maker, 226 e. Washington, res. same. Miller Mi8s S, seamatress, res. 157 David son. Miller Sebastian, olerk, 138 s. Illinois, bds. 61 Russell. See Condensed R. R. Routes in last part of Book. (10) 146 LOGAN'S [M] INDIANAPOLIS Miller S. K, salesman, 85 e. Market, bds. 612 n. Mississippi. Miller S. S, plasterer, bds. Court, bet. Ala bama and New Jersey. Miller Theodore, lab, res. 330 Madison av. Miller Thomas, railroader, P. & I. R. R, res. bet. Liberty and East. Miller Thomas J, painter, bds. 307 e. Washington, No. 2, up stairs. Miller Thomas P., invalid, res. 157 David son. Miller Valentine, currier, 125 s. Meridian, res. 140 Davidson. Miller William, shoe-maker, bds. 79 s. Lib erty. Miller William, sow-maker, works E. C. Atkins & Co, bds. Concordia Houae. Miller William W, atudent, Purdy's Col lege, bds. 31 Kentucky av. Miller William B, (Sima, M. & Hoakins,) Canal, near Kentucky av, rea 246 n. Blake. "Miller Mrs, (wid,) rea. 293 Indiana av. Milligan Francis, wagon-maker, rea. 79 Elm. Milligan Frank, (col,) waiter, Bates House. Milner D, mailing clerk, Journal office, bds. 173 Dougherty. Milner J, lawyer, office 94 e. Washington, bds. 89 n. Delaware. Milner John E, teameter, rea. w. Seventh near Lenox. Milla D. S, phyaicion, res. 82 s. Illinois. Mills ,Dovid, (D. M. & Co,) livery and feed stablea, res. 142 n. East. Mills John, master mechanic, bds. 333 s. Pennsylvania. Mills Layton, (L. M. & Co,) rea 180 Mas sachusetts av. Mills Mahala, 8ervant, A. S. Walker, 81 w. Vermont. Milla William G, printer, bds. 152 n. Me ridian. Milton Hiram T, carpenter, res. 338 Indi ana av. Minch Mrs. Mary, (wid. Henry,) rea. 266 Winston. Miner Margaret, (wid. Milton T,) bds. 33 w. Maryland. Miner William, carpenter, res. 16 w. Ma ryland. Miner Willis R, book-keeper, Connelly, Wiles & Co, bds. Palmer House. Minger Christopher, telegraph repairer, bds. 18 s. Delaware. Mingevon Patrick, brakesman, T. H. & I. R. R, res. cor. West and Georgia. Minick D. C, (M. & Latehaw,) 17_ w. Washington,res. same. Minick Hiram, policemon, sixth word, res. 147 Union. Minick & Lotshaw, (David M. & L. T. L,) real estate agts, 17J w. Washington. Minihin Thomas, lob., res. 197 Meek. Mint James, (col,) servont, 139 n. Ala bama. Minthorn John J, (Adams & M,) res. 268 e. St, Clair. MIRROR, (WEEKLY, ) Harding & Morion, publishers, cor. Meridian and Circle. Miselton Philip, lab, res. Court, bet. Ala bama and New Jersey. Misaion Illinoia Street Church, cor. Illi nois and Russell. Mission Sabbath School, cor. Madison av. and Merrill. Mitchell Adolphua 0, clerk, Japan Tea Store, rea. 244 n. Illinoia. Mitchell Bryant, (col,)- lab, res. 158 n. Douglas Alley. Mitchell Burn, (col,) porter, Daggett & Co., res. 230 n. Missouri. MITCHELL JACOB, merchant tailor and draper, 2 Bates House blk, w. Washington, res. 174 e. Ohio. Mitchell Jamea L, lawyer, (Ketchum & M, ) over 21 e. Waahington, res. e. end Market. Mitchell Mrs. Jone, (wid,) bds. 169 n. Il linois. Mitchell Joseph G, occupant Deaf and Dumb Asylum. Mitchell Mary A, servant, J. N. Phipps, near Arsenal av. Mitchell Mra. Percilla, (col,) res. Eighth, bet. Lenese and Knox. MITCHELL & RAMELSBURG FURNITURE CO, 39 s. Illinois. See card on front fly-leaf, page 2. Mitchell Robert, brick-moulder, res. 114 Michigan rd, beyond city limits. Mitchell Robert, carriage painter, bds. Ray House, e South. Mitchell Simeon J, conveyer of the mail, Indianapolis and Brooklyn, res. 2.7 n. Mississippi. Mitchell William, (col,) lab, rea. Fourth, bet. Miasissippi and Tennessee. Mitchell Wm, (M. & Rammelaburg,) mana ger Mitehell &Romme_burg furniture Co, 39 a. Illinois, res. 32 s. Missiasippi. Mitchell Wi\liam M, (Miller, M. & Stough,) cor. Kentucky ov. and Georgia, rea. , 244 n. Illinois. Mitchell W. H, school teacher, bda. 297 n. MiaBiaaippi. Mittay Charles, lab, res. 835 e. New York. Mittay Chri8tian, lob, res. 335 e.New York Mittoy Christian G, drives ale wagon, res. 347 e. New York. Mittay Henry, drives for George Fahrion, 90 e. South, bds. same. Mittay John C, ale peddler, Frank Wright's brewery, res. 847 e. New York. Mittee Samuel E, railroader, P. & I. R. R-i res. 233 cor. Grove and Huron. Where is Heidlinaer. the Ciaar-Maker? CITY [M] DIRECTORY. 147 Mitten George, engineer, I, C. & L. R. R, res. 75 Davidson. Mix Lyman, produce dealer, rea. 76 n. No ble. Mix Lemuel, produce shipper, bds. 236 e. Market. Mock Leouidas G, brakesman, Bellefon taine R. R, rea. 222 Winston. Mock Martin, clerk, Joaeph Staub, res. 127 Davidson. Mock Morris, clerk, M. U. Ex. Co., res. 275 a. Tennessee. Mock Mrs. Sarah, (wid. George,) res. 222 Winston. Mode Michael, (C. Karle & Co,) 83 e. Washington, res. 118 n. Liberty. Moffit.Miaa Emma G, bds. 177 n. Tennessee. Moffit Charles, piano pattern maker, 159 and 161 e. Washington, rea. 70 Fletcher av. Moffitt John, (Willis & Moffitt,) 166 Indi ana av, res. near City Hospitol. Moffitt John, printer, Braden's, res. 297 s. New Jersey. MOFFITT O. I., restaurant and ice cream saloon, 24 n. Pennsylvania, rea. 237 8. New Jer sey. Moffitt Robert, printer, M. & J. Braden, bds. Oriental House. Moffitt Sarah, (wid. John.) rea. 237 n. New Jersey. Moffitt William, salesman, Browning & Sloan, res. 177 n. Tennessee. Mahoney;Patrick, lab, res. 298 s. Delaware. Mohr George, works cabinet-maker's un ion, bds. 518 e. Washington. Moisseemo Von, image-maker, res. 295 e. New York. Mokler Charles, pictures and fromea, 79 s. Illinois, res. some. Molin ThomoB, railroader, bds. 470 e. Geor gia. Monahan Charles, lob, res. 368 s. Tennes see. Monahan John, boarding house, 300 s. Ten nessee. Monahan Patrick, boots and shoes, rea. 271 e. Merrill. Monahan Patrick, lab, res. 368 s. Tennes see. Monahan Timothy, salesman, 41 e. Wash ington, res. 474 e. Georgia. Monan Michael, lab, res. bet. Liberty and East. Monfort Cornelius, carriage-maker, res. 780 n. Tennessee. MONNINGER DANIEL, saloon, 20 Kentucky av, res. 388 n. Tennessee. Monroe Edwin, basket-maker, 362 e. New York, res. same. Monroe F. T, printer, bds. Martin House, 33 w. Maryland. Monroe John, carpenter, res. 330 ., Ver mont. Monroe John L, carpenter, rea. 431 e. St. Clair. Monroe Samuel, teamster on Junction R. R, rea. 319 e. North. Monroe Simon, teamater, res. 252 Massa chusetts av. Montague Misa Jane, dress-maker, works 172 .. Washington, rea. 105 s. New Jersey. Montague Martha, (wid. William,) rea. 105 b. New Jersey. Montague Miss Mary, tailoress, rea. 105 a. New Jersey. Monteith John, carpenter, rea. 127 e. South. Monteith Taylor, carpenter, bds. 127 e. South. Monteith William, carpenter, bds. 127 e. South. Montgomery Andrew, shoe-maker, res. 505 n. Meridian. Montgomery Joseph, works at 175 w. Cum berland, bds. Ray Houae. Montgomery Thomaa, lob, res. 39 e. Mc Carty. Montgomery Wm, drives express wogon, res. 312 Madison av. Montgomery William, cooper, res. 1 mile w. White river bridge, n. a. National rd. Montgovern John S, cigar-maker, J. A. Heidlinger, rea. 17 s. Miaaiaaippi. MOODY BROS. (Edward R. & Charlea W. M,) drugs and medicines, 51 and 180 Indiana. Moody Charles W, (Moody Bros,) 51 and 180 Indiona av, bds. Pyle House. Moody Edward, (Moody Bros,) 51 and 180 Indiana av, res. 126 w. Vermont. Moody George A, clerk, 180 Indiana av. Moody Lucinda, servant, 238 n. Weat. Moody Michael, ahoe store, 83 e. Waahing ton, rea. 118 n. Liberty. MOONEY & CO., (James E. M. & A. S. Mount,) leather, hides, oil, rubber and leather belting, 147 s. Meridian. Mooney James 15, (M. & Co.,) 147 s. Meri dian, bds. 152 s. Mississippi. Mooney John, salesman, New York Store, res. 213 n. Mississippi. Mooney Thomas, fireman, T. H. & I. R. R, bds. Nagele House. Moore Aaron, (col,) lab, res. w. Ohio. Moore Alfred C, road-master, C, C. & I. C. R. R, res. e. s. Liberty, bet. Meek ond Georgia. Moore Miss Catharine M, student, Indiana Female College, 146 n. Meridion, bds. some. Moore Chorles, merchant, res. 175 s. New Jeraey. Moore Edmund, lob., ree. 142 Elm. At No. 39 West Washington Street. 148 LOGAN'S [M] INDIANAPOLIS' Moore Channey G, asst. assessor internal revenue, room 14, p. o. bldg, res. 242 ii. Pennsylvania. Moore Duncan, soldier, U. S. Arsenal, rea. same. Moore Eliza J, occupant Deof and Dumb Asylum. Moore Emma, (wid,) res. 80 n. Pennsylva nia. Moore Miss Fannie, works Ben. Fronklin office, bda. 24 a. Illinoia. Moore Frank, compoaitor, Downey, Brouae, Butler & Co, bda. 171 n. Weat. Moore Frank, tinner, I. L. Frankem, bda. Pyle Houae. Moore George, railroader, res. 195 w. South. Moore George D, Indianapolis Agricultural worka. Moore George T, clerk, bda. Macy House. Moore Geo. W, at gen'l ticket office, C, C. & I. C. R. R, res. 222 e. Louisiana. Moore Granville C, clerk, oflice Supt. Pub lic Instruction, res. 366 w. Vermont. Moore Hardin F, worka J. Cahall & Co., bda. Ray Houae. Moore Henry, carriage painter, 123 e. Washington, res. 124 e. New York. Moore Henry H, physician and surgeon, 298 e. Ohio, res. same. Moore H. A, ( Frink _ M,) 24 e. Georgia, res. 97 8. Meridian. Moore James, lab, res. 59 Jones. Moore James, engineer, C, C. & I. J. R. R, bds. 142 a. East. Moore James, lab. White River Iron Works, res. 37 Jones. Moore James L, pump-maker, works 14 Virginia av, bds. 321 e. Ohio. Moore Jane, (col,) bds. 126 w. Michigan. Moore John, boiler-maker, res. 229 s. Ala bama. Moore John, carpenter, bds. 144 n. Tennes see. Moore John G, ale-bottler, res. 378 e. Michigan. Moore John W, plasterer, res. 267 w. Mer rill. Moore Joseph, huckater, res. 31 s. Bright. Moore Joseph A, (Alford, Talbott & Co,) 2 Morrison's Opera blk, s. Meridian, res. 433 n. Pennsylvonio. t Moore Joshuo, cloth-finisher, res. 628 s. Illinois. Moore J, teamster, res. 246 s. Miaaouri. Moore J. L, pump-maker, bda. 821 e. Ohio. Moore Mra. J. M, (wid. Joaeph,) res. 23 e. Michigan. Moore Miss Maggie, res. 31 s. Bright. Moore Mary, servant, Blind Asylum, bds. same. Moore Mary J, (wid,) res. 267 w. Merrill, Moore M. H, carriage-trimmer, worka S. W. Drew & Co., res. 119 n. New Jer sey. Moore Nicholaa, lab, re8. 384 a. Delaware. Moore Patrick, lab, rea. 294 Madison av. Moore & Co., bakery and confectioners, 131 s. Illinois. Moore Phillip, (M. & Co,) 131 s. Illinois, res. same. Moore P. H, piano-forte-maker and tuner, rea. 27 Ellsworth. Moore Richard, tailor, res. 67 8. West. Moore Robert C, painter, rea. 104 a. Penn sylvania. Moore Miss Sarah, rea. 31 s. Bright. Moore Sophia, (col.,) res. w. Ohio. Moore S. H, physician, 37 Virginia av, res. 323 Virginia av. Moore Thomas, soap manfr, reB. n. s. Na tional rd, half mile from bridge. Moore Thomas C, blacksmith, res. 553 Virginia av. Moore Thomas C, book-keeper, 49 a. Meri dian, res. 23 e. Michigan. Moore Thomas D, cooper, rea. Carey's blk. Moore William, cooper, 102 s. East, res. 275 w. Washington. Moore William, horse dealer, res. 185 n. Noble. Moore William H, plasterer, res. 387 Mas- Bachuaetts av. Moorea John A, carpenter, res. n. 8. Na tional rd, w. White river bridge. Moorea Mrs. J. M, (Merrill & Co,) 5 e. Washington, res. s. w. cor. Alabama ond Merrill. Moorman 0. W, student. City Academy, bds. 76 Fort Wayne av. Moore John, carpenter, res. 74 n. Pennsyl vania. Moran Mrs. Ellen, (wid. Thomas,) board ing, 38 s. Tennessee. Moran Catharine, servant, In8titute of the Blind, bds. same. Moran John, lab, res. 92 8. Liberty. Moran John, engineer, C, C. _ I. C. R. R, res. 165 Meek. Moran & Kelley, (Samuel M. & John B. K,) house, sign and ornamental paint- era, 12 a. Pennaylvonio. Moran Michael, lab, bds. n. s. National rd, w. White river bridge. Moran Samuel B, (M. & Kelley,) 12 a. Pennaylvania, rea. 140 w. Vermont. Morbock Charlea, boot-maker, bds. 78 8. Delaware. Morback Peter, boot and shoe-maker, 78 s. Delaware, rea. same. Morell William, clerk, New York Store, bda. 70 e. Market. Morell William, lab, 395 8. West. Morford Emeline, (wid. Thomas,) res. 276 8. Tennesaee. Morgan Daniel, switchman, rea. 308 Madi son av. Morgan Daniel B, mill- wright, res. 322 w. Washington. City Directory Office, over 18 East Washington Street. CITY [M] DIRECTORY. 149 Morgan David E, heater, Rolling Mill, res. 248 s. Misaouri. Morgon Dennia, , egg-packer, bda. Court, bet. Eaat and New Jersey. Morgan Ellen, servant, 113 3. Meridian. Morgan L. L, carpenter, bds. 420 s. Illi nois. Morgan Miss Mary, dresa-maker, 316 .. New York, res. same. Morgan Patrick, lab, I. & C. R. R, bds. end Lord. Morgan Paulina, (wid. John,) res. 33 e. McCarty. Morgan Sarah M, (wid. George W.,) dress maker, res. over 167 w. Washington. Morgan S. C, with Grover & Baker Sewing Machine Co., rea. 322 n. Alabama. Morgan Stephen W, (Stewart & M,) 40 e. Waahington, res. in country. Morgan William, lab, bds. 759 n. Missis sippi. Morganveck V, grocer, 21 Chatham, res. same. Moriarty Betsy, servant, n. e. cor. New York and East. Moriarty Daniel, lab, res. 248 s. Dela ware. Moriarty James, brick-layer, rea. 493 b. East. Moriarty John, lab, res. n. s. e. Georgia. Moriarty John, lab, res. near National rd, beyond city limits. Moriarty Patrick, lab, res. 33 Bates. Moriarty William, lob, rea. 229 w. Mer rill. Moriarty William C, caahr. and book keeper, Sentinel Establishment, 16$ e. Washington, bds. Palmer House. Moritz Amelia C, inmate Deaf and Dumb Asylum. Morley David, lab, res. w. Seventh, near Lenox. Morley Edward B, constable, res. 303 Indiana av. Morley Thomas, lab, res. 226 _. Missouri. Morrer John, moulder, res. 839 s. Pennsyl vania. Morris Alfred, coach-trimmer, 26 e. Geor gia, bda. Pattison House. Morria Artemus, carpenter, res. 142 e. Mc Carty. Morris Mrs. A. W, (wid,) res. 115 s. Me ridian. Morris Betsey, (wid, col,) res. 129 n. Cali fornia. MORRIS CHARLES G., druga and medicines, 521 n. Illinois, bds. 112 n. Jackson. Morris Elizabeth, res. 625 n. Meridian. Morris Grigsby, (col,) cook, Spencer House, res. 81 w. Georgia. Morris Harmony, huokster, res. 330 Indi ana av. < Morris John, shoe-maker, res. 5 Dougherty. Morris Henry W, clerk, 59 w. Washing ton, res. 186 n. Miseiesippi. Morria Jamea W, teller, Citizena' National Bank, 4 e. Waahington, res. 112 Jack- son. Morris John C, clerk, res. 9 Cherry. Morris John D, freight agt, I, C. & L. R. R, res. 112 Jackson. Morris John I, (H. F. West & Co,) 37 s. Meridian, rea. Ft. Wayne rd, beyond city limita. Morris Joseph, lab, res. 239 Bluff rd. Morria Miss Mary, student, Indiana Fe male College, 146 n. Meridian, bda. same. Morris Mary E, (wid. Frank,) res. 226 Massachussetts av. Morris Sanford, salesman, 10 e. Waahing ton, rea. 275 w. Vermont. Morria S. B, lab, res. 79 Norwood. MORRIS THOMAS A., prest. I. & St. L. R. R, office 33 s. Ala bama, res. Western av, n. city limits. Morris William B, expreaa-measenger, res. 210 Huron. Morria William H, heater, Rolling Mill, rea. 266 a. Illinoia. Morria William J, plasterer, rea. 169 Ft. Wayne av. Morrison Alexander, stone-cutter, res. 177 Meek. Morrison Alexander F, res. cor. Ft. Wayne av. and St. Mary. Morrison Ann, (wid. A. F,) res. 52 n. Pennsylvania. Morrison Charles, clerk, 49 8. Meridian, res. Ft. Wayne av, cor. St. Mary. Morrison E. S, salesman, 117 e. Washing' ton, bds. 17£ Virginia ov. Morrison Mrs. Hettie, (wid,) bda. 1 75 e. Ohio. Morrison Hetty A, clerk, p. _., bds. Patti son House. Morrison Jacob, traveling agent, rea. n- Pennsylvania, beyond city limits. Morrison James, attorney at law, 24£ e. Washington, rea. cor. Maryland and Fort Wayne av. Morriaon Jamea, teamater, bda. 135 Union. Morrison J. A, agent Pennsylvania R. R, 85 Virginia av, rea. 219 n. New Jersey. Morriaon John, bda. 148 Indiana ov. Morriaon John I, lowyer, room 6 Talbott & New's blk, n. Pennsylvania, res. 298 n. Tennessee. Morrison Michael, teamater, res. 135 Union. Morriaon Miohael, Jr., laborer, bds. 135 Union. Morriaon Mias M. F, etudent, Indiana Fe male College, 146 n. Meridian, bda. same. MORRISON'S OPERA HALL, W. H. Morriaon, propr, n. e. cor. Me ridian and Maryland. Visit Trade Palace for bargains in Dry Goods., 150 LOGAN'S [M] INDIANAPOLIS Morrison Robert I, deputy treosurer of atote, bds. 298 n. Tennessee. Morrison S, lob, res. 428 s. Missouri. Morrison William, teamster, res. 429 e. St. Clair. Morrison William, lob, bds. 135 Union. Morriaon William A, secy. Ind. & 111. C. R. R, office 26 s. Meridian, bds. 52 n. Pennsylvania. Morrison William H, book-binder, bds. 144 n. Tennessee. Morrison Williom H, propr. Morrison's Opera Hall, (Alford, Talbott & Co,) res. 63 Circle. Morrison William Henry, civil engineer, over 46 e. Washington. Morrison W. Lewis, book keeper, Stewart & Morgan, res. cor. Fort Wayne av. and St. Mary. Morrow Misa Emma L, seamstress, James Blake, 308 n. Tennessee. MORROW, GOODWIN & HAY, (Wilson M, Robert M. G. & William H. H,) attorneys at law, room 3 Vin ton's blk, opp. P. 0. Morrow Thomas, lab, 327 w. Market. Morrow Thomas E, carpenter, res. 217 Coburn. Morrow Willson, (M, Goodwin & Hoy,) 3 Vinton'e blk, rea. 282 n. Pennaylvonio. Morse Chorle8 A, machiniat, rea. 204 Win- ston. Morse Joaeph, (Rev,) res. 203 a. New Jer- aey. Morae L. C, (col,) barber, bda. 63 s. Illi nois. Morse Robert S, carpenter, res. 68 Indi ana av. Morse Thomas J, carpenter, res. cor. Ver mont and West. Morton Alfred, (col,) lab, rea. Minerva, near City Hospital. Morton Miss Catharine E, res. 215 w Ohio. Morton George T, attorney at low, room 1, Talbott & New's blk, n. Pennsylvania, bda. Pyle Houae. Morton John, bricklayer, rea. 67 Norwood. Morton John R, (Harding and Delaware, res. 311 8. East. Wheatley John M, book-keeper, McCord & Wheatley, res. 309 s. East. Wheatley Julia, (col,) servant, 309 e. Murkct Wheatley William M, (McCord & W,) 19 a. Alabama, rea. 202 e. Ohio. Wheden A, conductor, J, M. & I. R. R, bds. Botes House. Wheeler Albert, tinner, bda. Pottiaon House. Wheeler Anno, (col,) washer-woman, res. 259 n. West. Wheeler D. Y, clerk, bds. Pyle House. Wheeler Ephraim, barber shop, cor. Indiano av. ond Michigan, res. same. Wheeler John, brakesman, C, C. & I. C. R. R, res. 58 Benton. Wheeler M, bds. 556 n. Illinois. Wheeler W, tinner, Tutewiler Bros, res. 63 n. Alabama. Wheeler W. V, driver, M. U. Ex. Co, 42 and 44 e. Washington, bds. 79 n. Ala bama. Wheeling Edward, railroader, res. 245 w. South. Whiney Charles C, manager, Western Un ion Telegraph, res. 94 s. Noble. Whipke Henry, drayman, res. 293 Davidson. Whipple Charles W, machinist, Root'B, res. 315 s. East. Whitaker John, (col,) lab, res. bet. Meek and Georgia. Whitaker L. L, clerk, 55 w. Woshington, res. 157 n. Mississippi. Whitcomb Jerome G, freight agt, Jeffer- sonville R. R, res. 162 e. Market. White Alonzo M, agt, Berkshire Life Ins. Co, res. 377 n. East. White Allen C, paper-hanger, res. 102 Botes. White Alfred, (col,) lab, res. 450 a. Ten nessee. White Mra. Catharine, (wid. John,) res. 578 e. St. Clair. White Charlea H, (Coulter & W,) 77 e. Market, rea. 365 e. New York. White Charlea H, carpenter, works War ren Tate's factory, res. Court, bet. East and New Jersey. White Mrs. E, actress, Metropolitan Thea ter, res. 224 Huron. WHITE F. G., comic actor, Metropolitan Theater, res. 224 Huron. White George W., traveling agt, 42 a. Me ridian, bds 33 w. Maryland. WHITE H. W., merchant tailor, over 11 s. Meridian, res. 212 e. Market. White Miss Harriet, res. 49 cor. Huron and School. White Hiram, lab, res. 4 Harris. White J. B, baggage-master, C. & I. C. R. R, res. 388 a. Miaaouri. WHITE MRS. JANE, (wid. David,) boarding-houae, 75 .. Pennaylvania, rea. same. White Miss Jane, bds. 35 Indiana av. White James M, machinist, bds. 233 n. Noble. White Jamea W, lab, rea. 793 n. Tenne8see. White Joel M, soldier, U. S. Arsenal, res. Arsenal. White Joaeph, lumber dealer, res. 49 cor. Huron ond School. White Joaeph E, salesman, 22 w. Wash ington, res. 72 Maple. White Line Freight Office, cor. Alabama and Union R. R. track. White Martha J, (col,) res. 194 DouglaB alley. White Miss Mary, res. E. L. Hasting's, _. Illinois, bet. First and Second. White Miss Mary, lady boarder. 201 e. Market. White Michael, lab, bds. 578 e. St. Clair. White Nineveh, dealer in fruit, shade and ornamental trees, cor. Delaware and Market, res. e. city limits. White Norah, (col,) servant, M. J.Oatman, 712 u. Tennessse. Capital Tobacco Works. See card, page v. 222 LOGAN'S [W] INDIANAPOLIS White Philip, (col,) servant at 284 n. Me ridian. White Pompey, (col, laborer, bds. Howard, bet. Third and Fourth. White R. B, foimer, res. 869 n. East. White Rhoda, (wid,) res. 53 e. Maryland. White Richard, lab, res. Michigan rd, be yond city limits. WHITE RIVER IRON CO., office 244 Kentucky av. See cord, page 222. White Mrs. Sarah, (wid. Samuel E,) res. 117 n. Mississippi. White Mrs. SuBan, (wid. Milton, ) re8. 494 Virginia av. White Mias Suaan A, res. 494 Virginia ov. White Thomas, lab, bds. 378 e. St. Clair. White Thomas, lab, res. 340 s. Alabama. White William, carpenter, bds. 20 S.Penn sylvania. White William H, carpenter, res. 72 Ma ple. White William M, bda. 57 Eddy. Whiteford M. M, teacher, Inatitute of the Blind, res. same. Whitehead Thomas, carpenter, res. 160 Ft. Wayne a v. Whitehead Thomas, miller, res. 420 w. Washington. Whitehead William, clerk, 405 w. Wash ington, res. same. Whiteman Peter, lob, res. 326 Railroad. Whiteside John, engineer, O, C. & I. C. R. R, res. 43 Bates. WHITING T. M., bleachieg manufactory, 31 Kentucky av., res. same. Whitlow Eli, soldier at Arsenal, res. 576 e. St. Clair. Whitman B. F, clerk, B. & I. office, bds. 380 Masaochusetta ov. Whitman J. M, res. 493 n. East. Whitmore Elizabeth C, rea. 58 Benton. Whitmore Oliver, compositor, Downey, Brouse, Butler & Co., bds. Mrs. Reed's n. Pennsylvania. Whitney C. W, bds. Macy House. WHITNEY CHARLES C, manager W. U. Telegraph Co., office lis. Meridian, res. 94 s. Noble. Whitney Jonathan, blacksmith, res. 306 e. Georgia. Whitney Phineas W, clerk, T. H. & I. R. R, bds. Bates House. Whitney William, res. 426 n. Mississippi. Whitney William, shoe-maker, 119 s. Illi nois, bds. 124 s. Meridian. Whitridge James, student, bda. 363 n. New Jeraey. Whitridge Samuel, painter, rea. s. s. Sec ond, bet. Meridian and Illinoia. Whitridge Williom, painter, rea. 363 _. New Jeraey. Whitsit Benjamin F, brick-layer, res. 291 Virginia av. WHITSIT C. E., builder and contractor, also, manfr. of brick, office a. w. cor. Meridian and WoBhington, res. 291 Virginia av. Whitsit James, (col,) lab, bds. Huron, bet. Ceder and Elm. Whitsit Jesse S, brick-layer, res. 296 Vir ginia av. Whitsit John, brick-maker, res. 291 Vir ginia av. Whitsit John (col,) lab, bds. Huron, bet. Cedar and Elm. Whitson John M, engineer, J. M. & L. R. R, bds. Ray House. Whitton Robert L, clerk, 40 e. Washington, res. 198 8. Illinoia. Whitton Rev. Elijah, miniater, Methodiat Church, rea. 124 n. Tenneasee. Whittenberger Mrs. Cordelia, bds. 316 n. Illinois. Wichen John, lob, bds. 351 Massachusetts av. Wick Isabella, clerk, p. o, res. n. Meri dian, near Tinker. Wick Miss Ina D, res. n. Meridian. Wick William, judge, res. w. s. n. Meri dian, beyond city limits. Wickens Thomas, works Junction R. R, bds. Wiles Houae. WHITE _RIVEJE_ lP-OIV CO. MANUFACTOHBRS OF BAR, BAND AND HOOP IRON, Kotche's Patent Hammered and Cold-Pressed Nuts and Washers. OFFICE AND WAREHOUSE : At the Works, Foot of Kentucky Avenue, Indianapolis, Indiana, W. S. PIERCE, President. J. T. WRIGHT, Secretary and Treasurer. G. B. SIMONDS, Superintendent. Western Furniture Company. See card, page iv. CITY [W] DIRECTORY. 223 Wickerley Robert J, cooper, bds. Bates House. Wickliff Henry, lab, rea. 32 Ann. Wickliff Peter, rea. 452 s. Tennesaee. Wickliff Peter, (col,) waiter, Batea Houae, Wicka Richards, porter, 62 e. Washington. res. Wabash. Wiegand John, works Union Depot, res. 147 Bluff rd. Wiegant Anthony, propr. City Garden, res same. Wierer Chas, brush-maker, works Schme- del & Fricker, res. e. Washington, near Michigan rd. Wiese Anthony F, lab, res. 327 e. Michi gan. Wiese Andy, carpenter, works Miller & Paule, res. 283 e. Ohio- Wieae Charlea, carpenter, worka Bellefon taine R. R. shop, res. 283 e. Ohio. Wiese Christian, lab, Spiegle, Thorns & Co., res. 84 s. Liberty. Weisman Simon, teamster, res. 355 w. Waahington. Weiseman William, res. 391 w. Waahington. Wiggina George W, tinner, rea. 36 a. Ala bama. Wiggina Henry D, mochiniat, Root'a foun dry, res. 507 n. Mississippi. WIGGINS JOSEPH P., (Foster W. _ Co,) and United States Pension office, cor Virginia av, res. 325 n. Pennaylvania. Wiggina Lizzie, seamstress, 124 Duncan. Wiggins Miss Mary, tailoress," works White's shop, Blackford's blk, res. 237 n. Noble. Wiggins Percival E, clerk, pension office, bds. 381 n. Illinois. Wiggins W. W, res. 222 s. East. Wiland Wm. D, clerk, res. 558 s. Illinois. Wilcox Charles D, ogt. St. Louis Mutual Life Insurance Co., room 4 Yohn blk, res. 64 Fletcher av. Wilcox David H, lab, rea 285 n. Blake. Wilcox George H, printer, bds. 9 Vine. Wilcox John, streetcar driver, rea. 293 w. Blake. Wilcox Thomaa, plaaterer, reB. 62 Fletcher av. Wilcox Wm. B, cabinet-maker, res. 9 Vine. Wilcox Wm. H, new rolling mill, rea. 154 cor. New York and We8t. Wilcua Jacob, lab, res. 70 a. Illinois. Wilde John H, saw-moker, res. 274 Bluff = rd. WILDER C. P., books, stationery, wall-paper, &c, 26 e. Washington, res. 26 n. Mississippi. See card, page 76. Wilding William, shoe-maker, 46 Indiano av, res. same. Wilding William, shoe-maker, res. 370 w. Vermont. Wildrick William, chair-manfr, 476 Vir ginia av, res. same. Wiland Minnie, eervant, 190 n. Eaat. Wiles Charles, elk, 32 s. New Jersey, res. 282 s. Mississippi. Wiles Daniel H, (Connely, W. & Co,) 149 s. Meridian, res. 53 Fort Wayne ov. WILES & REYNOLDS, (William M. W. & Thomas E. R,) drugs, medicines and toilet goods, 48 n. Pennsylvania. Wiles Theodore, propr. Wiles House, 41 w. Maryland. Wiles Thomas S, Jr., 32 s. New Jeraey, rea. 182 a. New Jersey. Wilea Thomas, stone-ware house 32 s. New Jersey, rea. 182 s. Mississippi. Wiles William D, ( Connely, W. & Co,) 149 s. Meridian, res. 394 n. New Jersey. Wilea William M, (W. & Reynolds,) 48 n. Pennsylvania, res. 346 n. Meridian. Wiley Andrew, clerk, 13 n. Pennsylvania, res. 131 n. Alabama. Wiley Charlea, clerk, 13 n. Pennaylvania, res. 131 n. Alabama. Wiley Delaney, physician, 116 e. New York, res. 79 e. Michigan. Wiley Miss Elizabeth, res. 67 w. Michi gan. Wiley James G, salesman, New York Store, res. Macy House. Wiley Joseph, saleaman, New York Store, bds. Macy House. Wiley W. M, paper-maker, res. 126 n. Blackford. Wiley William Y, captain and 0. S. R, United States Arsenal, res. Arsenal grounds. Wilgus Jacob, engineer, res. 370 s. Illi nois. Wilheim Christ, lab. Central Depot, res. 265 s. Alabama. Wilkens C. L , foreman, Mooney & Co., bda. Macy Hou8e. WILKENS & HALL, (John A. W. & Thomas Q. H ,) dealers and manfs. of furniture, 38 e. Wash ington. Wilken John, res. 80 e. Market. Wilkens John A, (W. & Hall,) 38 e. Wash ington, res. e. New York. Wilkes T. A, harness-maker, res. cor. West and Maryland. Wilkes Thomaa, aaddler, e. Washington, res. 39 s. West. Wilkining Charles, expressman, res. 283 Davidson. Wilkins Charles H, res. 117 s. Noble. Wilkins Frank C, res. 117 s. Noble. Wilkins Peter, carpenter, res. 117 s. Noble. Wilkinson F. M, book-keeper, J. S. Dun lop & Co., bds. 258 a. Meridian. Wilkinson Henry, (col.,) teamster, res. cor. Oak and Vine. See card of Palmer House, at Indianapolis, on page 7, Advertising Department. 224 LOGAN'S [W] INDIANAPOLIS Wilkinson John, clerk, Bee-Hive, bds. 73 n. Illinoia. Wilkinson William, retired, livery busi- nesa, res. 85 n. Delaware. Will Frederick, works Speigle, Thorns & Co., res. 99 n. Noble. Will John, butcher, res. s. Kansas, beyond city limita. Will J. F, (Frenzel, W. & Co,) 104 a. Illi nois, res. 96 n. Noble. Willard A. E, salesman, 4 and 5 Bates Houae blk, res. n. w. cor. Alabama and New York. Willard A. G, (W. & Stowell,) 4 and 5 Bates House blk, rea. 92 Massachu setts av. Willard H, cobinet-maker, 83 e. Market, res. n. Mississippi. Willard William, retired teacher of deaf mutes, rea. near Deaf and Dumb Asy lum. Willard W. F, (wid. William,) rea. 264 a. Tennessee. Willard Nicholas, printer, Journal office, res. 73 e. St. Clair. Willard & Stowell, (A. G. W. & M. A. S,) 4 and 5 Bates House blk, w. Wash ington. Wildrick Mrs. Nancy, (wid,) cook, 131 n. East. Willhoff George, drives beer wagon, res. 64 e. McCarty. Willhoff Martin, carpenter, bds. 152 Madi son av. William Hillman, grocery, 401 Virginia av, res. 42 Water. William Hubbard, house painter, res. 259 Virginia ov. Williama H. F, grocery, rea. 192 w. Ohio. Williams Aaron F, caahier Indianapolia National Bank, bda. 181 e. Ohio. Williams Auguat, moulder, rea. 172 w. New York. Williams Benjamin H, traveling ogt. Cot ton Express Co., res. 298 e. Market. Williams Benjamin, (col,) lab, res. back of I. & C. shops. Williams Bruno, clerk, 30 w. Washington, res. 171 w. New York. Williams Champion, bds. 20 w. Michigan. WILLIAMS CHARLES, undertaker, over 10 Bates House blk, w. Washington, res. 20 w. Michigan. Williams Charles C, res. 748 n. Illinois. Williams Charles, cabinet-maker, res. 163 c. St. Joseph. Williams Daniel, plasterer, res. 277 e. New York. Williams Daniel, student, North-Western Christian University, bds. 402 n. New Jersey. Williams Daniel G, (Todd, Carmichael & W,) 33 e. Washington, res. 164 e. St. Clair. Williams David, lab, res. 237 w. Merrill. Williams E. H, traveling agt, bds. 84 Massochuaetts av. Williams E. L, clerk, 7 and 9 e. Waahing ton, bds. 226 n. Illinois. Williams Alexander, (col,) lab, cor. Blake and Center. Williams Hart, (col,) hod-carrier, res. 191 Huron. Williams J. H, lab, res. 225 w. Merrill. Williams James, Jaoatler, bds. 198 a. Illi nois. Williams Jamea D, carpenter, res. 418 In diana av. Williams James T, machinist, bda. 88 n. California. Williama Mra. Jane, (wid. John,) ladiea' boarding houae, 289 e. New York. Williama Jefferson, life insurance ogt, bds. 184 n. Tennessee. Williams Joshua, res. 249 s. New Jersey. Williams John C, (col,) white-washer and paper-hanger, res. 85 w. Georgia. Williams John, neater, rolling mill, res. 260 s. Missouri. Williams John R, lob, res. 363 s. Mis souri. Williams Minerva, (wid,) res. 192 w. Ohio. Williams Owen, (W. & Maston,) s. s. Ma ryland, bet. Illinois and Meridian, res. 226 n. Illinois. Williams R. R, lab, 250 s. Tennessee. Williams Rachel, (wid.,) seamatress, rea. 655 n. Tenneasee. Williama Robert, hoatler, W. Hinesley, bda. Pyle House. Williams Rufua, (col,) rea. n. a. Elizabeth, bet. Blake and Harris. Williams Sarah C, occupant Deaf and Dumb Aaylum. Williama Sandy, (col,) worka Crown Hill Cemetery, rea. cor. Seventh and La fayette R. R. track. Williams, Scott _ Co., manfs. and whole sale dealers in smoker's articles, 4 w. Louisiana. WILLIAMS MISS SUSAN, ladies' boarding house, 281 e. New York. Williama Thomaa H, teamster, res. 131 Huron. Williama Wallace, lab, res. Camp Carring ton. Williama William, (W, Scott & Co,) 4 w. Louisiana, rea. 168 n. East. Williams William, policeman, seventh ward, res. 299 s. East. Williams William B, freight agt. Atlantic & Great Western R. R, office 80 Vir ginia av, res. 119 Massachusetts av. Williams W. D, Trade Palace, bds. Palmer House. Williams William G, blacksmith, res. 70 Meek. A reliable Fire Insurance Company. See page 17, Advertising Department. CITY [W] DIRECTORY. 225 Williama Williama R, receiver, Citizen's Street R. R, rea. 11 u. West. Williamson Hiram, farmer, rea. n. a. Na tional rd, w. White river bridge. Williamson John W, aalesman, Tyler'8 Bee Hive, bda. 73 n. Illinois. Willinms n Levi B, lab. Root's foundry, res. 31 Coburn. Willis & Co, (Jonathan W. & John Moffit,) tin shop, 166 Indiana av. Willis George, messenger, American Ex press Co., res. 376 e. New York. Willis Jonathan. (W. & Co,) 166 Indiana av, res. 78 Minerva. Willis Lemuel, cook, Union Depot Dining HaU, res. same. Willits James, baggage-master, C, C. & I. C. R. R, res. 117 s. Noble. WILLMAN HIRAM B., inventor and patentee in kerosene lamps, oil-cans and illuminating fluid, office, room 7 Vinton's blk, n. Penn sylvania, res. Vine, bet. Broadway and Plum. Wilmington Edward M, deputy auditor, re8. 122 e. St. Mary. Wilmington Levi F, night-policeman, res. 65 Arch. Wilmot Mra. Caroline, (wid. Jamea,) rea. 276 a. Delaware. Wilmot Horace Q, book-binder, Meikel'a, bds. 89 n. Delaware. Wilson Andrew, paper-maker, McLene, Mc lntire & Hays, bda. 327 w. Washing ton. Wilson Ann, (wid,) notion store, 88 e. South, rea. same. Wilaon Miss Anno, student, Indiana Fe male College, 146 n. Meridian, rea. same. Wilson Benjamin A, dry goods and gro ceries, 160 Indiana av, rea. 686 n. Il linois. Wilson Benjamin F, works Street Rail way Co., res. 18 n. Noble. Wilson C. F, general agt. New Jersey Mutual Life [Insurance Co, office 19 w. Washington. Wilson C. P, bookkeeper, Willard & Stow ell, res. 181 s. Tennessee. Wilson Mrs. Caaaia M, (wid ,) res. Eighth, bet. Lenox and Knox. Wilson Charles, clerk, 7 Odd Fellows' Hall, bds. 178 s. New Jersey. Wilson Charles, lob, res. 188 Winston. Wilson Charles, (col,) lab, res. 67 Hos brook. Wilson Charles, book-binder, bds. 20 a. Pennaylvania. Wilaon Charlea G, Sr, carriage-painter, res. 266 s. Mississippi. Wilson Charles G, Jr., book-binder, Jour nal office, res. 266 s. Mississippi. Wilson Mrs. E. G, bda. 236 n. Illinois. Wilaon E.I, telegraph operator, 11 n. Merid ian, bda. Patiison House. Wilson Eliza, (col,) servant, 268 w. Ver mont. Wilson Elizabeth, servant at 296 n. Meri dian. Wilson Emily, (col,) servant at 21 Indiana av. Wilson Frank, compositor, Sentinel news room, res. cor. Ohio and Mississippi. Wilson Fred., moulder, bds. 267 e. Wash ington. Wilson Miss J. L, teacher, bda. 37 Mary land. Wilaon George, clerk, p. o, rea. 409 n. New Jeraey. Wilaon George W, revenue inapeotor, room 13 p. o. bldg. Wilson Guy, salesman, New York Store, bds. Macy House. Wilson Harry, lab, res. 507 s. Tennessee. Wilson J. B, stoves and tin-ware, 169 and 171 w. Washington, res. 476 n. Illinois. Wilaon J. C, supt. W. Union Telegraph, office Union Depot, res. 236 n. Illinois. Wilson J. T, stable-boss. Citizens' Street Ry, bda. Globe Houae. Wilaon J. W, tailor, 32J a. Meridian, res. 40 Fletcher av. Wilson Jamea, brakeaman, I, P. & C. R. R, re8. 179 s. Illinoia. Wilaon Jamea, atone-cutter, res. 322 s. West. Wilson James, carpenter, res. 477 w. Mich igan. Wilson James H, worka Street R. R. Co., res. 18 n. Noble. Wilson James H, assistant book-keeper, A. Jonea & Co, 74 and 76 s. Meridian, res. 20 w. Georgia. Wilson Jnmes W, lumber-dealer, res. n. w. cor. Liberty and North. Wilson Mrs. Johanna, (wid. William,) res. 360 s. Delaware. Wilson John, lab, res. 188 w. Georgia. Wilson John, chair-maker, res. 159 w. Elizabeth. Wilson John, painter, bds. Wiles House. Wil8on John, carpenter, rea. 29 Jonea. Wilaon John, salesman, Dorsey & Layman, bds. 268 e. St. Clair. Wilson John, marble-cutter, works Em mons & Wilson, bds. 168 Winston. Wilson John C, baker, res. 264 s. Missis sippi. Wilson John L, trader, ree. 117 Indiana av. Wilson John S, carpenter, res. 68 n. Eaat. Wilson John T, plasterer, res. 117 Benton. Wilson John W, tailor, res. 226 s. Noble. Wilson L. B, clerk, Union Line office, res. 97 w. Maryland. Wilson Laura, servant, Palmer House. Wilson M. W, piano case-maker, 159 and 161 e. Washington, bda. Joger Halle. (15) For Grover & Baker Sewing Machines, card opposite letter A. 226 LOGAN'S [W] INDIANAPOLIS Wilson Lizzie, bds. 22 Fletcher av. Wil90n Mra. Mattie, (wid.,) dreaa-maker, bds. Ballard House, e. Market. Wilson Martin B, res. 253 Bluff rd. Wilson Mrs. Margaret, (wid. Patrick,) res. 276 s. Delaware. ' Wilson 0. M, lawyer, office Aetna bldg, res. 73 s. Tennessee. Wilson Olney F, student, Purdy's Com mercial College, bda. 73 n. Liberty. Wilson Ransom (col,) porter, 14 Bates House, rea. Benton. Wilson Richard, (col.,) brick-moulder, res. Lafayette R. R, bet. First and Second. Wilson Sanford B, res. e. National rd. Wilson Miss Sarah A, bds. 440 n. Meri dian. Wilson Stephen B, traveling agt, Con nelly, Wiles _ Co., res. 126 e. Walnut, Wilson Stephen B, plasterer, res. 325 s. Alabama. Wilson Stephen C, chair-maker, res. 159 w. Elizabeth. Wilson Thomas E, clerk, 76 w. Washing ton, re*. 20 w. Georgia. Wilson Thomas S, chief of police, res 178 s. New Jersey. Wijson William, book-keeper, 123 a. Meri dian, res. 20 w. Georgia. Wilson William, -painter, bds. 267 e. Wash ington. Wilson William E, carpenter, res. e. Na tional rd. Wimer Frank, teamster, res. 18 Arch. Winch Fred, stone-cutter, res. 139 Stevens. Winohell Mrs., seamstress, res. 198 n. Mis sissippi. Windall Charles, works Junction R. R, bds. Wiles House. Winder Alfred, telegraph operator, res. 339 n. Illinois. Winder Joseph, express driver, bds. on al ley in rear 140 Winston. Wineburg William, lob, res. 309 e. New York. Winengs Miss Jennie, rea. 115 n. Missouri. Wing Thomas R, conductor, C, C. & I C. ity, bds. -Batea House. Wingate E. H, grocer and produce dealer, 82 e. Washington, res. 141 s. New Jersey. Wingate Joseph F, groceries and provi sions, 42 n. Pennsylvania, res. 306 n. Delaware. WINGATE T. H., actuary, Great Western Horae Ina. Co, room 7 Vinton's blk, bds. 52 n. Penn sylvania. Wingate William D, (Hill & W,) rea. 122 Virginia av. Wink Miss Isabella, millinery store, 152 e. Washington, res. same. Winken Auguat, piano-top-maker, 159 and 161 e. Waahington, res. 178 n. Noble. Winkel William F, clerk, James Blake's flour and feed store, s. Delaware, res. 194 Davidson. Winken William, piano case-maker, 159 and 161 .. Washington, res. 178 n. Noble. Winkles Caroline, servant at 383 n. Illi nois . Winn Cynthia, (wid,) res. 136 e. St. Jo seph. WIWNESHEIK FIRE INS. CO., J. F. Smith, prest, W. Prembor, sec'y, Jones & Child, State agts, Ind, 25 w. Washington. See card, page 42. Winslow A. B, book-keeper, J. D. Conditt, _tackford'a blk, bda. 54 Circle. Winslow Annie, (col,) rea. 219 n. West. Winalow Isaac, (col ,) waiter, Bates House. Winslow Jacob, (col,) lab, res. 104 Ash. Winslow Mrs Mary' (col,) res. 558 n. Mis sissippi. Winsor John, cabinet-maker, res. 101 Bates. Winter D. E, painter, res. 68 Gregg. Winter Frederick W, lab, res. 335 w. Ma ryland. Winter Fritz, lab, bds. Nagle House. Winter John A, painter, rea. 317 b. East. Winters George, cash boy, New York Store, res. 371 e. St. Mary. Winters Henry, works stave factory, bds. 172 w. Maryland. Winters Michael, lab, res. 19 Willard. Winters Philip, machinist, bda. Ray House. Winton Jack, (col ,) porter, 38 s. Illinois, bds. w. Washington. Wirt Joseph, shoe-maker, res. 127 n. Ala bama. Wirtz Jacob, horse doctor, res. 503 s. East. Wise August, helper, B. F. Hay, bds. 573 e. St. Clair. Wise George, tailor, bds. 73 n. Illinois. Wise Thomas, railroader, bds. 58 Benton. Wise William T, (col,) barber shop, 223 Massachusetts av, res. same. Wiseman Anna, (wid. John,) res. 199 _. Pennaylvania. Wiseman William W, watchman, C. & I. C. ahopa, rea. 114 Meek. Wiahmeyer Henry, worka atarch factory, re8. 194 n. Noble. Wiahmeyer Michael, clerk, Hay & Co., 48 w. Waahington, re8. 345 e. McCarty. Wiahmire Anthony, Sr, lab, rea. 274 e. Ohio. Wishmire Anthony, Jr., clerk. Seventh Ward Grocery, ree. 274 e. Ohio. Wishmire Charles F, works Union Starch Factory, res. 292 Winston. Wishmier Chriatian F, aaw-mill, w. side Davidson, bet. Michigan and North, rea. 258 Davidaon. Wister Miss Annie E„ ladies' boarding houae, 97 w. South. Withera George T, lob, bda. 342 Railroad. Call at 24 East Washington Street. CITY* [W] DIRECTORY. 227 Witman Henry L, carpenter, Vermont, near Delaware, res. 243 n. New Jer sey. Witner Frederick, lab, bds. s. s. National rd, w. White river bridge. Witt Bennett F, gen'l agt. Franklin Life Ins. Co., res. 364 n. New Jeraey. Witte & Boerner, groceriea and produce, 249 w. McCarty. Witte Edward, grocery, res. 249 w. McCar ty- Witte & Arbuckle, (B. F. W. & Matthew A,) real estate agta, a. w. cOr. Waah ington and Meridian. Wittenberg Charlea, (W. & Ruschaupt,) 37 e. Waahington, rea. 217 e. Ohio. Wittenberg Robert, saleaman, 37 o. Waah ington, rea. 217 e. Ohio. WITTENBERG & RUSCHAUPT , (Charlea W. & Frederick R,) dry goods, notions, fancy goods and trim mings, 37 e. Washington. Wittenbring Henry, cigar-maker, works 266 e. Washington, bds. same. Witthoft Frederick, groceries and provis ions, 1 Buchanan, res. same. Witthoft Henry, cabinet-maker, res. 82 s. East. Wittinger Jacob, grocery, 100 s. Noble, res. same. Witzmann John, teamster, res. 162 Win ston. Wocher John, stone-cutter, res. 21 Meek. Woelz Charles A, wholesale and retail confectionery, s. e. cor. New York and Delaware, rea. sam.e. Woert Jacob, lob, res. n. o. National rd, w. river bridge. Woert John, lab, bda. Gardner'a Saloon, Notional rd. Wolcott Oliver, traveling agt, res. over 248 e. Washington. Wolf Adam, clerk, 131 w. Washington, res. same. Wolf Catharine, (wid,) boarding house, 176 s. Delowore, res. same. Wolf Charles, saddler, res. 147J e. Wash ington. Wolf E. M, painter, 44 w. Pearl, res. 255 s. Mississippi. Wolf Elihue, carpenter, res. 99 Maple. Wolf George, cigar-dealer, Franklin, Ind, res. 176 s. Delaware. Wolf Henry, shoe-maker, bds. 117 s. Illinois. Wolf Isaac, cooper, n. side New York, bet. Blake and Minerva. Wolf John, moulder, res. 144 Union. Wolf Joseph, moulder, bds. n. East. Wolf Michael, conductor, Jeffersonville R. R, res. 229 e. South. Wolf Moses, with Hoys & Rosenthal, rea. 250 e. Vermont. Wolf Philip, cigar-maker, bda. 176 a. Dela ware. Wolf Mra. Sophia, (wid..) bda. 65 _. Bright. Wolf W. W, painter, 123 e. Waahington, bds. Union Hall. Wolfendeu A, carpenter, res. 399 o. West. Wolfrom Albert, (Wolfrom & Bros.,) res. 201 n. New Jersey. Wolfrom & Bros, dealers in stoves, tin and sheet-iron wore, 197 e. Woshing ton. Wolfrom Charles A, printer, works Jour nal office, res. 201 n. New Jersey. Wolfrom Christian A, (Wolfrom & Bros,) cor. New Jersey and Washington, res. 201 n. New Jersey. Wolfrom Ernest E, clerk, Fletcher & Sharpe's Bank, res. 201 n. New Jersey. Wolfrom Mrs. Sarah, (wid. Charles,) res. 201 n. New Jersey. Wonder Miss Sophia, res. 60 Hosbrook. Wonnell Charles, blacksmith, worka 60 e. Maryland. Wood A. D, capilaliat, rea. 201 _. Dela ware. Wood Alexander, rodman for city engin eer, res. Vermont, bet. Meridian and Illinois. WOOD & BOYD, (Levi W. & Frank A. B,) burning and lubricating oils, paints and varnishes, 22 s. Meridian. Wood Mrs. Cynthia A, (wid. Stephen,) res. 74 n. Liberty. Wood D. L, (Nutting & W,) 17J w. Wash ington, res. 417 n. Pennsylvania. Wood David A, book-keeper, 60 s. Merid ian, res. k. city limits. Wood Edmondson, carpenter, res. 124 Bntea. Wood Frank, with Nutting & Wood, bds. 417 n. Pennsylvania. Wood Frank M, carriage blacksmith, bds. 35 Circle. Wood & Foudray, (John M. W. <_ John E. F.,) livery, sale and boarding stable, 16 n. Pennaylvania. Wood George P., foreman, J. S. Carey & Co., res. cor Georgia and Helen. Wood Herman, (Hinsely & W,) 21 w. Pearl, res. 123 n. East. Wood James W, carpenter, res. 124 Bates. Wood Jacob P., pump-maker, res. 428 e. St. Clair. Wood John B, bds. 35 Circle. Wood John G, carpenter, res. 124 Batea. Wood Jacob S, (Jordon & W,) rea. 378 Indiana av. Wood John M, (W. & Foudray,) rea. 4 Massachusetts av. Wood John F, secy. Republican State Central Committee, res. 185 e. New York. Wood Mrs. L. J, boarding house, 62 a. Pennsylvania. For Grover & Baker Sewing Machines, card opposite letter A. 228 LOGAN'S [W] INDIANAPOLIS Wood L. J, lab, res. 205 w. McCarty. Wood Levi, (W. & Boyd,) 22 a. Meridian, rea. n. Mississippi, beyond city limits. Wood Mrs. Mollie, (wid. Jamea,) rea. 174 Virginia av. Wood N. H, conductor, C, C. &, I. C. R. R, bda. Botes House. Wooda N. M, book-keeper, S. Kaufman, 116 s. Meridion, res. 168 n. Noble. Wood Nicholas, pump-maker, bda. 428 e. St. Clair. Wood Sarah E. A, (wid. Ely,) rea. e. Wash ington, beyond city limita. Wood William E, horse-dealer, res. 442 n, Pennsylvania. Woodbridge Charles A, (John Woodbridge & Co,) 16 w. Washington, res. 160 n. Meridian. Woodbridge John (J. W. & Co,) 16 w. Washington, bds. 160 n. Meridian. WOODBRIDGE JOHN & CO.. china, glass and queensware, plated ware and table cutlery, 16 w. Wash ington, wholesale house, 36 s. Merid ian. Woodbridge Wesley, (col,) waiter, Bates House. Woodburn James II, (Thompson & W,) physician and surgeon, 90 n. Illinoia, rea. 264 n. Illinois. Woodbury Uriah T, dentist, rooms 39_ w. Washington, res. 44 n. Mississippi. Woodby George W, (col,) lab, bds. Eighth, bet Lenox and Knox. Woodfill George, groceries, 323 8. Delaware, res. same. Woodford James E, book-keeper, Frank Wright's brewery, bds. 160 w. Wash ington. Woodford Mrs. Nancy, (col., wid,) washer woman, res. 157 Indiana av. Woodruff Ada, (wid,) rea. 83J e. Washing ton. WOODS MISS ALICE, ladiea' boarding houae, 27 n. New Jer sey. Woods Miss Annie, knitter, res. 70 w. Eliz- obeth. Woods Benjamin F, supt. wood-yard, res. 234 Huron. Woods Daniel, razor sharpener, res. 209 e. Market. Woods F. M, blacksmith, bds. 25 Circle. Woods John, blacksmith, bds. 35 Circle. Woods L. E, salesman, New York Store, bds. Oriental House. Woods Mary, servant, H. D. Carliale, 77 w. Ohio. Woods Mrs. seamstress, res. 70 w. Eliza beth. Woods Neander M, book-keeper, S. Kauf man, 116 s. Meridian, res. 168 n. No ble. Woods Thomas, res. 469 s. Illinois. Wooda William, stock-trader, res. 303 e. Market. Woodsides Alexander, butcher, res. s. s. National rd, w. White river. Woodson John S, painter, rea. a. Second, bet. Meridian and Illinois. Woodson Mrs. Millie, (col, wid,) washer woman, res. Railroad, bet. Fifth and Sixth. Woodward John, book-binder, Journal of fice, bda. 25 Harria. Woollen Miaa Anna, bda. cor. We8t and Michigan. WOOLLEN, BAAR & CO., (W. J. W, G. L. B. & ,) furni ture manfs. and dealers, 75 w. Wash- ton. Woollen Kesiah, (wid,) boarding house, 83 n. Pennsylvania. Woollen Greenly V, physician, 35 e. Wash ington, res. City Hospital, cor. Locke and Margaret. Woollen Milton A, constable, office over e. Washington, res 248 n. w. cor. Mich igan. Woollen William J, 74 w. Washington, res. 279 w. Vermont. Woollen William M, groceries and provia- iona, 101 Indiana av, re8. 288 n. Ten nesaee. Woollen William W, Jr., attorney at law and diatrict prosecutor, over 353 e. Waahington, rea. 405 n. Pennsylvania. Woollen William W, ca8hier Indiana Banking Co, 28 e. Washington, res. 167 n. Tennessee. Woolley William B, brakesman, Bee Line R. R, bds. 103 s. New Jersey. Worley John, res. n. s. National rd, half mile from bridge. Worley Lina, res. n. s. National rd, half mile from bridge. Worton Benjamin, pump-repairer, res. 47 Rose. Worman Charles R, clerk, 14 w. Washing ton, bds. Pyle House. Worrell J. R, driver, J. R. Marot, res. 186 n. Davidson. Worson Hiram P., salesman, Tyler's Bee- Hive, bds. 175 s. Tennessee. Worthington W. H, trunk-maker, res. 266 n. West. Wose Juliua L, (Williama, Scott _ Co.,) 4 w. Louiaiana, rea. McGill. Wren Mra. Eve, ( wid,) res. 269 n. Blake. Wren Miss Ellen, seamatreaa, bds. 160 s. Noble. Wren Edward, wagon-maker, res. 99 s. New Jersey. Wren Miss Jennie, room second floor, 186 w. Waahington. Wren Thomas, contractor, res. cor. Nor wood and Tennessee. Wren Mike, lab, res. 123 w. McCarty. Geo. M. Jenison _ Co., card on back of title page. CITY [Y] DIRECTORY. 229 WRIEDT CHARLES, saloon, and bowling and shooting al ley, 34 w. Georgia, res. same. Wright Aaron, gardener, res. n. s. Nation al rd, one mile w. White river. Wright Mrs. Anna, boarding house, 366 w. Washington. Wright Asa, lab, res. over 212 e. Washing ton. WRIGHT ARTHUR L., county treasurer, Marion county, rea. 426 n. New Jersey. Wright Benjamin, book-keeper, Davis & Wright, 88 e. Washington, bds. 228 n. East. Wright Charles, (Davis & W,) auctioneers, 88 e. Washington, res. 228 n. East. Wright Charles A, bds. Bates House. Wright Charles E, (farvin, Fletcher & Wright,) "physician and surgeon, bds. 236 e. Vermont. Wright D. B, currier, 49 s. Delaware, res. Michigan rd. Wright Edward B, book-keeper, bds. 228 n. East. Wright Miss Elizabeth, seamstress, res. 212 e. Woshington. Wright Elizabeth, (wid. Alonzo,) res. 182 w. Georgia. Wright Francis, salesman, Bee-Hive Store, res. 228 n. East. Wright Fronk, clerk, 3 Odd Fellows' Hall, 189 e. Ohio. Wright Frank, ale brewery, foot w. New York, res. 160 n. West. Wright Henry, minister, res. 88 e. Pratt. Wright Hiram N, boarding house, 366 w. Washington. Wright J. J, engineer, I, C. & L. R. R, bds. 99 Benton. Wright J. J, physician Insane Hospital, res. 498 n. Pennsylvania. Wright I. T, secy, and treas. White River Iron Co., 275 n. Delaware. Wright John, (col,) lab, res. 30 Ann. WRIGHT JACOR T., clerk, county auditor's office, res. 275 n. Delaware. Wright Jeremiah, farmer, res. n. _. Na tional rd, w. White river bridge. Wright John, salesman, New York Store, bda. 185 e. Waahington. Wright John R, (Wm. Summer & Co,) 10 w. Waahington, re8. Cincinnati, 0. Wright John S, clerk, street R. R. office, rea. 795 n. Tennessee. Wright Levi, grocery-dealer, 323 n. Ala bama, res. 314 n. Alabama. Wright Mansur H, physician, res. 103 n. Meridian. Wright R. M, res. Orient, e. city limits. Wright Theodore F, foreman, Downey, Brouse. Butler & Co., res. 361 w. Ver mont. Wright Thomas, lab, res. 135 n. Bright. Wright W. G., pump-maker, res. 271 Vir ginia av. Wright W. H, salesman, 52 s. Meridian, res. 83 e. Michigan. Wright Wesley, res. 15 Kentucky av. Wright William, salesman and collector, Crossland, Maguire & Co, bds. 204 n. Illinois. Wrighter G. W, student, commercial col lege, bds. 147 n. Meridian. WUEST & CO., manfrs. and dealers in furniture, 105 e. Washington. See card, page iv. Wuest Chriatopher, tinner, 103 e. Waahing ton. Wuest John, (W. & C,) res. 143 Ft. Wayne av. Wuest Louis, cigar-maker, bds. 452 .e Waahington. Wundrum William, tailor, res. 383 s. Del aware. Wundran Louia, ahoe-maker, rea. 83 s. Il linoia. Wvaer Mre. Elizabeth, (wid. Frederick,) dreaa-maker, Wabash, bet. New Jer sey and Eaat, res. same. Wvser Frederick, works Gates, Pray & Co., res. Wabash, bet. New Jersey and East. Wyatt William D, plasterer, bds. 83 Ben ton. Wycoff Samuel, lab. Central depot, res. 179 e. South. Wylend Ellen, servant, 242 n. Meridian. Wynn Miss Annie, teacher, German-En glish school, res. 38 e. St. Joseph. Wynn Willber S, salesman, Bowen, Stew art & Co., res. 138 e. St. Joseph. Wyfe Michael, res. Kansas, out city limits. Wyrick Michael, engineer, J, M. & I. R. R., bds. Oriental House. WYSONG CHRISTOPHER, brick-layer, res. 281 n. Noble. Wysong George, brick-layer, bds. 281 n. Noble. Wysong Jesse, brick-layer, res. 337 n. Noble. Wysong John, brick-layer, res. 329 n. No ble. YACHMAN HARMAR, tailor, bds. 110 Virginia av. Yagan Henry, foundryman, bds. 46 Hos brook. Yagan Matthew, wood-peddler, bds. 46 Hosbrook. Yager Miohael, lab, res. 432 e. Georgia. Yaer Christian, res. 293 c. Washington, up-ataira. Yaer William, rea. 293 e. Washington. Yambelle Andrew, blacksmith, bds. 479 e. ' Georgia. Hair work, all kinds, at Medina's, 50 South Illinois Street. 230 LOGAN'S [Z] INDIANAPOLIS Yandes Daniel, (Sinker & Co,) s. Penn sylvania, bda. 84 w. Vermont. Yandes Daniel, Jr., wholeaole deoler in leather, hides, oil, &c, 76 e. Washing ton, res. 179 e. New York. Yandes George B, leather and shoe-find ings, 76 e. Washington, bds. Batea House. Yandes & Kemper, (G. B. Y. & William K„) last and boot-tree factory, 262 s. Illi nois. Yorbrough Peter, engineer, C, C. & I. C. R. R, res. 76 Benton. Yorper Hermon, brick-maker, res. 493 s. New Jersey. Yeager William, grocer, 246 n. Noble, res. same. Yeakle Henry R, clerk, U. S. paymaater'a department, room 14 Talbott & New's blk, n. Pennsylvania, res. cor. Vir ginia av. and Alabama. Yeaton L. B, superintendent, Fire Alarm Telegraph, rea. 167 n. Delaware. Yewell Solomon, book-keeper, rea. 320 Madiaon av. Yewell Solomon, Jr., bds. 320 Madison av. Yeiser Jacob, conductor, C, C. & I. C. R. R, bda. Spencer Houae. Yohn's Block, n. e. cor. Meridian and Washington. Yohn Charles G, Btudent, bd3. 206 n. Del aware. Yohn Jamea C, capitaliat, res. 206 n. Del aware. Yorger & Bro, (J. Y. & N. Y.) meat-mar ket, 245 e. Washington. Yorger Charles, wood-sawyer, res. s. Penn sylvania. Yorger Clemens, butcher, rea. 137 n. Noble. Yorger John,(Y. & Broa,) 245 e. Washing ton, res. e. city limits. Yorger Matz, (Y. & Bros,) res. Vermont, near Noble. York Andrew J, steward, Ray Houae, bd8. same. York E. D, messenger, American and U. S. Express Cos., 34 e. Washington, res. 216 .. South. Yost Henry, stone-mason, ' bds. 271 w. Washington. Yost Taylor, stone-mason, res. 378 s. West Yoat Thomas, stone-maaon, res. 271 w. Washington. Youart John M, aurgeon, 130 n. Pennsyl- venia, res. 128 n. Pennsylvania. Young , res. 121 Duncan. Young Mrs. Ann, (wid. John,) bds. 210 e. Ohio. Young Christopher, pattern-maker, White River Iron Works, res. 121 Duncan. Young George, (col,) lab, res. 171 Indi ana av. Young Granville, tailor, bds. 340 n. Me ridian. Young Isaac, (col,) servant, 139 w. New York. Young Jacob, res. 290 e. St. Clair. Young John, lawyer, room 5 Hereth's blk, res. 103 Jackson. Young Junius, tailor, works over 11 s. Meridian, bds. 212 e. Market. Young Levi, (col,) lab, res. 224 Huron. Young Louis, tobacco and cigars, and bar ber ahop, 77 s. Illinois, res. aome. Young Men's Christian Aasociation Sun day School, No. 2, 300 e. St. Clair. Young Men's Library Aaaociation, 8. w. cor. Washington ond Meridian, up- etaira. Young Millege, (col,) barber, Dr. Frank lin. Young Richard, lab, res. 109 Huron. Young Richard, (col,) gardener, res. 224 Huron. Young Miss Sarah, res. 213 w. Market. Young Squire, (col,) lab, res. 259 n. West. Young Thomas J, (col.,) lob, res. 122 _. Pennsylvania. Young Taylor, (col.,) teamster, res. 224 Huron. Young Thornton, (col.,) lab, res. 228 n. Noble. Young William, carpenter, res. Athon, near City Hospital. Youngerman Mary P., (wid. Conrad,) res. 120 Masaaehuaetia av. Younk John, teamater, bda. 59 Eddy. Youts Peter, wagon-maker, worka 231 w. Washington, bda. 272 w. Washington. Youtsay Thomas, sawyer, res. 57 Eddy. Youtsey William, res. 43 Eddy. ZAGG FERDINAND, cabinet** maker, bds. 267 e. VVashington. Zahn Bernhard, engineer, res. 113 Benton. Zeeber S. S, Trade Palace, bds. Macy House. Zehringer Frank, porter, 6 e. Washington, bds. 164 n. Davidson. Zehringer Landolin, cabinet-maker, res. 164 Davidson. Zeigler George H, claim agent, res. 202 n. West. Zeigler Miss Mary, res. 202 n. West. Zelath Russell, pay-master, Bellefontaine R. R, res. 38 w. St. Clair. Zellers Henry, matrass-maker, Spiegel, Thorns _ Co., bds. Macy House. Ziegelmueller Herman, shoe-maker, 270 s. Delaware, res. same. ZIEGLER GEORGE H., military claim-attorney and notary public, room 6 Talbott & New's blk, n. Pennsylvania, res. 202 n. West. Ziep Anna, servant, 82 n. East. Zimmer Ferdinand, saloon, 110 s. Illinoia, res. some. Diamonds, Jewelry and Silver-Ware, at 24 East Washington Street. CITY [Z] DIRECTORY. 231 Zimmerman Christopher, alate-roofer, res. e. Washington, near corporation line. Zimmerman George, drayman, res. 284 n. Noble. Zimmerman Gothlep, butcher, res. 211 w. Michigan. Zimmerman H. C, slate-roofer, res. 130 u. Spring. Zimmerman James, slate-roofer, res. 72 n. Liberty. Zimmerman John R, slate-roofer, bds. 130 n. Spring. Zimmerman Mrs. Mary, (wid. William,) res. 130 spring. Zink Henry, (Brahnm &Z,) Sherman House harber-shop, res. 328 s. Delaware. Zion's Church, (German Lutheran,) n. a. Ohio, bet. Illinois and Meridian. Zscheok ' Frederick, carpenter, res. 90 Union. Zscheck Qustavus, Eagle Machine Works, res. s. Meridian. Zulmer Charles, machinist, C. C. & I. CR. R. shop, res. 399 e. Georgia. Zuinbusch Theodore, watch-maker, 93 e. Washington, res. 61 w. Maryland. Zwick William, tailor.' works over 182 _. Washington, res. Ill n. Noble. MIIIC i o t_2 O >~&d cp_?_ AND DEALERS IN CGBSETS&FANCYCOOGS, WHERE CAN BE FOUND THE BEST HOOP SKIRTS AT THE LOWEST PRICES. ALL SKIRTS BOUGHT FROM US REPAIRED FREE OF CHARGE. GEI BILLIARD HALL AID SALOON, No. 9 WEST WASHINGTON STREET, INDIANAPOLIS, IND. WILLIAM BUCKSOT. PBOFB. This Hall contains as fine Tables as are to be found in the city ; also, one ot the most superb BARS, at which is offered the finest WINES, LIUUORS, CIGARS, BEER AND ALE, To be had in the market. Club Rooms furnished in good style. Established in 1857— Sheffield Saw Works. ALPHABETICAL DIRECTORY -OF- STREETS, AVENUES AND ALLEYS IN INDIANAPOLIS. The principal streets crossing Washington Street are divided into North and South ; those crossing Meri dian Street into East and West. The four principal Avenaes extend in four diagonal directions, from near the center to the extreme limits of the city. AGNES, north and south, from New York to North, twelve blocks west of Meridian. Alabama, north and south, three blocks east of Meridian. Alleghaney Alley, east, and west from Ten nessee, bet. Vermont and Michigan. Ann, from Macauley to Catharine, bet, Tennessee and Mississippi. Arch, east and west, bet. Jackson and No ble, nine blocks north of Washington Archer, from Michigan to St. Clair, four blocks east of corpration. Arsenal, from east National road to Michi gan, one-half mile east of corpora tion. Ash, from Massachusetts av. to Home av., bet. Bellefontaine and Oak. Athon, north and south, from Rhode Island to Indiana av., ten blocks west of Meridian. B AUN HILL, north and south from Eliz abeth to Coe, sixteen blocks west of Meridian. Hates, east and west, from Noble to corpor- ration east, four blocks south of Wash ington. Beaty. from Buchanan to McCarty, bet. Noble and Greer. Bellefontaine, from corporation to Home av., bet. Peru and Ash. Benton, north and south, from Harrison to Market, bet. Noble and Cady. Bicking, east and west, from Delaware to East, two blocks south of McCarty, Biddle, east and west, bet. Winston and corporation east, seven blocks north of Washington. Blackford, north and south, from National road to North, seven blocks west of Meridian. Blake, north and south, from National road to Indiana av., ten blocks west of Meridian. Bluff Road, termius south Meridian. Bradshaw, east and west, from Beaty to Virginia av., bet. Buchanan and Mc Carty. Brett, east and west, beyond corporation, west of Michigan road. Bright, north and south, from Ohio to North, eight blocks west of Meri dian. Broadway, from St. Clair to Home av., bet. Plum and Jackson. Brooks, north and south, from First to Drake, bet. Michigan road and Fall creek. Buchanan, east and west, from East to Virginia av., bet. Dougherty and Mc Carty. Butler, east and west, from Ft. Wayne av. to College av., twelve blocks north of Washington. CADY, north and south, from Harrison to Market, one block east of Benton. California, north and south, from Wash ington to St. Clair, six blocks west of Meridian. Campbell, east and west, east ot corpora tion, six blocks north of Washington. Catharine, east and west, from Mississippi to West, bet. Merrill and McCarty. Cedar, north-east and south-west, from Dillon to Virginia av., bet Grove and Pine. Center, east and west, from Douglas to El len, bet. North and Elizabeth. Chadwick, from McCarty to city limits south, bet. Missouri and West. Chatham, from Massachusetts av. to St. Clair, bet. East and Noble. CITY DIRECTORY. 233 Cherry, east and west, bet. Ft. Wayne av. and Charles, ten blocks north of Wash ington. Chestnut, from Georgia to Morris, bet. Del aware and Pennsylvania. Chesapeake Alley, east and west, from Mississippi to West, bet. Maryland and Georgia. Choptank Alley, from Washington to St. Clair, bet. New Jersey and East. Christian Avenue, east and west, from Ft. Wayne av. to Peru R. R., eleven blocks north of Washington. Circle, crossing of Meridian and Market, one block north of Washington. Coburn, east and west, from East to Short, bet. Dougherty and corporation south. Coe, east and west, west of corporation line, ten blocks north of Washington. College Avenue, from Christian av. to Home av., bet. Ash and Broadway. Columbia Alley, north and south, from Georgia to Michigan, bet. West and Missouri. Cottrell, from Louisiana to Georgia, bet. Missouri and West. Court, east and west, bet. Washington and Market, from Pennsylvania to Dela ware. Crane, east and west, from Arsenal to Seymour, two blocks north of Wash ington. Cross, east and west, bet. Peru and Belle fontaine R. R., eleven blocks north of Washington. DACOTA, from Rockwood to city limits south, bet. West and White river. Davis, north-east and south-west, from In diana av. to Fall creek, twelve blocks north of Washington. Delaware, north and south, two blocks east of Meridian. Dillon, north and south, from Harrison to corporation south, on corporation line east. Dorman, from Michigan to St. Clair, one block east of corporation. Dougherty, east and west, from East to Virginia av., bet. Buchanan and Co- burn. Douglas, north and south, from Ohio to Indiana av., nine blocks west of Me ridian. Downey, east and west, from Bluff road to Japan, fourteen blocks south of Washington. Drake, east and west, beyond eorporation, west of Michigan road. Duncan, east and west, from Delaware to New Jersey, bet. South and Merrill. Dunlop, east and west, from Bluff road to Japan, fifteen blocks south of Wash ington. EAST, north and south, five blocks east of Meridian. East Cumberland, east and west, from Del aware to East, one-half block south of Washington. East National Road, terminus e. Washing ton. Eokert, from Kentucky av. to Merrill, bet. West, and Kentucky av. Eddy, from Merrill to South, bet. Illinois and Tennessee. Eighth, east and west, eighteen blocks north of Washington. Elizabeth, east and west, from Blake to Ellen, eight blocks north of Washing ton. Elk, north-east and south-west, from Dil lon to Virginia av., bet. Dillon and Virginia av. Ellen, north and south, from North to In diana av., eight blocks west of Meri dian. Ellis, from Georgia te Maryland, bet. West and Helen. Ellsworth, north and south, from New York to Vermont, bet. Missouri and Mississippi. Elm, north-west and south-east, from Noble to Dillon, bet. Virginia av. and Huron. Erie Alley, from Washington to St. Clair, bet. Alabama and New Jersey. FAYETTE, north and south, from North to St. Clair, bet. Missouri and West. Fifth, east and west, fifteen blocks north of Washington. First, east and west, weBt of Meridian, eleven blocks north of Washington. Fletcher Avenue, north-west and south east, from Noble to Dillon, bet. Forest av. and Huron. Forest Avenue, north-west and south-east, from Harrison io Dillon, bet. Harrison and Fletcher av. Fort Wayne Avenue, north-east and south west, from Pennsylvania and North to city limits north-east. Fort Wayne Road, terminus Ft. Wayne av. Fourth, east and west, fourteen blocks north of Washington. Franklin, from Morris to city limits south, bet. Wallace and Japan. GARDEN, east and west, from Missis sippi to Pennsylvania, bet. South and Merrill. Geisendorff, north and south, from Nation al road to New York, nine blocks west of Meridian. Georgia, east and west, two blocks south of Washington. Grant, bet. West and Kentucky av., one block south of Merrill. 234 LOGAN'S INDIANAPOLIS Greer, from Buchanan to Stevens, bet. East and Beaty. Gregg, cast and west, bet. New Jersey and Jackson, nine blocks n. of Washington. Grove, north-east and south-west, from Dil lon to Virginia av., bet. Elk and Cedar. HARRISON, east and west, from Noble to corporation east, four blocks south of Washington. Helen, from Maryland to Louisiana, bet. Ellis and White river. Henderson, north and south, terminus of north Illinois. Henry, east and west, from Missouri to Mississtppi, bet. south and Merrill. High, from McCarty to corporation south, bet. New Jersey and Alabama. Home Avenue, east and west, from Ft. Wayne av. to Peru R. R., thirteen blocks north of Washington. Hosbrook, north-west and south-east, from Cedar to Dillon, bet. Virginia av. and Elm. Howard, north and south, from First to Seventh, bet. Lafayette and Mill. Hudson Alley, from Ohio to Walnut, bet. Delaware and Alabama. Huron, east and west, from Virginia av. to Noble, one block south of South. Huron, porth-west and south-east, from Noble to Dillon, bet. Fletcher av. and Elm. ILLINOIS, north and south, one block west of Meridian. Indiana Avenue, north-west and south east, from corner Ohio and Illinois to city limits north-west. JACKSON, from St. Clair to Home av., bet. Broadway and East. Japan, north and south, extension of south East. John, east and west, bet. Peru and Belle fontaine R. R., ten blocks north of Washington. Jones, east and west, from West to Dacota, six blocks south of McCarty. KANKOKEE ALLEY, from Michigan to North, bet. Illinois and Tennessee. Kansas, east and west, from Meridian to Minnesota, thirteen blocks south of Washington. Kentucky Avenue, north-east and south west, from corner Washington and Illinois to city limits south-west. Kingan, east and west from West to White river, two blocks south of McCarty. LAFAYETTE, north and south from First to city limits, bet. Mississippi and Howard. Lafayette Road, terminus Indiana av. Lenox, norlh and south, from Seventh to Ninth, bet. Lafayette and Mill. Liberty, north and south, six blocks east of Meridian. Lockerbie, east and west, from East to Liberty, bet. New York and Vermont, Locust, from McCarty to Morris, bet. Me ridian and Union. Lord, east and west, from Noble to corpo ration east, bet. Louisiana and Hairi- son. Louisiana, east and west, three blocks south of Washington. MACAULEY, east and west, from Ann to Missouri, one bl,ock south of Mc Carty. Madison Avenue, north-west and south east, from corner South and Meridian to city limits. Madison Road, terminus Madison av. Maple, from Ray to Morris, bet. Tennessee and Illinois. Margaret, east and west, south of City Hospital. Maria, east and west, east of City Hospi tal. Market, east and west, one block north of Washington. Maryland, east and west, one block south of Washington. Massachusetts Avenue, north-east and south-west, from corner of Ohio and Pennsylvania, to city limits north east. Maxwell, north and south, from Elizabeth to Davis, fourteen blocks west of Me ridian. Mayhew, east and west, beyond corpora tion, west of Michigan rd. Meek, east and west, from Noble to corpo- • ration east, two blocks south of Wash ington. Meikle, from McCarty to city limits south, bet. Mississippi and Missouri. MERIDIAN, north and south, through Governor's Circle, bet. Pennsylvania and Illinois. Merrill, east and west, six blocks south of Washington. Miami Alley, east and west, bet. Ohio and New York. Michigan, east and west, five blocks north of Washington. Michigan Road, terminus north-west. Michigan Road, (east,) east terminus, Washington, ten blocks east of Me ridian. Mill, north and south, from Fifth to city limits, bet. Howard and Michigan road. Minerva, north and south, from Ohio to North, eleven blocks west of Meridian. CITY DIRECTORY. 235 Minnesota, from Morris to city limits south, bet. Tennessee and West. Mississippi, north and south, three blocks west of Meridian. Missouri, north and south, four blocks . west of Meridian. Mobile Alley, east and west from Merid- , ian to Mississippi, bet. Georgia and Louisiana. Morris, east and west, twelve blocks south of Washington. Morrison, east and west, bet. Delaware and Alabama, twelve blocks north of Washington. Mulberry, from McCarty to Morris, bet. Union and Chestnut. Muskingum Alley, from Louisiana to First, bet. Tennessee and Illinois. McCarty, east and west, eight blocks south of Washington. McGill, from Louisiana to South, bet. Mis sissippi and Missouri. McGinnis, from McCarty to Ray, bet. Ten nessee and Mississippi. Mclntire, east and west, beyond corpora tion, west of Michigan road. McKernan, from Buchanan to corporation south, bet. Short and Wright. McNabb, east and west, from Illinois to Meridian, bet. Louisiana and South. NEW JERSEY, north and south, four blocks east of Meridian. , New York, east and west, three blocks north of Washington. Ninth, east and west, fourteen blocks north of Washington. North, east and west, six blocks north of Washington. Noble, north and south, seven blocks east of Meridian. OAK, from Massachusetts av. to Chris tian av., bet. Ash and Plum. Ohio, east and west, two blocks north of Washington. Oregon, north and south, from First to Pratt, bet. Brooks and Michigan road. Osage Alley, north and south, from Geor gia to Pratt, bet. Missouri and Missis sippi. Oxford, east and west, bet. Charles and corporation east, nine blocks north of Washington. PATTERSON, north and south, from Vermont to Elizabeth, thirteen blocks west of Meridian. Pearl, east and west, from Illinois to Penn sylvania, half block south of Wash ington. Peck, bet. old and new cemetery, terminus Kentucky av. Pendleton Pike, terminus Massachusetts av. Pennsylvania, north and south, one block east of Meridian. Peru, from North to Home av., nine blocks east of Meridian. Phipps, east and west, from Meridian to Pennsylvania, bet. Merrill and Mc Carty. Pine, north-east and, south-west, from Har rison to Virginia av., one block east of Noble. Plum, from St. Clair to Christian av., bet. Oak and Broadway. Poplar, east and west, from Union to Chestnut, two blocks south of Mc Carty. Potomac Alley, east and west, bet. Wash ington and Market. Pratt, east and west, nine blocks north of Washington. RAILROAD, from Market to Massachu setts av., bet. Spring and Davidson. Ray, east and we.t, from McGinnis to Chestnut, two blocks south of Mc Carty. Rhode Island, east and west, eight blocks north of Washington. River, south of old cemetery. Roanoke Alley, north and south, from Ohio to First, bet. Tennessee and Missis sippi. Rockwood, east and west, from Weat to Dacota, three blocks south of Mc Carty. Root, east and west, from West to White river, one block south of McCarty. Rose, between West and White river, two nlocks south of Merrill. Russell, north and south, from Meridian to Illinois, bet. McCarty and Merrill. SAND, south-east, from Kentucky av. to White river, one block west of West. Sanders, east and west, from Shelbyville road to terminus of Wrigbt,_terminus Virginia av. School, north and south, from South to Huron, bet. Noble and Virginia av. Scioto Alley, from Washington to New York, bet. Meridian and Pennsylva nia. Second, east and west, twelve blocks north of Washington. Seventh, east and west, seventeen blocks north of Washington. Severn Alley, north and South, from Lou isiana to Second, bet. Meridian and Illinois. Seymour, from east National road to Crane, one-half mile east of corpora tion. Sharpe, east and west, from Eckert to Missouri, bet. South and Merrill. Shelbyville Road, terminus Virginia av. 236 LOGAN'S INDIANAPOLIS Short, from Dougherty to city limits south, bet. McKernan and Virginia av. Sinker, east and west, from Alabama to East, one block north of McCarty. Sixth, east and west, sixteen blocks north of Washington. Smith, north and south, from Rhode Island to Indiana av., eleven blocks west of Meridian. South, east and west, four blocks south of Washington. Spring, from Market to St. Clair, bet. No ble and Railroad. Stevens, east and west, from East to Vir ginia av., one block north of Mc Carty. Susquehanna Alley, from Washington to North, bet. Pennsylvania and Dela ware. St. Clair, east and west, eight blocks north of Washington. St. Joseph, east and west, ten blocks north of Washington. TENNESSEE, north and south, two blocks west of Meridian. Tenth, east and west, twenty blocks north of Washington. Third, east and west, thirteen blocks north of Washington. Thomos, east and west, from West to Da cota, five blocks south of McCarty. Tinker, east and west, seventeen blocks north of Washington. • Tippecanoe Alley, east and west, from Tennessee to Illinois, bet. New York and Vermont. Torbet, east and west, from Fall Creek to Michigan road, beyond corporation. UNION, from Merrill to Morris, bet. Meridian and Chestnut. VERMONT, east and west, four blocks north of Washington. Vine, east and west, bet. Jackson and Charles, nine blocks north of ^Wash ington. Vinton, east and west, from West to Daco ta, four blocks south of McCarty. Virginia Avenue, north-westand south-east from coiner Washington and Pennsyl vania, to city limits south-east. WABASH ALLEY, east and weBt, bet. Market and Ohio. Wallace, from Morris to city limits south, bet. Madison road and Franklin. Walnut, east and west, seven blocks north of Washington. WASHINGTON, east and west, length of city, first street south of Governor's Circle. Waters, from Stevens to McCarty, bet. Greer and Virginia av. Wesson, east and west, from Arsenal to Seymour, one block north of Wash ington. West, north and south, five blocks west of Meridian. West Cumberland, east and west, from Tennessee to White river, one-half block south of Washington. West National Road, east and west, west White river bridge. Westfield Pike, terminus north Illinois. Wilkins, east and west, from Tennessee to Chestnut, three blocks south of Mc Carty. Willard, from Merrill to Garden, bet. Ten nessee and Mississippi. Willard, north and south, south side east National road, one-half mile east of corporation. Wilson, north and south, from Elizabeth to Davis, fifteen blocks west of Meridian. Winston, from Ohio to Walnut, ten blocks east of Meridian. Wisconsin, east and west, from West to Meridian, fourteen blocks south of Washington. Wood, north and south, from Michigan to North, bet. Missouri and Mississippi. Wright, from Buchanan to corporation south, one block west of McKernan. Wyoming, east and west, from Delaware to East, one block south of McCarty. YEISER, east and west, from Bluff road to Japan, thirteen blocks south of Washington. PUBLIC HALLS, BLOCKS AND BUILDINGS, INDIANAPOLIS. ALVORD'S Block, south-west corner Meridian and Georgia. i£tna Building, east side Pennsylvania, bet. Washington and Market. Academy of Music, south-east corner Illi nois and Ohio. BATES HOUSE Block, north-west cor ner Illinois and Washington. Blackford Block, south-east corner, Wash ington and Meridian. Bismark Hall, Virginia avenue, near McCarty. Brown's Block, north-west corner Wash ington and Pennsylvania. COLLEGE Hall, south-west corner Wash ington and Pennsylvania. Commercial Building, corner Meridian and Circle. Court House and County Offices, full square, bet. Washington and Market and Delaware and Alabama. EDEN'S Block, south side Market, bet. Pennsylvania and Delaware. Emmenegger Halle, south side Washington, bet. Delaware and Alabama. FATOUT Block, south side Washington, bet. Mississippi and Canal. GLENNS' Block, south side Washing ton, bet. Meridian and Pennsylvania. Good Templar's Hall, south-west corner Meridian and Washington. Gymnasium Hall, north-west corner Me ridian and Maryland. HERETH'S Block, north Delaware, op posite court house. Hubbard's Block, south-west corner Wash ington and Meridian. JOURNAL Building, (new,) corner east Market and Circle. MARMONT'S Hall, south Illinois, cor ner Georgia. Masonic Hall, south-east corner Washing ton and Tennessee. Metropolitan Theater Hall, north-cast cor ner Washington and Tennessee. Miller's Hall, corner Delaware and Pearl. Miller's Block, north-west corner Illinois and Market. Morrison's Opera Block, north-east corner Meridian and Maryland. Mozart Hall, east side south Delaware, bet. Washington and Maryland. Music Hall, north side Court, bet. Delaware and Pennsylvania. 0 DD FELLOWS Hall, north-east cor ner Pennsylvania and Washington. PALMER HOUSE Block, north-east corner Illinois and Washington. Post-OflBce Building, south-east corner Pennsylvania and Market. SCHNULL'S Block, south-west corner Meridian and Maryland. Seidensticker's Block, opposite south side Union Depot. State House, full square, bet. Washington and Market and Tennessee and Mis sissippi. Supreme Court and State Office Building, south-west corner Washington and Tennessee. TALBOTT & NEW'S Block, east side north Pennsylvania, bet. Washington and Market. Temperance Hall, north side west Wash ington, bet. Illinois and Meridian. UNION DEPOT, Louisiana, bet. Illinois and Meridian, Union Hall, south side east Washington, bet. Delaware and Alabama. United States OflBces and Court Room, in Post Office Building, south-east cor ner Pennsylvania and Market. YINTON'S Block, south-west corner of Pennsylvania and Market. WILEY'S Block, west side north Penn sylvania, near corner Washington. YOHN'S Block, north-east corner Wash ington and Meridian. ALTERATIONS, CORRECTIONS AND REMOVALS. ALLEN JAMES, pressman, H. C. Chan dler & Co., res. 31 w. Georgia. Alvord Mrs. Mary H., (wid. E. B.,) res. 334 n. Illinois. BALLARD T. M., retired merchant, res. 356 n. Alabama. Barker W. H., bds. 17 w. Maryland. BEAULIEN CHARLES S., physician, office 63 e. McCarty. See card, adv. dept., page 6. CARPENTER B. 0., marble dealer, 36 e. Market, res. 246 n. Illinois. See card, page 6, adv. dept. Casey Michael, harness-maker, res. 114 w. Georgia. Chapman Mrs. C. M., (wid.,) dress-maker, res. cor. East and Washington. Clay H., (A. Jones & Co..) 74 and 77 s. Meridian, res. 240 n. Meridian. Colclazer J. H., at W. P. Bingham & Co., bds. 17 w. Maryland. Couse Riley, (col.,) lab., res. 751 n. Mis sissippi. Craft J., bds. 17 w. Maryland. Cruze Mary, servant, 381 n. Illinois. Curtis T. M., engineer, Geisendorff's res. 122 e. Merrill. DEWIRE JOHN, carpenter, bds. w. _ Mississippi, bet. First and Second. ENOS T. H. K., book-keeper, Browning & Sloan, 7 and 9 e. Washington, res. 350 n. Illinois. FLETCHER STOUGHTON A., Jr., pres. Indianapolis Gas-Light, Coal and Coke Co., office cor. s. Pennsylvania and Maryland, res. cor. Virginia av. and South. Fuller James C, lab., Blind Asylum, res. 27 s. Alabama. Fuller Lorenzo D., painter, res. 27 s. Ala bama. Fuller Sylvester R., lab., res. 27 s. Ala bama. GORDON JAMES.A., speculator, bds. 83 Indiana av. GAS OFFICE, n. e. cor. Pennsylvania and Maryland, Stoughton A. Fletcher, Jr., pres., L. Vanlaningham, sec. GEBHARD AUGUST, upholsterer and spring-bottom mat- trass, 14 s. Delaware. See card, page 122. German Methodist Episcopal School, Ohio, bet. New York and East, J. F. Miller, teacher. Graves George H., brakesman, I., C. & L. R. R., bds. Ray House. Gregg Joshua, conductor sleeping-car, C, C. & I. C. R. R., bds. 248 n. Alabama. Gregg Sarah, (wid.,) res. 248 Alabama. GLICK & SCHWARTZ, (Herman G. & Joseph S.,) manfr. and dealer in ) c 'p-skirts and fancy goods, 54 n. Illinoip. See card, page 231. HACKET WILLIAM, lab., res. 64 s Liberty. Hogan Israel, machinist, res. 268 w. Ver mont. Holliday John H., journalist, res. 242 n. Alabama. Hoskins John, fireman, J., M. & I. R. R., bds. 361 s. Delaware. JONES WILLIAM J., yard-master, T. H. « I. R. R., res. 132 w. First. Judson & Dodd, (William J. & J. W. D.,) steam coffee and spice mills, s. e. cor. Washington and East. KAHLER REV. SAMUEL J., pastor Third Street M. E. Church, res. e. s. n. Illinois, bet. Third and Fourth. Keely William, carpenter, res. 158 e. Mich igan Keith Mrs. P. H., (wid. William, ) seam stress, res. 47 cor. Huron and Noble. Koller William H., grocer, e. Washington, res. near Arsenal av. Kunkel Benhart, cigar-maker, 61 e. Wash ington, res. 253 s. Union. MARONE |& BERINGER, (T. M. & J. B. B.,) saloon, 145 w. Washington. Martindale Mrs. Julia, (wid. Alston,) seamstress, 194 w. Georgia, res. same. Mikels Philip, machinist, res. 449 s. Mis souri. SINKS JAMS M., carpenter and builder, contractor and jobber, 240 n. Missis sippi. See card, page 80. Stelzel John, (S., Jordan & Co.,) barber, 33 J w. Washington, res. 376 e. Ohio. >fv •K31I-AL RBo \J >" OF INDIANAPOLIS. v•', A-* £ M A T O B: DANIEL MACAULEY TEEM EXPIRES MAT, 1869. CITY COUNCILMEN. First Ward— Sims A. Colley, P. H. Jame son. Second Ward— H. Coburn, J. H. Kappes. Third Ward— J. W. Davis, J. H. Woodburn. Fourth Ward,-!. B. McArthur, A. P. Stan ton. Fifth Ward — Samuel Goddard, George A. Foster. Sixth Ward— A. H. Brown, James Bur gess. Seventh Ward— Thomas Cottrell, C. F. Schmidt. Eighth Ward—Yf. H. Loomis, W. H. Hen- chen. Ninth Ward — A. Seidensticker, Henry Gei sel. CITY OFFICERS. OFFICE, GLENNS' BLOCK, EAST WASHINGTON STREET. City Clerk— "Daniel Ransdell. Deputy Clerk — John G. Waters. Deputy Clerk — John R. Clinton. Treasurer — Robert S. Foster. Deputy Treasurer— John W. Coons. City Judge — John N. Scott. City Attorney— B. K. BUott. Civil Engineer — R. M. Patterson. Assessor — William Hadley. Marshal — John Unversaw. Deputy Marshal — M. R. Scudder. Street Commissioner — August Richter. Chief Fire Engineer — Charles Richmond. Market Master — Gideon B. Thompson. Sealer — S. B. Morris. Sexton— G. W. Aired. Printer — James G. Douglass. 240 LOGAN'S INDIANAPOLIS Standing Committees of City Council. A ccounts— Henry Coburn, J. II. Woodburn, J. H. Kappes. Benevolence — J. H. Kappes, W. H. Loomis-, Henry Geisel. Bridges — J. W. Davis, James Burgess, Hen ry Geisel. Finances — P. H. Jameson, C. F. Schmidt, Thomas Cottrell. Fire Department— 3 . W. Davis, Henry Co- burn, J. H. Kappes. Gas Light — C. F. Schmidt, Samuel God dard, James Burgess. Judiciary — Sims A. Colley, A. Seidenstick er, A. P. Stanton. Market — J. B. McArthur, Samuel Goddard, W. H. Henchen. Police — A. Seidensttcker, W. H. Loomis, A. P. Stanton. Printing and Stationery — J. H. Kappes, A. H. Brown, A. P. Stanton. Public Buildings — J. H. Woodburn, W. H. Henchen, A. P. Stanton. Public Schools — W. H. Loomis, A.H. Brown, J. H. Woodburn. Revision of Ordinances— A. Seidensticker, S. A. Colley, Thomas Cottrell. Streets and Alleys — A. H. Brown, Henry Coburn, J. W. Davis. Board of City Government. CITY COMMISSIONERS. President — S. M. Seibert, Secretary — J. N. Russell. J. C. Yohn, W. Braden, Thomas Schooley. DIRECTORS CITY HOSPITAL Dr. John M. Kitchen, W. W. Smith, J. C. Geisendorff, W. Braden, George Mer ritt, Dr. F. S. Newcomer, Charles Gla zier, E. J. Holiday, Dr. J. M. Phipps. President— Dr. G. M. Mears. ' " Dr. John P. Avery, Dr. R. M. Todd. • * * SCHOOL TRUSTEES. President — -Thomas B. Elliott. Secretary and Treasurer — W. H. L. Noble, Clemens Vonnegut. POLICE COMMISSIONERS. A. Seidensticker, W. H. Loomis, A. P. Stan ton. PUBLIC IMPROVEMENTS. J. W. Davis, Samuel Goddard, Henry Co- burn. Clerk of the Board— D. M. Ransdell. Police. Police Judge — John N. Scott. Chief of Police — Thomas S. Wilson. Lieutenants — Henry Paul, George Taffe. DAY PATROLMEN. First Ward— Geo. W. Bennett. Second Ward — James N. Stevens. Third Ward— Hannibal Taffe. Fourth Ward— -William B. Bolen. Fifth Ward — Samuel Buser. Sixth Ward— J. P. Duval. Seventh Ward — William Williams. Eighth Ward—L. M. Russell. Ninth Ward— J. T. Murphy. NIGHT PATROLMEN. First Ward — Robert Barbee, Thomas Hor niday. Second Ward— E. P. Hoppe, A. J. Wells. Third Ward— John Cahill, Allen Thorn brough. Fourth Ward — Wm. F. Brunnemer, Michael Murphy. Fifth Ward — Frederick Scheigert, John L. Brown. Sixth Ward — Hiram Minick, 0. B. Board- man. Seventh Ward — George Buser, Francis Ot well. Eighth Ward — A. H. Catterson, August Reick. Ninth Ward — Pauline Landormi, George Thomas. Ward Boundaries. First Ward — North of Washington, bet. Ala bama and Liberty, to corporation north. Second Ward — North of Washington, bet. Alabama and Meridian, to corporation north. Third Ward — North of Washington, bet. Meridian and Mississippi, to corpora tion north. Fourth Ward — All that part lying north of Washington and west of Mississippi, to corporation. Fifth Ward — All that part lying south of Washington and west of Illinois, to corporation. SizthWard — South of Washington, bet. Il linois and Delaware, to corporation south. Seventh Ward — South of Washington, bet. Delaware and East, to corporation south. Eighth Ward — All that part lying south of Washington and east of East, to cor poration. Ninth Ward — All that part lying north of Washington and east of Liberty, to corporation line. CITY DIRECTORY. 241 Wood Measurers. East Market- West Market- L. H. Jameson. -A. W. Jenkins. Fire Department. Chief Engineer — Charles Richmond. Watchmen City Tower — Charles Rhoads, Thomas Barnitt. STEAM ENGINE, NO. 1. South side Washington, bet. West and Cal ifornia. Engineer — Frank Glazier. STEAM ENGINE, NO. 2. South-west corner Massachusetts av. and New York. Engineer — C. E. Curtis. STEAM ENGINE, NO. 3. South s. South, bet. Delaware and Alabama. Engineer — Daniel Glazier. STEAM ENGINE, NO. 4. Company not yet organized. HOOK AND LADDER COMPANY. East side New Jersey, bet. Market and Washington. Driver — E. H. Webster. PUBLIC FREE SCHOOLS. The city free schaols are under the general management of a Board of three Trus tees, elected by the Common Council, consisting at present of Thomas B. Elliott, president, W. H. L. Noble, sec retary and treasurer, and Clemens Vonnegut; A. C. Shortridge being clerk of the Board and Superintendent of the Public Schools. Office of the Board and Superintendent, in High School building, corner West Market street and the Circle. The Board of Visitors, Are appointed by the Board of Trustees, and have special supervision over the educational interests of the schools in the different wards, during the terms, and at the semi-annual and annual examinations. High School — Hon. John Caven and I. W. Monfort. First Ward—L. G. Hay and W. W. Leath ers. Second Ward — Hon. J. I. Morrison. Third Ward— Rev. E. T. Fletcher and D. V. Culley. Fourth Ward— J. B. McArthur and H. A. Edson. Fifth Ward — Rev. L. H. Jameson and Si mon Yandes. Sixth Ward— Rev. C. H. Marshal and A. H. Brown. Seventh Ward — Col. Sam Merrill and Gran ville Ballard. Eighth Ward— Rev. N. A. Hyde and W. H. Loomis. Ninth Ward — Rev. J. Stuckenberg and J. H. Kappes. There are twelve School Buildings and sixty-two teachers. The Schools are divided into three departments : Pri mary, Intermediate and High School, with four grades in each department. A new building for the use of the High School is being completed, and will be occupied after September 1st, 186 . Its looation is on the corner of West Market and the Circle, which, for accommodation and convenience, owing to its central location, will be equal to the increasing demand of this school. A large School House is just completed in the southern part of the city, corner of Union street, bet. Merrill and McCarty, which will accommodate 800 pupils. A new School Building is contemplated, and will be erected in the extreme northern part of the city, iu some eligible location, which, with the present large number of School Buildings now completed, will afford accommodations equal to any city in the west, compared to the population of the city. LOCATION OF SCHOOL BUILDINGS. First Ward — South-west corner New Jer sey and Vermont. Second Ward — North Delaware, bet. Ver mont and Michigan. Third Ward — New York, bet. Illinois and Tennessee. Fourth Ward— (Old house,) Market, west of West. (16) 242 LOGAN'S INDIANAPOLIS Fourth Ward — (New house,) north-east corner Michigan and Blackford. Fifth Ward — Maryland, bet. Mississippi and Missouri. Sixth Ward — (Old house,) Pennsylvania, south of South. Sixth Ward — (New house,) Union, bet. Merrill & McCarty. Seventh Ward — East, bet. Georgia and Louisiana. Eighth Ward — Virginia avenue, bet. School and Noble. Ninth Ward — Vermont, bet. Railroad and Davidson. High School — North-west corner Market and Circle. INSTITUTIONS, COLLEGES, &C. Indiana Agricultural College. President, Hon. Conrad Baker ; Secretary, J. J. Hayden; Treasurer, E. B. Mar tindale; Board of Trustees, Smith Vawter, Lewis Burke, of Richmond, Henry Taylor, of Lafayette, Isaac Jenkinson, of Fort Wayne. Indiana Female College. South-west corner Meridian and New York. The building affords accom- dations for fifty boarding, and one hundred and fifty day pupils. BOARD OP TRUSTEES. President, Rev. F. C. Holliday; Vice-Presi dent, Oliver Tousey ; Secretary, John W. Ray; Treasurer, T. P. Haughey; Ingram Fletcher, John W. Holland, W. Hannaman, James C. Ferguson and Jesse Jones. Indianapolis Female Institute. North-east corner Pennsylvania and Mi chigan. The building affords accom modations for one hundred and fifty boarding, and three hundred day pupils. OFFICERS. President of the Institute, Rev. C. W. Hewes ; President of the Board of Trustees, Rev. Henry Day ; Secretary, E. C. Atkins ; Treasurer, J . R. Osgood. Indianapolis Law College. JPresident, John T. Elliott; Secretary, S. E. Perkins, Jr.; Treasurer, David Mc Donald ; Trustees, J. E. McDonald, F. M. Finch, M. B. Taylor, T. A. Hen dricks, A. G. Porter and R. B. Dun can ; Professors, Hon. Samuel E. Per kins, Hon. Lueien Barber. N. W. C. University. Located near corporate limits, north-east part of the city. The charter, of this Institution authorizes its Board of Directors to organize Colleges for Lit erature, and Science, Law, Medicine, and a Normal School. The College, proper, was opened in November, 1855; the preparatory department was taught a year before. The ses sions for 1868-69, opens September, 1868. FACULTY. President and Professor of Ethics and Creek, Rev. 0. A. Burgess, A. M.; Secretary of Faculty, W. M. Thrasher, A. M.j Pro fessor of Latin and Modern Languages, S. K. Hoshour ; Professor of Natural Science, R. T. Brown; Professor of Math- matics, W. M. Thrasher; Professor in Preparatory and English Department, A. Fairhurst, A. B. Purdy's Commercial College. Eden's Block, east Market. OFFICERS. President, William Purdy. St. John's (R. C.) Academy for Young Ladies. Georgia, corner Tennessee. Superioress, Sister Antoinette, assisted by eight Sisters of Providence. St. John's (R. C.) Academy for Boys. West Georgia, near Illinois, under the charge of Rev. A. Bessonies. LIBRARIES State Library. Located in the State House. The Library consists of twenty-four thousand vol umes of historical, law and miscel laneous works. Librarian, Rev. R. F. Foster. CITY DIRECTORY. 243 County Library. Located in the court house, up-stairs. The Library consists of two thousand vol umes. Oipen and accessable to all responsible parties. Librarian, James A. Hamilton. Township Library. Located in rooms 4 and 6 Langsdale's Block, 16 north Delaware. The Li brary consists of fifteen hundred vol umes. Young Men's Library Association. Located in Hubbard's block, corner Wash ington and Meridian. Open to stran gers day and evening, except Sun days. President, John Caven; Vice-President, D. E. Snyder; Treasurer, D. M. Taylor; Secretary, D. W. Grubbs; Librarian, C. P. Taylor; Directors, C. Dickson, D. W. Grubbs, V. T. Malott, G. B. Yandes, L. R. Martin, G. W. Sloan and C. A. Ray. CHURCHES Baptist. * FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH. North-east corner New York and Pennsyl- nia. Pastor, Rev. Henry C. Day. MISSION CHAPEL. In charge of the First Baptist Church, corner Noble and South. Sabbath School at 9 o'clock A. M. Superin tendent, E. J. Foster. AFRICAN BAPTIST CHURCH. Mississippi, bet. Ohio and New York. Pastor, Rev, Moses Broyles, res. 227 n. Minerva. Catholic. si. mary's church. South side Maryland, bet. Pennsylvania and Delaware. Pastor, Rev. S. Sei- grist, res. near church. ST. JOHN S CHURCH. Pas- Georgia, bet. Tennessee and Illinois. tor, Bev. Augustus Bessonies. ST. peter's church. Dougherty, near Fletcher avenue. Pastor, Rev. Joseph Petit. Christian. CHRISTIAN CHAPEL. South-west corner Ohio and Delaware. Pastor, Rev. 0. A. Burgess, res. 324 n. Delaware. MISSION CHURCH, (COLORED.) Corner Lafayette R. R. and Second. Pas tor, Rev. Conrad. Congregational. PLYMOUTH CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH. North-west corner Meridion and Circle. Pastor, Rev. E. P. Ingeraal, res. 383 n. Pennsylvania. Episcopal. Christ's church. North-east corner Meridian and Circle. Organized August, 1837. Pastor, Rev. J. P. T. Ingraham, res. 65 Circle. GRACE CHURCH. South-east corner St. Joseph and Penn sylvania. Rector, Rev. M. V. Averill, res. north Tennessee, bet. Second and Third. ST. Paul's church. South-east corner Illinois and New York. Rector. Rev. Horace N. Stringfellow. German Evangelical. zion's church. North side Ohio, bet. Meridian and Illinois. Pastor, Rev. Herman Quinius. GERMAN EVANGELICAL. East side New Jersey, bet. Ohio and Mar ket. Pastor, Rev. John Fuchs. Friends. friends' church. South-east corner Delaware and St. Clair. Erected 1856. Minister, Rev. Enos G. Pray, res. north-west corner Chris tian avenue and Broadway. German Tteformed. East side Alabama, bet. Washington and Market. Pastor, Rev. Henry Esoh- meier, res. 41 n. Alabama. 244 LOGAN'S INDIANAPOLIS Jewish Synagogue. South side Market, bet. East and New Jer sey. Minister, Rev. M. Messing. Lutheran. FIRST ENGLISH LUTHERAN. South-west corner Alabama and New York. Pastor, Rev. J. Stuckenberg. st. Paul's German Lutheran. North-east corner East and Georgia ; erect ed in 1861. Pastor, Rev. , residence . Methodist. ASBURY CHAPEL. West side New Jersey, between Louisiana and South ; erected 1850. Pastor, Rev. John H. Lozier, residence, East city limits. ROBERTS CHAPEL. Meets at Morrison's Opera Hall; new church in process of erection. Pastor, Rev. D. Mendenhall. STRANGE CHAPEL. East Bide Tennessee, between New York and Vermont; erected in 1852. Pas ter, Rev. C. S. Burgner. TRINITY CHURCH. North-west corner Alabama and North ; erected 1865. PaBtor, Rev. R. D. Rob inson. THIRD STREET CHURCH. Third, between Illinois and Tennessee; erected 1867. Pastor, Rev. S. J. Kah ler. WESLEY CHAPEL. South-west corner Meridian and Circle; erected 1827. Pastor, C. M. Sims. GERMAN CHURCH. North side Ohio, between East and New Jersey ; erected 1850. Pastor, Rev. H. G. Lich. AFRICAN CHURCH. North side Georgia, between Mississippi and Canal. PaBtor, Rev. E. Mcintosh. Presbyterian.FIRST CHURCH. South-west corner Pennsylvania and New York; erected 1865. Pastor, Rev. J. H. Nixon, residence 75 e. Michigan. SECOND CHURCH. North-west corner Pennsylvania and Ver mont; erected 1867. Pastor, Rev. H. H. Edson, residence 157 n. Tennessee. THIRD CHURCH. North-east corner Illinois and Ohio; erect ed 1859. Pastor, Rev. , resi dence . FOURTH CHURCH. South-west corner Delaware and Market; erected 1858. Pastor, Rev. C. H. Mar shall, residence 80 Christian avenue. FIFTH CHURCH. (German,) East side New Jersey, between Washington and Maryland. PaBtor, Rev. Charles Steinbach. REFORMED CHURCH OF C0TENANTER3. North Bide South, bet. East and Noble. Pastor, Rev. John Crozier. SEVENTH PRESBYTERIAN. North-east corner Elm and Cedar; erected 1867. Pastor, Rev. J. Howard. UNITED PRESBYTERIAN. North side Ohio, between Pennsylvania and Delaware. Pastor, Rev. A. W. Clokey. EIGHTH PRESBYTERIAN. North side McCarty, between Union and Pennsylvania; erected 1867. Pastor, Rev. J. D. Brandt. United Brethren. South-east corner New Jersey and Ohio; members, 400. Pastor, Amos Han- nawoy. Universalist. FIRST CHURCH. Meets in Wallace's Hall, south-west corner Delaware and Maryland ; organized 1863. Pastor, Rev. B. F. Foster. SECOND CHURCH. Michigan, between Illinois and Tennessee; organized 1867. Pastor, . Mission. ^ILLINOIS STREET CHURCH. Corner Illinois and Phipps. Pastor, Rev. J. Tarkington. CITY DIRECTORY .¦ 245 UNION MISSION CHAPEL. South-west corner Union and Madison ave nue ; Sunday-school, 9 A. M. Superin tendent F. W. Davis. Young Men's Christian Association. Meets at rooms in Vinton's blk., opp. p. e. Pr_.,W.H.Hay; Treas., J. C. Hays; Ree. Sec, E., P. Ingersoll; Sec, C. P. Wilson. SOCIETIES AND ASSOCIATIONS. PUBLIC. Butcher's Association. OFFICERS. President, H. Kramer ; Treasurer, Frederick Beck; Secretary, Michael Mayer. Eclectic Medical Association. President, D. H. Prunk ; First Vice-President, J. F. Ridgeway ; Second Vice-President, N. S. Pendry ; Secretary, G. W. Pick erill , Treasurer, L. Abbott. Indianapolis Academy of Medicine. President, R. N. Tod_ ; Vice-President, F. S. Newcomer; Secretary, William Wands, Treasurer, J. M. Kitchen. Indianapolis Female Bible Society. OFFICERS. President, Mrs. M. Given; Vice-President, Mrs. J. M. Graydon ; Treasurer, Mrs. S. P. Ray ; Secretary, Miss J. A. Bassett ; Depository, Todd, Carmichael & Wil liams ; Managers, Mrs. E. Wilkinson, Mrs. F. C. Holliday, Eliza Newman. Indianapolis Mannserchor Society. Meets at Miller's Hall, corner Delaware and Pearl. President, G. Recker; Vice-President, A. Dennescheek ; Secretary, L. Klemm ; Treasurer, F. Theobald; Librarian, L. Haller; Musical Director, Weeg- man. Indianapoils Typographical Union. OFFICERS. President, John G. Doughty ; Vice-President, William Meredith ; Corresponding Sec retary, Harry Cassill ; Recording Secre tary, D. L. Payne; Financial Secretary, John Hargin; Treasurer, Francis A. Ratti ; Guardian, Edward Guthrie ; Executive Committee, John Fray, A. D. Stevens, John A Rankin, S. J. Pearce, P. Griffin, R. Moffit, D. M. Cantrell. SECRET. Masonic. OFFICERS. GRAND LODGE. M. W. G. M., Martin L. Rice; R. W. D. G. M., A. G. Porter; R. W. S. G. W., L. A. Smith; R. W. J. G. W., A. J. Holmes; R. W. G. T., Charles Fisher; R. W. G. 8., J. M. Bramwell; G. C, Geo. B. Ingle; G. L., William Blinks; G. M., L. A. Foot; G. S. D., W. E. Hol lingsworth; G. J. D., W. H. Smith; G. Tyler, Fred. Haueisen. GRAND COMMANDERY OF KNIGHTS TEMP LARS. M. E. G. C, Thomas Newby ; R. E. D. G. C, D. P. Whedon; G. G., Thomas Patti son ; G. C. G., E. G. Hamilton ; G. T., Charles Fisher; G. R., John Bramwell; G. P., T. H. Linch ; G. S. W., L. B. Stockton ; G. J. W., Christian Fetta ; G. S. B., H. W. Daniels ; G. S. B., G. H. Fish; G. W., Erie Locke; G. C. G., W. M. Black. GRAND CHAPTER. M. E. G. H. P., Thomas Newby; D. G. II. P., R. J. Chestnutwood ; R. E. G. K., Hugh Hannah ; R. E. G. S., George V. Howk ; E. G. T., Charles Fisher; E. G. S., William Hacker; G. Chap., John Leach; G. Oaptain, Joseph Hale; G. R. A. C, Alex. Thomas; G. Guard, William M. Black. GRAND COUNCIL OF ROYAL AND SELECT MASTERS. M. P. G. M., Thomas Newby; D. P. G. M., Thomas Pattison; T. I. G. M., William W. Austin; G. P. C, M. H. Rice; G. C. Guards, A. H. Thomas; G. Treas., 246 LOGAN'S INDIANAPOLIS Charles Fisher; G- Recorder, William Hacker; G. Chaplain. John Leach ; G. Steward and Sentinel, A. A. Wilson. INDIANA CONSISTORY S. P. R. S. J. C. C, E. A. Davis; J. L. C, C. J. Dobbs; J. L. C, P. G. C. Hunt; J. G. 0., John Love; J. G. C, Nathan Kim ball; J. G. S., Geo. H. Fleming; J. G. T., L. R. Martin; J. G. E., William Glenn; J. G. H., N. G. Burnham ; J. G. M., N. R. Ruckle; J. G. S., J. W. Smith; J. G. C, S. T. Scott; J. G. S., J. F. Haueisen. INDIANAPOLIS CHAPTER OF ROSE CROIX. M. W. and P. M, J. Barnard ; M. X. and P. K., Sen., N. R. Ruckle, M. X. and P. K., Jun., J. W. Smith; Res. P. K. Treas., L. R. Martin ; Res. P. K. Secy., Geo. K. Fleming; Res. P. K. Mr. Cer., W. H. Valentine ; Res. P. K. Capt., A. M. Benham; Asst. P. K. Capt., Fred. Haueisen. SARAITT COUNCIL PRINCES OF JERUSALEM. M. E. G. M., W. C. Stone ; G. H. P. S. B., P. G. C. Hunt; M. E. S. G. W., N. R. Ruckle ; M. E. J. G. W., John Caven ; G. T., L. R. Martin; G. M. C, J. W. Smith ; G. M. of E., F. M. Heron ; G. Tyler, Fred. Haueisen. ADONIROM LODGE OF PERFECTION. T. P. G. M., John Caven ; H. T. P. G. M., John Love; S. G. W., W. H. Valentine; J. G. W., Wm. Glenn; G. K. 8., C. W. Dobbs; G. Sec, George Fleming; G. Treas., L. R. Martin; G. Orator, F. S. Newcomer; G. Master, J. W. Smith ; G, Captain, M. T. Scott; G. Tyler, Fred. Haueisen. RAPER COMHANDERY, NO. 1. E. C, E. Colestock ; C. G., Erie Locke ; Prelate, John Caven; S. W., E. S. Dow; J. W., J. Ebert; Treas., H. Dau mont ; Recorder, C. Fisher ; Warden, Geo. H. Fleming; Sentinel, W. M. Black. INDIANAPOLIS CHAPTER NO. 5. H. P., J. M. Bramwell : R., Roger Perry; S., E. Colesttook ; C. H., B. C. Dar row; P. S., G. B. Ingle, Jr. ; R. A. C, N. R. Ruckle ; 1st V. G. M., John B. Kelley; 2d V. G. M., L. Seibold ; 3d V. G. M, J. McKibben ; Treas., J. Rey nolds ; Secy, C. Fisher ; Guard, W. M. Black. CIT_ LODGES. ANCIENT LANDMARKS LODGE NO. 319. W. M., George S. Warren; S. W., J. C. Walke; J. W., W. H. Valentine; Treas., D. B. Jones; Secy., E. Har- mell; S. D., W. 0. Stone; J. D., C. A. Bates ; Tyler, Fred. Haueisen. CAPITAL CITY NO. 312. M. W., W. M. Davis; S. M., W. H. Ireland; J. M., Jeff. Harper; Treas., Fred. Baggs ; Sec, A. F. Coorse; S. D., John Sullivan ; J. D., A. Bavington; Tyler, J. J. Merritt. CENTRE LODGE NO. 28. W. M., B. C. Darow; S. W, Joseph Solo mon; J. W., John Cavin ; Treas., H. Daumont; Secy., Charles Fisher; S. D., N. R. Ruckle; J. D., C. E. Wright; Stewarts, H. White and A. B. Prather; Tyler, J. H. Kappes. INDIANAPOLIS COUNCIL NO. 2, OF ROYAL AND SELECT MASTERS. -; Dept., Roger Parry; Gr. Master, - P. C. W., George B. Ingle, Jr ; C. G., Frank Farmer; Treas., H. Daumont; Recorder, C.Fisher; Sentinel, W. M. Black. MARION LODGE NO. 36. W. M., John Ebert; S. W., Jackson Say- lor; J. W., G. B. Ingle; Treas., H. S. Bighorn; Secy., W. S. Cone; S. D., E. J. Hardesty; J. D., T. C. Rout. TEUTO.NIA LODGE. M. W„ J. C. Brinkmeyer; S. W., G. H. Brinkmeyer; J. W., C. Dehne; Secy., Louis Helle; Treas., Adam Spreng; S. D., Christian Karle ; J. D., Fred. Meyer ; Tyler, Bernauer. Odd Fellows. THE QBAND LODGE OF INDIANA. I. O. 0. F., Holds Its semi-annual communioation at Odd Fellows Hall, in the city of Indi anapolis, on the Third Tuesdays of May and November of each year. M. W. G. M, J. T. Sanders; R. W. D. G. M., S. L. Adams ; R. W. G. W., J. A. Wildman; R. W. G. S., E. H. Barry; R. W. G. T., T. P. Haughey ; G. Chap., Rev. S. Bowers; G. M, F. A. Jeter; G. Con., F. W. Kizer; G. H., William Bellis; G. G., G. W. Rose; G. Rep., T. B. McCarty; G. Rep., J. A. Funk. GBAND ENCAMPMENT INDIANA. M. W. G. P., C. P. Tnlly; M. E. G. H. P., T. G. Beharrele; G. S. W., G. H. Brink meyer; G. J. W., G. W. Gordon; G. Treas., T. P. Haughey; G. Sec, E. H. Barry; G. Sent., Chris. Toler; D. G. S., J. S. Watson; S. Rep., F. J. Blair. CAPITAL LODGE NO. 12. W. G., A. McLane; V. G., I. H. Hedges; Secretary, J. B. Kelly; Per. Secretary, J. F. Walleck; Treas., C. Hamlin. CENTRE LODGE NO. 18. N. G., J. A. Buchanan; V. G., S. W. Coch rane; Secretary, E. M. Byrkit; Per. Secretary, G. P. Anderson ; Treasurer, John G. Waters. GERMANIA LODGE NO. 129. N. G., Charles Schmidt; V. G., M. Ginz ; Secretary, Charles Lauer; Per. Sec, Tob Bender; Treasurer, J.Schneider. PHILOXENIAN LODGE NO. 44. N. G., W. S. Cone; V. G., H. M. Mounts; Secretary, A. B. Howard ; Per. Sec, Geo. G. Staats; Treasurer, Jo. S. Wat son. MARION EMCAMPMENT NO. 35. C. P., Carlin Hamlin ;,H. P., A. McLane; S. W., A. J. Buckhart; J. W., ; Scribe, J. A. Ringer; Per. Scribe, W. W. Weeks; Treasurer, J. F. Wallick. METROPOLITAN ENCAMPMENT NO. 5. G. P., W. S. Cone ; H. P., J. W. Jones ; S. W., Chas. Buck ; J. W., A. J. Corey; Scribe, J. W. Byrkit; Treasurer, John Rey nolds. TECTONIA ENCAMPMENT NO. 57. C. P., M. Ginz; H. P., H. Wilking; S. W., P. Heddrick; J. W., ; Scribe, Fred. Smith ; Per. Scribe, J. Scribner ; Treasurer, T. Bender. Sons of Temperance. GBAND DIVISION OP INDIANA. G. W. P.. William W. H. McCurdy, India napolis; G. W. A., C. E. Scarlett; G. S., L. Abbett, Indianapolis ; G. T., J. B. Abbett ; G. Chap., R. T. Brown ; G. C, J. W. Vance; G. Sent., J. S. Va- narsdel. Next session at Indianapo lis, the first Tuesday in November, 1868. CITY DIVISIONS. WASHINGTON DIVISION NO. 10. Meets every Friday night in Temperance Hall, 30 west Washington street. Cadets of Temperance. GRAND SECTION OF INDIANA. Grand Patron, W. R. Ellis, Lafayette; Vice-Grand Patron, J. L. Harris, At tica; Grand Secretary, L. Abbett, In dianapolis; Grand Treasurer, John E. Taylor, Evansville; Grand Guide, Jo seph McLain, Kent Station; Grand Watchman, J. S. Vanarsdel, Thorn- town; Grand Chaplain, J. E. Ferrill, Indianapolis. Next session at Indi anapolis, first Tuesday in November. CITY SECTION. MORRIS SECTION NO. 2. Meets every Saturday night in Temperance Hall, 30 west Washington street. Independent Order of Good Templars. GEAND LODGE OF INDIANA. G. W. C. T., Amanda M. Way, Indianapo lis; G. W. C, S. Montgomery, Kokomo; G. W.V.T., J. W. Hasket; G. W. S., J. W. Husper, Terre Haute, and D. R' Pershing; G. W. T., J. Jenkins, Port Wayne; G. W. Chap., H.J. Lacy; G. W. M., J. M. Merwin, Cloverdale; G. W. D. M., Miss Cynthia A. Gard; G. W. I, G., Mrs. C. A. P. Smith, Delphi ; Representatives to R. W. G.L., Aman da M. Way, William Copp and S. T. Montgomery; Alternates, M. F. Tho mas, Cynthia A. Gard and N. Sim mons. Next session at Terre Haute, commencing on the third Tuesday of October, 1868, at 2 o'clock P. M., CITY LODGES. FOREST LODOE NO. 381. Meets on Friday evening, at Wood's Hall. 248 LOGAN'S INDIANAPOLIS CENTER LODGE NO. 322. Meets every Tuesday night in Wood's Hall, over Dorsey, Layman & Fletcher's Hardware Store. JULIAN LODGE NO. 74. Meets every Wednesday evening in Tem perance Hall, 30 west Washington street. GOUGH LODGE NO. 178, I. O. G. T. Meets in Wood's Hall, 64 east Washington street, every Mondav evening. Tom. E. Null, W.C.T.; H. Clay Sculors, W. S. Independent Order of Knights Templar of Temperance. SUPREME COUNCIL. G. W. C, Sir Hirry Cassil, Indianapolis; R. L. C, Lady Peep CasBil, Indianapo lis ; R. W., Sir Thos. S. Walterhouse, Muncie; E. C, Sir Samuel 0. Budd, Muncie; E. H., Sir Andrew A. Kauf man, Anderson; E. S., Sir Joshua E. Knight, Anderson ; E. T., Sir John W. Westerfield, Anderson. COECR DE LION COUNCIL NO. 2. Meets every Saturday, in Wood's Hall. Druids. WASHINGTON GRAND GROVE NO. 3. Meets 27t s. Meridian, on the last Thurs day of every month. H. E. E., A. Haffner; Secretary, I. Kern. Haragarie Society. Meets every Tuesday evening, at the Hall, 14 and 16 south Delaware. D. G. B., A. Naltner; E. B., Charles Heiser; C. B., Edward Muller; W. B., H. Til ly ; Secretary, H. Roy; Treasurer, W. Richter. Helvetia Bund. Meets at 61 east Washington, every other Wednesday. President, C. M. Meyer; Secretary, R. Hoefler; Treasurer, C. Fisher; Door keeper, N. Pfaender. HUMBOLDT GROVE NO. 8. E. E., P. Richwein ; W. E., Henry Piell; Secretary, J. Verenickel ; Treaurer, Geo. Fahrion. I. O. B. B. President, Joseph Myer; Vice-President, Sol. Straus ; Secretary, J. G. Joseph ; Treasurer, Samuel Kahn ; Monitor, Leo. Kahn ; Assistant Monitors, Lyon Kahn; Warden, A. Kahn; C. G., H. Rosenthal. Grand Army of the Republic. Head-Quarters Department of Indiana Grand Army of the Republic, Adju tant General's office, 2 __na Building. Grand Commander, Major General R. S. Foster; S. V. G. C, Charles Craft; J. V. G. C., George Humphreys ; J. G., T. W. Bennett; Q. G., Samuel Merrill; L. C, L. D. Waterman; G. C, L. H. Jameson ; A. G., 0. M. Wilson. Merchants and Manufacturers Exchange. Meets every Saturday 3 P. M., at 27 south Meridian. This society, being recently organized, comprises the Merchants and Manufacturers, in general, of the city of Indianapolis. President, W. E. Tarkington ; First Vice- President, Robert Connely ; Second Vice-President, Samuel Merrill ; Sec retary, James Green ; Treasurer, John W. Murphy. Executive Committee, E. T. Sinker, Chair man ; J. M. Caldwell, R. S. Foster, E. C. Mayhew, J. D. Vinnedge. Railroad Committee, George Merritt, J. E. Mooney, Frank Landers, H. Daily, A. Wallace. Chamber of Commerce. Vinton's Block, north Pennsylvania, oppo site post-office. President, James C. Ferguson ; First Vice- President, S. V. B. Noel ; Second Vice- President, Thomas Kingan; Third Vice-President, A. Jones; Secretary, J. Bernard ; Board of Directors, John Carlisle, J. D. D. Pattison, J. W. Mur phy, Lucien Hill, F. P. Rush, G. W. Smith, L. W. Hasselman, D. Gibson, Fielding Beeler, B. Coffin. MARION CO. COURTS AND OFFICERS. County Officers. Clerk, William C. Smock. Deputies, C. F. Rooker, R. M. Smock, L. L. Harvey, D. C. Granfield. Sheriff, George W. Parker. Deputies, 3. T. Elliott, H. C. Adams, L. Hanna. Auditor, George F. McGinnis. John CITY DIRECTORY. 249 Deputies, Frank Hamilton, E.M.Wilmington Treasurer, Frank Eidermeyer. Deputy Treasurers, A. L. Wright, B. F. Riley. Surveyor, Oliver W. Voorhies. Commissioners, Aaron McCreery, L.Vausyoe, J. K. English. Common Pleas Court. Meets first Mondays in February, June and October. Length of term, Bix weeks. Judge, S. T. Blair. Marion Civil Circuit Court. Meets first Mondays in November and May. Length of term, nine weeks. Judge, Cyrus C. Hines. Criminal Court. Meets first Mondays in January and July. Length of term, six months. Judge George H. Chapman. INDIANA COURTS. Supreme Court. Meets at the Supreme Court Rooms, south west corner Washington and Tennes see, in Indianapolis, on the fourth Monday in May and November. Judges, Hon. James S. Frazer, Hon. Charles A. Ray, Hon. John T. Elliott, Hon. Robert 0. Gregory. Reporter, Gen. Benjamin Harrison. Attorney General, D. E. Williamson. Clerk, General Laz Noble. Sheriff, Samuel Lamb. Deputy Sheriff, Samuel R. Judah. U. S. Circuit Court, FOR THE DISTRICT OF INDIANA. Meets first Tuesdays in May and Novem ber. Circuit Court held by Hon. Da vid Davis, Assistant Justice of the United States Supreme Court, and Hon. D. MoDonald, District Judge. Clerk, John D. Howland. U. S. District Court. Meets first Tuesdays in May and Novem ber. Judge, Hon. David McDonald. Clerk, John D. Howland. Deputy Clerk, William V. Humphreys. District Attorney, Alfred Kilgore. United States Marshal, General Benjamin J. Spooner. United States Deputy Marshals, 3. L. Bige low, 0. E. MoDonald, J. C. Spooner. Land Office Register, Edmund Browning U. S. Commissioners, Edwin A. Davis, J. W. Raymond, Eben W. Kimball, 0. M. Wilson and Fred. Knefler. INDIANA STATE GOVERNMENT. Lieutenant Governor — Conrad Baker, acting Governor. Governor's Private Secretary — J. M. Com mons. Secretary of Stale— Nelson Trusler. Auditor of Stale— -T. B. McCarty. Treasurer of State — Nathan Kimball. Superintendent of Public Instruction — Prof. George W. Hoss. State Librarian — Rev. B. F. Foster. Attorney General — D. E. Williamson. Adjutant General— W. H. H. Terrell. Quarter-Master General — Peter Schmock. Indiana Military Agency. Office, cor. Tennessee and Market, opposite State House. General Agent — William Hannaman. Notary Public — James. Turner. Cashier — Lina J. G. Greenwalt. Clerk— 3. H. Turner. AGRICULTURE. Indiana State Board of Agriculture. OFFICERS. President — Hon. A. D. Hamrick, Hamrick's Station, Putnam Co. Vice-President — Dr. John C. Helm, Muncie, Delaware Co. Treasurer — Carlos Dickson, Indianapolis. General Superintendent — John B. Sullivan, Indianapolis. 250 LOGAN'S INDIANAPOLIS Secretary — A. J. Holmes, Rochester, Ful ton Co. Office — State House, Indianapolis. MEMBERS. 1st District— E. T. Cox. 2d District— Ron. 3. D. Williams. 3d District — John C. Shoemaker. 4th District — John McCrea. 5th District — Benjamin North. 6th District— D. E. Rees. 7th District — Jacob Mutz. 8th District— Hon. W. C. Danaldson. 9th District — Hon. A. D. Hamrick. 10th District — Alexander Heron. 11th District— Vt. John C. Helm. 12th District — Joseph Poole. 13th District— nezekiah Caldwell. 14th District — A. J. Holmes. 15th District — John Sutherland. 16th District— Dt. George W. McConnell. The Sixteenth Annual Fair will be held at Indianapolis Sept. 2Slh to Oct. 3d. Marion County Agricultural and Horti cultural Society. Office, Hubbard's block, s. w. cor. Wash ington and Meridian. President — John S. Dunlop. Vice-President — D. Mears. Secretary — John T. Francis. Treasurer— W '. S. Hubbard. U. S. OFFICES IN THIS CITY. United States Arsenal. Located one-half mile from city corpora tion east. The grounds consist of about seventy-five acres. There is al ready completed a main store-house, one building for storing artillery, one magazine for storing powder, one set of officers' quarters and one office. Other buildings, for manufacturing and storing ammunition and for other purposes, will be put up from year to year, as fast as it is possible to do so. Brevet Lieutenant Colonel William H. Har ris, Colonel commanding. United States Internal Revenue, Sixth District, Indiana. Assessor — David Braden. Deputy — L. M. Phipps. Office room 14, post-office building. Collector — Austin H. Brown. Deputy — Thomas Madden. . Office room 15, post-office building. Register — Edmund Browning. Office room 8, post-offioe building. United States Marshal's Offlce. (Room 6 post-offlce building.) U. S. Marshal — Benjamin Spooner. Deputies — J. S. Bigelow, C. E. McDonald, W. C. David, John C. Spooner, H. N. Bigelow. Indianapolis Post-Ofiice. POST-OFFICE BUILDING. Located south-east corner Pennsylvania and Market. Open, from the first of October to the first of April, from 7} A. M. to 6_ P. M., and from April 1st to October 1st, from 7 A. M. to 7 P. M., on Sundays from 9 A. M. to 10 A. M. Post-Master — D. G. Rose. Assistant Post-Master — E. P. Thompson. Money Order Clerk — T. B. Messick. Special Mail Agent — W. R. Bowen. Local Mail Agent — H. Vandegriff. Going East, over Bellefontaine and Cent ral Railways. Going West, over Terre Haute _ Indian apolis and St. Louis Railroads. Going North, over Peru and Lafayette Railroads. Going South, over Cincinnati, Madison and Jeffersonville Railroads. Going South-west, over Vincennes Railroad. Going North-west, over Indianapolis. Craw- fordsville & Danville Railroad. BANKS AND BANKING HOUSES. Bank of the State, incorporated 1857 ; clos ing business. James M. Ray, prest., Joseph Moore, cashier. Branch of the Bank of the State, n. e. cor. Washington and Meridian, Oliver Tousey, prest., D. M. Taylor, cashier. Citizens' National Bank, 4 e. Washington ; organized 1864, capital $300,000. Isaiah Mansur, pres., Joseph R. Haugh, cashier. FIRST NATIONAL BANK, s. e. cor. Washington and Meridian ; organized 1863, capital $500,000. Wil liam H. English, prest., John C. New, cashier. FLETCHER'S BANK, 30 e. Washington; organized 1830, capital $200,000. S. A. Fletcher & Co., props. Deposits received, dis counts made, exchange and govern ment securities bought and sold. Bank ing hours from 8 A. M. to 4 P. M. HARRISON'S BANK, 15 e. Washington, established in 1855, capital $100,000. Alfred & John C. S. Harrison, proprietors. Deposits re ceived, discounts made, and exchange bought and sold. Banking hours from 8 A. M. to 4 P. M. INDIANA BANKING CO., 28 e. Washington; organized 1865, capital $100,000. F. A. W. Davis, prest., W. W. Woolen, cashier, Samuel C. Vance, asst. cashier, John P. Lord, book-keeper, Oliver Boaz, messenger. Deposits received, discounts made, ex change and government securities bought and sold. Banking hours from 8 A. M. to 4 P. M., daily. INDIANA NATIONAL BANK, 2 e. Washington, cor. Meridian ; or ganized 1865, capital $400,000. George Tousey, prest., D. M. Taylor, cashier, Morris R. Eddy, book-keeper, James Nichol, teller. George Tousey, Oliver Tousey, George Merritt, Wm. Cough- lin, Daniel Stewart, Jacob P. Dunn, directors. Banking hours from 8 A. M. to 4 P. M. daily. Indianapolis Branch Banking Co., Fletcher & Sharpe, props., 49 e. Washington, cor. Pennsylvania, capital $200,000; have been ongaged in banking busi ness for 35 years. Deposits received and discounts made daily from 8 A. M. to 4 P. M. INDIANAPOLIS NATIONAL BANK, under Odd Fellows' Hall, n. „. cor. Washington and Pennsylvania, chartered 1864, capital $500,000, sur plus fund, $80,800. Theodore P. Haughey, prest., A. F. Williams, cash ier, Henry Latham, asst. cashier. S. A. Fletcher, Sr., F, M. Churchman, Ingram Fletcher, E. Sharpe and Theo dore P. Haughey, directors. Deposits received, discounts made, gold, silver, exchange and government securities bought and sold. Banking hours from 8 A. M. to 4 P. M. Merchant's National Bank, 48 East Wash ington; organized 1865, capital, $1 OO OOO. John S. Newman, prest., V. T. Malott, cashier. Locke Erie, banker and broker, 19 n. Me ridian. SAVINGS BANK, J. B. Ritzinger, propr., 38 e. Washing ton, capital $50,000 ; gold, silver and exchange, bought and sold. Deposits received and discounts made daily, from 8 A. M. to 4 P. M. Wagner S. W., banker, broker and loan office, room 11 Yohn's blk., n. Meridian. BARTON D. JONES. GEORGE P. ANDERSON. ANDERSON & JONES, REAL ESTATE BROKERS, No. 19 North Meridian Street, Ground Floor. AGENTS FOR EQUITABLE LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY OF NEW YORK, WITH A CAPITAL OF <6»000>000- INSURANCE COMPANIES. FIRE. (Home Companies.) EQUITABLE, a mutual company, incorporated 1861, now closing business. Wm. Manlove, receiver ; office, room 4, Langsdale's blk., n. Delaware. GERMAN MUTUAL, a mutual company, incorporated 1864, A. Seidinsticker & Co., agts., 14 s. Del aware. HOME, A mutual company, organized in 1864, now closing business, under the man agement of a receiver. Charles W. Smilh, Jr., room 5, Yohn's blk., n. Meridian. INDIANA FIRE, originally a mutual company, organ ized 1862, now doing business on the stock system, with a capital of about $200,000. J. S. Harvey, prest., W. T. Gibson, secy., office, room 5 Odd Fel lows' Hall, over Indianapolis National Bank, cor. Washington aed Pennsyl vania. INDIANAPOLIS, a stock company, chartered 1836, au thorized capital, $500,000; office in old bank bldg., cor. Virginia av. and s. Pennsylvania. Wm. Henderson, prest., Alexander C. Jamison, secy. Sinnissippi, a mutual company, organized in , now closing business under the management of a receiver, R.J. Thompson, over 87 e. Market. UNION, a stock company, organized 1865, with a cash capital of $200,000, has lately retired from business by reinsuring her risks in the Home Insurance Co., of New York. (Insurance Companies having Agencies in this City.) iETNA, of Hartford, Conn., caBh capital $4,- 375,830.55, incorporated 1819, charter perpetual, do a Fire and Marine In surance, L. I. Hendee, pres't ; J. Good- now, secy.; J. B. Bennett, manager, Cincinnati; A. Abromet, agt., office _5tna bldg., n. Pennsyvania, bet. Washington and Meridian. Baltic, of New York, cash capital $200,- 000, T. A. Goodwin, agt., office 35 e. Market. BUCKEYE, of Cleveland, O., J. S., Dunlop & Co., agts., office 16 n. Meridian. CHARTER OAK. of Hartford, Conn., Davis, & Greene, agts., 27_ 8. Meridian. CITY FIRE, of Hartford, Conn., cash capital $465,- 965.00, Martin, Hopkins & Follett, agts., office in Journal bldg. CONTINENTAL, of New York, cash assets $2,000,266,- 00, Martin, Hopkins & Follett, agts., office in new Journal bldg. CORN EXCHANGE, of New York, capital $400,000, in vested in Government bonds, bank stock and mortgages on real estate, R. F. Mason, prest.; George A. Dres ser, secy.: C. A. Beidenmeister, agt., 96 e. Washingtdn. ENTERPRISE, of Cincinnati, cash capital $1,304,- 328.00, Martin, Hopkins & Follett, agts., office Journal bldg. FIREMANS, of Chicago, Ills., J. S. Dunlop, agt., office 16 n. Meridian. HARMONY. of New York, J. S. Dunlop, agt., office 16 n. Meridian. HARTFORD, of Hartford, Conn., cash assets $2,- 026,220.79, Snyder _ Hays, agts., office 17 n. Meridian. HOME, of New Haven, Conn., capital $2,- 000,000, invested in Government bonds, bank stock and mortgages, D. R. Satterlee, prest. ; Charles Wilson, vice-prest. ; W. A. Goodell, secy.; C. A. Beidenmeister, agt., office 96 e. Washington. HOME, of New York, assets $3,623,876.78, H. H. Walker, adjusting agt.; E. B. Martindale, agt., 2 w. Washington. INSURANCE COMPANY, of North America, cash assets $2,- 000,000, Martin, Hopkins & Follett, agts., office new Journal bldg . LIVERPOOL, LONDON AND GLOBE, fire and marine, J. S. Spann & Co., agts., Brown's block, _. Penn- svlvania. LORILLARD, of New York, cash capital and assets CITY DIRECTORY. 258 1,600,000, J. S. Dunlop _ Co., agts., office over Bee Hive Store, entrance on Meridian, over 16. LUMRERMANS, of Chicago, 111., Snyder & Hays, agts., 17 n. Meridian. MANHATTAN, of New York, Davis & Greene, agts., office 27 _ s. Meridian. MARKET, of New York, J. S. Dunlop & Co., agts., 16 n. Meridian. MERCHANTS, of Hartford, Conn., Davis & Greene, agts., office 27$ s. Meridian. MERCHANTS, of Chicago, 111., Martin, Hopkins & Follett, agts., office new Journal bldg. NEW ENGLAND, of Hartford, Conn., J. S. Dunlop & Co., agts., 16 n. Meridian. North American, of New York, D. E. Snyder, agt., 17 n. Meridian. PHCENIX, of Hartford, Conn., Snyder & Hays, agts., office 17 n. Meridian. REPUBLIC, of Chicago, 111., capital and assets $1,330,468.67, central office 82 La Salle street, Chicago, 111., John V. Farwell, pres't; J. R. P ayson, secy.; J. S. Dunlop & Co., agts., 16 n. Meridian. SANGAMO, of Springfield, 111., capital $200,000, F. M. Blair, agt., Vinton's block, opp. p. o. SECURITY, of New York, J. S. Dunlop & Co., agts., 16 n. Meridian. SPRINGFIELD, of Mass., cash assets $808,892.33, W. T. Gibson, agt, room 6 Odd Fellows Hall. Sun, of Cleveland, O., Davis & Greene, agts., office 27_ s. Meridian. TEUTONIA, of Cleveland, O., capital $200,000, II. W. Luetkemoyer, pres't; I. Stopple, vice-pres't; E. Hessenmueler, secy.; C. A. Biedenmiester, agt., 96 e. Wash ington. UNDERWRITER'S AGENCY, of New York, is composed of the German, Hanover, Niagara and Repub lic Ins. Co.'s, of New York, capital nearly $4,000,000, invested in gov ernment bonds, bank stock and mort gages on real estate, Alexander Stod dard, gen'l agt.; W. F. Collier, special agent for Indiana; C. A. Beidenmeis ter, local agt., 96 e. Washington. Winnesheik, of Decatur, 111., capital $500,- 000.00, Jones & Childs, State agts., 25 w. Washington. YONKERS & NEW YORK, Martin, Hopkins & Follett, agts., new Journal bldg., e. Market. HORSE. AMERICAN, of Indianapolis, E. J. Burkert, secy., room 13 Vinton blk., n. Pennsylvania. (Foreign Companies having Agencies in this City.) GREAT WESTERN, of Decator, III., T. H. Wingate, actu ary, Vinton blk, a. Pennsylvania, opp. p. o. LIFE. (Home Companies.) FRANKLIN, of Indianapolis, Ind., chartered 1866, James M. Ray, pres't; Edward P. Howe, secy.; B. F. Witt, supervising agt., office in Company's bldg., cor. Kentucky av. and Illinois. (Foreign Companies having Agencies in this City.) iETNA, of Hartford, Conn., Snyder & Hays, agts, 17 n. Meridian. AMERICAN LIFE, home office s. e. cor. Fourth and Wal nut sts., Philadelphia; Indiana branch office 35 J .. Washington; Alexander Whilldin, pres't; Geo. Nugent, vice- pres't; John C. Sims, actuary; John S. Wilson, secy.; George M. Bowen, gen'l agt. for Indiana ; incorporated April 1850, charter perpetual, amount of capital stock, all paid in, $500,000 ; present value of said stock at least $700,000; assets, Jan. 1, 1868, $1,- 901,234.90; amount necessary to re insure all outstanding risks, Jan. 1, 1868, $723,337.80; ratio of assets to liabilities 2,62 ; policies issued on both joint stock and mutual plans ; dividends declared and paid annually, averaging 60 per cent, for several years past. All policies non-forfeit ing, and payable when the insured at tains his eightieth year, or on previ ous decease. The Company has one hundred thousand dollars deposited in the State treasury of Pennsylvania for the security of its insured, and it makes annual sworn statements to the auditor gen'l of that State, showing its condition, etc.; copies of which swon statements are deposited with the State auditor of Indiana. ATLANTIC MUTUAL, of New York, J. B. Barnard, agt., of fice Vinton blk., cpp. p. o. Atlas Mutual, of St. Louis, Mo., Akin & Reynolds, ge.n'1 agts. for Indiana, of fice 39$ w. Washington. BERKSHIRE, Pittsfield, Mass., cash assets $1.0,000, J. W. Greene, agt., 25 w. Washington. BROOKLYN LIFE, of New York, 141 Broadway, New York, and 159 Montage, Brooklyn, chartered 1853, assets $1,000,000, C. W. Bouck, pres't; William M. Cole. secy.; Daniel Ayers, M. D., medical examiner; dividends paid annually in cash, no restriction on travel or resi dence; one-third of the premiums loaned annually; note will not consti tute a claim against policy after two annual payments, F. M. Blair, gen'l agt., Indianapolis, office Vinton blk. CHARTER OAK, of Hartford, Conn., organized A. D., 1850, James C. Walkley, pres't; U. S. Palmer, vice-pres't; Samuel H. White, secy.; S. J. Beston, asst. secy.; L. W. Meech, mathematician; Henry M. Palmer, supt. of agencies; W. H. Hay, gen'l agt. for Indiana ; cash assets $4,500,000, dividends declared and paid annually, a dividend of twenty- five per cent, on note plan, and thirty per cent, on all cash plan, is guaren- teed, and in each triennial year the entire- surplus earnings returned to policy holders ; the triennial dividend for 1867 amounted to seventy per cent. Office, room 6 Blackford's blk. CINCINNATI MUT'L HEALTH ASSURANCE, capital $101,600, Geo. W. Bishop, Pres't; N. Roff, secy.; M. Rosenstock, gen'l agt.; Alexander Metzger, State agt. for Indiana, office Odd Fellows Hall. CONNECTICUT MUTUAL, of Hartford, Conn., asselts $20,000.00, H. R. Dutton, agt., 77_ e. Market. CONTINENTAL, of New York, chartered March, 1866, assets $1,500,000, Justus Lawrence, pres't; G. H. Scribner, vice-pres't; J. P. Rogers, secy.; R. C. Frost, actuary ; E. D. Wheeler, M. D., medical exami ner; thirty days grace allowed in pay ment of premiums after three annual payments have been made, a loan of four-fifths of the amount paid in, will be loaned to the policy holder for the advantage of subsequent payments; Johnson & Turner, agts. for Indiana, room 7 Blackford's blk. Continental, of Hartford, Conn., T. D. Douglas, ogt., s. w. cor. Washington and Meridian. Great Western, of New York, Haehl & Means, agts., 20 s. Delaware. Guardian Mulual, of New York, incorpo rated 1859, capital $1,500,000, E. Gilbert, agt., room 4 Blackford's block. HAN NEMAN, of Cleveland, O., cash assets 673.04, H. M. Chapin, pres't; J. P. Dake, vice-pres't; J. F. Crank, secy.; D. H. Beckwith, M. D., medical exam iner; W. J. Copeland, gen'l agt. for Indianapolis. Manhatten, of New York, Davis & Greene, agts., 27$ s. Meridian. Mutual Benefit, of Newark, N. J., assets $16,000,000, Nutting & Wood, agts., 21 w. Washington. New England Mutual of Boston, assets, $6,082,400.41, Snyder & Hays, agts., 17 n. Meridian. North Western Mutual, of Milwaukee, Wis., assets $3,145,126, Martin, Hop kins & Follett, agts., Journal bldg. New Jersey Mutual of Newark, N. J., C. F. Wilson, agt., 19 w. Washington. NEW YORK LIFE, established in 1845, principal office, 112 and 114 Broadway, New York, as sets July 1, 1868, $12,000,000, Morris Franklin, prest., Wm. H. Beers, actu ary ; Theodore M. Banta, cashier ; Cor nelius R. Bogart, M. D., and George Wilkes, M. D., medical examiners ; Charles Wright, M. D., asst. medical examiner; W. W. Byington, general agts. for Indiana, No. 11 s. Meridian. PHCENIX MUTUAL, of Hartford, Conn., cash capital, over $3,000,000. This company is purely mutual ; charter perpetual. Edson Fes- senden, prest. ; James T. Brown, secy.; E. S. Folsom, general agt. for Indiana. Office, room 3, Tallbott & New's blk. SECURITY LIFE INSURANCE AND ANNUITY, of New York, assets $1,500,000, Robert L. Case, prest.; Theodore R. Welmore, vice-prest. ; Isaac H. Allen, secy., W. W. Northrop, general agent for Indiana and south ern Illinois, office, room 2, Blake's row, Indianapolis, Ind. No restriction on travel or residence. No extra rates on female risks. Dividends on Life and Ten Year Life rates have always been 50 per cent. STANDARD LIFE, of New York, guarantee fund, $126,- 000 ; Henry H. Elliott, prest. ; James L. Dawes, secy. ; Charles White, super intendent agces.; A. C. Metzger, gen. agt. for Ind., room 6 Odd Fellows' Hall. St. Louis Mutual, Charles D. Wilcox, agt., office, Yohn's blk. Travelers' of Hartford, Martin, Hopkins & Follett, agts., new Journal bldg. Universal, of New York, W. T. GibsoD, agt., room 5 Odd Fellows's Hall. Western Life, of Cininnati, Martin & Gib son, gen'l agts. for Indiana. ADVERTISING DEPARTMENT, -CONTAINING- ILLUSTRATED AND DISPLAYED CARDS OF Principal Merchants, Manufacturers, Bankers, Lawyers, Physicians, Insur-! ance Companies, Colleges, Educational Insti tutions, &c, ic. The remaining cards of prominent individual dealers and business firms, will be found on fly-leaves in front and back of book, and at bottom of pages among uames of citizens. ADVERTISING DEPARTMENT. WILLIAM SWEINHART, PIKST CLASS 21 SOUTH MERIDIAN STREET. THE BEST WORKMEN EMPLOYED .PERFECT FIT GTT___t__:_T'TEE_**_ GIVE Him A CALL. THE GERMAN BAZAAR. "wm:. h__.er.i_i_, Wholesale and Retail Dealer in LADIES' DRESS TRIMMINGS, FURNISHING GOODS WHITE GOODS, HOSIERY, Zephyr Wool, Cotton and "Woolen Tan-, Fancy Goods, Notions, No. 4 WEST WASHING-TON STREET, INDIANAPOLIS, IND." ADVERTISING DEPARTMENT. SOUTHERN HOTEL, mm um _s Walnut Street, extending to Elm, Fourth and Fifth Sts., ST. LOUIS, MO. This Hotel was first opened to the public in 1863, having required five years in its construction and completion, at a cost of $1,250,000. The lot on which it is situated measures two hundred and seventy feet on Walnut street, one hundred and thirteen feet each on Fourth and Fifth streets, and sixty feet on Elm street. It is six stories high, the first being sixteen feet, the second seventeen feet, the third thirteen feet, the fourth twelve feet, the fifth eleven feet and sixth ten feet, making a total hight from level of sidewalk to the eaves of over one hundred feet. The stone of which it is built is a species of magnesian marble, a most durable and beautiful material which never fades or stains, the color being that of a rich cream or uniform yellow tint. This house con tains over three hundred and fifty guests' rooms, nine large parlors, several smaller par lors, a billiard room, bar room, vestibule, rotunda, reading-room, bakery, laundry, bar ber's emporium, bath rooms, aside from a large number of smaller apartments for various purposes ; with elevating cars, used for ascending and descending, with spacious halls and corridors, and last and largest of all a Dining Hall that ip not excelled in the style of finish or the sumptuous table which it oilers to its guests, at all seasons of the year, by any hotel on the continent. The style of architecture, plan of finish and man ner of furnishing is superb. Its accommodations are complete, thereby placing it upon the list as one of the first hotels in this country, and business men, travelers, tourists and all others, will find the " Southern " a pleasant home, with beautiful surroundings and superior accommodations at all seasons of the year. But one trial will be required to prove our assertion. The proprietors are men of untiring energy, the employees are courteous, obliging and attentive to the wants of guests. LAVEILLE, WARNER & CO., PROPRIETORS. (THEO. LAVEIIXE, CHAS. P. WARNER, 17 W. B. CARTER, G. W. FORD.) ADVERTISING DEPARTMENT. C. W. BROKING. A. ROESENER. C. H. ROESENER. F. MAYER. E. D. BROKING. i_srr>i_^_sr__. Transfer Company, NO. 40 EAST MARYLAND STREET, INDIANAPOLIS, IND. GOODS DELIVERED WITH CARE AND DESPATCH. BATES EEASONABLE. ©it? ©togas ul HkEMfis SETTLED PROMPTLY. BROKING, ROESENER & CO., - - PROFS. GEORGE T_ER__A."_TS_B___6, (Late of the firm of Trayser, Robinson & Co., Indianapolis, Ind.,) MANUFACTURER OF Awarded the FIRST PREMIUM ! 1865, 1866 and 1867, for best Square Piano manufactured in the United States. THREE PATENTS FOR IMPROVEMENTS. WARRANTED TO KEEP IN TUNE MUCH LONGER THAN ANY OTHER. My Dear Feiend— It affords me great pleasure to give you my opinion as to the excellence of the Piano of your make, I had tbe opportunity of playing last night. Said instrument is remark able for purity of tone, equality and strength in all its registers. I wish you all the success you so justly deserve in your profession as a Piano Maker. I remain, dear sir, yours truly, Geobge Tbaysee, Es6., Indianapolis, Ind., February 10, 1860. GOTTSCHALK. Factory : Corner New York and Davidson Streets, IND. ADVETISING DEPARTMENT. BATES HOUSE, North-West Corner Washington and Illinois Streets, M.MMPQU3, III. IM. D. KENEASTER, PROP1ETOR. This old and popularly established Hotel, the largest in this city or State, more com plete in its appointments, having lost none of its original glory, is adding to its already accumulated patronage as it justly deserves. The location of the " Bates " being on one of the principal corners and two of the great thoroughfares of the city, near the principal jobbing and most extensive retail business houses, public halls, churches, theatres and places of amusement ; and contain ing large sample rooms, spacious parlors and convenient office, well arranged sleeping apartments, largest dining hall in the city, fine saloon affording the best wines, liquors and cigars, added to other conveniences, combine to make the " Bates " the most desira ble Hotel in the city. Business men, travelers, tourists and all others, will find it pleasant and profitable to stop at this Hotel on visiting Indianapolis. Capt. E. HART WELL, Chief Clerk. ADVERTISING DEPARTMENT. WILLIAM EMMONS. JOHN WILSON. "W]___. _E___C3XOTVS Ac CO., ITALIAN IARBU_ W-MKS. wm, TOM Ai we sun, Marble Mantels, Bureau and Table Tops, &c, &c, NO. 27 NORTH TENNESSEE STREET, INDIANAPOLIS, IND. DR. CHAS. S. BEAULIEN, WILL TREAT ALL KINDS OF DISEASE SCIENTIFICALLY, AND ON LIBERAL TERMS Office, No. 63 East McCarty Street, INDIANAPOLIS, IND. SMITH, ITTENBACH & CO., 6itt«8©fSt@i© FOR BUILDING, ORNAMENTING _ PAVING. Yard on Cady, near Harrison Street, INDIANAPOLIS, IND. Keep constantly on hand all kinds of stone in the rough which they will manu facture to order. MAHBLE WOEKS! B. O. CARPENTER, No. 36 East Market Street, near New Journal Building, INDIANAPOLIS, I_STD., Monuments, Tombs & Grave Stones, Of Italian and American Marble, always on hand or made to order. MONUMENTS FURNISHED ON REASONABLE TERMS. ADVERTISING DEPARTMENT. PALMEE HOUSE, bw___Il I iMily_i9^_H SOUTH EAST COR. WASHINGTON _ ILLINOIS STS., (THREE SQUARES NORTH OF UNION DEPOT,) INDIANAPOLIS, IND. Alonzo Blair, Proprietor. Jeff. K. Scott, Chief Olerk. The Palmer House is one of the oldest and most favorably known hotels in the State of Indiana, owing to its having been conducted by enterprising men for years ; and it has gained a popularity that any number one hotel is justly entitled to. Its location being on one of the greatest thoroughfares of the city and on one of the principal cor ners, where the street cars pass running to any part of the city, near the centre of busi ness, places of amusement, public halls, theatres, churches, county and State offices, renders it especially convenient for business men from neighboring towns and villages, politicians, commercial travelers, tourists, pleasure seekers and others, who may have occasion to visit this city. They will have a guarantee of a quiet and comfortable home during their stay, as the " Palmer " contains fine accommodations, a bountiful ta ble, comfortable sleeping apartments (the office atfid dining hall being on the ground floor,) and all the conveniences that are to be found in any western hotel. The proprie tor is an affable gentleman, and the attaches are courteous and obliging. All will do well to give the Palmer House a trial, and be satisfied of the truth of the above state ment. ADVERTISING DEPARTMENT. TUTEWILER BROS., DEALEKS IN STOVES, rnrm. -AND- MANTLES AND GRATES. Sole Agents for the Monitor WJ± JE&JST - ____ I I£ FUENACES. No. 74 East Washington St., Tousey & Byram's old stand. INDIANAPOLIS, INDIANA. ADVERTISING DEPARTMENT. OFFICE AND CONSULTATION PARLORS — ARE LOCATED AT- 29 SOUTH DELAWARE ST., INDIANAPOLIS, IND., Where he will continue to treat and cure _?:_R_xv_A._r__n diseases In all their species, stages, ramifications and phases. Dr. Thomson will give to each patient a written guarantee, binding himself to effect a radical and permanent cure, or make no charge. Dr. Thomson has made the treatment of private diseases a specialty since the year 1851— three years in the city of Buffalo, New York, eight years in Chi cago, Illinois, and two years in Peoria, Illinois. During eight years practice in Chicago, he cured over THIRTEEN THOUSAND CASES. In Dr. Thomson's practice for Scrofulous, Rheumatic and other blood ail ments, he uses a Fumigating Vapor Bath of the most ingenious kind, in con junction with internal treatment. SEMINAL EMISSIONS, the consequences of self-abuse, is a solitary vice, or __ depraved sexual indulgence, practiced by the youth of both sexes to an almost unlimited extent, producing, with unerring certainty, the following train of morbid symptoms, unless combated by scientific medical measures, viz: sallow countenance, dark spots under the eyes, pain in the head, ringing in the ears, and noises like the rustling of leaves and rattling of carriages, uneasiness about the loins, weakness of the limbs, confused vision, blunted intellect, loss of confidence, diffidence in approaching strangers, dislike to form new acquaintances, dispo sition to shun society, loss of memory, hectic flushes, pimples and various eruptions about the face, furred tongue, night sweats, fetid breath, coughs, consumption, monomania, and frequently insanity. INVOLUNTARY SEMINAL EMISSIONS may not make their appearance for many years after the practice of this vice has been discontinued, and the patient may be afflicted with slight derange ment of the system for some time before emissions are developed. Therefore, all are cautioned who have been addicted to solitary habits, to be on their guard, and on the first appearance of unusual symptoms endeavor to avail themselves of the services of the best medical talent, and be cured of this soul-subduing and murderous disease, which destroys both body and mind and ren ders its victim totally unfit for society or marriage. Dr. Thomson's success in the treatment of syphilitic diseases is proverbial. Many of the best and most candid physicians, after having placed their patients under the usual forms of treatment, without satisfactory results, advise them _o apply to Dr. Thomson as The Only Chance of Being Saved OFFICE AND CONSULTATION PARLORS, NO. 39 SOUTH DELAWARE STREET, POST OFFICE BOX 1,650. 10 ADVERTISING DEPARTMENT. EXc:___:_-_.__Ta-:E Livery, Sale and Boarding Stables, NO. 35 NORTH ILLINOIS STREET, (Opposite Bates House, one-half Square north of Washington Street,) INDIANAPOLIS, INDIANA This old and popular establishment has lately been purchased by Mr. Hinesly, a well- known horse merchant and livery stable proprietor, whose knowledge of the business enables him to KEEP AS PINE STOCK AND GET UP AS GOOD A TURN OUT as any other stable in the city, at reasonable charges. The stables being large the accommodations for boarding stock are number one and convenient. A liberal discount made in supplying carriages for funerals, pic-nic, sleighing and wed ding parties. The proprietor pledges his personal attention to the satisfaction of pat rons, and business men and pleasure seekers will find the best accommodation for boarding their stock or securing a number one livery turn out of any kind, by calling at the 1. WILLIAM HINESLY, PROPRIETOR. ADVETISING DEPARTMENT. 11 MACY HOUSE, INDIANAPOLIS, IND. SOUTH-EAST 00E. ILLINOIS AND MARKET STS., ONE SQUARE NORTH OP WASHINGTON STREET. A. W. Melsheimer , - Prop'r. This house having just passed into the hands of Mr. A. W. Melsheimer, an experi enced hotel keeper, has been thoroughly refitted and refurnished throughout, and i? now open for boarders and the reception of guests. Its location being neaar the center of the city makes it convenient to business, churches and public places of amusement. Business men and politicians will find this hotel a convenient and quiet place, affording good accommodations, including a bountifully supplied table at all seasons of the year, comprising the best the market affords. The sleeping apartments are well ventilated in Summer and warmed in Winter ; the whole affording a comfortable home at moder ate charges. Travelers will find it to their interest to give the Macy House a call on visiting Indianapolis. 18 12 ADVERTISING DEPARTMENT. SPIEGEL, THOMS & CO., ¦ ' __• MANUFACTURERS — AND— WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALERS IN Furnitjure, Chairs, L* Jul KJ 5§_ i> WAREROOMS : 71 & 73 WEST WASHINGTON ST., FACTORY: SOUTH ___V"_T STKEET, INDIANAPOLIS, IND. INDIANA FIRE Insurance Company! OF INDIANAPOLIS. ACCUMULATED AND CASH ASSETS, $303,483 23. OFFICE NO. 5 ODD FELLOWS' HALL, INDIANAPOLIS, IND LARGE SECURITY-PAIR RATES-PROMPT PAYMENT. Policies of Insurance against Loss or Damage by Fire issued on the most favorable terms. W. T. GIBSON, Secretary. J. S. HARVEY, President. ADVERTISING DEPARTMENT. 13 HAY HOUSE, INDIANAPOLIS, IND. South-East Corner South and Delaware Streets. James M. Lambert, - - Propr. This house is one of medium size, pleasantly located near the Union Passenger Depot and the different Railroad Freight Depots, yet far enough away from the rush of business to be a pleasant hotel and public boarding house, affording fair accommodations to either strangers or business men from neighboring cities and towns, commercial travel ers, railroad men and others. The proprietor, Mr. Lambert, being a gentleman of large experience, a practical hotel keeper, burthens his table with everything the country affords or the market pro duces. Persons visiting Indianapolis or traveling through the western country should try the Ray House. 14 ADVERTISING DEPARTMENT. D. ROOT & CO., MANUFACTURERS OF Tin, Copper and Sheet Iron Ware, STOVES HOLLOW-WARE, CASTINGS, Portable and Stationery Engines, MILL GEARING AND IRON FRONTS. AND WHOLESALE DEALERS IN loft MM COPPER AND COMPOSITION BOTTOMS, PIG Ai 111 TI, LEI WIRE, SHEET RIVETS, KETTLE EARS, &C. nf OFFICE AND WABEHO USE : No. 66 East Washington St., I_X_3I^lV-A__POI_IS, ITV_E>. ADVERTISING DEPARTMENT. 15 Type and Stereotype Foundry, BRANCH OF THE JOHNSON TYPE FOUNDRY., NO. 168 VINE ST., BETWEEN FOURTH AND FIFTH, CINCINNATI, OHIO. mKKMwfiw__!!_B____-UUUu______^Eeau__ii mi ALLISON, SMITH & JOHNSON, MANUFACTURERS OF AND DEALERS IN 'l ft< Printing Presses, Oases, Gallies, &c. INKS AND PRINTING MATERIAL OF EVERY DESCRIPTION. STEEEOTYPING OF ALL KINDS, Such as Books, Music, Patent Medicine Directions, Jobs, "Wood Engravings, &c. Brand and Pattern Letters of Various Styles. IN ALL ITS GIBSON HOUSE. !! J, ,' 1:; ..I !,!.;!,,!;::, i.IJ. liLMilllPllllllllllllUPIIIlii j X>__."VI_>SO"IV «fe SINKS, PROPRIETOK8. WALNUT STREET, BETWEEN FOURTH AND FIFTH, OPPOSITE MERCHANTS' EXCHANGE, OI_VC5I_NTY___TT, OHIO. ADVERTISING DEPARTMENT. 17 SPEINGFIELD FIRE AND MARINE Insurance Company. OF MASSACHUSETTS. ASSETS, $808,892 33. CONDENSED STATEMENT, APRIL 1, 1868. Cash $ 48,178 24 Loans on Real Estate 76,321 66 Loans on Collateral 37,363 54 Real Estate 60,000 00 Bank Stocks 137,232 00 Railroad Stocks and Bonds 166,352 00 U. S. Registered Bonds 271,000 00 Springfield Aqueduct Co. Stock 5,000 00 Accrued Interest and other Cash Items 7,444 89 $808,892 33 DIRECTORS. EDMUND FREEMAN, EDWARD SO UTHWORTH, CHARLES MERRIAM, LOMBARD DALE, JAMES BREWER, MARVIN CHAPIN, GEORGE A. HULL, WAITSTILL HASTINGS, CHESTER W. CHAPIN, DANIEL L. HARRIS, WILLIAM BIRNIE, HENRY E. RUSSELL, GEORGE WALKER, WILLIAM STOWE. D.R..SMITH, E. FREEMAN, President. J. N. DUNHAM, Sec'y. D. R. SMITH, Vice Pres't. S. J. HALL, Ass't. Sec'y. W. T. Gh___BSO__T, AGB1TT, Office, No. 5, Up-Stairs, Odd Fellows' Hall, Indianapolis. 18 ADVERTISING DEPARTMENT. INDIANAPOLIS STEAM LAUNDEY J. L. SPAULDING, PROP'R. NOS. 22 AND 24 SOUTH NEW JEESEY STEEET, OPPOSITE LITTLE'S HOTEL, INDIANAPOLIS, INDIANA. Having the latest improvements in Laundry Machinery, we are prepared to do all kinds of And in the NEATEST MANNER. Particular attention given to fine work, such as Ladies' Fancy Dresses and Underwear, Gents' Fine Shirts, White Suits, etc. Parcels called for and delivered to any part of the city. SZEJSHD FOR PEICE LIST! WE TAKE SPECIAL ORDERS FOR THE "Quaker City Fine Shirt," And will give you a perfect fit and satisfaction in quality »f goods. Try them. ADVERTISING DEPARTMENT. 19 CITY GHOCEEY! J. N. CONKLIN, Successor to Horn, Anderson & Co., WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALER IN FANCY AND STAPLE GROCERIES, _TO_-_3I(3-_T FBTJITS, TEAS -AND— The Finest Wines, Liquors & Cigars, NO. 31 WEST WASHINGTON STREET, INDIANAPOLIS, IND. Depot of LONGSWORTH'S NATIVE WINES of all Brands. Orders from the country, for anything in our line, shipped promptly. Goods deliv ered to any part of the city free of extra expense to purchasers. 19 20 ADVERTISING DEPARTMENT. St. Nicholas Hotel, _;l_il_? III 1 f_ii#lifepii W'i__V_n Ti ¦HNN! uHH A&AKEfi -CHICAGO.' - -~ SOUTH-WEST COR. MADISON AND FOURTH STS., JOHN McCREERY, PROPRIETOR. This Hotel is one of the oldest in the city of Springfield, Illinois, and under its present management is fully equal if not superior to the past, combining all the modern accommodations surrounding a first -class Hotel, being situated in a retired part of the business portion of the city, but three blocks from the Post Office and State House, near the Chicago and St. Louis railroad depot, convenient to the different churches, public places of amusement, banks and principal business houses. The house is large and handsomely finished, well furnished, lighted with gas, easily heated in Winter and ventilated in Summer. The office, reading rooms, reception rooms and parlors, are handsomely decorated ; being on same floor with the dining hall are conveniently ar ranged. On the ground floor is superbly fitted up a large billiard room and bar, where those who desire can enjoy a lively game of billiards, a quiet smoke, or a pleasant drink of the best wines, liquors, ale or beer, the market produces. The whole combined affording a comfortable Hotel, at all seasons of the year, for business men, commercial travelers, tourists and all others, who as guests will find the kindest attention to their wants promptly proffered by the proprietor, employees and servants, who are at all times courteous, obliging and attentive to the wants of guests. AH will do well to give the St. Nicholas at least one trial and be satisfied with the truth of the above state ment. JOHN McCREERY, PROPRIETOR. ADVERTISING DEPARTMENT. 21 LOGAN (te CO., PRINY1RS s PTOtlSEIftS ! —OF— DIRECTORIES — OF— Indianapolis, Terre Haute, Richmond and Lafayette, Ind., COLUMBUS AND DAYTON, OHIO, SPRINGFIELD, ILLINOIS, AND OTHER CITY DIRECTORIES AND GAZETTEERS. K|,Di rectories of different cities and Stat^ Vor s.iIp at publishers' prices, including POST OFFIOE DIRECTORY of the United States and Canada*, and LIVINGSTON'S LAW REGISTER of the United States. OFFIOE, NO. 16 1-2 EAST WASHINGTON STREET, INDIANAPOLIS, IND. LOGAN'S GENERAL Newspaper Advertising Agency. Cards of any size inserted in any of the leading Journals in the West. Issued Monthly: " Wes tern Commercial Review and Railroad Journal, "' having a circulation in the Western States, at one dollar a year. DEALER IN Bottled Liquors, Ale, Cider, &c NO. 29 SOUTH MERIDIAN STREET, I__TI_)IJ_.__T___._PO___IS, I__TID. A pleasant place to enjoy a quiet talk and invigorating smile. White Fawn Saloon, NO. 33 WEST WASHINGTON STEEET, HS^DIA.I^i__F>OI_IS5 TNT). Nihn K. Knotts & Co., .... Proprietors. The White Fawn is anew institution just opened in fine style, nt which wili be afforded the best WINES, LIQUORS AND CIGARS in the market. A cool and comfortable place, either in Summer or Winter, to enioy a quiet talk, pleasant smoke or an invigorating smile. 22 ADVERTISING DEPARTMENT. LIFE Insurance Company, PITTSFIELD, MASSACHUSETTS. Annual Cash Dividends Paid on Renewal of all Policies that have been in force two years. Dividends added to the Policy often exceed the amount of premiums paid and are non forfeitable, and will be redeemed in cash on demand. Premiums may be paid annually, semi-annually or quarterly. OUR CASH ASSETS ARE NEARLY $1,000,000. Dividends, September, 1866, forty-four per cent, and payable the same year as declar ed, always adding, in many cases, to the Policy more than the Premium paid, and on Endowment and ten Annual Life Policies, from sixty to one hundred and twenty per cent, of the annual life rate. The Berkshire was chartered in 1851, and is One of the Oldest in the Country! No company stands higher in the ratio of assets to liability. (See Massachusetts Reports, 1865.) For the same money or less, we insure you twice the length of time of most companies. For instance, a party by paying one year's premium, insures for two years and three days from the date of his Policy, giving you one year and three days more than ordinary companies. Be sure and see our agents before insuring. AGENTS WANTED. EXTRA INDUCEMENTS OFFERED. J. N. Greene, Gen'l. Agent, NO. 25 WEST WASHINGTON ST., INDIANAPOLIS. ADVERTISING DEPARTMENT. 23 SPENCEE HOUSE, OPPOSITE NORTH-WEST CORNER UNION DEPOT, INDIANAPOLIS, INDIANA. W. D. SAPP, 1 rT -ptj-r-o J. T. CANAN, \ CLEM8' J. E. SHOVER. W. F. CHRISTIAN. SHOVER & CHRISTIAN, Carpenters & Builders JOB WORK PROMPTLY ATTENDED TO. No. 278 North Delaware Street, Indianapolis, Indiana. P. O. BOX 1,209. ANSON REED. JAMES BOYLE. A. EEED & CO., MANUFACTURERS OF Hipiriw irtttei M& Water. WAREHOUSE AND MANUFACTORY No. 212 West Washington St., INDIANAPOLIS, HYXX Bottled Soda Water delivered to any part of the city or country, or shipped to sur rounding towns on order left at the manufactory, or addressed to P. O. Box 813. DR. U. T. WOODBURY, leaf JL. low Jtl OFFICE, 39 1-2 WEST WASHINGTON STREET, Next to Palmer House, Up Stairs, INDIANAPOLIS, IND. Special attention given to fitting in artificial teeth, in the highest style of the art, on Vulcanite base, at reduced prices, Tiz: Single tooth, $5,00; $1,50 each additional to eight; full upper set, 818,00; full mouth denture, $*)5 ,00. Extracting, 00 cents each, and by antesthesia, without pain. Pilling the natural teeth with the best materials, at prices to suit the times. Satisfaction guaran teed. Call and see. J) 24 ADVERTISING DEPARTMENT. J. R. OSGOOD.) T ,. ,. J. WOODBURN, "1 _u y . s. f. smith, } In-ianapohs. _ _¦ ___. j St. Louis, OSGOOD, SMITH & CO., MANUFACTURERS OF SARTKN'S PATENT Willi* PLAIN BUGGY AND CULTIVATOR WHEELS, WAGON § CARRIAGE MATERIAL, AND PLOW HANDLES. No. 230 South. Illinois Street, ONE SQUARE SOUTH OF UNION DEPOT, IJSTDIA-^-^-FOI-IS, TNT>. E. T. SINKER. DANIEL YANDES, WILLIAM ALLEN "W_53ST_3__^__T Machine Works. SINKER & CO., MANUFACTURERS OF AND DEALERS IN STEAM BOILERS AND CIRCULAR SAW MILLS, With McLain's Improved Lever Set connected to Patent Screw Set ; also, has Patent Blower for the Removal of Saw Dust without the labor of handling, Mill Gearing and Sheet Iron Work Of Every Description, Patent Governors, Steam Guages and Whistles, IRON PIPING, IRON & BRASS FITTINGS, BELTING, FIRE BIRE BRICK, FIRE CLAYi 125 SOUTH PENNSYLVANIA STREET, (One Square East of Union Depot,) INDIANAPOLIS, INDIANA. ADVETISING DEPARTMENT. 25 New Piano Store l" OPPOSITION TO HIGH PRICES ! IRVING BROS., OPPOSITE ODD FELLOWS' HALL, Are just receiving a splendid assortment of NEW YORK and BOSTON MADE PIANOS, that are not excelled for FINISH, QUALITY OF TONE or DURABILI TY, that will be sold at same prices as " before the War." Our Pianos contain all real modern improvements, and are made of the best materi als with great care, by the most skillful workmen, selected from the best factories in this and the old countries, and are fully warranted to stand the changes of any Climate and to give as good satisfaction as any in the market. All Pianos sold by ns are WARRANTED FOR FIVE YEARS and will be kept in rder one ye ar FREE OF CHARGE to purchasers. TAKEN IN EXCHANGE FOB NEW ONES. A liberal discount to Teachers, Schools and Clergymen. Now is the time, for those who have been discouraged by HIGH PRICES, to get good Pianos At Prices that Defy Competition. Call and examine instruments, or address IR/VT-STC. BBOS., ;r ). INDIANAPOLIS, IND. 26 ADVERTISING DEPARTMENT. Academy of Music. .*. SOUTH-EAST CORNER ILLINOIS AND OHIO STREETS, I__TIDIJ_.I_TJ_.^OI_IS. ZIsTJD'A.. V. BUTSCH & DICKSON, PROPRIETORS. This is one of the most complete THEATRICAL HALLS in the western country, and is open every season with a first-class Mil Every attention paid to the comfort of visitors. A vigilant police guard always in attendance. W. H. LEAK, Manager. JAMES B. DICKSON, Treasurer. if LIFE , Insurance Company, OF I__T3DI_A.__TJ_._POI_IS. THE PIONEER INDIANA LITE INSURANCE COMPANY. Office in the Company's Building, (Old State Bank,) Opposite Bates and Palmer Houses. ALL KINDS OF POLICIES NON-FORFEITING, DIVIDENDS DECLARED AND PAID ANNUALLY. PURELY MUTUAL. The policy holders control all the affairs of the Company. Premiums as low as is consistent with perfect security. All Cash and Cash and Note systems combined. Policy holders can take their choice. This HOME COMPANY was organized in 1863, by some of our best citizens. Its affairs have been carefully and prudently managed, and it already has a large accumulation of funds. We ask the snpport of all who feel an interest and pride in the success of home institu tions and the WELFARE OF OUR CITY AND STATE. JAMES M. RAY, President. WM. S. HUBBARD, Vice President. EDWARD P. HOWE, Secretary. B. F. WITT, Supervising General Agent. LOGA_T'S HISTORY OF INDIANAPOLIS FROM 1818. GIVING A CAREFULLY COMPILED RECORD OF EVENTR OF THE CITY FROM THE ORGA NIZATION OF THE STATE GOVERNMENT; ITS MERCANTILE, MANUFACTURING, POLITICAL.AND SOCIAL PROGRESS, COURSE OF DEVELOPMENT, PRES ENT IMPORTANCE AND FUTURE PROSPERITY ; AS SEEN BY A NATIVE BORN RESIDENT AND WORTHY CITIZEN. Indianapolis, the political and commer cial capital of Indiana, is situated on the west fork of white river, latitude 39° 55', longitude 86° h', and about 527 feet above the sea. It is two miles north-west of the centre of the State, and one mile south-west of the centre of Marion county. It occu pies the midst of a shallow basin, the ground rising gradually for miles in all directions, The soil is a clayey loam,' sub-soil clay, on thick beds of drift gravel' and sand, resting on silurian clays, limestones and shales. The gravel beds are great natural niters, producing thorough drainage and holding ample supplies of the purest water. The whole country was once densely covered with large hard wood trees, and in many places on the city site were extensive thick ets of prickly ash and spicewood. The thick undergrowth afforded safe covert for all kinds of game, and for a number bf years after the settlement bears and deer were readily found in the neighborhood. Hun ters seldom returned unsuccessful from the chase, and, as late as 1842, saddles of veni son sold at from 25 to 50 cents, turkeys at 10 and 12 cents, and a bushel of pigeons for 25 cents. The river was so fully stocked with fish that an old settler declared "a stone thrown in it anywhere, from the grave yard ford to the mouth of Fall creek, would strike a shoal of fish." The Indians reluctantly yielded the country on account of the abundance of fish and game, and many of them lingered in the vicinity long after the treaty. Though they had no per manent village here, their hunting and fish ing camps were numerous on and north of the city site, and a traveller who passed up the river several years before the settlement, says' the banks were then dotted with wig wams and the river- often parted by their canoes. . The scene was very striking at night when the savages were fire hunting or fishing. The Shawnees and Delawares had moved to this section sometime between. 1790 and 1795, and had built several vil lages along the river, the nearest being about twelve miles above this point. An old white woman, the wife of a French trader, lived there after the rest of the tribe had left. She had been taken prisoner, when nine years old, at Martin's Station in Kentucky, had married an Indian and rais ed a half breed family, and after the death of her Indian husband married the French man. 1818 By treaty at St. Marys, Ohio, Oc tober 2, between the Delaware Indians and Lewis Cass, Johnathan Jennings and Ben jamin Parke, United States commissioners, the former ceded all their lands in central Indiana, agreeing to give possession in 1821. The reported fertility and beauty of "the new purchase," as it was afterward called, excited the frontiersmen, and, without wait ing for possession to be given under the treaty, they entered, it at various points. William Conner, an Indian trader, had set tled at a Delaware village on White river, four miles this side of Noblesville, several years before this date. His location drew the attention of others to that stream, and several persons from Fayette and Wayne counties, visited this section just before and after the treaty. In the Spring of 1819, two brothers, named Jacob and Cyrus Whit zel, having got permission of the old Dela ware chief, blazed a trace from the White water river to the bluffs of White river. They remained and raised a crop there during the Summer, and moved their fami lies out in October. (Jacob Whitzel died there July 2, 1827.) Lewis Whitzel, the noted Indian scout, celebrated in border annals, was a brother of these men and visited them there shortly after, while on his way to Louisiana. Late in the Fall of 1818, Dr. Douglas had ascended the river from the lower settlements, stopping awhile at the bluffs ; and James Paxton descended LOGAN'S HISTORY OF it from the headwaters, reaching this point in January, 1820. These exploring trips were attended with some risk, for the In dians were in full possession and not well disposed toward the intruders. 1819 According to most authorities, the honor due to the first settler belongs to George Pogue, a blacksmith from White water, who reached this point from that section March 2, 1819. After reaching the river he turned back and built his cabin on the high ground east of the creek which now bears his name, close to a large spring. and near the present eastern end of Michi gan street. The ruins of this cabin were (George Pogue's Residence, the First Cabin Built on the Donation.) visible for many years afterward. Pogue was killed by Indians about daybreak one morning in April, 1821. His horses had been disturbed during the night, he de clared the Indians were stealing them, and taking his rifle set out in pursuit. When last seen he was near their camp, gunshots were heard, and as his horses and clothes were afterward seen in their possession little doubt remained as to his fate. His death greatly excited the settlers, but their nu merical weakness prevented any effort to avenge it. The creek on which he settled, which then pursued a very winding course through the south-east part of the plat, alarming the inhabitants by its floods, re ceived his name and remains a lasting memorial of the first inhabitant of the pre sent city. Pogue's claim as the first settler has been contested, and in a published article by Dr. S. G. Mitchell, in the Indianapolis Gazette, in the Summer of 1822, it is stated that the McCormicks were the first emigrants in February, 1820, and that Pogue arrived with others in March, 1820, a month later. It is singular that this statement, if ill- founded, should' not have been contradicted publicly in the paper at the time, but the weight of tradition is against it an^concurs in fixing Pogue's arrival in 1819. 1820 Pogue seems to have been the only inhabitant from March, 1819, to February 27, 1S20, when John and James McCor mick arrived and built their cabins on the river bank, just below the mouth of Fall creek and near the present bridge. John Maxwell and John Cowan followed shortly after, building cabins early in March, in the north-west corner of the donation on Fall creek, near the present Crawfordsville road bridge. In March, April and May, other families arrived following the trace left by Cowan and Maxwell, and by the first of June there were perhaps fifteen families on the present donation. Among them were those of Henry and Samuel Davis, Corbaley, Barnhill, VanBlaricum, Harding and Wilson. The first cabin on the .old town plat was built in May, by Isaac Wilson, near the north-west corner of the state house square. Other emigrants arrived during the Summer and Fall, and the settlement grew slowly for a year, after ward. The government surveys in this sec tion were made in 1819 and. 1820. The congressional act of April 19, 1816, authorizing a state government for Indiana, had donated (with the privilege of selec tion,) four sections of unsold lands for a permanent capital. The assembly, on Janu ary 11, 1820, appointed George Hunt, John Conner, John Gilliland, Stephen Ludlow, Joseph Bartholomew, John Tipton, Jesse B. Durham, Frederick Rapp, William Prince and Thomas Emerson, commissioners to make the selection, directing them to meet at Conner's house, on White river, early in the Spring. A part of them only served. Ascending the valley on horseback and making examinations, they met as directed at Conner's, where, after very serious dis putes between them as to sites at the bluffs, at the mouth of Fall creek and at Conner's, the present location was chosen by three votes against two for the bluffs. On the 7th of June, 1820, they reported the choice of sections one and twelve, east fractional section two and eleven, and enough of west fractional section three, in township fifteen, range three east, to make the four sections granted. The location gave the place in stant reputation, and assisted in bringing emigrants to it during the Summer and Fall of 1820, and Spring of 1821. Among those who then came were Morris Morris, Dr. S. G. Mitchell, John and James Given, Matthias Nowland, James M. Ray, Nathan iel Cox, Thomas Anderson, John Hawkins, Dr, Livingston Dunlap, David W°°d, Dan iel Yandes, Alexander Ralston, Dr. Isaac Coe, Douglas Maguire and others, and the cabins clustered closely along the river bank, on and near which almost the whole settlement was located. Most of the above INDIANAPOLIS FROM 1818. named, parties came in the Spring of 1821. In the north-west part of the donation, and west pf the present, blind, asylum, a tract of one, hundred and fifty or two hun dred acres was found where the heavy tim ber had been killed years before by locusts or worms. The undergrowth was cut off, brush fences enclosed portions of the " cat erpillar deadning," and during this and fol lowing years it was cultivated in corn and vegetables by the settlers as a common field. Its existence was a great benefit, for. it saved much heavy labor in cutting off dense tim ber and was immediately available for culti vation. It yielded abundantly, game was readily procured, and though considerable sickness occurred during the Summer and Fall, the people got along with comparative comfort during the Fall and Winter of 1820. 1821 The legislature confirmed the choice of site January 6, 1821, named the town Indianapolis, and appointed Christo pher Harrison, James Jones and Samuel P. Booker, commissioners to lay it off, direct ing them to meet on the site first Monday in April, appoint surveyors and clerk, make a survey, prepare two maps, and advertise and sell the alternate lots as soon as possi ble, the money received from the sales to be set apart as a public building fund. At the .appointed time Judge Harrison was the only commissioner here and the only one who acted. Elias Pi Fprdham and Alexan der Ralston had been selected as the sur veyors, and Benjamin I. BIythe clerk. Mr. Blyth became a resident of the town and was subsequently the agent. Of Fordham little is known. Ralston was an old bache lor, a talented Scotchman, and when young had assisted in surveying Washington city. He was afterward connected with Burr's ex pedition and on its failure remained in the West. We. are indebted to him for the reg ular plan, large squares, wide streets and diagonal avenues of the old plat. He afterr ward settled here, highly esteemed for his virtues and mental powers, and dying Jan uary 5, 1827, lies somewhere in the old cemetery in an unmarked grave. The surveying party having been organ ized in April, the plan was determined on, the plat made and the survey begun. The lines and corners of the four sections were traced out, with a fraction on the west bank to complete the 2,560 acres granted. A town plat one mile square was marked out near the middle of the donation. A circle lot of nearly four acres in extent surrounded by a street eighty feet wide occupied the centre, and from the outside corners of the blocks next to it avenues ninety feet wide were drawn to the corners of the plat. The other streets ran north and south and east and west, and were ninety feet wide except Washington which was one hundred and twenty. There were eighty-nine squares of four acres in extent, each four hundred and twenty feet front, divided by two alleys fifteen and thirty teet wide crossing at right angles. There were also six fractional squares and three large irregular tracts in the valley of Pogue's run. The present North, South, East and West streets, were not included in the original design, the plat abutting directly against the undivided do nation lands, but were added afterward by Judge Harrison at the suggestion of James Blake, who said that fifty years afterward they would afford a fine four mile drive around the town and a half mile from its centre. The donation outside the plat was not laid off or divided, for no one supposed the town would ever extend beyond the plat, and no provision was made for it. It was afterward divided by the agent, under direction of the assembly, into large out- blocks, with few and narrow roads or streets, and sold for farms. The "sub-divisions" are properly in the squares of the old plat and in these out-blocks, and the "addir tions " are properly outside of the donation limits. Unfortunately no rule has ever been adopted by the legislature or city council requiring sub-divisions, and especially ad ditions, to conform generally to the city plat. Each owner has been left free to regulate the size and shape of blocks and lots, and the width and direction of streets and alleys, to suit his own interest or con venience, and as a natural consequence the newest portions of our city are the. most irregular and unsightly portions shown m its map. A rule on this subject should be at once adopted for the future, and large sums will have to be expended some day on account of the failure to adopt it in the past., The city long since covered the do nation, and its suburbs extend in most direc tions from a half mile to a mile beyond, but the municipal government and revenues are still restricted to the original donation limits. The old town plat was not located in ' the center of the donation. The joint corner of the four sections is. in the alley ten feet west and five feet south of the south east corner of the Palmer House lot. The surveyors found that if the centre of the plat was fixed there too much of the plat would be thrown in Pogue's run valley, then a most unpromising locality. In searching for a better point the natural elevation in the present circle was found and at once chosen. It was then covered with a fine grove of tall, straight sugar trees, which should have been preserved. The surveyors were much embarrassed in their work by the bayous which then crossed the LGGAN'S HISTGRY OF donation in a north-east and south-west di rection, and by the dense thickets through which they had to cut their way. In some places these bayou channels are not yet en tirely obliterated, and portions of the old thickets were found in protected spots till 1850. The surveys and maps being completed, the lot sale was duly advertised and held by Gen. John Carr, (the first State agent, who had reached here shortly before,) on the 10th of October, at a cabin on Washington street just west of the pressnt canal. The sale lasted nearly a week. The first day was cold and raw with a high wind, and a man at the sale came near being killed by a falling limb. There were many buyers present both citizens and strangers, and Carter's, Hawkins' and Nowland's taverns, as well as many of the private houses, were thronged with guests ; competition was brisk and high prices were obtained. The main settlement was near the river, but lots to the east and north sold best, for the unusual sickness during the Summer and Fall (here after mentioned) had convinced the people they must leave the river neighborhood Each four acre block was divided into 12 lots 67 _ by 195 feet, and the alternate lots were reserved beginning with number one. Three hundred and fourteen lots in the cen tral and northern parts of the old plat were sold for $35,596,25, one-fifth or $7,119,25 down and the balance in four equal annual installments. The lot west of court square on Washington street sold highest, $560, and the similar lot west of state square brought $500. Intervening lots on the street sold from $100 to $300. One hun dred and sixty-nine lots sold at this time were afterward forfeited or exchanged by the buyers for others. The reserved and forfeited lots were repeatedly offered at sub sequent periods, both at public and private sale; but money was scarce, the town im proved slowly, prices declined and for sev eral years few sales were made. Nineteen hundred acres of lots and lands remained unsold as late as 1831, but were mostly dis posed of in that year by order of the legis lature, the minimum price being ten dollars per acre. The amount received up to 1842, when the sales were ended and closed, was about $125,000, and from this fund the state house, court house, Governor's circle, clerk's oflice and treasurer's house and office were built. General Carr received the money and made the deeds at the first sale. His cabin stood on Delaware street where Hereth's block now stands, and the elections were held and the courts began there till the court house was built. He was appoint ed in 1821 at a salary of $600, but it was in September, 1822. The people were dis satisfied with him and with his successor, James Milroy, (who held the oflice _ few months and then resigned,) because they did not become permanent residents of the town. Bethuel F. Morris was appointed December 24, 1822 ; Benjamin I. Blythe Feburary 1, 1825; Ebenezor Sharpe April 8, 1828, dying September, 1838 ; John G. Brown then held it a few months, being succeeded January or February, 1835, by Thomas H. Sharpe ; John Cook, state librarian, held it a short time in 1843-4, and the oflice was then transferred to the auditor of State Jan uary, 1844, and the business closed up by him. Until 1821 the centre and north part of the State was included in Delaware county yet unorganized but attached, for judicial purposes, to Fayette and Wayne counties, whose courts had concurrent jurisdiction. The people in the new purchase were sued and indicted in the courts at Connersville and other points on Whitewater, and the costs often exceeded the debt, damages or fines. Conflicts of jurisdiction also occurred, ill- feeling was aroused, and the people here finally rebelled against it. To prevent trouble the assembly, January 9, 1821, au thorized the appointment of two justices of the peace for the new settlements, appeals lying from them to the Bartholomew circuit court. In April Governor Jennings ap pointed John Maxwell, of this place, a jus tice of the peace, the first judicial officer in the new purchase, but he resigned in June, and the citizens elected James Mcll- vain, who was duly commissioned in Octo ber. His twelve foot cabin stood on the north-west corner of Pennsylvania and Michigan streets, where he held court, pipe in mouth, in his cabin door, the jury ranged in front on a fallen tree, and the first con stable, Corbaley, standing guard over the culprits, who nevertheless often escaped through the woods. Calvin Fletcher was then the only lawyer, and the last judge in all the knotty cases, the justice privately taking his advice as to their disposal. There was no jail nearer than Connersville, and it being expensive and troublesome to send culprits there in charge of the consta ble and posse, the plan was adopted of frightening them away. A case of this kind occurred on Christmas, 1821. Four Ken tucky boatmen, who had "whipped their weight in wild cats " on the Kanawha and elsewhere, came from the blufis to " Naplis " to have a Christmas spree. It began early, for the citizens were roused before dawn by a great uproar at Daniel Larkins clapboard grocery, which contained a barrel of whisky. The four heroes were discovered busily em- reduced next year to $300, and he resigned! ployed in tearing it down. A request to INDIANAPOLIS FROM 1818. desist produced a volley of oaths, a display of big knives, and an advance on the citi zens, most of whom immediately found pres sing business elsewhere. They were inter ested, however, in the existence of the gro cery, and furthermore such defiance of law and order could not be tolerated. A con sultation was held, resulting in the determi nation to take the rioters at all hazards. James Blake volunteered to grapple the leader, a man of great size and strength, if the rest would take the three others. The attack was made, the party captured and marched under guard through the woods to justice Mcllvaine's cabin, where they were at once tried, heavily fined and ordered to jail at Connersville in default of payment of bail. Payment was out of the question, and they could not be taken to Connersville at that season of the year. Ostentatious pre parations were made, however, for the trip, the posse was selected for the journey next day, a guard was placed over them with secret instructions, and during the night the doughty heroes fled to more congenial climes. But the Fayette and Wayne county courts still claimed jurisdiction, and the annoyance therefrom continued. Doubts existed as to the legality of Maxwell and Mcllvain's ap pointments, and a meeting was held at Hawkins' log tavern, late in the Fall, to de vise some remedy for the difficulty. It was resolved to demand the organization of a new county, and James Blake and Dr. S. G. Mitchell were selected as lobby members to attend at Corydon and secure it. The Summer of 1821 was noted for con tinuous and heavy rains. There is little doubt that much more water fell forty years ago than now. Storms of wind, ' rain and thunder, were more frequent and violent streams rose higher and , remained full longer; sections now dry were then very swampy ; and bayous ran bank full that are now unknown. To travel even a few miles was sometimes a desperate undertaking, and teams were often stopped for weeks by high water. The "whole country was wooded and wet; the air was damper, modifying the Winter cold and Summer heat; the wind generally came from the south and west, and the climate was milder and more uni form than now. As the timber and swamps disappeared the air grew dryer, fogs were less frequent, winds had more sweep and came oftener from the north, variations of heat and cold increased, till at present the cultivation of peaches, — formerly a certain crop, — has been abandoned; and if the change' continues with the deforesting of the country, it is questionable whether other crops besides peaches- will not be lost. In consequence of the wet condition of the country and the want of roads the set tlement was almost entirely isolated. The national road had been designed to run fif teen miles south of this point before the site was chosen, but the assembly, January 8, 1821, memorialized congress, stating the lo cation of the capital, and asking that it be made a point on the line. This was after ward conceded, to the great joy of the peo ple, but the road was not commenced in this State till 1830, and was abandoned in 1839 before its completion, leaving the town still in the mud. It is impossible, at present, with our railroads and good common roads, to realize the situation of the early settlers after a Spring thaw or a long wet spell, separated from civilization by sixty miles of mud and slush, with unbridged streams, floating corduroys and fathomless mud holes. Horse-back travel over the so called roads was often a serious business, and with a team an impossibility. Until a compara tively late period a " stage " often consisted of the four wheels and axles, on which balanced a crate containing one or two wet, muddy, half-frozen passengers, dragged wearily into town by four or six horses looking like animated masses of mud. The Summer of 1821 was distinguished by the general sickness resulting, it was thought, from the heavy fall of rain. It is said that storms occurred every day in June, July and August. Clouds would suddenly gather and send _ deluge of water, then as quickly break away, while the sun's rays fairly scorched the drenched herbage, gen erating miasmatic vapors with no wind to carry them off. Sickness began in July but did not become general till after the 10th of August, on which day Matthias Nowland had a raising, all the men in the settlement assisting. Remittant and intermittant fe vers, of a peculiar type, then began, and in three weeks the community fras prostrated. Thomas Ciiinn, Enoch Banks and Nancey Hendricks, , were the only persons who es caped. Though so general the disease was not deadly, about twenty-five only, mostly children who had been too much exposed, dying out of several hundred cases. The few who could, go about devoted their time to the sick, and many instances of generous devoted friendship occurred. Their mutual suffering at this time bound the early sett lers together in after life, and none recur to this period without emotion. New comers were disheartened at the prospect, and some left the country circulating extravagant re ports about the health of the town, greatly retarding its subsequent growth. Disease that year was general in the West. It was little greater here than elsewhere, and the relative mortality was scarcely so great. It abated here by the end of October, the gen- eral health was soon after entirely restored, and the people busily engaged in prepara tions for the winter. The sickness having prevented proper cultivation of the common field, and the throng of strangers at the lot sale having consumed all surplus food, absolute starva tion impended over the settlement. No roads or mills whatever existed, and all provisions and goods had to be packed on horses sixty miles through the wilderness from Whitewater. Regular expeditions were organized for procuring food. Flour and meal were brought on horseback from Goodlander's mill on Whitewater, then the nearest one, and corn was bought and boated down in canoes and rafts from the Indian villages up the river. The arrival of sup plies from either of these points excited general joy among the half sick and half starved people. They aided each other in this new distress as in the former one, and many pecks of meal, pounds of flour, bacon, fish and other articles of food, were given more destitute neighbors. Emigrants were constantly arriving dur ing the year ending August 1, 1821, by which time there were fifty or sixty resident families. The October sales attracted others and by the end of the year the population was estimated at four or five hundred. Many, however, were only waiting till their cabins were built in the country to move out. Obed Foote, Calvin Fletcher, James Blake, Alexander W. Russel, Caleb Scud der, Nicholas McCarty, George Smith, Na thaniel Bolton, Wilkes Reagan and others, arrived during the Summer and Fall of 1821. The wet and sickly Summer was succeeded in October by a long and beauti ful Indian Summer. The sick recovered health and spirits, business improved, new and better cabins were built further from the river, for the settlement left the river after the sickness, though it was still mainly west of the canal,, where a cluster of cabins was dignified with the title of Wilmot's row, Wilmot keeping a little store there. During the Fall the timber on the streets was offered to any one who would cut it, and as it was largely composed of splendid ash, walnut and oak trees, Lismund Basye accepted the grant as a chance for fortune, and labored zealously in felling the trees on Washington street. After cutting a large part of the timber down the question arose " What will he do with it ? " and as there were no mills to cut it into lumber, Basye was unequal to the answer. He had drawn the elephant and having done so abandoned it. The street was so blocked with standing and felled timber and undergrowth that it was impossible to get through it, and the citizens burned it where it lay during the Winter and Spring. John Hawkins had built a log tavern early in the Fall, where the Sentinel office now stands, using logs cut from the site and the street, and so dease was the timber and undergrowth that _ person at that tavern could not see Isaac Lynch's house and shoe shop where 5 and west Washington now are, and it took nearly a half mile travel to go from one point to the other. The work of clearing and burning steadily progressed, and by the close of the Spring of 1822 the people re joiced at being able to take a wagon along a zig zag path on and near the street for a considerable part of its length. The first marriage, first birth and first death, occurred during the Summer of 1821. The first marriage was that of Jere miah Johnson to Miss Jane Reagan. He walked to Connersville and back, one hun dred and twenty miles, for the license, and had to wait several weeks for a preacher to come along and marry them. He died at his residence near the city April 5, 1857. Mordecai Harding (still living,) was the first person born on the donation, and James Morrow, the first in the old town plat. The first death was that of Daniel Shaffer, the first merchant of the place, who had come in January, 1821, and kept a few goods and groceries at his cabin on the high ground south of Pogue's run, near Pennsyl vania street. He died in May or June and was buried in Pogue's run valley, near Pennsylvania street, but was taken up and reburied in the old graveyard August 25th. The first woman who died was Mrs. Max well, wife of John Maxwell, dying July 3d, and buried on the 4th on the high ground near the Crawfordsville road bridge over Fall creek. Eight persons were buried there during the Summer and Fall. _o cemetery had been set apart in the original survey, but Judge Harrison, at the request of the people, assigned the lot on the river afterward known as the old burying ground, and on December 31, 1822, the assembly confirmed the grant. In the meantime twenty-five or thirty persons had been buried there. It was covered with heavy timber and undergrowth, but at a citizens' meeting March 10, 1824, it was resolved to clear and enclose it. Nearly fifty persons had then been laid in it. It may be interesting to give here the names and dates of arrival of the pioneers in the different trades and professions. John McClung, a new light minister, came in the Spring of 1821, and preached the first sermon here shortly after, in the grove on the circle, the audience sitting around him on the grass and logs in Indian style. Services continued there during the Sum mer and Fall whenever the weather per- INDIANAPOLIS FROM 1818. mitted. He died north of town August 18, 1823. Other authorities say the first ser mon was preached during the Summer, at the state house square, by Rev. Resin Ham mond. James Scott, first Methodist preach er, was sent by the St. Louis conference, and reached here October, 1821, after much difficulty in finding the place. O. P. Gaines, first Presbyterian minister, came August, 1821. John Waters, first Baptist preacher, came October, 1823. Isaac Coe, physician, May, 1820. Calvin Fletcher, lawyer, September, 1821. Daniel Shaffer, merchant, January, 1821, died May, 1821. James B. Hall, carpenter, Winter of 1820. Matthias Nowland, brick-maker and mason, November, 1820, died November 11, 1822. Andrew Byrne,, tailor, November, 1820. Isaac Lynch, shoemaker, Fall of 1821. William Holmes, tinner, Spring of 1822. Michael Ingals, teamster, Fall of 1820. Kenneth A. Scudder, Summer of 1820, died March 5, 1829, opened first drug store in 1823. Wilkes Reagan, butcher and auc tioneer, Summer of 1821. John Shunk, hatter, October, 1821, died September 2, 1824. Amos Hanway, cooper, came up the river in a keelboat, June, 1821. Conrad Brussel, baker, Fall of 1820. Milo R. Da- vis, plasterer, Winter of 1820. George Norwood, wagon maker, Spring of 1822. John McCormack, tavern keeper, February 27, 1820, died August 27, 1825. George Myers, potter, Fall of 1821. Caleb Scud der, cabinet maker, October, 1821. Henry and Samuel Davis, chair makers, April or May, 1820. Isaac Wilson, miller, March, 1820. He built the first cabin on the old plat, on the north-west corner of the state house square, in March, 1820, and the first grist mill on Fall creek, north-west of Black ford's addition, in the Summer of 1821, and died November 4, 1823. George Pogue, first settler and blacksmith, March 2, 1819, killed by Indians April, 1821. James Lin ton, sawyer and mill-wright, Summer of 1821, built the first saw mill on Fall creek, near the Crawfordsville road bridge, in September and October, 1821. Nathaniel Bolton, editor and printer, September, 1821. George Smith, printer and book-binder, August, 1821, began book-binding March, 1823. Joseph C. Reed, teacher and county recorder, Spring of 1821. Samuel Walton, spinning wheel maker, October, 1826. R. A. McPherson, first foundry, July, 1832. Samuel S. Rooker, house and sign painter, Fall of 1821. Daniel Yandes, ta_.ner, Jan uary, 1821. John Ambrozene, watch and clock maker, February, 1825. James Pax- ton, militia colonel, October, 1821, died April 5, 1829. , Samuel Morrow, lietit. colo nel, Spring or Summer of 1820. Alexan John Maxwell, justice of the peace, March, 1820. William W. Wick, circuit judge, February, 1822. Harvey Bates, sheriff, February, 1822. James J. Mcllvain and Eliakim Harding, associate judges, Sum mer of 1820. James M. Ray, county clerk, Spring of 1821. Joseph C. Reed, county recorder, Spring of 1821. John McCor mack, county commissioner, February 27, 1820. John T. Osborn, county commission er, Spring of 1821. Samuel Henderson, post master, Fall of 1821. William P. Murphy, dentist, November, 1829. Elizabeth Now land, first boarding house, November, 1820, began 1823. Samuel Beck began gunsmith- ing July, 1833, (still at it, 1868,). Hub bard, Edmunds & Co., book-store, began May, 1833. David Mallory, colored barber, in Spring of 1821. Daniel Shaffer had opened the first store in February or March, 1821, at his cabin on the high ground south of Pogue's run, but dying in May or June, stores were shortly afterward opened by John and James Given and John T. Osborn, near the river bank, and by Wilmot, at Wilmot's row, near the present site of the old Carlisle house, Luke Walpole began in the Fall or Winter, on the south-west corner of the state house square, and Jacob Landis on the south-east corner. Jeremiah Johnson also began on the north-west corner of Mar ket and Pennsylvania streets. The first log school house, Joseph C. Reed teacher, was built in 1821, near a large pond just west of the Palmer house. Reed taught a short time being succeeded temporarily by two or three others, but no permanent school exist ed till after June 20, 1822, when trustees were chosen, and Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence selected as teachers by a meeting held for the purpose at the school house. After the Presbyterian church was finished and the school opened there, Mr. and Mrs. Law- rance taught there for several years. The first frame and also the first plastered house was built in the Fall of 1821, by James Blake, on the lot east of Masonic hall. It stood till 1852, and was occupied as the Sentinel office from 1841 to 1844. During the same Winter Thomas Carter built a two story ceiled frame tavern, (the first two story house,) eighteen by twenty feet, at 40 west Washington street. It was long known as the Rosebush tavern from its sign. It was afterward moved to the vicinity of the canal, and again to a point near the sol- dicrls home, where it is yet standing. James Linton built the first saw mill in September and October, 1821, on Fall creek, above the Crawfordsville bridge ; and about the same time he built the first grist mill, for Isaac Wilson, on Fall creek bayou north-west of der W. Russell, major, Spring of 1821. [Blackford's addition. Until this mill was finished the people sent sixty miles to Goodlander's for flour and meal, or hulled hominy in a stump mortar. The mills af terward built here had no bolting cloths, and fine flour was not made here until the steam mill was built in 1832. Linton also built the first two story frame dwelling in the Spring of 1822, at 76 west Washington street. It was burned during the Winter of 1847. The first market house was built in the maple grove on the circle, in May, 1822, and Wilkes Reagan first sold meat there in June. The first brick house was (The First Brick House.) built for John Johnson, begun in 1822 and finished in the Fall of 1823, on the lot east of Robert's chapel and is yet standing. Doubts having arisen as to the validity of the survey and sales, Harrison only hav ing acted, the assembly confirmed them November 28th, and on the 31st of Decem ber passed an act organizing Marion county. The organization to be complete April 1, 1822. Square fifty-eight, — court square, — was made the permanent seat of justice. Eight thousand dollars was appropriated to build a two story brick court house, fifty feet square, to be completed in three years, and used by the State, federal and county courts forever, and by the assembly for fifty years or till a State house was built. Two per cent, of the lot fund was devoted to county library. The sessions of the courts were to be held at Carr's house. Johnson, Hamilton, and most of Boone, Madison and Hancock counties, were attached to Marion for judicial purposes. Marion, Lawrence, Monroe, Morgan, Greene, Owen, Hendricks, Rush, Decatur, Bartholomew, Shelby and Jennings counties, constituted the fifth judicial circuit. William W. Wick was elected judge and Harvey Bates was commissioned sheriff by Governor Jen nings. Both gentlemen were from White water, and arrived here in February or March, 1822. During the Winter, the people being healthier and better housed and acquainted, became sociable and merry. Dances, quilt- ings and weddings were frequent. Candi dates were numerous and busily canvassing for the county offices. Christmas brought its round of festivities, and the Winter pas sed pleasantly in spite of past sickness, threatened famine and cold, which was both severe and protracted. The snow was deep and large logs were hauled on the ice in the river, but fuel at least was plenty, and with large chimneys, great back-logs and roaring fires, the inmates of the rude cabins bid defiance to the weather. 1822. The assembly, on the 3d of Janu ary, ordered the unsold lots to be leased, the lessees to clear them in four months. Two acres were to be sold for a brick-yard, and a three year lease given of the ferry. Lands in west Indianapolis were leased in lots of five to twenty acres. Improvements on unsold lots could be removed in forty days after sale. One hundred thousand dollars were soon after appropriated to cut roads through the wilderness. The Indianapolis Gazette, the first jour nal in the new purchase, edited printed and published by George Smith and Nathaniel Bolton, was first issued January 28th, from a cabin south-west of the intersection of the canal and Maryland street. The office was moved to the present theatre corner the next year, and a few years afterward to east Washington street near Glenn's block. The ink used on the first numbers was _ tar composition. The paper appeared irregu larly, the mails being so infrequent that news matter could not be obtained to fill the columns, but several mail routes were opened in April and May and that difficul ty was measureably obviated. The second number appeared February 11th, third the 25th, fourth March 6th, fifth the 18th, sixth April 3d, seventh, May 4th, after which date it appeared weekly till discontinued in 1831. Heavy rains fell in April flooding the country, and as the editors happened to be absent when the flood came, they were stopped by high water for a month, sus pending publication from April 3d to May 4th. B. F. Morris became editor May 3, 1821. Smith & Bolton dissolved April 27, 1823, Bolton continued the paper about a year, when they rejoined and published together till July 23, 1829, when they again dissolved. Bolton continued it till after the Indiana Democrat was issued, when the list of subscribers was transferred to that paper. The Gazette of February 25, 1822, stated that much improvement was going on. Forty dwellings and several workshops had been built, a grist and two saw mills were running and others being built near town. INDIANAPOLIS FROM 1818. There were thirteen carpenters, four cabinet makers, eight blacksmiths, four shoemakers, two tailors, one hatter, two tanners, one sad dler, one cooper, four brick-layers, two mer chants, three grocers, four physicians, three lawyers, one preacher, one teacher, and seven tavern keepers. This liBt gives, per- perhaps, half the adult population of the place. Harvey Bates, sheriff, by proclamation Februrry 22, directed an election on April 1st, for two associate judges, a clerk, record er, and three county commissioners. The voting precincts were at Carr's house, John Finch's, near Conner's station, John Page's, Strawtown, John Berry's, Andersontown, and William McCartney's on Fall creek near Pendleton. Returns were to be for warded by the 3d of April. James Page, Robert Patterson, James Mcllvain, Eli akin Harding, John Smock and Rev. John McClung were candidates for associate judges. James M. Ray, Milo R. Davis. Morris Morris, Thomas Anderson and John W. Redding for clerk. Alexander Ralston, James Linton, Joseph C. Reed, Aaron Drake, John Givans, John Hawkins, Wil liam Vandegrift and William Townsend for recorder, and twelve or fifteen candi dates for county commissioners. Nearly half the population were candidates for some office, and all were busily canvassing. Nominating conventions were unknown and each ran on his personal merit. The Whitewater and Kentucky emigrants had brought their local prejudices and candi dates with them. James M. Ray repre sented the first, and Morris Morris the last party. The canvass was thorough and the excitement culminated at the election. — Whisky flowed freely. Persons usually sober, excited by victory or grieved at de feat, joined in the spree and the whole community got drunk. Many Kentuckians had lived here less than a year and had no vote, and the Whitewater party being ably managed defeated them. The Kehtuckians, however, afterward outvoted and outgener- alled their opponents. James Mcllvain and Eliakin Harding were chosen associate judges; James M. Ray, clerk; Joseph C. Reed, recorder ; and John T. Osborn, John McCormack and William McCartney, coun ty commissioners. Two hundred and twen ty-four votes were cast here, nearly half being from residents on the donation, and 336 votes were cast in the county, which then included most of the present adjoin ing counties. James M. Ray got 217 votes, the highest for any candidate. The county board organized and held their first session April 15, at the corner of Ohio and Meri dian streets, and divided the county into Fall creek, Anderson, White river, Dela ware, Lawrence, Washington, Pike, War ren, Centre, Wayne, Franklin, Perry and Decatur townships, but several of these were united for township purposes for want of population. No post routes or office was opened here till March, 1822. The mails had been brought, until that date, from Connersville at different intervals, by private hands. A citizens' meeting was held at Hawkins' tavern, January 30, to take measures for a regular private mail. Aaron Drake was chosen postmaster: He issued a circular to postmasters stating the fact and asking that letters for this point be sent to Connersville. He returned from the first trip after night fall, his horn sounding far through the woods, arousing the peopl. who turned out in the bright moonlight to greet him and learn the news. This effort aroused the government, and in February President Monroe appointed Samuel Henderson post master. He opened the office March 7th or 8th, and on the 3d of April published the first letter list of five letters to old resi dents. Henderson continued in office till removed by Jackson in February, 1831, being succeeded by John Cain, who resign ed in 1841. Joseph M. Moore then held it till 1845. John Cain again held it until 1849. Alexander W. Russell succeeded in 1849, dying in office, and his son, James N. Rus sell, was appointed for the balance of his term. William W. Wick held it from 1853 to 1857 ; John M. Talbott till 1861 ; Alex ander H. Conner till 1866 ; and D. G. Rose till the present time. The office was first kept near the canal, then at Henderson's tavern, then on the north side of Washing ton west of Meridian street, then in the present Hubbard's block on south Meridian street, then in Blackford's old building op posite, from which it was moved in 1861 to the government building on north Pennsyl vania street. Plans for a court house were called for by the commissioners May 22. That of John B. Baker and James Paxton was chosen, and the contract given them in September. The house was begun the next Summer and finished in the Fall of 1824 at a cost of $14,000. Wilkes Reagan, Obed Foote, and Lismund Basye, were elected justices May 23. The sheriff was directed in May to obtain proposals for building a jail and clearing the court house square, both to be completed by the first of August. James Blake induced the board to save two hun dred of the young maples growing on the square, but no specific instructions being given the contractor left two hundred of the largest trees on the tract, and when the surrounding forest was cut away the storms so damaged them that all had to be cut 10 LOFAN'S HISTORY OF down. The jail was a two story hewed log house, built in July and August, in the north-west corner of the square, and was used till 1833 when it was burned by a negro prisoner, who was nearly suffocated before being rescued. Its foundations were visible till filled over in 1852. After its (The First Jail.) destruction the old brick jail was built east of the court house and used till 1845, when a hewed log jail was added just north of it. These were torn away on the completion of the present stone jail begun in 1852, finish ed in 1854, and since enlarged at a total cost of $60,000. Arrangements for the first Fourth of July celebration were made at a meeting June 17th, at Hawkins' tavern. The celebration occurred at the corner of West and Wash ington streets. The Rev. John McClung preached from Proverbs xiv, 34. Judge Wick read the declaration, prefacing it with remarks on revolutionary events and men. Obed Foote read Washington's inaugural address, with remarks on sectional issues and parties. John Hawkins read Washing ton's farewell address, with appropriate re marks. Rev. Robert Brenton closed with prayer and benediction. A barbecue then succeeded. A deer killed on the north part of the donation the preceding evening by Robert Harding, was roasted in a pit under a large elm tree close by. An ample supper was served on long tables under the trees. Speeches were made by Dr. S. G. Mitchell and Major John W. Redding, toasts were offered and the festivities closed with a ball at Jacob R. Crumbaugh's house near the canal. William Hendricks received 315 out of 317 votes cast here at the August election for Governor. Harvey Bates was elected sheriff and George Smith coroner, the first elected incumbents. The first militia elec tion was held September 7. James Paxton was chosen colonel of the fortieth regiment, Samuel Morrow lieutenant colonel, and Al exander W. Russell major. The first session of the circuit court be gan September 26, 1822, at Carr's cabin, William W. Wick presiding judge, James Mcllvain and Eliakim Harding associates, James M. Ray, clerk, Harvey Bates Sher iff. After organizing the court adjourned to Crumbaugh's house west of the canal. Calvin Fletcher was appointed prosecuting attorney for the first three terms, being suc ceeded by Harvey Gregg, Hiram Brown, William Quarles and others. There were thirteen civil causes on the docket at the first term. The first case tried was Daniel Bowman vs. Meridy Edwards, action on the case. The grand jury, Joseph C. Reed foreman, returned twenty-two iudictments, six of which were non prossed. The first criminal case tried was the State vs. John Wyant for selling whisky without license, and nearly all the rest were like unto it. The term lasted three days and eleven at torneys were present, five of them being residents. Richard Good, an Irishman, was naturalized on the first day. John Hawk ins was licensed to keep tavern and sell whisky. "Prison bounds," beyond which no debtor under arrest could go, were estab lished along certain streets the first day. The first divorce case was brought at the May term, 1823, Elias Stallcup vs. Ruth Stallcup. The second session of the court began at Carr's May 5, 1823, and adjourn ed to Henderson's tavern where Glenn's block now is. The third session began at Carr's November 3, 1823, and adjourned to Harvey Gregg's, lot 11, square 46. The fourth began at Carr's April 12, 1824, ad journed to John Johnson's, lot 8, spuare 44; the fifth began at Carr's Oct. 11, 1824, and adjourned to the court house, then nearly finished. The first sessions were attended by several prominent lawyers from abroad, who talked of locating here ; but the sick ness, isolation of the place and dullness, deterred them. The early local bar com prised a number of talented men, including William W. Wick, James Morrison, Hiram Brown, Calvin Fletcher, Philip Sweetser, William Quarles, Harvey Gregg and oth ers, and held a high rank in the State. Many amusing anecdotes are related show ing the peculiarities of the bench and bar at that period. A meeting held at Crumbaugh's Septem ber 26, petitioned the assembly for repre sentation therein, for the improvement of White river, and for opening roads. A committee made and published a long report on the improvement of the river. Several roads to Whitewater and the South were located and partly opened in Septem ber and October, by commissioners who directed the work and expenditures; but years elapsed before the roads were really passable, and not until a recent period, INDIANAPOLIS FROM 1818. 11 when gravelled or planked, have they been firm in wet or thawing weather. A westward migration of gray squirrells was noticed in the Fall, these animals cros sing the river at several places in almost countless numbers. These movements have occurred several times since, and in one in 1845 they came into the town. The first camp meeting began September 12, east of town, lasting three days, under charge of Rev. James Scott, the first Methodist Min ister, but no facts can now be given regard ing it. A meeting was held December 1st, at Carter's tavern, to get a weekly mail to and from Vernon during the session. The first tax sale occurred December 7th, the long delinquent list and the amounts due generally ranging from twenty-five cents to one dollar, the highest being $2,87_, showed the existence of hard times. A petition was sent to the assembly in December to incorporate the town, but the project was strongly opposed and abandoned. No mu nicipal government existed till 1832. The year closed with better prospects than the last. The adjacent conntry was being set tled, the sickness had not been so general as in 1821. People were becoming acclimated and were better fixed, and Christmas was greeted with the usual festivities, 1823. The people had clamored for a year for representation in the. Assembly, and that body yielded it January 7th. Can didates were numerous and busy till the August election, and their merits were duly »et forth in the papers ; for, in addition to the Gazette, a second journal, The Western Censor and Emigrants' Guide, was now pub lished. The first number appeared March 7th, 1823, from an office opposite Hender son's tavern, edited and printed by Harvey Gregg and Douglass Maguire. The second number appeared March 19, third, March 26, fourth, April 2, fifth, April 19, sixth, April 23, after which it appeared regularly. Much difficulty was experienced in getting the press and material over the bad roads from Cincinnati, and for ten years afterward all the papers frequently passed a publica tion day on account of failure in the arrival of their paper. The Censor started with the motto, " He is a freeman whom the 1835, when Maguire sold his interest to S. V.B.Noel. Douglass & Noel (Mr. Noel editor,) continued till February, 1842, when Douglass became sole proprietor, and T. J. Barnett editor. Mr. Noel bought the es tablishment in March, 1843, Barnett remain ing as editor. Kent succeeded him, and in March, 1845, John D. Defrees became edi tor. He also became proprietor in Febru ary, 1846, and edited and published it till October 20, 1854, when the Journal Co. was formed (he being a large stockholder), by which it was published till 1863, John D. Defrees and B. R. Sulgrove being editors for part of the time, and B. R. Sulgrove and Barton D. Jones for the remainder. Wm. R. Holloway & Co. then purchased the establishment, Holloway becoming chief manager and editor. Shortly afterward James G. Douglass and Alexander H. Con ner became partners, and in 1865 Samuel M. Douglass purchased HolloWay's share, and the paper has since been published by Douglass & Conner, with H. C. Newcomb and W. R. Holloway as editors. During its existence the Journal has been published from several different offices on Washington street, being located for long periods oppo site Washington Hall, and also over the present Gem billiard room, and in the three-story brick just opposite. From 1853 to 1860 it was located in Sharpe's building on Pennsylvania street, opposite the old Branch Bank. It was then remoyed to the Journal building, erected for it by the com pany on the corner of Circle and Meridian streets, and issued there till January, 1867, when it was transferred to the present five- story building on Market aud Circle streets, erected in 1866 by the company. The weekly edition of the paper has borne the same name ever since January 11, 1825. Semi-weekly editions were published for many years during the sessions, the first ap pearing December 10, 1828 ; the first Tri- Weekly December 12, 1838. Daily editions were at first only issued during the sessions, the first appearing December 12, 1842, and ending February 15, 1843. The present daily began October 7, 1850, and with suc cessive changes in size, shape and in name, October 20, 1854, to Indianapolis Daily Jowr- truth makes free." Mr. Gregg was chief nal, has regularly appeared to the present editor, but retired from the paper October time. Since January, 1866, it has appeared 29, 1824, and was succeeded November 16 as an eight-page sheet. The Journal^ earn- by John Douglass, Mr. Maguire acting as estly supported the Whig party during its editor. January 11, 1825, the paper was existence, and aided the organization of the enlarged to super-royal size and called the Indiana Journal. It was enlarged to impe rial size October 29, 1831. Mr. Maguire leftthe paper November 7, 1826, S. Merrill taking hisplace as editor ; but in the fall of 1829 Douglass and Maguire resumed their partnership and continued till October 17. Republican party, to which it has since de voted its energies. It has always been the State organ of its party is the leading jour nal of the State, and holds high rank among western newspapers. There was no church edifice except the Methodist, no regular minister till 1823. A 12 LOGAN'S HISTORY OF Methodist camp-meeting was held east of town in September, 1822, and union meet ings were occasionally held at the circle grove and in private houses. The Presby terians met February 23d and March 6th at the schoolhouae, to organize and build a church. Subscription and building com mittees were appointed, and March 22 trus tees appointed. The church was formally constituted in July. A lot was bought on Pennsylvania street, and the building raised in the summer and finished in 1824, at a cost for house and lot of $1200. It was used till 1842 or 3, then used as a carriage shop, and finally torn down in 1859. A (The First Presbyterian Church.) new brick church was built in 1841-2, Then ensued two years without a pastor, and in 1860 J. H. Nixon was called and still remains with the society. After the division in the church on the slavery ques tion a portion of the members left, forming the Second church in the summer of 1838, and in September, 1851, a further division formed the Third church. These in turn have colonized until at present seven or eight prosperous bodies look to the First church as a common mother. It would be interesting to mention their history in de tail, but the limits allowed in this sketch forbid it. Beside these, other branches of the great Presbyterian family exist here, and movements have lately been made to unite them as one common body. The first Sabbath School was organized April 6, 1823, in Caleb Scudder's cabinet shop, on the south side of the State House square. It was a union school, very suc cessful for the time, seventy scholars being in attendance the third Sunday, but was dis continued in the fall. It was revived on its anniversary, and continued steadily from that time, the First Presbyterian being its present representative. After the Presby terian church was finished the school met there. The average attendance at the union school was forty the first year, fifty the sec ond, seventy-five the third, one hundred and six the fourth, one hundred and fifty the fifth. 150 volumes were in the library bought in 1827. Successive colonies formed Market and Circle streets, at a coat of schools for other churches, the first forming $8,000, and used till 1866, when sold to the Journal Co. and torn away. The pres ent edifice on New York and Pennsylvania streets was built in 1865-6-7, at a cost of $75,000, and occupied in December, 1867. Rev. O. P. Gaines was the first Presbyterian minister, acting as a missionary in 1821-2, but David C. Proctor, a missionary here in 1822, was first pastor of the church from 1823 to August, 1824. George Bush- widely known afterward as a theologian — was pastor from September, 1824, to June, 1828, and left here March 20, 1829. Dif ferences had arisen betwen him and the church on church government, and after severing his relation with them he preached for some time in the Court House. The average attendance during his ministry was seventy-five to one hundred persons. John Moreley was called May or June, 1829, re maining until 1832. Wm. A. Holliday was called in the fall of 1832. James W. Mc- Kennon was called February, 1835, remain ing till 1840. Phineas D. Gurley was called November, 1840, and remained till the fall of 1849. The church was without a pastor till October, 1851, when John A. McClung was called. T. L. Cunningham was called October, 1855, leaving in 1858. the Methodist school April 24, 1829, and the third the Baptist in 1832. Want of space forbids fuller mention of this import ant enterprise, but it may be stated here that Dr. Isaac Coe was the founder and most active supporter of the movement. Nearly every church now has a school, and a number of mission schools originated by associations or individuals also exist. — Thousands of scholars and teachers are en rolled, and thousands of books and papers are circulated each week from the libraries. A Sabbath School Union was started shortly after the first school, with visiting commit tees to solicit the attendance of scholars and keep up the interest of parents in the enter prise. Israel Mitchell, Stephen Howard, and Martin Smith, three resident young men, left March 21st for Russian America via the Pembina settlement. They reached Fort Armstrong on the Mississippi May 4th, and Fever river August 15th, having seen no white men for twenty-three days after leav ing the Vermillion salt works, and being robbed by the Indians and nearly starved for food. Their ultimate fate was unknown. The Indiana Central Medical Society was formed in the spring, with Dr. S. G. Mitch- INDIANAPOLIS FROM 1818. 13 ell, President, and Livingston Dunlop, Sec retary. It licensed physicians to practice under the law at that time, and continued in existence for years, being the forerunner of the present medical society of the city. The first Woolen machinery in the county was started at Wilson's mill June 20, by Wm. Townsend and Earl Pierce. The celebration of the 4th of July oc curred at Wilkes Reagan's cabin on Pogue's run and Market street. D. C. Proctor was chaplain, Daniel B. Wick reader, Morris Morris orator, and Rev. Isaac Reed closed with benediction. Reagan gave the barbe cue and. fed the crowd and Capt. Curry's rifle company, closing with , toasts and speeches. Political feeling grew warm as the August election approached. Two hun dred and seventy votes were cast in the county, James Gregory, of .Shelby, being elected first senator, and James Paxton first representative. The population was esti mated at six hundred in September by the Censor, and the health was better than had been reported. The paper denounced the jealousy manifested toward the capital by other towns — a jealousy which lasted through subsequent years, and until the growth and superiority of the city rendered such a feeling ludicrous. Instead of aiding to build a city here of which the State could be proud, every town long labored to pre vent its growth and build up cities in other States. During this summer Thomas Carter built a frame tavern on Washington street oppo site the court house, and opened it October 6th, and on the 26th the first sermon by a Baptist preacher was delivered there. This house was burned January 17, 1825, during the first session of the Assembly ; and be tween the fire and the efforts of excited cit izens to save property, Carter lost nearly all he had. Several persons desirous of saving the new sign on a tall post in front of the house chopped it down, and were much as tonished when the fall crushed it into splin ters. James Blake and Samuel Henderson had also built a tavern during the summer and fall, the Washington Hall, a two-story frame, where Glenn's block now is, and opened it with a ball January 12, 1824. Henderson had kept there before in a log house. Blake & Henderson dissolved in March, 1826, and for a few months after November, 1832, Town & Pullian succeeded Henderson, but he resumed in March, 1833, and kept it till June, 1836, when the house was removed to the lot east of its former site, and the new Washington Hall built in its stead. A part of the old frame house was standing, occupied as a clothing store, till February, 1866, when it was torn down and Gramling's block afterward built on its site. The clearing of lots along Waahing ton and the cross streets progressed during this year, and scattered farms on the plot and donation were .opened, connected by foot-paths winding through the dense thick ets, in which it was easy to miss the way and get lost". The Gazette in December surprised the citizens by stating that Mr. and Mrs. Smith, late of the New York theatre, would appear at Carter's tavern, Wednesday night, De cember 31st, in the "Doctor's Courtship, or the Indulgent Father," to be followed by the " Jealous Lovers ; " tickets 37_ cents. The town was excited and considerable op position aroused. Carter insisted that the orchestra — one poor fiddle — should only play solemn music. A curtain was drawn across one end of the room for the players. The orchestra occupied a stool at one side, and the audience were seated at the other end of the room. Several performances were given. Such was the origin of the drama here. Mr. and Mrs. Smith returned in June, 1824, and gave several perform ances, the first on the 21st, but the experi ment was not repeated for many years. The editor of the Censor in announcing the show in 1824, said he did not oppose the repre sentation of tragedies and comedies as many did, but he thought that company would not do. In the next issue he announced that they had absconded without taking any of his money. 1824. The first military school here was opened January 13, by Major Sullinger, for the instruction of militia officers and sol diers. The first real estate agency was opened early ip. the same month by Wm. C. McDougal. The Assembly had hitherto declined to move to the new Capital, and the southern counties delayed action as long as possible, but the new purchase members having taken their seats the subject was pressed, and on the 25th' of January an act passed making Indianapolis the permanent seat of govern- meni, directing the State offices and arch ives to be moved here by January 10, 1-825, and the Assembly to meet in our court house on that day.. Samuel Merrill, State Treasurer, was charged with the removal, and effected it in the following November, being ten days in making one hundred and twenty-five miles over the rough roads then existing. After the Assembly adjourned, Messrs. Gregory and Paxton returned from Corydon, and received a complimentary supper February 21st, at Washington Hall, in approval of their services. The toasts and speeches evinced great joy at the re moval of the government to this point. Many Indians still lingered in this coun try, and an event occurred March 22d 14 LOGAN'S HISTORY OF which caused much fear of a border war. Two men, three women, two girls and two boys of the Shawnee tribe were murdered at their camp, eight miles above Pendleton, by four white men and two boys. The whites were Bridges and his son, Sawyer and his son, Hudson and Harper. The In dians had hunted and trapped on Fall Creek during the winter, obtaining so many furs that Harper determined to secure them. He got his party drunk, told them the Shawnees were horse-thieves, and proposed to kill them. They went to the camp, asked the three men, Logan, Stephen Lud low and another to help hunt cattle, and after going a short distance fired on them, killing the first two, but the third escaped. Returning to camp the women and children were killed, the children's brains knocked out against trees, and the bodies mutilated as if Indians had killed them, and the bod ies thrown in a pond where they were found next day, one of the women still breathing. The wretches divided the property between them, and its possession betrayed them. They were arrested, confessed the crime, but being assisted by friends soon after es caped. All were retaken but Harper, the leader, who traveled on foot to Ohio, eighty miles through the woods, in twenty-four hours, and escaped. They again escaped in July, but were recaptured. Hudson was tried at Anderson in November before Judge Wick, was convicted, and hung in the winter. The rest were tried in May, 1825. Young Sawyer was convicted of manslaughter, the rest of murder. Old Bridges and old Sawyer were hung June 3d. Young Bridges was brought under the rope where his father had just died, his coffin by his side, when Governor Ray mounted the platform and announced his pardon in a speech to the people. These executions quieted the Indians and no retaliatory measures were taken ; but at first the settlers in the vicinity were much alarmed and fled to the Pendleton mills for protection, and there was a general uneasi ness here. A census taken by Sunday school visitors in April showed one hundred families on the donation, comprising one hundred and seventy-two voters, forty-five single women between fifteen and forty-five; number of children not stated. There had been but little increase since November, 1821, but many persons then here had moved to the country. For a number of years the town increased very slowly. The want of roads, and of a market for surplus products cut off travel or trade, and prevented any rapid progress. Improvements, however, were made. The court house, school house, Presbytyterian church, and State offices were being erected, the trees on the streets felled and the plat gradually cleared. A series of great storms in April and May deluged the country with water, bayous, ponds and creeks everywhere overflowed, and White river attained a height never equaled, unless by the floods of 1828 and 1847. The boats took advantage of the high water, and the keel-boat "Dandy," twenty-eight tons, arrived May 22d with the new purchase staples, salt and whisky. The Methodist quarterly meeting began May 15th in the Presbyterian church, then nearly finished. James Scott was the first minister here, sent by the St. Louis confer ence, and arriving October, 1821,' after much difficulty in finding the town. Ser vices had been held at private houses, and camp meetings held, the first September 12th, 1822, on James Givens' farm east of town, and the second began there May 23d of this year, lasting one week. These meet ings were held in or near the town for ten or fifteen years, not only by the Methodists, but other denominations ; but as church ac commodations increised they were aban doned, and none have been held in the im mediate vicinity for nearly twenty years. The Methodists had no church edifice till the summer of 1825, when they bought a lot and hewed log house for $300, on the south side of Maryland street east of Merid ian, which was used till 1829, when a brick church, built in 1828-9, at a cost (with lot) of $3000, was opened on Circle and Merid- (First Methodist Church.) ian streets. This was used till 1846, when the walls becoming cracked and unsafe, it was torn down and Wesley Chapel built on its site at a cost of $10,000. This chapel has been used till the present time, but pre parations are now on foot for its sale, and the erection elsewhere of a new and more expensive edifice. In 1842 the church was divided into the eastern and western charg es, but in 1843-4 Roberts Chapel was built at a cost of $10,000, on Market and Penn sylvania streets, by the eastern charge. This church also will soon be sold and a new and more expensive edifice erected for the INDIANAPOLIS FROM 1818. 15 congregation. By the division of confer ences and charges, Strange, Asbury and Trinity, with several Mission, German and African Methodist churches have since been built, and the denomination is perhaps the strongest in the city unless the Catholics outnumber it. Further mention of the church or of the many talented ministers who have been stationed here is prevented by limited space. The 4th of July being Sunday, the cele bration took place' at Wilkes Reagan's on the 3d. Gabriel J. Johnson addressed the citizens and Major J. W. Reding the mili tia. Obed Foote was reader, and Reagan furnished the barbecue, the affair ending with the usual toasts and speeches. The August election was hotly contested, the contest being on sheriff, Morris Morris and A. W. Russell being candidates. Four hundred and thirty votes were cast, one hundred and sixty more than in 1823, Rus sell having two hundred and sixty-five and Moms one hundred and forty-eight votes. At the, November election Clay received two hundred and thirteen, Jackson ninety- nine, Adams sixteen. Clay always received a heavy vote here afterward, and his sup porters had held the first meeting and or ganized July 17th, James Paxton, Presi dent, and Hiram Brown, Secretary. A large humber of emigrants passed through the town during the fall on their way to the Wabash country. The Indianapolis Legislature was organ ized during the fall by the lawyers and leading citizens, and sessions were held dur ing the winter for ten or fifteen successive years. Its rules, and the pending measures and subjects for debate, were similar to those in the body it copied. Talented men were assigned as members from the several counties, and the mock representative often had far more ability than the real one. The Governor's messages were often witty and able documents, and sometimes published. The Governor was elected whenever the members wanted a new message or inaugu ral. After the General Assembly met here, its leading members joined the Indianapolis organization, and the debates and proceed ings in the last frequently guided and con trolled legislation in the first-named body. 1825. The State officers having arrived with the archives in November, 1824, the State government was formally and perma nently located here January . 10th, 1825. The Assembly met in the court house (still unfinished )^-the Senate in the upper, the House in the lower room— and the sessions continued there till December, 1835, when the State house was finished, and the Legis lature met there for the first time. The members at that time fully earned their mileage over the terrible roads. They ar rived on horseback, singly or in groups, muddy and weary, at the different taverns, for several days before the session. The influx of strangers, with new topics of thought and conversation, excited the quiet villagers ; and after the session opened crowds of gaping natives witnessed the pro ceedings with unsated curiosity. For years afterward the annual session was anxiously awaited. The money then disbursed was an important item ; trade then revived, and business of all kinds improved. Property which had formerly declined was held more firmly, though no marked advance took place in it till 1835, when it suddenly reached extravagant figures, only to fall back and leave the people poorer than be fore. On the 23d of January, 1824, the Assem bly ordered the agent to lay off twenty out- lots of four acres each on the north and south sides of the old plat, and sell them by auction January 24th, 1825. The lots had been laid off during the following summer, and were sold as directed, the highest bring- $155, the lowest $63, the average being about $100 for each four-acre block. After this sale, the Assembly on the 12th of Feb ruary ordered the agent to lay off and sell, on the 2d of May, twenty additional lots on the north and south of those already sold ; also the reserved lots on Washington street and elsewhere ; to have Pogue's run valley cleared if the expense did not exceed $50 ; and to lease the ferry for five years. Mr. Blythe complied with these directions, ex cept clearing the valley, part of which was heavily timbered till 1845. Two of the old trees are still standing south of the Central depot ; others south of the old Bellefontaine depot were cut down in April of this year,. He held the sale of reserved and other lots on the 2d of May ; $360 was the highest price obtained for reserved lots on Washington street, and $134 the lowest. Seventeen lots on Washington street, equiv alent to a frontage of nearly three squares, sold for $3,328. The twenty additional out- lots sold for $1,467, averaging a little over $18 per acre. This year was distinguished for the form ation of various societies. The Indianapo lis Bible Society was formed on the 18th of April, and has continued in active operation ever since. Mrs. George Bush was among the most earnest supporters of the society, and for many years past Mrs. Margaret Givan has been the President of the society. The Marion County Bible Society, an aux iliary of the American Bible Society, was organized November 13th, 1825, B. F- Mor ris, President, J. M. Ray, Secretary: The Indianapolis Tract Society was formed in 16 LOGAN'S HISTORY OF the spring of this year and continued its enza prevailed here as an epidemic, attack operations for many years, ln July and August meetings were held at the court house to organize an agricultural society, and it was completed September 3d, Calvin Fletcher, Henry Bradley, Henry Burton, and others being leaders in it, but no perm anent effect resulted from the effort, and it is notable only as the first attempt in that direction. In September the land office was removed from Brookville to this point, and in Sep tember and October an unusual number of emigrants passed through the town on their way to the Wabash and the Illinois prairies. 1826. On the 13th of January the As sembly directed the agent to contract with Ashael Dujning to build a two-story brick ferry house 18 x 30 feet, on the river bank. It was built the following summer, and though partially burned November 27th, 1855, was repaired, and is standing in good repair near the mill-race on Washington street. Sickness, and lack of trade and mo ney, had prevented many lot buyers from meeting deferred payments on their lots, and they were liable to forfeiture at any time. The Assembly, January 20th, al lowed farther time, and permitted buyers oft A military and civic procession marched to ing nearly every person in the town. Great rains fell for two weeks in March and April, four inches of water falling in one night. The streams rose very high, and all mails were stopped. A cannon having been sent here an artil lery company was formed under Captain James Blake, and thereafter at 4th of July and other celebrations, the artillery squad became an important though dangerous ad junct, for several men were afterward maimed for life by that gun, On the 20th of June the Indianapolis Fire Company was formed, John Hawkins, President, J. M. Ray, Secretary. The company used buck ets and ladders, and turned out at the call of the church bell. It maintained its or ganization (being incorporated January, 1830,) till February, 1835,. when it was merged in the Marion fire engine company. The usual military and civic parade oc curred on the 4th of July, with exercises at the court house. Rev. George Bush was chaplain, L. Dunlap, reader, C. Fletcher, orator, and John Hays furnished the din- On the 12th of August public funeral services were held for Adams and Jefferson. several lots to surrender nart, and transfer the cash payments on the lots surrendered to meet deferred payments on others. This act was followed by similar ones at subse quent dates, greatly relieving embarrassed buyers. Western lots were surrendered and the settlement went still further east. The centre of population and business has shifted considerably at different periods. At first the town was on the river. The sickness in 1821 drove it eastward, and the lot-relief act carried it still further to the east. Till 1836 the town was on and near Washington street, between West and New Jersey streets. It then tended westward to the canal, under the internal improvement excitement. Af ter the abandonment of the public works it moved eastward to the square on which the Palmer House stands, and for a long time was nearly stationary, for there was little change in the size and business of the place. In 1848 it moved southward, tending to the Madison depot ; the construction of other lines arrested it and it moved north-east, till the war suddenly scattered business and population in every direction. At present it is probable the centre of population is not far from the east market house, and the cen tre of business near the north-west corner of Pennsylvania and Washington streets. A census in February showed seven hun dred and sixty inhabitants, two hundred and nine of them being children of school age, and one hundred and sixty-one of them in the Sabbath school. In March the influ- the court house, where B. F. Morris and D. Maguire delivered eulogies on the illustrious dead. There was the usual great westward emi gration in the fall. The town was unusu ally healthy, although the summer was hot and dry. Lorenzo Dow, the noted revival ist, visited the town in June and preached to the people in a grove near the present Madison depot, and the next evening at the court house steps. He attracted large audi- enees, more by eccentricities of speech and dress than by eloquence. A treaty was concluded with the Indians at Fort Wayne in the fall, by which more territory was ceded, and the government agreed to deliver certain cattle, hogs, wag ons, Ac., the next spring. In January, 1827, John Tipton, Indian agent, advertised for proposals for the delivery of two hund red hogs, two hundred cattle, ten wagons, and the building of eight brick houses in the Indian country under the treaty. The heavy rains the following spring prevented the delivery of the wagons and stock, and the savages were somewhat dissatisfied thereat. 1827. The Assembly, on the 26th of January, directed the agent to survey and sell seven acres near the river for a steam mill site, and on the 28th of January, 1828, incorporporated the Steam Mill Company with $20,000 capital, in $50 shares. The company — the first one incorporated here — organized shortly after, Nicholas McCarty, INDIANAPOLIS FROM 1818. 17 James Blake and J. M. Ray being the lead ers in it. Subscriptions were slowly ob tained during 1829-30, materials were col lected in 1830-1, the building raised in Sep tember and finished in December, 1831. The saw mill had been finished before. The grist mill began work in January, 1832, and was the first in this section that had KsiBB'HS&llf liiffil _ _ I'll; pgfllii,iJi;: wail (Old Stoam Mill.) the summer, and stood there till 1855. ffgjjff _*'g___i |lj§§ (Clerk's Office.) Four thousand dollars were also appropri ated for a two-story brick house on the Circle for the Governor, and the Circle was to be enclosed by a rail fence by the first of May. The house contract was signed March 17th, and it was built at a cost of six thous and five hundred dollars during the sum mer by Smith, Culbertson, Bishop and Speaks. It was a solidly-built, square, two- story, hipped-roofed brick house, with look out, large windows, doors and chimneys, two cross halls, and four large rooms on each floor, and dark, damp basement under the whole structure. These vaults were a bolting cloths or made fine flour. The wool-carding apparatus was put in motion in June, 1832. The mill ran irregularly, for there was difficulty in getting good wood at seventy-five cents per cord ; the de mand for flour was not equal to the supply. and shipments were out of the question. The mill stood north-east of the present bridge, and was the largest building in the place, being a heavily framed structure of three full stories with a high gambrel roof, allowing two additional stories. The boil ers and engines — the first ones ever used here — were to have been brought up on a steamboat, but were wagoned out from Cin cinnati with great difficulty in 1831. The mill was unprofitable, and was abandoned and the machinery offered for sale in 1835. It remained vacant till 1847, when it was refitted and used till 1852 by Geisendorffs as a woolen mill. It again became vacant, and was fired and totally destroyed with the neighboring toll house, on the night of November 16, 1853, endangering the White river bridge, which was only saved by great exertions on the part of the firemen. One hundred men worked two days in rais ing its heavy frame, and no liquor was used, a fact which excited much comment at the time, for serious doubts had been enter tained whether so large a building could be raised without the aid of whisky. The Assembly appropriated five hundred dollars January 26th, to build a Supreme Court clerk's office, eighteen by thirty-six feet, on the west side of court square. It was built by S. and J. Patterson during (2) (Governor's House.) source of terror to all small boys, for they fully credited the legend that they were tenanted by a headless ghost whose appetite for youngsters was insatiable. The house was totally unfit for a residence and was never occupied as such. At the session of 1829 it was proposed to add wings to the east and west ends and use it as a State house, but the proposition failed. The rooms were successively occupied by the State officers, State library, State Bank, State engineers, Supreme Judges, old bach elors, debating societies, and Supreme Court clerk. At the session of 1856-7 it was or dered to be sold, and was disposed of by auction April 16th, 1857, for six hundred and sixty-five dollars, and torn down April 25-30. Its material was partly used in the Macy house and the dwelling adjoining it. The Circle has since been used for political 18 LOGAN'S HISTORY OF and other open air meetings. In the fall of 1867 the city council ordered it graded, planted, fenced, and surrounded with a de cent sidewalk, for the first time in its his tory. The Assembly, January 26th, directed the agent to offer at public sale, with cer tain exceptions, all reserved, forfeited and unsold lots. Several alleys and squares were vacated. Square 22 was reserved for a State Hospital and square 25 for a State University. This square has since been claimed by the Bloomington College, which was then a " State Seminary," so designated in the act creating it, and with funds and lands specially set apart for it ; and though afterward made a college, no act ever recog nized it as the " University " for which square 25 was reserved as a site, nor has the Assembly ever at any time in any man ner given it any claim on that square. The Assembly, January 26th, 1832, au thorized the agent to lease square 25 for thirty years to the trustees of the Marion County Seminary, who might build on the south-east or south-west corner thereof, and if the square was needed for a university be fore the lease expired, a half-acre where the seminary stood was to be sold or deeded to the trustees. The trustees took possession under the lease, and in 1833-4 built on the (Marion County Seminary.) south-west corner and opened the school September 1st, 1834, with E. Dumont as principal. W. J. Hill succeeded January 1835; Thomas D. Gregg, May, 1836 ; Wm. Sullivan, December, 1836 ; Wm. A. Holli day, August, 1837 ; James S. Kemper, Oc tober, 1838 ; J. P. Safford, 1843 ; Benjamin L. Lang, 1844. The seminary was long the leading school in Central Indiana, and under Kemper, Saflbrd and Lang had a high reputation. Many of the present bus iness men of the city were wholly or par tially educated in it. After the city free school system was adopted the building was used from Sept., 1853, to 1859, as a high school, but was torn down in August and September, 1860. After the lease to the seminary trustees, the Assembly directed the agent, February 6th, 1837, to lease the north-west corner for twenty years to the Lutheran church, the lease to be given up if the square was needed for a University. The church, however, was built elsewhere. On the 17th of February, 1838, the agent was directed to lease the north-west corner for twenty years to the trustees of the Indi anapolis Female Institute, first getting a re lease from the Lutheran church, but the in stitute also was afterward built elsewhere. On the 21st of January, 1850, the Governor and State officers were directed to sell one acre of the square at its appraised value, to the Indiana Asbury University for the use of its medical department, the Central Med ical College. The acre was accordingly se lected, and appraised at $3,566, but the appraisement being thought too high, and opposition arising to the sale, it was never completed, and the college was discontin ued. In 1865-6 the city took possession of the square, fenced, graded and planted it at an expense of over $2,000, and in future it will probably be used as a park. Hitherto it has been used as a pasture, as a lumber and stone yard, and as a parade and play ground. In June, 1860, a large part of it was covered with a frame structure called a " Coliseum," built by Mr. Perine, and in tended for shows and monster meetings. The edifice was about three hundred feet square, consisted of a board wall twenty-five feet high, with battlemented towers at the entrances and corners. The interior con tained a large pit or open space at the south side, with a tall flag-staff, from which seats ranging from four feet at the front to twenty feet high near the walls, were arranged on the east, west and north sides, making an amphitheatre capable of seating fifteen or twenty thousand persons. Wide aisles led to the several tiers of seats. By great efforts it was got ready and opened July 4th with a military parade, band concert, and balloon ascension by J. C. Bellman, closing at night with the finest display of fireworks ever seen here. The enterprise was not pecuni arily successful, but deserved to be so, if only for its magnitude and boldness. No auditorium as large has ever been built elsewhere in the West, and perhaps not in the country,. After standing some weeks it was torn away. The vacant square was subsequently used for military parades, es pecially during the Morgan raid, when the City Regiment, twelve hundred strong, was daily and nightly mustered there at stroke of bell, to go through agonizing partings INDIANAPOLIS FROM 1818. 19 with mothers, wives and sweathearts, while their twelve hundred martial bosoms throbbed, doubtless, with strong desires to meet the foe. The Journal in February, 1827, said the town then contained a court house, a Pres byterian church with thirty members; a Baptist church with thirty-six members, worshiping in a small cabin ; a Methodist church with ninety-three members, worship ing in a small cabin, but building a new brick church, the walls of which were com pleted and enclosed during the fall. A Sabbath school had also existed for five years, and now contained twenty teachers and one hundred and fifty scholars. There were twenty-five brick, sixty frame, and eighty hewed and rough log houses in the town. In the fall it stated that rents were high and houses in demand. The Govern or's Circle was being built. Six two-story and five one-story brick houses, with a large number of frame houses, had been built. It called for the introduction of steam engines and home manufacturing, and said nearly $10,000 worth of goods and provisions had been brought to the town and sold during the past year. Among the articles were seventy-six kegs tobacco, two hundred bar rels flour, one hundred kegs powder, four thousand five hundred pounds spun yarn, and two hundred and thirteen barrels of whisky. Seventy-one additional barrels of whisky had also been made here and sold. A Sunday school census taken November 25th showed five hundred and twenty-nine white, and thirty-four colored males ; four hundred and seventy-nine white, and twenty four colored females ; total, one thousand and sixty-six inhabitants in the town. Two hundred and eighty-four barrels of whisky seems a large allowance for this number of people, but the water then was doubtless very impure, from the vast quantity of de caying vegetable matter. A tornado passed a few miles south of town on the 5th of April, destroying the timber but injuring no person. The sale of lots ordered by the Assembly took place May 7th and 8th. One hundred and fifty-three lots (twenty-four of them on Washington street,) and thirty or forty squares of four acres each, were offered. One hundred and six lots sold at $180 per acre, and thirty-eight outlots and squares at $23 per acre. Mr. Knight, commissioner in charge of the National road survey, lo cated the line to this point July 8th, and went on westward next day. The Fourth of July was ushered in with twenty -four rounds by the new artillery company. The procession included citizens and the rifle and artillery companies, and marched to the court house. Ebenezer Sharpe was reader, N. Bolton orator. John Hays pro vided the dinner, which closed with the usual toasts'and speeches. The first public Bchool examination and exhibition took place at the court house October 5th. Dur ing the fall squirrels and other animals were migrating in great numbers, and sev eral bears were killed close to town. Hitherto the ladies of the place had been compelled to make their own bonnets and clothes in backwoods fashion, but in Octo ber the first millinery establishment was opened by Mrs. Matilda Sharpe, and there after style began to be assumed in the new town. The town improved but slowly from this date to 1834. The settlement was mainly on Washington street and one or two squares north and south, with detached dwellings on other parts of the plat. The timber had been cut from the greater por tion of the plat, but the outlots were still in the woods. Large trees stood in places within two squares of Washington street, and the greater part of the ninth ward was a forest till 1846. All the territory south of Maryland and east of Meridian streets was unimproved except as farms till 1845, and most of it till 1855. A fine walnut grove existed in the first and second wards north of North street, and Drake's addition was a good hunting ground till 1848. Squirrels, rabbits and turkeys were killed in sections now thickly peopled. No grading what ever had been done, and few sidewalks ex isted, even on Washington street. Ponds along the bayous afforded skating in winter, and in summer were covered by green scum and tenanted by countless frogs. The streets were semi-fluid in thawing weather, but the drainage in many places was better than since the engineers changed it. The town was a dull country village, with no excite ment beyond the annual sessions, when a little animation was given to society and to trade. It seemed to have attained its growth. Few expected a brighter future, nor was there any prospect of it till the in ternal improvement scheme was originated. 18 2 8. The spring was very wet with heavy rains, and in May a flood occurred in White river, rivaling that of 1824, and those of 1847 and 1858. Less damage was done then than since, there being, fewer set tlements along the bottoms. There is no doubt that White river then had a greater average depth of water than now, and was better fitted for navigation. Repeated at tempts were made to navigate it, and boats of good size used. In May, 1822, the keel- boat Eagle, fifteen tons, with salt and whis ky, arrived from the Kanawha, and the Boxer, thirty-three tons, with merchandise, from Zanesville ; and the Dandy, twenty- 20 LOGAN'S HISTORY OF eight tons, in May, 1824, with salt and whisky, and many other boats arrived from the lower river, and departed loaded with produce. Large flatboats also were built and ran to the southern market, and the trade was kept up till the dams on the river interfered with its navigation. The Assem bly and the people regarded White river as a very important channel for heavy freights. Alexander Ralston was appointed commis sioner February 12th, 1825, to survey and report the expense of removing obstructions in it from drift, snags and leaning trees. He made the survey during the summer, and reported that from Sample's Mills in Randolph county to Indianapolis was one hundred and thirty miles, from here to the forks two hundred and eighty-five miles, and from thence to the Wabash forty miles ; total four hundred and fifteen miles ; and that for that distance the river might be made navigable for three months in the year by expending $1,500. There were two falls, one of eighteen inches, eight miles above Martinsville, and one of nine feet in one hundred yards, ten miles above the forks. There was also a great drift at the Daviess and Greene county line. After this report the Assembly repeatedly memorial ized Congress, asking for the improvement of the river, and considerable sums were appropriated from the State treasury for that object, the county commissioners along the river governing the expenditure. In 1830-35, John Matthews and others pro posed slackwater navigation, building lev ees, dims and locks, and using steamboats and tugboats for barges, to carry passengers and freight from this point to the lower river. Mills would be built at the dams, and serve as feeders to the trade, and the stone, timber, iron ore, coal and produce of the river valley, could be brought more cheaply to our town than by any other mode. Matthews pressed this plan for years, and the Assembly in February, 1851, chartered the White River Navigation Company for twenty years, but nothing was done, not even a survey, to test the practi cability of the plan. If at all feasible it certainly deserves attention and a survey at least to test its practicability, for our manu facturers and builders would derive advan tages from it they can never get from any other work. In 1828 or 9, Governor Noble becoming convinced that steamboats of a small size could be used on the river, en deavored to get some captain to bring a boat to this point, and offered $200 reward to the first one who succeeded, and to sell the cargo free of .charge. In April, 1830, Captain Saunders with the " Traveller " reached Spencer, and the " Victory " came within fifty-five miles of this point, but the river falling rapidly they returned. In 1829-30 General Hanna and others took contracts on the National road, and resolved to bring up a boat to haul stone and timber from the bluffs for the abutments and bridges. A medium-sized boat, the " Rob ert Hanna," was bought, and after some trouble arrived here loaded and towing a loaded barge, on the 11th of April, 1831. She was greeted by the entire community, and by Captain Blythe's artillery squad fir ing a National salute. A meeting was called on the 12th, Isaac Blackford, presi dent, and James Morrison, secretary, which passed resolutions of welcome, asked for the improvement of the river, and extended an invitation to the boat owners and officers for a public dinner. Two excursion trips were made up the river on the 12th with a great crowd of passengers. During the sec ond one she ran into the trees on the bank, knocking down her pilot-house and chim neys, and injuring the wheel-house. The passengers were terribly frightened, and slid off in great numbers. The boat was too high and large for so narrow a river with overhanging trees, and unfit for the purpose for which she was designed. She started down on the 13th, grounded for six weeks on a bar at Hog Island, where the captain's child was drowned, and did not get out of the river till the fall. No subsequent effort at steam navigation was made till 1865, when the Indianapolis and Waverly packet, Governor Morton, built by a company at a cost of $11,000, ran a few trips several miles up and down the river during the summer and fall, and following spring. From want of water, leakiness, defective construction, and distrust by the community, she failed to realize the hopes of her builders, and was wrecked just below the bridge in the sum mer of 1866, after a brief but glorious ca reer. The first stage line from Indianapolis was started to Madison by Mr. Johnson, in June or July, 1828. In July the Indianapolis Library Society was formed, the members donating the books, and continued its ex istence for six or eight years. The Fourth of July was celebrated with more display than usual. The artillery and rifle com panies, the citizens, and the Sabbath school, which now participated for the first time, formed in procession and marched to the court house. Hiram Brown acted as presi dent, Henry Brenton vice president. Rev. Geo. Bush was chaplain, A. Ingram reader, B. F. Morris orator. The Handelian Soci ety (formed in the spring,) furnished the music. After the exercises closed the Sab bath school returned to the school house, and the military and citizens marched to Bates' grove, east of town, where a dinner INDIANAPOLIS FROM 1818. 21 was eaten, with the usual toasts and speech es. A military ball at Vigus' tavern, oppo site the court house, closed the festivities. Nine hundred and thirteen votes were cast at the August election, and nine hund red and sixty-one at the November election, Adams receiving five hundred and eighty- two, Jackson three hundred and seventy- nine. The first cavalry company, David Buchanan, captain, was organized in Aug ust. A heavy emigration westward oc curred this fall, and also during several fol lowing years, fifty teams per day often pass ing through town. A similar movement occurred in 1839—40. In December, twen ty-eight blocks and seventy-two lots in the old plat were yet unsold, and nearly all the donation land outside the plat. The winter was colder than usual, with much snow in February. 1829. The Methodist Sabbath school, the second one in the town, was organized April 24th with eleven teachers and forty- six scholars, and at the end of the year had twenty-seven teachers and one hundred and forty-six scholars. Wesley Chapel school is its present representative, but eight or nine colonies have left it since its origin. The Fourth of July hitherto had been cele brated by the civic and military procession, the schools participating for the first time in 1828, but this year the school display was the only one. The two town, with five countiy schools, formed on the Circle, and accompanied by eight hundred adults, marched to Bates' woods, on East, between Ohio and Market streets, where the children were seated, a hymn sung, and bread and water distributed. Reverend Jamison Hawkins prayed, Ebenezer Sharpe was reader, James Morrison, orator, and Rev. Henry Brenton closed with benediction, and the procession returned to town. James Blake acted as marshal, and continued, with but few exceptions, to act in that ca pacity for nearly thirty years afterward. The Sabbath school celebration continued a leading feature till 1858, but the number of schools and scholars became so great that the general celebration was abandoned. The exercises were always of the same character. During the war the military displays were the chief attraction. Since that date the firemen's processions and picnics have been the chief features of the day. There was much sickness during the sum mer and fall, and many deaths, an unusual proportion being young married people, The Indiana Colonization Society, Isaac Blackford, president, was organized in No vember, and continued its operations for many years afterward. In September and October contracts were let on the National road. The people were much rejoiced, for it promised a direct route to the East, and its early completion was confidently expect ed. It was begun in 1830, but from defi cient appropriations, and the fact that work was carried on simultaneously across the whole State, it progressed slowly, and was abandoned in 1839 before its completion. The bridge here was contracted for July 26th, 1831, by Wm. H. Wernweg and Wal ter Blake, at $18,000, and finished in the spring of 1834. 18 30. The winter was very severe, the thermometor marking five or six deg. be low zero, and much snow fell. The Legis lature celebrated the 8th of January, A. F. Morrison delivering an address. For eight or ten years afterward this celebration con tinued regularly. A theological debate — the first one here — on the future punishment of the wicked, began January 21st, between Jonathan Kidwell, Universalist, and Rev. Edwin Ray, Methodist. Like all such dis cussions it settled nothing and roused bad feelings. The Indiana Democrat, an administration paper, was first issued by A. F. Morrison in the spring. The Gazette, which had been published since January, 1822, was discon tinued in the fall, and the Democrat fur nished to its subscribers. The paper was published till 1841, the office being most of the time in a one-story brick building at 32 West Washington street, and was owned successively by Morrison, Morrison & Bol ton, Bolton & Livingston, and John Liv ingston. It was sold to the Chapmans July 21st, 1841, who moved the office to a frame house where Blake's Commercial Row now stands, and changed the name to Indiana Sentinel. The second number of the Sentinel was issued August 4th, 1841, and weekly afterward. In November, 1844, the office was moved to a brick built for it on North Illinois street. In November, 1846, John S. Spann became a partner. Chapman & Spann dissolved May 20th, 1850, and June 1st W. J. Brown bought the paper and moved it to 8 West Washington street, Ellis & Spann retaining the old job office. In August, 1852, the office was moved to Tom- linson's new building, and published by A. H. Brown (Wm. J. Brown, editor,) till March 2d, 1855, when Walker & Cottam became proprietors, Walker and Holcombe editors. Spann & Norman bought it De cember 4th, 1855, and sold to Larrabee & Cottam January 24th, 1856, A. F. Morrison and W. C. Larrabee being editors. Larra bee, Bingham & Co. became proprietors August 25th, 1856. Bingham & Doughty bought it January 13th, .1857, and moved the office to the old Capital House. On the 7th of April, 1857, the office was nearly de stroyed by a boiler explosion, which killed 22 LOGAN'S HISTORY OF a boy and badly injured one or two others, and the paper was suspended till April 21st. The office had just been completed and the engine put in motion for the first time, and the explosion entailed a heavy loss. The paper was then published by the Sentinel Company till July 31st, 1861, when it was moved to the old Locomotive office in Hub bard's block, the Locomotive discontinued and merged with the Sentinel, which was then published by Elder, Harkness & Bing ham. A new three-story brick office was built for it in 1863, on Pearl and Meridian streets, where it was issued till 1865, when the paper was bought by C. W. Hall and moved to the old office, 16 East Washington street, where it has since been located. The name was changed to the Indianapolis Her ald, and published by Hall & Hutchinson till October, 1866, when it passed into a re ceiver's hands and was bought by Lafe Develin in January, 1867, and published by him till April, 1868, when R. J. Bright became the owner and changed the name to Indianapolis Sentinel. Joseph J. Bingham has been the chief editor for over ten years. The Chapmans issued the first daily pa per in the place, the Daily Sentinel first ap pearing December 6th, 1841, and continu ing during the session. The second volume began December 6th, 1842, for the session, and the third began December 6th, 1843. Semi-weekly editions had been issued dur ing the sessions before and after these dates. The present daily began April 28th, 1851, and appeared regularly till April 7th, 1857, when the boiler explosion destroyed the of fice and snspended the paper till April 21st. It has since appeared regularly, under the names of the Sentvnel and Herald. The Fourth of July was separately cele brated by the schools and citizens. Consid erable rivalry existed. Demas McFarland and James Blake, the respective marshals, addressed the crowds on the street corners, calling for adherents. Rain being threat ened the schools went to the Methodist church, where the usual exercises took place. The citizens went to a grove near the present central engine house. Isaac Blackford was president, W. W. Wick, ora tor, and A. St. Clair reader. A dinner was spread and the usual toasts given. The cannon was taken to fire salutes, but the ar tillery officers being with the schools, inex perienced men were handling the gun, and at the third fire Andrew Smith lost his arm. The accident put an end to the exercises and threw a damper on such celebrations for several years afterward. McComber & Co.'s menagerie, the first show here, exhibited at Henderson's tavern July 26-7th, and on the 23d-4th of August another exhibited at the same place. — Among its animals was a."Rompo," doubt less a relative of the " Guyascutas." The summer was hot and dry, with considerable sickness and many deaths. The Indiana Historical Society, Benjamin Parke, presi dent, B. F. Morris, secretary, was organized December 11th, at the court house, and con tinued its existence for many years. The first gift enterprize was started in the fall by T. J. Langdon, who offered the Indianapo lis Hotel, opposite the court house, as the first prize, to be drawn December 30th. The winter of 1830-1 was steadily and severely cold. The snow fell twelve to eighteen inches deep in February, and the thermometor fell to 18 and 20° below zero, by far the coldest weather since the settle ment. 18 31. M. G. Rogers, the first portrait painter here, announced his arrival in Feb ruary for a few weeks' stay, at Henderson's tavern. In the same month, Samuel Hen derson, who had been postmaster since Feb ruary, 1822, was removed and John Cain appointed. Several railways had been projected in 1830, and the Assembly on the 2d and 3d of February chartered the Madison & Indi anapolis, Lawrenceburgh & Indianapolis, Harrison & Indianapolis, Lafayette & Indi anapolis, New Albany, Salem & Indianapo lis, and Ohio & Indianapolis railways. Sur veys were made on them in following years, being completed on the Madison, Lawrence burgh, Jeffersonville and Lafayette roads in 1835. Several were rechartered in 1834-5, and some work done on them. They were revived in 1835-6, and State aid given them, but stopped with the State work and were not built until 1849-53. The agent was directed, February 9th, to divide the donation into outlots, fix a mini mum price, and sell them publicly in May. The subdivision was accordingly made, and nearly nineteen hundred acres in and out of the plat offered in lots of two to fifty acres at a minimum price of ten dollars per acre, but a part only was sold. The Assembly on the 10th of February resolved to build a State house. A com mittee had reported in its favor at the last session, estimating the cost at $56,000, and estimating the value of the unsold donation at $58,000. James Blake was appointed commissioner to superintend it and procure materials, and $3,000 was appropriated therefor. He was to offer $150 for a plan (to be reported at the next session) compris ing a Senate hall for fifty members, Repre sentatives' hall for one hundred members, Supreme Court and Library rooms, twelve committee rooms, &c. The building was not to cost over $45,000. Blake bought some stone and other materials, and re- INDIANAPOLIS FROM 1818. 23 ceived a plan from Ithiel Town and I. J. Davis, of New York City, which was adopt ed by the Assembly January 20th, 1832, Noah Noble, Morris Morris and Samuel Merrill were appointed commissioners Feb. ruary 2d, 1832, to superintend the building according to the plan, to employ an archi tect, and use the material already bought. The house was to he completed by Novem ber, 1838, and examined and approved by a committee of five from each House before being accepted. They contracted February 19th with Ithiel Town for its erection, at $58,000. It was begun in the spring of 1832, and by great exertion finished in De cember, 1835, in time for the annual session beginning on the 7th. It is generally Doric in style, but contains a large rotunda and dome, surmounted by a cap ornament mod eled after the tomb of Lycidas. The brick work was well done, but the stone used in the foundation was not durable. The house was stuccoed inside and out in imitation of sandstone, and though well done such work is not durable in this climate, and always looks ragged. The building cost about $60,000, and was regarded with great pride as the finest in the West. The feeling has since diminished. The roof has several times been partly stripped off by winds, and in December, 1867, the ceiling of Repre sentatives' Hall was thrown down in a storm, crushing the desks and injuring the building. A new structure is needed, one in which the materials and construction will defy time and bad usage. The square was filled to a depth of nine feet in 1834, and the trees now growing on it were planted in 1835-6. On the 11th of April the steamboat Rob ert Hanna arrived and was greeted as here tofore stated. On the 17th of May Sophia Overall, a colored woman, was declared by all the physicians as having the small pox, the first case here. A panic ensued, and a citizens' meeting was called. Dr. S. G. Mitchell, Isaac Coe, L. Dunlap, J. E. Mc Clure, C. McDougal, J. L. Mothershead, Wm. Ticknor, and John H. Sanders, were appointed the first board of health, and au thorized to take all necessary measures to prevent the spread of the disease. No other cases occurred, however, and the pan ic subsided. The first soda fountain in the place was put up July 2d in Dunlap & McDougal's drug store, and largely patronized. The Fourth of July was celebrated in the usual way by the schools and young men. Nine hundred and fifty votes were cast in the township at the August election. A full- grown elephant and calf elephant, the first here, were shown as " natural curiosities," at Henderson's tavern August 12th. The first three-story brick house in town was erected at 4 and 6 West Washington street, during the summer, and is still standing. The Methodist conference held its first ses sion here October 4th, with a full attend ance. The summer and fall were the healthiest since the settlement of the place. The Indianapolis Lyceum or Atheneum was organized in the fall, giving lectures and scientific discussions, and continued its existence for several years. The winter was cold and snowy. 183 2. News of the Indian outbreak under Black Hawk was received June 3d, and one hundred and fifty mounted volun teers from the fortieth regiment were called for on the 4th, by Colonel A. W. Russell, and the same number from adjoining coun ties. They rendezvoused here June 9th, armed with rifles, tomahawks, knives, a pound of powder each, and balls in propor tion, and were organized in three compan ies, under Captains J. P. Drake, J. W. Red ing and Henry Brenton, and marched for Chicago the same day under Colonel Rus sell. The cannon was fired on the day of rendezvous, and by a premature explosion William Warren, an Irishman, lost both arms, shedding the only blood here during that war. After reaching Chicago the bat- tallion marched round the south end of the lake to St. Joseph, and returned home with out accident July 3d, participating in the celebration and dinner of the 4th as veter ans. They were paid off by Major Earned, January, 1833. Wm. Conner, a merchant here, and formerly an old Indian trader and scout, piloted the expedition. Meetings had been held and subscriptions made in August and September, 1832, to build a market house, C. J. Hand, John Givans and others being prominent in the movement, and after some difficulty as to location, it was contracted for in May, 1833, and finished in August, on the square north of the court house, and regulations agreed on for holding the markets. Josiah Davis, Thomas McOuatt and John Walton were the committee in charge of the work. L. Dunlap, J. S. Hall and D. McFarland were elected the first seminary trustees in Aug ust. The Indianapolis Foundry, the first in the place, was started in August west of the river, by R. A. McPherson & Co., and continued several years. The cholera swept many places in the West this year, being diffused by the troops from the Indian war. The people here held meetings, organized a board of health, and adopted sanitary mea sures, but no cases occurred and the panic passed off. Until this time no municipal government had existed, the township and county offi cers enforcing the State laws ; but at a 24 LOGAN'S HISTORY OF meeting held September 3d, at the court house, it was resolved to incorporate the town under the general law. The election of five trustees was held in September, and the board organized shortly after, electing Samuel Henderson, president, I. P. Griffith, clerk, Samuel Jenison, marshal and collec tor. The town was divided into five wards, inside the old plat: all east of Alabama, 1st ; thence west to Pennsylvania, 2d ; thence to Meridian, 3d ; thence to Tennes see, 4th; thence west, 5th. A general "or dinance " No. 1, in thirty-seven sections, " established by the board of trustees of the town of Indianapolis for their own govern ment and for the regulation of the town," was probably adopted in November, and published December 1st, signed by S. Hen derson as president. At the same time a market ordinance in seventeen sections was adopted and published. The general ordi nance or charter provided for the election by the board of a clerk to keep records, is sue warrants, &c. ; a treasurer, who was to report annually in December ; an assessor, who was to make an annual assessment in January ; a marshal, who also acted as col lector, and enforced ordinances, abated nui sances, &c, reporting taxes in June to the treasurer. All these officers were to give bond. The firing of guns, flying kites, leav ing open cellar doors, racing horses, driving over foot-paths, leaving unhitched teams, letting hogs run at large, keeping stallions on Washington street, &c, was prohibited under penalties. Wood piles were not to re main on Washington street over twelve hours, or shavings in any place over two days. Shows and tippling houses were required to take out license. Offences against the ordinances were to be sued with in twenty days, in the name of the trustees before a justice. Regular meetings were held the first Friday in each month, but meetings could be called at any time. The markets were held for two hours after day light, Wednesdays and Saturdays, by a market master, who governed the markets, tested weights, &c. Huckstering was pro hibited. The elections were held annually in September, and the town continued under this ordinance, or charter, until April, 1836. The officers so far as known with those elect ed at subsequent dates, are given in the table hereafter inserted. On the 5th of February, 1836, the Assem bly incorporated the town and legalized the acts of the first trustees. The wards were left as before, all east of Alabama being the first; thence to Pennsylvania, second; thence to Meridian, third; thence to Tennessee, fourth; thence west, fifth. One trustee to each ward was to be elected April 4th, and the board was to elect one of their number president, and a clerk, marshal, lister, col lector, trustees and other officers, whose duties were prescribed. They could pass all necessary ordinances, levy taxes and im prove the streets and sidewalks at the ex pense of property holders. Taxation was not to exceed one-half of one per cent, and was limited to the old plat, though the in corporation covered the donation. The board elected under this act re-enacted, with but few changes, the ordinances formerly in force. The officers of the old board settled to the first of April, 1836. The treasurers' report showed $1,610 receipts for the year ; $1,150 of this was paid for the Marion engine, five public wells, and other fire de partment expenses, and a balance of $124 was turned over to the new board. On the 17th of February, 1838, the place was re-incorporated, the corporation cover ing the donation, but taxation being still limited to the plat, and not to exceed one- half of one per cent on real property. The town was divided into six wards, as follows : All east of Alabama, the first ; thence west to Pennsylvania, second ; thence to Merid ian, third ; thence to Illinois, fourth ; thence to Mississippi, fifth ; thence west, sixth. An election was to be held March 27th for a president, by the general vote, and one trus tee for each ward, by the voters thereof, to hold office one year, and to constitute the " common council," four being a quorum. The president had justice's jurisdiction, and was to sign all ordinances, keep a dock et, &c. The council met regularly once each month, but called meetings might be held. The trustees received twelve dollars each per year. They could pass all necessary ordinances for the improvement and gov ernment of the town, levy taxes, borrow money, regulate and license shows, grocer ies, saloons, fire companies, &c. They were to elect a clerk, marshal, collector, lister, treasurer, supervisor, clerk of markets, and other officers, and prescribe their duties. The marshal had a constable's authority, and was to enforce all ordinances. The of ficers were to give bond and receive such compensation as the council allowed. Tax sales on the municipal assessment were au thorized and rules prescribed therefor. — Several sales were made under this author ity, the first being held October 25th, 1839, at Washington Hall, but the records being all destroyed by fire in 1851, but few traces remain of them. North, South, East and West streets were declared public highways and ordered to be opened. The new board was elected in March under this act, and shortly after enacted ordinances regulating markets, prescribing the duties of the cor poration officers, fire department, police, INDIANAPOLIS FROM '1818. 25 street improvement, licensing tippling houses, groceries, shows, &c. This charter, with some subsequent chan ges, continued in force till the city charter was granted in February, 1847. The chan ges were as follows : On the 15th of Feb ruary, 1839, the Assembly ordered the coun cil to expend the revenue collected in West Indianapolis in that part of the town, and to open the alleys in the donation. In Feb ruary, 1840, the charter was amended so that councilmen were elected for two. years, and received twenty-four dollars annually, householders only being eligible. In Feb ruary, 1841, the office of marshal was made elective by the people, and West Indianap olis was detached from the corporate lim its ; and on January 15th, 1844, all the offi cers were made elective by the people. The first trustees made no effort to im prove the streets, and no engineer was em ployed till 1836. The first street improve ment was made that year in filling a pond near Wesley Chapel. No street grading was done, and few sidewalks existed, even on Washington street, till 1839-40. James Wood was employed March, 1841, to make a street profile, which was adopted in April, 1842, and thereafter followed in the street grades. The corporation officers and coun cilmen from 1832 to 1847 are given, as far as known, in the following table. The de struction of the records by fire in 1851 left no trace of them, and the table has been made from the contemporary journals and tradition : TRUSTEES AND COUNCILMEN FROM EACH WARD, FROM 1832 TO 1846. let WARD. John Wilkens.... John Wilkens.... Alex. Morrison.. Jas. M. Smith.... Geo. Lockerbie. TEARS. 1832.1833.1834. 1835. 1836.1837 1838 1839. Geo. Lockerbie. 1840. Mathew Little.. 1841. M. Little 1842. Joshua Black 1843. Joshua Black ... 1844. Wm. Montague. 184.. Wm. Montague. 2d WARD. 3d WARD. 4th WARD. H. P. Coburn.... John G. Brown S. Henderson H. P. Coburn.... S. Henderson John Cain L. Dunlap Jos. Lefevre JV Blaricum Jos. Lefevre Charles Campbell.. H. Griffith John Foster S. Merrill H. Griffith Joshua Soule 6th WARD. 6th WARD. Sam. Merrill Sam. Merrill Nat. Cox.... N B Palmer J. L. Young Wm. Sullivan.... John E. McClure.. P. W. Seibert. 8. Goldsberry... Jacob Cox P. W. Seibert. S. Goldsberry... Jacob Cox A. A. Louden. S. Goldsberry... Jas. R. Nowland... P. W. Seibert. S. Goldsberry... Jas. R. Nowland... A. A. Louden.. 8. Goldsberry... Jas. R. Nowland... A. A. Louden.. S. Goldsberry... Jas. B. Nowland... A. A. Louden.. C. Scudder.. Nat. Cox..... G.Norwood S.S. Rooker G.Norwood A.A.Louden G.Norwood C H Boatri't T. Rickards A.A.Louden T. Rickards S.S. Rooker. H. Griffith. S.S.Rooker. H. Griffith. Wm. C. Van ' Blaricum. 1846. Wm. Montague. 8. Goldsberry... A. W. Harrison.... A. A. Louden.. C. W. Cady. Wm. C. Van -•*; Blaricum. Note. The first incorporation in September, 1832, was by vote of the people under the general law, the town being divided into five wards, and the councilmen chosen by general vote. The Assembly incorporated the place in 1836, making five wards, the trustees to be elected by general vote. On the 17th of February, 1838, the town was reincorporated and the trustees made councilmen, to be chosen by the voters of the several wards, with a president by the general vote. The wards were increased to six in number. (3) . TOWN CORPORATION OFFICERS FROM 1832 TO 1847. • a The following persons were the Corporation Officers, as far as can now be ascertained, from 1832 to 1847, when the City Government was organ ized. The records of the old Corporation up to 1839 were all destroyed by fire in the year 1851, and the list has been culled from the public prints and other sources. Tear. Pres't of Council, Clerk. MarsIuU. Collector. treasurer. _™* gam } Henderson I. P. Griffith Samuel Jenison... Samuel Jenison. 1S33. Sam '1 Henderson I. P. Griffith Samuel Jenison... Samuel Jenison Alex.F. Morrison Jas. Morrison John O. Busic John C. Busic.. N. B. Palmer Joshua Soule R'd D. Mattingly. R'd D. Mattingly Geo. Lockerbie... Joshua Soule Wm. Campbell.... Wm. Campbell JpshuaSoule Hugh O'Neal Wm. Campbell.... Wm. Smith Jas. Morrison J. Soule Engineer. Clh. of Markets. Supervisor of Sts. 1834 1835183S18371S38 N. B. Palmer Hervey Br 1839. 1840. Henry P. Coburn Hervey Brown. 1841. *Wm. Sullivan l . Hervey Brown. D. V. Culley J* . 1842. David V. Culley. 1843. David V. Culley. Laz. B. Wilson.. Joseph A. Levy. Wm. Campbell. (?) W. Campbell Jas.VanBlarieum Jas. Van Warinum Chas. B. Davis.. J. Van Blaricum. J. Van Blaricum.. Humph. Griffith. J. Van Blaricum. J. Van Blaricum. Chas. B. Davis... Glidden True F. T Geo. Lockerbie F. T Thos. H. Sharpe.. Geo. Lockerbie F. T. Thos. H. Sharpe.. Geo. Lockerbie F. T Thos. H. Sharpe.. John Elder Wm. Sullivan Thos. H. Sharpe Wm. Sullivan. Thos. H. Sharpe.. A. G. Willard Luke Munaell. . A. G. Willard R. B. Hanna...*) .. Luke Munsell J .. Henry Bradley Luke Munsell. Luse Luse. (?) Luse. (?) Luse F. T. Luse. (?) J. Wormagen J. Wormagen "I ... W. Campbell J... J. Wormagen J. Wormagen.... Thos" Donnellan.. James Wood J. Wormagen. Win. Ballenger. Thos. Lupton (?) Thos. Lupton.... J. Van Blaricum J. Van Blaricum J. Van Blaricum 1S44 18-1.'). Hervey Brown.... Wm. L. Wingate. Wm. L. Wingate. James G. Jordan. Rob't C. Allison.. Rob't C. Allison.. C. B. Davis.. Benjamin Ream.. Benjamin Ream.. C. B. Davis.. J. Van Blaricum. Henrv Ohr John L. Welshnns Thos. Donnellan.. N. N. Norwood... Henry Ohr John L. Welshans Thos. Donnellan.. 18411. Joseph A. Levy... James G. Jordan. Jacob B. Filler.. Jas. H. Kennedy. James Wood J. Wormagen Rob't C. Allison. Thos. Donnellan.. Luke Munsell J. Wormagen Thos.il. Weaver James Wood J. Wormagen James Wood I. Wormagen, E. "i Win. Wilkinson Jacob Miller, W. j* Henry**0hr George Norwood.. John Coen James Wood Jacob B. Fitler, E Jacob B. Fitler. --tt -, ... , _. , . _, Jacob Miller, W... .' * Wm. Sullivan resigned November 12th, and D. V. Culley was elected by the Council. Note.— In addition to the above-named officers, James Morrison was the Corporation Attorney in 1834 and 1837; Hugh O'Neal* in 1838 and John L Ketcham in 1846. John F. Ramsey was Weighmaster in 1836, and Adam Haugh from 1840 to 1846 inclusive. John Musgrove was Sex- t0" "J l°4f > 45 and '46> and J°hn O'Conner in 1844. David Cox was Messenger of the Marion Fire Companv from 1843 to 1846 inclusive, and Ja cob B. _ ltler of the Good Intent in 1845-6. Thomas M. Smith was elected Chief Fire Engineer for 1846, the* office being created that year INDIANAPOLIS FROM 1818. 27 18 33. William Henry Harrison, the former Governor of the Territory, visited . the town for the first time January 11th. He was received by the Assembly and ten dered a public dinner at Washington Hall, January 17th, at which he made a Union speech. He visited the town again January 13th, 1835. The first homicide here occurred on the 8th of May, Michael Van Blaricum drown ing William McPherson by upsetting a boat in the river. The murder created great excitement at the time. He was tried and sent to the penitentiary in Oc tober, 1834. The first wholesale grocery was opened in June by Beard & Patterson. The cholera had been prevailing else where this year, and on the 18th of June one or two cases of supposed cholera — not fatal — occurred here. The churches assign ed and kept the 26th as a special fast day. No other cases happened then, but in July it became very fatal at Salem, Indiana, and the trustees of the town called a meeting on the 17th at the court house. One thousand dollars were subscribed by the citizens, res olutions passed, a board of health consisting of five physicians and five citizens appoint ed, visiting committees were assigned to each ward, sanitary measures were adopted and medicines procured. The trustees were also requested to open a hospital. The Governor's Circle was accordingly secured for the purpose, and Dr. John E. McClure assigned as physician. There were no cases here however, and the building was not used. The first circus, (combined with a menag erie, Brown & Bailey's,) exhibited at Hen derson's tavern August 13th and 14th. A new graveyard was laid out east of the old one, and lots sold in October by Isaac Coe. The great meteor shower on the 13th of November, from 2 A. M. to - daylight, was witnessed with awe by the people, many of whom thought the end of the world was close at hand and they unprepared for the event. 18 34. The State Bank of Indiana was chartered January 28 th, 1834, for twenty- five years, with a capital of $1,600,000 in fif ty dollar shares, one-half of the stock to be held by the State. Its charter was amended with its consent in several particulars a.t subsequent dates. Samuel Merrill was elected president by the Legislature, with Calvin Fletcher, Seton W. Norris, R. Mor rison and T. H. Scott State directors. J M. Ray was chosen cashier, a position he held till the charter expired. The bank was organized February 13th, with ten branches, (ultimately increased to sixteen,) and books opened for stock subscriptions for thirty days from the 7th of April. Samuel Merrill served as president till 1840, James Morrison till 1850, Ebenezer Dumont till 1855, H. McCullough till 1859. Additional time was given to wind up the business. The bank was first located in the Governor's Circle in 1834, then on Washington street till 1840, when the banking house on Illi nois street and Kentucky avenue being com pleted, it was removed to and remained there till 1859, being succeeded in its occu pancy by the Bank of the State. The old State Bank was a safe and very lucrative enterprize for its stockholders, and made good and steady dividends. All the branch es suspended specie payments under its di rection May 18th, 1837, during the financial panic and bank run of that period, and did not resume payment till June 15th, 1842, when directed to do so by act of the General Assembly. The Branch of the State Bank at this point was organized November 11th, 1834, with Harvey Bates, president, B. F. Morris, cashier. These officers served for two or three years, and were succeeded by Calvin Fletcher as president and Thos. H. Sharpe cashier, who served till the charter expired. The State and Branch Banks began busi ness November 20th, 1834. The Branch banking house, on Pennsylvania street and Virginia avenue, was built in 1839, and oc cupied from 1840 to 1859, when it was sold for nearly $16,000 to the Sinking Fund, and by the Fund in 1867 for $30,000 to the In dianapolis Insurance Company, who now occupy it. For many years the rule of the bank was to loan but $200 to any one per son, unless a greater sum was needed for stock or grain enterprizes, which were made special exceptions. The old State Bank charter being about to expire, the General Assembly, on the 3d of March, 1855, chartered "The Bank of the State of Indiana," with seventeen branches, (three additional branches being afterward authorized,) and it was organized November 1st, 1855, Hugh McCullough be ing elected president, and J. M. Ray cash ier, with seventeen directors — one from each Branch. It began business January 2d, 1857, with a capital of $1,836,000, and re ported $132,216 profits over all expenses in the first six months. It continued an ex tremely lucrative business, rapidly extend ing its capital, until after the adoption_ of the National Bank system and the taxation of free and State bank paper. In January, 1865, the Assembly authorized it to reduce its capital, redeem its stock, distribute sur plus funds, &c, to stockholders, and close up its branches and business, and at present it is about completed, the branches having nearly all been merged in National Banks. It was located in the building of the old 28 LOGAN'S HISTORY OF State Bank on Illinois street and Kentucky avenue, which was sold in May, 1868, to the Franklin Life Insurance Company, and now occupied by that corporation. Hugh McCullough, George W. Rathbone and J. M. Ray have been the presidents, J. M. Ray and Joseph A. Moore cashiers of the institution. The Branch at this point of the Bank of the State was organized July 25th, 1855, with a capital of $100,000, afterward in creased to over $200,000, W. H. Talbott being elected president. The stock was af terward sold at an advance to other parties, and the bank began business in January, 1857, at the north-west corner of Washing ton and Illinois streets, with George Tousey, president, C. S. Stevenson, cashier. Steven son resigned to enter the pay department in June, 1861, and D. E. Snyder was cashier till November, 1866, being succeeded by D. M. Taylor, present cashier. Oliver Tousey was elected president in June, 1866, suc ceeding George Tousey, who had resigned to become president of the Indiana National Bank. The bank was removed in March, 1860, to the corner room of Yohn's block, where it remained till 1867, when it was removed to the back room in the same building and its affairs wound up. A general bank law was adopted by the Assembly in May, 1852, and shortly after ward applications were filed by different parties for a number of banks at this point, some of which were afterward organized under other names, and others were never completed. Among these applications were the City Bank, nominal capital $500,000, in December, 1852, A. Defrees, proprietor ; Bank of Indianapolis, J. Woolley & Co., proprietors, capital $400,000, January, 1853; State Bank of Indiana, $500,000, January, 1853 ; Agricultural Bank, $200,000, Febru ary, 1853 ; Traders' Bank, Woolley & Wil son proprietors, $300,000, May, 1853. The banks actually organized here under the law were the Bank of the Capitol, J. Woolley & Co., proprietors, nominal capital $400,000, W. S. Pierce and J. H. Bradley successive presidents, J. Woolley, cashier. It began business in 1853 in a little frame house where Blackford's block now stands, then removed to Dunlop's building, then lately built on North Meridian street, and then to No. 6 East Washington street, which had just been finished. The concern carried more sail than ballast, and capsized September 15th, 1857, in the financial storm of that date, with liabilities .to.over $80,000, nominal assets $56,00Q. The Farmers' and Mechanics' Bank, Al len May and G. Lee successive presidents, William F. May and O. Williams success ive cashiers, began business February, 1854, in the basement of Masonic Hall. The cashier, W. F. May, absconded in May, 1855, taking about $10,000 with him, crip pling the bank so badly that it collapsed shortly afterward. The Central Bank, Ozias Bowen and J. D. Defrees, successive presidents, Sidney Moore and W. H. McDonald, successive cashiers, with a nominal capital of $500,000, began business in July, 1855, at No. 23 West Washington street. The Traders' Bank, Woolley & Wilson, proprietors, be gan in 1854 at the office of Ellis & Spann on Illinois street ; and the Metropolitan Bank, A. F. Monism & Co., proprietors, J. D. Dunn, president, Jerry Skeen, cashier, in 1855 in Blake's Commercial Row, but neither of them did much business, and suspended payment soon after getting their notes in circulation, and were shortly after closed up by their owners or by tne Auditor of State. The free bank system entailed great loss on the community from the depre ciation of the circulation, the owners finding it much more profitable to buy in at a heavy discount than to redeem it or at tempt to do a legitimate business. The State and free bank systems have been superceded in the last five years by the National banking system. The First Na tional Bank was organized August 1st, 1863, with $150,000 capital, under the National law. W. H. English was president, and W. R. Nofsinger, cashier. John C. New was chosen cashier January 11th, 1865. The bank was reorganized September 22d, 1864, and the capital increased to $500,000. — There a_e at present sixty stockholders. The bank was first located just north of Odd Fellows Hall, then in the north room of the hall, and removed thence October 1st, 1865, to the corner room of Blackford's block. It has been a government depository from its origin, and has done a very extend ed and lucrative business. Its circulation during the first quarter of 1868 was $450,- 000, deposits $700,000, discounts $600,000, surplus $75,000, profit and loss $125,000; exchange sales in 1867, $4,620,000. The Indianapolis National Bank was or ganized December 15th, 1864, with $500,- 000 capital, Theodore P. Haughey being elected president, and Ingram Fletcher, cashier. He resigned in January, 1866, being succeeded by A. F. Williams, present cashier. The bank rented the corner room of Odd Fellows Hall, where it has since been located. It has been a government depository from its origin, and has done a large and lucrative business. The circula tion during the £rst quarter of 1868 was $450,000, surplus fund $78,000, deposits $432,900, discounts $416,000 ; commercial exchange sales in 1867, $3,606,650. INDIANAPOLIS FROM 1818. 29 The Indiana National Bank was organ ized, with $250,000 capital, March 14th, 1865, Oliver Tousey being elected president, David M. Taylor, cashier. The capital was increased June 6th, 1865, to $400,000, and on the 27th of July George Tousey was elected president, D. E. Snyder, cashier. D. M. Taylor was chosen cashier November 26th, 1866. The bank was opened at 19 North Meridian street in July, 1865, but the location being an unfavorable one, it was removed November 26th, 1866, to the corner room of Yohn's block, the Branch of the Bank of the State removing to the back room, and its business being transferred to the Indiana National Bank. The bank is a government depository, and since its re moval to the present location has rapidly increased in business. The circulation dur ing June, 1868, was $350,000, deposits $354,235, discounts $292,800; exchange sales in 1867, $2,787,370. The Merchants' National Bank was or ganized January 17th, 1865, with $100,000 capital, Henry Schnull, president, V. T. Malott, cashier, and began business at 23 North Meridian street, but finding that lo cation unfavorable it was renjoved in Janu ary, 1867, to 48 East Washington street, where it has since been located, and has done much more business. John S. New man became president September 1st, 1866, The circulation for the first quarter of 1868 was $90,000, discounts $132,000, surplus funds $6,000, profit and loss $13,500 ; ex change sales for 1867-8, $950,000. The bank has nine stockholders. The Citizens' National Bank was organ ized November 28th, 1864, with $200,000 capital, Isaiah Mansur, president, Asa G. Pettibone, cashier, and began business short ly after at No. 3 West Washington street. It was consolidated December 1st, 1865, with the Fourth National Bank, Isaiah Mansur being elected president, and Joseph R. Haugh, assistant cashier of the combined corporation, which retained the name of Cit izens' National Bank, and the capital in creased to $300,000. It was removed to No. 2 East Washington street November 20th, 1866. Joseph R. Haugh was elected cashier in January, 1866. Circulation June, 1868, $270,000, deposits $206,000, discounts $338,- 000, profit and loss $24,000, surplus fund $35,000 ; exchange sales in 1867, $1,067,- 000. The Fourth National Bank was organ ized January 23d, 1865, with a capital of $100,000, Timothy R. Fletcher, president, Joseph R. Haugh, cashier, and began busi ness at No. 11 North Meridian street. It was merged and consolidated in December, 1865, with the Citizens' National Bank, as above stated, losing its separate existence. It is difficult to give with certainty the history of the different private banking en terprises of the city, some of which now vie in business and importance with the public organizations. So far as is known, the first private banking enterprise (though an in corporated company its banking privileges were at first taken advantage of only by the secretary, Mr. Gregg,) was the Indianapolis Insurance Company, chartered February 8th, 1836, with $200,000 capital, and with insurance and favorable banking powers. It began operations in April, and for some years did considerable business in insurance and banking, but gradnally declined, and suspended active operations about 1840. It was reorganized by Defrees, Morris and others in 1852 or 3, and continued till 1858 or 9, when it again suspended. In 1865 the stock was purchased, a new company organ ized, business resumed, and the capital in creased to $500,000. The old Branch Bank building was bought in 1867. It now does an insurance and banking business. Its dis counts in the bank department for the first quarter of 1868 were $99,220, deposits $159,647 ; exchange sales for fractional quarter in 1868, $67,884 ; average amount of discounted paper held during fractional quarter of 1868, $216,519. John Wood, exchange broker and bank er, began business in 1838 and continued till September, 1841, when he failed, caus ing considerable loss to the community from the shinplaster notes which he had issued, together with those of other equally respon sible parties, that he had circulated. He soon after left this section. E. S. Alvord & Co. did a banking busi ness from January, 1839, to 1843, but noth ing can now be stated as to its extent or character. S. A. Fletcher, Sen., opened an exchange office in 1839 in a one-story frame shed next to Wolfram & Rommel's saddle shop, at the present No. 8 East Washington street, con tinuing there till 1850. when he moved to the room now occupied by Raschig's cigar store, and from thence in December, 1852, to the present bank, 30 East Washington street, then just built. Timothy R. Fletcher was a partner from 1839 to 1858, when he retired. On the 1st of June, 1864, S. A. Fletcher, Jr., and F. M. Churchman, be came partners, S. A. Fletcher, Sen., retiring from the firm. On the 1st of January, 1868, F. M. Churchman and S. A. Fletcher, Jr., dissolved, S. A. Fletcher, Jr., retiring from, and S. A. Fletcher, Sen., re-entering the firm. The bank has done a very lucrative business since its origin, increasing its capi tal from $3,000 in 1839 to $200,000 in 1868, and is now the leading privatebank, doing the heaviest banking business in the 30 LOGAN'S HISTORY OF city. The deposits for the first quarter of 1868 were $635,000, discounts $560,000; exchange sales in 1867, $13,228,000. Before the expiration of the old State Bank charter, Calvin Fletcher, Sen., and Thomas H. Sharpe, who had long been the president and cashier of the Branch at this point, started the Indianapols Branch Bank ing Company on the 1st of January, 1857, at the south-west corner of Washington and Pennsylvania streets, where the bank has ever since been located. As the capital of the old Branch was diminished and its bus iness closed, the capital of the Banking Company was increased, and it has done a large and lucrative business, second only if not equal to S. A. Fletcher & Co. Calvin Fletcher, Sen., died May 26th, 1866, and his interest in the bank descended to his sons, Ingram and Albert Fletcher. The capital of the bank is $200,000. The dis counts for the first quarter of 1868 were $500,000, deposits $500,000 ; exchange sales in 1867, $3,147,280. , Alfred and John C. S. Harrison started an exchange office in May, 1854, in the second-story room of the Johnson building, remaining there till August, 1855, when the adjoining bank building was completed and the bank removed there, where it has since remained. No changes have occurred in its ownership since its origin. S. W. Wat son is cashier. For the first quarter of 1868 the capital was $100,000, discounts $188,- 000, deposits $227,347 ; exchange sales in 1867, $2,140,000. The Indiana Banking Company, with seven partners, F. A. W. Davis, president, W. W. Woollen, cashier, was organized March 1st, 1865, with a capital of $100,000, and began business in Vance's building, corner Wash ington street and Virginia avenue, March 14th, 1865, where the bank remained till May 16th, 1867, when removed to 28 East Washington street. No changes in organ ization or amount of capital have since been made. The discounts for the first quarter of 18(38 were $394,540, deposits $380,274 ; exchange sales in 1867, $3,000,000. J. B; Ritzinger opened a savings bank the 26th of March, 1868, at 38 East Washing ton street, J. B. Ritzinger, proprietor, A. W. Ritzinger, cashier ; capital $50,000. Dunlevy, Haire & Co., brokers, began business in Blake's Commercial Row in February, 1856, and continued here for a year or two. They were agents of the Cin cinnati banks, and bankers, to run our State and free banks for gold, and within three months afterward had returned $2,000,000 currency for redemption. This action on their pari made them and their principals at Cincinnati very unpopular, and produced the commercial convention of 1856. But few failures of banks or bankers have occurred here, the following list comprising about all that have happened : John Wood's bank, established in 1839, failed in 1841, as before stated. In the spring of 1852 John Woolley & Co. began a private bank in a one-story frame, where No. 4 Blackford's block is now, remaining there till the establishment was merged in the Bank of the Capitol in May, 1853, and moved to Dunlop's build ing, and subsequently to No. 8 East Wash ington street. The failure of that bank has already been mentioned. It produced a run on the other banks, resulting two days after in the failure of the savings bank. William Robson, A. L. Voorhees and others started a savings bank in 1854 in the corner room of Odd Fellows Hall, Robson and Voorhees being successively the presi dents, and Joseph R. Robinson cashier. Robinson became proprietor in 1857, and in the panic following the failure of the Bank of the Capitol was compelled to suspend payment September 17th, 1857, owing his depositors $15,000. The most if not all of this was paid by the receiver in April, 1858. In the fall of 1862 Kilby Ferguson start ed the Merchants' Bank at No. 2 North Pennsylvania street, K. Ferguson, proprie tor, G. R. Gosney, cashier, and continued business there till August, 1863, when by reason of unfortunate gold speculations he was compelled to suspend payment. The liabilities have lately been settled. In the spring of 1856 G. S. Hamer start ed an exchange office in the basement of the American House, where shaving was close ly done and shinplaster notes circulated, but the enterprising financier was arrested in November for passing counterfeit money, and shortly after disappeared. No effort has hitherto been made to ascer tain the extent of the dry goods and grocery trade here. The exchange sales by the banks in 1867, amounting to $34,614,180, may give an approximate measurement for that year, but a large additional sum should be added for currency transmitted by ex press. It may be safe to estimate this sum at $2,884,515, one-twelfth of the total, and by adding this we get $37,498,695 as the approximate importations of groceries and dry goods in 1867, and the trade has rap idly increased in 1868. A number of railways were chartered and re-chartered in 1833-4-5, and efforts made to build them. Government surveyors ran the lines from Lawrenceburgh, Madison and Lafayette to this point, and from Co lumbus to Jeffersonville, in August, 1835. The first railroad meeting ever held here was on March 24th, 1834, to secure sub scriptions on the Lawrenceburgh line, from INDIANAPOLIS FROM 1818. 31 individuals and from the county commis sioners. The first meeting of the Whig party by that name, was held at the court house May 17th, Robert Brenton, president. John Ho- bart, Hiram Brown, Wm. Quarles, and John H. Scott were the speakers. A meeting was held at the court house June 9th to devise means for the suppres sion of gambling. Resolutions were adopt ed, and prosecutions threatened unless the gamblers left. Meetings of a similar char acter were held in subsequent years, and an association formed to suppress the vice, Another raid was made in August, 1835, on the gamblers. The Indianapolis Brewery, the first one in the place, was started this year near the canal, on Maryland street, by Young & Wernwag. A ropewalk was started on Market street, east of the market house. The pension agency was removed here from Corydon in January. 18 35. The State House being nearly completed, the Assembly, February 7th, di rected the State treasurer to insure it, and to buy twenty fire-buckets, and ladders to reach the roof, and if the citizens subscribed half the cost of an engine, to subscribe the balance for the State. A citizens' meeting was held on February 12th. The old fire- bucket company reorganized as the Marion Fire and Hose and Protection Company. The trustees were called on by resolution to subscribe the money for the engine, and levy a fire and public well tax. Caleb Scudder was chosen captain of the company. The trustees levied the tax, and subscrip tions were also made by individuals ; the State furnished her quota, and in the sum mer of 1835 the old Marion, a box, hand brake engine, was bought in Philadelphia for about $1,800, and duly received here in September. A one-story frame house was first built for it by the State, in 1836, but on the 6th of February, 1837, a two-story frame house was ordered to be built on the north side of the Circle, and was erected during the summer. It was occupied as an engine house and council chamber till the summer of 1851, when it was burned and the records of the town were destroyed with the house. On the 20th of February, 1838, the Marion Fire Company was incorporated. In the spring of 1840, the Good Intent, a box, hand -brake engine, was bought in Philadelphia, and used for a time by the Marion company with the old Marion, but in 1841 the company was divided, and the Independent Relief Company was formed and took the Good Intent. After the burn ing of the Marion house on the circle, a brick house was built in 1855-6, at the cor ner of Massachusetts avenue and New York street, and the Marion was located there. The company disbanded in October, 1859, during the trouble preceding the introduc tion of the paid department, but re-entered the service in November, and was finally disbanded February, 1860. The old engine was used by the company till July, 1858, when a new, powerful side hand-brake en gine was purchased by the council and giv en to the company. This machine was sold in April, 1860, to the town of Peru for $2,130. The Independent Relief Fire and Hose Company was formed and incorporated with peculiar privileges in 1841, taking the Good Intent and using it till November, 1849, when it was given to the Western Liberties Company and a row-boat engine was bought by subscription and money realized from fairs, and used till August, 1858. The com pany became dissatisfied with it, and bought (aided by the city,) a powerful hand-brake engine at that time, which they used till they disbanded in November, 1859. Diffi culty ensued between the company and the city authorities as to the ownership Of the engines and other property, but in Februa ry, 1860, they surrendered everything to the city except the old row-boat engine, which was broken up and the materials sold in April, 1860, and the company finally dis solved. Their engine house during the greater portion of their existence was in Hubbard's block, on Meridian street. The Western Liberties Company was formed in November, 1849, taking the old Good Intent, and occupying an old frame house at the fork of Washington street and the National road, near the race, using a large iron triangle for a bell, but they moved in 1857 to the house now used by the steam engine No. 1, west of the canal. In April, 1857, a new hand-brake engine, the Indiana, was bought for them, and used till November, 1859, when the company was "disbanded, and the steam engine No. 1 afterward stationed, in their house. The Indiana was afterward sold. The Invincibles, a company mostly com posed of Germans, was formed in May, 1852, in the first ward, and the Victory, a small hand-brake engine, procured shortly afterward, and used by them till March, 1857, when the Conqueror, a fine hand brake engine, was bought and used by them till August, 1859, when the company dis banded and surrendered its property to the city. The house of this company, built in 1854-5, just north of Washington on New Jersey street, is now occupied by the hook and ladder company. The company was large, prompt and effective, and during its existence made several trips to other cities. After the new engine was bought the Vic- 32 LOGAN'S HISTORY OF tory was used by a company of boys. After the first paid department was organized, the Invincible company was re-organized as a part of it, and the Conqueror continued in use till the summer of 1860, when the com pany was finally disbanded, and the engine sold shortly after to the town of Ft. Wayne, The Union Company, No. 5, was organ ized in 1855, and a house built on South street for it in 1856, and in April of that year the '_' Spirit of 7 & 6," a Jeffers hand brake engine was bought and used by the company till November, 1859, when the company was disbanded and surrenderedjits apparatus to the city. Some effort was af terward made to re-organize the company under the paid department, but without sue cess. The engine was sold at $600 in Octo ber, 1860, as part pay for the steam engine No. 3, which was subsequently stationed in the Union house. The Rover Fire Company was formed in the third and fourth wards in March, 1858. A house was secured for them, one of the old engines assigned to them, and steps tak en to purchase an engine, but before any thing was done the approaching change of system became evident, and the company was disbanded in June, 1859, and the house sold in 1860. Hose companies were simul taneously formed for each of the foregoing fire companies, and the necessary hose, reels and other apparatus furnished to them. A hook and ladder company was formed in 1843, as a part of the old volunteer de partment, and the necessary wagon, ladders, ropes, hooks, axes and buckets procured. The company continued its organization till disbanded with the rest of the department November 14th, 1859, but was re-organized as a part of the paid department, and still continues in service, occupying the old In vincible house on North New Jersey street. The Young America Hook and Ladder Company was formed in May, 1858, and got their wagon and apparatus in June, re maining in service till disbanded in Novem ber, 1859. In December, 1849, a number of boys formed the "O K Bucket Company," and procured a wagon and the old ladders aud leather fire-buckets which belonged to the State and private citizens, and to the Indianapolis Fire Company in the earliest organization of the department. The coun cil subsequently gave them a new wagon and buckets, and provided a house for them. They were effective — generally get ting the first water on fires — until they dis banded in 1854. The company was revived in 1855, but disbanded finally in 1856, the boys taking the Victory formerly used by the Invincibles. Under the volunteer system each company was independent, havin*g its president, sec retary and messenger for ordinary business, and its chief and assistant engine directors, pipemen, hosemen and brakemen for serv ice. The corporate authorities exercised little control over the firemen until after the city charter in 1847, and not much then till 1853, when the office of chief fire engineer was created and rules prescribed for the government of the department. Joseph Little was chosen first chief May 6th, 1853. His successors since that date have been Ja cob B. Fitler, elected 1854 ; Chas.W. Purcell, 1855 ; Andrew Wallace, 1856 ; Joseph W. Davis, 1858 ; John E. Foudray, 1859 ; and under the paid department, Joseph W. Da vis, 1859 ; Charles Richmann, 1863 ; Geo. W. Buchanan, 1867 ; Charles Richmann, May, 1868. The volunteer system worked well till 1857. The rivalry between the companies produced good results ; but the organization of the fire association in 1856, while render ing the department more efficient, also made it a political machine and increased the de mands on the treasury. Conflicts and jeal ousies gradually arose between the compa nies, and . on the choice of J. W. Davis as chief engineer in May, 1858, disputes arose as to the fairness of his election and man agement. The dissension impaired the effi ciency of the organization, and the trouble was not entirely healed the next year under Foudray. It broke out afresh in August, 1859, on the proposition to substitute a paid department, which was earnestly advocated by Davis. The Invincibles disbanded in August, 1859, the Marions and Westerns in October, the Relief, Rover and Union in November, and the city was left for a short time without a fire organization. The Mar ions re-entered the service in November, but finally disbanded in February, 1860. The volunteer department in the spring of 1859 included six engine and six hose com panies, with about four hundred and eighty men ; two hook and ladder companies, with about one hundred men ; one chief and two assistant engineers ; seven houses, and about seven thousand feet of hose. It was evident that a change would have to be made in consequence of the dissension arising over the election of engineer in May, 1858, and on account of the rapidly-increas ing expense of the system. Fire alarms were very frequent, and the companies were charged with their origin. The council, in August, 1859, declared it inexpedient to re organize the volunteer department. The fire committee reported, September 4th, in favor of a paid system, and the purchase of a third-class steam engine, and selling the old Relief and Good Intent engines. A Latta steam engine was exhibited here Sep tember 23d-4th at the county fair, and tried INDIANAPOLIS FROM 1818. 33 at the Palmer House cistern before the com mittee. A Lee & Lamed engine was also brought here and tried October 15th and 22d, at the canal. It was determined to buy one of the Lee & Lamed machines, and on the 30th of March, 1860, it was received and stationed at the Western engine house. On the 14th of November,_ 1859, the old volunteer department was disbanded by or dinance, and a paid department, consisting of one steam and two hand engines, and a hook and ladder company, was authorized, and J. W. Davis made chief engineer at a salary of $300. C. Richmann and W. Sher wood were made captains of the two hand engine companies, W. W. Darnell of the hook and ladder company, and Frank Gla zier engineer of the steamer. Some diffi culty was experienced informing the hand companies on account of the general oppo sition to the chief engineer, but the force was fully organized by January, 1860. The engineer was ordered to sell the old and surplus apparatus. The Marion engine was sold in April, 1860, to Peru ; the Union in October to the Seneca Falls Company ; the Conqueror in February, 1861, and the re mainder since that period, the last one be ing sold within the last year. In August, 1860, a third-class Latta en gine was bought, arriving here in October, and was stationed at the old Marion house. A Seneca Falls engine was exhibited at the State fair, and tried October 22d before a committee of the council in competition with the other engines, the result being that the council purchased it at $3,500, giving the old Union at $600 in part pay, and sta tioned it at the Union house on South street. Frank Glazier was appointed engineer of the No. 1, Charles Curtis of the No. 2, and Daniel Glazier of the No. 3. Hosemen and pipemen were also appointed, and but few changes have since been made in the force. After seven years' trial of the three engines, the council in 1867 purchased an additional Seneca Falls machine, No. 4, which was re ceived and put in service in December, and the No. 3 sent back for repairs. These were completed and the engine returned in March, 1868, the whole cost of the new engine and the repairs on the old one being about $6,500. The Latta engine was then relieved from service for repairs, and the Lee & Larned will be repaired in its turn. The department is now in an efficient state. All the horses, hose, feels and other appar atus have been provided by the council For some years after the organization of the paid department no central alarm existed, but in the spring of 1863 an alarm tower and bell was placed in the rear of Glenns' block, and connected by wires and pulleys the building. Two watchmen have since been employed, giving the locality of the fire by striking the number of the ward. In February, 1868, a fire-alarm telegraph was adopted, and the wires, boxes and fixtures completed and put in operation by the end of April, at a cost of about $6,000. During the existence of the first bucket fire company the dependence for water was wholly on private wells. After the Marion and Good Intent engines were bought a few large public wells were dug in the central part of town. The first cisterns (two in number, holding three hundred barrels each,) were built by the trustee government in the spring of 1840, but it was not till Oc tober, 1852, when a cistern tax was ordered by special election, that any number of cis terns were built. Sixteen were constructed by the close of 1853, and since that date fifty two, ranging from three hundred to eighteen hundred barrels, have been built in various quarters of the city, and though the supply is still inadequate, the protection is ample against all ordinary fires. In the spring of 1868 $300 were appropriated to bore an ar tesian well to test the project for supplying cisterns from underneath the surface. At present they are filled from wells, and the creek and canal by the engines, or by a steam pump, built for the purpose in 1864, at a cost of about $1,000. Though so largely built of wood, this city has been remarkably fortunate in re gard to fires. The streets are so wide, and the department has been so prompt, that fires rarely go beyond the houses in which they originate.- As the present buildings are replaced by brick, stone or iron struc tures, with fire-proof walls and roofs, the immunity from destructive conflagrations will be still greater. The ordinary, rates of insurance are too high for this city, and our people are now helping to insure property in cities like Chicago, where more loss is frequently suffered in a single fire than oc curs here in a year. The State Board of Agriculture was char tered in February, 1835, Jas. Blake, Larkin Simms, John Owen and M. M. Henkle, di rectors ; James Blake, president, M. M. Henkle, secretary. Premiums were offered April 28th for essays on specified subjects, and rules adopted for organizing county so cieties. The first State agricultural conven tion met December 14th, 1835, in Repre sentatives' Hall, and several annual meetings were afterwards held, but the enterprise died in a few years. Meetings were held at the court house June 6th and 27th, to form a county agricultural society under the State Board rules. N. B. Palmer was pres ident, D. Maguire, secretary. Subscriptions with the watchmen's station on the tower of | were made for premiums, and the Board of (_) 34 HISTORY OF Justices also appropriated fifty dollars. The first fair was held October 30-1 in the court house yard. One hundred and eighty-four dollars were awarded in premiums. Much interest was manifested. Four hundred dollars were subscribed for the next fair. Annual fairs were held by the society for two or three years. In the fall the papers said much im provement was going on. Property had doubled in value in two years, and business lots on Washington street were selling at fifty, sixty-two and seventy-five dollars per front foot. The Benevolent Society was formed No vember, 1835, with a president, secretary, treasurer, depository and visitors, and has been active and efficient to the present date Its system has always been the same, and prevents street begging. Funds and cloth ing are collected in specified districts in the fall by visitors, who deposit the same with the officers, and who also ascertain and re port all cases needing aid. Written orders for money, clothes or provisions are given to applicants, and transient cases are cared for by a special committee. The society has been sustained by private contributions, the city and township authorities furnishing wood only when needed. Mr. James Blake has been the president for many years, and much of the good effected by the enterprize has been due to his zeal and energy. The Young Men's Literary Society, de signed for debate, composition and general mental improvement, was formed in 1835, and continued its meetings for twelve or fif teen years. It was incorporated in April, 1847, under the general law, collected considerable library, and from 1843 to 1848 gave each winter a series of lectures by its members, and others from abroad. It was the successor here of the Indianapolis Ath eneum, and th. precursor of the lecture so cieties of the present day. The winter of 1834-5 had been cold and protracted. The spring was backward. More rain fell in May and June than in any season before for ten years, and at Fort Wayne ten inches of water fell in two hours. the storm being limited to a small space. This statement was made by Jesse L. Wil liams, State engineer on the Wabash canal. There was a hard frost on the morning of July 1st, followed by a hot and dry season, closing on the night of August 18th in a tornado of wind and rain, unroofing houses, destroying fences, timber and crops, and killing horses, cattle and hogs. The follow ing winter lasted till April. 18 3 6. The want of natural channels for trade had prompted many improvement schemes in past years, and at an early day the Legislature had given $100,000 for opening roads, had often asked aid to im prove the rivers, and had chartered many railways. From various causes these ex penditures and efforts had effected little. With increasing resources the demand for greater facilities increased. The National road gave an impetus to other projects of more doubtful utility. A pressure from all sides was brought to bear on the Assembly, and on the 26th of January, 1836, the in ternal improvement bill was passed. The State not only undertook several great works, but extended aid to others under pri vate companies. The act was greeted with rejoicing. Bonfires and illuminations marked the spread of the news. Our citi zens were especially elated, for several of the works terminated or crossed at this point, and more than one outlet would ex ist to the world. A general illumination took place here on the night of January 16th, after the passage of the bill had be come a certainty. The bill at once im proved the prospects of the town. Property rose in price rapidly, new houses were built, the settled limits extended westward, me chanics were busy, merchants sold large stocks, money was plenty, and every one prosperous. This continued nearly three years, when funds gave out, public works stopped, trade ceased, property declined, la borers went elsewhere, and ruin stared every one in the face. The hard times of 1839-42 were sorely felt. The leading bus iness men were most involved, and for years their lives were struggles to save something from the wreck. The forbearance of cred itors alone saved them from utter poverty. The bankrupt act of 1841 afforded relief to the whole country, easing the general dis tress, and enabling many to get another start. From this time till 1847 the town remained a, dull country village, with so unfavorable an experience of internal im provements that our capitalists subsequently kept out of them or aided them but little. Under the internal improvement system the central canal, from the Wabash to Ev- ansville, together with several railroads from various points, had been intended to centre here. All were abandoned in 1839, after much work had been done. The Madison railroad had been completed nearly to Ver non and graded to Columbus. It was oper ated by the State till 1843, then surrendered to a company, and finally finished in Octo ber, 1847. Before competing lines reduced its traffic it made more money than any road in the country. The State was cheated out of her interest in the road, and the road itself, after losing business and importance, was finally bought and operated by the Jef- fersonville line. INDIANAPOLIS FROM 1818. 35 The canal was nearly done when aban doned ; $1,600,000 had been expended, and a comparatively small sum would have completed it from Noblesville to Martins ville. It was begun in October, 1-836, work being prosecuted simultaneously along its line by gangs of Irishmen, whose disputes with spade and shillelah gave animation to their encampments. A great debate of this kind occurred in 1838 near town, between the Corkonians and fardowners, several hundred disputants being engaged, and the discussion occupying the greater part of the day. The sections to Noblesville and Mar tinsville were nearly ready, and that to Broad Ripple was finished late in Novem ber, 1838, and opened for use June 21th 1839, with an excursion by boats to Broad Ripple in July. Considerable preparations were made for traffic on it. Several freight and passenger boats were built, and flour, timber, grain, &c, were brought from Broad Ripple and above. The mill sites here were leased June 11th, 1838, and one wool en, one cotton, two paper, one oil, two grist and two saw mills built shortly afterward. The power proved less than was promised, the canal not having fall enough to cause a free flow of water, but the mills went to work, and with others since built have greatly benefitted the place. The millers were always complaining of scant water and much moss ; the people grumbled when the water was drawn off to clean the bed ; and the Assembly, wearied by the incessant complaint, January 19th, 1850, ordered the canal to be sold. It was soon after sold to persons who were chartered as a company in February, 1851. In April the company sold to Gould & Jackson, who sold in Octo ber, 1851, to "The Central Canal, Hydrau lic Waterworks and Manufacturing Com pany." This company sold to another company in 1859, who now rent out the power. For years after the first sale it was regarded as a nuisance, and propositions to fill it up were seriously considered in the council, both in 1855 and 1858, but having lately been kept in better order the opposi tion has measurably abated. It was dry for months in 1847, from the breaking of the banks and acqueduct, and in 1866-7 from the breaking of the feeder dam at Broad Ripple. It now furnishes mill power and transportation for wood and logs. The company owning it lately sued for the pos session of a part of the military park, on the ground that it passed at the sale as an appurtenance of the canal. The town having been specially incorpo rated in February by the Assembly, the new board pf trustees was elected under the act in. April, and the officers of the old board settled to April 1st, 1836. The treas urer's report showed $1,610 receipts for the year, and $1,150 of this sum had been ex pended for the Marion engine and in dig ging five public wells, and other fire de partment expenses. A balance of $124 was turned over to the new government. The new board passed ordinances regulating markets, ordering the streets to be opened, and prohibiting riots, drunkenness, horse- racing and indecent language on the streets. The work on the National road in the last few years had attracted many men of bad character and habits to this point. These, banded together under a leader of great size and strength, were long known as "the chain gang," and kept the town in a half subjugated state. Assaults were often committed, citizens threatened and insulted, and petty outrages perpetrated, until at last a meeting was called March 9th at the court house to take the matter under advisement. Harrod Newland, a revolutionary soldier, was chosen president and made a radical speech against the gang. Resolutions were adopted to abate the nuisance. The citizens resolved to elect trustees and officers who would see the ordinances enforced, and pledged themselves to assist them. The determined stand taken somewhat awed the gang, and they became less bold in their demonstrations. At the camp-meeting in August on the military grounds, the leader made some disturbance and was knocked down and subjugated by Rev. James Hav ens, the preacher in charge, and shortly af terward was also soundly whipped by Sam uel Merrill. These defeats broke his pres tige, the gang was demoralized, and most of them left the town or ceased their lawless conduct. The second homicide here occurred April 27th, Zachariah Collins being killed by Ar nold Lashly. The county agricultural so ciety held its second fair at the court house October 7th and 8th. C. Fletcher delivered an address, stating that 1,300,000 bushels of corn had been raised this year on the thir teen hundred farms in the county. Luke Munsell copyrighted a map of the town May 30th, and Wm. Sullivan published a map of the town in October. A great camp meeting was held on the military ground August 25-30, under James Havens and John C. Smith. One hundred and thirty experienced religion. Professor C. P. Bron- son [died in New York, April, 1868,] gave the first lecture here on elocution, August 30th. Hiram Devinny began the manufac ture of mattrasses, oushions and carpets here in October. The new Washington Hall, a three-story brick hotel, built by a company in 1836-7, on the site of the old frame Washington Hall, at a cost of $30,000, was opened by E. 36 HISTORY OF Browning November 16th, and kept by him till March 15th, 1851. It was then one of the largest and best western hotels, had a high reputation, and was the Whig head quarters for its entire existence. It was damaged by fire $3,000 in February, 1843, and came near burning up. Several at tempts were made to bum it in May and June, 1848. It was sold to F. Wright in March, 1851, was subsequently known as the Wright House, was successively kept by Henry Achey, Robert Browning, Burg ess & Townley, W. J. Elliott, Louis Eppin- ger and others, and was bought in March and remodeled in the summer of 1859 by the Glenns, and is now known as Glenns' block, the lower story being used as business rooms, and the upper by the council, city officers and police, with the fire tower and alarm on the roof. A very brief mention may be given here of the other leading ho tels at various dates in the history of the town and city. John McCormick was the first tavern and boarding-house keeper, beginning in the spring of 1820 on the river bank, in a little cabin with small pens around it as sleeping apartments for his guests. In 1821 Hawk ins, Carter and Nowland each opened " tav erns," — Nowland in a cabin on Washington street west of the canal. He shortly after died, and his widow, Elizabeth Nowland. in 1823 opened a boarding-house where Browning's drug store is now, continuing there for many years. Carter's " Rosebush Tavern," a two-story ceiled frame, eighteen by twenty feet, built in 1821-2, at 40 West Washington street, was occupied by him till 1823. It was afterward moved near the ca nal, and then near the soldiers' home, where it yet stands. Carter in 1823 built a two- story frame tavern opposite the court house, which was burned in 1825. Hawkins' " Eagle Tavern," a double log house, was built in the fall of 1821, where the Sentinel office is now, the logs being cut from the lot and street. It stood there till 1826 or 7, when it was replaced with a small two-story brick. Bazel Brown took it in 1829, and was succeeded by John Hare, John Cain and others. It was torn down in 1849 and replaced by the Capital House, which was opened by John Cain July 14th, 1850, and subsequently succeeded by D. D. Sloan and others, till March, 1857, when it was occu pied by the Sentinel as a printing office. It has since been used as a printing office and bindery, and for business rooms and of fices. It was the first four-story house built here. The successive hotels on this site were the Democratic headquarters ; and it was at the Capital House, as the most styl ish in the city, that Kossuth was lodged during his visit here in February, 1852 The Palmer House, a two-and-a-half-story brick, was built in 1840-1 by N. B. Palmer, on Washington and Illinois streets, and opened by John C. Parker in the summer of 1841. ItTvas enlarged and raised to four stories in 1856 by Dr. Barbour, the lessee. Parker, Barbour, J. D. Carmichael, D. Tut tle, C. W. Hall, B. Mason, and others have been its lessees. It has always kept the same name, was for some time the leading house, and has had a fair share of patron age. Little's Hotel, first built in 1834 or 5, on New Jersey and Washington streets, by John Little, and known then as Little's Sun Tavern, (from the sign, a blazing sun,) was originally a small two-story frame house. A three-story ell was added by M. and I. Little in 1847, and in 1851 the old frame was moved to East and Washington streets, and a three-story brick front building put in its place. It also has frequently changed lessees but has retained its old name. The Duncan House, a three-story brick, subse quently the Barker and the Ray House, was built in 1847 on South and Delaware streets, by R. B. Duncan. It did a good business for some years, but has long been mostly devoted to boarders. D. J. Barker, M. M. Ray and others have been lessees. The Carlisle House, a three^story frame, built by Dan Carlisle in 1848, on Washing ton street, west of the canal, has so often changed names and lessees that they are unknown. From its position it never did as good a business as other houses, and is now used as a brewery. The Morris House, a two-and-a-half-story brick, subsequently much enlarged and raised to four stories, and known as the " American," " Mason," and "Sherman House," was built by Thos. A. Morris in 1852-3, north of the Union depot, and has done a good business. It has often changed its lessees. The Bates House, a four-story brick, which has re tained its name though often changing les sees, was built on the comer of Washington and Illinois streets in 1852-3, by Harvey Bates, and has since been much enlarged, being the largest and leading hotel of the city, and doing perhaps the heaviest busi- The Oriental, a four-story brick built in 1856-7, and opened in June by Francis Costigan, has retained its name though often changing lessees, and has done a fair busi ness. The Tremont, afterward the Spencer House, a four-story brick, was built on the corner of Louisiana and Illinois streets, near the Union depot, in 1857, and has done a good business under J. W. Canan and oth ers, its lessees. The Farmers', now the Commercial Hotel, was built in 1856 by Henry Buehig, as a three-story brick, and enlarged and raised to four stories by F . A. Reitz in 1864. It has often changed lessees. INDIANAPOLIS FROM 1818. 37 The Macy House, a three-story brick, was built by David Macy, on Illinois and Mar ket streets, in 1857, and has since been oc cupied mostly by boarders. A large num ber of other less important houses exist, mostly built in the last ten years, but want of space forbids further mention of them. The Indianapolis Insurance Company was chartered for fifty years February 8th, 1836, with a capital of $200,000, in fifty dollar shares, and with very favorable banking privileges. It was organized March 16th With nine directors, D. Maguire being pres ident and C. Scudder, sec-etary, and began operations in April. It did a limited busi ness for many years, but finally suspended operations in 1859 or '60. In 1865 the old stock was purchased and a new company organized, with Wm. Henderson as presi dent and A. C. Jameson, secretary. The charter was amended December 20th, 1865, increasing the capital to $500,000 by vote of the stockholders, and making the company perpetual. The old Branch Bank building was purchased" for about $30,000 from the Sinking Fund, in April, 1867, and the of fice has since been located there. It is now doing a prosperous insurance and banking business, and ranks high among the home enterprises of the city. The other insurance companies since started may be briefly mentioned here. The Indiana Mutual Fire Insurance Com pany was "chartered January 30th, 1837, and amendments made to the act at several subsequent dates. It was organized in Feb ruary with James Blake, president, Charles W. Cady, secretary, and began, business in March in an office opposite the Washington Hall. It was prosperous and did a good business for two or three years, but from in herent defects in the plan, heavy losses and mismanagement, became involved, insolv ent, and finally suspended operations about fifteen years ago. The Indiana Fire Insurance Company was chartered in February, 1851, with a nominal capital of $300,000, and was organ ized May 1st, 1851, be ing president, secreta ry. It did a limited business, and sus pended operations after a few years. The German Mutual Fire Insurance Company was organized under the general law January 21st, 1854, and has successfully conducted its business to the present date. Its office was first located at 81 East Wash ington street, removed in 1859 to Judah's block, and in March, 1866, to 16 South Del aware street. Henry Busher, Julius Boet- ticher and A. Seidensticker have been the presidents, and A. Seidensticker, Valentine Butsch, Charles Volmar, Charles Balke, Adolph Miller and F. Ritzinger secretaries of the company. The risks assumed during the first year amounted to $136,000 ; its present risks to $3,146,000 ; cash and pre mium notes on hand in April, 1868, $284,- 487 ; losses in last year, $10,606 ; no unad justed liabilities. The Indiana Fire Insurance Company — a mutual company — was organized May 9th, 1862, ur.ier the general law of 1852, and the office has since been located in Odd Fellows Hall. Jonathan S. Harvey was chosen president, and W. T. Gibson, secre tary, at the time of the organization, and have served till the present time. The amount of risks assumed by the company during the first fiscal year was about $600,- 000, and the amount now incurred is be tween eight and nine millions. The Sinnissippi Mutual Insurance Com pany was organized November 18th, 1863, under the general law, with Elijah Good win, president, John R. Berry, secretary, and continued its operations till 1866. It advertised extensively, did a large business, incurred risks (many of dangerous charac ter) to the amount of millions of dollars, paid good salaries and commissions, and incurred heavy expenses and losses. As sessments were rapidly made on the premi um notes, and the company broke in 1866, passing into a receiver's hands, and its af fairs are now being closed up. The office of the company was at 35 East Market street. The Equitable Fire Insurance Company was organized on the mutual plan in Sep tember, 1 863, under the general law, W. A. Pellee, president, E. D. Olin, secretary, and its office opened in Odd Fellows Hall. The company was authorized by law in 1865 to change the character of its business substan tially to the stock system, dispensing with premium notes and receiving premiums in cash. Its operations were limited mostly to the centre and north of the State, but its expenses and losses compelled its suspension in January or February, 1868, and its af fairs are being adjusted by a receiver. The office was in Odd Fellows Hall. The Home Mutual Insurance Company was organized in April, 1864, under the general law, with J. C. Geisendorff, presi dent, J. B. Follett, secretary. Its business was conducted substantially on the same plan as that of the Equitable Company, but was mostly confined to risks in the city and vicinity. Not being very remunerative, and some losses having occurred, the com pany voluntarily suspended operations in June, 1868, and its business is being closed by a receiver appointed by the court. The office was most of the time at 64 East Wash ington street. 38 HISTORY OF The Farmers' and Merchants' Insurance Company was organized on the same gener al plan and under the same law as the two foregoing companies, on the 1st of April, 1864, with Ryland T. Brown as president, and A. J. Davis, secretary, and the office located in Blackford's block. It continued its operations, doing a moderate business in the central portion of the State, till the sum mer of 1867, when it suspended, and its af fairs are now in process of settlement. The Union Insurance Company was or ganized on the stock plan under the general law, in the spring of 1865, with a capital of $200,000, James M. Ray being president, and D. W. Grubbs, secretary. The office was first opened in Talbott & New's build ing on Pennsylvania street, but removed in 1867 to Dunlop's building. E. B. Martin dale was elected president, and George W. Dunn, secretary. The company continued its operations, doing a good business but meeting with considerable losses, till April, 1868, when it was determined to close its af fairs and dissolve the company. Its risks were accordingly re-insured in the Home Fire Insurance Company of New York, and the Union Company discontinued. The American Horse Insurance Com pany, (for security against loss by death, &c., of horses and other animals,) was or ganized under the general law in August, 1865, with a nominal capital of $100,000, Thomas B. McCarty being elected presi dent, J. F. Payne, secretary, and has con tinued its business to the present date, at the office in Vinton.' s block on Pennsylvania street. The Franklin Mutual Life Insurance Company was organized under the general law in July, 1866, James M. Ray being elected president, and D. W. Grubbs, secre tary, (since succeeded by E. P. Howe,) and has been very successful, as all life compa nies are that are carefully managed. It has done a good business and met with few loss es, standing well among such enterprises. The office was first opened at 19 North Me ridian street, but in April, 1868, the com pany purchased the old State Bank build ing, at the corner of Illinois street and Ken tucky t avenue, and removed to that point. Beside the foregoing home organizations, agencies, general and special, exist here for forty or fifty foreign life, accident and fire insurance companies. Most prominent among these is the* iEtna, of Hartford, which, under William Henderson and A. Abromet as agents, has done a very lucra tive business at this point, its net receipts here during the continuance of the agency, in excess of all expenses, amounting to nearly if not quite $200,000. The company in 1858-9 erected a four-story brick build ing on North Pennsylvania street as an of fice and for business purposes. 18 3 7. At a meeting held February 22d it was determined by the young men to form a military company, and at subsequent meetings a constitution, by-laws and uni form were adopted, members enrolled, and officers elected, Alexander W. Russell being captain, and serving till August, 1838, when Thomas A. Morris succeeded and command ed the company for years afterward. The uniform was gray with black velvet facings, and tall leather caps with pompons and brass mountings. The company was armed with muskets and drilled by Scott's tactics. It was the ,best organization in the State, at tracted much admiration on parade,, and existed till 1845. The " Graybacks " were the first independent company, and were specially incorporated February 14th, 1838. Their fine discipline and soldierly bearing aroused the long dormant military feeling, and other companies were shortly afterward formed in the town and vicinity. Promi nent among these were the " Arabs," or Marion Riflemen, under Captain Tom. Mc- Baker, uniformed in fringed hunting shirts, and armed with breech-loading rifles. In August, 1842, the independent companies formed a battalion and elected Hervey Brown Lieutenant-Colonel, and George W. Drum, Major. Frequent parades and sev eral encampments were held by the compa nies, and the military feeling was active till near the time of the Mexican war. Three companies of volunteers were raised here during that war, under Captains J. P. Drake, E. Lander and John McDougall. For two or three years after that war no or ganization existed. In 1852 the City Guards were formed under command of Governor Wallace, and in May, 1853, the Mechanic Rifles, but neither of these lived long. The Saint Louis National Guards passed through here in February, 1856, and thp ef fect produced was such that a similar organ ization was effected here on the 12th of March. The National Guards were uni formed in blue, with caps and white plumes, and were successively under the command of W. J. Elliott, Thomas A. Morris, George F. McGinnis, Irwin Harrison, J. M. Lord, and W. P. Noble. When the war occurred the company entered the eleventh regiment and closed its existence with the end of the war. An unsuccessful effort was afterward made to revive it. It was a well-drilled and officered organization, held frequent parades and a number of encampments, and supplied many competent officers to the army during the war. It revived the mili- INDIANAPOLIS FROM 1818. 39 tary spirit here when it was at the lowest ebb, and aided in keeping it alive until the war demonstrated the absolute necessity of such organizations in time of peace. George F. McGinnis, W. W. Darnell, J. H. Livsey and others commanded the company through the war. Shortly after it was first formed the National Guards Band was or ganized, and under different names and with some changes, still exists, holding a high rank among the musical organizations of the State. The City Greys and the City Greys Band were organized August 12th, 1857, and un der the successive command of W. J. Elli ott, E. Hartwell and others, attained a high state of discipline. It was uniformed in gray, wore bearskin shakos, and was armed like the Guards with muskets. It entered the eleventh regiment and closed its exist ence with the war, being commanded by R. S. Foster, S. W. Butler and Henry Kemper. The Greys Band, in March, 1859, during the Pike's Peak fever, started for that local ity, but turned off toward Santa Fe, and thence down through Mexico to Matamoras, and through Texas to New Orleans and home, receiving a public welcome here June 7th, 1860, after their fifteen months of wandering and hardship. The band en tered the service, though not as the old or ganization. The City Greys Artillery was organized in 1859 as an adjunct to that organization, under J. A. Colestock as captain, but the commander lost his arm not long after by a premature explosion of the gun, and the company was suspended. In July, 1858, the Marion Dragoons, Captain John Love, were organized, and for a year or two kept up their organization and occasional parades, but the difficulty of properly drilling and keeping up a cavalry. company prevented their continued exist ence. The Montgomery Guards visited the city on the 21st of February, 1860, and with our city companies paraded on the 22d. In the afternoon they gave a fancy drill by drum beat, in Zouave dress, near the Bates House, in presence of an immense crowd, and ex- eited great admiration. It was at once de termined to form a Zouave company here, and on the 1st of March the Independent Zouaves, Captain F. A. Shoup, were organ ized, uniformed as Zouaves, armed with sa bre-bayonet rifles, and persistently drilled. Shoup resigned in January, 1861, went south and joined the rebel army, in which he af terward became a brigadier general, and was noted as the first one on that side to propose using the negroes as soldiers in the rebel cause. The Independent Zouaves en tered the eleventh regiment and terminated their existence with the end of the war, be ing commanded by W. J. H. Robinson, F. Knefler and others. A military convention was held here June 27th, 1860, under the leadership of Captain Lewis Wallace, eleven companies being represented, and an encampment was determined on, to be held September 19th on the State military grounds. It was ac cordingly held September 19th-24th, the Greys, Guards, Zouaves, Montgomery Guards, Fort Harrison Guards, and Vigo Guards participating, General Love com manding, Captain Shoup Adjutant. The unfavorable weather prevented a large at tendance. The Zouave Cadets were organized in August, 1860, and the Zouave Guards, Cap tain John Fahnestock, in October. This company also entered the eleventh regi ment, and terminated its existence at the end of the war. The Cadets were in exist ence for a year or two after the war began under Captain George H. Marshall, and most of them entered the service singly as officers in various regiments subsequently organized. The news of the attack on Sumter was re ceived April 12th, and the next day recruit ing began. The Guards, Greys, Zouaves, and Zouave Guards at once filled up, and were all in camp by the 17th. Two reserve companies of National Guards were formed. Two companies of the Greys entered the service, leaving one reserve company at home. Two companies of the Independent Zouaves were in the eleventh regiment. The Zouave Guards left no reserve com pany. Besides these organizations an artil lery company was formed, and Home Guard companies in every ward. Several thous ands of men were raised here for the service during the war, without counting the gal lant City Regiment, twelve hundred strong, with its artillery and cavalry wings, raised here during the Morgan raid, or the one thousand "hundred daysers" at a later date in the struggle. The military record of the city during the war was a proud one, and her quotas were always filled, although by the remissness of the authorities in securing the proper credits, a draft was ordered early in 1865, and a debt of several hundred thousand dollars incurred for bounties to volunteers to fill requisitions that should never have been made. On the 4th of February, 1837, Calvin Fletcher and Thomas Johnson were ap pointed commissioners by the Assembly to receive subscriptions and drain the swamp north-east of town, which discharged its waters by two bayous through, the place. They proceeded to execute the work by cut ting a ditch west to Fall creek, south of and 40 HISTORY OF through the present fair grounds. During build the church on the north-west corner the flood of 1847 the banks of the drain broke and the water again came down the old channels, flooding the houses and alarm ing new comers. These bayou channels are now nearly obliterated by the street grades and filling of lots. On the 6th of February the Assembly authorized the Internal Im provement Board to use the half of square 50, which had been given to the town for market purposes in 1821, and in lieu there of to set off the north half of square 48 to the town, the town and the State to ex change deeds on the transfer. On the 4th of February the first carpenters' association was incorporated, and it shortly after limit ed a day's work to ten hours. The Episcopalians had met occasionally in 1835 for worship at the court house, as the services of a minister of that church could be secured, but in the winter of 1836 the meetings had been more frequent, and in March or April, 1837, a church was or ganized and Rev. James B. Britton chosen rector, preaching at the court house and seminary. Preparations were made for building in November, and on the 7th of May, 1838, the corner-stone of Christ Church was laid, a plain wooden Gothic structure, on the north-east corner of Circle and Meridian streets. The house was open ed for services November 18th, 1838. This building was used till 1857, when it was sold to the African Methodist church and removed to West Georgia street. A new stone church (the first in the city) was be gun in May, 1857, and completed in 1859, The spire yet remains unfinished. A peal of bells was placed in it in May, 1860, and taken out and replaced with a better one in September, 1860. A tasteful brick parson age was built near the church in 1857. Rev. J. B. Britton, S. R. Johnson, M. M Hunter, N. W. Camp, J. C. Talbott, H. Stringfellow, T. P. Holcomb, J. T. P. In graham have been rectors of this church. In 1865 the church divided, a part of the members forming St. Paul's church, and in the spring of 1867 the corner-stone of a large brick edifice was laid at the corner of New York and Illinois streets, with appropriate services. Rev. H. Stringfellow has been the rector to this date. This church has recently been completed and dedicated as the cathedral church of the diocese. Grace church, on Pennsylvania and St. Joseph streets, was built in 1863-4, M. V. Averill, rector. Several mission chapels of this de nomination have since been built in differ ent quarters of the city. The Evangelical Lutheran church was formed in the spring of 1837, and the first communion held May 14th, Rev. A. Reck being pastor. It was at first proposed to of University Square, and a lease was ob tained from the Assembly ; but the house, a small, plain brick, was commenced in the fall on the south side of Ohio street, between Pennsylvania and Meridian, and was torn down in 1852 and a new church built in 1853-4 on the south-west comer of New York and Alabama streets. The German Lutheran church was built in 1860-1 on East and Georgia streets, Rev. Charles Freke, pastor. The Indianapolis Female Institute was chartered at the session of 1836-7, and opened June 14th by Misses Mary J. and Harriet Axtell, in Sanders' building. It was subsequently removed to the upper rooms of the house opposite Washington Hall, and finally to a frame school-house on Pennsylvania street next the old Presbyter ian church. The first examinations were held April 30th, 1838, and the school sub sequently attained a high reputation, at tracting scholars from abroad. Miss Axtell was a faithful and competent teacher, held in grateful remembrance by her pupils, but her health failing the school was discontin ued in the fall of 1849, and she died at sea shortly after on her way to the West Indies. The Indianapolis High School, afterwards called the Franklin Institute, was opened on Washington street, opposite Washington Hall, October 25th, 1837, by G. Marston and Eliza Richmond. A frame school- house was built in the spring of 1838 on Circle street next the present high school building, and occupied by the school for four or five years. Marston left in 1839, being succeeded by Orlando Chester, who died in October, 1840, and was succeeded by John Wheeler, who taught until the school was discontinued. ln December, 1837, it was proposed to establish a State Female Seminary as the counterpart of the Bloomington College for males, and use the Governor's Circle as the college building, but the project was not executed. The In dianapolis Academy, under Josephus Cicero Worral, had been in existence from 1836, and continued for several years after this date. Worral was a man of considerable education but peculiar idiosyncracies, and his addresses to his scholars (often publish ed) excited much amusement on account of the flights of fancy, classical allusions, and stilted style in which he indulged. The first editorial convention in the State met May 29th in the town council chamber, twenty editors and publishers being present. John Douglass acted as president and John Dowling secretary. Fifty-two papers were then published in the State. An associa tion was formed, constitution adopted, and advertising rates agreed on. INDIANAPOLIS FROM 1818. 41 As the National Government was McAd- amizing the centre of Washington street, it was proposed in June that the trustees im prove the sidewalks, and steps were accord ingly taken to do so. The sidewalks as originally designed were fifteen feet wide on Washington and ten feet on other streets. At a subsequent date they were made twen ty feet on Washington and twelve feet on other streets ; and within the last ten years fifteen feet has been adopted as the standard width on the ninety-feet streets. The in creased width of the pavement on Washing ton street was bitterly opposed by the prop erty-holders on account of the increased ex pense entailed in their improvement. The first street improvements were begun in 1836-7. A great hail storm occurred on the 6th of June, many of the stones weighing three and four ounces, and measuring three inch es in length. Nearly all the windows in town were broken. The usual military and school celebration occurred on the Fourth of July, the exercises closing with a milita ry reception, and ball at night in the Gov ernor's Circle building. The Ladies' Mis sionary Society held the first fair here on the 31st of December, realizing $230 for the cause. Such fairs were afterward very fre quently held by various societies and for various objects. 183 8. The Assembly re-incorporated the town on the 17th of February, includ ing the whole of the donation, but limiting taxation for municipal purposes to the old plat. The town was divided into six wards, all east of Alabama street constituting the first ; thence west to Pennsylvania the sec ond ; thence to Meridian the third ; thence to Illinois the fourth ; thence to Mississippi the fifth ; thence west the sixth. One trus tee was to be elected by each ward, and a president by the whole town. They were to be freeholders, hold office one year, and constitute the common council, the presi dent and four members being a quorum. The president had a justice's jurisdiction, was to enforce all ordinances, and keep a docket. The marshal had a constable's au thority and was to keep the peace. The council met monthly, the members each re ceiving twelve dollars per annum. They had all necessary powers, to pass ordinances, levy taxes, (not over one-half per cent, on real property) improve streets, borrow mon ey, tax shows, saloons and groceries, regu late markets, guard against fires, &c. The assessment was to be made annually by June 1st, and collected by September 1st, The council was to elect a secretary, treas urer, collector, marshal, supervisor, market master, lister and assessor. The election under this act was held the last Saturday in 5 March, and resulted in the election of Jas. Morrison as president. In April and May the council passed ordinances governing the markets, regulating cases before the presi dent, licensing groceries, and improving sidewalks and streets. The summer and fall of 1838 was very sickly and many deaths took place. The first "steam foundry" in the town was start ed in January by Wood & Underhill, on Pennsylvania street, where the Second Pres byterian church now stands. The old steam mill was finally closed in February of this year and the machinery offered for sale, though not disposed of finally until a year or two afterward. Benjamin Orr opened the first ready-made clothing store here during this year. 183 9. On the 13th of February the Assembly directed the State officers to buy a residence for the Governor, and early in the spring Dr. Sanders' two-story brick dwelling, erected in the summer of 1836 on the north-west corner of Market and Illinois streets, was purchased and used as the offi cial residence till 1864. It was sold by or der of the Assembly in 1865, and a row of business rooms built along the Illinois street front of the lot. Three hundred and twenty-four votes were cast at the corporation election in March, N. B. Palmer being elected presi dent. At the meeting in April the public wells were ordered to be repaired, by-laws adopted for the government of the town offi cers, and the streets which were still fenced up ordered to be opened. The corporation receipts for the year ending March 27th were $7,012, the expenditures $6,874 ;. $3,- 850 of this sum was paid Elder, Colestock & Co., for building the west market house and adding to the east one ; $443 were paid M. Shea, sexton, for clearing and fencing the old graveyard ; $58 for printing, and $145 for street inprovements and gravel, The first revision of the town ordinances was made and published in July. In No vember $300 were appropriated to buy a new engine ; a committee was appointed to see if it could be bought for $600, and dona tions solicited for the purpose. An accurate survey of the donation this year showed a mistake in the original sur vey by which the title to eight acres, which had been laid off in lots and sold in 1831, was still in the general government. The Assembly memorialized Congress in Febru ary, 1840, stating the mistake and asking a donation of the eight acres. This was granted and the title quieted. The first municipal tax sale took place October 25th at Washington HaU,. by James Van Blaricum marshal and collector. A considerable number of sales were subse- 42 HISTORY OF quently made, but the records have since been lost. In November Mrs. Britton opened a fe male seminary near the foundry. This school— afterward known when under the care of Mrs. Johnson as the " St. Marys Seminary" — was subsequently removed to a building adjoining the Episcopal church, and for many years was quite prosperous. The first Thanksgiving proclamation was issued on the 4th of November by Governor Wallace, the day fixed on being the 28th. The Presbyterian church having divided in May, 1838, on the slavery and other questions, the church here was also divided, fifteen of the members forming the Second church November 19th, 1838, under Rev. J. H. Johnson. One or two calls were ex tended to pastors but declined, and in May, 1839, Rev. H. W. Beecher, then of Law renceburgh, was called, and began his min istrations July 31st. The congregation wor shiped in the seminary. In 1839-40 a frame church (the present high school building*) was erected at the north-west cor ner of Market and Circle streets, and occu pied by the congregation October 4th, 1840. Mr. Beecher remained till September 19th, 1847, and was succeeded by Rev. Clement E. Babb in July, 1848, who remained till January 1st, 1853. Rev. T. A. Mills was called as pastor January 1st, 1854, remain ing till February 9th, 1857. Rev. G. P. Tindall became pastor in August, 1857, and Rev. H. A. Edson in November, 1863. In November, 1851, twenty-four of the mem bers formed the Fourth Presbyterian Church, and erected a brick church in 1853-4 on Delaware and Market streets. In the spring of 1864 a new stone church, not yet fully completed, was begun on Ver mont and Pennsylvania streets, and is now nearly completed at a cost of about $100,- 000. It is the finest church building in the city. The chapel was occupied December 2d, 1867. The Fifth Presbyterian church is a colony from the Second, and their church was dedicated May 15th, 1864. The Olivet church is also a eolonv, dedicat ing their church October 20th, 1867. The old frame church was sold to the city for a high school building in the spring of 1867, and was last used as a church July 16th, 1867. 1840. Much political excitement oc curred this year, and the Whigs carried the municipal election in March for the first time, electing the trustees and town officers. The corporation receipts for the year 1839 amounted to $5,975, the expenditures to $4,753 ; $1,984 of this sum were spent on the market houses, $1,350 on streets and fridges, $197 on the fire department, $974 for salaries, and $244 for incidentals. The first cisterns, two in number, of three hundred barrels each, were ordered to be constructed in the spring of this year. The political excitement increased in in tensity as the elections approached, both parties holding monster conventions. A very large convention was held at Tippeca noe about the last of May, many persons at tending from this place. A great Whig convention was also held here on the 5th of October, and on the 14th of October the Democrats held a great meeting in the wal nut grove north of the Blind Asylum to welcome Richard M. Johnson, Vice Presi dent and reputed slayer of Tecumseh. He was received with due honors and addressed the convention. Colonel Johnson visited the town once or twice afterward on private business. One thousand three hundred and eighty-seven votes were cast in the township at the November election, Harrison receiv ing eight hundred and seventy-two, Van Buren five hundred and fifteen. The Indiana Horticultural Society was formed August 22d and continued active operations for several years, Henry Ward Beecher and James Blake being among its most prominent supporters. The annual Methodist conference met here October 21st, Bishop Soule presiding. 1841. In March, James Wood, civil engineer, made a profile of the streets by direction of the council to establish a uni form system of grades, to be followed in their future improvement. The profiile was filed with the authorities, adopted by the council April 8th, 1842, and has been fol lowed in nearly all the subsequent improve ments. The survey and profile cost $303. On the 10th of April a meeting was held to make arrangements for funeral services for President Harrison. The exercises took place on the 17th, Governor Bigger and Henry Ward Beecher delivering addresses. Business was suspended during the day, and the funeral procession was imposing. The 14th of May was observed throughout the country as a fast day for the death of the President. 1842. By the treasurer's report in March the corporation receipts for the past year amounted to $3,197, expenditures $2,- 957 ; $1,138 had been expended for street improvements and $767 for salaries. The county receipts from March 1st, 1841, to June 1st, 1842, were $9,942, expenditures $8,194. The salaries of the town officers for 1842 were as follows: Secretary $200, treasurer $100, marshal $100, supervisor $200, collector $200, assessor $75, market master $140, messenger of fire company $100. An effort was made in the fall to re peal the act of incorporation on account of INDIANAPOLIS FROM 1818. 43 the expenses attending the municipal gov eminent. On the 25th of April at two o'clock A. M., the town was startled by a heavy explosion, and on examination it was found that the grocery of Frederick Smith, a one-story frame house, where 93 East Washington street now is, had been blown up with powder, and further search revealed the body of Smith badly burned and wounded. He had attempted suicide during temporary insanity, sitting on the keg of powder and applying the match. The first daguerreotype saloon here was opened by T. W. Whitridge in July or Au gust. During the fall James Blake erected a mill and furnaces and attempted the man ufacture of syrup and sugar from corn stalks. This year was distinguished by the visits of two Presidential candidates, Van Buren and Clay. Mr. Van Buren arrived by stage on Saturday, the 11th of June, being received east of town by a procession com posed of citizens, firemen, and four military companies, and was escorted with due hon ors to the Palmer House, where he made a speech in reply to the welcoming address. He visited Governor Bigger at the State house, and held a reception in the evening. On Sunday he attended the Methodist and Second Presbyterian churches, and left on Monday by stage for Terre Haute, being upset near Plainfield while era route. Henry Clay arrived October 5th, attending a Whig convention in response to an invitation of the party. The crowd on that occasion was generally estimated at thirty thousand, and considering the facilities for travel, then and since, it has never since been equaled. The procession included many bands, many military companies, representatives of all trades and professions, and was nearly two hours passing a given point. It proceeded to a grove north of Governor Noble's house, where a great barbecue was spread for the assembled thousands. Mr. Clay spoke for two hours after dinner, and was followed by Governor Crittenden, Governor Metcalf and other Whig leaders. The festivities lasted three days, and included a grand military parade, and review by the Governor, a fine exhibition of fireworks and an agricultural fair. During this and several following years an excitement about mesmerism spread through the West. Lecturers went from point to point explaining the new science to the natives and giving experiments in illus tration. Many amusing scenes occurred in the trials made on the " subjects " by com mittees appointed by the audiences. 1843. Physicians and philanthropists had repeatedly called the attention of the Legislature to the condition of the insane, blind, and deaf and dumb persons in the State, suggesting steps for their education and maintenance ; and as early as January, 1839, the Assembly had memorialized Con gress asking a grant for that object, and on the 13th of February, 1839, the assessors were directed to ascertain and report the number of deaf-mutes in each county. The Governor was directed, January 31 st, 1 842, to correspond with the Governors of other States concerning the cost, construction and management of Insane Hospitals. Dr. John Evans delivered a lecture December 25th, 1842, before the Assembly on the treatment of insanity, and on the 13th of February, 1843, the Governor was directed to corres pond with superintendents of hospitals and procure plans to be submitted with his sug gestions at the next session. This was done, and a tax of one cent on the hundred dol lars was levied January 15th, 1844, for hos pital buildings. On the 13th of Jan., 1845, John Evans, Livingston Dunlap and James Blake were appointed commissioners to se lect a site of not more than two hundred acres. They chose the present site in the spring of 1845, and reported it, with a plan of the building, at the following session. On the 19th of January, 1846, they were ordered to begin the hospital according to the plan on the site, and sell hospital square 22, its proceeds, with $15,000 in addition, being appropriated to the building. The central portion of the hospital was begun in the summer of 1846 and finished in 1847, at a cost of about $75,000. The south wing was built in 1853-4, and the north wing several years afterward. Various additions, changes and repairs have also been made, and the house as finally completed has cost nearly if not quite $500,000, and is among the largest buildings in the West. It is sit uated on a quarter-section of land two miles west of the city, is from three to five stories in hight, with a basement, and' is about five hundred feet in length. It was first opened for the reception of patients in 1847, and has ever since been fully occupied. Dr. John Evans was its originator and first su perintendent. He resigned July 1st, 1848. R. J. Patterson, J. S. Athon, J. H. Wood- burn and W. J. Lockhart have since been the successive superintendents of the insti tution. The first stepts having been taken to pro vide for the insane, the Assembly, on the 13th of Februaiy, 1843, levied a two-mill tax to support the deaf mutes and build them an asylum. William Willard, a mute teacher from Ohio, arrived here in the spring of 1843 and opened a private school for mutes on the 1st of October, having six teen pupils during the first year. This 44 HISTORY OF school was adopted by tho State on the 15th of January, 1844, and the Governor, Treas urer and Secretary of State, with Henry Ward Beecher, Phineas D. Gurley, P. H. Jamison, L. Dunlap, James Morrison and Matthew Simpson appointed trustees, with instructions to rent a room and employ teachers. They rented the house on the south-west corner of Illinois and Maryland streets, and opened the school there October 1st, 1844. The Governor was also to receive proposals for site, &c. The Governor was authorized on the 15th of January, 1845, to appoint five trustees in place of the former board. He did so, and in the fall of 1846 the new board rented the Kinder building on East Washington street and removed the school there, where it remained until the completion of the Asylum in October, 1850. The institution was permanently located here January 9th, 1846, the trustees being directed to buy thirty acres near the city, $3,000 being appropriated therefor. They were subsequently directed to buy one hun dred acres in addition to instruct the pupils in agriculture. The site was bought east of the city in the summer of 1846 and the building begun in 1849 and finished by Oc tober, 1850, at a cost of about $30,000. It was rough-casted and completed in 1853 On its completion the school was removed there and has been prosperously managed ever since. Many mutes have received their entire education there and been fitted for active business pursuits. Prior to 1848 pupils who were able were required to pay tuition and board, but since then the educa tion and maintenance of all have been free. William Willard was the originator and first teacher of the school. James S. Brown was the first superintendent from 1845 to October, 1852, and since that date Dr. Thomas Mclntyre has been in charge of the institution. The insane and the deaf mutes being thus provided for, the blind were still neglected ; but during the session of 1844-5 pupils from the Kentucky Institution gave an exhibi tion before the Assembly with such success that a two-mill tax was at once ordered for the support and education of the blind James M. Ray, George W. Mears, and the 'Secretary, Treasurer and Auditor of State were appointed commissioners at the next session to expend the fund thus created in starting a school or maintaining pupils at the -Ohio or Kentucky institutions. They appointed William H. Churchman as lec turer to present the case to the people and to ascertain the number of blind in the State. On the 27th of January, 1847, G. W. Mears, J. M. Ray and Calvin Fletcher, were appointed commissioners to erect asy- 'tam buildings and arrange for a school, $5,000 being appropriated for a site, furni ture, &c. Mr. Fletcher declining to serve, Seton W. Norris was appointed trustee. Two blocks on North street were purchased for a site, a plan selected and the building commenced. The school was opened Octo ber 1st, 1847, in the building on the south west corner of Illinois and Maryland streets by Mr. W. H. Churchman, who had been appointed superintendent. Nine pupils were in attendance on the 4th, and thirty during the session. In September, 1848, the school was removed to a three-story brick building erected on the grounds and afterward used as a workshop. The asylum was commenced the same year and finished, with some changes of plan and details, in 1851, at a cost of $60,000, and the pupils and school at once removed to it. The sur rounding grounds have since been tastefully laid out and planted with trees and shrub bery. W. H. Churchman, G. W. Ames, W. C. Larrabee and James McWorkman have been superintendents of the institution. The asylums are creditable to the city and State, not only for extent, management and arrangement, but also that they were built when the State was heavily in debt and the people unprepared for the extra taxation necessary for their support. In February, 1843, a fire damaged the Washington Hall to the extent of $3,000, and seriously threatened its entire destruc tion. The weather was excessively cold, the water freezing as it fell, and the house was saved after several hours' hard work by the engine companies, aided by hundreds of citizens in passing buckets. The Millerite deldsion, which had some of the citizens among its adherents, created some excitement during the winter and spring. The belief in the approaching end of all things was strengthened by an earth quake on the 4th of January between eight and nine o'clock, lasting nearly a minute and sensibly shaking the buildings. It was also encouraged by the great comet which nightly flamed in the south-west during February and March, its train reaching across the sky like a destroying sword. The weather however was adverse, being cold and stormy during March and April, with deep and drifting snows, followed in May by heavy rains, filling the streams, sweeping off bridges, breaking the canals, and raising White river over the bottoms. The 22d of February and the 4th of July were celebrated by the military, four com panies participating, and the last anniver sary by the schools in the usual style. In the month of June R. Parmlee began mak ing pianos here, and continued the business two or three years. In November " The New York Company of Comedians " gave INDIANAPOLIS FROM 1818. 45 a series of concerts in Gaston's carriage shop on Washington west of Illinois street, each concert being succeeded by a theatrical rep resentation. John and Mary Powell, Sam. Lathrop, Mr. Wallace, Tom. Townley and others were the actors. The company had considerable merit and attracted good audi ences. During the season, which lasted for ten weeks, the noted tragedian, Augustus A. Adams, Mrs. Alexander Drake and Mr. Morris were the stars. This company was the third which performed here, Lind say's company having performed several years before, and Mr. and Mrs. Smith in 1823-4. The Indianapolis Female Collegiate In stitute, Miss Lesuer, principal, began in September in the Franklin Institute on Cir cle street, and continued two or three years. The Roberts Chapel Methodist church was built during this and the following year at a cost of eight or ten thousand dollars, on the corner of Market and Pennsylvania streets, under J. S. Bayless, the first pastor. The congregation worshiped in the court house until the completion of the church The present lot and building were sold in June, 1868, and steps are being taken to erect a larger and finer edifice at a cost of about $80,000, on the north-west corner of Vermont and Delaware streets. 1844. The Union Cemetery was laid out in April adjoining the old burying ground. In 1852 Messrs. Ray, Peck and Blake, laid out the ground north and east of this cemetery for burial purposes, and in 1860 the Greenlawn Cemetery, wast of the last-named ground and next the river and Terre Haute railroad, was added. A meeting was held on the 5th of August to make arrangements for the contemplated visit of Lewis Cass. He came on the 25th and was received with due honors and con ducted to the State military grounds, where a welcoming address was made by Governor Whitcomb, and a long speech made by Gen eral Cass in response. He was followed by Senator Hannegan and others. The pro cession and audience was large and enthusi astic. A reception was held for several hours at the Palmer House, and he left at six in the evening for Dayton. 1845. The Thespian Society, composed of young men of the town, gave a series of dramatic performances during July, August and September. They also performed dur ing September and October of the following year. Several of the performers evinced decided talent for the stage, and their efforts attracted good audiences. The usual celebrations occurred on the Fourth pf July, but the day was signalized by a riot, resulting in the murder of John Tucker, a negro, on Illinois street opposite the present site of the Bates House. Bal- lenger, the principal in the affray, made his escape. Nick Woods was sent to the peni tentiary, and the others were acquitted. Washington street was graded and grav eled in July. In August and September Seton W. Norris built the present Hubbard block, then the best . business house in the place. On the 16th of August John H. Ohr, Daniel B. Culley and David R. Elder, ap prentices in the Journal office, issued the first number of the Locomotive, and contin ued its publication weekly for three months. It was revived by them April 3d, 1847, and again issued for three months. Its size was seven by ten inches, and each three months' issue formed a volume. Douglass & Elder revived it January 1st, 1848, and issued it weekly from an office on South Meridian street in Hubbard's block, till July, 1861, when its publication was suspended and its subscription list transferred to the Sentinel. Its size when first issued by them was eight by thirteen inches, and after several en largements it was finally published on a sheet twenty-three by thirty-one inches. Elder & Harkness became proprietors March 30th, 1850, and continued such till its suspension. For a number of years it had the greatest circulation in the county, and published the letter-list. It was neutral in politics, and devoted to literary and news matters. The old Methodist church, erected in 1828-9 on Meridian and Circle streets, hav ing become unsafe from the cracking of the walls, was torn down and Wesley Chapel erected in this and the following year on its site. It has since been in constant use by Wesley Chapel charge, but will probably be sold this year and a finer and larger edifice will be built on the south-west corner of Meridian and New York streets. 18 4 6. The corporation receipts for the year ending March 31, amounted to $2,- 636. This had all been expended and a debt of $370 contracted. This debt caused some uneasiness to the citizens. The Mexican war began early in April, and the news was received here early in May. The Governor's proclamation call ing for volunteers appeared May 23d. Re cruiting at once began and a company was formed in June under captain J. P. Drake, and lieutenants John A. McDougall and Lewis Wallace, and marched to the rendez vous at New Albany. This company was attached to the first Indiana regiment under colonel Drake, and spent the year of its enlistment guarding stores in Matamoras. Two additional companies, under captains Edward Lander and John A. McDougall, were raised in May and September, 1847, 46 HISTORY OF and attached to the fourth and fifth regi ments. A number of recruits were also secured here for .he regular army. But little excitement existed here in regard to this war, and it was generally viewed from a party stand point. The Madison railroad depot was located this summer on the high ground south of Pogue's run, nearly half a mile from the settled portion of the town. The location caused much dissatisfaction, and the com pany was strongly urged to build its depot on Maryland street ; but, the location hav ing been finally determined on, the coun cil ordered the improvement of Pennsylva nia and Delaware streets across the low valley of the run, and the creek bed was straightened from Virginia avenue to Meri dian street by the property holders. The citizens became provoked during the summer at the bold operations of the gam blers. Meetings were held, a committee of fifteen appointed, resolutions to abate the nuisance adopted, and Hiram Brown, the oldest member of the bar, retained to pros ecute the offenders. Vigorous measures were taken, and repeated in December, 1847, and the gamblers compelled to leave the town. Much feeling was aroused by these measures and the fifteen were de nounced as a vigilance committee, but the desired object was attained and the town rid of the presence of many bad characters. 18 4 7. Heavy and continued rains, amounting to twelve inches in forty-eight hours, had fallen over the State during the last days of December, 1846, producing by the first of January the greatest flood in White river and its tributaries since 1824. The whole valley was flooded, washing off soil, cattle, hogs, fences, hay, and causing in various ways so much damage that the As sembly authorized a deduction of taxes for the year to parties residing on the streams. The swamp north-east of town becoming full, the banks of the drain broke flooding the two bayous, and causing loss and incon venience to parties who had built along them. West Indianapolis was covered, and the National road and canal badly injured. The acqueduct by which the canal crossed Fall creek was broken, and not repaired till late in the fall, the mills meanwhile lying idle. This flood was almost equalled by another in November. The 22d of February was celebrated by the mechanics with a procession, speeches, dinner, __. A meeting was held on the 26th of February to take measures for the relief of the starving poor in Ireland. An organization was effected, committees ap pointed, subscriptions of money and grain procured and forwarded, and for several weeks the work was actively and effectively prosecuted. The Assembly on the 13th of February, 1847, granted the town a city charter, its acceptance or rejection to be decided by a vote of the citizens on the 27th of March, and in case of its acceptance the Governor was to proclaim the fact and that it had become a law. The donation east of the river was included in the corporation, and was divided in seven wards. Washington street was the boundary between the north and south wards. All east of Alabama and north of Washington was the first ; thence west to Meridian the second ; thence to Mississippi the third ; thence west, fourth ; all west of Illinois and south of Washing ton, fifth; thence east to Delaware, sixth; thence all east the seventh. The first city election was to take place April 24th. The Mayor was to serve two years, had a jus tice's jurisdiction and the veto power. One councilman was to be elected from each ward at $24 annual salary and serve one year. The council was to elect one of their number president, hold monthly meetings, two-thirds being a quorum. They had full power to pass ordinances, levy taxes, estab lish district schools and levy taxes therefor, grade streets, suppress nuisances, &c, and were to elect a secretary, treasurer, assessor, marshal, (who was to have a constable's authority,) street commissioner, attorney, and such other officers as might be needed. Taxation for general purposes was limited to fifteen cents on the $100, but could be increased if specially authorized by vote of the people. At the election for city officers in April a vote was also to be taken on the question of tax for free schools. Joseph A. Levy, the last president of the old town council, issued a proclamation di recting an election to be held in the six wards of the town on the 27th of March, to determine the acceptance or rejection of the new charter. The election resulted in 449 votes for to 19 against it. This vote was certified to Governor Whitcomb on the 29th, and on the 30th he proclaimed the adoption of the charter and that it had be come a law. Joseph A. Levy, president of the old council, then issued a proclamation directing an election, on the 24th of April, in the seven wards of the city, for mayor and councilmen, and also to decide whether a tax should be levied for free schools. The election was held and the tax almost unan imously authorized., Samuel Henderson was elected the first mayor, and the follow ing persons from the several wards the first city councilmen: Uriah Gates from the first, Henry Tutewiler from the second, Cornelius King the third, Samuel S. Rook er the fourth, Charles W. Cady the Year. 1847. 184S. 1849. 1850. 1851. 1852. 1853. 1854. 1855. 1856. 1857.1858. 1859-001801-2 1803-4 1805-6 1867-8 ( ¦ lHayor. LIS*] Prest. of Council. S. S. Rooker C. W. Cady Geo A Chapman .. Wm Eckert ? OF PRINCIF Clerk James G. Jordan.. James G Jordan... James G Jordan... Jos T Roberts D B Culley AL CITY OFI Treasurer. N. Lister H. Ohr J H. Kennedy A F Shortridge... A F Shortridge A F Shortridge.... A F Shortridge.... H Vandegrift Francis King Jos K English..,, W H Craft TCERS FROM Marshal. Wm. Campbell ... S A Colley 1847 TO 1868.^ Engineer. A B Condit Attorney. A. M. Camahan... N. B.Taylor,.,, ' Wm B Greer Assessor. Chas I Hand H Ohr . o M >¦ >ot-1h- i GO.3O rtl—lGOI-*CO >^--J DV Culley D VCiillev DV Culley B Pilbean AG Porter A G Porter SP Daniels LVanlandingh'm Jacob S Allen M Little... . S A Colley D B Culley C Scudder D B Culley Jas N Sweetser Alf Steyens B Pilbean N B Taylor N B Taylor N B Taylor John T Morrison.. Henry F West... Wm J Wallace... Wm J Wallace... Sam D Maxwell . Sam D Maxwell . Sam D Maxwell. Dan MeCauley... John G Waters... J H Kennedy John B Stumph... John B Stumph... D L Merriman.... John B Stumph .. John B Stumph... Wm Hadley Wm Hadley Wm Hadley GW Pitts Alf Stevens Jeff Springsteen .. Jeff Springsteen- Jeff Springsteen.. DW Loucks,., John Unversaw... John Unversaw ... John Unversaw .. John Unversaw .. D B Hosbrook D B Hosbrook James Wood James Wood, Jr.. James Wood, Jr.. James Wood, Jr.. Fred Stein Geo H. West John G Waters.... John G Waters.... John G Waters C S Butterfield C S Butterfield Daniel Ransdell .. B K Elliott J N Sweetser R J Rvan B K Elliott .. Robert S Foster.. B K Elliott LIST OF PRINCIPAL CITY OFFICERS FROM 1847 TO 1868— Continued. Year. 1847. 1848. 1849. ~ 1850.1851. Street Com'r. Jacob B Fitler John Bishop George W Pitts... Geo Youngerman Jos Butsch Market Master. Sampson Barbee. Jacob Miller Jacob Miller Jacob Miller Jacob Miller Jacob Miller Weighmaster. John Patton A Haugh... A Haugh.. A Haugh.. A Haugh... Sezfym. B F Lobaugh.. J I Streeher.... J I Streeher.... Ch'f Fire Eng'r. Sealer Wei' ts & Mea's. Printers. Chief Police. Phil Socks.. 1852. HughSlaven Jacob Miller A Haugh Phil Sock: 1853.1854.1855.1850. 1857. 1858.1859-60 1861-21803-41865-6 18C7-S Wm Hughey . Wm Hughey . J B Fitler J B Fitler , H Ohr Jacob Miller Richard Weeks.. G.-o W Harlan.... A Haugh.. A Haugh.. A Haugh.. H Colestock.., H Colestock... H Colestock.. R Weeks .... ('lias John... Chas John.. None.. Jno A Colestock. John M Kemper. August Richter... August Richter... Thos J Foos J J Wenner Chas John Sampson Barbee Phil Socks Joseph Little Geo Bisbing Jacob B Fitler John Moffitt Chas W Purcell... A Lingenfelter.... Samuel Keeley.... John Moffitt Andrew Wallace .. John Moffitt Jos W Davis G W Allied John E Foudray. Jos W Davis G W Allred Jos W Davis J W Davis J T Williams.. J T Williams.. H J Kelley G W Allred Chas Richmann... G W Allred Chas Richmann... J M Jamison.... J G Hanning .... CS Butterfield.. Jas Loucks.. Jas Loucks .. G W Allred . Geo W Buchanan Chas Richmann .. Jas Loucks Joseph Bishop.. Aug Bruner Statesman and Locomotive Sentinel and Locomotive Locomotive Elder & Harkness Chas G Berry Larrabee & Cottam Ind'p's Journal Co Ind'p's Journal Co Ind'p's Journal Co Ind'p's Journal Co Ellis Barnes James G Douglass James G Douglass Jeff Springsteen... Jeff Springsteen... Jeff Springs teen... J M Van Blaricum Chas G Warner.... AD Rose Samuel Lefevre... AD Rose AD Rose Thos A Ramsey. „ Thos D Amos David Powell J Van Blaricum... Thos S Wilson.... Note. — The city was incorporated by the Assembly February 13th, 1847, the act being accepted by the people at a general election held March 27th. A mayor was to be elected in April for two years, one councilman from each of the seven wards for one year, and the council were to elect the city officers, who also served one year. This government continued till March 7th, 1853, when the council accepted the general law of June 18th, 1852, as the city charter. By this act the mayor became president of the council, and all the officers and councilmen were to be elected by the people and serve one year. Two councilmen were to be elected from each ward by the voters thereof. This charter was amended in 1857, extending the term of mayor and councilmen to two years, and on the 1st of March, 1859, it was amended so that the city officers elected by the people were to hold office two years and the councilmen four years. This act was superseded by the act of December 20th, 1865, under which the officers and councilmen were elected for two years, the auditor, assessor, attorney and engineer being elected by the council. This act was super seded by the act of March 14th, 1867, under which the city is now governed. This act provides for a police judge, John N. Scott being elected the first incumbent May, 1867. The mayor, clerk, assessor, judge, marshal, treasurer and councilmen are elected by the people, and hold their offices for two years ; the other officers are elected by the council, and hold office for one year. INDIANAPOLIS FROM 1818. 49 fifth, Abram W. Harrison the sixth, Wil liam L. Wingate the seventh. The new council was organized May 1st, and elected Samuel S. Rooker president, and James G. Jordan sec'ry, at a salary of $100 ; Nathan Lister, treasurer, at $50 ; James Wood, engineer, at $300 ; William Campbell, col lector, with per cent, compensation ; Wil liam Campbell, marshal! at $150 and fees ; A. M. Carnahan, attorney, with fees ; Jacob B. Fitler, street commissioner, at $100 ; David Cox and Jacob B. Fitler, messengers of the fire companies, at $25 each ; Samp son Barbee and Jacob Miller, clerks of the markets, at $50; Joshua Black, assessor and Benjamin F. Lobaugh, sexton. [The city officers, from 1847 to the present time are named on pages 47 and 48.] The tax duplicate for 1846-7 amounted to $4,226, and $865 of this sum were delinquencies from for mer years. Though there was little money in the treasury the council at once began io improve the streets, and it was waggishly suggested that they employ a squad to tramp down the dog-fennel and thus give the place a business appearance. Little had been done by the old trustees and councilmen in the way of street im provements, beyond filling mud holes, cut ting drains or grubbing stumps, and though James Wood had been employed to make a street profile in March, 1841, which had been adopted in April, 1842, and followed in the subsequent improvements, and con siderable sums expended, no permanent re sults had been achieved. The street profile was re-adopted by the new city council June 21, 1847, and a new system com menced, beginning at the centre of the city and extending gradually outward. Prop erty holders were required to bear the ex- pense of grading and gravelling in front of their lots, and the city finished the cross ings. The first bouldering was done in May, 1859, by Looker and Lefevre, on Washington between Illinois and Meridian streets, and by the summer of 1860 it was completed from Mississippi to Alabama streets, and from thence it has been extend ed east and west and north and south. Nearly all the present street improvements, culverts and bridges, have been completed in the last twelve years. The free school tax having been author ized by a large majority, at the election held April 24, 1847, the council levied it and made arrangements for the schools. Each ward was made a district under the super vision of a trustee. Houses were rented and teachers employed, the schools being free only for one quarter each year under the State law. Donations of lots and money were asked, and the thanks of the council extended, in December, 1847, to Thomas D. Gregg, for. a gift of $100. Lots were purchased at from $300 to $500 in the seven wards in 1848-9, and in 1851-2 plain, cheap, one story brick structures, so planned that additional stories could afterward be added, were built in five of the wards. Those in the second, fourth and sixth wards, had two rooms each, and in the others but one room each. A second story was added to the first, second and fifth ward houses in 1854-6, and all except the old seventh ward house have since been enlarged or raised. A good two story house was built in the eastern part of the seventh (now in the eighth,) ward in 1857, and it was raised an addition al story in 1865. Lots were bought in the fourth and present ninth wards in 1857, and in 1865-6 large, well finished, three story buildings, with basements, were erected on them at a cost of about $32,000 each. Other lots have been purchased for sites, and in view of the future extension of the city be yond the donation it would be good policy to secure sites for future houses on or beyond the present boundaries of the city. In 1867-8 a large, four story building, with basement, was erected in the south part of the sixth ward and will cost, when fully completed, about $43,000. It is at present the largest and finest school building in the city. The houses recently built are well designed, well finished, and have far more architectural pretensions than the earlier ones. Additional buildings are still needed as the schools from the start have been much cramped for room. The first tax levy, in 1847, produced $1,- 981 ; that of 1848, $2,385 ; that of 1849, $2,851. In 1850 the fund amounted to ,160, $5,938 of which sum was spent that year and the beginning of the next for lots and buildings. The tax produced a larger sum each year with the increased growth of the city, and in 1857 yielded $20,329. At first the entire amount was expended for buildings, the teachers being paid by tuition fees, but after the first houses were finished the annual return was mostly expended in salaries, the schools being kept open longer, more teachers employed and better salaries paid. In 1847 the several wards were constitut ed independent districts, each under the supervision of a trustee, and schools were opened in the fall of that year or spring of 1848, in rented houses. This continued till January, 1853, when the council elected Henry P. Coburn, Calvin Fletcher and Henry F. West, a board of trustees under the new law, giving them the sole control and management of the city schools. A code of rules was drawn up by Calvin Fletcher, arrangements made, and on the 25th of April the free schools were opened (6) 50 HISTORY OF for the first time, two male and twelve fe male teachers being employed. Until that date the number of pupils had averaged only 340, but by the first of May the atten dance rose to 700, and over 1,000 out of the 2,600 children in the city were enrolled. Until the election of this board of trustees the schools had been conducted indepen dently, without a common system, text books or course of study. At the request of the trustees the principals of the leading 1 private schools prepared a list of text books and a course of instruction which was adopt ed and subsequently followed. In August the graded system was adopted, and the high school, for more advanced pupils, was opened September 1st, by E. P. Cole, with one assistant, in the old county seminary, which had been repaired and refitted for the purpose. From this date to February, 1855, the system was under the sole super vision of the trustees, who served without compensation and almost without thanks, to the detriment of their private interests, but they persevered in the work, overcame all obstacles, and at last interested the peo ple in the enterprise. The work, however, proved too great, and at their request the council in February, 1855, elected Silas T. Bowen superintendent, at a salary of $400 per annum, (which he earned twice over,) requiring him to give a large share of his time to the duties of the office. He effected a marked improvement, but it was soon evident that the duties required more labor and time than he could bestow, and the council, in March, 1856, appointed George B. Stone (who had succeeded E. P. Cole as principal of the high school,) superinten dent at a salary of $1,000 a year, requiring him to give all his time to the schools. He at once perfected the system, adopted im proved methods of teaching, held meetings of the teachers and examined and drilled them for their work, inspired them with his own zeal and energy, and made the system so thorough and popular that the prejudice which had existed against it died out. The school tax was willingly paid, and the pri vate schools sank into the back ground or languished for want of their former sup port. With the increasing revenue better salaries (ranging from $300 to $600,) were paid, the terms were lengthened, more teachers engaged, 35, mostly females, being employed in 1857. The average attendance of pupils had risen from 340 in April, 1853, to 1,400 in 1856, and 1,800 in 1857. The total number enrolled at that date was about 2,800. Ten houses were occupied, seating comfortably only 1,200, but crowded with 1,800 pupils. Forty-four per cent, of the children in the city were enrolled, and 73 per cent, of those enrolled were in average daily attendance. The schools were graded as primary, secondary, intermediate, gram mar and high schools. The system was working prosperously and a bright career seemed certainly before it when the supreme court decision on the tax question in Janu ary, 1858, struck a fatal blow at the whole fabric. The city council was immediately convened to consider the question. It called meetings of citizens in the several wards to devise measures by which the schools could be continued. The meetings were held January 29th, and 1,100 scholarships were subscribed amounting to $3,000, and it was resolved to sustain the free system for the current quarter, and as a pay system after ward. The schools were closed, however, at the end of the quarter, the superinten dent and teachers left for other points, and the houses remained vacant or used occa sionally for private schools for a year or two afterward. No free schools were opened in 1859. A small tax was levied for the repairs of houses and furniture, and from the State fund free terms of eighteen weeks each were held in 1860 and 1861. The system was reorganized under the law of 1862, and a term of twenty-two weeks held that year and since that date it has been gradually regaining the ground occupied in 1858. Prof. George W. Hoss acted as superintend ent in 1862-3, having 29 teachers employed and 2,374 pupils enrolled. In September, 1863, the system was again reorganised, A. C. Shortridge being elected superintendent, and since that date full terms of thirty-nine weeks have been held each year. The schools are graded as primary, intermediate and high, with four subordinate grades (A. B. C. and D.) in each. Common text books are used in the similar grades, and all the children in any given subordinate grade of all the schools are simultaneously pursuing the same course of study, graduating from the lower to the higher sabordinate grades, and from the primary to the intermediate and thence to the high school, the whole course requiring twelve years, (ten months in each year,) and giving the pupils a thorough English education. Daily regis ters are kept showing the conduct, atten dance and scholarship of each pupil, and a given average must be attained before pro motion to a higher grade is granted. The registers thus kept show a great improve ment in attendance and scholarship in the last three years. The school buildings and the whole sys tem are controlled by three trustees elected by the city council, but accountable for their acts and expenditures to the county com missioners and the superintendent of public instruction. They have charge of the ex- INDIANAPOLIS FROM 1818. 51 penditures for buildings, tuition, employ ment of teachers, &c ; the expenditures be ing made from two separate funds, one being for buildings and repairs, the other for tuition, and derived partly from the State school fund and partly from a special city tax. The immediate management of the schools devolves on a superintendent, who devotes his whole time to them and receives a salary of $2000. The teachers (sixty-two of whom are now employed, three male and fifty-nine female,) receive salaries ranging from $400 to $700, and are only employed after a thorough examination of their qual ifications for the position. Improved methods of instruction have been promptly adopted, object teaching, gymnastics, music, Eenmanship and other branches, are taught y special instructors, who visit the schools in turn for that purpose. The following table shows the number of houses, teachers, children enrolled in the schools, average number enrolled, daily average attendance and per cent, of atten dance from 1863 to the present time. No reliable returns exist as to the total number of children of school age (6 to 21,) in the city for the several years, and no records exist as to above items for the years 1853-8. When the new sixth ward building is open ed, 4,200 children can be accommodated with seats, and 75 or 80 teachers can be employed. ¦1. r O — V. o c O CO A *LJ *o 3!O t a 2*5 « *r u 3 &Ch Sr ° a? hj a ¦-S **H; school fund $10,300. The general expenditures|exhausted the re ceipts and left a debt of $567— the bal ance left in the school fund was $6,880. The street improvements requiring consid erable labor in the engineer department, the council, in July, first authorized the office of assistant engineer, at $300 salary. A wood-measurer was also appointed for the newly- established wood markets. A market house was built this year on South street, between Delaware and Alabama streets. But few markets were held there, and the house was torn down in 1858. The first city directory was issued this year by Grooms & Smith. Directories have since been issued by A. C. Howard, Henry E. McEvoy, J. T. Talbott, Sutherland & McEvoy, J. C. Sutherland, H. H. Dodd & Co., Richard Edwards, A. L. Logan and others. The liquor law took effect June 12th, and the county agency was started. The law was generally observed for a few weeks, and unusual order and quiet reign ed on the streets, but on the 2d of July R. Beebee was arrested for selling liquor, fined and imprisoned; the case went to the Supreme Court, and the impression gain ing ground that the law would be declared unconstitutional, it was soon generally disregarded and the traffic reopened. Blake's, Drake's, Fletcher's, Drake & Mayhew's, Blackford's and other additions to the city were made in 1854-5, and the lots mostly disposed of and their improve ment begun. Between sixty and eighty additions and sub-divisions have been made to the city since the first one was made by John Wood, in Juno, 1836. The fourth of July was celebrated by the Sabbath Schools at the State Houae yard, in the usual manner. Nineteen schools, comprising 2,100 children, par ticipated. The firemen paraded in the afternoon, making a fine display. The Hope company, of Louisville, then visit ing here, was in the line. The Indianapolis Building, Loan Fund and Savings Association was organized in October, and continued its existence for Beveral years, its object being to make loans to its members at ostensibly low rates of interest, to aid in building houses. The Marion Loan Fund and Savings Asso ciation, a similar organization, was started in March, 1856. These organizations when wound up, failed to realize the hopes of their projectors. The Indianap olis Fuel Association was formed ou the 31st October, and supplied its members during the winter, with wood and coal at but little over one-half the rates charged in the open markets. A women's rights convention was held at Masonic Hall, October 22d and 23d, Mrs. Rebecca Swank, President. Mrs. INDIANAPOLIS FROM 1818. 71 Lucretia Mott, Ernestine L. Rose, Frances D. Gage, Adaline Swift, Harriet L. Cutler, and Joseph Barker, of Pittsburg, and other speakers addressed the convention. But few persons attended, and the move ment excited no remark. The city was well supplied with amuse ments this year. The Black Swan, with the African Mario, sang at Masonic Hall on the 2d of May, (she again visited the place in the spring of 1868.) Du Bufe's paintings of Adam and Eve were shown May 22-6, at Washington Hall. Powers's Greek Slave, October 19-25, at College Hall; Parodi, with Maurice and Madam Strakosch and others, sang, Dec. 10th, at Masonic Hall. Brown and Commons opened the Atheneum, May 14, ending the season June 25, with C. J. Fyffe, manager, and J. F. Lytton, Beaver, and others, in the company; Harry Chapman and his wife, Mrs. A. Drake, William Powers and James E. Murdoch were the stars. Murdoch left in disgust before the close of his engagement. Commons re-opened the Atheneum, September 15th, ending the season December 8th, with Thos Duff, manager, and about the same company; Eliza Logan, Joseph Proctor, Susan and Kate Denin, Peter and Caroline Richings, and Mr. and Mrs. Florence were the stars. Yankee Robinson had returned dur ing the fall, and wintered here with his circus company. An amphitheatre was fitted up in Delzell's stable, on east Pearl street, and horse opera given during the winter. The first effort at numbering the houses on Washington street, was made during the fall, but no settled system was adopted and the numbering was partial and faulty. The Council, in July, 1858, authorized A. C. Howard to number all the streets of the city, and the work was completed during the fall, but the system was defective in numbering only the houses then built, and the work was badly done, resulting in confusion as new buildings were erected. The Council, in June, 1864, adopted a sys tem authorizing fifty numbers to the square. The work of renumbering was done by A. C. Howard, and the plan has since been followed in the numbering of new buildings. The Young Men's Christian Association gave their first course of lectures during the fall and winter, Park Benjamin, Rev. Mr. Butler, David Paul Brown, Edwin P. Whipple, Henry B. Staunton, H. W. Ells worth, Bishop Simpson, and Edward P. Thompson being the lecturers. 18 5 6. The General Conference of the Methodist Episcopal Church met on the 1st of May, in the hall of the house of representatives, and continued in session for about a month, attended by the full board of BishopB, and the leading men of that denomination. The delegates were the guests of citizens of all the churches, and the pulpits of the churches were filled each Sabbath by preachers in attendance at the conference. The session was im portant and interesting, and drew the at tention of the whole country to this city. It was the first national body meeting here. The city election took place May 6th, 2,776 votes being cast, the democrats elect ing the whole city ticket, with ten out of fourteen councilmen. The assessment for this year amounted to $7,146,670, $1,892,152 being personal property. The receipts in the general fund for the past year were $27,889, ex penditures $46,105. The debt on the 1st of May, 1854, was $567; May 1st,, 1855, $11,000; May 1st, 1856, $15,295. It was proposed to fund the debt by a loan, and Jeremiah D. Skeen was chosen in August, by the Council, as financial agent, to sell city bonds iu the New York market. He accordingly went there, and not succeed ing in negotiating a loan for the city, hy pothecated the bonds for $5,000, which he applied to his own use. The defalcation was discovered in the spring of 1857, and unsuccessful efforts made to recover the bonds. The money was finally paid by the city to the parties who had advanced the money to Skeen. Suit was brought against Skeen and his sureties, and judg ment finally recovered in January, 1868, for the principal and interest of the de falcation. Alfred Stevens, the City Clerk, died October 26th, and George II. West was appointed Clerk pro tempore, to fill the va cancy. Henry F. West, Mayor of the City, died November 8th, and was followed to the grave by an immense concourse of citizens. He was the only incumbent of that office who has died during the term. He had been an earnest and active pro moter of the publio schools, and their suc cess had been largely due to his efforts as trustee. The Council ordered a special election to be held, November 22d, to Bup- ply vaoanoies in the offices of Clerk and Mayor. It was held, and for the first time in several years the democrats were beaten. Two thousand nine hundred and thirty-one. votes were cast; William J. Wallace was chosen Mayor, and Frederick Stein, city Clerk. The republicans in dulged in wild demonstrations of delight when the result became known. Early in February, Dunlevy, Haire & Co. beo-an business as brokers and run- 72 HISTORY OF ners of the State and free banks, in the interest of Cincinnati bankers. In two months $2,000,000 of the circulation was returned for redemption, causing such financial stringency that a State commer cial convention was held here, in April, to protest against the course of the Cin cinnati and Indianapolis brokers in crip pling the trade and resources of the State, by contracting the circulating medium. Delegates from Cleveland, St. Louis, To ledo and Louisville, were in attendance. Bitter resolutions were adopted in regard to the conduct of Cincinnati business men and bankers, and efforts were made to di vert the trade of Indianapolis to other points. The meeting had the effect to se riously diminish the war on Indiana banks, and open other markets to our peo ple. Clinton Watson opened an exchange and reading room in August, in the room over Harrison's bank, but the enterprise failed in a few weeks from want of pat rons. Professor Pusey made a balloon ascen sion on the 28th June, and attempted another on the 4th of July, but failed for want of sufficient gas. The usual cele bration of schools and firemen occurred, and in the afternoon the first fantastic parade attracted great crowds. The political canvass this year was unu- Bually animated and bitter, both parties putting forth their full strength, and hold ing frequent great conventions. The lar gest republican demonstration was held on the 15th of July, attended by many thousands of persons from all parts of the State. A great procession took place, and an almost equally great torch light procession at night, closing with fire works and balloon ascensions. During the afternoon, a. border ruffian demonstra tion and dramatic representation of the designs of the slave interest, and life in Kansas, was given by a club of young men in fantastic dress, and with proper acces sories. It created great amusement at the expense of the opposite party, and was re peated with effect by the club at several other points during the canvass. The lar gest democratic convention followed on the 17th, closing also with a torchlight proces sion at night, and in numbers and enthu siasm vied with that of their opponents. A great storm of wind and rain took place November 21st, doing considerable damage, not only here, but all over the western States. The Indianapolis Art Society was formed during this or the next year, and held an nual drawings for several years, under the direction of a cnmmittee, at Herman Lei- ber's print and picture store, where the pictures (mostly by Indianapolis or Indi ana artists,) were placed on exhibition. — Messrs. Jacob Cox, P. Fishe Reed, Jas. F. Gookins and others, being contributors. — The paintings were purchased by an asso ciation, at their value, each member con tributing a stipulated sum, and the pic tures were divided by lot. Many good paintings were thus distributed at small cost among the citizens. The Young Mens' Literary, and the Young Mens' Christian Associations each gave a course of lectures during the win ter. Charles Sumner, J. B. Gough, T. A. Mills, S. S. Cox, Elihu Burritt and others, appearing before our people. Judson, John and Asa Hutchinson sang, January 22, at Masonic Hall. Ole Bull appeared Feb ruary 27, Signer Blitz, (the elder,) in April, Tom Thumb in July, Miss Richings October 10th, and 30th; Strakosch, Parodi, Tiberini, Morini, and Paul Julien, Novem ber 24th; and a State musical convention under George F. Root, was held there No vember 20-1. W. L. Woods opened the atheneum in March, for one month ; W. Davidge being the only noted star. It was reopened by Vance & Lytton, May 16, clo sing June 3; Eliza Logan, Miss Richings, and Mrs. Coleman Pope, being the stars. — It was opened by Maddocks & Wilson sev eral times in June and July, for a day or two at a time. Wilson, Pratt & Co. ap peared there during the State fair; Yankee Bierce and the Maddern sisters early in December, and on the 16th of December it was opened by Lytton & Oo. for the season, closing March 9, 1857. The company in cluded Mr. and Mrs. R. J. Miller, Mr. and Mrs. Lacey, Tannyhill, Lytton, and others. Sue Denin, Dora Shaw, John Drew, Char lotte Crampton, Mrs. Drake and Miss Du val, appeared as stars. It was reopened for a few days, afterward, for benefits, and in March 1857, for a week or two, under C. J. Smith, as manager. 18 5 7. The Germans, during the fall of 1856, had requested that a portion of the city free school fund should be set apart for the support of German schools, and the council in December had requested the trustees to report whether the project was feasible and proper. They reported against it in January, 1857, stating that the fund and school accommodations were insuf ficient for the schools then in operation. There were nine houses (two of them rented,) and the old seminary, in use, prop erly accommodating twelve hundred pu pils, while eighteen hundred were in at tendance. The fund for 1856 had amount ed to $27,050, the expenses to $19,428; bal ance $7,616. There were thirty-five teach- INDIANAPOLIS FROM 1818. 73 ers employed in June, and 2,730 children enrolled, being about forty-four per cent. of the children in the city, and but sev enty-three per cent, of those enrolled were in daily attendance. The first ward house had been raised to two stories, in 1854, and the fifth ward house in 1856. The eighth ward house was built this year. D. V. Culley, John Love and N. B. Taylor, were eleoted trustees in January. In August there were twenty-nine sabbath schools, with two thousand nine hundred and fifty scholars. The city council on the 16th of March adopted the new incorporation law as the city charter, under which the city officers and councilmen were elected for two years. Three thousand three hundred votes were cast at the May election, each party elect ing part of its ticket. The council organ ized and drew for short and long terms, and elected Andrew Wallace chief fire en gineer. The receipts in the general fund for the past year were $32,697; expendi tures $31,003; balance $1,232; debt $23,- 740; school fund $20,329; expenses $15,- 384; balance $4,945. The assessment was $9,874,700, and a tax levy for general pur poses of sixty cents on each $100. The salaries of the city officers were fixed as follows : Mayor $800, clerk $600, marshal $500, deputy $400, attorney $400, street commissioner $450, engineer $600, clerk of markets $300, sexton $80, chief fire en gineer $175, treasurer four per cent, on current and six per cent, on delinquent receipts, and councilmen $2 each meeting. On the 22d of May the German Turn ers had a celebration, procession, address and gymnastic exercises on the military grounds. The spring had been backward and wet, and on the 10th, 12th and 16th of June there were tremendous thunder storms, resulting in a sudden and high freshet in White river and other streams in the State. A brilliant comet appeared in the west ern sky in the latter part of June. The Fourth of July was celebrated by the Sabbath-schools only, the firemen not parading, and the Guards were at Lex ington attending the Clay monument dedi cation. This celebration was notable only as the last general one held by the schools. Meetings were held in July by the busi ness men to encourage the establishment of exclusively wholesale dry goods and no tion houses. A committee appointed by the meeting reported that though there were seventy-five establishments and thir ty-two manufactories which did a. whole sale business to a greater or less extent, there was but one exclusively wholesale dry goods house in the place. Blake, Wright & Co., started a dry goods house in response to the demand of the meeting; but the enterprise was short lived. There were two riots in July in which the firemen were prominent actors, attack ing houses of ill fame in the western part of the city, destroying the furniture and injuring the buildings. Several af fairs of this kind occurred afterward in this and the following years, the firemen being principal actors in all of them. The county fair this year was a failure on account of unfavorable weather, but the State fair was the most snccessful ever held here, there being over three thousand seven hundred entries of articles for exhi bition, and the gate receipts amounting to nearly $14,600. A vast crowd was in at tendance during the three leading days. A grand parade of our fire department, with visiting companies from New Albany and Dayton, was held during the fair. A negro was arrested here in December under the fugitive slave law. The arrest caused much excitement, and being fa vored by the crowd, he escaped, but was recaptured after a long chase in the north part of the city, and remanded to his mas ter in Kentucky, being convoyed thither by a large squad of heavily armed deputy marshals. Dodworth's New York band, ninety in number, gave a concert on the 30th of June on the military grounds, under contract with H. Stone, of Cleveland, in his gift con cert enterprise. They also gave a concert at night, in Masonic hall, for their own ben efit; but neither of the performances was largely patronized. Edward Everett delivered his Mt. Ver non lecture on the 4th of May at Masonic hall. Thalberg, Parodi and Mollenhauer gave a concert May 7th at the hall. Dud ley Tyng, Horace Greeley, Ex-Qov. Bout- well and others lectured during the fall and winter for the Young Men's Christian Association. Mr. Kunz and his daughters gave a series of German theatrical per formances, during June and July, at the Apollo Gardens. Stetson & Wood opened the Atheneum September 5th, with Mr. and Mrs. Harry Chapman and an indifferent company, closing November 2d. The Indianapolis Daily Citizen was started May 14th, 1857, by Cameron & Mc Neely, at their office, 10 east Pearl street. It was regularly issued by them till June, 1858, when it was discontinued. It was republican in politics, and well conducted. The Western Presage, a literary and polit ical weekly paper, was first issued by Bidwell Bros, at 84 east Washington street, January 3d, 1857. It was the exponent of advanced republican ideas, was issued 74 HISTORY OF in expensive style, resulting in the failure of the firm and the discontinuance of the paper in April. It deserved a longer life and better fate. Much building was done in 1857. The block opposite the court-house, the Episco pal, and Third and Fourth Presbyterian churches, the United States post-office, Metropolitan Theatre and many other prominent buildings being in progress. 18 5 8. The question as to the constitu tionality of the free school tax was deci ded in January by the Supreme Court, against the tax. The citizens of each ward were requested by the city council to meet and, if possible, devise means by which the system could be maintained. The meetings were held January 29th. It was resolved to continue the schools, and one thousand one hundred scholarships,amount- ing to $3,000, were subscribed to keep them going for the current quarter. At the end of that time they stopped, the teachers left, the system was broken up, and the houses were closed. Some effort was made to re-establish private schools, and the free schools were opened each year for a short time under the State law. Three thousand, three hundred and for ty-three votes were polled at the May elec tion, the republicans electing the entire ticket and a majority of the councilmen. The council elected Samuel Lefever chief of police, and the fire association having presented the name of Jos. W. Davis for chief fire engineer, he was elected to that office on the 22d of May. Much dissatis faction arose among the firemen at his election, and from this date, till November, 1859, when it was disbanded, the efficien cy of the department was much impaired. The opposition to Mr. Davis was mainly owing to his imperious manner, for other wise he was a good executive officer. The assessment of city property for the current year showed a total of $10,475,000, and the increase in buildings over last year was $600,000. The spring of 1857 had been unusually wet, and the spring and early summer of this year were still more so. Constant and heavy rains fell from early in April to the middle of June. Great storms oc curred on the 11th of April, the 11th and 12th of May and about the 10th of June. Pogue's run completely flooded its val ley on the 12th of April. Several street bridges were swept off; the Central rail road bridge giving way as a locomotive was passing over, throwing it into the creek. The culvert under the canal was also carried off. White river was over the bottoms repeatedly during the spring, and on the 14th of June reached a point but little below the flood-ma.rk of 1847, caus ing great loss in fencing to the farmers along the valley. The wet season was succeeded by very hot, dry weather, and on the 26th of June eight cases of sun stroke occurred, five of them being fatal. Several cases happened the next day, and for two or three days afterward all persons kept in the shade as much as possible. A brilliant comet, which passed very near the earth in its course, was visible in the western heavens in September aDd Oc tober, its train bending like a bow. A Bible investigating class was origi nated during the summer or fall, holding meetings every Sunday at the court house, for investigation of the authenticity of the Scriptures, or the meaning of disputed passages. Atheists, Deists and members of all orthodox churches participated in the discussions, which were often keen and searching, sometimes acrimonious. The meetings were kept up during this and the next year, were well attended, excited much interest, and if they did no other good, at least caused more study of the Bi ble by some persons than they otherwise ever would have given it. Four or five miles of mains were laid by the Gas Company during the summer and fall, and several miles of streets were lighted. . Much building and street im provement also were undertaken. Black ford's block, the Mtna building, Metropoli tan Theater and the Washington street cul vert over Pogue's run were built. The 4th of July happening on Sunday, no general celebration took place. The 3d and 5th were devoted to pic-nics by the schools, firemen and Turners, the military companies going to Richmond. A Jewish church, Rev. T. Weschler, was organized in August, worshipping in Ju- dahs' block till 1866, when the Synagogue on east Market street, built in 1865-6, was completed at a cost of .$25,000, and occu pied by the congregation. There was great rejoicing and an ex temporised illumination on the night of the 7th of August, over the completion of the Atlantic Cable, and on the 17th a for mal celebration of that event took place in the Circle, with a display of fire-works and an oration by Governor Wallace. The National Guards held a three days en campment, in October, on White river, north-west of the city. The Indianapolis Academy of Science was organized during the summer, R. T. Brown, J. W. Barnitz, and others, being prominent in the matter. A room in Ju- dahs' block was rented, meetings and dis cussions held, papers read on scientific subjects, and a considerable cabinet of INDIANAPOLIS FROM 1818. 75 geological specimens accumulated, but the community not taking sufficient interest in it, the society was suspended in July 1860, and its collections scattered. Lectures and amusements were not lack ing this year. Thomas F. Meagher lec tured, February 17th, at Masonic Hall. Ormsby M. Mitchell began a series of as tronomical lectures there, October 27th, B. F. Taylor, M. F. Maury, E. L. Youmans, Bayard Taylor, Dr. Holland, and others, lectured during the season before the Young Men's Christian Association. An drew Jackson Davis, the "Pokepsie seer," gave » series of spiritual lectures there, beginning December 16th. The German singing societies of the State held a con vention, June 10th-13th, with a pro- cesBion and grand concert. A German theatrical troupe appeared at the Athe neum in August, and in January and Feb ruary there were two German theaters at Washington and Union halls. Sam. and Kate Denin Ryan had appeared with a small company at Washington Hall in April. Harry Chapman during the State Fair, opened the Atheneum, Mrs. Drake and J. K. Mortimer appearing on the boards. It had also been opened for a few nights by strolling companies, several times during the summer. The dramatic event of the year, how ever, was the opening of the Metropolitan Theater, the first building specially devo ted to amusements here. It was erected by Valentine Butsch in 1857--8, on the north east corner of Washington and Tennessee streets. The corner stone was laid in August 1857, and the house opened Sep tember 27, 1858. The building was eighty- two by one hundred and twenty-five feet, three stories high, of brick stuccoed in im itation of sandstone, and, with the lot, cost when completely fitted up, about $58,- 000. The cellars and ground floor are used for business purposes. The dress cir cle and parquet are well arranged, but the gallery was not well designed for a proper view of the stage. The buildiDg will com fortably seat about twelve hundred persons. The interior was neatly frescoed and gil ded by artists from Cincinnati, and the scenery was mostly painted by S. W. Gulick. E. T. Sherlock was the first manager and lessee, opening September 27th, 1858, with a rather indifferent Company, and closing Feb'y 29th, 1859. Harry Chap man continued it as manager till March 13, 1859. The Keller troupe*, H. W. Gossin, Sallie St.Clair, Hacket, Dora Shaw, theFlor- ences, J. B. Roberts, Mrs. J. W. Wallack, Mrs. Howard, Adah Isaacs Menken, the Cooper opera troupe, Eliza Logan, Mr. and Mrs. Waller, Mrs. Edwin Forrest, Mr. Sedley and Miss Matilda Heron appeared as stars during the season. George Wood & Co. opened it again for a short time in April. John A. Ellsler opened it in April, 1859, for a two months season; Miss Kim- berly, Collins, and Kate and Sam Ryan appearing as stars. He again opened it, October 1st, the season closing March 2d, 1861. The Webb sisters, Miss Ince, Sallie St. Clair, Marion McCarthy, F. A. Vin cent, Barras, J. B. Roberts, the Richings and others being the stars. The war having begun, and thousands of men thronging here, the theatre was re-opened by Mr Butch, as proprietor and manager, on the 25th of April, F. A. Vincent being stage manager, and Miss McCarthy lead ing lady. A good company was also se cured, and from this date until after the close of the war, the enterprise waB well supported and profitable. Most of the leading members of the stock company continued here for several successive sea sons, and some of them, as Mr. and Mrs. Hodges, and F. C. White, until the thea tre was finally closed in the spring of 1868. Vincent continued as stage man ager until 1863. William H. Riley then succeeded, holding that position till the spring of 1867. ' He then removed to the St. Charles theatre. New Orleans, dying shortly after his arrival there. M. V. Lingham became manager for the season of 1867-8, and in the spring of 1868 Charles R. Pope became the last manager, with a good company, and giv ing the people the most brilliant season ever witnessed there. Edwin Forrest played an engagement of five nights, be ginning March 16th, to crowded houses, at double the usual rates of admission. Since April, 1861, nearly all the leading actors and actresses in the country have appeared on the boards of the Metropol itan, and among others, Adelaide Ristori appeared there with her company, under Graus' management, on the 25th March, 1867. The theatre has not been so well sup ported since the close of the war. Its po sition was against it, being too far west. The proprietor, Mr. Butsch, early in 1868, purchased Miller's Hall, (then nearly completed,) on the corner of Illinois and Ohio streets, for about $50,000, and has fitted it up in tasteful style for a theatre and music hall, to be opened in the fall of this year. The building is much larger than the old theatre, and the auditorium will comfortably accommodate a much larger audience. The old theatre will hereafter be used for concerts, lectures, meetings, &c. 76 HISTORY OF 18 5 9. Some efforts were made in Jan uary, to organize a corporation for a Uni versity at this point, and in February an- application was made to the Assembly for a lease of University Square for a term of ninety-nine years, as a site for the con templated buildings, the property to be surrendered to the State at the end of the term. As there was some doubt as to the ownership of the square, between the city and the State, the application was not granted, and the project was dropped. The city terminated the dispute as to ownership in 1860, by taking possession of the square and the military grounds. The old seminary was torn down in Au gust and September, 1860, and the square improved as a park. In 3867-8 the mili tary grounds were fenced, and also im proved as a park, at the expense of the city. The ownership and possession of the city will probably be uncontested here after. The gas company had laid a number of miles of mains during 1858, and during this year were still further extending the pipes. Many applications for street lamps had been granted, and others were pend ing, and as no uniformity existed in the position of the lamps, or their number to the square, and no regulations had yet been adopted on the subject, the Council, on the 12th of February, passed an ordi nance prescribing a general plan for lighting the city, fixing the number of lamps at four for each square, and their position, and distance from each other. Under this ordinance several additional miles of streets were lit for the first time, in the fall and winter of this year, Washington street, from Pennsylvania to New Jersey, and Illinois from Washing ton to North street, being in the number. Early in 1854 a number of young men had formed a gymnastic association, adopted by-laws, fixed admission fees, dues, &c, and elected officers. The third story of Blake's commercial row was rented, and fitted up with a complete Bet of apparatus. The gymnasium was popu lar, and well patronized for two or three months, but as the novelty wore off and the hard work began, the interest rapidly lessened, and but few steadily availed themselves of its advantages for exercise and health. The association declined for want of members, and died in a year or two, after spasmodic efforts to continue it. No further effort was made till March, or April, 1859, when the Indianapolis Gymnastic Association was formed, with Simon Yandes, President, and Thomas H. Bowles, Secretary. A code of rules was adopted, and the third story of the Athe neum building rented, and fitted up with gymnastic apparatus, bowling alleys, &c, at a cost of about $1,200, and the room opened for use iu June. The older men were also invited to share in the enter prise, and with their aid it did very well for two or three years, the bowling alleys and chess tables largely adding to its at tractiveness. The interest gradually di minished, however, and though the ladiea were asked to share its advantages, the organization became defunct at the break ing out of the war. A grand procession and celebration by the Odd Fellows took place on the 29th of April. In April, Rev. Gibbon Williams bought the house and one and a half acres of ground at the north-west corner of Penn sylvania and Michigan streets, and shortly afterward opened the Indianapolis Female Institute, a school which has increased in importance and prosperity to the present time. The building, (at first small and ill arranged) was greatly enlarged and' improved at several subsequent periods, and at present is one of the largest edu cational structures in the city, having a capacity for nearly two hundred boarding, and three hundred day pupils. Rev. Mr. Williams left in 1863, and was succeeded in the presidency of the institution, by C. W. Hewes. A full corps of able pro fessors are connected with the college, and the number of pupils has steadily in creased since its origin. The city election took place May 3d, the city officers being elected for two years, and the councilmen for four years, under the amended charter adopted by the assem bly March 1, 1859. At the same time a proposition was submitted to the general vote of the people to divide the first and seventh wards, so that two new wards should be created, forming the eighth and ninth wards, but the result, of the vote was largely against it. The proposition was again submitted to vote in May 1861 and carried by six hundred and twenty-one majority. Councilmen were elected from the new wards, but were refused their seats, and the wards were unrepresented for a year or two afterward. The city clerk reported the reoeipts from May 8, 1858 to May 30, 1859, at $71, 211, expenditures the same, with a debt of $9,- 317. The total city assessment for the year was $7,146,677. The treasurer re ported the receipts from May 8, 1858 to May 1, 1859 at $59,168. Expenditures $56,442, the leading items being $10,232 for the fire department; gas $4,771 ; watch man $4,882. The salaries of the city of ficers were raised in May and June. The INDIANAPOLIS FROM 1818. 77 bouldering of Washington street, between Illinois and Meridian streets, (the first done here,) had been ordered in April and was done in May, and further street improve ments were designed. The council, in view of the probable expenditures, fixed the tax levy at sixty cents, which so aroused the tax- payers that they held a public meeting June 22d, to protest against it. They lit tle knew what was in store for them in the future. A proposition was entertained by the council, during the spring, to build a City Hall on the lot south of the Journal office on Meridian street, but no final action was taken. The city offices and council room were located in the Odd Fellows Hall where they remained till May, 1862, when a lease, for ten years, was secured of the upper stories of Glenns' block. Efforts have often been made to secure the erec tion of a City Hall and prison, but without success. The General Assembly of the Old School Presbyterian church met in the basement room of the Third Presbyterian church, May 18th, continuing in session till the 2d of June. Tho eminent men of the church were in attendance, and the de bates between Dr. McMasters and N. L. Rice, and others, on the establishment of theological schools and the policy of the church on the slavery question, excited great interest and attracted crowded audi ences. The national anniversary was celebra ted with unusual display. The City Coun cil appropriated $500 for the purpose, and large subscriptions were made by individ uals. The procession comprised the ar tillery, cavalry and infantry companies, three bands, Turners, Butchers, Fenians, Catholic societies, Madison firemen and our own fire department, seven companies with eight engines, reels, hook and ladder wagons and a long line of carriages. The engines were beautifully decorated. The procession, which was nearly two miles in length, marched through the principal streets to the old fair ground, where the usual exercises occurred, Caleb B. Smith delivering the address. A great pic-nic dinner was spread, after which the mili tary were reviewed by Governor Hammond . A grand fantastic parade took place in the evening, and a fine display of fire-works at night. Over twenty thousand persons were present at the celebration. It was rumored in the evening that the " Sons of Malta," a mysterious organization, which had rapidly increased in number during the spring, would parade at midnight; their rigid ruleB preventing public demon strations at any other hour. The report caused much excitement, especially among country visitors and the ladies, thousands of whom impatiently awaited the strange display. It proved to be all that fancy painted it, and the procession was accom panied through its midnight march by a multitude of half crazy spectators, though the gravity of the puissant Knights and reverend prelates was sadly disturbed by the noisy advice of the street boys, " go faster old tin-head," " step up brass moun ted man." On the 23d of August, Adam Deitz drank eight gallons of lager beer together with a bottle of brandy, inside of twelve hours, attaining a wide notoriety thereby and winning a wager. Much improvement took place during the summer and fall, and a number of good business houses were erected. Yohns', Rays' and Glenns' blocks being among them. The Daily Atlas was first issued by John D. Defrees as editor and publisher, in July, from an office in Van Blaricum's block, on south Meridian street, The presses were run by a small Ericsson hot air engine, (the only one ever used here,) which at tracted many visitors. The paper was regularly issued till about the end of March 1861, and then discontinued, the material and subscription list being sold to the Journal office. Several other newspaper enterprises have been started here before and since the Citizen and Atlas were estab lished. The Brookville American was transferred to this point by the editor and proprietor, Thomas A. Goodwin, in 1857. It was afterward sold to Downey & Co., who issued it as a daily for a short period, and then sold the establishment to Jordan & Burnet. They changed the name to the Evening Gazette. Dr. Jordan afterward issued it till the spring of 1865, when he sold it to Smith & Co. They afterward sold it to Macauley, Shurtleff & Co., and they Bold the office and list, in May or June 1867, to the Journal Co. The Gazette was issued most of the time from an office in Hubbard's block, and latterly from the Sentinel office on Pearl and Meridian streets. It was well conducted during a part of it's existence, and attained a con siderable circulation during the war. The Daily Telegraph, the only German daily in the city, was issued by the Free Press Co., in 1866, and has continued to the present time. The office is on west Maryland street. The Evening Commercial was estab lished in 1867 by Dynes & Co., and issued from Downey & Brouse's Publishing House in the Sentinel building on Pearl street. It was subsequently moved with their of- 78 HISTORY OF fice to the old Journal building, on Circle and Meridian streets, and is now pub lished by M. G. Lee. The year 1859 was dull so far as lectures, concerts and amusements were concerned. Geo. D. Prentice lectured at the hall on the 6th of February, and Henry S. Foote, of Mississippi," at Roberts' chapel, December 2d. Dr. Boynton delivered a series of geo logical lectures, at the hall, in December and January, 1860. Miss Laura Melrose sang there March 24, and the Cooper opera troupe April 1st. The ooming political contest began to excite attention. Gov. Corwin addressed a large serenading party at the American House, on the 6 th of July. Abraham Lin coln viBited the city for the first time, and addressed a large audience at Masonic Hall, on the 19tlfof September. He was personally unknown to the great mass of the citizens, and considerable curiosity was manifested to hear the man who had so gallantly struggled with Senator Douglass, then at the zenith of his power. Richard Cobden, of England, then on a visit to this country, reached the city on the 5th of May, but remained a few hours only, passing oa to the north-west. The year closed with excessively cold weather. 18 6 0. The military grounds being thought too small to properly accommodate the visitors and exhibitors, at the State fairs, the agricultural board determined in 1859 to secure a large tract for the pur pose, and locate the fair permanently at this point. Proposals were invited in the fall of 1859, and an unsuccessful effort was shortly after made here to form an as sociation to buy the grounds for the board. An appropriation of $5,000 was then asked from the city, and the proposition heing submitted in February to a vote of the peo ple, it was authorized. A question arising, however, as to the legality of such an ap propriation, it was not made. The rail ways and the board finally made an ar rangement Tor the purchase of the grounds, and after much competition between the advocates of various sites, the Otis grove, of forty acres, north of the city, was bought in the spring of 1860. Extensive and costly improvements were made du ring the summer, and the fair held there, October 15th to 21st. It was not as suc cessful as had been desired. $11,900 only were realized, and a part only of the award ed premiums were paid. The board was Beriously embarrassed for several years afterward, but is now getting out of debt. In April a Mr. Bell, of Rochester, New York, submitted a plan for water works to the council. The project was discussed at u number of meetings. Estimates were made, but no definite action was finally taken. It was again broached by the cen tral canal company in July, 1864. They proposed to furnish water from their ditch. This project was also considered, and com mittees appointed who reported on it, but the subject was finally dropped without definite results. In October, 1865, the Mayor again brought up the subject by a message, urging the building of such works, and recommending Crown Hill as the point for a reservoir The council passed a resolution declaring it expedient that such works be built, and that it was inexpedient for the city to undertake them. This action was intended to invite propo sals from private companies, but had no immediate effect. In May, 1866, the Mayor again brought the subject before the coun cil, introducing questions propounded by him to James B. Cunningham, civil engin eer, and the answers and estimates made by that gentleman in reply. The SHbject was again brought up October 15, 1866, on a proposition by R. B. Catherwood and his associates to build water-works if a liberal charter was granted them. The council thereupon by resolution declared it expe dient that water works be built, and inex pedient for the city to build them. A committee on the subject was appointed. — It reported an ordinance on the 22d of Oc tober, authorizing R. B. Catherwood & Co. as the Indianapolis water works company, to build such works, and furnish the city and people with water for fifty years. The ordinance, after various amendments, was finally passed, November 3, 1866. It gave the company the right, for fifty years, to furnish the people and city with pure water, to be taken from White river or its tributaries, several miles above the city. — To use the streets and alleys for pipes, the company to repair the streets when torn up. The city reserved the right to buy the works after twenty-five years; required operations to be commenced within one year, and a given gum to be expended within two years. HydrantB and fire-plugs were to be located where desired, and the city was to pay from $40 down to $25, ac cording to the number ultimately erected. The amount of capital was specified, and the amount of profit on it limited to fif teen per cent., water rates to be placed as low, from time to time, as practieable. The company was organized under, the charter, with R. B. Catherwood, president, Jno. S. Tarkington, secretary, and accepted the ordinance, November 5, 1866, filing it with the mayor, who, on the 6th of November, issued his proclamation, stating that fact, and publishing the ordinance. The com pany, within the year, and to save their INDIANAPOLIS FROM 1818. 79 charter, nominally began operations by laying about fifty feet of pipe on North street. Nothing has since been done with the work. So far as a convenient and plentiful sup ply of water is concerned, the works will doubtless be of great benefit, but no sur face water will ever equal in purity and healthfulness the water now drawn from wells sunk in the great gravel and sand- beds underneath the city, and if surface drainage was carefully prevented, no dete- rioratian in its puritywill occur for scores of years. No artificial filters can equal those nature has given us, and the phos phates and carbonates dissolved by the water in its passage through the sand are those most needed in the human system. By the treasurer's report in May, the re ceipts for the past year were $87,262, ex penditures $80,172, balance $7,090, debt $11,553. The leading items were for fire department $11,353, bridges $13,915, street improvements $14,875, police $5,986, gas $6,445. The city duplicate showed an as sessment amounting to $10,700,000. Street railroads in the city were first proposed in November of this year, and an unsuccessful attempt was made to form a company to build them. No further action was taken in regard to them until June 5th, 1863, when a number of our citizens formed a company under the general law. electing Thomas A Morris president, Wm. Y. Wiley, secretary, and Wm. O. Rock- wood, treasurer. They filed an application with the council on the 24th of August, setting forth their organization, and ask ing a charter from the city. The applica tion was referred to a committee, who pre pared an ordinance and submitted it for the consideration of the council. Amend ments were proposed, and while the ordi nance was still pending, R. B. Catherwood, of New York, associated with several of our own citizens, formed the Citizens' Street Railroad Company, with John A. Bridgland as president, and proposed more favorable terms to the council, agree ing to begin the construction of the lines at once, and finish a greater number of miles in a given time. The competition between the two companies grew warm. It was charged that the Citizens' company was not responsible or able to fulfill their offers. Tney responded to this by paying down nearly $30,000 of their capital, and offering bond of $200,000 to fulfill all their agreements. The council finally decided the contest in favor of the Indianapolis company, granting them a charter on the 11th of December, 1863. They declined to accept it on the 28th of December; and the mayor having telgraphed that fact to Mr. Catherwood, at Brooklyn, New York, he immediately answered that he would accept the charter, re-organize the com pany, and begin the work. On the 18th of January, 1864, the council passed an ordi nance giving the Citizens' Street Railroad Company, (which had re-organized, with R. B. Catherwood, president, E. C. Cather wood, secretary, and H. H. Catherwood, superintendent,) the right to lay single or double tracks of railway on all the streets and alleys of the city, or its future exten sions. Horse-cars were to be used only for transportation of passengers and bag gage. The council retained the right to govern speed and time. The tracks were to conform to the street grades, and the company were to boulder between the tricks and two feet each side. The tracks were to be laid in the center of the street, or, if double, on each side of the center, and not nearer the side-walks than twelve feet. Fares on any route were not to ex ceed five cents. The company to repair all damage to the streets, relay tracks when the street grades are changed, and be liable to private parties for all dama ges they might sustain. They were to re turn annually, on the first of January, a full statement of all property for taxation; but each separate line was to be exempt from taxation for two years from its com pletion. Rules were prescribed for the running and management of the cars, and the cars were given right of way against all other vehicles. The charter was given for thirty years, subject to the following conditions : Three miles were to be built and fully equipped by October 1, 1864, two additional miles by October 1, 1865, two additional miles by December 25th 1866, unless a further extension of time was granted by the council, otherwise all rights, &c, under the charter were to be forfeited. The council reserved the right to order additional lines constructed after the first seven miles were finished; and in case of failure, the company was to forfeit the right to that particular street or route. If, after ten years, the company had not built and fully equipped ten miles of track in the best style, the council might order an appraisement and pay the company therefor, or transfer the property and fran chise to another company. The ordinance was to be in force after two weeks publica tion in the weekly Journal. The company accepted the charter, and immediately began preparations for build ing lines. Materials were collected du ring the spring, cars ordered, and property secured for stables and car-houses. Their operations were somewhat delayed, and the iron and cars detained by the use of 80 HISTORY OF the railways by government. But on ap plication, the council, on tne 27th of Au gust, 1864, extended the time for sixty days, and no forfeiture of their franchise occurred. Track-laying began on Illinois street at the Union depot, and the line was finished on that street to North street with in the year. Tracks were also laid on Washington from Pennsylvania to West streets, and thence to the military ground, in time for ihe State fair in October. The line on Illinois street had been opened for travel in June, 1864— the mayor driving the first car on the first trip, accompanied by the council, city officers and officers of the company. In the fall of 1864 the citi zens along Virginia avenue, having sub scribed from $25,000 to $30,000 for a bo nus, the company built a single-track road from Washington street to the end of the avenue, making the route along the avenue and Washington street (which had a double track from Illinois to Pennsylva nia street,) to West street. The route was afterward limited to the avenue alone, causing much dissatisfaction, and the com pany subsequently changed to the old route, limiting it to the avenue and Ten nessee street. In March, April and May, 1865 the Massachusetts avenue line, (which had a double track,) was laid from Washington street up Pennsylvania, Mas- sachuseets avenue and New Jersey street to St. Clair street. In June, 1867, one of one of the tracks on New Jersey street was taken up and used to extend the line on Ft- Wayne avenue, and thence east on Christ ian avenue to College street. In October, 1865, the Washington street line was ex tended on Washington street and the Na tional road, (which had been adopted by the council, September 18th, as one of the city streets,) to the White river bridge — the line to military ground having been taken up in 1864 after the fair. The coun cil also gave the company the right to lay tracks on all new streets. In the spring and summer of 1866 the Washington street line was extended east by single track to the culvert over Pogue's run. The Illinois street line was extended to Tinker street in June and July, 1866, and the line to Crown Hill, (built by a separate company,) was begun in the fall of 1866, and opened for travel in Aprii or May, 1866. In the spring of 1868, a new line was laid from Washington street down Kentucky avenue and Tennessee street, and east on Louisiana to Illinois street, being opened for travel in April. The first stables and car house were built on Tennessee and Louisiana streets, in October, 1864, and extended and improved in the summer of 1867. After the first lines were built and opened, the company placed about thirty two horse cars upon them, and continued using them with drivers and conductors till April, 1868. At one time an effort was made to dispense with conductors, but after trial for some days, the company resolved to adopt, a different car. Thirty or thirty- two one-horse cars, requiring a driver only, were procured during the Bpring of 1868, and placed on the different lines on the 3rd of April. The driver now merely fur nishes change, the passengers themselves place the fare in safety boxes. The cars are turned on turn-tables at each end of the route, and trips are made at greater speed than under the old system. The old cars are used only on the Crown Hill route, or in case of pic-nics, or unusual demands on tho rolling stock of the company. A portion of them havejbeen sold, eighteen or twenty only being left at the present time. Mules are now almost exclusively used by the company. No bouldering has been done by the company on their tracks, except where they run along bouldered streets, as it is claimed that bouldered streets injured and crippled the animals. Five hundred and fifty round trips are run, and four thousand passengers carried over the lines daily. At present, including the Crown Hill line from Tinker street, and including side and double tracks, the company have about fifteen miles of finished and equipped road, costing $468, 000. They also own fifty cars, employ sixty-four men, and one hundred and fifty mules and horses. The enterprise has not been as profitable as it was expect ed to be, but with the future increase of the city, its success will be assured. R. B. Catherwood in September or Octo ber 1865, sold the controlling interest in the company to Messrs. English, Alvord and others. A reorganization took place, E. S. Alvord becoming President, R. F. Fletcher, Secretary, W. H. English, Treasurer, and H. H. Catherwood, Superintendent. J. S. Alvord is the present Secretary, and R. F. Fletcher, Superintendent. A tornado swept across the State from west to east in the afternoon of May 29th, 1860, passing just south-east of this city, between 5 and 6 o'clock, p. m. It was a rapidly moving, whirling cloud, of small diameter, described by those who witnessed it, as hanging from or cutting through the clouds above and around it, swaying about like an elephant's trunk, rising and falling as it sped forward. Considerable damage was done to houses, timber, gardens and fences in its path. The residence of Gard ner Goldsmith, at the end of Virginia avenue, was thrown from its foundation and partially destroyed, and Goldsmith was INDIANAPOLIS FROM 1818. SI seriously injured. It was much more de structive both east and west, however, than near this city. Great preparations were made for the celebration of the fourth of July, the peo ple feeling that it might perhaps be the last under a united government. The proces sion included five bands, the entire fire de partment with beautifully decorated en gines and reels, three military companies, the butchers, gardeners, various societies, and a long line of carriages. The usual exercises took place at the fair grounds. A very large frame building had just been completed on University square, by Mr. Perrine, and in the afternoon the military companies drilled there for a prize of $100. A balloon ascension by J. C. Bellman, took place at 4 o'clock, p. m. He rose to a great hight, and landed ten miles from the city. The best display of fire works ever given here took place at night in the enclo sure. The "Coliseum" — as it was termed — could accommodate fifteen or twenty thou sand persons, being, perhaps, the largest structure of the kind ever built in this country. It was torn down some weeks after. The political struggle of this year was unprecedented in its interest and bitter ness, each party holding repeated monster conventions and torch-light processions; every effort being made by each to surpass the last display by the opposite party. The democrats held a great meeting at the State house yard on the 8th of July, George E. Pugh and C. L. Vallandigham being the leading speakers. The republicans far surpassed this demonstration on the 29th of August, at the old fair ground, Corwin, Blair, Stanton, Lane, Morton and others being the speakers. A great procession marched thither in the day time; and at night a torch-light procession, which in cluded several thousand Wide Awakes, formed on University square, and filed through the principal streets, saluted along its line of march with a constant blaze of fire works and illuminations. This demon stration was equalled if not surpassed by the democrats on the 28th of September. Much money had been spent by them in tasteful arches and other decorations, and the display was a very grand one. Doug lass, H. V. Johnson, and other leaders of the party were present, and delivered ad dresses at the fair ground. There was a grand torch-light procession at night, and the fire works and illuminations equaled if they did not surpass the display by the republicans. The crowds in attendance at these conventions were to be measured only by the acre, and sufficiently demon strated the perfection and extent of our railway system. At no other place in the country could such immense throngs have been concentrated or dispersed so readily as at this point. The first rope-walking exhibition here was given in September, by Theodore Price, in the presence of an immense crowd, the rope being stretched from the roof of the Palmer house to that of the Bates house. Several subsequent exhibitions have oc curred, the most notable and dangerous one occurring in the summer of 1865, on a rope stretched from the roof of Blackford's block to that of Yohn's block. The Escott and Miranda Opera Troupe sang at the theatre in January. A musical convention was held at Masonic Hall in September. Bayard Taylor and Henry J. Raymond lectured there in February. Lola Montez lectured there for several nights, beginning February 23. In the fall and winter, Bayard Taylor, Prof. Youmans, J. B. Gough, Dr. Robt. J. Breckinridge, G. W. Winship and others, lectured before the Young Men's Christian Association. Sallie St. Clair appeared at the Metropolitan for a few nights in February. In view of the threatening aspect assu med by the southern States, and the lack of patriotism displayed by them, it was deemed proper by the asssmbly to unfurl the American flag from the State Houso dome, and the ceremony was fixed for the 22d of January, 1861. A flag staff and large fiag were prepared. Extensive ar rangements were made, the military, the firemen, city and State authorities, and citizens paraded. The preliminary exer cises were concluded, and the flag was started up in presence of a vast and ex pectant crowd, when the staff broke, and, with the flag, tumbled down the dome to the roof. The crowd dispersed silently, deeming the event ominous of coming trouble. A new staff however was after ward procured, and the flag successfully raised, but with less display and enthusi asm. 18 61-8. The First Baptist church, on the corner of Maryland and Meridian streets, was burned during a great snow storm, on the nfghtof January 27th, 1861, presenting a sad but magnificent spectacle as the flames burst from the roof, and wrapped round the spire, which soon top pled and plunged downward through the roof. The fire was supposed to have caught from a defective flue. The loss was a se rious blow to the church. The first build ing occupied by the congregation was a small one-story brick structure, on the same site, built in 1829 or 1830, and hold ing two hundred and fifty or three hundred persons. The small bell then used was (3) 82 HISTORY OF placed in a separate frame tower at one end of the house. This building was torn away, and the house which was now just destroyed was built there in 1851 or 1852. The first spire was built in the telescopic form usual in country towns, the upper portion being finished inside of the lower, and hoisted by tackle to its proper eleva tion. It had just been hoisted to its place during a hot summer afternoon, and the workmen were still on it, when a sudden thunder gust came up, and the spire being insufficiently stayed, the guy ropes parted and it turned a somersault, coming point down on the pavement in front of the building, narrowly missing a team and wagon, and shattering itself into splinters. The men at work on it had barely time enough to get off before it went over. An other spire was afterward built, but in a different way. The congregation, after the destruction of the church, sold the lot (which is now occupied by Schnull's block,) and purcha sed the lot on the north-east corner of Pennsylvania and New York streets, and in 1862 erected the present large brick ed ifice upon it. President Lincoln arrived here on the 12th of February, 1861, on his way to the national capital, and was received as the guest of the city and State, being met at the State line, and escorted thither by a committee. He left the Lafayette train at Washington street, and was escorted to the Bates House by the military companies, fire department, State authorities, and a vast crowd of citizens. In a short speech from the balcony of the Bates House, he out lined his future policy with regard to the rebellion, and held a reception during the evening, leaving for the east next morning. Several meetings of conservative repub licans were held at the court house in Feb ruary and March, to urge a compromise of the existing political differences, and the settlement of the controversy by making concessions to the South. The sessions were stormy, in consequence of the at tendance of the more radical men, who felt that the time for all compromise had pas sed, and before any definite action or course was decided on by the meetings, the acts of the rebels transferred the dis cussion from the forum to the field. There was then no further talk of compromise, and those who had urged it became earnest and active in the war. It can scarcely be expected that a full history of the part taken by this city in the war can be given in the limits of an article like this. It could only be properly dealt with in a volume. But a brief out line at least may be presented of the lead ing events. The news of the attack upon Fort Sum ter reached the city April 12th, and at once produced the profoundest feeling. — Business was suspended, and every one eager for the latest intelligence. During the afternoon a handbill was posted calling a meeting at the court house, and at' the appointed hour the room was thronged. — An adjournment was voted to Masonic Hall, and the excited crowd, now momen tarily augmenting, rolled down Washing ton street. The hall was at once filled, as well as the theatre and the intervening street. The American flag was produced, and greeted with deafening cheers. Speech es were made at the several meetings, bit ter resolutions were adopted, and volun teering at once begun. The throng dis persed at a late hour, excited and enraged over the news that the Fort had been Bur- rendered. On the following day the Greys, Guards, Independent Zouaves, Zouave Guards, and a light artillery company be gan recruiting. Flags were everywhere displayed, and the fife and drum heard at every corners' The president's proclamation for seventy-five thousand men appeared on the 15th, and the governor's call for six regiments from this State, on the 16th. The State fair ground was chosen as the rendesvous. It was named Camp Morton, and on the 16th and 17th the city compa nies moved there, having meanwhile been quartered in the public halls of the city. Companies from abroad were also hourly arriving, greeted by cheers,n,nd the firing of cannon, and were sworn in at the State House and sent to camp. In a few days eight or ten thousand men had reported for duty. Had sixty, instead of six, regi ments been demanded, the call would have been almost as readily filled. Our own companies were full and others forming. Home guards were organized for each ward. Every one was anxious to contrib ute, and blankets, food and clothing were collected by the wagon load for the men so suddenly collected with no provision for their comfort. The ladies formed so cieties and materially assisted in this work. The enthusiasm was wonderful: The zeal, faith and courage, sublime. The material and men were superabundant, and the excess made the labor of the au thorities all the more difficult. Everything had to be learned by a people unacquain ted with war, and for some time confusion reigned supreme. Order, however, was gradually restored, the six regimentB were organized and brigaded, and the work of drilling and equipping them began. On the 24th of April Stephen A. Doug- lass visited the city and made a speech. He went to Camp Morton, visiting the troops and arousing great enthusiasm among them. Some feeling arising concerning the support of the families of soldiers during their absence, the City Council, on the 20th of April, voted an appropriation of $10,- 000 for their maintenance. Seven companies were formed here under this call, the most of them being in the eleventh regiment under Col. Lew Wallace. They were moved in a few days to the old Bellefontaine depot, uniformed soon after and persistently drilled. Stands of col ors were presented to them at the State House on behalf of the ladies, and feeling like old troops they clamored for service. They were accordingly sent to Evansville, (ostensibly to guard the border,) on the 9th of May. The excess of troops report ing here, over the six regiments called for by the Government, were organized under State authority in six one year regiments for the State service, but were soon after re-enlisted, (except one regiment of one year men,) for three years and all trans ferred to the Federal service. The six regiments of troops under the first call were reviewed by General G. B. McClel- lan in the fields north-west of the military grounds, (then occupied by the State troops and known as Camp Sullivan,) on the 24th of May. He shortly after ordered them into active service in West Virginia, where they participated actively and ef fectively in the campaign. The. eleventh regiment, meanwhile, wa3 left at Evans ville, but growing tired of their position, an order was obtained from Washington transferring them to Cumberland, Mary land. They afterward joined Patterson's army, participating in the movements of that force prior and subsequent to the bat tle of Bull run. The three months regi ments were discharged, returned home, but shortly afterward were again rendesvoused here to re-enter the three years service. Their old organizations were maintained, although the regiments were mostly com posed of new recruits. The State troops, meanwhile, had been transferred to the Federal service and sent to the field, and the additional regiments afterward called for by the Government were gathering here and 'elsewhere. The nineteenth Reg ular regiment, added with others to the army by President Lincoln, rendesvoused here and was gradually growing in strength. It remained here till the fall of 1862, when its head-quarters were trans ferred to Detroit. After the first flurry arising from the sudden concentration of the three months volunteers and the State troops at this point was over, and they had gone to the field, the work progressed more quietly and methodically. Tho anxiety to enter to the service was greater than the de mand for troops, and some trouble was ex perienced in securing permission to raise additional regiments. After the three months troops were re-organized as three years men, however, additional regiments were demanded, and recruits for the first organizations were constantly called for. They were very readily obtained without local bounties, for business had been very dull since the preceding winter, and hun dreds of men were out of work. This stagnation in general business continued here until the winter of 1862 and spring of 1863, when, from the Government de mand for various articles, and the scarcity of workmen, high wages began to be de manded, and volunteering decreased. Uni forms had been scarce on the streets after the first regiments left. They afterward began to multiply, and from the capture of Ft. Donelson till after the close of the war they constantly became more numer ous, until the city at last was a heavily garrisoned post. During the late fall and winter of 1861, however, the skeleton nine teenth Regular regiment constituted the main force here, and their perfect disci pline and fine dress parades, with the added attraction of their full regimental band, drew crowds of admiring spectators. The twentieth regiment and several bat teries were rendesvoused here and camped on the commons north-west of Camp Sulli van. The twenty-sixth and thirty-third and other regiments subsequently occupied Camp Sullivan. The drafted men were also placed there in 1862-3. The fifty- seventh regiment occupied a camp on the canal west of the Lafayette depot, and la ter organizations, recruits and drafted men were sent to Camp Carrington. In August 1862 a further call for troops was made. Bragg and Kirby Smith were ad vancing on Louisville. Great efforts were made to fill the quota, and good bounties offered for recruits. A draft was ordered and the preparatory enrollment was made, but before it took plac« the requisition was filled. The seventieth and 'seventy- ninth regiments were raised at that time, mainly in this district, and hurried to Louisville. They served to the close of the war, participating in Sherman's cam paign against Atlanta and the march to the sea. No unusual war excitement disturbed the city from this date until early in July 1863. It was then announced by the papers that John Morgan had crossed the Ohio 84 HISTORY OF river, and later in the day news came that he was rapidly moving toward this city, to release the prisoners. The fire bells were rung, and a vast crowd collected at the Bates house. The governor announced the news, and recommended the immediate ces sation of business, and the formation of military companies. It was resolved to form companies in each ward, and recruit ing at once began. Dispatches were sent elsewhere calling for aid. The next morn ing martial law was declared, business ceased, the ward companies were sworn in to the State legion, and a regiment twelve hundred strong organized under Colonel Rugg, armed, equipped and constantly drilled. It met that night on University square, to receive blankets, accoutrements and ammunition, and was ordered to march next day. During this and the two follow ing days, companies and regiments were coming by rail from all parts of the State, and a considerable army was extemporized. The excitement and enthusiasm increased hourly, surpassing any thing seen during the war. Other regiments were organized and sent to meet the enemy, but the city regiment was persistently marched and drilled on University square and else where, attaining very creditable proficiency in forty-eight hours. Signals were estab lished by the fire bells, for the regiment to start on the campaign, and they were thus called together about twice a day. The warriors parted so frequently from their wives and sweethearts that they grew tired of it, and finally left for the seat of war on University square at each alarm, without a thought of those they left be hind. The artillery and cavalry wings of the regiment meanwhile were executing various manoeuvres not laid down in any system of tactics, sometimes putting the infantry in great bodily fear. Morgan soon turned eastward, but the regiment continued its martial exercises for several days afterward, and rapidly attained celer ity and precision in marching and in the manual of arms. The organization was continued for two or three months, and in September an effort was made to uni form it and the police guards at the ex pense of the city, but it failed, and the force disbanded shortly afterward. Its services in the Morgan raid were after ward paid for by the State. The sudden organization of, and the immediate profi ciency attained by this regiment conclu sively proved that the people can be fully relied on in any emergency. Recruiting went on steadily from this date, the city's quota always being supplied with reasonable promptness, but late in the fall another draft was expected, and the citizens held a meeting on the 11th of December, asking the council to appro priate a sufficient sum to pay $50 of boun ty to each recruit who might be credited to the township. On the 14th of December the council accordingly appropriated $25,- 000 for that object, ordering the sale of bonds to that amount to raise the money. The bonds were prepared and sold in a few days, and recruiting went on with more activity. Committees were appointed, and funds raised in each ward to add to the bounty, and the required cumber of men was soon obtained. During the winter of 1863-64, and the following summer, the old veteran regi ments were returning on thirty day fur loughs for recreation and recruiting, before re-entering the service. One or more of them arrived every week, and were suita bly received by the State and city authori ties, the council having appropriated mon ey for that purpose. Many recruits were obtained here for their ranks, and the Seventeenth Regiment re-enlisted and were credited, in a body, lo this city. On learn ing that our quota had been filled, they confirmed their action regardless of bounty, but on the 8th of March Colonel Wilder asked the council to grant it to them. A committee reported against it, but the coun cil, after further consideration of the sub ject, passed an ordinance on the 11th of March, appropriating $5,355 in bounties to the regiment. An attempt was afterward made to have this sum increased, but with out success. The campaign against Atlanta having begun, and the governors of Hiinois, Indi ana and Ohio having tendered a heavy force of one hundred day men to guard the lines of communication, a call was issued for troops for that term. The response not being very prompt, ward meetings were held, asking the council to appropriate bounties to those who might enlist under the call, and on the 9th of May $5,000 were appropriated for the maintenance of the families of one hundred day men, the sum to be disbursed by the Soldier's Aid Com mittee. Recruiting was actively prose cuted, and the city regiment was shortly raised, equipped and sent to Alabama un der Colonel Vance, Lt.-Colonel Cramer and Major Bates. It was assigned to duty along the line of communication, and* after the expiration of its term was sent home, discharged and paid off. From this date recruiting became more difficult, and larger bounties were required. The demand for labor had increased the rates of wages, and few persons were out of work. Five hundred thousand more men were called for, and as the response INDIANAPOLIS FROM 1818. 85 was not satisfactory, preparations were made for a draft. The enrollment in June, 1864, showed seven thousand five hundred and seventy-three men subject to draft in the city, and the quota was fixed at one thousand two hundred and fifty-nine. Ef forts to fill it by recruiting were made, and meetings were held in the wards and in the tabernacle on Court square, to secure sub scriptions to pay bounties. Forty or fifty thousand dollars were subscribed and paid to recruits, but the required number was not obtained in time, and the draft took phrce September 25tb, for about four hun dred and fifty men. Drafted men's meet ings were repeatedly held afterward, and „ great efforts made to raise money. Sixty or seventy thousand dollars more being subscribed by them, the council on the 28th of September, appropriated $92,000 to as sist them, and on the 3d of October $40,000 more were appropriated. The city clerk was directed to collect the subscriptions of the citizens. Mayor Caven used every means to assist the work and by strenuous exertions the required number of volun teers were secured in October and Novem ber, and the drafted men relieved at a cost of nearly $180,000. Much complaint had been made prior and subsequent to the draft, of the incorrect enrollment on which it was made, and that the city and town ship were drafted together, compelling the city to expend $20,000 beyond its propor tion, to relieve the township. The council on the 12 th of December, appointed a com mittee to revise and correct the lists, and secure a correct enrollment. The President, on the 20th of December, again called for three hundred thousand men, directing a. draft if it was not filled by volunteers. Mayor Caven, on the 28th, recommended the Council to appropriate $90,000 for bounties, at $150 each, for re cruits. The Council, after consideration of the subject, ordered the balance of the appropriation, $2,500, to be paid, and ap propriated $20,000 in addition for the same purpose. On the 2d of January, 1865, the Mayer again urged an appropri- tion to pay $150 bounty for volunteers, and the appointment of ward committees to sell orders and raise funds. He also urged the correction of the enrollment lists, and that the city be drafted sepa rately by wards. The Council at once re sponded, by appropriating $125,000, to be paid in $150 bounties and $10 premium for recruits. On the 5th of January they authorized the bounties to be increased to $200, and sent Hon. John Coburn to Washington to secure a draft by wards. He succeeded in his mission, and the draft was afterward so made. Commit tees were also appointed for each ward, to sell city orders, or warrants. On the 16th special committees were appointed to see if the bounties could be increased in amount, and to urge the Legislature to so amend the charter that loans might be made directly to pay bounties. On the 17th committees were appointed to super intend recruiting and assign the men pro rata to each ward. The time fixed for the draft was rapidly approaching, the quota was large and unfilled, the citizens grew excited, and many of them turned their attention to recruiting. In February the Council appropriated $400 to each man who might be drafted, provided he had purchased a $50 order before the draft. After the draft occurred they confirmed the grant, ordering the money to be paid at once to those who furnished substitutes, and in installments to those who were compelled to serve. The Council had furnished twelve hundred cords of wood to soldiers families in August, 1864, and now gave $3,500 more for the same pur pose. On the 20th of February, three thousand six hundred citizens petitioned the Council to effect a loan sufficient to pay all orders, bounties, &c. The petition was deferred for more names, and on the 22d, seven hundred and seventy-two more were reported. A resolution offered by Mayor Caven was adopted, authorizing a loan of $400,000 in bonds of $50, $100, $500 and $1,000 each, signed by the Mayor and Clerk, at such rate of interest semi-annually, as might be lawful where the bonds were payable. A, special tax levy was to be made to pay interest and form a sinking fund to meet the principal. Messrs. Brown, Coburn and Jamison were appointed a committee to prepare and ne gotiate the bonds. They did so. The bonds were sent to New York, where they remained unsold for several months, and were then recalled, cancelled, and the committee discharged. The quota not being filled, the draft took place, by wards, ou the 25th of Feb ruary. The Council at once ordered the loan committee to borrow $100,000 from the banks, at one per cent., at four months, with privilege of renewal, depositing or ders at sixty cents on the dollar as secu rity, the orders to be sold by the banks on ten days notice, if the debt was not paid. On the 6th of March this was reconsid ered, and.the Treasurer ordered to borrow $100,000 from the banks, at one per cent., for four months, with privilege of renewal, depositing bonds and orders at seventy- five cents on the dollar, as security, giving the banks the privilege of selling at ten days notice, if the debt was not paid. The loan was taken by Fletcher's, Har risons', the Citizens' National, First Na tional and Indianapolis National Banks, $20,000 from each, and the money thus re alized was appropriated at once to bounties. The drafted men were now very active in securing recruits. Offices were opened in the Council chamber and elsewhere, $400 bounties were paid, a number of substi tutes were furnished, and the quota was nearly filled, when it was announced that on a revisal of the lists of credits, the quota was entirely filled, and with several hundred to spare. Bounties at once fell from $400 to $100, but the work was stopped, and $25,000 to $30,000 of the fund saved. All felt, however, that the listB should have been revised before the draft was made, and a heavy expenditure thus avoided. The war ended four weeks afterward, and no further recruits were needed. The city and citizens had spent about $700,000 in the past ten months, in bounties for troops, and expenses con nected with the war. The government immediately began the reduction of the army. Sick and conva lescent troops, new recruits, drafted men, Quarter-masters' employees and others were at once discharged. The rebel pris oners were released and sent home. The veteran regiments rapidly returned and were mustered out. The veteran reserve corps dwindled to a skeleton organization, and by the close of the year the ninth regiment of Hancock's corps constituted almost the entire force stationed in the city. The camps were abandoned and the property sold. The houses were re moved elsewhere, and by the summer of 1866 a uniform was rarely seen on the streets. The return of the veteran troops kept up the excitement for some time, and caused great activity in trade, but as the great floating population of the past three years dwindled in number, and the gov ernment demand for supplies ceased, the difference in the throng on the streets was soon perceptible, and the town grew dull. Extensive camps, hospitals, barracks, sta bles and other structures were built by the government during the war; the most prominent of these may be mentioned here. Camps Morton and Sullivan had been occupied by the three-months men and State troops while organizing and preparing for the field, and the last named camp had afterward been sufficient for the regiments subsequently organized, Camp Morton be ing unused; but after the capture of Fort Donelson, when several thousand rebel prisoners were sent to this point, addi tional troops and camps were at once need ed. Camp Morton was then fitted up as a prison camp. It was surrounded with a high, tight fence and sentry Walk; addi tional buildings were added from time to time, and the defenses strengthened, until at last it was as complete in its appoint ments as any other in the country. More than five thousand prisoners were occa sionally confined in it, and many thou sands during the war. Among its inmates were the greater part of Morgan's men, captured after their celebrated raid through Indiana and Ohio. Toward the close of the war many of these men, becoming con vinced that their cause was lost, enlisted in the Union army for service against the Indians ; others took the oath of allegiance and were discharged, and several thousand were released and sent home after the war ended. The prisoners were guarded at first by the Nineteenth regulars, but other troops were afterward detailed to that duty, and some regiments were raised for that special ser vice. Temporary camps for the guards were at first established near the prison; but after the invalid corps (afterward the veteran reserve,) were detailed to guard duty, camps of a more permanent charac ter were built, requiring many thousands of feet of lumber. Camp Burnside, just south of the prison, grew into a large, populous, well arranged and well built village by the end of the war. The vet eran corps guarding the rebels occupied this camp — many of the officers and men having their families with them. Camp Carrington, formerly a temporary affair, and afterward one of the best arran ged and constructed camps near the city, was mostly built in 1864. It was at a considerable distance to the west of the prison, near the Lafayette road, and was mostly occupied by reoruits, new regiments and drafted men. Camp Sullivan, on the military grounds, was not so extensive, well built or arranged as the two former. It had been occupied by the State troops, and afterward by new regiments, transient troops and drafted men. As the war progressed and this point became more important as & depot of sup plies, troops and prisoners, all these camps, with others in and around the city, were constantly oooupied. Among other im portant establishments the Soldiers' Home founded in 1862, for the accommodation of transient soldiers, soon became prominent, and was greatly enlarged before the war ended. It was in charge of the veteran reserve corps at first, and afterward in that of the Ninth regiment of Hancock's corps. Single soldiers, squads, detach ments, and regiments of troops, passing INDIANAPOLIS FROM 1818. 87 through or temporarily stopping in the city, were accommodated with lodging and cooked food in this establishment, and it was of great service when the veteran regi ments were returning on furlough during the war, and at its close, when they return ed for discharge. In addition to camps Carrington, Burn- side, Sullivan and the Soldiers' Home, a cavalry camp was established near the city; and when the negro regiment was authorized late in the fall of 1863, Camp Fremont was temporarily established in Fletcher's woods, south-east of the oity. The government, in 1864, took the old Bellefontaine depot, in the north part of the ninth ward, and fitted it up as an ex tensive stable to accommodate the thou sands of artillery, cavalry and wagon horses, bought and brought to this point; and for the storage, also, of the necessary grain and forage. Barracks were also added for the many teamsters and quarter-mas ters' employees in service here. It was proposed early in 1865 to aban don all the government camps, prisons, stables and hospitals then in use in and around the city, and construct new, more extensive and better arranged ones several miles out in the country. The site was selected, the plan approved by the authori ties at Washington, and the order prepared, but before it was issued, the war termina ted, and the new buildings were not needed. When the war first began and the three- months troops collected here, but few arms and still less ammunition could be sup plied. It was evident that ammunition would have to be fabricated, and Herman Sturm applied to the Governor for au thority to manufacture it for the State. Permission was granted in May, and with one or two assistants, he immediately be gan making musket balls and cartridges at McLaughlin's gun-shop, on east Wash ington street. The demand soon extended the business, and a small frame structure was erected in July and occupied in Au gust, north of the State-house. Additional buildings were soon erected and the num ber of workmen increased; but the facili ties were not equal to the rapidly growing demand, and a removal took place to Ott's building, on Washington street, south of the State-house. It remained there some time, and was then removed to buildings specially designed for it east of the city, It had grown from a small beginning to great proportions ; several hundreds of per sons were employed, and vast amounts of artillery and small-arm ammunition were daily fabricated — the armies of the west being largely supplied by it. It filled a pressing want early in the war; but the government having established an arsenal here, and ammunition being largely man ufactured elsewhere, the State institution was discontinued in 1864, The national government in 1861 deter mined to found a number of arsenals in the west, one of them being located here. Eighty acres of ground were bought north east of and adjoining the city, plans adopt ed for the buildings and improvements, and Captain Jas. M. Whittemore, of the regular army, appointed commandant and superin tendent. The improvements, consisting of buildings for the storage of small arms and accouterments, artillery and wagons, offi cers' quarters, magazines, barracks, fen cing, grading, &c, were begun in 1862, and have been prosecuted to the present time, and are now nearly completed, at a cost of several hundred thousand dollars. The buildings are large, well planned and perfectly constructed. All the improve ments are of the best design, materials, and finish. Large amounts of arms artil lery, ammunition, and other government property, are now stored there. The Wal lace building, on Delaware and Maryland streets, was used during the war as the U. S. Arsenal and storehouse. Wm. Y. Wiley was appointed military store-keeper. Capt. Whittemore served as commander and su perintendent till the close of the war, be ing then relieved by brevet Col. W. H. Harris, the present commander. An arse nal guard of about thirty men was enlist ed for that special duty in 1864, and is now stationed there. The financial condition of the city was greatly influenced by the war, and it is best, perhaps, to consider it in connection with our war history; though, in doing so, many facts already given in the statement of the war movements will necessarily be repeated. It is now impossible, from loss of re cords, to give a certain statement concern ing the early financial condition of the corporation. The old books yet in exist ence are in such shape that no clear idea can be drawn from them. It'is only with in a few years that a system has been adopted showing the condition of the finan ces at any given time. Such facts for for mer years as were published at the time are given below. The valuation of real and personal prop erty in 1847 was about $1,000,000. In 1850 it had risen to $2,326,185 ; in 1853, to $5,131,582 ; in 1856,to $7,146,670; in 1858, to $10,475,000; in 1860, to $10,700,000; in 1862, to $10,250,000; in 1863, $10,750,000; in 1864, $13,250,000; in 1865, $20,144,447; in 1866, $24,231,750; in 1867, it sunk to $21,943,605, and rose in 1868 to $23,593,- 619. These figures show the steady growth of the place, as well as the temporary checks it has experienced. The listed polls in 1847 were about 400; in 1853, 1,460; in 1857, 1,862; in 1860, 2,200; iu 1863, 3,200; in 1866, 5,160; in 1867, 5,300 ; in 1868, 5,780. Taxation under the charter of 1847, for general purposes, was limited to 15 cents on the $100; but special taxes to any amount could be levied, if authorized by the general vote. Repeated efforts were made, from 1847 to 1853, to induce the citizens to vote special taxes for various objects; but with the exception of taxes for schools, clock, cisterns and to pay debts, the movements were generally defeated, and the entire levy^did not exceed 45 cents on the $100. To avoid the trouble in re gard to special taxes, the council, in 1853, adopted the general incorporation act as the city charter; and though the taxing power was thereby increased, they hesitated, in view of the general opposition of the tax payers, to materially advance the rate, and it did not usually go beyond 60 or 80 cents before the war. After the war be gan, a different policy was necessarily adopted, and the people have Bince become acquainted with heavier rates on vastly increased valuations. The receipts and expenditures for all purposes, (other than schools,) are given as published at the time, giving generally the actual current receipts without includ ing balances. The levy for 1847, (includ ing $865 of delinquencies from former years,) amounted to $4,S26, nearly $4,000 being realized therefrom, and the expendi tures considerably exeeded the receipts. In 1850 the receipts were $9,327, expendi tures $7,554. In 1851, receipts $10,515, expenses over that sum. In 1853, receipts $10,906, expenses $7,030, $2,908 being de voted to cisterns and the fire department. In 1854 receipts $20,500, expenses nearly the same. In 1856 receipts $27,889, ex penses $46,105. In 1857 receipts $32,697, expenses $31,003. In 1859 receipts $59,- 168, expenses 56, 442; $10,232, being spent on the fire department cisterns, $4,882 for police and $4,771 for gas. In 1860 the re ceipts were $87,262, expenses $80,172; lead- ingi terns being for street improvements, re pairs and bridges, $28,790; fire depart ment and cisterns, $11,353; police, $5,986; gas expenditures, $6,445. The actual cur rent receipts and expenditures, (not includ ing balances from former years,) and the leading items of expenditure, as nearly as they can be obtained from the reports from 1861 to 1868, are given as follows: in "ft oo M toaOJ StreetImprove ments, repairs. Cleaning and Bridges. a . IS M CO S3 ss £ 3 E o a> a aa „ « V w > -o'sHH ¦8 M « ong the early settlers, the delay in establishing the government here, and the want of communication wiih the outside world, put a Biop to this speedy advance, and ihough the Capital was after ward removed here, very little improve- 100 HISTORY OF ment in the prospects of the town took place. The Internal Improvement scheme in 1836, began the second era, and for the time completely changed the aspect of af fairs. Another sudden advance occurred. A marked increase in trade, in population, and in wealth, was visible, and the town was assuming an important rank, when the failure and suspension of the public works cut short its career. Its subsequent growth was very slow, being governed by the de velopment of the surrounding territory, and it remained a country village of the better class, till October, 1847. The completion of the Madison railroad in that mouth and yeaiybegan the third era, giving the town an outlet, and making it a center for the surplus products of the surrounding re gion. From that time till the war of the rebellion, its growth was steady, rapid and solid, and the foundation gradually laid for its future trade, but it still remained subordinate to other business centers. The fourth period began with the war in 1861, Ihe place being at first stopped in its devel opment, but soon advacning with a rapidity astounding to those who had been educated only by their early experiences here, and who constantly predicted a downfall. The war growth, though so rapid, was a healthy one. It was the direct result of a large trade, and the fact that a greater scope of territory was made tributary to the city, and had manufacturing been largely com menced at the close of the war, no perma nent cessation of the trade and growth of the place would have occurred. The four periods of development in the history of the city show that just as facilities for trade and travel have been increased, just so certain and constant has been its subse quent growth. Merchants and manufac turers should apply the lesson, and not only aid every effort to open new channels, but go before, and interest themselves in the trade and products of the region to be traversed by tbem. A great trading and manufac turing center may be created here by pro per effort, and the destiny of the city rests directly iu the hands now controlling its active business. On the merchants, bank ers and manufacturers, rests the responsi bility for its future growth or decadence and they can not escape it by waiting for citizens of other sections to do that which so clearly devolves upon them. This sketch is now ended. No apology is needed for the effort to wri'e it, but one is due for the mauner in which the task has been executed. When the writer con sented to undertake it, he intended to give merely a general review of the progress of the city from its first settlement, (revising, correcting and extending an article he had prepared for the Directory of 1857.) and limiting the sketch to forty-eight pages. The material collected soon compelled an enlargement of the work, and finally much care was needed to prevent its expansion to a volume. All attempt at embellish ment by personal sketches or anecdote, was abandoned, and the author's sole aim was to crowd the greatest number of facts, important or unimportant, into the fewest words, the object being to perpetuate matter that would soon be irrecoverably lost. To this cause must be ascribed the careless style, the paragraphic character of the con tents, and ihe repetition of the same facts in different connections. Many of these repetitions were necessary, but others, es pecially in the last half of the work, arose from the fact that several compositors were constantly wanting "copy," and as fast as the manuscript was prepared, it went to the printer, and not being again seen by the writer, some repetitions unavoidably oc curred. The collection of material and its preparation for the press, has been done at night, or in leisure moments, amid the press of other matters. It has involved much rapid and exhausting labor, and though errors have doubtless been com mitted, the author trusts he has recovered so much that was almost lost, that crudities in style and inaccuracies in statement will be forgiven. The author would return his thanks to the old citizens who assisted him by their personal statement of facts, and espe cially to the heirs of the late Calvin Fletcher, for the use of the files of papers collected and left by that gentleman, from which, far more than from any other source, the facts were secured ou which this article is founded. Ignatius Brown. RAILWAY DEPARTMENT. RAILROADS. CINCINNATI, CONNERSVI'LE & INDIANAPOLIS R. It., general offices 112 Virginia avenue, corner Union Railroad. STATIONS AND DISTANCES FROM INDIANAPOLIS, TO miles. Palestine 16 Morristown 25 Rushville 39 Cambridge 53 CONNERSVILLE 57 Liberty 71 Oxford 85 Hamilton 99 CINCINNATI 124 CLEVELAND, COLUMBUS, CIN CINNATI & INDIANAPOLIS R. W., general offices 53 South Alabama, Passenger Depot at Union Depot. Justus L. Cozad, Superintendent; E. A. Ford, General Passenger Agent. STATIONS AND DISTANCES FROM INDIANAPOLIS, TO miles. Muncie 54 Union 84 Sidney 119 Bellefontaine 142 Marion 182 Gallion 203 CRESTLINE 207* Cleveland 282 Pittsburg 396 Dunkirk 425 Buffalo 465 Albany 763 New York 827 Boston 963 COLUMBUS, CHICAGO & IN DIANA CENTRAL R. R., goneral of fices corner Virginia Avenue and Del aware, Passenger Depot at Union De pot. James M. Lunt, Superintendent ; F. Chandler, General Ticket Agent. STATIONS AND DISTANCES FROM INDIANAPOLIS, .TO miles. Cambridge City 53 Richmond 69 Union City Junction 105 Piqua 110 Urbana 141 MILES. COLUMBUS 188 Pittsburg: 381 Baltimore 700 Washington 722 Philadelphia 736 NEW YORK 812 INDIANAPOLIS, CINCINNATI & LAFAYETTE R. R., offices corner Delaware and Louisiana, Passenger Depot at Union Depot. J. F. Richard son, General Superintendent; H. L. Hall, Assistant Superintendent, W. H. L. Noble, General Agent. STATIONS AND DISTANCES FROM CINCINNATI, TO miles. Valley Junction 18 Lawrenceburgh 26 Morris 52 Greensburg 59 Shelbyville 79 Acton 102 INDIANAPOLIS 115 Zionsville 130 Lebanon 143 Clarksville 163 LAFAYETTE 179 Chicago 337 INDIANAPOLIS, PERU & CHI CAGO R. R., general offices 101 east Washington, corner Delaware, Pas- Benger Depot at Union Depot. David Macy, President and Superintendent ; A. D. Southard, General Ticket Agent. STATIONS AND DISTANCES FROM INDIANAPOLIS, TO miles. Noblesville 22 Buena Vista 34 Tipton 39 Kokomo 54 Miami 63 PERU 75 Logansport 76 Chicago* (via Kokomo)' 195 Toledo, (via T. W. & W.) 225 INDIANAPOLIS & VINCENNES R. R. Just completed from Indianap olis to Vincennes, via Martinsville and Gosport, making a direct line south-west. RAILROAD DEPARTMENT. STATIONS AND DISTANCES FROM INDIANAPOLIS, TO miles. Moresville , 16 Martinsville 31 Gosport 50 Spencer — Bloomfield 86 VINCENNES 131 EVANSVILLE 182 JEFFERSONVILLE, MADISON & INDIANAPOLIS R. R., offices east South, between Delaware and Penn sylvania, Passenger Depot at Union Depot. Horace Scott, General Superin tendent ; J.. G. Whitcomb, General Agent. STATIONS AND DISTANCES FROM INDIANAPOLIS, TO* miles. Greenwood 10 Franklin 20 Edinburgh 30 Columbus Junction 40 Elizabethtown 48 Seymour 59 North Vernon 62 Crothersville 71 Vienna 82 MADISON 86 JEFFERSONVILLE 108 Louisville 110 Bowling Green 223 Nashville 294 Stevenson 417 CHATTANOOGA 445 TERRE HAUTE & INDIANAP OLIS R. R., offices south-west corner Louisiana and Tennessee, Passenger Depot at Union Depot. John E. Simp son, Asst. Superintendent. STATIONS AND DISTANCES FROM INDIANAPOLIS, TO miles. Plainfleld 13 Clayton 20 Greencastle 38 Brazil 56 Cleveland 62 TERRE HAUTE 73 Paris 92 Mattoon 129 Litchfield 207 Alton 247 ST. LOUIS 263 The Railroad interests of Indianapolis are equal to any other, this being, at present, one of the most important railroad centers in the Western States, compared with the population of its inhabitants, there beiDg, as will be seen by a reference to the above and preceding and following pages, 9 dis tinct and separate railroads, and 3 more in process of completion, all leading in different directions to al most every conceivable point of the compass, from this city. There are also 14 lines of roads, either directly or indirectly leading to and from this city, by close and convenient connec tions, the cards of some of which may be found in the following pages, fully set forth, and it is designed to correct and increase this record from year to year. And all Railroad lines that desire to be identified, or represented in these pages, can have space by sending the publishers copy, and conforming to our terms. See price list on first leaves of book ; and any desiring to exchange, will notify the publishers of the fact, in advance of publication, each year. The following are a list of the through and fast freight lines and transportation companies having agencies in this city. The formation of these lines greatly facilitate the shipment of all classes of merchandise or produce of a heavy or sizable nature, as the majority of these lines own their own cars, which run through without reship- ment. FREIGHT LINES AND TRANSPORTATION COM PANIES. ALLENTOWN LINE, Fast Freight, Samuel F. Gray, agent, office 85 Virginia avenue. EMPIRE LINE, (Fast Freight,) W. S. Tarkington, agent, office 96 Virginia avenue. ERIE TRANSPORTATION CO'S Fast Freight Line, , agent, office 94 Virginia avenue. GREAT WESTERN DISPATCH, T. A. Lewis, agent, office 80 Virginia avenue. MERCHANTS' DISPATCH, Fast Freight Line, offico 19 Virginia avenue, D. Stevenson, agent. PEOPLES' DISPATCH, Fast Freight Line, S. T. Scott, agent, office 44 east Washington. STAR UNION LINE, Fast Freight, office 86 Virginia ave nue, Samuel F. Gray, agent. WHITE LINE FAST FREIGHT, office in Bellefontaine Depot, M. M. Landis, assistant superintendent. GREAT WESTERN COTTON EXPRESS, Fast Freight tin*;, superin tendent's office SC Virginia avenue, T. A. Lewis, superintendent, W. B. Williams, agent. RAILROAD DEPARTMENT. FAST TIIMIIE IE.A.ST •BY THE GREAT "BEE-LINE ROUTE." CLEVELAND, COLUMBUS, CINCINNATI & INDIANAPOLIS HA.1TJWA.Y LINK, LATE BELLEFONTAINE RAILWAY, VIA. C Ii E S T Xn, I IV E, ¦Quick Time ¦and Sure Connections to MEW YORK, BOSTON, AND INTERMEDIATE POINTS. ELEGADTT 3KEEFING CARS Run through to Alliance on the Pittsburgh Route, and to Cleveland on the Lake Shore Route. Passengers leaving INDIANAPOLIS on this Line, on SATTJEDAY EVENING-, Are carried directly through via Cleveland or Pittsburg, arriving in New York, Philadelphia, Balti more and Waahington, on MONDAY MORNING, Twenty-Four Hours in -Advance of all other Routes. THIS IS THE SHORTEST LINE TO TOLEDO AND DETROIT, ¦VIA. SIX3*N**B*1T. Purchase Through Tickets by the Great "Bee-Line Route," AT UNION DEPOT. W. N. JACKSON, J. L. COZAD, E. A. FORD. J. W. CAMPBELL, Ticket Agent. Superintendent. Gen'l Passenger Agt. Passenger Agt., Ind'polis. RAILROAD DEPARTMENT. BALTIMORE & OHIO R. R. -TO- Baltimore, Richmond, Va., Lynchburgh,Va., Petersburgh, Va. AND SOUTH - EJ^STESOT CITIES. 50 MILES SHORTER TO BALTIMORE, AND 82 Miles Shorter to Washington City than by any other Route. Passengers purchasing Tickets via this OLD AND RELIABLE ROUTE, Are saved the trouble, delay and annoyance of a tedious Omnibus Bide, (two mHes,) through the city of Bal timore, and having to purchase Tickets and getting Baggage re-checked to Washington City. The above statement is strictly true, and passengers purchasing Tickets to "Washington City, via any other route than the BALTIMORE & OHIO RAILROAD, are assured they will not be honored between Baltimore and 'Washington City. SLEEPING CARS ON ALL NIGHT TRAINS Polite and attentive officials. First class Eating Houses. Nothing fs ommitted to secure the comfort and give entire satisfaction to the passenger. Trains leave Indianapolis over COLTTBSBUS 6l INDIANA CENTRAL RAI1EOAS. ASK FOR TICKETS VIA Columbus & Bellaire and Baltimore & Ohio R. R. Tickets can be procured at all the principal Railroad and Steamboat Offices in the West. L. M. COLE, JOHN W. BROWN, General Ticket Agent, Baltimore, Kd. General Passenger Agent, Columbus, Ohio. J. W. GTJTHRIDGE, Agent, Indianap»lis. RAILROAD DEPARTMENT. CONDENSED RAILWAY LINE SOUTH. JEFFERSONVILLE, LOUISVILLE & NASHVILLE AND MEMPHIS & LOUISVILLE RAILROAD LINE, TO ALL IMPORTANT POINTS IN THE SOUTH & SOUTH-WEST. The time from Indianapolis by this Route, is only 24 Hours to Memphis, only 43 Hours to Mobile, AND ONLY 48 HOURS TO NEW ORLEANS, BEING 12 HOURS QUICKER THAN BY ANT OTHER ROUTE. Through Tickets can be procured at the Union Depot, Indianapolis. ASK FOR TICKETS VIA LOTJISVILIE. Thia Ronte is 12 hours quicker to all points in the South and South-West, than any other loute from Indi anapolis. Passengers holding Through Tickets to any other point South by this Route, can stop over at CAVE CITY to visit MAMMOTH CAVE, and resume their Journey at pleasure. MAMMOTH CAVE EXCURSION TICKETS, At greatly reduced rates for parties of 15 or over, for sale at the Depot L. & N. R. R. in Louisville. Elegant Sleeping Cars on all Night Trains. ASK FOR TICKETS VIA LOUISVILLE. J W CAMPBELL, HENRY KING, ALBERT FINK, " Passenger Agent, Indianapolis. General Ticket Agent. General Superintendent, L. & N. R. R- RAILROAD DEPARTMENT. NEW YORK CENTRAL DOUBLE TRACK RAILROAD. PASSENGERS CAN NOT BE DETAINED By ihe New York Central Railroad, as there are TEN DAILY EXPEESS TRAINS LEAVING BUFFALO AND NIAGARA FALLS FOB HEW YORK, BOSTON, And all Points in New England. Express Trains have New and Elegant "Red Line" Passenger Coaches and Luxurious Sleeping Oars, running over the New Hudson River Bridge at Albany, WITHOUT TKANSFEft OE FERRYING. This is the only line running through and into the city of New York, landing passengers at Fourth and Ninth Avenues, Chambers Street, Canal Street, and Broadway Depots. ASK FOR TICKETS VIA NEW YORK CENTRAL RAILROAD, And thereby secure the advantage of the Popular Passenger Route, its new and Improved Equipments, its Smooth Track, Air Line and High Speed, passing through the Great Cities and Garden Districts of .the Empire State, and in full view of Niagora Falls, the Great Suspension Bridge and Magnificent Scenery of the Mohawk and the Hudson, the River Rhine of America. Passengers holding all Rail Tickets, can, at Albany, if they choose, take either the Night or Day line of Steamers on the Hudson, the accommodations and Splendor of which are not equaled in the old or new world. THROUGH TICKETS AND BAGGAGE CHECKS Can be had at all Principal Ticket offices and Depots in the West and South. H. W. CHITTENDEN, General Superintendent. General Passenger Agent. RAILROAD DEPARTMENT. Cincinnati, Connersville -AND- INDIANAPOLIS JUNCTION RAILROAD -VIA- Rushville, Connersville, Oxford and Hamilton, TO AND FROM CINCINNATI. This Koadwill be COMPLETED FKOM RUSHVILLE TO INDIANAPOLIS by the first of Angnst, 1868, running . TWO PASSENGER TRAINS EACH WAY DAILY, •BETWEEN CINCINNATI AND INDIANAPOLIS, Making all connections at both points, and also, via the Branch Road, from Connersville via Cambridge City to New Castle, Indiana, which will constitue it THE GREAT CENTRAL ROUTE "From Cincinnati to the West and North-West, Throach the most desirable portion of Indiana, and on shorter time than any other route.in the " directions indicated. J.H.SHELDON, J.A.PERKINS, J. M. R1DEN0UR. Snperintendent, Hamilton, 0. Gen'l Freight and Passenger Agent. Vice-President, Indianapolis. RAILROAD DEPARTMENT. CIUICK TIME AND SHORTEST ROUTE EAST INDIANAPOLIS iWkkAYLlM- VTA. COLTT*lVt*B*tJS TO NEW YORK, BOSTON, PHILADELPHIA, -W.A.SIEIXI^a-TOIN' CITY, BALTIMORE, PITTSBURG, CLEVELAND, TOLEDO UD DETHOXTc THREE THROUGH TRAINS DAILY. NEW SSTA.TE-ROOM: SLEEPING CARS, Surpassing in elegance and comfort those of any other Line, are run on night trains through to NEW YORK, (on Central Ohio Eonte,) and CADIZ JUNCTION, (on the Pittsburg Route,) WITHOUT CHANGE, arriving at CADIZ JUNCTION at a sea sonable hour for BREAKFAST. TICKETS GOOD VIA PIQUA OR DAYTON. Passengers to avail themselves of the QUICK TIME and SURE CONNECTIONS of this SHORT LINE to the Eastern Cities, must ask for tickets via COLUMBUS. For Through Tickets and any inform ation, apply at the UNION DEPOT at INDIANAPOLIS, TERRE HAFTE, LAFATETE and all PRINCIPAL TICKET OFFICES in the West. WM. N. JACKSON, Ticket Agent, Indianapolis. F. CHANDLER, J. S. SHACKELFORD, J. M. LUNT, General Ticket Agent. Western and Southern Agent. Snperintendent. RAILROAD DEPARTMENT. NO CHANGE OF CARS TO CHICAGO. 18 B-11I.EJS 1HB SHORTEST ROUTE. Indianapolis & Chicago VIA IC O *KI O IsA. o , Ht IS THE MOST DIRECT ROUTE TO Milwaukee, La Crosse, Rock Island, Burlington, Des Moines, Prairie Du Chien, Omaha and St. Paul, AND ALL POINTS IN TEE NORTH-WEST. 8U0A8T STATE-BOOM «88H8G G&8S ON ALL NIGHT *X*R.A.H>TS. SPECIAL NOTICE. Passengers pnrchasing Tickets by this Route for the North-West, are saved the expense and delay of a tedi- ous Omnibus ride and transfer of Baggage at Chicago Trains run into the Depot of the Chicago & Milwaukee and Chicago & North- Western Railways, avoiding the uncertainty of making connections incident to other Routes. ASK FOR TICKETS VIA KOKOMO And any for through: tickets further information, apply at the Union Depot, Indianapolis, and all principal Ticket Offices in ln . the West and South. A. B. SOUTHARD, Gen'l Ticket Agent, I., P. & C. R. W- Indianapolis. F. CHANDLER, Gen'l Ticket Agent, C, C. & I. C. R. W. Indianapolis. -V *¦*".-.-. ¦"-¦ fe«" ¦ ¦¦ ¦ ¦ I *** RAILROAD DEPARTMENT. ¦V*- li**-* GREAT MIDDLE ROUTE TO THE' WEST, VIA ? WZnh SHORT LIIVE RAILE-OAI3. THREE EXPRESS PASSENGER TRAINS DAILY BETWEEN INDIANAPOLIS AND ST. B.OUIS, Connecting at INDIANAPOLIS with all trains to and from the EAST ond SOUTH, and forming the ONLY LINE TO THE WEST, connecting at Terre Haute for EvansviSle, Vincennes, And all other town1? on the Ohio ; at Mattoon, Illinois for Centralia , Cairo and Memphis ; at Pana, Illinois, for Decater, Rloominfffon, Mendota, Freeport and Dnnleiih; at St. Louis, with all roads running in any direction West, North-West and South-West, making close connections. SLEEPING CARS ON ALL NIGHT TRAINS. Baggage Checked Through to any Destination, either West or East. » Tickets can he secured at all General Ticket Offices in the country. Gen. T. A. MORRIS, J. D. HERKIMER, J. S. GARLAND, President, Indianapolis. Gen'l Supt., St. Louis, Mo. Gen'l Passenger Agt., St. Louis, Mo. X ±t^ ^^-y-gg'^ygg-vs^*^*^* y^v i Xir^DI-AJSTA^OILiIS AA MANUFACTURERS OF RAND AND SQUARE PIANOS. i?Ch, tmar -a Awarded the 1RDED ;o medal 'OR. THE, r , PIANO B ed in tho United ihe Indiana State i at Fort Wayne, ¦# .--¦£ ] Rftfi. -S****** HIGHEST PREMIUM FOR THE BEST PIANO Manufactured in the United * States, at the Indiana State Fair, held at Indianapolis, In diana, 1S66. AWAHDED THE HIGHEST PREMIUM 'est Piano manufactured in the United States, at the State Fair held at Terve Haute, Indiana, 1867. MEKBE STOCK OF PIANOS CONSTANTLY ON HAND AT MANUrACTUREKS' PRICKS. LIBERAL DISCOUNT TO THE TRADE. WAREROOMS ANU FACTORY: J aua 101 BAST WASHINGTON STJREET, ^ X 1ST X>X ^.3ST^.3POX,IS,-I*lsr*E)I^.*lT^-. SUBSCEIBF FOB -A-ISTIQ .ttttjkJZ) •1APEST JOURNAL IN THE WEST. THB WORKING-MAN'S ADVOCATE. THE WESTERN * 'taiisiciil -Eifitw i". VID vTOXTI^-1-TJLXj. >»' ** HLY. irer, Itffner, Shipper, "Working-Man, V nee co'inplete, Authentic >?> Mineral Regions 1 >" "SC, &0. ^n.