Richmond Palladium (Weekly), Volume 44, Number 17, 8 July 1874 — Page 4

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THE PALLADIUM.

WEDNESDAY, JULY 8, 1874. t'Ul'SCH SERVICE. Mrst Presbyterian Church Fifth street, between Main and Walnut. Rev. I. M. Hughes, Pastor. Services at 10:30, a. m. and 7 p. m. babbath school at 9 a. m. U. P. Church Corner Eighth and Mulberry streets, llev. 11. Turnbull, Rastor. Services every Sabbath at 10:30 a. m. and 7 p. m. Sunday Shool at 9 o'clock, a. m. Pearl Street M. E: Church Broadway. Pearl and Front streets, llev. N. Gillam, Pastor. Services at 10:30 a. m. and 7 p. m. Sabbath School at 2p.m. Grace M. E. Church Broadway and Seventh streets. Rev. R. N. McKaig, Pastor. Services at 10:30 a. m. and 7 p. m . Sabbath School at 9 a. m . Erienda (Whitewater) North ol Depot. Services 10:30 a. m. Sabbath School at 9 a. m. Friends (Hicksites)7-Broadway and Eighth streets. Services at 11 a. m. Sabbath School at 9 a. m, Friends (Orthodox) Fifth street, between Walnut and Market. Service 10:30 a. m. Sabbath School at 9 a. m. Mission Sabbath School at 2 p. in. St. Paul's Episcopal Church Broadway and Fiith streets, llev. .1 . B. Wakefield, Rector. Services at 10:30 a. m. and 7 p. m. Sabbath School at 9 a. m. First Baptist Church Eighth St., between Main and Broadway. Rev. Pastor. Services at 10:30 a. m. and 7 p. m. Christian Church (late Central) llev. A. J. Laflin, Pastor. Services at 10:30 a. m. and 8 p. m. every Sabbath. Sunday School at 9 a. hi. , New Jerusalem Church Corner of Franklin and Walnut. Services at 10:30 a.m. and 250 p.m. St. Paul's Lutheran Church South Franklin street, llev. Wickemcyer, Pastor. Services at 10 a. m. and 7 p. m. 8abbath School at 2 p. m. German Luthuran Church South Front street. Rev. Lowenstcin, Pastor. Services at 10 a. in. and 7 p. re. Sabbath School at 2 p. m. St. Andrew's Catholic Church South Pearl street. Rev. Father Huiidt. Mass 7 a. m., High 3Iass 9 a. m. Sunday School at 2 p. m. Vespers at 3 p. m St. Mary's Catholic Church Corner Franklin and Broadway. Rev. Father McMiillen. Mass 8 a. m., High Mass lO a. m. Sunday School at p. m. Vespers at 7 p. m. African M. E. Church Corner of Market and Marion streets. Rev. J M. Townsend, Pastor, Services ' at 10:30 a. ni. and 7 p. m. Sabbatl School at 2 p. ru. African Bat list Church Corner of Sixth and Market. Rev. Nimrod Lewis, Pastor. Services at 10:30 a. ui. and 7 p. tn Sabbath School at 2 p. id. Progressive Lyceum Lyceum Hall at2p. m. The English Wy nf Taking Care or Ilornes. Some English grooms at Sarato ga are teaching Yankees the care of horses. I asked oao of these grooms, who has spent twenty years in the stables of royalty, what he had to say about our American way of taking care of a horse. "Why, sir," said he, "you don't take good care of your horses; you think you do, but you don't" "Why!" I asked. ' "Because, when a horse comes in all wet with perspiration, you let him stand in the stable and dry with all the dirt on. In England we take the horse as he comes from a drive and sprinkle blood warm water all over him, from his head to his feet Then we scrape him, rubbing his legs and face dry. Thus in an hour he is clean and dry and ready to take a good feed, while with your way he will stand and swelter for Lours, and finally drv.stickvanddirly Ourhorsesnev er founder and never take cold. We never use a curry comb; you scratch your horses too hard. The only care necessary is to have the water not too cold; then bathe them instantly, while you are rubbing their legs." Commercial Adver tiser. Laughter is a very good thing in its place, but a decent regard for the eternal fitness of things should be preserved. In England, not long ago, a wedding party failed of reaching the object they had in view because of their ill timed hilarity. While all were kneeling around the chancel, a groomsman, unappreciative of the solemnity of the occasion, poked the groom in the side, where the ribs grow short. The sensation must have been agree-, able for the groom laughed aloud, j It was so hearty that it became contagious, and, like a row of bricks, the bride and the rest of the party fell in, until all were in a titter. The expression of wonder on the clergyman's face changed to that of anger, and he refused to complete the ceremony, and leaving the con didates for matrimony half married, hurried to liis study, diesobed, and went home. The moral is obvious: Laugh all you can before marriage, be silent during tho ceremony, and afterward well, that's something no fellow can find out. Surgeon General Hammond, of New York, claims to have made important and startling discoveries in relation to hydrophobia. The result of his investigations so far as disclosed, is, that hydrophobia is not a blood poison, but a nervous disease, traceable directly from the original wound to the great nerve centers. And, second, that any dog, even a perfectly healthy one, may communicate a poison which may result in hydrophobia. The Doctor believes that he is on the point of solving much of the mys tery which has heretofore surrounded this terrible malady. - It is well that the heart strings can relax and contract. There's Mrs. Weaver, of Peoria. She tried to throw herself into her husband's grave, fainted away and went wild. That was five months ago, and the other day she married a red eyed lightning rod man.

. The Place of Woman. One of the principals features of tho Middle Ages is the recognition of the fact that Christianity assigned to women a new place in the social order ot tho world very different from what it had been before. The deep respect accorded by that epoch to women could not but exercise a most j-owerful and beneficial influence on humanity; for when man, confident in his physical force, reigns alone, we can never expect to see real human culture develop itself. There now arose a new kind of worship of the Beautiful, and of female beauty in particular, and that in a higher and more refined sense than had been the case with the non-Christian world. The Greeks, the Romans, and the Arabians had bestowed praise on woman, as necessary to their happiness, but they treated her only as an inferior and even as a 6lave. The Christian world set before itself a new ideal. What man now strives for is, that the lady whose affections he endeavors to win should recognize his personal worth; that she should prefer him to other suitors; that she should love rini because she honors and esteems Mm. Such a demand is based upon the supposition that man considers woman as his equal; nay, that he looks rp to her as a superior being; the endeavor he makes to deserve the favor of her he loves, and to become worthy of her, reacts on his own conduct. Love raises him above all that is common and vulgar; it becomes with him the mainspring of every noblo action; he can henceforth neither do nor say anything of which he would feel ashamed before her. The Teutonic nations especially seized the full sig

nificance of this lofty conception of woman and of her place in life; with them love was nothing but the spontaneous homage of strength to beauty; they introduced new social usages and a more elevated system of ethics among ths inhabitants of Southern Europe, and at the same time, communicated to them that a reverential respect which raises woman, though naturally weak, above the common level of humanity. Essays and Addresses. By Professors and Lecturers, of the Owens College. A Valuable Recipe. The Journal of Chemistry publishes a recipe for the destruction of insects, which, if it be one-half as efficacious as it is claimed to be, will prove in valuable: "Hot alum water is a recent smrges tion as an insecticide. It will destroy red and black ants, cockroaches, spi ders, chintz bugs, a id all tho crawling pests which infest our houses Take two pounds of alum and dissolve it in three or four quarts of boiling water; let it stand on the fire till the alum disappears, then apply it with a brush, while nearly boiling hot, to every joint and crevice in your closets, bedsteads, pantry shelves, and the like. Brush the crevices in the floor ot tne SKivung or mop boards, it you su?pect that they harbor vermin. If. iii whitewashing a ceiling, plenty of alum is added to the lime, it will also serve to keep insects at a distance. Cockroaches will flee the paint which has been washed in cool alum water Sugar barrels and boxes can be freed from ants by drawing a chalk mark hist around the edge of the ton of them. The mark must be unbroken, or they will creep over it; but a con . Ill 11, rt , iinuous cnaiK marie nan an men in width will set their depredations at naught. Powdered alum or borax will keep the chintz hues at a respect able distance, and travelers should always carry a package in their handbags to scatter over and under their pillows in places where they have reason to suspect the presence of such bed-fellows." At the late gathering of the old line abolitionists in Chicago, an interesting account of the "man with the branded hand'' was given. Jonathan Walker is his name, and for his abolition principles he was, in 1813, branded in his right hand with two letters, "S. S." signifying slave stealer, by order of the Uni ted States Marshal of Florida. He is now seventy seven years of age, and lives in Muskegon, Illinois, and, but for his poverty, would have been in attendance at the reunion. In a moment of enthusiasm the convention proposed a contribution for him, and a good round sum was raised. The production of precious met als by the Pacific slope reached during the last quarter of a century 1,583,614,931, of which California mines produced three fourths, near ly all of which latter was in gold. The amount obtained is now in creasing yearly, partly from the opening of new mines, but chiefly from the introduction of improved methods of extracting the precious metals from the ores. The yield oi tne Jracinc slope last year was $80,287,-146. against 70,236,914 in 1872. The increase is mostly in silver, a much more useful metal than gold except for coinage. Mr. Coleman, of St. Louis, editor of the Rural World, is an itchiiip; candidate for office, and of him and a speech of his soon to be delivered the St. Louis Globe remarks: "Colonel Norman J. Coleman will urge the farmers to capture the chinch bug, by means of dead falls, and utilize his hide in making chintz coverings for household furniture. There is no reference whatever to the chinch bug in the oration What Colonel Coleman will sav is, that when cows aro in curably afflicted with horn-ail, and I defy the influence of tho crusaders, it will be best to feed them on dis tillery grains, and so encourage j them to the production of milkpunch. - According to Humbolt, there is a tree in the South Sea Islands which produces ready-made shirts The natives cut off pieces of the tree about two feet long, from which they draw off the fibrous bark, as the boys draw off the bark of willow or hickory to make whistles. Each man selects a tree corresponding in size to his own diameter, so that the shirts may be a good fit "When the bark is off they cut a hole in each side to admit the arms. The shirts do not require any washing, starching, or ironing, and a more convenient article for loafing could Dot be imagined. The same counti y produces bread fruit, so that a follow can get his board and clothes gratis.

The Shoals Iron Furnace has resumed operations, running Lawrence county ore. An elevator company has been organized at Evansville with a capital of SG0.000.

The corner-stone of a new seminary building was laid at Plymouth on the 4to of July by the Masons. The Hebrews of Peru have con tributed $800 to the endowment fund of a proposed Jewish College to be located in this country. . J Some of the Madison merchants i propose to turn the tables on the gran- -gers by organizing a stock company, 1 purchasing a farm and raising their fruit and vegetables. ( "A regular old fashioned camp- i meeting" is to bo held at Deputy, twenty-three mile? from Jeffersonville on the O. and M. Railway. The : meeting will commence in a short time , and continue a month. The San Francisco Bulletin announ ces that a wjgon road has at last been completed to the Yosemite Valley. Travelers, therefore, need no longer perform the toilsome journey on gothic steeds. A Nevada paper says: "There was no regular trial in the case ot John Flanders yesterday. He had an interview in the woods with a few friends, however, and it is perfectly certain that John won't burgle any more. The most diabolical pun ever in vented was perpetrated by a very harmless sort of person the other evening. When Mr. Soberleigh read that a lather in the West had chopped f - a i er -in e Xt hia sn Jnwo? e innocently re marked that he didn't think they ought to arrest a man for simply parting his heir in the middle. The other day an aged couple drove into a western town just as an undertaking firm was moving into an old church, which had been purchased for a shop. The old gentleman stood up in his wagon, Ins mouth and eyes distended, as the men silently carried coffin after coffin into the church. At last he turned to his awe stricken half and gasped: "Sary, by golly, its cholera! Let's git!'! The new ocean steamer Indiana sailed from Philadelphia for Liverpool on the 30th ult. She is one of a new line ot lour si earners, the other three being called alter Ohio, Pennsylvania, and Illinois. They are said to be the finest steamers ever built in this country and equal in all respects to any afloat. The most diabolical pun ever in vented was perpetrated by a very harmless sort af a person the other dav. When Mr. Soberleigh read that a father in the West had chop ped lus only son m two, he inno cently remarked that lie dum t think they ought to arrest a man for simply "parting his heir in the middle." NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. STATE OF INDIANA,-) Wayne County, Wayne Circuit Court, September terra, 1871. Civil action. No. II. Abraham Earnest vs. Nathan Boar, ct a!. Be it known, That on the 17th iky of A m il. 1871, the above named Plaintiff, by Popp, I and Holland & Hinkley, attorneys, "Mod in ! the office of the Clerk of the Wayne Circuit Court, his amended complaint against said defendants in the above entitled cause, together with the affidavit of a competent person, that said delendants, r idelia A orman, Ada Mitchell, Edward Mitchell, Mollie L. Howarth, James Howarth, James Worman, are not residants of the State of Indiana. Said defendants, Fidelia Worman, Ada Mitchell, Edward Mitchell. Mollie L. Howarth, James Howarth, James Worman, therefore, are hereby notitied of the riling and pendency of said complaint against them and that unless they appear and answer or demur thereto, at the calling of the said cause, on the second day of the next Term of said Court, to be legun and held at the Court House, in Richmond, on the first Monday of September, 1874, next, said complaint and the matters and things therein contained and alleged, will be taken as true, and the said cause will be heard and determined in their absence. Witness, the Clerk.and the Seal of said SEAL Court, nt Richmond, this l!)th day of June, is 1 4. WM. W. DUDLEY. Clerk. Popp, Holland & Einkley. attorneys for plaintiff. 15-3w prl Sll. KEARNEY'S FEVIO EXTRACT B U C H U ! The only known remedy for BRIGHT S DISEASE! And a posite remedy for Gout, Ci ravel, Ktrietnres, Diabetes, Bynpepsia, Nervous Bebility, Bropsy, Non-retention or Incontinence of Urine, irriiaiion, innainaiion or Ulceration of the BLADDER. AND KIDNEYS, SPEKMATOIUUKEA, Le ucorrlwa or Wh i I es, Diseases of the Pos tate Gland, Stone in the Bladder, Colculus Gravel or Tirickdust leposlt, and .mucus or amity Discharges KEARNEY'S EXTRACT BUOHU, Permanently Cures all Diseases of the Bladder, Kidneys, and Dropsieal Swellings, Existing In Men, Women and Children BB-XO MATTEIi WHAT THE AGE! Prof. Steele says: "One bottle of Kear ney's Fluid Extract Buchu is worth more than all other Ituchus combined." Price, one Dollar per Bottle, or Six Bottles lor rive Dollars. Depot, 104 Dnane St., New fork. A Physician in attendance to answer cor respondeuee and give advice gratis. S"Send stamp for Pamphlet, free.-fc -TO THEOF BOTH SEXES, No Charge for Advice and Consultation. Dr. J. B. Dyott, graduate of Jefferson Med ical College, Philadelphia, author of several valuable works, can be consulted on all diseases of the Sexual or Urinary Organs, (which he has made an especial study) either in male or female, no matter from what cause originating or of how long standing. A practice of 30 years enables him to treat diseases with success. Cures guaranteed. Charges reasonable. Those at a distance can forward letter describing symptoms and enclosing stamp to rrepay postage. Send for the Guide to Health. Price 10c. J. B. DYOTT, M. D Physician and Surgeon, 104 Duane St., N. Y. lily yyAsmxcii WASHING! Family Washings wanted at THE HOME FOR THE FRIENDLESS. All washing well done, and at low price. 12-tf 1

Girt EUTEtfFBISE The only Reliable Gift Distribution in tbe Country! S50, OOO.OO IN TALl'ABLE GIFTS! To be Distributed in Xj. ID. SIDE'S 16Mb. BEGILAU MONTHLY GIFT ENTERPRISE! To be drawn Monday, Angust lo, 1S74. O.VE CRAX0 CAPITAL PRIZE, $5,000 IN GOLD! Two Prizes $1,000 each in Greenbacks! i Two Prize3 $500 each in Greenbacks! Five Prizes $100 each in Greenbacks! ' One Family Carriage and Matched Horses with Silver Mounted Harness.worth 1 Horse and rtuggy, with 8ilver mounted Harness, worth $fm. One Fine-toned; Rosewood Piano, worth Eive Family Sewing Machines, worth 5100 enrh. 7j Gold and Silver Lever Hunting Watch es (in all) worth from 20 to each! '. iold Chains, Silver-ware, Jewelry, etc., etc. N umber of Gifts 6,000! Tickets limited to flO.OOO! car-Agents Wanted to pell Tickets, to Whom Liberal Premiums will he paid. Mingle Tickets, fill; Six Tickets, 85; Twelve Tickets, $10; Twenty-five,S20. Circulars containing a full list of prizes, a ilescriution of the manner of drawing, and ntht-r information in reference to the Iiistribuliou, will bo sent to any one ordering fhetn. Ail letters must be addresw d to ' Main otliee, J;. : S1XE, Box 86, I'd "VV. Fifth street. CINCINNATI, O l(j-UW ArM.S WASTED For Family Bi bles, Protestant, German and Oiltholie, with 1 ielkii:ry, iiooks of the Bible, etc., fuiij Illustrated. Sample copy at wholesale prices. YOST, Publisher, Silo Market street, i'niladclpiua. u-4w A DAIT CUARANTrm i"0" WELL AUGER AND URI LL a good territory. HIGHEST ir-sii.-viOJNlAlJI FROM GOVERNORS OF IOWA, AEKARSA9 AND DAKOTA. Catalogue! fie. W. Bt. LouiJ, Mo. ll-Jw 'EDKOtiKAi'IIY" A new book on the rt of Writing bv sound: a complete system i f Phonetic Short-Hand, the shortest, most Siiapie, easy, and comprehensive, enal'Iiiiu .inyoneiu a short time to report trials,, speeches, si'rmonx, etc. The Lord's Prayer I is written with 4! strokes of the pen, and 110 words per minute. ll:e unemployed should learn tins art. Price hv mail cms. Aaents wanted. Address T. W. EVANS a CO., liWSouiii Seventh street, Philadelphia, i.'a ll-lw f orewarned. Forearmed. lo no :oreu'iued now when you are threatened with nil the ailments caused by debilitating print' and Summer weather is to make 1 fee use of JURUBBBA. Which will make the Liver active, assist l-'igestion, fiirify the blood, strencthen the i tonne and urinary organs, invigorate tne ivstem. and make you eniov lire as you outrht. Price H a bottle. JOHN J. KKLlAMJG, Agent, New York. ll-4w 200 PIANOS AND ORGANS. New and Second-hand, of First Class JTakrs, will be sold at Iower Prices for cash, or I n Instalments, or for rent, in City or Coun:ry, during this month, by HOliACE WATEltS & SON, No. 1M l'.roadwav, than ever before offered in New York. SPECIALTY: llanos anil Onians to let until the rent money, pays the price ot the Instrument. 1 Uustrated Catalogues mailed. A lame dis count to niinisters,churches, schools, liKlses, etc. 1MVF 3.000 Outfit Ordered In Advance! w"i TELL IT ALL By Mrs. Stenhouse, of Salt Lake City, 25 years the wile ot a Mormon rligu 1'riesl. With introduction by Mrs. Stowe. Over 3,000 Outfits ol this Extraordinary work were ordered by old Agents, in advance, Alio are now selling 25 to 40 a day! Its sale is without a parallel. One Agent (lady) sold 2SO in one wet k. Terms big; sales positively immense. Completeoutlitfree to all agents who mean husiness. Circulars tree. Address. Ou'EEN CITY PUH'NG CO. 14-4v Cincinnati, Ohio. Dr. Sharp's specific cures Dyspepsia, Liver ( 'omplain t. Const i nation. Vomiting of Food , Sour Stomach, Water Drash, Heartburn, .ow Spirits, etc. In thirty-live years never tailing to cure the most obstinate cases. Sold by druggists generally. C. E. Potts &- Co.. agents for Richmond, Indiana. Depot, 1 lo Kigtith street, N . i . Circulars mailed on application. 11-4 This Sewinu Machine gives the bestsatisInction to the user, is paid for most readily, and is the bcr.t of all to sell. If thero is no "Domestic Agent in your town, apply to DOMESTIC S. M. Ci ., New York. 9-4 Ladies send lor elegant I asliion Look. 11-lw Mm coi eais, coeds, Hoarseness, and all Throat Diseases USE WELLS' CARBOLIC TABLETS, Pnt np only In Bine Boxes. A TRIED AND SURE REMEDY. Sold by Druggists. 11-4 Livingstone is Dead! For 30 years Millions have intently watch. ed his perilous yet heroic struggles, and prand triumphs, and now they eagerly de-f-ire the Complete Life 1 Iistory of this worldrenowned Hero and llenefactor, which unfolds also the curiosities and wealth of a wild and -wonderful country. We publish lust that history from his birth to his burial. Now ready. 2,UK) ngents wanted quickly ne agent sold 181 first six days: another l'W first week. For particulars of this, our superb new illustrated liibles, and Ocean's Story, address HUBBARD & BROS., 14-lw Pubs., Cincinnati, Ohio. FJ1HE FAVORITE LAWN MOWER And GAKIjEN ROLLER COMBINED Manufactured and for sale by the "WEED SEWING MACHINE CO. SIMPEE, EFFICIENT, DURABLE. Runs easy and light on any kindoi ground, suiooiu or rougn, noes not Clog, arvl never gets dull. HARDIN Sli ARDON, Managers, 235 West Fourth Street, Cincinnati. 13-4w (E. N. F.) JDMINISTKATOR'S NOTICE. Notice is hereby given that Charls A. Francisco has been duly appointed Administrator of the estate of Lomis J. Francisco, deceased, late of Wayne county, Indiana. The estate Is probably solvent. CHARLES A. FRANCISCO, Aduiinistrator. J. C. Whitridge Attorney juneiu, i3 i-li-3w

gTi:EI RAIL! IM1 11I.E TRACK! .

Baltimore and Ohio: Xtail Itoad. ' THE tilt EAT SHORT MM. FRO . tiSU..ATI OH t'OElJIillS EAST! SAVING fc7 to 110 MILKS, and arriving on li-Hiu m Advance tit .NEW YORK. ; SAYING m MILKS, and arriving 5 to Hot'IlM in Advance at BALTIMORE. SAVING 125 MILKS and arriving 5 to 7 HOUilS iu- Advance at WASHINGTON. Keaching 3r li i 1 a delpliia One Train the Quickest. Mngnlficent D ly 'onche ami I'nllman 1'alaee Drawine luioin and Sleeping Coaches Are run on this route between Louis, Cincinnati, Columbus, Baltimore and Washington City. WITHOUT CHANGE! Orossing the Ohio river on Splendid Iron Railway Bridges At Parkersburgor liellair; By this Line yon will Avoid nil; Om Tickets for sale at all Ticket Offices in the South ami West. C. M. COI.E, TIIOS. 11. SHARP, Gen 1 Ticket Afr't, MasterTransport n. Baltimore, Md. Baltimore, Md 1-tf Dr.-J. Walker's California Vinesrar Bitters arc a purelv Veg etable preparation, made chiefly from tho native herbs found on the lower ranges of the Sierra Nevada moun tains of California, tho medicinal properties of which are extracted therefrom without tho uso of Alcohol. Tho question is almost daily asked, " vuat is the causo ot tho .unpar alleled success of Vinegar Bittees?" Our answer is, that they remove the cause of disease, and the patient recovers his health. They are tho groat blood piumer and a life-giving principle, a perfect Renovator ana I'nvigorator of the system. Never before in the history of the world has a medicine been compounded pos sessing the remarkable qualities of Vinegau Bitters in healing the sick of every disease man is heir to. They are a gentlo Purgative aa well as a Tonic, relieving Congestion or Inflammation of the Liver and Visceral Organs, in Bilious Diseases The properties of DK. Walk er's Vinegar BiTTEas are Aperient, Diaphoretic, Carminative, Nutritious, Laxative, Diuretic, Sedative, Counter-irritant, Sudorilic, Alterative, and Anti-Bihous. Grateful Thousands proclaim Vinegar Bitters the most wonderful Invigorant that ever sustained the sinking system. No Person can take these Bitters according to directions, and remain long unwell, provided their bones are not destroyed by mineral poison or other means, and vital organs wasted beyond repair. Bilious, Remittent, and Intermittent Fevers, which are so prevalent in the valleys of our great rivers throughout the United States, especially those of the Mississippi, Ohio, Missouri, Illinois, Tennessee, Cumberland, Arkansas, Red, Colorado, Brazos,' Rio Grande, Pearl, Alabama, Mobile, Savannah, Roanoke, James, and many others, with their vast tributaries, throughout our entire country during the Summer and Autumn, and remarkably so during seasons of unusual heat and dryness, are invariably accompanied by extensive derangements of the stomach and liver, and other abdominal viscera. In their treatment, a purgative, exerting a powerful influence upon these various organs, is essentially necessary. There is no cathartic for the purpose equal to Dr. J. Walker's Vinegar Bitters, a3 they will speedily remove the dark-colored viscid matter with which tho bowels are loaded, at the same time stimulating the secretions of the liver, and generally restoring tho healthy functions of the digestive organs. Fortify the body against disease by purifying all its fluids with Vinegar Bitters. No epidemic can take hold of a system thus lore-armed. Dyspepsia or Indigestion, Headache, Pain in the Shoulders, Coughs, Tightness of the Chest, Dizziness, Sour Eructations of the Stomach, Bad Tase in the Mouth, Bilious Attacks, Palpitation of the Heart, Inflammation of the Lungs, Pain in the region of tho Kidneys, and a hundred other painful symptoms, are the offsprings of Dyspepsia. One bottle will prove a better guarantee of its merits than a lengthy advertisement. Scrofula, or King's Evil, White Swellings, tllcers, Erysipelas, Swelled Neck, Goitre, Scrofulous Inflammations, Indolent Inflammations, Mercurial affections, Old Sores, Eruptions of the Skin, Sore Eyes, etc. In those, as in all other constitutional Diseases, Walker's VinEgarBitters have shown their great cur ative powers in the most obstinate and intractable cases. For Inllammatory and Chronic Rheumatism, Gout, Bilious, Remittent and Intermittent Fevers, Diseases of tho Blood. Liver, Kidneys and Bladder, these Bitters have no equal. Such Dis eases are caused bv Vitiated Blood. Mechanical Diseases. Persons engaged in Paints and Minerals, such as Plumbers, Type-setters, Gold-beaters and Miners, as they advance in life, are sub ject to paralvsis of the Bowels. To guard against this, take a dose of Walker's Vixegar Bitters occasionally. For Skin Diseases, Eruptions, Tetter, Salt-Rheum, Blotches, Spots, Pim ples, Pustules, Boils, Carbuncles, King worms, Scald-head, Sore Eyes, Erysipe las. Itch. Scurfs, Discolorations ot the Skin, Humors and Diseases of the Skin of whatever name, or nature, are literally dug np and carried out of the system in a short time oy tne use 01 inese timers. Pin, Tape, and other Worms, lurking in the system of so many thousands, are effectually destroyed and re moved. N o system ot medicine, no ver mifuges, no anthelmintics will free the Rvstem from worms UkB these Bitters. For Female Complaints, in young - or old, married or single, at tne aawn oi womanhood, or the turn ol hie, tuese 'i on' ic Bitters display so decided an influence that improvement is soon perceptible. Cleanse the Vitiated Blood whenever you find its impurities bursting throne-h the skin fti Pimnles. Eruptions. or Sores ; cleause it when you find it obstructed and sluggish in the veins ; cleanse it when it is foul ; your feelings will tell you when. Keep the blood pure, and the health of tho svstem will loiiow. R. II. lilfDO.V H,!) & CO., I )ru it crista Si Gen. Acts., ban rriwimseo. Ciuinir nia. icor of Wnshiiiirtim nmU'iuirliim Sts..X.Y

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bold by ail Druggists Lud i'iUia.

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PRINU AND Sl'MSEH. The undersigned has just received. hisnew FALL STYLES OF HATS of nil kinds, lo which he invites the attention of all who would Indulge in the latest fashions. feiTCall at the Hat and 'ap Store of (JOHN SUFFRINS. Richmond . March 1, 1S73. 1 -ly JOTE SWAINE, PHOTOGRAPHIC ARTISTS Are prepared to do all kinds of work their line of business in AND IN THE BEST STYLE, At their Galleries, SOI and 306 Main St.. ; (third Htory,) AND Corner of Main A Finn Streets, RICHMOND. INDIANA I. KXOPF. c. n. k )?if. SI. K OPF. K KOPF Dealers in all kinds of Fresh and Dried Meats, Manufacturers of BOLOGNA, HAM AND PORK SAUSAGES, Etc. 313 Main Street, Southeast cor. Pearl, (old Fostoflice corner.) dec! 70-41-tf RICHMOND, INDIANA. SIMMONS, AGENT FOR Coal, Lime, Plasters, Cements, Stone Pipe, Fire Brick, Fire Clay, Stoneware. Ofiice, 194 Fort Warn Avenue, near the Depot, RICHMOND. INDIANA. JOB PEINTING. Business Cards" Shipping Cards, Railroad Cards, Address Cards, Bill Heads, Business Cards, Checks, Drafts, Wedding Cards, Visiting Cards, Ball Cards Invitation Cards, Bills of Lading, Letter Heads, Envelopes, Statements, Etc.. Etc EJVTKAJfCE TO OFFICE,) 22S Main Street Keeond door East of the Richmond National Bunk. Orders thankfully promptly attended to. received, Address anil JPR RENT, TWO STOREROOMS, In EyeeaiB Hall HnlMinfc, Adjoining rvannce, Nos. 39 and 41 Fifth Street Possession given January 10, 1873. 32 E. HAUHHTOX, H. D. Office, No. 36 South Franklin St., RICHMOND, INDIANA. Maylst,lS74.

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, UOLLOWAY. COL. E. M. X AflOK. JAMESM.BLACIIABD. u NION PATE.1T GENCY D. P. UOLLOWAY & 0 Have engaged in the business of Soliciting Patents and Prosecuting Patent cawes. Business entrusu.'d to them willreceive prompt attention. Claims Against the Government, FOR BACK PAY, F0H PENSIONS, Ere. Will receive personal and prompt attention ALL INFORMATION Copies ot the Laws ana Kuies ana iteguiations or tne raient umce, win De sent era i is on application. In applying for a Paten tne applicant snouitt Forward a Model of bis Invention (susceptible of being illustrated by a model, or if it consists iu a chemical compound; samples of the ingredients in their commer cial state, ami also in uie proposed prepareu form, should be sent. Also, a full description of the Invention or discovery, and its advantages should be given as is practicable, to aid in the proper preparation oi me papers. KB-Persons believing they have made an invention or discovery in art or science, and detiirousof knowing whether the same has been patented, by transmitting to us a model, or drawing, or a sufficient description to make the invention intelligible, can have a thorough examination made in the Patent Office, and the result of said examination forwarded to them for a reasonable compensation. CAVE ATS Will be prepared on short notice, by the inventor giving brief description of their invention. DRAWINGS) Will bemndein artistic style frcm mode furnished by inventors SEARCHES OF THE RECORDS Of tbe Patent Onlce Iu regard to titles in Patents, will be made on application. Send full name or namescharacter of the invention, and, if possible, uaieoi I'aieiu. COPIES OF CLAIMS Since 1836, will be furnished on the reception of $1, the applicant giving the full name of the patentee, nature of the invention, day of the patents, etc. Washington City, Dec. 21, 1872.

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mi m m mm, HAWSE'S GREAT RESIEBY FOR THE THROAT AND LUNGS. It is gratifying to us to Inform the publlo that Dr. L. Q. C. Wishart's Pine Tree Tar Cordial for Throat and Lung Diseases, has gained an enviable reputation from the Atlantic to the Pacific ocean, and from thence In some of the first families of Europe, not through the press alone, but by persons throughout the States actually benefitted and cured at his office. While he publishes less, so say our reporters, he 1r unable to supply the demand. It gains and holds its reputation: First. Not by stopping cough, but by loosening and assisting nature to t'jrovr oft the unhealthy matter collected about the throat and bronchial tubes, which causes irritation. Second. It removes the cause of Irritation (which produces cough) of the mucous membrane and brouchlal tubes, assists the lungs to act and threw off the unhealthy secre tions, and purifies the blood. Third. It is free from squills, lobelia, ipecac and opium, of which most throat and lung remedies are composed, which allay cough only and disorganize tbe stomach. .It has a soothing eirect on the stomach, acts on the liver aud kidneys, and lymphatic and nervous regions, thus reaching to every part of the system, and in its invigorating and purifying effects, it has gained a reputation which it must hold above all others in the market. ; NOTICE The Pine Tree Cordial Great American Dyspsia Pills, AND WORM SUGAR DRO; '.S Eeing under my immediate direction they shall not lose their curative.oualilies by the use of cheap and impure articles. HENRY R. WISIIART, Proprietor. FREE OF CHARGE. Dr. Ii. Q. C. Wishart's Office Parlor's are opened on Mondays,Tuesdays and Wednesdays, from 9 a. m. to 5 p. m., for consultation by Dr. Wm. T. Magee. With him are assosociated two consulting physicians of acknowledged ability. This opportunity is not offered by any other institution in the city. L.Q.0.Wishart,M.D.( No. 233 North Seeond Street,' PHILADELPHIA. LULL AND WINTER. BHTIRB ItXIW 1 1" o cj.: CARPETS, DRY GOODS, DRESS GOODS, MATTINGS, GENT'S FURNISHING GOODS OIL CLOTH, LACE CURTAINS, WINDOW SHADES. J FORKNER. 270 Main Street, RICHMOND, IND. April 29, 1873. ?7-lf UGI'STIS R. YOUNG, ATTORNEY AND NOTARY. Office in room over George V. Barne's Grocery. Richmond Indiana. A LECTURE to youprc- mkit. Jnst Published In it Sealed Envelope. Price Six Cents. A Lecture on the Nature, Treatment and Radical Cure of Spermatorrhea, or Seminal Weakness, Involuntary Emissions, Sexual Debility, and Impedimenta to Marriage generally; Nervousness, Consumption, Epilepsy and tits; Mental and Physical Incapacity resulting from self-abuse, etc. By KOliEKT .1. CULVER WELL, M. D., Author of the Green Book, etc. The world renowned author, in this admirable Lecture, clearly proves from his own experience that the awful consequences of Self-Abuse may tie effectually removed Without dangerous surgical operations, bnnf les, instruments, rings, or cordials, pointne out a mode of cure at once certain and effectual by which every sufferer, m matter what his condition may he. may cure himself cheaply, privately and radically. 1 his lecture will prove a boon to thousands and thousands. , . . , , Sent under seal, to any address, in a plain sealed envelope, on the receipt of six cents, or two postage stamps. Also, Dr. Culverwell's Marriage (iuide, price o0 cents. Addthe publisher & 127Bowerv. New York P O Box5ti. JOHN I. . OWEN, louse Higt.Piiiliig, AND CALCIMINING, No. 2 South Front Street, RICHMOND, INDIANA

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