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id THE PALLADIUM. WEDNESDAY, JULY 29, 1874. Affrlealtaral itcnu. .P!"?' pch crop is estimated 4 602,000 baskets. When the tree is fallen, every man foeth to it with his hatchet. Vine ashes from the hot blast of an thraeite furnaces have been found Tery destructive to potato bugs. It is said that the wortleberry crop will be an immense one throughout Michigan during the present season. The caterpillars stopped a train on tnet Ogdensburg and Caugnawauga Railroad, near Montreal, on the 29th, detaining it an hour. Says the Napa Register: "Napa County has an odd specimen of grass, known by the name of rattlesnake grass, which has a head much like a club wheat head, and bearing a strik ing resemblance to the rattles of a snake." A firm in Dyer County, Tcnn., ship ped 128 crates of strawberries from three acres of vines, which brought them about (1,000. That is better than raising corn. A man in Victory, Vt.,lost nineteen lambs out of a flock of twenty-seven, by washing them in a solution of arse nic to destroy the sheep ticks. The ticks were all killed. A fish farmer in Illinois gets seventy five cents a pound for his trout : thus a small string of fish will bring as much as sheep, and they require neith er grain, hay, nor stabbing. As many as 500,000 goats have per ished in the districts of Angora, Cas tamboul, and Tehangri, from a fatal disease, and this year's shearing of a tiflik wool will show a great reduc - tion. In Vermont the prospects for abun dant crops never was better. The fruit trees promise an abundant yield, the grass is luxuriant, and the train. though somewhat late, is making great neaaway..' Rattlesnakes are joining in now. In Laporte county, Ind., they tarn their attention to horses, many of which have been killed. What next in the heavens above or the earth beneath. via . at A win do alter tne tanners? The Secretary of the Kansas Board of Agriculture indignantly denies in print that chinch-bugs are there do ing any damage worthy of note, con stitutional grumblers and item gath erers to the contrary notwithstand ing. Iowa farmers cherish the fond hone that the seventeen-year locust, so long ? i Ml tl 1 . promised, win reany maxe its appear ance this year, for they are tired of be ins eaten out of house and home bv the slow opperations of forty varieties of different bugs now at work and want the job nnisned up at once. J. C. Davis, of Alcona, Wis., has calf only nine months old that gives two to three Quarts of milk daily Wheu the animal was only two months old a develonement of the udder com menced, and it became necessary to mux ner ior ner own reuei, since which time the calf has given milk regularly. The Wisconsin State Arricultura! Society will offer upward of 16,000 in prizes at its twenty-nun Annual r air to be held in Milwaukee irom sept 7th to 11th, inclusive. The prizes aro divided as follows : Morses, cattle, fz,UUS; sheep, ttiza; swine ftFaQQ ViAnUw Sllr fl a a and Anna. mental plant?, 1363; and fruit, IG22, Blackberry Wine. Put tho berries in a large tub. to every eallon of ber ries pour on one pint of boiling water Bruise them with a mallet, and let them remain until the next day. Strain through a thick cloth. To every gal Ion of juice add two and a half pound ot sugar. JJrain again and put into cask: cover the bun with muslin put it into a cool place, shake the cask daily until fermentation ceases : cork it tight and by September it will be ready for use, but improve with age. This recipe has been followed for ten years, and never failed. From the Madison Courier. A aew Coarse or Lemons In Eones. trlanlsra Heeded. Governor Hendricks is a God-fearing man and a church member; what he knows about the circus feat of rid ing two horses at the same time is all hearsay. Governor Hendricks goes to church, not to the circus. Possibly he never went to see a highly moral show animals, birds and snakes. On "information" then, he decided that one man could ride two horses at the same time, but unfortunately the "in formant" did not deem it necessary to inform the Governor that both horses must be going the same way, and that it is impossible to ride two horses at the same time if they are traveling in different directions as one would say, one horse coming from town and the other going to town. It was a small mistake of the teacher of Governor Hendricks in the science of ridin two horses instead of one. but it lc the Governor into very grave errors. In no other way can the Governor's attack upon "personal liberty" be ex plained. He concedes in his speech the evils resulting from the liquor traffic, and the necessity for regulating it. He signed the Baxter bill, and mildly Suggested to the Democratic convention that he had better be mod ified, but still insists that the liquor traffic must be regulated. Which is exactly what the Germans of the Dem ocratic persuasion don't want. The utter folly of capital punish ment was never more pertinently il lustrated than in an execution that recently occurred at Trebizond. A nice little family of eight persons, a father, daughter, and six sons, were all wiped out by the halter. It was a punishment (or having committed 235 murders. As they could only be hung once.only eight murders were avenged, and the other 227 were unatoned for. In its report cf the Democratic State Central Committee meeting the Sentinel says: "A number of leading Democratic politicians, including the Hon. M. C. Kerr. Gov. Hendricks, Hon. D. W. Voorhees, Hon. George' W. Julian, and others were invited to stump the State." Shades of aboli tionicmf Think of George W. Ju lian training in that crowd and being classed as a "leading Democratic politician." Can such things be and overcome us like a summer's cloud, without our special wonder? Indi anapolis Journal. A camp of fifteen or twenty thieves has settled in the woods near Fort Wayne, and it is supposed they have concealed in the woods all manner of stolen goods. GoveraorHendrleas. The sobriquet of "Oleaginous," bo often applied to the Hon. Thomas A. Hendricks, of Indiana, , seems mote appropriate than ever after his speech before the Democratic Convention of Indiana. The ad dress was carefully prepared, and its every word and sentence closely scrutinized. It was spliced in one place and amputated in another until it was considered, no doubt, the most remarkable effort of the kind ever produced. And taken as a whole, it is an astonishing production. In the concrete it thunders like Jove. In - the ab stract it coos like a sucking dove. He starts straight at a proposition as if he would knock the vitals out of it at a bounce; but just before be bits it, his boulder turns to a bunch of down, and he carresses what he threatened to destroy. Bnt in his effort to slip through the narrows and slide over the sand bars of politics, Mr. Hen dricks is not altogether successful He does well; he does better than most men could do; but his lubri cated breeches catch on a jutttng point here and there, and, not to put too fine a point on it, they are rent. One of the chief questions enter ing into the local canvass in Indi ana is temperance. At the last session of the Legislature a law was passed known as the Baxter law, which, during the late exitement, has been rigidly enforced, and has consequently grown to be very un popular with a certain class of the people. Probably any other law restricting the sale of intoxicating (trincs, closing the saloons at an early hour of the night, and making the saloon keeper responsible for damages occuring through an un proper sale of liquor, would be just as unpopular and just as oppressive as the Baxter law; but such a law has not been tried, or at least has not been enforced: and so the Democratic convention, afraid al beit to come out boldly against any rigid regulation, determined to court favor with the antitemper- ance element by denouncing the Baxter bill, and to molify the tern' perance people by insisting that they were effective. To Mr. Hen dricks was given tne task, as is asserted, at his own request, o: introducing tins proposition and clearing his own records, which was not exactly satisfactory to the anti-temperance element Mr. Hendricks as uovernor approved the Baxter bilL Finding that it had become unpopular with his party, he proposed to make things all lovely and harmonious by tell ing how became to do this.' To tne initiated, this explanation is a curious one. He says, in brief, that having examined the bill and found it constitutional (.the plat form, by the way, says its consutu tionalit v is doubtful, he considered it his duty to approve what hail been passed, after due deliberation. by the people's representatives, In other words, he had "no policy to enforce against the will of the people." He does not say, in words that he was personally op posed to the bill, but he creates that impression. The facts are, that Governor Hendricks was the recognized friend and, so far as his official position would admit, the advocate of the Baxter bill. He wrote to numerous parties in vari ous parts of the State, which were universally understood to expess a desire that the bill might become a law. His smooth assumption now, therefore, that he did not approve of the law is as cool and impudent a piece of acting as we have met for many a day. It was in sliding over this rock that the first rent in his garments was made. The financial question was an other troublesome obstruction. On this subject the wily Governor reminds us of a species of steam vessels called "double enders." They move forward or backward with equal facility. With a full head of steam on, Hendricks struck for greenbacks. Interpreted by the platform, he struck for them more completely, and lavishly than any other prominent public man. But just before he reached the grand shoal he stopped, and began moving the other way fully as rapidly. He sailed over and waved lus banner to the expansionists of the West, but, without stopping, moved swiftly to the bullionists of the East, and fired a big gun to let them see that his flag of specie payments was flying at the main. Having done this, he went mean dering about until he anchored finally with one end of his boat in a limitless sea of greenbrcks, while the other was grinding on the reefs of specie resumption. Mr. Hendricks made another failure when he tried to get over the charge that he had admitted in 1872 that the Democratic party was dead. Going into the ranks of the Liberal Republicans, and em bracing the doctrines of Horace Greeley, he then announced that the Democracy turned their backs on the past Later, when beseech ed to come to the rescue of "Rise up Willian Allen," of Ohio, Mr Hendricks was conveniently en gaged and did not respond, and his action was regarded as another proof that there was no more Democracy for him. Now he tells us that it was only "dead issues" on which ho tarns his back, and that the antediluvian relic known as the Democratic party can never die. "It is endowed with immortality of truth and right says HendnckB, "and will yet achieve man s enfranchisement Columns might be written on the coolness of this assertion, but we forebear. The speech i 3, in brief, a loud bid for the Presidency. It is the effort of one whose accom plishments as a trimmer and a dem agogue of the more respectable and, therefore, more dangerous, class are positively unrivaled. We ' bad hoped that the day of double dealing and deception had passed, j but it appears that this gentleman has yet confidence in his ability to humbug and deceive the voters of Indiana after the old fashion. We shall see whether his calculations are well made. Inter Ocean. A Bride and Her Doakle. The woeful predicament in which Chinese would be bridegroom found himself is thus described by a Yokohama correspondent of the Cleveland Herald. He writes: A very curious story comes to us from China. A bride was on her way in a sedan chair from the house of her parents to her husband's abode. Passing through a grave yard, the bearers of the chair no ticed that their burden grew heav ier. Tins, however, they ascribed to fatigue. On reaching the bride groom's house, though, what was the dismay of the honest 'folk to find on opening the chair, two brides instead of one. Two spick, span new brides, alike even to a hair pm! Confusion reigned, and polygamy was imminent. Better counsel prevailed, however, and the about to be mother in law appeared and instituted a searching investi gation. But even maternal eyes and instinct failed, and the old lady was obliged to give it up in despair, being heard to declare, sotto voce, that "she never knew that girl was wins before." Just at this moment k bright thought occurred to the father. Ho remembered that his girl was what the Chinese call a rip snorter at weaving, and he forthwith suggested that the two girls be set to spinning, and the one who came out last he declared to be "tother." No sooner said than done. The girls were put in separate rooms, and the materials for spinning placed at hand. The doors were locked, and watch and ward kept over them by the anxious parents and all the old ladies of the neighborhood. When the day was done the doors were opened and the work examined. Wonder of wonders! Both girls had done the same amount; neither had a thread more nor less than the other. The poor father pulled his pig tail, and tramped about m a very lndiscnm mate way, while the mother sat down diconsolately in a corner and addressed the assembled com pany as 'hussy.' At last accounts the matter was still in a very mixed condition. Nobody is able to tell which is which, and the would be bridegroom, unwilling to cast him self away on a duplicate, has gone to California to ease his aching heart in the 'washing pigeon' at San Francisco. The 'Master of Heaven' has been summoned to drive away the devil that haunts the bride. In view of this true and veracious history, who will say that life is not a dream, and who is wil ling to cast a first stone at our Pu ritan ancestors of Salem witchcraft memory?" Built of Sea Shells. I've just heard ot a very wonder ful thing. Tbe houses and churches and palaces of the big and beautiful city of Paris are almost all made of sea shells! This is how it happened : Some hundreds of thousands of years ago, the waters of the ocean rolled over the spot where Paris now etmds. Under the ocean waves lived and died millions and millions and milions of tiny sea shell animals. By-and by, after a great, great many years, the ocean waters no longer rolled over this spot, and the very, very big piles I might say, indeed, the mountains of dead shells were left for the sun to shine on, the winds to blow on, and the rains to fall on for many centuries more, till tho shells had hardened into rocks. Then, after hundreds and hundreds of years more, men came and began to build houses. They dug m tho earth, and found the sea shell stone, with which they built the beautiful houses and churches and palaces for which Paris is so famous. And yet the poor little sea shells that uvea ana died so Jong ago, never get the least bit of credit for all that they did for the fine city! Per- iaps, they don t care. At any rate, we will remember them, and that will be BomeUiinsr. While we are talking about this matter, it may be as well to ro member that a- great many of tbe rocks in different parts of the world were made of sea shells and fresh water shells in just about the same way that the stone of 1'aris came to be ready for the builders From "Jack-in the Pulpit," St, Nicholas for August. Let those who are leaving home for a time, go with the determina tion to take their religion.with them, and to use it so wisely and so well I that it shall sanctify all their sports and smile upon all their pleasures, instead of brooding like a thunder cloud in the near archer of the sky, ever muttering and ever threat ening to discharge its volleys of displeasure upon all their brightest scenes and most agreeable expo riences. If one carries with him his Bible, his Sabath, his conscience, and his communion with God, and seeks to use each of these as not abusing it, so applyieg all to the various forms of life which summer weather and summer scenes de velop, as to be able to be continually glad in tue .Lord, and to reioice in the God of his salvation, he will be almost sure to be happy; and to get back home again with the con viction that, so far from having been j a backslider while far from the ' scenes commonly related to his re ligious life, he has been constantly growing in grace ; and that he is ready then to turn from the ab normal and hot weather and travel modihed phase ol lus experience back to that which is associated especially with home and with the cooler months, with a fresh and elastic spirit which tells that it has made a gain and not a loss in what it Las seen, and felt, and done, while a temporary exile from the tabernacle of home. A PnnnRvlvania cirl who weighed 160 pounds consulted a fortune-teller as to how to reduce her weight, and was told to drink strong vinegar in fore her meals. The girl followed the prescription for five months, and now limiieU UUBK3 lUICC uurco a, ".'t wpiehs onlv lia pounds, .true, sne is completely broken down in health dvsDeDtic. nervous, letnargic, ana generally despondent. Her color is gone, her eyes dull, and all ambition seems to have departea. uut no matter, she reduced her weight. 1 -fa W The Fort Wavne orean factory turns out 150 organs monthly, and employs sixty hands. Mr. Colfax and family leave South Bend for Colorado on the third of August for a two months trip. On their return Mr. C. will address the State Immigration Convention of Mississippi, and then an anniversary ceieDrauon ai jroruanu, xue. IV -A 1 Al J I1 KEARNEY'S FLUID EXTRACT B U C H U ! The only known remedy for BRIGHT S DISEASE! And a posite remedy for Goat, Gravel, Strictures, Diabetes, Dyspepsia, Nervous. Debility, Dropsy, Non-retention or Incontinence of Urine, irritation, mnaniauon or ulceration of the BLADDER AND KIDNEYS. SPERMATORRHOEA, Leucorrhcea or Whiles, Diseases of thePos- tate Gland, stone in the madder, Colculus Gravel or Brickdust Deposit, and juiicus or Mimy mscnarges KEARNEY'S EXTRACT BUCHTJ, Permanently Cures all Diseases of the Bladder, Kidneys, and Dropsical Swellings, Existing in Men, Women and Children, I OB-NO MATTER. WHAT THE AGE! Prof. Steele says: "One Iwttle of Kear ney's Fluid Extract Buch u is worth more than all other liuchus combined. Price, One Dollar per Bottle, or Six Bottles ior ivc .Dollars. Depot, 104 Dnane St., New York. A Physician in attendance to answer cor respondence and give advive gratis. RS"Seud stamp for Pamphlet, free."S -TO THE OF BOTH SEXES, No Charge for Advice and Consultation. Dr. J. B. Dyott, graduate of Jefferson Med ical College, Philadelphia, author of sev eral valuable works, can be consulted on all diseases of the Sexual or Urinary Or gans, (which he has made an especial study) either in mule or female, no matter from what cause originating or of how long standing. A practice of 30 years enables him to treat diseases with success. Cures guaranteed. Charges reasonable. Those at a distance can forward letter describing symptoms and enclosing stamp to prepay lostage. Send for the Guide to Health. Price 10c. J. B. DYOTT, M. D.. Physician and Surgeon, 10-1 Duane St., N. Y 14 ly S" TEEL RAIL.! DOUBLE TRACK! Baltimore and Ohio Hail Road- THE CiRF.AT SHORT LINE FROM CINCINNATI OR COLUMBUS EAST ! SAVING 87 to 110 MILES, and arriving on irain in Advance at NEW YORK. SAVING 59 MILKS, and arriving 5 to IIOUKS in Advance at BALTIMORE. SAVING 123 MILES and arriving 5 to 7 liuutis in Advance at WASHINGTON. Reaching rniiadeiphia One Train the Quickest. Magnificent Day Conehe! and Pall nun ra lace ifrawinir Koom . and Sleei ns Coaches Are run on this route letveen Louis, Cincinnati, Columbus, Bal timore and Washington City. WITHOUT CHANGE! Crossing the Ohio river on Splendid Iron Railway Bridges At Parkersburg of Bellair. By this Une yon will Avoid all; Oin niuuN ransiers. Tickets for sale at all Ticket Offices in the South and West. m . . ....... mrf,, miAj,, . mm . iruiiB Gen'l Ticket Ag't. MasterTransoort'n. Baltimore, Md. Baltimore, Md 1-tf tact Dr. J. Walker's California Vinegar Bitters are a purely Veg etable preparation, made chiefly from tho native herbs found on the lower ranges of the Sierra Nevada moun tains of California, the medicinal properties of which aro extracted therefrom without the use of Alcohol. The question is almost daily asked, " What is the cause of the unpar alleled success of Vinegar Bit ters t" Our answer is, that they remove the cause of disease, and the patient recovers his health. They are the great blood purifier and a life-giving principle,, a perfect Reno vator and Invigorator of the system. Never before in the history of the world has a medicine been compounded pos sessing the remarkable qualities of Vin eoak Bitters in healing the sick of every disease man is heir to. They are a gentle Purgative as well as a Tonic, relieving Congestion or Inflammation of the Liver and Visceral Organs, in Bilious Diseases The properties of Dr. Walk er's Vikegar Bitters are Aperient, Dia phoretic, Carminative, Nutritious, Laxa tive, Diuretic, Sedative, Counter-irritant, Sudorific, Alterative, and Anti-Bilious. R. H. McDOffALD & CO., Druggists & Gen. Agfa., San Francisco. Califor nia, &. cor. of Washington and Charlton Sts-N.T. Sold by all DragglaU aad Dealer. gif Tbe only Reliable Gift Distribution In tbe Country! 50,000.00 IN VALUABLE GIFTS! To be Distributed in Xj. ID. SIDE'S 168th REGCXAR MONTHLY GIFT ENTERPRISE! To be drawn Monday, August 10, 1874. ONE GRAND CAPITAL PRIZE, $5,000 IN GOLD! Two Prizes $1 ,000 each in Greenbacks ! Two Prizes $500 each in Greenbacks ! Five Prizes $100 each in Greenbacks! One Family Carriage and Matched Horses with Silver Mounted Harness, worth l liorse and Bnggy, with silver mounted Harness, worm nw. One r ine-toiied: Rosewood Piano, 'worth 55-tO. Five Family Sewing Machines, worth S100 eacn. 7o0 Gold and Silver Lever Hunting Watch es (in all) worth from 520 to S300 each! Gold Chains, Silver-ware, Jewelry, etc., etc. j Number of Gifts 6,000! Tickets limited to 50,000! Mr Agents Wanted to sell Tickets, to wnom Lioerai mmiums will be paid. Single Tickets, 81; Six Tickets, 5; Twelve Tickets, $IO; Twenty-live, 8SO. Circulars containing a full list of prizes, a description of the manner of drawing, and other information in reference to the Distri bution, will be sent to any one ordering inem. ah letters must oe aauresscu to Main office, L. D. SIXE, Box So, 101 W. Fifth street. Cist INN ATI, O lt-ow WE FAVORITE LAWN MOWER And GARDEN ROLLER COMBINED Manufactured and for sale by tho WEED SEWING MACHINE CO. SIMPLE, EFFICIENT, Dl'RABLE. Runs easy and lisiit on any kind of ground, smooin or roun, aoes not ciog, ami never gets dull. HARDIN A Sit AIIDOX, Managers, 2i5 West Fourth Street, Cincinnati. 13-4 W (E. N. F.) REE TO BOOK AGENTS. An Elecrantly Bound Canvassing: HOOK lor tne Dest mm meanest family liible ever published, will besentfiee of charge to any book agent. It contains Over TOO tine Scripture Illustrations, and agents are meeting with unprecedented success. Address, slating experience, etc.. doing, NATIONAL PUBLISHING CO.,Chl eago, 111., St. Louis, Mo., or Philadelphia, anil we win snow you wmu our agents are l'a. 4w Forewarned, Forearmed. To be fore- i armed now when you are threatened with all tne ailments caust-a hy debilitating Spring and Summer weather is to make I ree use ot JTJRTJBEBA Which will make the Liver active, assist Digestion, t'urify the blood, strengthen the Uterine and Urinary organs, invigorate the Svstem. ami make von tniov lit" n vnn ougiu. irice.ti a nottie. auui o,. KiiL- liOUG, Agent, New ork. 18-4w 200 PIANOS AND ORGANS. New and Second-hand, of First Class Mak ers, will be sold at Lower Prices for cash, or on Instalments, or for rent, in City or Coun- I ry, during tins month, hy ilOKACE WAT- KlW & SU, .No. 41 ISroadwav, than ever before ollered in New York. SPECIALTY: llanos and Organs to let until the rent money pays the price of the Instrument. count to ministers,churehes,schools, lodges, j uustrateu catalogues mailed. A large dis eic. i-4w 3,000 Outfits Ordered in Advance! waStei TELL IT ALL By Mrs. Steuhouse. of Salt Lake City. 25 yrarsiue wiie oi u Mormon Ilign I'riest, With Introduction bv Mrs. Stowe. Over 3,000 Outfits ot this Extraordinary work were ordered by old Agents, in advance. who are now selling as to 40 a day! Its sale is without a parallel. One Agent (ladvl sold 2S0 in one week. Terms big: sales pos itively immense. Compleleoutnt freeto all agents wuo mean ousiness. Circulars tree. Address, QUEEN CITY PUB'NG CO.. 1S-4W Cincinnati, Ohio. M I III A splendid paying bu VmSA W mlMi "rj-our entire" lme," "8" home or traveling, you : busi- iours at round or old of either sex, A i hi splendid and complete outnt sent free to those who will act as our agents. No capital required. We must have au agent in every town. Write at once and secure the agency. Address 18-4 6 N. Howard St., Baltimore, Md. Al. 1K.N. HALL S CO.. Dr. Sharp's Specific cures Ivsveisia. Liver Complaint, Constipation, Vuinitiiigol Food, Sour Stomach, Water Brash, Heartburn. liow Spirits, etc. In thirty -five years never ailing 10 cure me most obstinate cases. Sold by druggists generally. C. K. Potts & Co., agents for Richmond, Indiana. Iiepot, application. is-4 ii.)i,iKuisirm,. i. circulars mailed on pOB COUGHS, COLDS, Hoarseness, and all Throat Disease WELLS CARBOLIC TABLETS. Pnt np only in Bine Boxes. A TRIED AND SURE REMEDY. Sold by Druggists. 18-4 JTICII FABMI LAXDS IX NEBRASKA, Sow for Kale Veiy Cheap. ren Years Credit. Interest only Six per Cent. SEND FOR "THE PIONEER,' A handsome Illustrated Paper, containing inn numt!m uaw. a new numoer just, published, mailed free to all parts of the woriu. Auurcss, r. 1JA V 1 S. Land Commissioner 17. P. It. R 1S-4W Omaha, Xeb. ART A DOBBINS, Honse, Sirn and Ornamental PAINTERS, GRAINERS, Etc. 353 Main Street, IS-ly RICHMOND, INDIANA. w ASHING! WASHING! Family Washings wanted at THE HOME FOR THE FRIENDLESS. All washing well done, and at low price. 12-tf OPKINO AMD SIMMER. u The undersigned has Just received hlsnew FALL. STYLES OF HATS of all kinds, to which he invites the attention of all who would indulge in the latest fashions. BurCall at the Hat and Cap Store of IJOHN 8UFFRINS. Richmond, March 1. 1ST 3. 1-ly jyOTE SWAINE, PHOTOGRAPHIC ARTISTS Are prepared to do all kinds of work their hue of business.! in AND IN THE BEST STYLE, At their Galleries, S04 and SOS Main St : (third story,) AND Corner of Main Fiftb Streets, RICHMOND. INDIANA L. KNOPF. C. U. KOPF. X. K OPF. KNO P T S Dealers iu all kinds of Fresh and Dried Meats, Manufacturers of BOLOGNA, HAM AND PORK SAUSAGES, Etc. 213 Main street, Southeast cor. Pearl, (old Fostoffice corner.) Oject 7(Ml-tf RICHMOND, INDIANA. EORftlE W. SIHMONS, AGENT FOR Coal, Lime, Plasters, Cements, Stone Pipe, Fire Brick, Fire Clay, Stoneware. office, 194 Fort Vara Avenne. near the Depot, RICHMOND. INDIANA. JOB PRINTING. business Cards " Shipping Cards, Railroad Cards, Address Cards, Bill Heads,! Business Cards, Checks, Drafts, Wedding Cards, Visiting Cards, Ball Cards Invitation Cards, Bills of Lading, Letter Heads, Envelopes, Statements, Etc.. Etc Office, Third Story H. E. Cor. Ma.ia and Marion St:. Second door East of the Richmond National Bank. Orders thankfully received, and promptly attended to. Address IB. W. -D-ATVIS pOR RENT, TWO STOREROOMS, Iu Lyceum Hall Bnlldlns;, Adjoining PostolHce, Nos. 39 and 41 Fifth Street. Possession given January 10, 1875. 32 R. E. HACGHTON, 91. D. Office, No. 36 South Franklin St, RICHMOND. INDIANA. May 1st, 1871. Dt P. HOtXOWAY. COL. B. It. MASON. James m.biachakd. NION PATENT AGENCY D. P. H0LL0WAY & 0 Have engaged m the business of Soliciting Patents and Prosecuting Patent cases. Bu siness entrusted to them will receive prompt attention. Clum Against the Government, FOR BACK PAY, FOR PENSIONS, Etc. Will receive personal and prompt attention ALL INFORMATION In reference to Patent Laws cheerfully given Copies of the Laws and Rules and Regula tions of the Patent Office, will be sent gratis on application. In applying for a Paten the applicant should Forward a Model of his Invention susceptible of being illustrated by a model or if it consists in a chemical compound samrjles of the liiicreuienis in their commei cial state, and also in the proposed prepared form. Kiiou id oe sent. Also, a full description of the Invention or discovery, and its advantages should be given as is practicable, to aid in the proper preparation oi me papers. Persons believing they have made an invention or discovery in art or science, and desirous of knowing whether the same has been patented, by transmitting to us a model, or drawing, or a sufficient descrip tion to make the invention intelligible, can have a thorough examination made in the Patent Office, and the result of said exam ination forwarded to them for a reasonable compensation. O A. V E- A TS Will be prepared on short notice, by the in ventor giving brief description of their in vention. DRAWINGS! Will be made In srtlMic style tieni mode furnished by inventors SEARCHES OF THE RECORDS Of the Patent Office In regard to titles in Patents, will be made on application. Send full name or names character of the invention, and, if possible, date of Patent, COPIES OF CLAIMS Since 1836, will be furnished on the reception of SI, the applicant giving the full name of the patentee, nature of the invention, day of t he patents, etc Washington City, Dec. 21, 1872. Nil AIT' fiis m m mm, NATTRE GREAT KBU&vff POB TBB THROAT AND LUNG8. It Is gratifying to to Inform tbe pnblie that Dr. L. Q. C. Wisli.rt's Pine Tr t. Cordial for Throat and Lung Diaeaw hM " reputation from the At- inuuc me i-Rcine ocean, and from thence iu some of the first families of Europe, not through the press alone, bnt by persons throughoot the States aetnally benefitted and cured at bis office. While be ntibiish. less, so say our reporters, be is unable to sup ply the demand. It gains and holds its rep utation: First. Not by stopping coach, bat b loosening and assisting nature to Cirow off the unhealthy matter collected about tbe throat and bronchial tubes, which causes irriiauon. Second. It removes tbe cause of irritation (tfhlch producescough) of the mneoosmem- ' brane and bronchial tubes, assists the longs to act and threw off the unhealthy seere tlons, and purines the blood. Third. It is free from squills, lobelia, ine- cac and opium, of which most throat and lung remedies are composed, which allav cough only and disorganise tbe stomach. It , has a soothing effect on the stomach, acts on the liver and kidneys, and lymphatic and nervous regions, thus reaching to every part of the system, and in its invteor&tinir and purifying effects, it has gained a repu tation which it must bold above all others in the market. KOTICE TheKneTreeGordial Great American Dyspala Pills, AND WORM SUGAR DRO. JS Being unaermy immediate direction they shall not lose their curative qualities by tbe use of cheap and Impure articles. IIESBT R. WISHABT, , Proprietor FREE OF CHARGE. Dr. L. Q. C. Wishart's Office Parlor's are opened on Mondays, Tuesdays and Wednes days, from 9 a. m. to 5 p. m., for consultation by Dr. Wm. T. Mage. With him are asso sociated two consulting physicians of ac knowledged ability. This opportunity Is uot offered by any other institution in the city. L.Q.C.Wishart,M.D., No. 232 Xorth Second Street. PHILADELPHIA. Jj-iAI.1, AND WINTER. BITTZItB IV1IW MTOO. CARPETS, DRY GOODS, DRESS GOODS, MATTINGS, GENT'S FURNISHING GOODS OIL CLOTH, LACE CURTAINS, WINDOW SHADES. J. FORKNER. 270 Mala Street, RICHMOND, IKD. April 29, 1S73. :7-tf CGCSTCS B. YOUNG, ATTORNEY AND NOTARY. Office In room over George W. Barnc's Grocery, Richmond Indiana, A LECTURE esizt. Jnst PnblUhed In a Sealed Envelope. - Price Six Cents. A Lecture on the Nature, Treatment and Radical Cure of Spermatorrhoea, or Seminal Weakness, Involuntary Emissions, Sexual lability, and Impediments to Marriage gen erally: Nervousness, Consumption, Epilepsy and Fits; Mental and Physical Incapacity resulting from self-abuse, etc By ROBEItT J CULVER WELL, M. D Author of the Green Beck, etc The world renowned author, In this ad mirable Lecture, clearly proves from his own experience that the awful consequences of Self-Abuse may be effectually removed without dangerous surgical operations, bou uies, instruments, rings, or cordials, point ing out a mode of cure at once certain and effectual by which every sufferer, no matter what his condition may he, may cure him self cheaply, privately and radically. This I ecture will prove a boon to thousands and thousands. Sent under seal, to any address, in a nlain sealed envelope, on me reiripv oi six . . ..... .... . ... ii ..q A 1 Tw cents. Culver- well's Marriage Guide, price 60 cents. Ad- dress the publlsners, CHAS. J. KLINE CO., 127 Bowerv. New York P O Box 586 JOHN L. OWEN, Hoist ii Sign Painting, AND CALCIMININb. No. 3 Sonth Front Street, RICHMOND, INDIA V ' w1 I I 4