Indiana State Sentinel, Volume 26, Number 17, Indianapolis, Marion County, 13 December 1876 — Page 7

THE 1XDIAXA STATE SENTINEL, '"WEDNESDAY MORNING, DECEMBER 13, 187G.

INDIANA'S LVDUSTMES. Indianapolis, the Capital of the 'Hoosier" State, Now Boasts the Possession of the Nordyke & Marmon Co.'s Great Iron Manufacturing and . Mill Furnishing Establishment. Description of the Building, Machinery, Etc., Which Go to Make Up the Institution Which the Millers of Indiana and Neighboring States Ftel Projd of. The Unlbtl States Milling and Matiutaclurlug Journal. Indianapolis, the capital of tlio täte of Indiana, has been fur several year; cue of the mod prosperout cities in the United States. It has been so fortunate as to is-eoine one of the most prominent railroad (enters' in tin' country. Thi. of course, in a reat measure, has leen i the means of lui!.iiirc it up rapidly from the small city it wa a do. n years ago to the large, handsomV and important one it is now. The t ifizens Lave never lot dight of tlie fart that manufactories are the all important thimrs in connection with railroads and their own natural resources to jrr i r.. t i i ts. There i; impearhm'iit in the Waihingu-n air. The New York theaters are closed on account of the Brooklyn disaster. The .stamjoede from the jump tj the legitimate South Carolina house continues. Returning bored: .Kvery honest man who went down to Loui-iana to see a fair count. There is a complaint What Trench racehorses are running out the oKt Kndih stock. Chicago Time: There's no fightiifg in South" Carolina, but in tbe hou-e it is dual to the death. Will any theaters be built with broader entrances .since the Urrxjklyn calamity? Probably not. Krupp, the cannon maker, lias l.,:fx men in Lis emplpr. What a kin;; of bulldozers he w ould make. (rtrneral Nicholl.-, of Louisiana, rivals Wade Hampton in moderation and noble self-control under wrong, Governor Kellogg is .slow about bringing the murderers of Klia rinksion's husband and child to justice. It is natural that IJeecher should .suppose Hayes to have Ihh-m vindicated by the disagreement ot" the jury. Trees have jut Wen formally planted at Nashville university in honor of George I'eabody and Dr. Kirnas .Sear-. Conkling anVl Blaine haven't yet kised aud made up. Neither knew that the other wa.s in the senate on Monday. The Cincinnati Gazette is still howling fr 'wah." Nature has provided the good deacon wiih Jsamson's favorite weapon. Whi-ky left in casks for seven years will lose ita fusil oil; and a critic says that uone letss than seven jrejir.s old should be consumed. Han Krane.iisro eats Srt.f "00,000 oysters a year, one-third of whivh are transported "from New York and l;Utimore. They cost Zrt cents a plate. The Santa Klaw.s klan. of Vicksburg' Miss., vill luld a grand larnival, Monday veuing. December IS. The aüair is likely to be brilliant. New York Heral 1: When your varty do s a mean thin you call it fighting for the right; when the other party doü.s it you call it a despicable trick. Igleseas Laa counted himself in as president of Mexicu without any returning board, l'resident Irdo, however, is moving his troops by w ay of injunction. f-t Loui.s Times: AVhile the country comtuend-s Grant for his sober second thought, it will not be apt to overlook the iniquity of his iaebriated first idea. The English t office forwarded in 1 ST no leer than ix7,wiO,tjo) letters, Tu.UJO.imk) postal carls and 2.!,00,00) book packets, mostly at half-penny and penny rates. In Warsaw, in IStil, the IIus.sian3 perjetratetl upon Polish men and women the Kaine atrocities, nly on a smaller scale, whic h muke the czar ungry w ith the Turk. A chunk of snow, hardened by mixture with mud, and thrown by the "heel of a ran less horse, knocked three teeth from the Hweet month of a sleigh-riding Chicago girl. Courier-Jonnial: Speaking of the impeachmeat of Grant, it may be paid that Ca sar had hw Brutus, Charles 1. his Cromwell, and Grant why, he'll have anything you'll gire Lim.' Cincinnati Eaquirer: All bets are declared 'otr" on the presidential election. Thijc ii right. The people tleeted Mr. Tilden and the -returning boards elected Hayes. That's a e tand-otf. it. Looia Kepubliisin : Schurr roars at the returning board rascals as "miLlly as a sucking dov." Where te. thone jitout, sharp words with which tlie same centleman peltc.1 the satiie rascal a Jew fchort years ago. . , (,'hicago Times: We hardly think it, but it U solemnly said tliat Mr. Kvart-s'.s recije for the situation autrgests that congres-s apply to the supreme court to put the governnie nt Into a receivership and then let Uvarta be appointed receiver. Cincinnati Commercial: Tlie joy of the Times was bo great yesterday, when the aewy came in from Florida, that the xuwt

Luild üp a great and wealthy citj'. Indianap!is l-i-s Uen s.i fortunate during this centennial vear us to secure the removal of the iron ami mill furnNhin works of the Norihke.v. Marmon Co. from Richmond, Ind.. to that eity. 1 he Nordyke .V Marmon Co. ha.? obtained an emiahle reputation dniins past years for the quality of their work and their promptness arid reliability in the tilling of contra' ts anions their cutmf rs in Indiana and nei:Li'orin states. TheY have found it to lie lo tl- advantage of themselves and their cusvinn rs to remove their works to Inli inax!is on :(count of shippinir t'ailit:es and various other reasons. The cn.-nmng we present herewith is a line representation of the establishment of the Nordyke .V Marmon Co., formerly of Richmond, Ind., but now located in Indianajo'.is, the j:rat railroad center of the state, it not of the west. The main buildin? is, as shown in the cr. a one and two-story, slate-eovered, briek and stone structure, nearly feet in length, fron which intrs and various compartments extend. The machine department i a room -?ox;J.".o fiet. containing iron-working tool, anion;: which is noticed the ponderous 'ear-eut;irie engine, weight four tons, capa

ble of si.ai iiv' and cutting tin iron teeth in ppl work of tlo.irir'g mills. The foundry ain.le and conii.lete in itJ arrangements, .iml is srk plied with all the ut::l appliance' for the production of every dc-irable kinlof mill custiiigK The collection of pattern" embraces tlio.-e ranging from the smallest spiral conveyor float to the numerous pulhideous charicature eer made of any human teing was printed for the second time, and again called Hayes. This is too bad. It eertainlv puts on awful fa-e on the re turns. New York Sun: It is announced now that General Grant disapproves of the course of General linger. This disapproval comes too late to be accredited as sincere. If General Gran." reullv and earnestly disapproved of the conduct" of General linger, would he not have said so at once, as son as linger' a Con duct was kuovn? Captain Ptovton, the man w ith a swimming apparatus, has l.een Tora long time unheard of. His latest feat was a recent attempt to swim down the river I'o, from Turin to Venice, a distance requiring from seven to eight days. After hours in the water fatigue induced a fever, which necessitated his landing and relinquishing the attempt. Paron Alfonse de Kothsehild owns Yoltaire's snutVI-ox. cane and waistcoat. Princess czartorv.-Ka mi tne ring iueen Eliza beth gave Ks-ex, and an F.nslisb entleman jxissesses that found on Seipio Afrioanus s linger. Sardoit, tlf; dramatist, has just pur chase" I the door of the houe in which Cor neille lived and died, und which has lately le-n nized. LITERARY NOTES. The llarr-rs will publish a fifty cent edition of "I'aniel IVronda." The third volume of P.lanchard Jerrdd's ' Life of Napoleon III." is in the press. An illustrated Sunday magazine, with the Pev. Ir. Heems as editor, is among the possibilities. An important new book on the law of nations, by Sir Edward Creasy, is entitled, 4A First Platform of International Law." Html X. Houghton will publish a new edition, in one volume, of "The Dairy and Keminisccnces of Henry Crabbe Kobinson." Scribner, Armstrong t e'o., the American publishers of Jules Verne's works, announce a new work by him, entitled "A Drama in Mexico." The anther of "The lilot's Wife," Mr. Jonas Lie, has two novels in preparation. They are to be published by S. 0. Griggs. At Co.," Chicago. Longmans tt Vo. Ixmdon, are just bringing out Mi. Amelia 15. Edwards' elegantly illustrated hook of travel, "A Thousand Miles up the Nile." The forthcoming January number of the. North American lieview will contain an article on "Kvlution at the Latest Date," by one.of the brightest scientific writers in the country. The next volume of Roberts Brothers' No Name Series will be a novel entitled, "Is That All?" The two volumes already published, "Mercy Philbrick's Choice" and "Deidre, have had a large sale. Mr. J. V . itouton has puolished a new edition . of Tom Moore's "Epicurean and Alcifhroji," with beautiful Vignette illustrations by Turner. The book is handsomely gotten up with un eye to the holidays. It is interesting to know that in some newly .discovered Inaian manuscripts is found 4 the text of the Ilig-Yeda Hamhita, accoriing to the Sakalasaktia. divided into maudalar and Ashlakas, the Adhyayas being numbered from 1 to 04. G. P. Putnam's Son have, republished in a thin book Hr. tedraan's tJalaxy pape' on '"Otavins Urook.s Frothingham and the New Faith.' There is added to Mr. htedman's review an extract "from a recent and typical sermon, which Rives the teacher's own statement of his faith and life-long purpose." Ithoda Brough ton's new novel, "Joan," is well spoken of by the London Athenaeum, w hich judges that the author may yet give to the world a l-ook that w ill be an addition to literature. "Her future is in her own hands," adds the critic sagaciously. Mim liroughtoix ought to be grateful for the info rmati on. Saxe Holm's new storr for ßcribner'n Monthly, entitled "Farmer BaÄnett's Romance," wifl be published in two or three Fart, hegintrfug in an early number, and Yofessor Boyenon, of Cornell, since the publication of Lis "Tales of Two Hemispheres," has written several new stories which are to appear in the aame magazine. ßtoddard, the poet, wean a lull iron-gray

rearimr. up to six feet in diameter an hf- j min-pu K aepartmeiu is umier tne manageu en-inch face. Then; is aNo a gar cutter r p-rts in their l.ne and great of mallvr dimensions; . sixteen engine, j oare is used in selecting material and exelatbes. .!.!.. ix-cial ones f..r shafting, mill -tmg satisfactory work. A fwitch and spindles, etc.; two larce pullev latluw; six : track conne. ting with nil the railroaus een-upri-htan.l radial dhlN: live "iron planers, tenng at 1 ndianapolis have been built tip and and tl:e usual annli:,n. es for turnin-ont t!ie i ir.to the works. that delays and expense

leys. jr arim:. cn, required to e.uip the most extend ve llouring mill. In the pattern shop are employed a draughtsman and jatterri makers, constantly engaged on new work, remodeling arl improving. Nicely finished lathe, saws, etc., are used, jrreatly faeilitating the work in this branch. The wth 4 working department, which is ."o"2no Uet, encloses the machinery, arv etc., adapted to cutting out and forming all tliose parts made of wo!, so la7'ely itseU in the construction of Jit, ur holt, mill husk-, cleaning machinery, middlings purifiers, jxirtable mills, etc. Here fifteen machines are ned in all, including tho-e for making cogv, lliehtv, etc. Lumber is an item of sucu importance that it is their enstom to carry a large .-k-V:. ordered by them direct from ibmills '"f the kinds used, thus insuring a dry and eaned article. The mill-stone slicp is newly fitted with the tools essential in turning out the mot perfect mill-stones, embracing the heavy maehine ixm winch every runners-tone is suspended, from its centre, where, in the eour-e of finishing, it is turned true and balanced at full grinding .'peed. All the stone, both runner and bed-stones, npjs r and under runner, are subjected to iliLs machine finish, and turned true, even betör. the bands are rut on. The smith shop and

3n loading and shipping are reduced to tl minimum. This is a mo-t desirable and convenient location for a lare establishment ot tins character, and tlie com pan v are to be con eratulated on their irood fortune in secur ing it. beard. For lifteni years he has been in the New Yoik custom house. His appearance indicates at once the senial man of litera ture. The right hand leing paralysed. Mr, Stoddard has learned to write with his kft Stoddard's w ife is a wrilor of no mean ability, and has made a reputation for herself in the literary world. It seems that Pret Harte' " Two Men of Sandy 1 sir,'" which was printed in Osgood's little classic series, will never be published. Mr. Robson holds the copyright on the play, and he could notVontrol it abroad if prim ed. He denanus that Uit edition be stir pres-ed, and it is no more than right thru it should be. IWhen he paid i.tM.V for the play he considered that it was his outright, and so it seems to us it is. "lho Ansna, a new pnnoiogicai review (German) devoted to the English literature and language, will make its appearance in April. The first division will consist of papers on literature, grammar, history of the language, etc., and will be edited bv K. Wi Icker, of Leipzig; the second division, de voted to book reviews and to bibliograpnv of works relating to English, will be under charge of Dr. Moritz Trautinann. The staff of coHtributors includes Profs. Ten Brink Grein, Heyne, Kissner, and a host of other The letter of Mr. llham Morns "ioct and paper-hanger on the eastern question is spoken of as a mo-t refreshing specimen o pure and vigorous English, such as the modern newspaper does not often receive from outside sources. Morns writes with wail and perhaps also with an Eastlake pen on benalf of "the ouiet men who usually go about their own business, bu wh are now stung into bitterness by think ing how helpless they are in a public matter that touches them so" closelv." , The Saturday Reuew savs of Mr. Eugene Schuyler's "Turkistan" : "Thongk frankly criticising English policy, as he is entitled to do, he does not spare his friends at St. Petersburg, and we pay him a sincere compliment when we say that any civilian or jxilitical officer high in Lord Lytton's confidence, orany accomplished member of par-' liament on either side of tlie house bent on mastering the whole subject of Central Asia, might be proud to have w ritten these tw ovolumes.'" The Review is good enough to say that Mr. Schuyler docs not bolt his travels like most of his countrymen, and that his book is free from "Americanisms of 5pe3ch.M Mr. W. TL S. Ralston, tlie best English author on Russia, and the leading w riter on the subject, generously writes to the English journals that "the best book ever w ritten about Russia" is now in press. It "is' the work of Mr. D. Mackenzie Wallace, a scholar who has spent nearly six years in Russia, studying the various institutions of the land and the most itnportant questions respecting its historical past, social present, and political future, with the most patient and well directed industry. I will undertake to say from personal knowledge, both of the writer and of his boqk, that it will be the most important contribution ever made to the department of Russia in the Imperial Public Library of St. Petersburg the section, that is to8ay, devoted to books written by foreigners about Russia. I may even add that it will be accepted by most intelligent Russians as one of Jhe most valuable aids offered of late years to their knowledge of their own country. Mr. Tupper's drama. "Washigtonn," will be tuade known to most American lecture goers ty its author's readings from iU pages, and passages front it were published in the newspapers several montiis ago.but these rev elationsof its quality will only stimulate a desirrt to possess the work in its completeness. and James Miller, New York, has published it in a neat little volume, which will find a ,wide sale without doubt. This English poet's tribute to our country in the person of our country's father is all the more welcome for the reason that Mr. Tupper is recognized as esjiecially a poet ot tbe lmglish people, a poet who speaks the thought of the great body of home loving and home keeping men and women of England. Men and women of this class have Innibt and read Mr. Tupiter works more largely than those of any other poet of our tune, and it is not too much to assume that tlie y share hid genial ami kirkllr admiration for the character of Washington, us they share his philosophy and his tastes.

SAttFORJTS

RADICAL CURE Tor CATARRH Is ITiiiTcraIIr Kecommemlo!. V have lust reoelvt-d r com mim tent Ion from nearly every dtuginst In 'New Kurland and the west, nndthe testimony is tint vers!lly n lavor ot sunrorc.1 ii.'it;e l I ure for tatarrn. We btllve there rf er was a remcly s pii)uar wneteyer Known, ana certainly we leel that ue v.. r was one liv.n dewrvliu of praise. Founded uon corw-et s-intitie nrine!iles. anl cateul itcd by tlie m'st eeoniplislusl physicians to nn-et t tie severvt forms of catarrh, the cures ma'ie by it have not only h-'en num erous, but so r markrible as to excite pub.l mention aim caiw tue saie to exets d ti nfold that of any similar rt i.ieUv -ver ix comjlinte,l. While many arc nnxious lO make- pllbllC I tm-ir lest imoiiy In favor ol .1 , , . i : , . I tlie KiUttc:iI lure, j others ami hiiiom: this number mav ! fonnl many of our most respected citizen Uisl:ke to become publicly iucntitied wii b so loathsome a disease. Hence, in the follow iiur case we re unable to tflve tbe name, bm are perinltted to refer those who mavcHll upon us personally to him. aud to state tin seeiitv and eoinlirioti of tlie case before and after nsln? tbe Radical rnre, and also that theaentleman occupies a responsible orfiet: in one .(' our state Institution. e quote: "I would not for the world permit mv name to le used, Although I have no doubt it would be of benefit to iianv now surferim; as I hne suffered; but i ;iveyou a brief statement of ins" case : "For t wo yertrs I have tuken bromide of ita.ssa and bromide of ammonia every day. 1 never passed n lnzle night without geüin uponcc or twice to tree my throat it'oiu tbe matter that had dropped into it during sleep, and llnally I cc'iuhed during all this tinie. ince taking tlie licdical t'ure I hav- biken no potassM or amnion la, have slept soundly everv nfrht without wneasinev or distress; not a purticle of mutter tins drojp'd into my throat durinif sl-t p, nil every symptom of a eou'b has left me. ' A wonderful renlt truly all will say who know or can realize the extent and s. -ritv of this case. The irenileman has had. eighteen bottles. This must satisry the skeptical that there 1 great merit in tb Radical t'ure. Its mode of i)rej)iritiin is new ami orininfil. lgnoiing the old practices and rfinwlifs, ir. Sa n fotsl selected a new field, and bus demon stmb-d his method to be th only proper and never riiumir ireatmeiii. The lollowüig recomuiendatious are from DRUGGISTS, who' are comi tent witiu-Mses to tlie wor'.c it is daily doing: Knnford's Radical Cure lias jirmctl Die ht Tt medy lor riievliig ' Titarrh. W. M. KK1.;.'VS, .averbni. Maw. . I am selling large ;tim i-s of vour svin ford's Radical cure. IHt. VKM Wi UTII, liiddeford. Me. Sandford's Radical t'ure is bavin-.: a ufx-i sale. It is Just what Tj.e people have ut n wan tim:. A. M. it'.lCttV, .-si. P;ois, M." . I have kepi S'anfonl's Radical fure ti h-ittd since its liiM Intrcxluction, and the sale and satisfaction in its use have been une,ind.d b any other similar preparation within mv knowledt'e. W.U. WILLIS, AM ., ' i:eiuting, Mass. I have sold San ford' Radlcid Cure i.r a year or more, and it stands the lest the best of r.ny similar remedy J have e er sol i. WILL II. OWEN, MIlo, Me. Wo recommend noother cure, and have no trouble in selling it. I. V. EVANS& ., tiai ian l. Me. San ford's Radical Cure his given uulversl satisfaction topll my customers. and :doo all other remtslies is a KBcees-s. K. 1". I 'A UKY. Uaveihill, Mas. Sanford's ltadical Cur.- sells well, and is erv much liked. MRS. s. P. WIN'L Sauger ille, Me. Fjteh pack;.K contains Pr. 'San lord " Improved Inhaling Tube, villi full direct Ion lor lt.s use in all cases. Price l in. Cor sale hy all wholesale Hnd retail drnisi throiiKboiil th United States. WI-.EKS & l)IT'K.R."tieneral Ascents and Wholesale ln ukuisls, Hlou. COLLIES' VOLTAIC PLASTERS. AN Klectro-Galvanic Itnttery, eombintst with the celebrated Medicated Porous, Plaster, formln the grandest curative auent In the world ot medicine, and utterly surpassing all other Plasters heretofore in use. 1 hey accomplish more in one week than th. old Plantar in a whole year. They do not puliate, they cure, iostant relief a Horded in RheuniPtlsm, Neurnlein, Paralysis, e'mmps, St. Vitus' Dance, S. latl.'a, Hip I'mnplainls, Spinal AflVnions. Nervous Turns an 1 Irritations, EpileiK" or Pits proc'tHling from Shocks to the Nervow System, Knptnrcsand Strains, l'ractures. iiruises, ln;ustons, Weak Muscles and Joints, Nervous and Feeble Mnsulr Action. reat Svr-ness anl Pain in Any Part of the IJody, Weak and Painful Kidneys, Great Tenderness of the Kidneys, and Weak and Lame Back caused by Chronic Inflammation of the Kidneys. So confident are the proprietors in the great value of this plaster over ail other plasten that they do not hesitate to warrant ii to possess greater, far greater, curative propertiUianafl others combined, while the prW of each, viz: 2-j cents, is within the reach of every iulferer In the laud. Insist, then-fore, upon 4iaving what yon call for. Sold everywhere, sent by man care fully wrapped and warranted, on receipt of price, Uj cents lor one. 1.2. for six or SUJ i for twelve, by WEEKS Jfe POTTKK, Proprietors, Boston, Mass. B. TB ABBITT'S BABY SOAP. i; , 1 UlUT to. pure. np '. N t ' i oil nixsl In lUt tinclal and dtropttr fMl.ir. to f"it ram. riK rihI fWletrioo inirrvslientiL ;l's 1UII rOK THt T0I LIT Anu THB BATH t wit In bulling cbJ drpn, nlU preni vmpuonii, Iwp U okln tntl nt nmootti, contrttxit o health, and prj wit dif "J lx away with all tnixrs. rt,lk or wn Z,". ""vr . tain prerntlve of (' l'ring. ., In r J half th. crrlnir and n-n of huSjhood. ort! imf ' cost toewft mother and faroU j In Christendom ; pa-" ot It oak, ol ( on. wh, and nt fr- u,any iarM.o lrt ot t.ta a Addr- . X. MabbHt. New YuBJt COT. Jf- tmr Sur by tu imn ' The Hope of Howard Is what Induces so many people in search of SPLENDID FARMING LAND To go to Michigan, and wdect from the ONE MILLION OF ACRES of the lnn.l grant of tke fiiand Rapids anl Indiana R, It. Co. strong polls, sure crops, plenty of timber; no drouths, grasshoppers or chinch bugs. Pure er, running streams, ready markets, civilization and schools. Railroad rugs through center of grant. Price, from 81 to HO pc acre. Send for our IHustrated pamphlet, full of facts. In German or English. Say in what paieryou saw this notice. Address vV. 0. HUGHABT, Land Commissioner, GRAND RAPIDS, MICH. Tltle.rerfect. HAPPY NEW YEAR. Splendid Holiday Novelties; New Year's Ptorie: New Year's Presents: New ear's Pic- ' uret; New Year's Music; New Year's Cabinet iems; New Year's t'hroiaos: Sew Year's Poe try; New earn ( iiromo nooKmarn.; .ew Yar' Household; New Year's Fashions; .sew Year'a Greetings and other Holiday Novelties, with rare Literary (Jems and Pull-sized Patterns, In the Splendid Holiday January Number of Dkmokkst's Monthly Maoa.ikk, 25 cents, post free. Yearly f.'l. with a plendiU Premium. Do not fall to Ree or Rend for the January number, with the beautiful t.'nbinet and Artistic Oil Chromos, worth several times the cost of the magazine- Sold everywhere. PRESCRIPTION S FJIEI TTUii the npeuy cure of Seminal etiknaC Lost Manhood, and all disorders broug1 on by IndiacretJon or exceaa. Any Drugt baa the Ingredients. Ail dress, DB. JAQVEB OOanclaaattOhio.

CATARRHAL

IVFECTIONS AND DEAF2? ESS. Among the list of rhornir diseases which ar-As-t the human frame. Catarrh is tbe most prevalent, most offensive, mast product iye of discomfort, and of a variety of distressing and dantrerou comjd lent ion t. I ts S e:rbesi und the h.iid von Inert i .1 ; , ...,.-..., ... v- ii.ii u it ill infirm s-, ,. I ...,, ha ; ...i : .-i.i n . ferent times. It may bo a thin, colorless, acrid fluid, or a lairy. starch-like pubstauce. Generally, how c er, it Is a thick, purulent or muevo-pnriilent matter, fit her ash-colored. ftreenisu yeiioworoi b Jeep green tint, jcchsionally streaked or lb cked with blood. So copious and olü nsive is the illscharge iu many wis s that patients express their liel'.ef ull their heads ure one "mass of corruption." HAWKING. AIuii of tbe discharge passes ttaekward either droppihg into the throat or collect ins: us a touch, viscid, tenacious phlegm Ixdiind and above the soft palate in the passage Im"t ween the thront and head. Its lodgment embarrasses n-spiration and creates a ixmstant and almost irresistible desire to relieve the discomfort by il rawing the ollcnle stibstance into tbe throat by a loud insunlatiou throtmh ihe Hos-', so as then to tie a bio to eject it by a disagreeable "haw king." Offensive Breath. In the more advanced stages the d Wharves are Eenerally uf nn otl'eiisive odor, causing urcat 'aiinoyanet to one's friends and to the patient himself, while Ids .sense ot smell remains. This annoyance from the odor becomes almost beyond enduranie, more especially w hen the disease assumes the lorin of ozifnit, and the delicate Ikuics of the iuse ixwiiie dis a.s.'d. . Fatal Effects of Catarrh. The swallowing of catarrhal fiertions deranges the functions of the storuivch, citUKin indigestion and loss; ofipp tite and health, lability, idleness, ladtuoe, headache and disturbance ol mind sou u follow. Consumption and Deah. Catarrhal affections mndiecked by tratnu tit, are prone to extend by continuity of surtaec ahtmz the natural air pas-ames to the Inters, t bus causing consumptiou and death. In this connection it shiml-l aNo be remembered that the air which enters the lnn-s of a catarrhal pat lent is, every breath of it, poisoned by exhalation' from the foul secretions of tbe diseased surface. This consideration alone should lw; sutlicient to induce every ersoh thus aflUoted to make early application for relief. Treatment and Cure. In tew departments of medicine has ihere been wrought iu recent times a. more coir.lete revolution than in that of tlie Pathology ami ThcraiMitioM of diseases of the ltupiatory ortans. The introduction of the ljiryiigoscoe tin. given a grade of poitivenesn and certain ty to the actual seat of t tie disease. By my treatment a com plow and permanent cure of this repulsive disorder can be effected. This I have demonstrated in thousands of cases, representing the disease in every form and nil its various stages of development. Mv applicnt Ions are made to reach tno die?iel parts in Hie most direct and positive manner, instantaneously penetrating every cell and cavity of the head communicating with the nostrils, ana sunjoctiug every por tion ot tne membrane to tne heal inc action of the remedy employed. wnu tne most noneiiciai result, and without eaiwiiz the least pain or unpleasant sensation. Noises in the head disappear, the affected cav ities are thorouahly deans.yl from the Incrusted morbitlc matter. ths offensive breath is reinov and relief from other troublesome symptoms is almost Itnnusliately exnerienctsl, The discharge soon diminisln-s, irritation is allayed, the inflammation sulfides, ulcerations are made to. Ileal, and nnalllya wtdical ami jHTiuaneut cure is elf -et si. The Ear and Its Diseases The diseases of the ear most prevalent and destructive to hearing are of a chronic char acter, living neither iain nor distress, nor presenting any ottier lea tu re ealculut'st to arouse immediate alarm. The approach of deafness in such cases is so extremely lnsidi ous tt.at a patient Is tuiable to tell when the dirlieulty wtw first , notice, and so slow and gradual in its devlipm'nt that no progress is rierceptltile except ut long intervals of time. At first the hearing is found a little less acute than formerly, and a somew hat closer atten tion has to be iwld If we wish to "hear dis tinctly. Deafness in One Ear. Occasionally we find that only one ar is at tacked, the other retaining its liearinji power often for j ears. Where this is the case no ditleulty is experienced In hearing nonversation renlily, except when approjwhed on the deaf side, but the power is last to know the direction of sound; if hallooed to, for instance, a pel-son ao affected could not tell which way the ound came from. In the majority of cases the other ear becomes all'ected in time, and what was before a Rcrkuis inconveniencu Im--comesthen an actual misiVrtnue. Discharge From the Ear. Dischame from the ear is dangerous, both to hearing and to the system generally. In some cases It occasions total deafness, wiiile in all, the hearing suners to a more or less extent, and none escap without some notable injury lo the hearing power. Aside from it-s effect on liearing, the disease Is apt to sive rise to Neuralgia, Pptlejvsy, tt. Vitus Ihwice. l:iralysis and other nervous disturbances, results scarcely to be womlercl at wtin we consider tbe clone proximity.of thai diwaseit aural cavity to the great nervous center, the brain, to which the inflammation or ulcration might lie omtrluuicated with fatal conseunenees. Noises in the Head. Noises in the head are sometimes the first and only indication of a morbid condition of the ear. At firat they are slight and only come by spells, but after a time they are constantly present and increase in intensity. They usually resemhle the escape of idVam, the'ringlng of bells, the beating of the heart, the humming ot Insects and in fact every imaginable sound. Olten they prove a source of terrR'le toft mv and distress, and many a patient who applied to me for relief was far more anxious to nave the noises removed than the hearing restored, if only one thing or the other could be done. To the deaf I wold say that they must entirely discard the idea that fhey are incurable. I have numerous letters from responsible men who had given up nil hope of relief because one physician or another, whom they had been in the habit of considering tho epitome of niediettl knowledge, had pr inounced thent to be W. The deaf are frequently hopeless because of tlie failure or the ettorts ot ignorant pretenders, or of practitioners perhay generally able, but in such diseases utterly incompetent. 11 them first be convinced that the pliyslclan to whom they apply is worthy of confidence, and then thoroughly confide tn him and co-operate w ith him, aiding his skill by strict attention to his directions. ThUonlyIn.sk for myself, and further beg to assure those who consult le that they may rely in each case, whether it be for diseases of the flyc, Kar, Throat oi Lungs. Chest CH'arrh,-;that they will receive candid statement of the amount of benefit they may expect to derive from wy treat ment. F. A. VON NOSCHZISKER, fl. 0. ' OFFICES,' RAND HOTEL, N0S. GO & 32.

'MEDICAL.

mm Ait I ut.t -4 M prs. itif It 1 Zm to ih- mar-l a x. : mim cf the MTU. vkWcv, !t tu. rix, lAir-4 iIkuhtm m I. ck ort of rTirwd Coo : 1)3 ttrnly lPf y in if marril is a-mu )lue t-, ft,uiH ana iniddie '"! bouid rmd pnerrvt i! - J SNiUia. infonration, tiici no on cxn aäuni to be air cut i on how to pmerv tu kmZüv, and cnaipirxion, r-4 :nrr tr faUM c.uk the treabms ot yfMit.i the bt arci f jMiil. Th. ufüor mi t totmir vtnumtZrGi if luiailoD an; of thet-ibWu miaexsl ;n bta --' u.ar. V 7. 4. 0. CU1. W aaKuwv.M.. ft cm . XJ. 3 Coat Fla(. LOUISVILLE, KY.,"t iu-xw Til, a bt ir'u -tf dt tv. Cnm all forms of PTXIVATK. C'HHONir aud SEXUAI, CISSpermatorriifei ana Iiuolencyf m Ü. Pf.u'.t f ;-lf ah..- in . NfTMl r v im ' wyinn, orn'hfr 04'. .j.u pr... toe v f L jmii efl'i s. Nr..u-c 's. S rcinl t B. i.r., (Citt ft: . jr 1.t .liimsl. I! jin-- I surht. Jf wn, ls-...-ft'Ifc-.-n. fiiaf-,i I'fc.-, A.r- U. s.if, w'lo:U v'vtii'ii'.o or M ..... U. .r rui Pirf, Ä ... in- J.-n-j " j-.r'uv imiiw-T ..r ipl.itc, trt t!.i-")r. A ' '. vtA f.nra-v-jt'y .-jirl SYPHILIS l"",,r-"!I 1.! i-V -pi'nl!"'5 Ir""" --nt Gtnorrbr J IjxLiXj X :r 'ur., 1? l-. Kn.t, tr '.j. y - . .U.J .Kii-T I r:T qui. th- . a .-tuiu .-ikrt ( i. ki. t.-inci t1.-tli a.'iuv -..r-iTT- f.p.u. u. BIT enr-. Ma it 1- muiviimn ..-..:h i'rrfr.fcD d. mniV iE eaa : (rirtCf "i ' iM ;.J bi: i!t. n;.v tBrnTCn?es Gnarantced iu 11 Ca4 anurtken. PRIVATE COUNSELOR ...Vi tent i mit i. ff '.v wtst.V-t i .tiis sb.M U r-d Ht O. t&j -r J DR DUFF, No. 39 Kentucky Avenue, Indianapolis. Ind. Cureaall fornwof Private and Chronic fclaea3s. A rejjularly educated au4 lestaiiy qualltltsl physician, has been longer eetHhlistied and mont Bnccessful, as his eTW'nfciv pret1e will prove. A Re. Willi cxpertence tafi be rll?a ou. lo respousJOie piTsorui ujiee a-aiatidea till cured. Spermatorrhea. Bexnal Debility ad Tm potency, as the result of Bell'-aine in youiii, s-x-uai excesses in maturer years or otaer cause producing some of the foQowdng effect: Ner vousness, Semiuel KinMonii, Inmuese il Mixht, Defective Menmry, fbj-sloni IV-cay. Aversion toSecletyof Kemale., Uouruston ot Ideas, Loss of JSextiHl Pow-r,w rendering marriage improper or unhappy, ae j'rmnently cured PaiupbJct pp) etil eaieü for . ÜKi.ininv. Mahriaok Gcidk, explainlr-ar who may marry, who may not, why; the ir4p.si!mnu to marriage oausps, conserjuenee and cure; what can le done iu such ca-s-s JaO pure t.fc. contaJninii much infortixaiiou for tlie ninrried, or those contemplating niarrut?? a true an iage Guide aud Private Cxa ax lor. s nt to any addrtss, securely sealed, by until, fur SO eenta Books for the -Million. 3MRBIAGEI of Larria4e and iTlTT YTiT, I vate t oujst iior et l no ij U XJJÜi I married and tltose coutemplatinii masrlage, on tiie aoase aud diHordnrs of the sh-xuk1 system, wan The latest discoveries in t he science of reprxluctlou, the dnties and disqualirlcationx of marriage, etc .V book for privat perusal, whlcli thould b kept under lock ana key. 2tM pag and many ensrravlugs. Sent under seal foe oU Centn. Also a MEDICAL GUIIE on all disease of a privat nature In both sexeK, atul how tiiey ctn lx speedily and permanently cured- läu payea with numerous Illustrations sent under seal for entH. M EPICAL ADVICE on aexnal waknesA, lst energy. Impotence, kln, biood and chronic diseases, catarrh, etc.. A 40 page pamptdet. lr sealed envelopes, sent for laiu p. All iüt above diseases successfully treated, person alii or by letter. Established 1M7. Address 1)11 BUiTH' Dispensary, No, 12 N. Eghtii ntr3 Hi. Louis Mo IUPE0RS A POSITIVE VICTORY OVEZl Ell KI TISM AND NECKALOIA, HKAL ACHE. B1711NS, BßUISflä, ETC,, ETC KAI WKAT KKOP1.X 6AT. Chicago, July 1, 1K76. It lmmedlaiely ivllevtnl the paroxysm of pain ; ivlief we almoKi instantaneous. tieore D. Lawrence, 4Kt hUUt street. Ciuclnnatl, May 21, W78. Bupeon if tbe moat wouderfnl remedy. Id iy opinion, for rtiec hb tLsin and neuralgia ever known. Kooert In lies. Proprietor Merchant a&d. Mjül uluoturer's lieview. ancinnatl, July 5, 1JC8. I focrJ la Eui'ieon immediate and permanent relief. (ieorge A. Hmit h, President Main Htreet R. R. Chicago. July 12, LS76. My wife has used tt for neuralgia In the heaLw-nh perfectly satisfactory resulut. Jajnes F. tsVevetu, tSU Norta Clark street Cincinnati, July 8,1878.-1 hare been a rafferer, and was cured by the use of Eupeon M. K. Kendall, 4i and 47 Lspencade square. . ClTiclnnati, July 8, 1S7U. I shall ever be Indebted to you aud your Eupeon for ray ct.re of neuralgia. LouU W. Drake,. 16 Ki TLirm street. Chicago, July 10, 1876. Two days' use of Eupeoa has enabled me to rise from iy chair without aid, which I have not been able to do for six months before. W K. Bwallow, 46 Beiden avenue FOR SALE BY ALL DKUGGISTS. GREEN MOUNTAIN RENOVATOR. TWENTY YEARS' EXPERIENCE PRC that It will positively cure Scrofula. Kry iaa, Tumors, Fever Sores White Bwell. Heart Disease, Ulceration of the Lunga Liver, all Ulcerous, Cutaneous and Oanc affections, Piles, Fever and Ague, am. Diseases arising from Impure Blood; also Chronic Rheumatism and Neuralgic ArTeotlous. Free from Alots, quinine and ail injurious drugs. WHAT PAYSIC1AKS BAT OF IT. We, the undersigned physicmnaiave known Fmith's Green Mountain Renovator since tta flrsrt introduction to the public years sine have used It in our practice and fsmllles; have been eye-witnesses, as It were, of Its efficacy In the cure of these diseases which before had baffled remedial agencies, ad do hereby beai wllllus? testimony t all that to claimed for It through certificates of general advertlsemtnte 0. W. Niehois, M. 1.. Ht, Albans, VU; H. O Burt let (, M. !., Georgia, Vt Chas. Corey, M. D., Watervill-, Vt.: t-Ttas. F. Horn, IX. Winooskt, Vt. ; R. I Flagg, M. Vl, Ctembi idge, Vt,; JI. P. Blitir, M. 1 Oeorgla, Vu; L. J Dixon. M. D MUton, VU; B. FalrohlldM, M.. D, Milton, Vt.: A. G. Bush, M. D., Fairfax, Vt.; D. J. Morrill, M. D., Hwanton, Vt.; G. H. Plumley, M. DM MontpeUer, VU; ö. W. Brush, M. Us, Cambridge, Vt. For particulars see circulars. FOE 8 ALE BY ALL DRUGGISTS. CIDER WANTED j We want ilOTiarrelH FURE CIDER for Ck we to furnish the barrel. HODKINSON A CO,