Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 10, 21 August 1885 — Page 2

Richmond Palladium

famished every Evening, (Bandar excepted.) by INAAV JEHIaI!IMOs. Offloe, Noa. 831 and 83) Main tU coram Ninth. Fit I DAY, AUGUST 21, 1885. Entered as Becond-Cta Matter, at tbe Postoffice, Richmond, IdU Served by carriers la Ulchmond or sent eUw'wUere by mall to subscribers at Trm tal per wrrkg alngle eopltaTwa Oats. Hpeclmen nDmtwri aent free on applica tion. Correspondence containing news of Interest anil Importance desired from all part of the connty. No attention paid to anonymous oomrannl cations. Shelby ville has contracted with E. li. MartiuJalc, of Indianapolis for wa ter works. : '" Mr. Hendricks is creJiteJ, with Bay ing: "It han only been discovered with in a few years that it was a great crime for one to want to fill an honorable posi tion under the roverament." Ilowever this may be.it is ecrtainlya more recent discovery that one must be gruilty of a great crime before he can be thought worthy to fill an honorable position un der the government. Ir seems that the present administration had no feeling for the great body of the Democratic party. With a large portion of the postoffiecs yet undisposed of, the President is awiy fishing for a month in the Adirondaeks, and l'ost master-General Vilas is out west at Brule ltiver, also angling for trout This is conduct entirely too heartless for the leaders of a partyhungering for the offices. The Iowa Democratic State convention, which was held oa Wednesday, nominated Charles I. Whitney, of Monona county, for Governor on the first ballot, and then fused with the Greenbackers and indorsed K. II. Gillette, their candidate for LieutenantGovernor. Their platform demands the repeal of the prohibition liquor law and the substitution of a license system in its place. The position taken by the Democrats in their platform very much disconcerts the third parly prohibitionists who cannot see how, they can consistently aid a party into power which so openly repudiates prohibition. Mr. St'TTOJr, a member of the Iowa Senate and a prominent prolubitionist, has been making a tour of the South, and took occasion to study the temperance situation in that section. In writing upon the subject, since his return, he says;; ';': ,,. ' " ' i l ne iourteen southern states l visited have double the anwunt of prohK than the enure "Sort--afliey have about UK) entire counties and enough precincts to make a hundred counties more. Yet prohibition has never had the indorsement of a Southern political convention, as it could not carry a single Southern State as a State issue. It .Northern prohibitionists had made prohibition non-partisan and made the fight by counties instead of States, as the South has done, we might have to-dav a majority of the counties in every Northern State, and nearly every county in very many of the States. - - t; The Democratic convention in' Ohio yesterday renominated Governor Hoadly for Governor and the present 'State officers generally for re-election.; There seemed to be no desire upon the part of any one to secure a place upon the ticket, and the old officers were made to accept as a matter of duty to the party. The platform adopted indorses the present administration of the general government, and takes a tilt at prohibition, pledging the party to "a judicious and properly graded lieense system." The resolution on this subject in full is as follows: The Democratic party is, as it always has been, opposed to sumptuary legislation and unequal taxation in any form, and is in favor of the largest liberty of frivate conduct consistent with the pubic welfare and the rights of others, and of regulating the liquor traffic and providing against the evils therefrom by a judicious and properly graded license system. Under the present constitution of Ohio such system is forbidden and taxation is limited to property and required to be measured by its money value. We. therefore, are in favor of a constitutional amendment which shall permit such system, and we promise its submission for adoption by the people it the necessary three-fifths of each branch of the next General Assembly be composed of Democrats. Dr. Leonard and his friends will, of course, labor to the utmost to secure the necessary majority for the Democrats, that they may be able to redeem their pledge to change the constitution and establish a license system in the State. With the nomination of Hoadly for Governor and the indorsement of Cleveland's policy on civil service reform the Democrats of Ohio enter the political contest this year heavily handicapped. Not one in a hundred of the Ohio Democrats really approve the President's policy, and Hoadly has made himself many enemies lately who it they do not openly oppose will give him a vcrv luke warm support, t With the general public of that State Iloadly's administration has been far from a popular one. When he and the Democratic Legislature which, was elected with him eame into power the State Treasury contained half a million dollars. It is almost empty now. The State debt has been increased ten millions in the meanwhile, The insufficiency of the revenue of the State to meet the demands of the Treasury was not due to any redaction of tax

ation. On the contrary, taxes have been increased very materially. In Sne, there is no explanation of the matter except in the one word, maladministration. J ust what may be the measure ol Governor Hoadly'a responsibility it is not necessary to determine. That no improvement could be looked for under a second term is perfectly obvious. Bat no second term will be given Hoadly in Ohio, and no one knows this fact better than himself. It was for this reason he did not desire a renomination from the convention, and accepted it with undisguised reluctance ? lie declared when accepting the nomination that the party had brought him through, on an ambulance and that he had made no effort himself to secure the result. The ambulance may have carried him through the convention but it will fail at the elec

tion. Foraker'a election is a foregone conclusion. is noticing the annual session of the aniform rank of Knights of Pythias in Chicago, the Inter Ocean says of the growing importance of the order: "It is therefore not difficult to understand why, with the constituency of the Knights of Pythias in this State, such a session as that of the uniform rank of the order in Illinois attracts so much attention. The parade through the prinoipal thoroughfares on Tuesday was a very imposing and creditable affair, and the order in this city and State can be congratulated upon the number and character of the representatives attending this annual meeting, the appearance of the divisions, and the favorable im pression made upon the uninitiated public by this body under the leader ship of Grand Commander Brand, of Chicago. As might have been antici pated, this event has created much in terest not only among the local divisions related more intimately to the uniform rank, but also among the thirty-one or more lodges of the order in the city, not to mention the seven endowment sections. The assembling of such bodies has been found to be highly beneficial to the societies or organizations under whose auspices they are held, as they revive in an emphatic sense the interest of their own members, and at at the same act on behalf of such societies or organizations as public educa tors. In both these respects the annual or other stated assemblies of fraternal bodies like this have come to be recognized as of high value, and gatherings to which each year more time and thought are given, and in which the in telligent, progressive men are to be found at the front." INDIANA NEWS. The apple and peach crop are a fail ure in the region of Logansport. ville was destroyed by fire . Wednesday night. . . .j. ... J.;h Dawson Lyon, of Salem, on Thursday had gone thirty-five days without nourishment. Harry Wyman, suspected of systematic car robbery at Indianapolis, is under arrest. Mrs.? Minerva Young, a wealthy widow, of Attica, was swindled out of "f 1,400 by a fruit tree agent. Paoli and Orleans have voted a two per cent tax to aid in the building of a railroad from Mitchell to Jasper. " Burglars entered the residence of Dr. Piercy, at Greencastle, securing a gold watch valued at $230 and a revolver. The wife of L. W. Stanley, a sewing machine agent at Washington, is missing, likewise 500 belonging to Mr. S. While pushing loaded freight cars at Terre Haute, Lddie Logan, aged 13, went between them and was crushed to death. Burglars raided a number of residences in Milan and got away with a large quantity of jewelry and other valuables. AlcFee, who murdered the marshal of Knightstown, has been heard from, ne is making for Kentucky, the murderers' paradise. George Engle, of Kewanna, is under arrest at Rochester for attempting to murder Jehiel Cook because he loved Cook's wife. The detective system for correcting the morals of Lafayette clerks and traveling salesmen has been adopted. Startling developments have been procured tor employes. A young Swiss girl employed by a Mr. Selig at I nion City, attempted suicide because the amount of money she expected from a relative's estate in Switzerland was reduced from $1,000 to 35. B. F. Gardiner, who escaped from the Hendricks county jail last spring, where he was serving a sentence for fraudulently using the mails, was arrested at St. Louis while engaged in the old business. ,,; f ' A peculiar disease is affecting the cows of dairymen in Clark county. While the animal seems in perfect health, the eyes begin to fill with a curious kind of moisture, and finally become blind. Wm. A. Burroughs, serving a life sentence in the Northern Indiana Penitentiary, from Randolph county, for murdering his wife, committed suicide in his celL He attempted to sever his jugular vein last Sunday, but waa prevented. ".si Frn the Qirnkfr Standpoint By at qukrr. To tbe Editor of the Palladium: Music is a kind of language intended to attract please and instruct, and to impress such instruction on the memory of the hearers; hence the Psalms of David, the King of Israel. And in later times the old Bards of England, Scotland, Ireland and Wales served that purpose at an age when there were tew books and bat a small number of the hearers could read, i The musical compositions of those old bards were chanted to their hearers and were generally "patriotic heroic or describing the many phases of human love, and served to communicate and commensurate true acts of loyalty, friendship or love. Even the methods or rhythm denoted the joy,

the sorrow or tenderness, and were

intended to raise such emotions in the hearers. ThU being the case, tunes came into fashion or use, and all the improvements, divisions, etc., ot modern music, And the purpose or true im iimnce and real use of music or poetry is soil the same to raise the emotions in the hearers, and to fix. the subject m the memories ot the hearers, lor instance how "Hail Columbia, Happy Land, or "God Save the Queen, will thrill and enthuse an audience. And what curious effect is produced in an other direction by "Rory O'Moore," or "i ankee Doodle. And in more pre tentious musical compositions "Haydn's Creation" stands out prominent. Music and painting have of old been hand maidens and companions ot religion. But many pious persons of all ages. ha Yin? seen the base uses to which mu Bic and the arts have been prostituted. have refused the suijport, practice or use of either for the purposes or as aids of religion. The monks of old and the anchorites and recluses of the middle ages refused the offices of the muses or of art, and in more modern times George Fox and the early Quakers, seeing the sinfulness ot their times, the deceit and hypocrisy of the priesthood, and the degeneracy of the Christian Church and the base uses or music therein, protested against it; and Georze I ox (paee 75 ot his journal) says he was "moved to cry out against all sorts of music," and he and early Friends adopted something ot a middle ground, which was in character and in accord, as they believed, with primitive Christianity. They adopted silent worship and waiting on the Lord, except as they believed some man or woman was moved by the Holy Spirit and thereby influenced to pray or speak but not altogether denying that one might be moved to sing in the spirit but it would be with the understanding also, and then others could understand what they sang. All done in the true liberty ot the gospel in Christ, which liberty some calling themselves Quakers have in modern times so much abused. Their practical departure from the doctrine and usages of primitive Quakers have been painfully manifest in this city, to the great damage and financial ruin of many. ' Inviting Cholera. San Framis.-o C r. inoinnati Enquirer. In a sanitary point of view Chinatown presents a strange anomaly. With the habits, manners, customs and whole economy of life violating every accepted rule of hygiene; with ojen cesspools, exhalations from water-ciosets, sinks and sewers tainting the atmosphere with noxious vapors and sliding odors; with people herded aud packed in damp cellars, living literally the life of vermin, badly fed ana clothed, addicted to the daily use of opium to the extent that many hours of each day or night are passed in the delirious stupefac tion of its influence, it is not to be denied that, as a whole, the general health of the locality compares more than favorably with other sections of the city which are surrounded by more favorable conditions. It seems impossible to account for this state of things upon any other condition than that of the constant fumigation to which Chinatown is subject pen wood fires from cellar to attic, cigars, tobacco and opium-pipes all contribute hourly clouds of smoke to the fumagation process, and probably prevents the generation and spread of zymotic diseases, that otherwise could scarcely fail to rapidly deriy i i - i I. ' i " Francisco. These preventive influences can never be suiticient guard against cholera or other like visitations, for the terrible disease, no matter whether it is borne on the wings of the wind, or steals like a thief at nigut, will surely decimate and play sad havoc in these filthy habitations. Securing a Hubatid by Sticking the Saint. St. James Gazette. Breton girls who want to get married go to Hone, near Vannes, and stick pins in the foot of the wooden statue of a Spanish saint locally called St. L'ferier, who marries his devotees within a year. The i in must lie well pushed, for if it bends the future husband may be a hunchback or a cripple This is on the Atlantic coa.-t On the channel, at 1'loumanac'h, on a rock accessible at low tide, there is a little shrine supported by four 1 Ionian columns and dedicated to fct Quirec, who landed there from England in the sixth century. His wooden image is stuck full of pins. So is a statue of St. Lawrence, near (juintin. Here the pin must stick at the first push, for each failure postpones the marriage for a year. The same practice has been traced further inland, at Laval, in the ancient province of Maine, where the bare legs and arms of a colossal wooden statue of bt. Christopher are covered with pin holes and pins; and both young men and maidens join in the rite. Fine Arta Auioug MuaaulDien. Boston Advertiser.) Because the Turks, an ignorant, uncultivated race, abhor statues, and have destroyed pictures, it is constantly asserted that no true Mussulman has ever patronized the arts of sculpture and painting. Nothing can le farther from the truth. The palaces of the caliphs of Egypt and Spain were alike adorned with statues and paintings, of which co trace remains. Hut the I scurial. the liiblotheque Rationale and liritish museum all contain manuscripts illuminated as were the books of Christendom at the same time. These pictures represent, with the greatest richness ot detail. Oriented life in all its phases. A legend in letters of gold explains each composition and gives the names of the personages. . Tenting HorMu' Steadiness. i Osl (rami's Messenger. A singular reception rehearsal took place recently at Aix-la-Chapelle, just previous to the crown princes arrival for the military jubilee of his regiment garrisoned in that city. In the court of the barracks a number of horses, intended to be used in carriages during the prince's stay, had to undergo a test of their steadiness and imperturbability as far as noise of any description was concerned. First, buglers and drummers treated them to the full capacity of their instruments in an ensemble of more than ordinary power, enhanced by an occasional loud cheering of the men, and finally intensified by a chorus of several hundred school boys. "With but one or two exceptions the competing animals stood the test bravely Digging ! am Indian Monad. f Bos Record.) Dr. Green, the antiquarian and archaeologist, sought out one of the hostelries at Mount l'esert some years ago, and, finding nothing better to do, obtained a shovel and began to dig in an adjacent mound, which, from its appearance, suggested to him an aboriginal origin. While engaged in this work a woman rushed out furiously from tbe hotel and snouted: " What are you digin' there for? Ton just stop it " "Oh." replied Dr. Green, "I was looking for curiosities in this Indian mound. " "That ain't no Indian mound." replied the woman, "that's where them Iliggina children is buried.

SHOOTING "THE MUSCALONGE. Novel Sport That at " Tork Ftaheranaa Smy la Fa Ah THlm. f-w Tork Sun-T "There's more sport for me in lying in wait on a runway to get a shot at a muscalonge than there is in standing on one in expectation of pulling a ball into a deer," said George I'onnet. of the liice Lake club. "To get a shot at a tnasealong?" "Yes. - Why, "there' more excitement in hunting the muscalonge with the rifie than there is in killing it in any other way. There is for me. at any rate, acd when you shoot a mus-ali-nge you can always know that it will be a big one a bigger ne than you would ca'ch on a hook if you fisbd for a year. Tlien it requires great skill and wariness to shoot one of these freshwater monsters. They are as craftv a the fox and as fierce as the wolf. It also requires great patience, for the appearance of your first victim may be ueia-d tpr hours. I-ast summer I was al one tishmsr ground Hice lake, in Canada and in 'three days had Pot succeeded in getting a shot at a single tish. I caught a number of small ones, the largest being a fifteen pounder, by trolling, but I was anxioils to kill ne of the inmense fellows 1 . knew were in the laka The way you hunt for muscalonge with the ririe is to climb a tree with branch extending over asleep part of the water, where you know that big fish naturally lurk. I built mS a comfortable platform of boards in a tree situated in such a spot, just as deerhunttrs who watch salt-licks from trees arrange for their comfort and convenience. "The tirst season I occupied the tree I killed tive big tish in three daya One of them weighed forty-two pounds. Muscalonge have a habit of slowly coming to the surface of tli water on sunny days, aud lying there, as if they were taking a sun -bath. The rhadow of a bird flying overhead, the snapping of a twig, or any sight or sound no matter how lusiguir'cant, will send them to the depths aain in the twinkling of an eye, an J tt they reappar again it will be after hours have passed. n!y the very largest fish come up to bask in the sun. Timid, and suspicious as they are. it is a singular fact that if you suo cced in shooting one it will instantly be surrounded by others, which dart to the surface and snap and tear at the dead fish with their alligator jaws. While their attention is all entered in their dead brother au active and skillful hunter may stretch the bodies of two or three others on the water. By that time however, the others, if there are any others left, suddeuly discover that there is something wrong, and they dart away and are seen no more. "The biggest BAuacalonge 1 ever caught in the lake with the hook was a twenty-five-pounder. I lave gaffed them through the ice, though, that weighed thirty pounds. That is a style of fish that requires skill and nerve. You cut a big square hole in the i e and build over it a dark hut to keep the light out of the hole. This enables youto see far down in the water. Taking a silver wire snell three or four feet long, w ith a strong artificial minnow on one end of it. you sink it through the hole witb, your left hand, and thrust your gaff down with your right The gatf you hold very still, near the bait which you keep moving about in the water. It won't 1 long before you will see the shadowy form of bisrmuscalongaway down bel6v you: lie se's the bait and is coming up to investigat it. lie gradually draws near, until you can see his savage eyes glitter, and discover his long, sharp teeth between his halfopen jaws. At that instant a man who does not become excited and trembled like an aspen has got a nerve that not one out of ten, even among' old tishermeo, has got The big lisWnovcfe on slowly, some.rJu'u "xraSbetrTVg'.ill the suspiciousness ! his nature. He will come on, though, until he has satis lied himself on the matter of the strange ob:ect in the water. When he gets close to the bait and stops and glares wildly at it the fisherman sinks the strong galf in his side, and. if it is managed skillfully, is sure to land him on the ice after a struggle, in which the advantage is all on the side of the fisherman. "

The Camp-Chair liiuttte. Clara Belle in Cincinnati Enquirer. I have made an Invention that Is just going to le a boon to my sex at the seashore, and what I want is that some capi talist shall put the money into the manufacture. 1 haven't applied for a patent: but if I give the thing aw ly here I feel sure that nobody will be mean enough to take advantage of my confiding nature. It is so natural for me to write all I know that 1 can't resist the inclination. I call my device the camp-chair bustle It consists of the , ordinary bustle of wires and tapes, to be worn in the usual manner. It will serve all the purposes of distention and shapeliness requisite in the fashionable bustle. Within this structure I place a specially contrived camp chair, light but su:l ciently strong, aud so arranged that it will automatically shut up flat when the wearer stands, and open to receive her when she sits. I have experimented with a model, and I suffered some hard kerchugs before the apparatus was perfected, but the thing is now worthy of the confidence of the most sensitive girl, for it positively will not betray her confidence. When she lounges on the sand of the beach and desires to be seated for awhile all she has to do is to gracef ally drop into the invisible chair. Wajker-Tourittta. Foreign Letter.l Bordeaux has just started a society called the Walker-Tourists of France, which publishes a curious prospectus. The exercise which brings them together, say these pedestrians, "changes fat into muscle and develops the chest and legs, but more nobly elevates the sentiments of man, and restores his energy and virility by putting him face to fat-e with nature and solitude. " Every s unday the J5ordeaux club will start for "study walks and graduated promenades" in the environs. "Marchesetudes" turns out to mean an earl, start, breakfast in the woods, and the epioration of sites and ruins. In the afternoon there will be games, then a supper, and back to bed at nightfall, having "transformed into strength that activity which every man possesses, but which in towns he expends in unhealthy pleasures. " "Doa; Cheap." K &cazo Paper. Nothing so well shows that there is a revival of business in the south as the fact that a Florida man was able to trade off his printing oitice for a mule. Either that or males aie dog cheap in Florida. American Tolee. JErchanee.7 In spite of the standing criticism and lUKUlC IU LUrOC UU LUC UIKW 1 JX American women, the cultivated voices Of . .uaaav. a ivau y ia L'w'" .aa nr rank in the vocal schools there. American rtrls continue to tase ciga W I . t . . . .Robert 'Ion ml .a nf feeble, and frequently walks supported J by his negro valet. One who saw him j enter the Kimball house dining room, in fluanil rerenrlv Bars- A h walk-cx-l in. his silvered locks falling in careless ringlets over his magnificent forehead, nis giant form and utritinir cotmtetianca ttracted the eyes of alL - He was attired in a dart an it. WMi-mar the oldtyle regulation cutaway."

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The Best Carriages, Pliaptons. Buggies, Jaegers, Surries, Spring Wagons and Backboard are found only at the City Carriage Shop, Richmond, Indiana. The popularity that my work has obtained is good evi dence of its Superior (Quality over all competing work. I use the Best Material and the most skilled mechanics that the country affords; and for beauty and utility my work stands unequaled. I am prepared to manufacture work in large quantities, and can afford to sell at a very small profit, thereby giving you the advantage of buying where you can get the Best Job for the Least Money. Jr you anticipate getting a vehicle, I can suit you in style, finish and price. Notice the following prices, all First-class Work: Choice in Buggies, - - - $125 Carriages, - - - - - 235 Fhaetons, - - - - $loOtol7 Jaggers, - ----- 150 Mimes, ------- im" Top Spring Wagons, - - - 120 Open " - - $05 to $10 Buckltoards, ------ 50 Every job warranted to give Perfect Satisfaction. I also have a large lot or reconu-naiid v, ort, consisting of Carriages, Phafons, Buggies, spring Wagons, etc., which will be sold cheap. Repairing done promptly and Good Hork Guaranteed at Reasonable Prices. P. SCHNEIDER, No. 9 South Sixth street, maxl6dAw-tf BABTHOLOMEW English & Classical School for Tvnng Ladies. Lawrn far. ar Tfci ral, Ciawt auati. Dkugh ihl Hon and Bxrr Advawt-agkb for tboaa who deaira to pursue either tha regular eoorsaor special studies. Catalogue with rail information aent upon application, ill. Teeth Tear begiBa September 2a, 15. julTl4-tae-thosai-2m

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RELICIOUS SERVICES. FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH. BOOTH Kighth etree- Rev. L U. Haghee, pea tor. Horning and evening eervlcea. T7"IRST BAPTIST CHURCH. Bev. O. B. Allen, aJ raator. Morning ana evening eerrtoes. Babbath acbool at a :15 a. in. Prayer meeting Thursday evening at 7 -JO. FRIENDS MEETING EIGHTH STREET. tt&ttbath acbool at 9 a. m. Horning serrioe ol worship at 10 JHX. Bible lea son at 7 p. m. FIFTEENTH STREET FRIENDS SERVICES on Firat-dar (Hunday) at IOOl and on Fifthday (Thursday) at 10 a. m. l int-day school at 9 a. m. I THIRST M. E. CHURCH. CORNER OF MAIN 7 and Fourteenth atreeta. ReT. C. E Raoon, pastor. Morning and evening services. GRACE M. E CHURCH CORNER TENTH and North A atreeta. Rev. R. M. Bama, pastor. Morning and evening aerricee. EW JEKCHALKat TEMPLE Corner of Meventa) and Boots B atreeta. Ueliffcraa wozahip every Bnndsy at 10 30 a. m. ST. PAUL'S EPISCOPAL CHURCH. COR. Eighth and North A ita. Kev. Frank rector, berrioes at 10 -JO a. m. ST. MA RYU CATHOLIC CHURCH Comer Seventh and North A streets. Rev. Fathe Byves, pan tor. First mass at 0:15 a. m ; aesond mass at 10 Oo a- m. Vespers at 8 Ml p. m. AFRICAN M. E. CHURCH. CORNER OF Sixth and Booth B atreeta. Rev. C. H Ihomae, pastor. Morning and evening aerricee. CHRISTIAN CHAPEL SOUTH NINTH ST, Near Main. Elder 1. 1. Morgan, pastor. Morning and evening servicea. TIVANGELICALCII ITRPH. K.MRVKVTH JZJ street. Rev. D.D. epcicna, pastor. Mara11114 ana evening aervicea. nabbalb-acbooi at 8am. Prayer-meeting Wedueeday evening ST ANDREWS CATHOLIC CHCRCH-Corner ot Fifto and booth C streets. Kev. Father Setbertz, peator. First tnaaa at 7 05 a. m.; second a :5 a- m. Vespers at I p. m. OEVA8TOPOL M. E. CHURCH. HA BR ATH k3 School at H JO p. to, and ealiiiig in the aiwiiiia. OT. PAUL'S EVANGELICAL LUTHERAN J ennrcn. soattt Sevaath street. Rev i. J. xomng. pastor, berviees at 10 a. m. Mad T p. All in German exeept nrrt .nd third Bau Bandar evemng 01 earn looms in TTKITKD PRESBYTERIAN CHUBCH. COBV oer 01 Kwventti and North B streets. Bev. Alexander OiiohrJst, pastos. Morning ai eveHITK WATER MEETING OF FBDErtDKbervieea at lu iSu a m &ru1 7U. m m yum Foorth-day morning at 10 o'clock. Sabbath acbool ats.m. Busy Bee, Seventh-day at 1p.m. WTESLEYAN METHODIST CHURCH. Booth Tenth street. Bev. 8. M. Smotners, paaw. morning and evening YOUNO MKTS CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATION Diekineon's BaOdina. corner ot Mtntk and Main Bstreeta. Denloes at theeonnty aa atgp. Praise mwating at f Ml Uospelaerric at 1:41 p. m

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lOoinnihaa tim.l BTATIOKH. No.1. No. . Wo. a. ttommaaU, - T.auu T.lSpoj Kieiiiuood. " ISSpoa llUU " A iiMtimtr ,il " H,w " ll.iO Kideenlla " 11.61 " lljll urUtml . " Viii) 11,47 rwtar " MS " l. " lA67m fort tmm, arrtv L " ajflt !. " STATIONS. Ma. I Mo, 4. Wo. Poet Warsaw Utfiu... 1.00 pm ll,0jam Daeater, - MJ - a.sa 12, For Uik1. . S.44 " t.so " K.US Ki.i fPTtila " 3,11 " 1,8a" tJM Wtocbfwt t, . o.l - X.M KKaou.! Arrive 4.& - .1S .S tituotnuat) " - IJ " ri.Sp

N(vS Wth Cincinnati anj No S Imtm Mark tnaw Otv daily azwpt batorday. AU otlwa daily curt Sunday. Woodruff m.iu aara oa Noa. and fcatvaoa Cincinnati and Uraml KtWda. and alaapiim and chair oar oa uuw traina betwawn Orand K(lJa and t'vUwkay ; alao, Woodraa alaaiaua eara on Noa 7 aud a Wtwaoa Urand Kapida and Maetl dhw City. A. B. 1JCKT. Uaneral Paawtujar Agaut. RICHMOND BtMXESS DIRECTOR! MANirAtTOIIKN. ROBINSON CO., Haxratacturora ot Portalii ami MaMonary RnSinoa, lima Powara. Kaparatura, Circular Maw lUla. Lra Saw a, I'loTsr Hnllara, Haw Tabtaa. Hoilar a, Caatiaga, ato. HAN KM. Jab K. KKBTKa, PraaY. J. F. Kaavaa, Caab"r. FIRST NATIONAL BANK, Richmond, Indiana Capital atnok paid In rwi.ooa aorplna rand, 10U,0u0 Prompt attanttoa paid to all ooUaotiona.

I make for 1iIn Couch the following elalma ot Nuperlorlty over other bed I.,ouiifi-e. 'i For being upholstered on 1 oven Wire. For making a Double lied. For having no hard ridge In renter. J&at.Jepmratnecw . . iFor having Iteeeptaele Redding. In eontruetion In NimiMLF. aud HUI1-NTAXTIAIj.

RICHMOND UNION STATION TIME TABLE No. 52. im EBect Haaiay, Jam 21, 1MHA. INDIANAPOLIS D VISION. Trains leave, going West. Oolnmbas A Indianapolia Aoeom 3KMpia Limited F.t praaa KJ)ln Fast , i " rm Western t-1f pm Richmond A Indianapolis A nnogii fi fig u Trains arrive from the West. Indianapolis A Richmond A anrwn a Colnnibns Aoooumiodatlon .... 1 0 pa Kay Kpraa M M t t -fi7 pm Eastern Exprese , ,,, , a M am Limited v.. !- ,,,, ay .4 pg, COLCMBU8 DIVISION. Traina leave, vnin Rut iT r.xpreaa , ..7:17 pm .7:00 ana pu ..HiU,m Fast lane Eaatern Expreea Columbua Accommodation ..., Limited fc'.p.. Traina arrive from the East. Limited Exreaa .5 :02 am Columb.ia A Indianapolia . I AO did rut una. ..30am -7 .-o pm Western Kxpress.. DAYTON A XENIA DIVISION Trains leave, going Eaaft. Irj'llanepf Jti Express .AAara Oolnmbas Aeoommo-iation 2 yta 7 IM pm .-10 am 9 so mi Indianapolis A 000 jindatioti Trains arrlv from the East. Inlianapoll4 Aenomnwi. atlow Indianapolia Aeeommoa ., , Kxpress . CHICAOO XIVISIL N. Trains leave going West. Cliicaco Fast Mail and Ktiitmi . m.to.Oinetonati F.xpraaa I0pni Loeal 3B lucumoaii and wo.l Aecom I pta (rains arrive from tbe West. Cincinnati Kiprm . . .4 -gri am Raehmood and Kiwood Aeeom am ' " "'ral 1 11 iisi at pas CTNGINNATT. HAMILTON A DATTOH K. K. Trains leave, going Booth. a M . 4 jgf um lirnimarUM 10 U0 am Trains arrive tram tbe Hootb. Expreaa , 14:10 am Aeeommodatloa ... 7 HO ma 6 pm GRAND BAPTDH IKDIABA B. B. Trains leave, going North. , VSMnm 1 36 pa . a -On an Aoeom inortatanai. Mixed Local. Express, daily except Hatarday lm pm Trains arrive from tbe North. Aesoiiiniodattott , t.lSam 4:17 pm 420 pta i ilb am KxTwess . Mixed Loeal.. Express, daily exeept Monday.. DailT- AH trains, anlaa oabaiataa taiiaa. tea, aepen ana arrive aauy, re dally, exeept Honday. 10. Oueaao Diviaioo. ban! a troan Ctnaaea Bn I . 'lraina not t ana Cm as sot No. Ml Cmeisnaal dailv betweea Cineinnan) and rtiiaaan via. Ab. deraon. Kokoano and Loaaawport. r Tbe Bgares printed on (trie Trme Tabht are Standard Time, tessd on ttte niiwvlielll meridl. an, ana wui tie asosraur kn Time O.K. L not. i and g bave tween Ctnataaacl and PeBoakey. . U. SXUBU. VMaBHBS . .-. - BV. W. BI0UU1JUL, - ..TlekMA C,B- A G. B.B E. W. CABTWBJGHT, Ticket Alt P, C A BC L. B. W -C, Bt L.

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