Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 9, 26 August 1884 — Page 2
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Richmond Palladium iabliaed STerr Evening, (Sunday except. by IMA AC JESKIHHOST. 1 - ' --..1 M Office. No- 831 and B3.1 Main st , corner Ninth.
TUESDAY. AUGUST 26, 18S4. Entered aa Second-Class Matter, at the Poat- " office, BJahxaond, Indiana. THE DAILY PALLADIUM. TEH CENTS A WEEK. Cllvea tha laleat ear fey taleanraph. The Utnl nsrkrt ivparta r telecraph. All late panal aot aalareUaa)news of the day. Fall aad roi plete latal aai ot the city, aad la toe beat and thnpml atwipaaer la Eaat. era ladlaaa. REPiBLICA5 TICKET. FOB PRESIDENT. JAKES 6.,BLAIVEi iorJiAnaUb iv . FOB VICE PRESIDENT, OEH. J0H3T A. LOGAW, OF ILLINOIS. I. i ;') STATE TICKET. tA v.: S OOVbANOB. ... ' 1 T : WILLIAM H. OALKXNB.L Porta county. ' i.rvTrraviiT flflTKUOK.
EUGENE H BUNDY, Henry oonnty. . SBCBETABT OF BTATM. , atfJBKHT MITCH KU (Mbsoa ooontr, J j ?' vV t : J i AOTHTOB o mw, i V H ' . BRUCE CABS, Orange county. - TBSASUKXB 0 STATB, ROGER B. SHIEIi, Marion oonnty. ATTOBHKT QKNKBAL, WILLIAM G. WILSON. Tippecanoe county, . k t I0DM Of IHrUMI CODH FUT IMaTBKTr, .I 1 I JKPT.UI Pi HAMMOND; Jasper oonirly. KRPOKTEB SCFREMB MBIT, - WILXXAM M. HOGGATT, Warrick county. B UP MB INTEND EITT PUBLIC IMSTBUOTIoa, BARNABAS C. HOBB3, Parka county.
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FOB COKOBASS, THOMAS M. BROWNE. COUNTY TICKET. tLBOIBXATCBaJ, JAMES M. TOWNSEND, . , - JOHN aV MAUK. f cmotrrff Jtnxia, DAN1BX. W. COMSTOCK, , rarmncTrmta attobhii, JOHN P. BOBBINS. THKaatTBKB, STEPHEN S. STKATTAN. f ISAAC A. GOKMON. COM MISSIONKBS.I ABFtAM GAAR. MARK MAUDLIN, BrjHVKVOB, ALDUON H. STUDY. OOBONKB, ( CHARLES 8. BOND. t The ex-Democrats are becoming a formidable party, and will soon be able to execute judgment on tbe remaining portion of the Democracy, who will retire with Cleveland to the wilderness ' nest N ovembAjv 5 -" St - ' y 9 ' 1 " T Z 41 - j f. Sometu.j.3 an incautious Democrat conderns the acquittal of the Starroute deferuJaplSjJbut it is when he forgets that theairfspf tbe jury, Mr. Dickson, is a Jmparstf od i a meaober of the Democratic National committee, The two leading Democratic papers at NashTille,'Tenne8see, are quarreling over the meaning of the tariff plank in the Democratic platform. The Banu r contends it means protection and r tlie American insists it is free trade. It t certainly easnot be a Tery plain statement of a principle wben Democratic papers thus contend over its meaning. Cleveland indorses it, but fails to say which side of it. Hendricks.of course, is used to the straddle and is therefore exactly suited. The recent election in Kentucky for Appellate Judge in the eastern district is" an indication of how the current is moving in politics in other portions of the' country. The district is 'composed of forty-one counties, and last year gave a Democratic majority of 7,210. This year tbe Kepublican candidate for Judge was elected by 625 majority, tbe Kepublican vote being increased about 7,000 and the Democratic vote decreased something over 800. It is now pretty sure that in this district the Republicans will gain two members of Congress. Democratic perplexities are in creasing every day. Tbe Democrats in Montgomery county, in this State, last week appointed their delegates to the county convention. Among these were two prominent and influential Irish Democrats, named Pat McMannis and Timothy Ring. Tbe next day, to the chagrin of the managers, both declined to serve as delegates, publishing cards declaring they could not longer act with the Democracy and support free trade, and that they intended to vote for Blaine and , Logan. It is claimed " that one hundred more Irish Democrats in Crawfordsville will follow the example of these in supporting the Kepublican ticket. ?Tin: -Democrats profess a great many things they do not practice. In Indiana they profess to be opposed to the use of convict labor in competition with free labor. Over in Kentucky where the Democrats are all-powerful they practice the opposite course. , The Lonis.?viH Times, in referring to it, saysr t i Ithai been demonstrated that fix nundred convicts, driven to labor in season and out ot season by the lash of taskmasters, can mine all the coal for which transportation can be had over the Chesapeake, Ohio & Southwestern road. It has been shown that free labor can not compete with this slave labor, and therefore tbe continued employment of these convicts will take the bread from the mouths of one thousand free, honest workingmen,and drive J them, their wives and children from the State o( their birth or adoption, -4
OCa SCHOOL SYSTEM AID SCHOOL
": fiid. , Senator Voorheea in his Terre Haute peach wmit guilty of blunders in the history of the : State of which any well informed schoolboy would have been ashamed. He eulogiied the Demo cratic party as the creator of our edu cational system and our school fund and our charitable institutions. : All these be said had "their blessed foun datiooa laid deep and strong in that constitution which the Democratic par ty created, and with which the Repub lican party has never been satisfied and now seeks to change." If Mr. voor hees had known the facts he would scarcely have ventured such a declara tion. The foundations of our school system and of our charitable institu tions were . laid before the constitution of 1850 was madeJand in which the Democratic Dartv created nothing of imnortance but the objectionable "black laws" provided for in that instrument. The first step toward the establish ment of the Insane Asylum was taken by tbe Whig Legislature of 1842, and while Samuel Biggar, a Whig, was Governor of the State. The Deaf and Dumb Asylum was also "created" by the Whig Legislature of 1843, when the first tax was levied for that purpose. The Blind Asylum had its beginning with, the Democratic Legislature of 1845. All the foundations of these in stitutions were therefore laid betore the Democratic constitution of 1850 was created, and two of the three when the Whigs were in power in the State. MrVoorhee also declare that "the Democratic 5 party created the common school system of the State. The glory of that system, which is now world wide and spoken of on every civilized shore, belongs to the leaders ot the Democratic i party in Indiana, whose record was made, and still exists, in the convention from which the constitution emerged."' The absurdity of this dec laration is recognized by every intelligent citizen of the State. The constitution of 1850 had about as much to do with creating our school system as it had with the Declaration of Independ ence. Y e quote upon inis point, an article in the Indianapolis Journal: Every body of mature age in the State, possibly including Mr. Voorhees, knows that our school fund is derived mainly from , two sources, the Bale oi one section ' of land, called the 'school section, in each township, and the avails of the sinking fund connected with the old State Bank. These were created, says the Senator, thirty-four years ago,' by the . constitution and the Democratic party.", Let ns; see. On the , 20th of May, 1785, the Continental Congress which was all the national government we had at that time, enacted an ordi nance for the survey and government of the Northwest Territory, ceded by V lrgima to tnd nation ;tr icem Der no That ordinance said: 'There shall be reserved the lot No. 16 of every town ship for the maintenance of public schools within the said township.' The far more celebrated ordinance of. July 13, 1787, declared in article 3, that 're ligion. morality and knowledge being necessary to good government and the happiness of mankind, schools and the means of education shall forever be en couraged.' Away back, ninety-nine years ago, the seeds of the congression al township fund were planted, sixtyfive years before the constitution which Mr. Voorhees savs created it and all tbe rest of tbe school fund." The sink ing fund, from which tbe larger portion of the present school fund is derived, was enacted by the charter of the State Bank in January, 1S34, sixteen years be fore the constitution of 1850 was enacted. So we find that the convention of 1850, and the Democratic party therein did not create either of the constituents of the school fund. Neither did that convention or that party create the school system. The sys tem was created by the constitution of 1816, and tbe later constitution in the article quoted by Mr. Voorhees only ap proved and re-adopted the article of the earlier constitution. The constitution of 1316 declared that "It shall be the duty of the General Assembly to provide for a general system of educa tion in a regular gradation from town ship schools to a State university wherein tuition shall be gratis and open to all." Here was the constitutional adoption of our free school system, which, to give it Democratic paternity, Mr. Voorhees places thirty-four years later and attributes to the constitution of 1850. - It is strange that a senator of the United States, who has spent his whole political life in this State, should exhibit such ignorance of the history of the State he represents, or is it ignor ance? G rover Clsvsland is not much known to the country, and it is now learned he is not much known even in his own family. Everything connected with him is, therefore, sought after both as news and as showing what kind of a man . he has been in the past. Hon. William F. Allen, of Buffalo, is an unelo of ,31r. Cleveland; recent interview with him has disclosed a few new facts which are of public interest just now. Mr. Allen says: Mr. Cleveland came to me when eighteen years old, and I told him that he could make his home here and I gave him his board. lie was an intelligent, bright young man .and I got him a place in a law firm. He was then and always has been a strong Democrat. As to the stories of his remaining home from the war to support his mother and sis
ters, (and here Mr. lUlen smiled)
there is nothing t& them. He was alwava dutiful and probably helped his mother. But the brothers who went to the war did more than G rover toward Eiinnnrtinir the family. I don't think he remained home from the war on that account. I have always been on good terms with G rover, but of late years 1 1 have not seen much of him. He never went into society, and his associates vrrn men ot convivial habits, and not persons of high standing in the community. " A good many things that were known about him were kept from me. , The astute editor of Harper's Week ly as thrown upon the delensiTe and is rceatlv out cf humor. It is not his custom to explain his positions, but the rough treatment he is receiving lor nis inconsistent course drives him to it, and he growls furiously at the necessity. He can't satisfactorily explain why he now condemns Blaine for an act which he fully approved at the time as correct and proper. Tfta Girl a a Look Branca. "Afanhafynn m Chicago Journal The most sightly and satisfactory things to study at Long Branch are the girls. They are constantly presenting new and curious aspects of femininity. Just now they are engaged in a fight for and against the bang. Shall or shall not the forehead be exposed to viewt The curtain of hair is ordered up by a mandate ox ra-stuon, but obedience is by no means general. Girls with low brows are willing to denude them, be cause they know that the effect will be pretty in itself, besides nonplussing the possessors of high foreheads, who are bound to look odd in exposing an expan sive portion ot cranium so long kept covered. The common result is a kind of compromise cropping of front locks. and a frizzy arrangement like that shown by Mrs. Langtry during her last tour here. The increase of apparent intellectuality is astonishing, but 1 am forced to write that there is a corresponding loss of prettiness. The change is nnproving to only a small minority. Lawn tennis u played in the most picturesque mannei possible to art. The girls wear costume for this game that are doubtless dis trading to impressionable observers. Very jaunty jockey caps; Jersey waists that are pliant to every move of joint oi muscle underneath; scarfs that encircle shifting outlines, skirts that are short and scant, stockings that are bright in a brief sectional view, and canvas shoes matching the dress in color, that make a : show of utility in their rubber soles all. these components of the . tennis toilets are highly ap proved by the admiring eye of man, when the game is pitched on the lawn of a big hotel, and the adjacent veranda holds a crowd or critical spec tators, it is a stretch ot credulity to sup pose that the gins are other than con scious performers; and the success which most of them achieve in an affectation of indifference to the staring, of com plete absorption in the exercise, and of unstudieuness in graceful posing, is re markable proof of the American trait of cool self-possession. The expenditure for dress is extrava gant or not, according as the iudulgers can not or can well afford it. Hard times have not appreciably lessened the display of costly clothes. A few of the wearors in former - yeaVs haves' disap peared, out tneir places are taken by fresh dressers. On the whole there is no deterioration. The Plevr Fog Slg-nal. St. Louis Globe-Democrat. 1 ine log-signal apparatus is now con structed in such a manner that in calm weather its sound may be heard twenty miles. This power is gained by means of two slotted cylinders, one fixed and the other revolving in it. The slots, as they pass one another, stop or cut off the passage of compressed air or steam and thus cause a series of vibrations. and consequently a musical note, the pitch of which depends upon the speed ot the revolving cylinder, in order tc vary the note, it is only necessary t control this velocity. The double-not horn is formed with a casing within, which is a fixed a slotted cylinder and a revolving cylinder moving upon a spindle. The slots are formed in each cylinder at opposite inclined angles. so that the motive nuid impinging against a number of inclined planes causes the inner cylinder to revolve with rapidity, carrying with it two disks, at tached to the common spindle, and upon their peripheries are pressed levers, un der the action of small pistons operated by diaphragms, to the outer surface of which compressed air is admitted. nen ine nign note is required, one brake is put on; for the low note, both brakes. A Sea Cook'i Xralnlng. The Cenrurv. A sea cook is a peculiar character, requiring a special training, lie must know how to prepare a sea hash ont of salt-horse flavored with onions, incrusted with the variegated browns of polished mahogany, and savory enough to create an appetite in -a stomach that the toss ing waves have rendered as sensitive as tbe needle of a compass. He must un derstand how to make eatable bread. and take his duff out of the kettle on Sunday as light as cotton and as deli cate as sponge cake. Besides this, he must know how to economize in the use of water and provisions, and, more diffi cult yet, he must contrive to keep the crew satisbed with the mess he cooes for them, while, at the same time, he looks out sharply for the interests of bis employer and the captain. He mutt also be proof against the worst weather, and undeviatingly punctual to the hours of meals. It goes without saying that it is not an easy thing to find such a paragon in the galley; but when he is there, he is, next to the captain, by far the most important character on board. Tba Earth as a Projectile. Exchange. If, looMnj at the earth in an artiltery point of view, and followine the principles rlelmholtz has laid down, the earth were considered an enormous projectile, and if it were supposed farther the whole energy stored up in tranpowder could be utilized, there would yet be required a charge 150 timeB greater than its own weight, or 900 times than its volume, to communicate to the earth her orbital motion. ' Electric Headlight. , By a new electric headlteht for locomotivea thirtT-thiee telegraph poles can ba countaj aSteaA of the engine on a dark night. faUrrjr Uase polfea covr about out mik. t
DEATH. Ai faiata tha fcraath of tadiug day. Am sink tha winda whan hnahad to lep Among tha atan with Uac'rlBS liht, Ai taOa the twOisht oo tba deep That throba beneath the axure aaiea. So float tha aooJ from earth away. So diea tbe rapine tempeat a blaat : ' Along the desolated ahore i . . , . So all tbe ma4daeed atreama Cad reav i Lost in tha aea forevermore. So ia the aaooavaln a borrtfnf breaat Hia furled paniona aleep at laat. Bo fadea and diea upon tha night, A Tina ling note ot aome atrange aong. With feebler breath tbe laet tone fall. Through veiling shadow dim and long ;
Yet sweeter atol tha echoe cell. With harp and linger loat to sight. FASHION IN MUSTACHES. Slaataebeleea men of the BarBefore tbe War, , Philadelphia Record. s 'Up to the time of the breaking out of the war it was the universal custom for men to have cleanly shaven facus. This was the case with the rich and poor alike. A laborer with a mustache would be the butt of his associates. Mil itary and naval men alone appeared with the upper lip covering., i suppose they had a sort oi idea that it made thein appear more ferocious and was better suited to their, calling. It w;ls the style to be mustacoeless. A tew meu wore full beards, but they had the hair . re moved from the upper lip. The girls looked upon a young man with as mus tache as a fop, and they did not like him. . Hoav different the case is t now That is, I have been told that the; lover of the present day is better received the more magnificent the mustache is. "Here is a book of eminent men of tbe period, covering the years from 18 j4 to 1858. There are the steel engravings of more than nfty men of that period. Take President Franklin Pierce's cabi net. There is James Guthrie, of j Ken tucky; J. O. Dobbin, of Xorth Carolina; James Campbell, of Pennsylvania:; Jef ferson Davis, of Mississippi; AV. L Marcy, of New York ; Robert McClelland and Caleb Gushing-. Not one of these men had ' a mnstache, and Davis f only had a tuft of hair upon his throat. So it was with all the rest. ' They were clean shaven so far as regards the upper lip. Take some of the leading men of our bar to-day, esiecially those who were m practice years ago. They still adhere to the custom of the English court. 'Attorney ; General Brewster's face has not a hair upon it. Richard McMurtrie's is clean. Daniel Dougherty has flowing side whiskers and a hairless lip. Eli K. Price, true to old times, is bereft of a mustache. George Junkin, David W. Sellers, John K. Val entine, Henry M. Phillips, Isaac Norris, iamao T "Ramlaw - Winiarrt'. T Ifnnn John C. Bullitt, George W. Biddle. and a host of others who are in active prac tice cannot be reproved ' upon the score that mustaches tend to impede the wave ot sound from tneir throats and iipt. "it was never compulsory to appear mustacheless. Fashion decreed it, and every one followed the edict of the fickle dame. , During the war period men be came careless in the excitement. Thou sands went to the front antr had no chance to shave, so gradually the old style of being cleanly shaven died out. 1 hardly know what some men would do to-day without their mustaches. They pull upon them, comb them, and give the lip-covering a considerable part of tneir leisure. tune. . lake the vouta of the present generation. - What is more amusing than a young man straggling with a faint covering for his uppet,lipy vny, ir uniet Justice Uockburn could get hold of him no doubt he would mete out justice to him. . ' t The Future or tbe Panama Caual. London Graphic - II ever this channel ot communica tion is completed, it will have, like the Suez waterway, far-reaching conse quences. I he British public, however. do not show much interest in the affan and therefore seekers after trustworthy intormation are driven to the olhciai re ports recently issued by the government or the L nited fetates. .From these docu ments we learn that, though the canal itself is scarcely begun, much useful preliminary work has beenaeeoinpli.slaxi. burveys have been made, the route has been cleared of trees and bushes, oot tages and barracks have been built and hospitals established. Admiral Cooper states tnat the undertaking is so gigantic that it is difficult to believe that it can be finished by the allotted time, 188, but he admits that the work already done is of a solid and substantial chai acter. Recently there have been serious dis turbances both at Panama and Aspin wall, chiefly between the native Colom bians ana tne imported laborers, some 12,000 or 14,000 . in number, from Ja maica. As these latter are, of course, British subjects, it is quite possible . that our government may be drawn into some aimcuiry. rinally oomes the question whether the canal, if finished, will prove a commercial success. It is reckoned to cost 1120,000,000, and will probably cost a great deal more. . 'Will tne toils wmch are levied. on the ships which pass through be likely to yield a fair interest upon this enormous capi tal? That the Suez canal was at first a failure and is now a success, does nut answer the question, because tbe circum stances ot the two cases are not an a lo gons. , There is no region in the western woria to which the Panama canal will be such a convenient short cut as the Suez canal is to the countries of nonthern Asia. To Australia the Panama canal will merely afford an alternative route of doubtful advantage: neither .Mexico nor Peru raises much produce as compared with India or China; and the western coast of North America is al ready united with the eastern bv several lines of railway. Altogether the Panama canal seems more likely to be useful to America than to the world in general. ' Saeep'a Hera for Brawaba. Scientific American. A new horseshoe has lately been exper imented with at I.vons. France.. The shoe is made entirely of sheep's bora, and is found particularly adapted . to horses employed in towns and known not to have a steady foot on the pavement. The results of the experiments have proved very satisfactory, as horses thus shod have been driven at a rapid pace on the pavement witnout slipping. Besides this advantage, the new shoe is very durable, and though a little more expensive than the ordinary one, seems destined sooner or later to ro place the iron shoe, uartkralarlv for hores employed in large cities,- where, beside the pavement, the streets are intersected by tramway rails, which from their slipper, iness constitute source oi permaoect danger,.. . , V . ? Batte, Mont, is advanced enough support a manic nre. to
AlvinRCroeker
Taoghan's Xew 111 or k, 7 Ha some- decided bargains in Dwelling Houses. Has decided bargains in Lots. Has decided bargains in Farms. Come and see me I will do yon good. Have you money to loan ! 1 have some first-class securities for j on. l)o you want to borrow money ? i'ome, and 1 will supply you if your title and security is right. Insure your property in my Asency. If yon hare a loss, I will see you are paid promptly. Renting houses a specialty. tkmie and see me. AL.VIX K. CROCKER. auglSdtf THE TREE BY THE WELI Joaquin Miller. An Arab sheik in deearts wild Ouoe sorrowed ao for thirsting man He led twturw the caravan, And digging wella, he, thirsting, died. He died of thirst! the wells remain 1 O daring, patient pioneer, Ood's angvls, what a triumph here To know no well is digged in vain I W Iel against the sunset gold, We liftl hand in deanrt land, lijrjcd wells and graves in sand driftiiu) The Arab's piteous tale of old. Wa plant a tree beside this well Oi knowledge in the weobnust West; Yon leaks ri.se up to call it blessed. They stand eternal entineL Some far-on day when we are dust. And all this Tast vale teems with lifa i-Hjme brave souls fainting in the strife May rest them here and siie&k us just; May snv we few. through wilds of rime. Mazed out new ways for worlds to come, Ana murmured not, but bravely dumb So died, full trusting God and time. Life's lessons bid us bide its worth, With all its fruitage bound in ton ; Trust God. and trust the ifunerous soil Of human hearts as trusting earth. I count it kindlier far to wait, . Tv work in faith, to wait in tears Av. wait and wait a thousand vears Than once to doubt or challenge fate. So here we set this little seed, Ana trust tts tender boughs to Time; To etow to touch the stars sublime. As grows and grows tone small, good dewl Set deep where lilies ever nod. ailed round bv everlastme snows. To trrow as some exeat, strone soul irrows n neu growing upward to in Uod. I see of Sawdust. Forest and Stream. W hen urged to burn, or in some othei way dispose of their sawdust, lumbermet have objected that they could not afford th cost. There is hope that the perplexing problem of dealing with this nuisance maj now ue solved, lor a process has been dis covered by which the refuse sawdust mat be made to yield a handsome profit. Whet dry it is carbonized in iron retorts, and ir the process there is given oft 80 per cent of volatile products, the remaining 20 pel cent, being granulated charcoal, which cat be used in making gunpowder. Altera. lining refrigerators, and as a disinfectant, and mixed with a little tar it could N pressed into bricks and used for fuel; 22 of the 80 per cent of the volatile product is in tne lorm ox axed gases, which can be usea ior nesting, ugnnng, etc. ; 47 pel toi i is pyrougenous acta, wmcn is crude acetic acid, and after baing purified and concentrated is used in white lead, color. prim, and vinegar manufactories. There remains 10 ier cent, of tar and one af wood alcohol. The tar has the same properties tm coal tar, the almost end less uses ot wwen, such as pitching roofs, lining water .tanks, covering the bottoms of vessels, protecting iron from rusting, covsriag the waunds made in pruning trees, and in the form of benzole, naotha. carbolic and sulphuric acids, and the whole spleadid series of aniline dyes, constitute one of the chief glories of mod ern chemistry. The wood or methylic alcohol is used as a solvent for euma. in varnish makin?. in the mail 11 f m.1 f 1 1 r r1 annine colors. The sawdust from vellow Dine and other v.vr4 n.k - .-, 1 . , """" .u iii r"iu vieius aiso a considerable amount of turpentine, in the cather. ing of which so many- trees are everv veai aacrmcea. It is estimated that in sawinir inrh boards of pine, hemlock, etc, the onefourth inch saw-kerf uses up one one-fifth of the log. When lumber is sawed by the billion feet, one can easily see that the question of diKposiag of the sawdust in a way to yield a profit, instead of a firstclass nuisance, is a very important one. A Revelation m Toilet make-up. thong Branch Cor. Inter Ocean. 1 There is an immense amount for fashion ably untutored man to and out, and every little while I get a revelation that as tonish a ma. While in the Long Branch store, wnere the belles buy the adjuncts and replenishments of toilets brought from the city, I stood near to a Birl who was examing several pieces of light pink satin. one naa pusnea up the sleeve of her dress somewhat, and was laving the fabrics, one after another, across the exposed part of her arm. 1 his is a match this morning. " she re marked to her companion; "but it's rather cool this mornine-. and I'm afraid it wouidnt do an case the -weather should turn hot 1 get awfully pink, don't you W bat could she mean? I consider!and came to the nobt cone fusion. She was selecting a material to trot under the lace at the neck of her bodies, and her desire was to have it the exact hue of her complexion. But her own shade, unlike that of the satin, varied with the temrjerature, ana so was raised a complication wmcn puzziea ner. How did she solve the problem? T?v taking two shades of the cloth, thus preparing herself for the ruddiness of a torrid occasion and the pallor of a seashore rain storm. At that rate we shall soon have in the dry goods market fabrics dyad not only for complexions as affected bv temnemtrir but to meet the complex reoroirementa of biliousness, malaria, etc aoaav Sell. nCichanpB.1 Tne patent fiih-oole. with self-reirfster attachment, saowinir exact numhpT of fish caught with, it dfctDlavs exeat inventive l, rrat it down t sell worth a cent. Anglers prefer to depend oa their AAA OUCU LeSSCS.
-WE
Big Drives in Gloves, Hosiery, Underwear, Corsets, Etc, .
We have Big 1) rives in TABLKI ITLIJIY , Bankrupt Kale.
Flags and Firecrackers At One-half the Price Usually Paid.
COH1E AXD SEE US
For Dishes, Glass and Tinware, Fifty Fine Oil Paintings in Elegant Frames, at S3. KJf ABE'S BAZAR,
ma79dwtf BOOTS -AND SHOES TVTATTT
STUjEjET. jMff ri
Ladies' Hand Turn Soft Shoes; Ladies' Hand Sewed Common Sense Shoes; Gent's Fine Fashionable Shoes; Boy's Fine Fashionable Shoes; Gents' all Calf $3.00 Shoe. J. M. WILLIAMS. may9dwtf ' WM. H. BRADBURY & SON,
Insurance and
j. . MO WE Y. TO. It'OASr. , , , Notaries Publifc Telephone 124. 730 lUIn tirMt.
W. P. BUM NEB, PRES.'
National Wire & Iron Go.
DETROIT, Office & Works.
UDFlCTfBXM Or Wire Cloth. Wire Counter BallinBS. Wire Hisna. Cheese Hafee. Casttns Brashes. Rand aad Hal
Screens, Weather Vanes, Stable Fixtures, Boot Creating, Wira ft Iron fences, Iron Shatters, Counter Bat ports, Ao. SW Bend for Catalogue. m Mention thia Paper.
RICHMOND BUSINESS DIRECTORY m A N ITAITORI EM. ROBINSON ft CO., Mannfactnrers of Portable and Stationery Ru nes, florae rowers, oeparatora, i;ureniar aw ills. Iraa Sawa. Clover Hollers. Saw Tablea. collars, iSDngs, etc RAWKN. Jab. E.&SEVKS, Prest. J. P. Bebvbs, CashV ; FIRST NATIONAL BANK, Richmond, Indiana Capital stock paid is $300,000 sorpiDs raou. aiuMMU. rramDt attention nald wuiownnioDj. Lyon's Drug Store Carmer Sixth and Main Htreeta. ' (angSdawtf ODORLESS Excavating Company! Office Hatfield & Tanghan's Stables, So. 13 Xorth Eighth street. lam better than ever prepared orders tor to attend an Vault, M or Cess Pool Cleaiiiiil W Office eerrtaraOv located fTTATP-rrT.n A VALUHift M STABLE .) All orders toft there will receive prompt attention. Prieea shall be umonniv low. JnneSdtf Manager. UAH SCHOOL FOR Select Home eomJorte. eooraea of studv. No limi aa to ae. Carerol personal an pervision. No better aonlnmd school in Amerfoe. For eateXotroe addreea Trafaat Oxford, Botier County, Ohio. an3S-d-tf CAMPAIGN UNIFORMS. Bend for niastrated Catalogue, with dtaeonnta, to E. A. ARMSTRONG. Mtniifietiuw of H. M. of L O. O.F. And an other TJ a I fa rasa, at a all a. Etc 208 & 210 Jefferson, ATew, Detroit, aUefc. anf7dawlm University of Cincinnati. The Academic Tear In all Aiiubrf. - Tneaday. leth September Best. Examinettoaa for entrance leth aad 17th lleuawmi i i For Catalognaa, address
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atreotsReal Estate! F. H. MINCKXEH, SECT. Cor. 4th ft Congress ita., MICH. TICE fc HUNTINGTON HO. 23 WEST FOURTH ST., Direct Importers of every DseSrlpK ef CHINA, GLASS WAKE, HOUSEFURNISHIfiO COODS, ETC. Personal selection thia aeaaoa rf one of the flrai, of Knirjisb, IVcncti, IrefHlen and . Aaatrian Novcltiea, now arriving. OUR HEW ILLUSTRATED CMMM HAMUAL angSS&twlm SCIPTDSS ccsed New Inventkm rv... I oventi cu red himself after suftVrlna- I years. r. Partly cured UV Mr. angaadawlm SALESMEN WANTED. We are in want of a fear man an airiiaia for tbe aale of CBOICK NTJB8BRT STOCK. To men who eaa make a aooeeaa of the boatneee wa ean give steady employment and good pay. (Previous experience la tha traatnees nut aaseatiaL) Apply for terms with retareoeas to .3. BAT ..CO, KuBMsnrn, BoGssm, K.T. Otit specialties ara New Fruit acd( stock. r TO.TVT Xrwra are 303 RACE For circular sddfns Mn anfr!9dvrlm Ague Mce IH WAIBA9TKD to eore all aaaaa rrf -larial dieeaee, nch aa Fever aad AoaLaw! mitasst or Chill Fever. " -ftl7l Ti Ao. Pver aad Liver Ootnaaabka ease of failure, after due trial. rtnalaiaTT. thorbbyooxeiretilarc rwl Dr. J. C. Ayer 4 Co., LoweB, KUm. Bold by AO Drflflrlata laly1-an.w, CwamAMrriAi mmi VtUrtmi Mathv t or kvebt DaacBimox,
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Done at the Palladium Job 03m.
