me by toeaction, for f the city, r, that there lg this class, tccllent peo-in a condi*j out of theago. was aria hli old again on the o go, as they arlow would, trough theot be accused irge twenty-I. They are ir supply at e by rail, andthey do not in they were msbel.diana ten miles from Indianapolis.” Wo call time on the Journal on insurance Items.offioes, to be being talked I for Mayor, ay for Mar-for Amssioi n mentionedHTMr. Samuel Flake, who has been spending some months in Kentucky, building a bridge over Green River, on the Louisville and Nashville turnpike, has returned to his home in this city for a few weeks visit, when he will leave for Memphis, Tenn., where he will again engage in bridge building on one of the railroads leading into that city. Some months ago Mr. Fiske was victimized in this city by a woman of bad reputation, and to save himself from annoyance preferred losing a sum of money to a public law suit with such a person. No one who knows him believes the charge made against him, as he has always been a young man of good character and of the most genial and kindly disposition. We-are glad to learn that he has been most successful during his absence, and bis success is the result of his industry and attention to busintDentli ef Walter Merman.Just as we ate going to press we learn that Walter, aged 13 years, oldest son of the late John B. Normas, died at his mother’s residence on Vincennes street, of typhoid fever, this afternoon. Wo havo not yot been informed of the hour of the fun-