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Chatsworth Plaindealer. · 2017. 8. 3. · had passed. “New York Post.” —At Galesburg,...

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V v> wbeu the SpartHos elda of victory. Who )6B iutheae dayaf speut Monday and 1 , we are pleased to lit Chicago this week a prominading on our y. Do you retueinber left on Monday eve- pleasant days with >u, of Chicago, was tors to our town this larris, the trader in all 8, is in our midst once am, of Long Point, Hunt and family, for 8k. and Miss Ida Shroyer, or a few days stay in. pbell, of Piper City, nd shopping. In Chuts- ;loy, our popular den- are visiting at Clic- he home of his mot li- nt the Sabbath at Pi- fri^nd Willie Pulver. 18 if he were bound n. on Saturday last for her daughter, Mrs. We hope her stay > . Radinski, perform- runients at Fairbury, terpsicorcan art. on lennle Vail and fami- ag their place of resi- ly occupied by Mr. ith of Gunsel’s. celin, left on Monday alks and other friends lit will be short, but lat. Oh! what, will ras called to Watseka professional business, til Tuesday, and the of the Republicans I tickets? of Pontiac, has been town during the past s very pleasant, and iich pleased with the le city and its citizens. ell known to many of who lived and farmed r a short time, was in le is stopping over rbury. 0 see our energetic Weinland, is able to more. His spell of rd with him, but we 1 be speedy and per- h her daughter Nellie, lust, from her short e suppose her visit ant, and the friend- ise her to turn her tion quite often. 'iss Mollie McMullon, sday morning. They itate, to make their son at least They if Chatsworth for a id go away leaving , called once more >rley and his family ago, to make their inty, south of Pekin, len in the employ of w years past, but sev- here to '‘go West. ’’ 3R IN 1^ @ [ARDWARS, II>- hand Lumber of all id and Brick, together ling Hardware. 1 am s iTASOJirs. 1/ Chatsworth Plaindealer. DEVOTED TO THE IJiTERESTS OF CHATSWORTH AJfD VICU^ITY' JOHN OOLVZir &L C O ., P r o p r i e t o r s . O F F IC C —O v e r H a ll 8 l Crane^s. Term s—12.00 a Year. VOLUMN III. CHATSWORTH, ILLINOIS, NOVEMBER 18, 1875. NUMBER 2 BUSIJfESS CARDS. B. A.. BAReg. a. A . BAMOB. XL Ai. BANOS A CO., OHATtWORTH. ILL. Collection% Made at Loweet Rates. i 0«eml Bukiig B wim Tninctti T H :H3 Bank of Chatsworth. A Gtunl Baaldii; Buutn Tnmcted. Drafts drawn on all principal points In the United States and Europe, ocean Passage Tickets sold. Collections made on all access- ible points. C'HAs. K. A nthomy , Pres’t. H bmby D bwhaht , Vice Prest. C. M. A nthony , Cashier. C. A. Wilson, Asst. Cashier, R. B. M. W ilson. A nthony * Dknhabt , BANKERS, W'ashington, Illinois. SAMUEL T. FOSDICE, (SBMMM r toPoW iok k W ilUee.) Aim AKD CWUIIAW, Chatsworth, Ills. w ill practice in Livingston and adjoining connMes. All legal business Intrusted to my care will receive prompt attention. G. TORRANCE. mi Law. w ill practice In Livingston and adjoining counties. Fvticolu AUoBtioi Girei to Colleotioii. Also, Justice of the Peace. O Rice over the I'ostotlice.lTl ATS WORTH 111. DZt. C. TB.'U^ Oltlce over Bangs' drug store; Residence In the bouse formerly occupied by Dr. Hying* ton. CHATSWORTH, ILLINOIS. D R .C . K . W IL£S, HOMGBOPATHIC Physician <& Surgeon, ■will attend calls day or night. Office over Doolittle's grocery store. CHATSWORTH, ILL. M. LCerch.axit T ailor X CHAT8W0BH, ILL. Give me a call and examine my work and prices. Particular attention paid to cutting Men’s and Ho^S* suits. CHRIS. aUNTHER, Dealer in and Manufacturer of Harness & Saddles! Collars, If hips, Sridles, Jkr. REPAIRING PROMPTLY EIECDTED. All work warranted of the best material or no charge. Come and see and save money.' XT. O. S:2BXT702T, —DEALER IN— BOOKS, STATIONERY, TOYS, Notions, Periodicals, Etc. AT THE POSTsOFKICE Chatsworth, t t III. Henry Walker, TONSORIAL ARTIST A t my rooms, opposite ^ a tt S Crane's, wilt be Jound 2^- mades, ffair2)yes, ffairTier- f^mes, M e. Atso, Cigars. M r jB’air Cutting in the tat- 09 ts(yte, Shaving and Sham- pooing, give me a catt. GENERAL NEWS. —Navigation on the Illinoia and Michigan canal will be closed on the 25th inst. —The hog cholera rages fearfully in Pike county, 111. In one neigh- borhood between 600 and 700 hogs have died. —The Prohibitionists of New Hamshire met in convention at Con- cord on the 10 inst., and nominated A. 8. Kendall for Govonor. --Thomas A. Doyle, Republican, was re-elected Mayor of Providence, R. I., on Wednesday, for the tenth time. Eighty-five counties of Missouri gave a majority of sixty-three thous-, and two hundred for the new con- stitution. —The temporary suspension of the operations of one of the great collieries and iron works near Leeds England, on account of the depres- sion in trade, over 10,000 workmen will be thrown out of employment. —The Illinois State Grange propose holding an annual meeting at Cham- paign this fall, and the managers of the Industrial Univoralty have offer- ed the use of llioir roniiiH for the mooting. — A oliarily fmlliMil in n Dnlti- more hoMplUl wlin iiwiia Iwn farms and earriBH alnm > ' ||(i oluilnia 9’^, OOU, haa banii fYiiin., uui, and will pay Ilia own duulor billa in the fu turo. The following order, dated Nov. 6th, has boon addrcaaod to the Rus sians in Khokand: The territory on the right bank^ of the Syn Duria^ from the Russian frontier to the river Nareeii, hitherto belonging to Khokann, is annexed to Russia. —James Colling, a half-witted fellow and adjudged insane not long since, was found on Wednesday morning “on the Kickapoo,” hang- ed to a tree by the neck. The Cor- oner’s jury rendered a verdict of suicide while laboring under aberra- tion of the mind. —Dr. E. 8. Hull, the famous en- tomologist and fruit grower, present President of the Illinois State Hor- ticultnral Society, died at his resi- dence near Alton, on the morning of the 8th inst., after a brief illness. He was well known throughout the west as a practical scientist, and his death will be widely regretted. —Three young boys named Pepin w*re arrested at Yamaska, Quebec a few weeks ago for piling logs on the track 'i;o see the cars jump, the cars jumped and killed some twenty people. On account of their tender years they were held irresponsible and discharged. Now they have been arrested again for attempting to repeat the experiment—happily, this time without success. —Another frightful marine dis- aster is added to the long list that have gone before. The steamship Pacific, runping between San Fran- cisco and Portland, Oregon, while on her vo^ge south last Thursday, and when twelve hours out from Victoria and forty miles from Cape Flattery, foundered. Several boats were launched, but they all swamp, ed, out of 150 passengers and orew only one was saved, Mr. Henry L. rU Jelly. He clung to the pilot house and was picked up bypassing ves, sel. He was so weak from hunger and exposure as to be unable to give the details of the loss of the steam- ship, but with his recovery what is now conjecture will doubtless be ex- plained.—‘‘Inter-Ocean.” —At the late Illinois yearly meeting of Friends, an aged Quaker 87 years old living 14 miles distant, missed but oneimeeting, riding back and forth the twenty-eight miles in a carriage, sitting the long sessions, and at the close of the last meeting five and a half hours’ continuance, declared that he was feeling better than at the opening. —Henry Baden, formerly yard- master of the Peoria and Rock Is- land road at Peoria, and Albert Fohler were arrested last summer for stealing whiskey. Pohler turn- ed State’s evidence and Baden was released on bail, but ran away. On Wednesday Baden was arrested in Camden, 111., by Sheriff Hitch- ock. The United States grand jury at Cincinnati, which has been in ses- sion for some time past, returned the following indictments on Wed- nesday, for violation of the internal revenue laws; Howe & Hubbell, H. II. II umilton, A. Mann & Co. and W. T. Marshall, rectifiers, and T A. Logan, Geo J. Leinger ami W- C Williams, Gaugers. —Tho wife of General Hendrick Vail Rensselaer, formerly of Albany celebrated the anniversary of her one hundredth birthday at Ran- dolph, Cattaraugus County, N. Y., last week. She received calls from a large number of acquaintances, and in the evening Prof. Edwards, of Chamberlain Institute, made an appropriate address, in which he re- counted some of the eventful scenes through which Mrs. Van Rensselaer had passed. “New York Post.” —At Galesburg, lately, a butcher was serving a lady in the shop, and just as she steppe'l out of the door, a stranger, who had been apparent- ly waiting his turn, picked up a ring off the floor with the remark that he guessed it was dropped by the lady who had jsut stepped cut. Of course the butcher took it and ran half a block after the lady, only to discover that it was not her’s. On returning to the shop he found that the stranger was gone, and also all the money in the cash drawer. —Joseph L. Drake, G. W. 8. of the Grand Lodge of Good Templars of this state, died at his home in Blue Island, on Wednesday last. This is the second Grand Worthy Secretary the Order has lost_ by death within the last eight months, J. K. Van Doom, the former G. W. S., having died in May last. Mr. Drake has been in poor health for several months, and to thoso who saw him at the time of the last ses- sion of the Grand Lodge, the an- nouncement of his death will not be nnexpected Mr. Drake was an Englishman by birth, and has been a resident of ‘Chicago for many years. He has been a prominent worker in the temperance ranks for many years, and has pobably done more to build up the Order of Good Templars > in Chicago than any other man in the Order His death will be a sad loss to tlTe Order, not only in that city but throughout the State. The Executive Committee of the Order will meet the Wash- ingtonian Home, in Chicago, ofi Friday next, to fill the vacancy in the oflice. “ Leader” — A dispatch from 'Quincy, 9th in<»t., says:“ For some time past this city and county have been greatly excited over an attempt by the town of Coatsburg "to have the county seat removed from here to that town. The special election to de- cide the matter was held to-day. Business was suspended in the city, and the day devoted by all to the e- lection. Quincy gave 5,349 against the removal and 4 for the removal The total majority in the county against removal will be over 4,000. This vote settles forev^ the loca- tion of the county seat at Quincy. — Rockford is getting up a revi- val. Taylor, the California Evan- gelist, is already there. Earle the Baptist, Hammond the presbyterian and Whittle and Bhss the congrega- tionalists, are also expected. The largest buildings in the city have been hired for many nights. Mul- titudes'of people are expected from Southern Wiscon.sin, and from the rural districts. These meetings will be condnetod in much the same manner as arc those of Moody and Suiikcy .All the church-choirs in town will become a union choir for several weeks. This is a strong concentration of effort upon one point. “Kankukoo Guz'-Hte." — A Ij^li in .Marysville California, was attended by an average of ten men to one woman; but the women ^eem to have made up in vivacity what they lacked in numbers Miss Lotta Sohnman, attired in blue silk en-train, a la pull-back, six button kids, aud a lace overdress, was the prettiest and sprightliest. She had a quarrel with her escort late in the evening, and, in her dashing way, said: “ .lu.st look a’here! 1 ain’t no slouch; I ’m a lady, I am, and know how to behave like one’ . Then she drew a revolver from a pocket among the folds of her dress at her hip, and shot tho beau, so that he is likely to die. “ San Francisco Chronicle.” —Great excitement prevails at Chandlersville, Cass county, over a recent elopement, the parties con- cerned being Prof. John S- Full, principal of the high school, and Miss Amanda Brier, both residents of Cliandlerville. Miss Brier is a young lady of fine appearance, good family, &c., and has been attending school at the M. E. college, Jack- sonville. She aske(L4iemuaeie«-tek leave for home, last Friday night, taking her trunk. Mr. Full left home the same evening, saying he was go- ing to his sister’s. He proceeded to Jacksonville, where he met Miss Brier, as per previous arraingement. from whence they departed for parts unknown. Mr. Full leaves a wife and two children, his wife being in destitute circumstances, and her reason and life are despaired. A Leeds paper says that a young widow in that city, who writes well, is training herself for an editor. Who is the editor? Dr. D. 'WrSvLxit, Physician & Surgeo-T, The Olde.l I’ractIclDK I'hyslclan In lown . will be found ready at all tlmea to an.iwei calla. Ilia office la at lila old atand i Resi- dence Houth of School Houae. 0. SANEOBD, Livery,Fseil 2 Sale M e, CHATSWORTH, ILL. TranaiMii'tatlon furnished to any part ol the country, ou quick time. Horaea boarded by the day or week. A . 22. JE2A2jf2j, PHOTOGRAPHER! OVER BANCS’ DRUG STORE Plcturea taken in the beat of style ol.i pictures copied and enlar>;<'d .\ll my work Ih w arranted. Give me a call. CH \TsWORTil, ILI.. 0. BADmSEI, Over Spelcher’a Blacksmith Shop. CHATSWORTH. - * II.LINOI'^. I am alwaya reaily to do all Kinds oi ilou.se and Sign Puiniiiii;. Wagon and lUiggt Painting a 8pechiil> . and fancy and oriui- men'al painting e.vcciittMl in the latest de* algna. JOHN TIMM’S MEAT MARKET! Jl .*(T EAST OC THE BANK. All kinds of P’reali and Halt Meats conatantl.' on hand, at' the loweat market rale.* Illgheat cash price paid for tat ( attic. .*hi-ep, UogH, Hides and Tallow ( HATSWOKTH, ILLINOIS BOBSBT BtUIBOLB, GENERAL INSURANCE AGENT! til ATS Worth , ill . / am agent for the HOME of N. Y.. HAU‘1'- KOUD. of Conn., CON I ISKN'TAL, of N Y.. GL()BK. of ( hluago, Klt.W KUN, of W. Va.. and the WA su LnOTON LIKE, of N, Y. ( all on me and 1 will write you up a policy at the lowest poHHible rates. PETER SHROYER, Dealer In Hard and Soft Goal! t HATSWOKTH, ILL. Orders solicited and promptly filled. JSSSE LANTB7, Dealer in FREBM MEATt CHAT8W08TH, ILL. 1 keep constantly on hand, all kinds ol I real! and Salted meats, and sell at the low- est prices. Highest prices paid for Hides, Tal low. Lard fat Cattle, Hogs aud Sheep. GIVE ME A CALL. , Cottage E£ouse I U. K. WANN, Proprietor. Chatsworth, - I Having recently refitted, remodeled aud lioua icing i ___________ __ now a flrat-olaaa hotel for the accommoda* refurnished this houae throughout. I take pleasure in announcing that Cnataworth has tIon of guests. Good Sample Rooms For the convenience of Commercial Agents. S harps R ifle Co. Msamfcstims of r»t«ot MllllBry, Cmdaoor UQm. rOEIESTIITHEVOUl WtwMT M UMnMlMikl lag •lOrMABMr. Mwlr aU priailfdi •poftlnc RidiM. . . taotam O reed m o erR iflw with t levstloiw ^ laooyanfg, . Stand fiMT ZUaati«t«4 Oat*do«n«» Armory ami OdRaAy & CL W B8TCOT% HARTFORD, CONN. .. I*.
Transcript

V

v>

wbeu the SpartHos elda of victory. Who )6B iutheae dayaf

speut Monday and

1, we are pleased to lit Chicago this week

a prominading on our y. Do you retueinber

left on Monday eve- pleasant days with

>u, of Chicago, was tors to our town this

larris, the trader in all 8, is in our midst once

am, of Long Point, Hunt and family, for

8k.and Miss Ida Shroyer, or a few days stay in.pbell, of Piper City, nd shopping. In Chuts-

;loy, our popular den- are visiting at Clic­he home of his mot li­

nt the Sabbath at Pi- fri^nd Willie Pulver. 18 if he were bound n.on Saturday last for her daughter, Mrs.

We hope her stay

>. Radinski, perform- runients at Fairbury, terpsicorcan art. on

lennle Vail and fami- ag their place of resi- ly occupied by Mr. ith of Gunsel’s.celin, left on Monday alks and other friends lit will be short, but lat. Oh! what, will

ras called to Watseka professional business, til Tuesday, and the of the Republicans

I tickets?of Pontiac, has been town during the past

s very pleasant, and iich pleased with the le city and its citizens.ell known to many of who lived and farmed r a short time, was in le is stopping over rbury.0 see our energetic Weinland, is able to more. His spell of

rd with him, but we1 be speedy and per-

h her daughter Nellie, lust, from her short

e suppose her visit ant, and the friend- ise her to turn her tion quite often.'iss Mollie McMullon, sday morning. They itate, to make their son at least They if Chatsworth for a id go away leaving

, called once more >rley and his family ago, to make their

inty, south of Pekin, len in the employ of w years past, but sev- here to ' ‘go West. ’’

3R IN

1 ^ @

[ARDWARS,

II>-

hand Lumber of all id and Brick, together ling Hardware. 1 am

s iTASOJirs.

1/

Chatsworth Plaindealer.DEVOTED TO THE IJiTERESTS OF CHATSW ORTH AJfD VICU^ITY'

J O H N O O L V Z ir &L C O ., P r o p r ie t o r s . O F F I C C —O v e r H a l l 8l C ra n e ^ s . T e r m s —1 2 .0 0 a Y e a r .

VOLUMN III . CHATSWORTH, ILLIN O IS, NOVEMBER 18, 1875. NUMBER 2

BUSIJfESS CARDS.

B. A.. BAReg. a. A . BAMOB.

X L A i. B A N O S A C O .,

O H A T tW O R TH . IL L .

Collection% Made at Loweet Rates.

i 0«eml Bukiig Bwim Tninctti

T H :H3Bank of Chatsworth.A Gtunl Baaldii; Buutn Tnmcted.

D rafts d ra w n o n a ll p r in c ip a l p o in ts In th e U n ited S ta te s a n d Europe, o c e a n P assage T ic k e ts sold. C ollections m a d e on a ll access­ib le po in ts .C'HAs. K. A n t h o m y , P re s ’t.

H bmby D b w h a h t , Vice P re st.C. M. A nth ony , C ashier.

C. A. W ilson , Asst. C ash ier, R. B. M. W ilson .

A nthony * Dk n h a b t , BANKERS,

W 'ash ing ton , I llin o is .

SAMUEL T. FOSDICE,(SBMMMr to PoWiok k WilUee.)

A im AKD CWUIIAW,C h a tsw o rth , Ills .

w i l l prac tice in L iv ingston a n d a d jo in in g connM es. All legal business In tru s te d to m y ca re w ill receive p ro m p t a t te n t io n .

G. T O R R A N C E .

mi Law .w i l l p rac tice In L iv ingston a n d ad jo in in g

co u n tie s .Fvticolu AUoBtioi Girei to Colleotioii.

Also, Justice of the Peace.O Rice ov er the I 'o sto tlice.lT l ATS WORTH 111.

DZt. C. T B .'U ^Oltlce over B angs' d ru g s to r e ; R esidence In

th e bouse fo rm erly occupied by Dr. Hying*t o n .

CHATSW ORTH, ILLINOIS.

D R .C . K . W I L £ S ,HOMGBOPATHIC

P h y s i c i a n <& S u r g e o n ,■will a t te n d ca lls d ay or n ig h t. Office over

D oo little 's grocery sto re.CHATSWORTH, ILL.

M .

LCerch.axit T a ilo r XCHAT8W0BH, ILL.

G ive m e a ca ll a n d e x a m in e m y w ork an d p rices. P a r tic u la r a t te n tio n p a id to c u ttin g M en’s a n d Ho^S* su its .

C H R IS. aU N T H E R ,D ealer in a n d M an u fa c tu re r of

Harness & Saddles!Collars, I f h ip s , S r id le s , Jkr.

REPAIRING PROMPTLY EIECDTED.All w ork w a rra n te d of th e b es t m a te ria l o r

n o charge. Com e an d see a n d sav e m o n e y .'

XT. O. S:2BXT702T,—DEALER IN—

BOOKS, STATIONERY, TOYS,

Notions, Periodicals, Etc.AT TH E POSTsOFKICE

C h a tsw o rth , t t III.

H e n r y W a l k e r ,

TONSORIAL ARTISTA t m y rooms, opposite ^ a t t

S C rane's, w ilt be J o u n d 2 ^ - m ades, f fa ir 2 )y e s , ffa irT ie r - f^ m e s , M e . A tso , C igars.

M r jB ’a ir C utting in the ta t- 09ts (y te , Shaving a n d Sham ­poo ing , g ive me a ca tt.

GENERAL NEWS.

—Navigation on the Illinoia and Michigan canal will be closed on the 25th inst.

—The hog cholera rages fearfully in Pike county, 111. In one neigh­borhood between 600 and 700 hogs have died.

—The Prohibitionists of New Hamshire met in convention at Con­cord on the 10 inst., and nominated A. 8. Kendall for Govonor.

--Thomas A. Doyle, Republican, was re-elected Mayor of Providence, R. I., on Wednesday, for the tenth time.

Eighty-five counties of Missouri gave a majority of sixty-three thous-, and two hundred for the new con­stitution.

—The temporary suspension of the operations of one of the great collieries and iron works near Leeds England, on account of the depres­sion in trade, over 10,000 workmen will be thrown out of employment.

—The Illinois State Grange propose holding an annual meeting at Cham­paign this fall, and the managers of the Industrial Univoralty have offer­ed the use of llioir roniiiH for the mooting.

— A oliarily fmlliMil in n Dnlti- more hoMplUl wlin iiwiia Iwn farms and earriBH alnm >' ||(i oluilnia 9’ , OOU, haa banii fYiiin., uui, and will pay Ilia own duulor billa in the fu turo.

The following order, dated Nov. 6th, has boon addrcaaod to the Rus sians in Khokand: The territory on the right bank^ of the Syn Duria^ from the Russian frontier to the river Nareeii, hitherto belonging to Khokann, is annexed to Russia.

—James Colling, a half-witted fellow and adjudged insane not long since, was found on Wednesday morning “on the Kickapoo,” hang­ed to a tree by the neck. The Cor­oner’s ju ry rendered a verdict of suicide while laboring under aberra­tion of the mind.

—Dr. E. 8. Hull, the famous en­tomologist and fruit grower, present President of the Illinois State Hor- ticultnral Society, died at his resi­dence near Alton, on the morning of the 8th inst., after a brief illness. He was well known throughout the west as a practical scientist, and his death will be widely regretted.

—Three young boys named Pepin w*re arrested at Yamaska, Quebec a few weeks ago for piling logs on the track 'i;o see the cars jump, the cars jumped and killed some twenty people. On account of their tender years they were held irresponsible and discharged. Now they have been arrested again for attempting to repeat the experiment—happily, this time without success.

—Another frightful marine dis­aster is added to the long list that have gone before. The steamship Pacific, runping between San Fran­cisco and Portland, Oregon, while on her v o ^ g e south last Thursday, and when twelve hours out from Victoria and forty miles from Cape Flattery, foundered. Several boats were launched, but they all swamp, ed, out of 150 passengers and orew only one was saved, Mr. Henry L.

rU

Jelly. He clung to the pilot house and was picked up b y p a ss in g ves, sel. He was so weak from hunger and exposure as to be unable to give the details of the loss of the steam­ship, but with his recovery what is now conjecture will doubtless be ex­plained.—‘‘Inter-Ocean.”

— At the late Illinois yearly meeting of Friends, an aged Quaker 87 years old living 14 miles distant, missed but oneimeeting, riding back and forth the twenty-eight miles in a carriage, sitting the long sessions, and at the close of the last meeting five and a half hours’ continuance, declared that he was feeling better than at the opening.

—Henry Baden, formerly yard- master of the Peoria and Rock Is­land road at Peoria, and Albert Fohler were arrested last summer for stealing whiskey. Pohler turn­ed State’s evidence and Baden was released on bail, but ran away. On Wednesday Baden was arrested in Camden, 111., by Sheriff Hitch- ock.

The United States grand jury at Cincinnati, which has been in ses­sion for some time past, returned the following indictments on Wed­nesday, for violation of the internal revenue laws; Howe & Hubbell, H. II. II umilton, A. Mann & Co. and W. T. Marshall, rectifiers, and T A. Logan, Geo J. Leinger ami W- C Williams, Gaugers.

—Tho wife of General Hendrick Vail Rensselaer, formerly of Albany celebrated the anniversary of her one hundredth birthday at Ran­dolph, Cattaraugus County, N. Y., last week. She received calls from a large number of acquaintances, and in the evening Prof. Edwards, of Chamberlain Institute, made an appropriate address, in which he re­counted some of the eventful scenes through which Mrs. Van Rensselaer had passed. “ New York Post.”

—At Galesburg, lately, a butcher was serving a lady in the shop, and just as she steppe'l out of the door, a stranger, who had been apparent­ly waiting his turn, picked up a ring off the floor with the remark that he guessed it was dropped by the lady who had jsut stepped cut. Of course the butcher took it and ran half a block after the lady, only to discover that it was not her’s. On returning to the shop he found that the stranger was gone, and also all the money in the cash drawer.

—Joseph L. Drake, G. W. 8. of the Grand Lodge of Good Templars of this state, died at his home in Blue Island, on Wednesday last. This is the second Grand Worthy Secretary the Order has lost_ by death within the last eight months, J. K. Van Doom, the former G. W. S., having died in May last. Mr. Drake has been in poor health for several months, and to thoso who saw him at the time of the last ses­sion of the Grand Lodge, the an­nouncement of his death will not be nnexpected Mr. Drake was an Englishman by birth, and has been a resident of ‘Chicago for many years. He has been a prominent worker in the temperance ranks for many years, and has pobably done more to build up the Order of Good

Templars > in Chicago than any other man in the Order His death will be a sad loss to t lT e Order, not only in that city but throughout the State. The Executive Committee of the Order will meet the Wash­ingtonian Home, in Chicago, ofi Friday next, to fill the vacancy in the oflice. “ Leader”

— A dispatch from 'Quincy, 9th in<»t., says:“ For some time past this city and county have been greatly excited over an attempt by the town of Coatsburg "to have the county seat removed from here to that town. The special election to de­cide the matter was held to-day. Business was suspended in the city, and the day devoted by all to the e- lection. Quincy gave 5,349 against the removal and 4 for the removal The total majority in the county against removal will be over 4,000. This vote settles forev^ the loca­tion of the county seat at Quincy.

— Rockford is getting up a revi­val. Taylor, the California Evan­gelist, is already there. Earle the Baptist, Hammond the presbyterian and Whittle and Bhss the congrega- tionalists, are also expected. The largest buildings in the city have been hired for many nights. Mul- titudes'of people are expected from Southern Wiscon.sin, and from the rural districts. These meetings will be condnetod in much the same manner as arc those of Moody and Suiikcy .All the church-choirs in town will become a union choir for several weeks. This is a strong concentration of effort upon one point. “ Kankukoo Guz'-Hte."

— A Ij^li in .Marysville California, was attended by an average of ten men to one woman; but the women ^eem to have made up in vivacity what they lacked in numbers Miss Lotta Sohnman, attired in blue silk en-train, a la pull-back, six button kids, aud a lace overdress, was the prettiest and sprightliest. She had a quarrel with her escort late in the evening, and, in her dashing way, said: “ .lu.st look a’here! 1 ain’t no slouch; I ’m a lady, I am, and know how to behave like one’ . Then she drew a revolver from a pocket among the folds of her dress at her hip, and shot tho beau, so that he is likely to die. “ San Francisco Chronicle.”

—Great excitement prevails at Chandlersville, Cass county, over a recent elopement, the parties con­cerned being Prof. John S- Full, principal of the high school, and Miss Amanda Brier, both residents of Cliandlerville. Miss Brier is a young lady of fine appearance, good family, &c., and has been attending school at the M. E. college, Jack­sonville. She aske(L4iemuaeie«-tek leave for home, last Friday night, taking her trunk. Mr. Full left home the same evening, saying he was go­ing to his sister’s. He proceeded to Jacksonville, where he met Miss Brier, as per previous arraingement. from whence they departed for parts unknown. Mr. Full leaves a wife and two children, his wife being in destitute circumstances, and her reason and life are despaired.

A Leeds paper says that a young widow in that city, who writes well, is training herself for an editor. Who is the editor?

D r. D . 'WrSvLxit,P h y s i c i a n & Surgeo-T,

T h e O lde.l I’ractIclDK I 'h y s lc la n In low n . w ill be found rea d y a t a ll tlm ea to an.iwei calla. Ilia office la a t lila o ld a ta n d i R e si­dence H outh of School Houae.

0. SANEOBD,

Livery,Fseil 2 Sale M e ,CHATSW ORTH, ILL.

TranaiM ii'tatlon fu rn ish e d to a n y part ol th e co u n try , ou q u ic k tim e. Horaea boarded by the day or w eek.

A . 2 2 . JE2A2jf2j,

PHOTOGRAPHER!O VER BA N CS’ DRUG S T O R E

P l c t u r e a t a k e n i n t h e b e a t o f s t y l e o l . i p i c t u r e s c o p ie d a n d en la r> ;< 'd . \ l l m y w o r k Ih w a r r a n t e d . G iv e m e a c a l l .

C H \ T s W O R T i l , ILI..

0. BADmSEI,

O ver S pelcher’a B lacksm ith Shop.

CHATSWORTH. - * II.LINOI'^.

I am alw aya reaily to do all K inds oi ilou.se an d Sign P u in iiiii;. Wagon and lUiggt P a in tin g a 8pechiil> . and fancy an d o riu i- m e n 'a l p a in tin g e.vcciittMl in th e latest de* algna.

J O H N T I M M ’S

MEAT M A RKET!J l .*(T EAST OC THE BANK.

All k inds of P’reali an d Halt M eats conatan tl.' on h an d , a t' th e loweat m a rk e t rale.*

Illgheat cash p rice paid for ta t ( a ttic . .*hi-ep, UogH, H ides and Tallow

( HATSWOKTH, IL LIN O IS

BOBSBT BtUIBOLB,

GENERAL INSURANCE AGENT!t i l ATS Wo r t h , i l l .

/ am ag en t for th e HOME of N. Y.. HAU‘1'- KOUD. of C onn., CON I ISKN'TAL, of N Y.. GL()BK. of ( hluago, K lt.W K U N , of W. Va.. an d the W A s u LnOTON LIKE, of N, Y. ( all on m e an d 1 w ill w rite you up a policy at th e low est poHHible rates.

P E T E R S H R O Y ER ,D ealer In

Hard and Soft Goal!t HATSWOKTH, ILL.

O rders so lic ited a n d p ro m p tly filled.

JSSSE LANTB7,D ealer in

FREBM M E A T tC H A T8W 08TH , ILL.

1 keep c o n s ta n tly on h a n d , a ll k in d s ol I real! a n d S alted m e a ts , a n d se ll a t the low ­est p rices. H ighest p rices p a id for Hides, Tal low. L ard fat C a ttle , H ogs a u d Sheep.

GIVE ME A CALL. ,

C ottage E£ouse I

U. K. WANN, Proprietor.

Chatsworth, - IH av in g rec en tly refitted , rem odeled aud

liouaicing i ___________ __

now a flrat-olaaa hotel for th e accommoda*

re fu rn ish ed th is h o u ae th roughou t. I tak e p leasu re in a n n o u n c in g th a t C nataw orth has

tIon of guests.

Good Sample RoomsF or th e co n v en ien ce of Com m ercial A gents.

Sh a r p s R ifle Co.Msamfcstims of r»t«ot MllllBry,

C m daoor UQm .

rO E IE S T IIT H E V O U lWtwMT M UMnMlMikl lag

•lOrMABMr.Mwlr aU priailfdi

• p o f t l n c RidiM . . . t a o t a mO re e d m o e rR if lw w ith t levstlo iw

l a o o y a n f g , .Stand fiMT ZUaati«t«4 Oat*do«n«» A r m o r y a m i O d R a A y & C L W B 8 T C O T %

HARTFORD, CONN.

.. I*.

J

T O C O R H K B r u n i l K Q T S .AO eom m enlostlooe fo r (hi* p«p*r iboald be e c e o n

U n te d b j th e ne me of ( ^ a o th o r ; not oeceeeerU; (oi pobUoetloD, b * t *a *n e r tM to e of good leltb un the perl c t i tM w itter. W rite only (to im e ld e o f th e peper. Re

to rtlW C n u u ^ e o d dete*. to have •M i.tattlW *<td AcufM p l ^ end A ^ e l .

tH E NEWS CONDENSED.T O K K A 8 T .

Basidel T. Abbott, of Oeuipee, N. H., re- ■ oeuUy um rdered liiu wife by aovering her hewl

tviUi *u ax. l i e tbeu h 'iug bimeulf. but wae c u i down before life vnui extiuut. aud ih now in

F irm National Bank of 1‘ittetou. ML. w«8 en tered by b tirg lan , laat week, and robbed of tlO.OOO in bouua and m oney ... .The Maneaeoit Mille, at Fall Uiver. Ma>^., have b een dM lroyed by tire. Iamb, tllifi.UOU.

T in t Ileecber acaadaJ ban been euddeuly re­vived by the New York and Brooklyn .Yaaocia- tio n of Coegregational paotorH, who liave appointed a eeinmiltee to invoatigate chargee agaiuat Mr. Bet'cher.

I ■H . B. C l.\riJN iV Co., the well-known NewYork dry goode nierehautH, have been indicted for emuggliug ailka. . . .Intereet in Moody and Hankoy’a revival lueetinga in Brooklyn ia on the decline, and the attendance is eiowing euialler each day. . . .Lewie (1. riiilh|)a .1 Co., cup luau- nfacturciH of New York, have failed for a hoavw a m o u n t.. . . At a biusineeH meeting of Plymouth Church, Brooklyn, laat week, the namca of Deacon 'iVeat and Ura. Francia D. Moulton

/

diatillera are under indictment, and cutioua will be puahed vigoroualy.

T H K tlO U T B .Two aevere eerthtjM ke abockii wer«9eU in

Atlanta, <la., and the aurroundiug oouVtry oA the 2d iuat. There waa a rum bling eomkL h waving instion, whioli ahooA tM naitli and bouaea, catiaiug aoiue alarm.

WAHliWOT^.TiLWiE ww) coined at th e vnHoua m iuta of the

country, during the m onth of October, W,- 785,225 worth of ail kiuda of c o in ... .T h e nro- ceedinge of the l l i ird Diatrict Court of Utah Territory, ordering the im priaoutneut o f Urig- bam Young until i'il,50U be paid by bim to Ann Fli^a Yoiiiig, waa brought oefore' the Cabinet, at a meeting laat we^k. and by them referreil to the Attorney-General, with a view of deter­mining the exact atat.ia of the caae. The imeation ^ireaented ia, whetlier the arreat of Bngham \o n u g could be made on the gruftmia claimed by the woman, fur the* reaaon th a t ber marriage with Young waa illegal, being con­trary to the lawa of the United Rtatea, aud that ahe cannot take advantage of her'ow n wrong.

T he Secretary of Uie Treaaury haa addreaaed a circiilai'tu the Colleclorauf Cuatuiua auuuuuc- ing that no imporiation of neat cuttle or liidea be allowed from Luglaiid from tliia date, in couaequenee of the prevalence of the mouth (haeaae in that country.

A fi.fs tx ’a S. (lAviAUtn, of Michigan, has been apjiointed Aaaiatar.t Attorney-Cioneral for

the proae- aure the perform ance of the BulUn’a piof reform to the luaurgenta in hia vaaa&I 8t*tea.

promiae

I the In terio r Department, v ice Wm. A. Hiuitli,

were dropped from tlio roll of membemhip on [id oth e g round of contiuned abaeuce. Mm. Moul­

ton protcated through her couuael, lloger A. Pryor, alating tha t her aliaence waa an eutorced one, oanaed by the crime of adultery commit­ted by Henry ^Yard Beecher, which ahe knew to be true through confeasiona and other evi­dence. She declared her diapoeition to dia- charge all the duUea deVolviiig on her as a member, that are conaiatent with with her knowledge of the adultery of the paator and Ilia falae awearing with regard to it.

T ue committee of revereuda charged with inveatigating Beecher promiae to do their work Uioroughly. They propose drat to acrutuiize closely the evidence brought out in the scandal trial, and then to search for new evidence. The following are nam ed as tlio committee : llev. William SI. Taylor, of the Broadway Taberna­cle, Now York; Kev. Dr. Wni. Ives Buddington, of the Clinton Avenue Church, Brooklym; Rev. P rofs. Parsons and Martin, of the New I'ork Theological Seminary, aud Rev. CliarlesH. Ever­est, of the Cburch of the Puritans, Brooklyn___T he undertakers of Williamsbiu-gh. N. Y., are greatly excited about the queer operations of a cofiiii-maker in tha t city. I t haa been dis­covered that he was in the habit of robbing cem eteries of the coftina deposited in newly- m ade graves. H is plan was to visit a grave­yard at night, remove the coflins from the rough box cases, take tbecoiqiso out of thccodin. p u t it in the box aud retill the grave. The coflins thus procured would be taken to tbo city aud sold to some undertaker. The offender, whose name is Wm. Blake, has been arrested. . . . . During the performance in a New Y'ork theater, the o ther evening, Superintendent Jenkins, of the Society for the Prevention of C ruelty to Children, raided upon the stage aud took in charge the little trapeze perform er known as Leo. The wee acrobat, who is about C years old, was m the act of walking a tigh t I ope with a balancing pole at the tim e of the raid. When it became known, however, wliat was the object of the whole affair, the audience gave expressions of their satisfaction and sym­pathy ill a burst of applause.

T he people of Saratoga county, N. Y'., are ex­cited over the discoverv of the defalcation ofH enry R. Mann, who has been tlio Treasurerof the county for the last fifteen years. I t is known that the sum of his stt'alings will reach •tl40,000, aud may largely exceed tha t amount. . . . T h e New York Order of United Irishm en Redivivi Itas tried another one of its members for treason aud condemned him to death. P a t­rick J W'alsh is th e alleged traitor, and makes th e th ird person condem ned.. . . Haight, Halsey A Co., of New Y'ork, heavy im porters of hat­te rs’ goods, have suspended. Their liabilities are 4750,000.

THE WEST.Jo.sETu N. pTTziioY, late Deputy Collector of

Revenue at St. Louis, has pleaded guilty to the iudictm euts against him. T. D. Thaqieau, an indicted storekeeper, also pleads guilty. The backbone of the St. Louis whisky ring is thor­oughly broken.

A poium uj; m urder and suicide is reported from Kokomo, Ind. David RobiuBon, while lalxiring under a temporary fit of insanity, a t­tem pted the m urder of his entire family. F irst by shooting a r d killing one of his children, then tiring at his wife, but missing her, ana she m aking her escape gave the alarm. Robinson then shot and killed|a second child and wounded a th ird in the face who made its escape. Not yet satisfied, Robiuson nearly severcil one of the dea<l cliildieu’s heads from its body, kud le ft tlio house. His boily was subseciueutiy found lying near the railroad track, where he had committed suicide.

T h e United States Grand Ju ry at Chicago has foi u l about sixty indictinouts against parties charged with criminal violation.s of the in te r­nal rcvcimo laws relating to whisky. Most of those inqilicated reside in Chicago, aud many of tlienr. are prom inent c itiz en s ... .M rs. Smith, of Brooktield, Mo., was handling a loaded gun the o ther day. when the weapon was discharged, the load passing through the body of her little dangliter and producing almost instant death.

. The Northwestern Railroad Company has pnn hased and will hereafter operate the llook- ford. Rock Island and St. Louis roatl . . . The National Gold Bank of San Francisco has gone into voluntary liquidation. Creditors will be paid in full.

A iio iiiu n i.E m urder o ccn iT o d at Springfield, Mo., lately. .A woBitui naineti JIary Collins went into the room where her hnsbaiitl, Jam esCollins, was sleeping, and seizing an ax split Ins skull in two. killing him instantly. Sitethen atteiiipted to murder her little daughter, but the child mailo her escape to a neighbor’s. . . . . Elder Jlorgan, an a pestle of the Mormon religion, appointed hy Brigham Y'oimg to evan­gelize Illiiiots, Kentucky and Tonuessee, began his "w ork of grace" at Blooimngton. HI., last Siindav, by aildressing a largo m eeting ni>on tbo "T enets of the Mormon F a ith .” I t is his intention to Uioroughly canvass tlie three States named in the interest of Mormonism.

D istinct shocks of earthquake were felt in (^ffeTont Bectioiis of Kansas early OB Ube m oni- ing of the 8th inst. The vibrationa wore from oast toV est. and wei e acconqmiiied by a heavy, dull, rumbling sound. Buildings were conaid- eralily shaken, and tlie inmates, in some cases, much alarmed, but no damage was done.

T ifs whisky ring throughout tl)e isthoroughly demoralized. In Cliicago nearly all th e flisHllers have been hulietdd and Will soon be brought to trial. The evideuco agai^ist them is 'aiBd to lie of -a veiy p t^ jv e character, aud oalinot /hil 'H»o‘ Bl. ring moomplolel.v bun ted , 'ftorfio of tlid mM t prom i­n e n t citizens have bo^ri indicted, including William McKee, of Hie Gfof»e-/icrn<HT«f, Con­stan tin e Maguire, lato Itovenuo Assoseor, and otBdlA.^ TOicy have retained Dan YiJBehees and BeVBttUer M r Ike defenaei" A revlMv of th e opB#atiOiiH oft the Sh Lottis' l4«(t shows th a t durilW . have defraudedth e goveram opt out of at leaiit a milliop dollars annualljl'i A t Milwaukee a la l^e Btitilber of

resigueil.T he Commissioner of

decided that under

Thebe* is much suffering among the i^tdos- triafl^hsaes of Germany, and th e g o v e^ m e n t is asked to establish loan bau lp as »

a of relieving Uie d is tre p t.. . , Advices ussia give doleful ao o o u i^ of ^ e uu- led failure of this year's o | r v e ^ The

failfM has been general all over (he country,H iid ^c lu aee every species of orops___ThaFrench Assembly m et on Nov. 4 . . . .So far from being crushed out by Turkey, the insurrection in Bosnia aud Herzegovina shows signs of healthy vigor. The military leaders in those provinces have taken the prelimtnu-y steps toward proclaiming a uational governm ent.

A Co.vHTANTiNopi.K dispatcli says the Russian Ambassador hss had a long inteBView with tlie Sultan. He represented to him the maladmin­istration of tlie oouutrv, the discontent of tlie liopuUBoii, the dila> idaliou o f the flnanoes, and the cousetpieut urgency of reform.

THBvnemtMm of the Franco-Ameriean Union in Paris gavo a grand ban(|uet at the H otel du Ixiuvro recently. Two hundred guests sat down to the tauJa and M. do Laboulayo, the distiuguislied juriscoiisiilt and member of the Asaenibly, presided. Speeches were delivered by M inister W ashburn and Col. Forney, who promised the hearty co ojieratiou of America in the iirojoct started by F'reucli citizens to erect a m onum ent in New York barboi. in coramemo- ratiou of tlie lOdth anniversary of the inde­pendence of the United Stales.

T he Ih ince of YVales has arrived safely in India, wliere he was euthusiaslically receivetl.

I t was a bitter, determined fight, the very large vote cast—over 67,000—atteeting the in terest taken in i t The Republican ticket. Which waa supported by large num bers of Democrats, waa elected by a hanw om e majority, the/disreputa- bles were . routed b o n e , foot aud drakoons, aud Chicago is saved from |jie tiprsatyspaAaogej: ofY a seoood era of TweedUm.

NATIONAL PIMAl.Some Idea us to What It Costs to Him the

Iteveniie ItureBU—Items that Enter Into the Hulilteixanre of Our Dlpluiiiatlc Es- talillshiiieiit.The report of Mr. Elu, F ifth Auditor

of the Treaaury, of tlie buaiuHBa tfi lii» office for tlie laat year, haa beeu aeut Uie

'freaaui-y. I t ahowa Uie

TUE CUBAN QUESTION

i t t dT h e P re s e n t D iplo

S p ain an d th e Uni P re s id e n t .

(lo KeUxtion Betwreeii lies—Views of the

V •A jpreoA digpatoh' from W iM^ugtou

b b: “ Siuq^, Caleb C uaU iug |^eut to in thAbapauBty of M im al^ of thu

U A im leM UiAti two yMira ago,'theW hATiB four dlffeifiut chongeaof the Speuish Cabinet. These chaugea and the prevalence of oivil war have af­fected and necesaarily delayed the traua- aotion of the busineea with which he waa charged. The instmotiona he receivt‘d

'from thegoTAntmegt r^eiieuce eii- ttfdly to ’'me1actuBl'State of tntf Island of

Secretary of the coat of the diplomatic stirvice of the gov-

•eaaui-y. itio stirv

cnim ent to liave been aa followa:For foreign Mlul«ter«...............................(For Cuusulii................................................For clerk-hire of Consul*.........................Fees oollecteil by (,'onsul*........................r xd'aa of feus above Consular exjieuscs. Cost of niieviiis distresaed seTun n in

foreiEU fHjrU.

.136, .StS Ml,303

■J6,777 «!I7.1188 ua,sig

Paul lo r p assage o f se am en h o m e . R eceived by C onsu ls lor e x tra

4t.483'.•,b«3

17,174ate

jlors aud•21.358

Internal Revenue baa .T he Em peior of Germany made a aiioecli the htatutea all inventions I the o ther day, on the occasion of receiving the

I'reaideut of Barliament, in wuich he laid stress on the em inently peaceful aeoect of affairs. ' Though the Bosnian difficulty was still na- Bolved, be expressed him self as’ perfectly oou- tideut of a peaceful settlem ent of th a t ques­tion . . . . A le tte r to the London Tim ex from Berlin states tha t as a result of the conferences in Vienna, the iwwers have determ ined to ask Turkey w hether she has any guarantees to offer for the fulfillment of her often-broken prom­ises o f reform .

for ageiuj' spirits, when brought into use in bonded warehouses, according to tlie proposi­tion made to the departm ent, constitute the work of rectification »ud purification, and those using such processes become rectifiers of spirits and subject to taxation as su ch . . . . During ()cto- ber 20,138,000 postal cards were issued by the Postoffice Depaitm eut, the largest issue by at least 5,000,000 ever niaile in the same t im e ,. . . A W ashington telegram states th a t a large num ­ber of special agents are employed in iuvesti» gating frauds in the pension business. These frauds are cbielly in the West, aud the re is rea­son to believe Uiat the total anioimt of money which the government is defrauded of annually by this means is an enorm ous sum. One of the special agents fixes the sum as high as 42,000,000. He thinks tha t am ount of money is illegally paid out to persons claiming to be piensinnen'.

A Wasuinuton dispatch says it is now cer­tain th a t three topics, a t least, will be largely dwelt upon by the P resident in his coming message to Congress. These th ree topics will embrace the public school question, the finances, and the condition of affairs in Cuba. I t is said be will urge, as he has done hereto­fore, the justice of recognizing the righ ts of the belligerent Cubans ; will come ou tstrong ly against the demands o f Catholicism; aud will take advanced ground in favor of an immediate return to specie p aym en ts .. . .T he Postoffice D epartm ent has nileil th a t where a postal card is to b<! sent through the mails a second time, a cent stam p is not enough to secure its trans- mission. I t must carry le tte r postage.

P O L I T IC A L ..

vo; aiitaol ffuiilt-ii JlB cliargi'd a b r o a d ..................

N m iib iT of Mvauien Hcnt hom o P a id o u t to repreH rutatIvufi of

ritizvTiH wlio d l 'd a b ro a d ...........................istehn.il bevkmue kxi'ENkch.

Thp cost of I n te rn a l R e v en u e Collectoi-s who w ere p a id by oaU ry a u d com niie-nIoub w an..........................................................

lly epeeial a llow aiieo .......................................KxiM-ii'es ot ([o llee to r’e office .......................T ota l coat of ( ’o lle e to m .................................. 2, llW,4tj'iA m o u n t co llec ted by th e m ........................... lU'2,lKI5,‘24'i

781,(ri6 (i,257

202,574677,fl;i7

1,436,711)

8,9:i8 I 8»5,35i

04,38'

99,91>» 64,6M) ;J7,114

137,763

VOX POPULI.

Du. I sa a c J . H a y e s , the well-known Arctic explorer, was elected to the New York Logis- tu re on the Republican ticket, a t the recent election in tha t S ta te .. . .T he complete vote for Governor in Iowa at the lato election was as follows: For Kirkwood, Rep., 125,069; for Leflier, Dem., 93,”24. Kirkwood’s majority, 31.745. There was a scattering Tem perance vote of a few hundreds. . . . Ex-Senator Pease, of Mississippi, who has lately held the Postm as­tership a t Vicksburg, has beeu dism issed from the office.

T he full vote of MsHaaclinsetts on Governor, at the recent election, is as follows : Gaston, D ;m ., 78,246; Rice, Rep., 83,.523; Raker, Temp,. 8,965; Adams, Ind., 1,774 : Phillifis, Labor Reform, 3 0 1 ... . Full official retu rns of the Pennsylvania election give H artranft, Rep., a m ajority of 14,510.

O E N K K A L i

A msi-ATcii from Quebec states that during a recent gale and snow-storm in tlie Isle of Ur- leauB an accident occurred a t St. Famille, by which about twenty persons lost the ir lives. The people, who were principally residents of the island, were re tu n n u g from’ market, and were being lauded from a steam er in a scow, which capsized, and all on boai'd. with onb ex­ception, were drowned.

Two NEW planets of the twelfth m agnitude have been discovered—one by Palioa, at Berlin, Snd the other by Paul Henry, at Paris.

T uiiee fishermen were drowned near Ilarris- villo, Lake Huron, one day lost week, by the swamping of their Iw a t... .T he United States Direct Cable lias been successfully repaired, aud is now in good working condition.

T he .Spanish governm ent in Cuba has for­warded to its agent in New York city orders to buy iqi and ship at mice 4500,000 worth of am­munition and provisions. Tlie fear otv Ameri­can intervention at an early day is stated as the reason for these large p u rch ases ... .'D ie direct A tlantic cable lias beeu repg^ired, and is now transm itting messages as usual.

T he coloretl cadet from Mississippi who has I beeu causing so much trouble at the Annagwlis Naval Academy, has been dism issed from the | Academy by the Secretary of the Navy. !

.•VuHA.NdEMENTs have been perfected by which j through bills of lading and tbrougli tickets fo’’ I passengers are to be issued from all loading Eiiroiiean cities to China. Japan, Australia, and ' New Zealand, via New Y’ork and San Franciaco, j and vice v ersa . . . . The steam ship Pacific, which i sailed fronx Victoria. Vancouver's Island, for ! San Francisco, on Thursday m orning, Noy. 4, I was wrecked the same evening, forty miles | south of Cape Flattery. Tlio ill-fatcci vessel

T h e N o v e m b e r E l e c t i o n s —V e r i l l c t o f t h eI ’e o j i l e i l l t h e V a r i o u s S t a t e s —A G e n e r a lS i i r a i i i u r y o f t h e R e s u l t .Elections were held in eleven States on

Tuesday, Nov. 2, as foUows ; Illinois, Kan­sas, Maryland, M assachusetts, Minnesota, Mississipgii. New .Jersey, New York. Pennsyl­vania, Virginia aud Wisconsin. We present below a brief summ ary of the result in the sev­eral S ta te s :

NEW YORK.In New York tlio entire Democratic ticket,

as given lielow, was elected by 10,000 to 15,000 m ajo rity :

Secretary of S tate—John Bigelow.Com ptroller—Lucius Robinson.Treasurer—Cliarles N. Roes.A ttorney-G eneral—Charles S. Fairchild.Engineer and Surveyor—J . D. Van Buren.Canal Commissioner—Chris. A. Walrath.Prison Inspector—Rodney R. Crowley.The Roiniblicans have secured a m ajority in

both branches of th e Legislature.In the city of New York, the entire Tammany

ticket was defeated by an alliance of Republi- caua aud auti-Taminany Democrats. John filorrissey, anti-Tammany, was elected to the State Senate over John Fox, in the Fourth D is­trict, comprising the lower section of the city. The Brooklyn ring, headed by “ B oss” Mc­Laughlin, was also routed—the Republican ticket, aided by the honest Democrats, being elected by a large majority, although the Dem­ocratic State ticket carried tbo city by over 6,000. In New Y'ork and Brooklyn, as in Cbi- cago, it was a bad day for rings.

PENNSYLVANIA.The Rep'iblican S tate ticket, headed by John

F. H artran ft (present incum bent), is elected in Pennsylvania by about 20,000 majority.

.11A SH A CH USETTS.; In M assaebusetts the entire Republican I State ticket is elected by a majority of 6.0(10.

The following are the newly-elected S tate of I ficials:I Governor—Alex. H. Rice.I Lieutenant-G overnor—Horatio G. Knight.

SAci-etary—Henry B. Pierce, i Treasai'er—Charles Eudicott

Auditor—Julius L. Clarke.I A ttoniey-General—Charles R. Train.

(Congress, one year—YViiliam W. Craixi.The Legislature is largely Republican.

.AtlNNESOTA.j The Republicans carried M innesota by a nia- I Jority of about 10,000. Appended ia a list of I the officers elected ; j Governor—John S. Pillsbury.1 L ieutenant-Governor—John B. Wakefield.I • Secretary—John S. Irgeus.

Auditor—O. P. Whitcomb, j T reasurer—William P laendor.1 Chief-Justice—Jam es Gilfillan. j Attorney-General—George P. Wilson.' Clerk of the Supreme C ourt—Samuel I Nichols.! Railroad Commissioner—YVm. R. Marshall.j WISCONSIN.

Tlio contest in Wisconsin was very clo«e.' Ludiiigton, Republican, is elected Governor by

a very small majority. The vote on minor State offices is alm ost evenly balanced, and it will probably reijm ie the official count to deter­mine who luo elected. '

MARYLAND.In this Slate all the candidates on the Demo­

cratic ticket, as printed below, wore elected by a large m ajo rity :

Governor—John Lee Carroll.Com ptroller— Levin Woodford.A ttjrney-Q eiieral—Charles J . M. Gwynn.

.NEW JERSEY'.

hx]icDBO of H torekcciieni Kxih-ubc of d la tlllc ry H urveyorx ' aalariea.E xpcnnc of (liBtlllery SurveyofB ’ cx-

peuacB................... .............................................O a iig ers’ f e e s ......................................................tiaUKi-rs’ tra v e lin g expeiiueB...... .. ..........Coat o f SupervUorM ol in te r n a l ite v e iiu e

—fo r s a la ry ......................................................F o r expcuei'B ......................................................F o r r l e r k h i r e ....................................................T o ta l cx|>onBC8...................................................CoBt o f lu tc m a l Uetvcuuc A gcn ta—fo r

s a l a r y .................................................................F o r expeuscB ....................................................T h e au io iiiit o f BpiriUatauipB se n t to Col-

lec to rs fo r th e y e a r wuh............................. 6‘2,703,1538T obacco , BtiillT. an d c ig a r s tan ipB .......... 31!,079,8.85B e er B tam psT .............. .................................... 9,403,190Bjiccial B ta iups.................................................... 10,403,440.\d licB i\e Btauips to a g e n t8 ............................ 3,614,689S tam p ed fo il w rap p ers fo r to b a c c o ........... 492,382

There wn« paid daring the year forand for

l')3,66231,209

Oriba and ita relations to tlie United States 0 8 well as to Spain. He wob oIho furnished with a selection, in chrono-

' logionl order, of the muncrons dispotehes which Lod pa»Jod between the two gov ernrafents. From theiri he derived oni- ple information, not only conceniing

: Hpeoial questions wliich had arisen from time to time, but also fospeetiug the

I general }birpoeee'and of'the Presi-' dent in the pr^miseB. T’hn dismi.ssion I of tlie Hpanii^ Cabinet’s reply to what is called ii the htte ]!^U'id telegram, “ The Wdshingtou Note,'*' has refcrcnct^ to the unsettled questions between tlie

, two countries, tlie Btatemeut of them being free from tlio verbiage of corre-

j spondenoo, and presented in u conioani- I tively brief memorimduni. Tlie exact ! points of this official piqier cannot bo ascertained, but they may be inferred from the views of the Pre.-ident which form the basis of the instructions to Minister Cushing, and wliich show that the President regards the civil tlissen- sions in Cuba, and especially the san­guinary hostilities, suen os have been provaiung there for the laat seven years, 0 8 producing effects in the United States second in gravity only to those which they produce in Spain. Meantime the political relation of the United States to Cuba is altogether anomalous, seeing that for any injury done to the United States or their citizens in Cuba the United States has no direct means ofengrossing and printing stamps

stamn paper, _*61L400._ 'r tf 3 2 " ! r 'iS 'S to ,;: ^ iT'eiS!;' of the Patent Office for photo-litliograph ! ing was 840,009; for plates for official 1 gazette, 836,643; for copies of drawings, 1^9,997; for tracings of drawmgs, 8 44,- 99(5. The expense of preserving the col­lections of the HUiveyuig aud exploring

! expeditious ivas 830,000.I The contingent expenses of the Post- I office Department amounted to 866,100; : the contingent expenses of the Patent I Office, 879,772.I .\mong the miscellaneous expenditures ' of the State Department are:! Piiblisliing tUc laws in newBpapera andI p a m p lc t .................................................................$I Edition revised aud annual BtatiitcH..........

49,<!8619,140

1,81983,800

6,008

13,919

P u rc h ase of official iioatago s tam jisS urvey of B riltsb b im m la ry ....................... .,S a la ry a n d e x p en ses of S p a n ish C la im s

C o m m issio n .........................................................S a lary a n d ex in uses o f M exican C la im s

((o m n iis s io n .........................................................Salary a n d ex p en ses o f C o u rt o f A labam a

C la im s .....................................................................A w ards to I l i i t is b r la in ia u ts ........................... I,9'29,819E x p en ses o f H is H aw aiian M a je s ty .............R e n t o f p r iso n s fo r A m erican conv ic ts in

. l a p a n . 'd d n a . S lam , T u rk e y , e tc ...........F o r p u rc h a se an d re s to r in g to th e la m ily

o f O en. L a fay e tte th e w atch p re se n te d h im by W a sh in g to n ............ ............................

83,936

19,917

16,485

241

THE FIJIAN PLAGUE.F o r t y T lio i im i i id D e a t h s In F o u r M o i i t l i s -

I t i i r y i i ig ; I ’c o p l e A l i v e ,

H.

Tlie election in New Jersey was for members p i tlie Senate and Asacmbly. The Republicans

m ajority of both.were snccossful in securiu" aMISSLSSIPPI.

In Mississippi the people elected a Blato Treasurer, members of the Forty-fourtli Con­gress and a State Legislature. The Democratic candidate for 'lYeasurer aud all tho Democratic candidates for Congree-s, with possibly one ex-

Botli rbranclios ofbad on board 108 porsons. only one of ' ception, arc elected. Both rbranclios of the whom escaped. T he survivor,’ H enrv Legislature are also Democratic, which insures L. Jelly, saved him self by c lin g in g I » United .States Senator to succeed jto the pilot-house of the wrecked Kteamer, and Jam es L . .Alcorn.was picked uji a dav or two afterw ard by a pass- ’ ka,n.sa,s. Iing v esse l.,, ,(nia'rles Reade’s delightfu l ro- ■ In Kaii.sa.s tho electors chose a S tate Legisla- m ancoof 'F o u l r i a y ” has its countoniart hi a tu r o a n d county officers. The Reiiubhcansthrilling tale lonelv islaiia of the

iriiareportecl from Now Y’ork. On a

West Indian group four b;xhcs were reccully seen by sea-faring men. YVho they were, how long they had watched (jlTl waited, what their iireserice tliero meant, is riot revealed.

FOHWIUN.S ir J o h n G a r d n e r W il k in s o n , the emiweut

English archeologist, is d e a d ... The ship Cath­erine Griffiths, from Hinderlaud, Englaa^, forRio. has been wrecked on tho 8cilly Islands. Eight of her crew were d n w n c d .. . . D ie (jer- raan missirins to Italy have been rsiseel to em­bassies. . . . More heavy commercial failures are reiHjrted from Dinduii.

O r i:at B r it a in is looking with hungry o>’08 upon tho Egyiitiaii country. 'T h e Pall'liialX dazetU' of a recent date says : “ The English occupation of Egyjit is only a question of time, as tha t step ia necessary for the proservatiott of our Indian Empire.” ___A dispatch from Ber­lin says tho Itelsberg Arsenal has been almost totally destroyeil by fire. D ie loss Is estim ated at 45,000,000.... A London telegram says Aus­tria is preparing, at tlie invitation o f Uie north­ern powers, a prupoeiUou for guorautoea to be dem anded and Uie control to bo oxeroieod ^ in-

electwl more than two-thirds of tho member i of the Legislature, and the connty officers gener­ally are of the same persuasion.

VIKOINIA.b D ie election m Virginia was also for mem­

bers ofti he Legislature. A majority of those chosen t fe Democrats.

IIJ.INfiI8.The election in Illinois was fo r county aiuF

municipal officers, and only a local iiiter-

I Further information from Fiji conveys ' still darker accounts of the plague which ] ha.s recently passed over the new colony, j A resident of long standing, writing to a ^Victoria contemporary, says: “ The 1 death rate is not yet made up, but the probability is that 40,000 Fijians died

i during the four months’ plague. The I native population of Fiji is now about oue-third only of what it was when 1

j landed hero about tweuty-five years ago.” The accounts given of the magnitude of

i tho disaster are less harrowing tlian those ; of the sufferings of the victims. “ Very ' few died of the measles, the majority • dying of subsequent tlisease in the form I of dysentery, congestion of the lungs,I etc. Want of nourishment, or starva- [ tioD, carried off thousands.” We are told that “ all work was suspended for

■ two months. You could pass through ivhole towns xviUiout meeting any one in the streets, which wero soon completely covered with grass. Entering a house,

' you would find men, women, aud chil­dren lying doMii indiscriminately, some just attacked, some still in agony, and some dying. Some who were strong enough "attempted suicide, and not al­ways luisuccessfnlly. ” We are'^further told that “ as the scourge became more permanent, some four or five were buried together in one grave, and generally without religious service. lu some cases the dead were biu'ied in the earthen floors of the houses. The burials werti hurried, and the probability is that some were buried alive. In many instances the husband, wife, and children all died. In one village all the women died, and in another aJl the men.” I t is interest­ing to read of the different mental effects

t produced by the torture of the disease, i t is not surprising that “ some made

; fruitless appeals” to tlieir ancient god.■ Some inland tribes, who ha<I only re- I cently embraced Christianity, consideredthat the disease was conveyed by feeir robgioiis teachers, and they dismissed them and then abandoned tneir hew re­ligion. Among these some wore for

I killing tho teachers, but wiser counsels prevailed. I t is said tliat one tobotnured

long aud circuitous action liy way of Madrid. The ultimate issue of events iu Cuba will be its independence, how­ever that issue may be jiroduced, whether by means of negotiation, or ns the result of military operations, or of one of those imexpected incidents which so frequently determine the fate of na­tions. The continuation of the insur­rection grows day by day more insup­portable to the United States; and while the attention of this government is fixed on Cuba in the interest of humanity, by tho horrors of civil war prevaihug there, it cannot forbear to reflect tliat the exist- «uce of slave labor in Cuba and its influ­ence ujjon the feelings and interests of the Peninsular Spaniards lie at the foun­dation of all the calamities which now afflict the island. Tho President hius not been without hope that all these ques­tions might be settled by the spontaneous act of Spain herself, she being more deeply interested in such settlement than all the rest of the world. The iiuestioii, what decision the United States shall make, is a serious and diffioult one, not to be determined without careful consid­eration of its complex elomeuLs of do­mestic and fo re i^ policy, but the deter­mination of which may at any moment be foixjed upon us by occurrence.'} either in Spain or Cuba. The policy of the United States in reference to Cuba at the present time is decloied to be one of ex­pectancy, but with positive and fixed convictions as to the duty of the United States when the time or emergency of action shall arrive.”

One himdred and twenty-six years old is Fortune Snow, of African de.sceut, at Milan, Go. He was one of Marion’s men during the Revolutionary War.

THE MARKETS.N EW YORK.

B e e v e s .........................................................IIOOB—D r e s s e d ....................................OOTTON....................................................FL oU B -^S uperflne W e s te rn .

99

1310

1210I t

est was takon in tho oontost, except in a few i qqq te a c h e r ’s w ife a n d o h ild , w h o secounUes and iii the largo cities. In the city of I th e ' n h u m A tO s t o p in fec -Chicago the re was one 6f the most exdting i ~ V* x i 4)wiif riin trenscampaigofl in Uie whole liletory of tmuiicipal ! tio n . But Trliilo BonvJ lU elections. I t was a fight between Iionesty on i fe ll b a c k o n tlieur f o n d e r B u p o ra u w n i^ the one side, ahd oorm ptioa and rasoolity on j tlfti o r r e o t e r n n r i i l ^ i * ' a r e ' s a i d t o n a v e the other, aud honesty achieved a most signal victory. T he Domoorats proper made no nom ­inations. D io Republicans placed in the field a ticket made up of reapectalilo, truatworthy (||kizena. Arrayed against theib were a lo t of nnprincipled scala-w a ^ placed in nomination by aoom bm ation of toreigners, ward bummers and tho riff-raff to d offoeonrings of society in general, not on4 of the candidates being a native-born Amertoao. This ticket wae supported an d voted fo r byiaU the bad elemeuts of society ; the other hy th e opposite elem ente—the m erchants, .bnain y wr men, tax-payers, and bpneet men of aU claaSes.

borne their oalomi^ with fortitude, .un8 to have suffered and died under the influ­ence of Oliristianity.— (Augfror lia) Herald. -

--------------- - . . -ww-

Wb e a t —N o. 2 C h icago ......................... 1 24Co r n ............................................................. 7:iOa t s ............................................................... 4sR y e ................................................................ 88P o r k —N ew M e ss.....................................23 '25La b d —S t e a m ............. .............................. 13

CHICAGO.B e b v e s— Cho ice G rad ed S te e r s__ 6 00

C hoice N a tiv e s ..................... 6 (hiG ood to P rim e S te e r s . . . . 4 61)Cows a n d H e if e r s ............... 2 50M edium to F a i r ......................... 4 00In fe r io r to C o m m o n .......... 2 -50

H o g s— L iv e ................ 7 .59F l o o r —F an cy W hite W in te r ........... 7 50

R ed W in te r ......................................5 50Wh e a t —N o. 1 S p r in g .................................. 1 19

N o. 2 S p r in g .................................. 1 08N o. 3 S p r in g ........................... 91

Co r n —N o. 2 ............................................... 62Oa ts— No. 2 R t H—N o .’ 2 Da r i.e t N o. 2 lluTTKR—F an cy E o o s— F re shP o r k —Me s s ..................................................... 21 26La r d ............................................................. 12,'i('4

S T . IX iP Ih .W h e a t —N o. 2 R e d ............................. 1 60 ^Co r n —N o. 3 ............................................... 46 @Oa'ts—N o 2 ......... 33 @K r* — N o. 3 . , ............................T \.............. 07 @PofiK— ................... i ............62 W (» ‘L a r d .............................................................. 12H o o s ................................................................. 7 50 06Ca t t l e .................................. 6 90 lA

M IL W A U K E E.W h b a t—N o. 1.................................................. 1 14

N o. 2 .......................................... 1 0 “ 94Co r n —N o. 2f.............................................. 56Oa ts—N o. 2 ................................................ 31R t e . . . . ' ..................................... 68Ua r i.e t —N o . 2 ................................................ 1 O.'i

I C IN C IN N A T I.Wb e a t —Ne w ................................................ I

ia) .'5 40 i* 1 26(<* 74

52« Ml (*23 50 (A 14

(A 6 25 (fi 5 60

4 80 3 00

(A 4 .50 (A 3 (H) (* 8 2.5

15Co r n .......................................................... -58Oats ..................Rtk. 1..........Pork—Me s s . . . La r d ...................

38 . 7820 90 lri22 50

TO LED O . •••■V........

13>;

' I r i s estimated that during the next four months more than 8200,000,000 will be paid out in tho W e^ W packing bueiness. Tlie good offocte Of tliis cannot fail to bo felt in every braiicli of trade. ' , : '

VI’

W fx a r—E x it s . . .' ; A m b e r . . . . . . . ...........X

OaTb ..............................................................D E T R O IT .

Wheat—E x tra ........................................ ]N o. 1 W h tte ............................. 1N o. 2 W h ite ................ ............ 1A m ber . . . ___ .......................... l

O o ^ N . . . . . . ............................................Oa ts ..........................................................Ba b l e t —N o. 2 . . . ; ............................. 1 ;iu 1ImBK—M e ss....................................... 2'» ,50 tAM

c i j :v e l a n d .WmCAT—N o. 1 R e d .........................

I N o . 2 i u a .........................:Co rn . . , .................................................... tr,0 4 t« ... ........................................ 3)1

(», 1 32 (A 1 ‘2.5 (at 1 ]

1 20 «<'

<a 38 95

t<*23 00

ta 1 40i%o@ 66

IS -- 40

BIKNINO OE VliG ra p h ic D e a c r ip t io n o

r s l AMW Jtdei

tewu-V^ follo tlagr

Virginia City has jiiatl tho whole town from 1 ia iu ashes. About < was given, the flro hai a private dwelling on wind was blowing at fore the department many buildiuM were ii credible rapidity tlie t street, and spon It Was greater port of the ( The alarm was taken u ing works in the city, a of 8 U^am-whistles an howling of the wind, i of the flames made d Houutls. The engines were broiight into se available appliance ui tire. Within an hour first alarm wdd given dwelling-houses on A main business portion burned to tho ground. Lug tliat succumbed < Mooney’s livery stable, with a wooden roof ; carriages liad been Yen

After leaping aoros frame buildings the f of tho County Court three-story b n o k edifli confined libout fifteen \ were removed to on at and subsequently libel own porol6, as under oumstouces nothing ei with them. Tlie east was soon enveloped i fire w:is extending nortl high wind and a suco liouses could carry it. doing tbeur outaAOStp.] People removed their street only to have thei they could be taken to While the Are was to the business heoirk was iiLso crawling up t< Mount Davidson, destre the finest family resideni B street, the Intematio .story brick, was bnminf the jewelry manufactory crick, on C street, waa at the same time the hi vying cinders as large ai into the east side of O ently a frame building i Kntrrprixe office was did the tire approach so to C street that businei latter thoroughfare wen until it was too late from them. The EnU 5vas on tire so fvoon that books alcmb. sffytethe Evening ChronicAe tents totally destroyed.pnblislmd^ a totalthese buildiu^ft;| rapid headi^y pP fhwaj .and commtfti<J||M b tremeg of’Opera-Hortfie kud a d |^ D street were smokini roof, and soon burst It,was now the most ex< the tire. From, the i•seemed to approaoli diiin dijfxlated Virgiit^ hbiaiii^i-ailioad depot, but no’ that unless something e done the xvoiks eusl the mill must succUmb. 1 iuterveuiiig buildings taken lire, and giant po’ into use to destroy tJ litter explosion thuiiden wuul anil the great he overcome by powder ev ing flames marched s street and to the mines their resistless course, thing before them, iiu ing works and mill of t Virginia, the new ba’ California, and the hois Ojihir mine.

The Virginia hoi.stinj flic railroad depot, aud are the hoisting works Mexican. Tlie hoistu Consolidated Virginia they were erected, the 1 any in tlie world. At were -mechanical shops I icai department connect the whole costing from ( 000. The new mill of Virginia was connected works by a rpilroad buil witli trestles, and the 1 this for ieteral bund reached the mill, which built structure, and the; jircy to the tire.

As tlie progress of tl formidable the miners 1 to the surface from e’ works below, the shafts the surface, and every to fiave tho lives of the iproperty as possible. 'I that, had tiia slri»afcioJtaken iu at tlie start, few kegs of powder up had not yet taken fire, of tho city might have correct as(iina\e bfdi losses, though they wil 85,00*,000.

Postal AffiThe report of the Pe

for the laet fiscal year many interesting st^tial hnsi'uess of tlie count that Chicago stands thi ness in the United Stat pared with St. Louis nearly double. The t of pieces of mail matte

/LM (jCEHTION.m ^ ( lo R e l a t i o n B e t w e e n iM il S |» i e » — > 1 « w 8 o f t h er •-ob from Woitougtou il«b OusUiug^eut to MDty of MiniaiP of the

?f u W two y&rs ago, our dlfferbut chongeH

binet. Those changes 3 of civil war have af- nily delayed the trans- lees with which he was struotiona he received e«t 1^1 r^eceuce en- l'State of tCd Island of lations to tlie United 0 Bpaw* He wap also selection, in chrono- le nnmorons dispatches between the two gov thoili he derived atn- not only conceniing

vhich had arist‘U from t also Respecting the Old polfoy of the Presi- aisea., Th/L* dismission Jabinet’s feplj' to what do l|/^lt'id telfgrani, i Note, has referenct^ juestious between the 10 statement of them tlie verbiage of corre- resented in a conioara- loranduni. Tlie exact fleial paper cannot be they may bi' inferreil the President which

f the instructions to and which show that ards the civil tlissen- d especially the san- I, suen as have been •r the last seven years, ts in the United States

only to those which Spain. Meantime the f the United States to ;r anomalous, seeing y done to the United citizens in Cuba the 1 no direct means of can obtain it only by

)U8 action by way of ;imate issue of events 3 independeuce, how-

may be jiroduced, of negotiation, or as

iary operations, or of lected incidents which irmine the fate of na- auation of the iiisur- y by day more iusup- ited States; and while is government is fixed erest of humanity, by 1 war prevaihug there, > reflect tliat the exist- in Cuba and its influ- lings and interests of inioi'ds lie at the loun- calamities which now The President has not

that all these ques­ted by the spontaneous self, she being more u such settlement than vorld. The question,I United States shall and difiicidt one, not without careful coiisid- iplex elements of do- pohey, but the deter-

li may at any moment by occurrence.^ either

The policy of the forenco to Cuba at the ilared to be one of ex- h positive and flxed le duty of the United inie or emergeucy of

il twenty-six years old )f African de.scent, at vas one of Morion’s volntionary War.

[ARKETS.YORK.

............... ;> u

....................... !> 10

....................... la @ 14fci’l l ............... 5 10 (O’. ,3 40

............................ 1 24 ( i 1 2i;

....................... ~:i (A 74

....................... 4s 52

........................ 8S « Ml......................23 2.5 (^;23 50..................... 13 14

[CAGO.S te e r s ____ B (Ml <a (i 25

1.......................... 5 (K) (4 5 noS I c e r e . . . . 4 00 (4 4 80

e r s .................... 2 50 <4 3 00I r ........................ 4 00 <4 4 .50u n io n ............ 2 -50 <4 3 (Ml...................... 7 .50 <4 8 2.5■Inter............ 7 50 (4 7 75....................... 5 50 (4 fi 50..................... 1 10 (4 1 II..................... 1 08 (i; 1 00..................... 81 (at, 82......................... 52 (4 .53........ .. .......... 31 (4 32

........................... B4 (4 05___ ; . ; ______ 84 (4 86......................... 32 (4 33......................... 24 (4 25......................21 25 (i421 50......................... 12 e (4 i iy ;1.0 r i b .................. 1 60 (4 1 62......................... 46 @ 4K..................... 33 (4 35. . h ............. 07 @ (IK. . ; . i ...........B2 50 (4Z3 00......................... 12 (4 13..................... 7 50 (4 8 00

............................ 6 90 (* 6 10iU K E E ...................... 1 14 (4 1 16..................... 1 (K‘ ( .# 1 1 1......................... .56 (4 5K........................ 31 (4 33..................... 68 (4 70^..................... 1 05 (4 1 08NM ATI......................1 15 0 1 25• ....................... 58 0 (M)........................ 38 0 42........................ 78 (4 80.................... 20 00 (422 50..................... 12‘i(4 13V;ED O . y ......... .. 1 ;i4 0 1 36

1 17 (4 1 10.........50 0 60

....................... 31 (4 36KOIT.

...................... 1 31 (ft 1 32.................... 1 23 (4 1 25.................... 1 1.1 ( m l 15

........ 1 18 (4 1 20................... 65 (4 66.................. 36 0 ,38................. 1 80 0 1 95............ .22,50 (4123 00.LAND................... . . 0 1 40.............................. (4 J% 0................... 66 0 66................... 3$) 0 ; 40

Avada,'towu^folio'

of iictd im !

BURNING OP VIBIHINIA CITY. Chicago Po«tBfl|odhiPt y«ar

O r a p h i c D e w i r i p t i o n o f t h e c o o i U v r a t i o n handleiY only 23,W)0,()00. St. Louls pur-,v .(<Aafled $148,000 worth of poB^e stamps;

' the iKirningi -tlian double

fta ftott-iTiy’lw.

Tlf\ ’irginia City has just Spent It force, tod the whole town from Taylor street north ia in ashes. About daylight the alarm was ^ven, the flre having broken out in a private dwelling on A s t ^ t . A high wind was hlowiqg at the timp, and be­fore the department could get at work many buildiuCT wore in ruins. With in­credible rapidity tlie flames spread to B street, and spon it was apparent that the greater part of the city was (loomed. The alarm was taken up by all the hoist­ing works in the city, and the shrill notes of steam-whistles and flre-beliB, the howling of the wind, and the crackling of the flames poade <i perfect bedlam of souutlB. The engines from Qbld Hill were broiight into service, and every available appUauoe uked to check the flre. Within an hour from the time the first alarm w4k given, at least twenty (.Iwelling-houaes on A street, and the main busmess portion of B street were burned to the ground. The first build­ing that succumbed on B street was McKiney’s hvery stable, a brick building with a wooden roof ; all the horses and carriages liad' been Removed.

After leaping across several small frame buildings the flre next took hold of the County Court House, a large three-story bnriok edifice, in which were confined about fifteen prisoners. These were removed to an adjoining building, and subsequently liberated upon their own parole, as under the existing cir­cumstances nothing else could be done with them. The east side of B street was soon enveloped in flames, and the fire was extending northward as fast as a high wind and ft succession of wooden houses could carry it. The firemen wore doiug the ir’tutxAoatp bQt> to .aiO People removed their effects into the street only to have them burned before they could be taken to a place of safety. Wliih’ the fire was tnuB extending to the business heavt of the town, it was also crawling up toward the base of Mouut Davidson, destroying in its course the finest family residence in the city. On B street, the International Hotel, a four- .story brick, was burning on the roof, and the jewelry manufactoiy of M. M. Fred­erick, on C street, was smoking, while at the same time the liigh wind was car­rying cinders as large as one’s hand over into the east side of C street, and pres­ently a frame building in the rear or the Knterpriffe office was in flames. Thus did the fire approach so quickly from B to C street that business houses in the

moreUiat amoont, $908,000 wortli.L-U-li-----4_______ .

Remarkable Snake Story.We are toQ veracious a atp^aipleR to

h up a snake sU ry wjmoot a first- olais voucher. Tliis oontes authenticated by our wortliy couutryman, E. Duucuu Macnoir, an ancient and cousisteiit mem­ber of ^ e P. E. Churoh in Tarboro. Qeti, Btyaii QriuifeS ' r^Hesr * ifl ‘ Pitt ooiluty. MosijuitoeH in that locality ore a mite ferocious aud bloodthirsty. As on antidote to these musical vampires fires aie kiudled iu the yard at night. A little child of Gen. Grimes was playing, after supper, in the glare of the light, when a sudden scream from the child at­tracted the attention of the General. He rushed to the spot in time to rescue the Uttle fellow from the fatal fang of a large rattlesnake, in the coil of attack rewly to strike. The snake glided ftwpy in the darkness, and the General sav* seipSnts of all assortments, sizes and varieties, iu playful multitudes, running about in all directions. Some were going under the bouse^ othere crawling out. Such a con- ventic^ of reptiles wou^k mkve alarmed any but a brave and gallmt soldier. But the situation required attention. So a ooimcil of war was held, consisting of the General and on old negro named Ned. Ned said, “ 1 tell you, Marse Bryan, if you will kill a sn ^ e or two, and bmui 'em, dem oders will all git from here.” No sooner said ^ n d o n e ; the General and old Ned readily slaughtered a few, and piled them on the glowing fagots. The smoke and odor commenced ks^nding and permeating the atmos­phere. Soon a head could be seen here and there protruding from the holes, forked tongues flashing and eyes glitter­ing, Then whole bodies andsuch a hegira of snak^ vms never edt- nessed before. In a short time “ mother earth seemed to have swallowed up her ■warlike birth,” Gen. Grimes haa not been troubled with them since.—Tar- boro {N. C.) Southerner.

The Autraui Heioe CleaiiiHgi>She has got on a torn dress, liitched

up at one side sufficiently to reveal an unbuttoned shoe; there are flakes of whitewash in her hair and on her chin; her dress is wet, her fingers are par­boiled, and her thumb has been split with a hammer, but her eye is as clear aud bright as that of a Major-General on field day. She picks a handful of skirts and skims thiough the apartments, seeing five hundred things that should be done at once, ami trying to do them; and every time she comes in reach of the dresser, she snatches a look into the

, " , , ---------- . , j , ( gloss and shoves a fresh hairpin into herlatter thoroughfare were considered safe jdated coil. And thus planted iniin ril if VTToo Tnn Iota rr\ oovta OTiTrrnirwwuntil it was too late to save anything from them. The Enterprise Building was on fire so soon that the accountant’s books alone . .'The ofBoe ofthe Evening Chronicle was with its con- tent.s totally destroyed. The Footlightspublished^ a total Ipis.^w E these buildin^M^ rapid head-vi^ •and coipmtlRiii( trenu'S of"

was alsoig W* Dumq^"bf

fire waft iftMtingiivuRd to d epshulM,

between the - eoc- iNBKmt Piper’s

OperarHoTtiie bnildiugs onD street were smoking hotly from the roof, and soon burst into a five flame. lt,was now the most exciting moment of tilt' tire. From the start .the flames .sei'med to approaoli directly the Consoli- .dated Virgiim bbistii^-xVorks and the roilioad depot, but now it was certain that nnle.ss something extraordinary was done tiie works and the large sixty-stemp mill must succUmb. There were a few iiitervening buildings that had not yet taken lire, and giant powder was brought iuto use to destroy them. Explosion nttei’ explosion thutidCred, but the high wind and the great boat could not be overcome by powder oven, and the roar­ing fliunes marched straight down E street and to the mines and the mills in their resistless course, sweeping every­thing before them, including the hoist­ing works and mill of the Consolidated Virginia, tlie new battery mill of the (California, and the hoisting works of the Opliir mine.

The Virginia hoisting-shaft abuts on the railroad depot, aud northeast from it arc the hoisting works of the Ophir and Mexican. The hoisting works of the Consolidated Virginia were, at the time they were erected, the best appoined of any in the world. Attached to them were mechanical shops for every mechan­ical department connected with the mine the whole costing from $800,000 to $400,- 000. The new mill of the Consolidated Virginia was connected with the hoisting xvorks by a raUroad built upon woodwork 5vitli trestles, end the flre dashed along this for kevffltil hundred feet, till it reached Ihe mill, 'which was a lumbet- biiilt structure, aud therefore fell a rapid prey to the tire.

As tlie progress of tlie fire became so formidable the miners had been hoisted to the surface from every part of the works below, th© shafts bulklieaded near the surface, and every precaution taken to save the lives of the men and as much property as possible. There is no doubt that, hod toe situation properlytaken iu at the start, by the use of a few kegs of powder upon buildings that had not yet taken fire, a large portion of the city might have been saved. No correct ©stima\e 'oto yet be modd.' of th© losses, tliougli they will probably reach $5,00*, OOO.

the debris, like a queen on her throne, she iinblushinj^ asserts that “ I t ’s an awful job;” “ Efverything is in wretched shape;" “ I ’ll be so glad when tins is over;” “ I t does seem as if my back will snap in two;” “ I ’m a good miud to say I ’U never clean house ftgain so long os I live.” And then her miud unconscious­ly soars heavenward, and she wonders if toere will be a house-cleaning season there, and if not, how a heaven can be made of it. I t is tliis specnlatiouwhioli gives her that dreamy expressiop when she is cutting your broad with the soap knife.—Danbury News.

Postal Affairs.Th(r report of the Poatmoater General

for the loft fiscal year will show a grrot many interesting st^tiRti(^ regarding the biiHiuess of the country. I t is aliown that Chicago stands third in Mstal busi­ness in the United States, ana tl iat com­pared with St. Louis its business was nearly double. The a g ^ g a te number of pieces of mail matter handled by the

A Woman’s Surgical Operation.Yesterday afternoon a man whoso name

oL>uid liot be letu'ued, and who with Uis family reside neai- the corner of Williams alley and Fountain street, got into a quarrel ^ t h his wife. Both were in­toxicated. Tliey pitched into eacli other, tore each other’s hair, aud raised a lum- pus generally. By some diplomatic course or other the woman finally suc­ceeded in getting her lord aud master to bed. Her next move was to get a bottle of clilorofonn which was near at hand, and administer a nice tittle dose to her husband. The next act was to procure au old saw, witli which she proceeded to do a job in surgery that would put a pro­fessional surgeon to blush. Beginning at the lower end of the man’s leg, she commenced sawing i^ til she had severed that useful appendage in twain. He, totally unconscious of what was going on, slept on, “ thesleepof the innocent,” while she, after the job was done, looked on, watching his life-blood ebb slowly away. Somehow or other the neighbors outfflde got wind of wbat was going on inside the house and rushed in, iu time to stop the bleeding, but at last accounts it was a question whether the man would live or not.—ClQoeland Leader.

Grumblers and the Press.Tlie truth is that there is scarcely a

newspaper published from one end of the year to. the other 4hat will not, if critically considered, give offense to somebody in the comm unity. Tho poli­tician objeots to the way his speech is reported. The buyer of one set of shares is offended because the money column reports another set as going up or going down. Gentlemen who find themselves in the liandsof the polioe ore grieved at tlie license of the piSess which reports their arraignment and trial among the police proeeediiu^ The sympathizer with Franoe is pYended at letters from Berlin, and the believer in German unity mourns over dispatches from Paris. The newspaper thus offends some one just as the weatlier—rain to-day and sunshine to-morrow—is sure to annoy somebody. The oommon-sense view is that the news­paper is tho history of yesterday written to-day; that it is the mirror of the time, and tnat those that conduct it care noth­ing fqr individu^, except to do them justice.—N. Y. Herald.

Gov. piNoiiKY is constantly receiving letters from Maine farmers who have gone West, ftnd want help to get back again. ,

BRIGHAM YOUNG’b TBOUULE8,Th« Old M orm oa Now D esires to A vail

H im se lf o f th e N ation ’s Laws.All interesting cake came up before a

Cabinet meeting here to-day. I t waa «he ease of Bngham Young—whether he could be legally intprisoned for his neglect to pay Alifi^oy to

I Ann Eliza Young. Tlie case m b ri^, is as followN : Some time ago Ann Eliza I Y’ oung sued before Judge McKean for I a divorce aud almony. She obtained a j decree, grouting u verdict qt $3,000 to ' pay her oouiisel fees, and an allowance for alimony. B r i g h t paid the $8,000 comisel fees, but has since refuseil to pay tho alimony. Judge McKean, before whom the oose was lorigiilally tried, shortly after the trial of tlie cose re­signed. Recently his successor noted the fact tliat the decree of the court ordering Young to pay alimony had not been com­plied with. In order to secure tins compliance, Brigham Young was on yfifl. terduy imprisoned. The case has been presented here* on to-day by the counsel of Y’oimg to see if he cannot bo legally released. The view advanced by tiieui is certainly a new one, and it is a wondes that this point was not mentioned in the trial of the case before Ju i^ e McKean. They claim that under the United States law the seventeenth wife of BHglffto Young has no standing iu the court, aud tliat she, in becoming his wife, under the Mormon law, voluntarily consented to become his concubine under the United States law, and that, therefore, her claims are not entitled to respect in a Federal court. I t is a puzzle to the average iudividual how t l ^ ease can come up hero at the present time. If this point is such a good one it is won­dered why Brigliam did not make the point when Ann Eliza first sued for divorce, and still further, it is a source of surprise that any representations should be made here when the local courts of Utah ai't surely refuges of redress in tlie case of justioe being mis­applied. However, tilings happen so often here out of the regular order that it should not be such a source of sur­prise that Brigham should apply to the paternalgovemmCut to adjudicate upon a question which, if settled in his favor, ivill result in his release from imprison­ment. Young, iu allowing this point against his seventeenth wife, surely does not staud by the Mormon doctrines, for in very self-defense, from the demands of Ann Eliza, he can find no better plan than to take advantage of the United States laws, and claim tliat under them she was only his conoubiue. The case was but briefly discussed in the Cabine to-day, and was then referred to "Eli Attorney-General for a decision. Mr. Pierrepont, before examining the case, remarked casually to a friend that he did not see how Ann Eliza’s claims for alimony could be sustained, as surely the law could not recognize the relations of a seveuteenth wife. Another reasou given for Brigham’s appeal to Wariiing- ton is the fact that he claims that the local coiuls of Utah have been organized Viy designing politicians with the view of persecuting him.— IVashington Dis­patch.

Fire and the 8word in Spain.A correspondent of the London Times

writes ns follows from Santander, Spain:I t is impossible for any one not on the

spot to realize the wanton devastion of property and barbarity to persons with which the civil war is being carrietl on by the combatants in the Basijue Pro­vinces and Navarre. Mafiy an English tourist who has entered Spain by Iruu, eu route to Sebastian, must remember the fair comitry, sprinkled with farm­houses, orchards, maize fields and groves on gentle acclivities which spread be­tween those tivo places. I t is now almost a w ilderness of trampled crops, trees de­stroyed and homesteads burnt. Tlie same picture of desolation presents it­self in Navarre, except that instead of orchards the vineyards are cut down with hatchets by tlie government troops. With this material ruin, the savage spirit of the war becomes more intense, and, although neither paity publicly admits tlie act, scarcely any quarter is given on either side. The reprisals of Gen. T'rillo go too far and are cruelly unjust, because the places he has directed to be destroy­ed are open towns, or rather villages, not occupied, militarily by the enemy, where­as, Hemani, Guetaria aud San Sebastian, which are being cannenaded by the Oarl- ista, play the part of fortresses, aud are therefore liable to be fired upon. The peaceful places ‘thus dooified by the Al- fonsine chief idso contain the houses, shops, stores and furniture belonging to numbers of Liberals. Supporters of the government, who, obliged to fly or ex­pelled from tlieir houses by the Carlists, will think their devotion to it ill-requited by this wanton destruction of their property.

A Physician’s Brain.Tho autopsy of Dr. Athon’s brain es­

tablishes the claim of medicine to being an almost exact soieniie. The first stroke of paralysis, involving the left side, natu­rally enough excited a great deal of in­terest among the city doctors, and it was agreed that it was causeil by the bursting of a small blood vessel in the right hemisphere of the brain. The sec­ond stroke, it was also decided, was caused by a more serious rupture in the left hemisphere, neceesitating a more complete paralysis of the right side. The doctors also diagnosed tho cause of the troifiile—fatty degeneration of the blood vessels of the base of the brain. They even told the eAct location of the two blood clots that fomu'd in the brain. After death the clots—tho spialler one on the right and the larger one on the left—were found just as they had been predicted, and disswtion revealed so ex­tensive a weakening of the blood veiwiela by ffttty de^neratton tliat it was a mat­ter of wonder the doctor bad lived so long. Tlie brain itself was large, solid, and fine-looking in texture. I t weighed

pearly. ouucos. Belore theautopay a wMl-kuown physician staked hie reputation on finding the larger blood clot iu a certain locality, and afl^ed to quit the practice of me^oiue if it tidt fdftjld were, 'H e even pr©- diute^f'toe-ftize o f it.—Herald.

Heavy Bank Bobbery.A recent dispatch from SorauloX

Pa., says : The First National Bank of Pittstou was broken into lastpight by a

of b u rg la o ^ ,^ m bhoV f 4 6 y s omTxleJInMB m a a m ^ w o ra a m v i euMMio*

I to the vault, liavuig entered the building “■ , through tlie roof, where they blew open

Burning of a South American City. i spherical safes, from which they ab- The Panama Star and Herald gives i stracted the money and decamped. The

full detori^of t t i im ^ e c ^ g v s^ bank ia 'A oue-sto rf|rrick '^ctM b, vI(imqiAi,i. PeriA toS n e # of ito ifli ' liaifl a fiat tig>pof. Tlfough ftiiis been ’ rubbe$A.aut a IteJL m iti** Mnftt o i f s .brokS out at 2 o clook iiiTue morning, Bhears several days ago, so as to Lave it

ready for electiou night, taking the pre- cautiou to adjust it again with putty to p^reveut the rain from going through.The hole is a^out eighteen inches square, aud through this three of the gang de

to 8ub| qne 'Tlie siC

rp s u le n ts ,idKties

sailor situggle^

vatot,'* Tijui-'Wy^pod. y

aud before noon three-fourths of Iipiique hail vanished iu smoke. Twenty-four blocks of houses, stores, banks, etc., were consumed. Merchiuit vessels iu the liarbor scut their crews ashore, and all ci^iaiiH, toreign tho piR^ce, ab3’ ie a

e thaf fl^iea, bufl^^iuoB

ew alS "^rc o7 the Muie material. The ground is impregnated with nitrode, and water is a luxury', and tho salt water falling on the earth only served to kindle tl^e fire hi(ldM|j|sby j |^ .saHj^tr©. , fire sweptdItnW liiffTraine over the ci^i Houses fell like pasteboard palaces. Tho damage done was immense. Five mil­lions m liard dollars will not cover it, and in jpi$ ilWI^surai obtaimi^ fmiA \ t^# grouml t|lf w n r ia l phuililjrtg,i|ptip^l|l^ -* !Tbc p flees Dumeo^are the branch of the IN a tioual Bank, the Town House, the Iqui- que aud Commercial, Hotels, the house occupied by thft Pa«Jitifc oteamdiip Navi­gation Company, the market place and the favorite club house of the city. Many families are homeless. The Presi­dent of Peru has ordered the authorities to use 6,000 sales for tlieir rebef. In Lima the different nationalities eoutiib- uted liberally. Many ofterohauts had t6iken advantage of the reduced tariff and dispatched large amounts of merchan­dise, nearly all of wliich is now destroyed, and rlow the merchants find themselves absolutely bankrupt, their liabilities, ow­ing to the disaster, being infinitely in ex­cess of their assets. Their warelio'uses, in which large quantities of nitrate were stored, close to the sea, wore saved, but large quantities of ^ a l , atcostly article in Iq u M e Q ^ e |b u ^ e d .

Whatever may be said against the Sul­tan, says the New York Oraphio, there is no question as to liis capacity as a first- class financier. He has swindled the Christian nations which were foolish noiigh to keep him on his throne by bree out of $900,000,000. He ha« sold bonds at a high of interest tUl it is impossible to borrow money to pay the interest any longer, and noiv he propda©^ to fund one half the interest for five years, wliich is a confession of bank­ruptcy and the first step toward repudi- j ation. It is something marvelous, the way this sensual barbarian has succeeded iu gulling the astute financiers of Chris­tian Europe of liuudreds of millions, and should he ever go ont of the govern­ing and borrowing business at Constanti­nople he would make a capital partner for Jay Gould, whose swiu(iling capacities need fertiliziug. It must be slightly humiliating, however, to English capital­ists to reflect on their facility for being , fleebed by foreigners, and semi-barbari­ans at that. A large portion of tliis vast Turkish debt is due to English people, and the refusal of the Sultau to pay interest ba.s led to something of a panic in London. But the London banks are loaded with Egyptian paper, and Mexi­can bonds arc piled up iu stacks with the , worthless Venezuelan securities. I t is i hard to understand why it is that the most practical people in the world, peo­ple who ore made of solid, matter-of-fact material, are also tho most easily de­ceived, and have been most tempted to ! port with tlieir uioneY for ivild aftd im practicable schemes.

. Jolly Old Age. |To-day is the one hundred and twelfth

birthday of the Courant. On the 29th of October, 1764, we issued the first uumber of the paper, and from that year to tlie present it hn^ never failed to appear on time, bringing with- it Uie late^ ad­vices and the l^ s t advioe we had toi offer. We have had so many birthdays that we do not consider them novelties, aud have seen so many strange things that we cannot now recapitulate them ; for it has taken us a hundred aacl eleven years already to tell them once. Without moraHziug, we will simply wish our readers the best of good momings. To our original subscribers we would pay especial greeting, and we promise them a hearty welcome if they xvill (5all upon us any day (iu the daytime) and renew the acquaiutanoe of early years. Every­body who subscribed in person for the first year of the Courant is entitled to retioive it for 1878 gratis, and is invited to oomo and talk over Centennial mat­ters whenever he feels like it.—Hartford Courant.

lJ»g. XHiiWMlt _door supplied with a burglar alarm, but they left tliat unmolested, and entered through the top of the vault. This is occupied by three ^ o in j^ d ^ ic a j

powderaiianfieiT of their contents, m- cludiug Lackawanna aud Bloomsburg railroail bonds, amounting to $11,600 ;

^ MtlL boD ^ tor $5,000,b o j^M ^P O Q ,

(ltd Iro^fab fipa iy^cH ypv Joi ' in coslffiii&MItMig

to over $40,000 in bonds and money.

,, ^ , Mclftoclmly B o $ ^ g Aocid0t(t..A letter from Biugliamton, N. Y’.,

says: ‘ ‘ About a week ago MauriceGoodrich and his brother William, of Worcester, N. Y., wwe married in that village to two sLsters. The brothers, as well as the sisters, were twins. On Wednesday laat, ,to complete their wed­ding trip, the twb cbiiples went to Uiia- dilla to visit the family of Joseph More­house, whoso wife was a sister of the newly-married ladies. On Thursday morning the bridal parly aud Mr. and Mrs. Morehouse went boat-riding oii the Susquelionna at Unadilla. William Gootlrich took the oars, and while row­ing the ladies became frightened. The bimt 5vaa capped , and the entire party thj[o\|n into tlj# wate^ Mr.

<fid sailor a ^ au {“#n..Meb2to|^ppori Maunce Goodrich. The women, how­ever, threw their arms about him, aud the three were drowned. Alaurioe Good­rich swam a few feet, but being weighed down with heavy clothing, was also drowned. William Goodrich, before beginning to row, had removed his poats. He was a good swiouusr^ aud s^ e d his \rife. The bodies of Mr. opd Mrs. Morehouse aud Maurice Goodrich were recovered the same day, but that of the latter’s ivife had uot been found at last accounts.”

How Little Alice Di d.Not long ago Rev. Mr. Winsor, of

Redwing, Minn., met with a painful loss ill the burning of his daugbUir Alice. Her breast, abdomen, legs, arms aud hands were sliockingly burned, and af­ter a few hours she died. She was only about five yejirs old, aud as slie lingered between heaven and earth a little while, she asked her mother to lie on the be(i with her, and when tliis request was granted she said, “ Sing to mo ‘ I nm Jesus’ little Iamb.’ ” As her stricken mother tried to press back the torrent of grief tliat welled up in her heart, and sang the words, the dear little sunerer made an effort, with her failing strength, to put one of her crisiied arms aroun(i her neck. Afterward, as death drew nearer, she requested her father to sing, “ Rock of ages, cleft for me,” and seemed to bo soothed by those grand old words. — St. Paul Dispatch.

A Pleasant Neighborhood to Live In.At Senatobia, a few days ago. Barton

McHenry and J. H. Cocke, both white, became involved in a personal alterca­tion, Cocke fired until bis pistol was exhausted, when they olincb^, Cooke draving his knife and McHenry using his pistol by striking liim on the head. A short struggle ensued, when MaHenry fell dead in front of Slaton k Slaton^ olfioe, with seven stabs in his breast, t#o in the region of tho heart. Mr. Cocke went homo -without assistance, but feel­ing liimsel Gladly wounded, medical aid was soon in attendance, ivhen it was foui^d that he -was mortally wounded, a bMl,having struck him near the center of his .abdomen, ranging downward and coming out near the spine on the left siifet One shot also took effect bear the M iqt of his hip bone, another struck nim lower down on the other hip, and the fourth made a slight wound just above his aukle.— Vicksburg Herald.

A Horrible StoryWe have heard of a very stressing

accident occurring in Jackson County, West Virginia. I t was a “ lioua^rais- ing.” As is customary on such occa­sions, chickens hoti been killed by clioi>- ping off their heads. Two little sons of the owner of the house to be raised saw the chiokeus thus guillotined, and dur­ing the day concluded to repeat the opera­tion. I t was just at a time when the men were lifting a heav"v log into its place. The father, ivho was holding one end of the log, casting his eyes toward the little fellows, one of whmn had the axe raised to sever the nook of his brother, let go of the log to save the lioy, and it fell, killing six men, two instantly, the others Irving only a few hours. The axe fell before the father oould reach the scene, severing the neck of the son. Thus were seven persons hurled into eternity iu a twinkling.—Middlcport (O.) News.

Some Big Charches.We think we have some big churches

here in America; but very few have a seating capacity of over 1,500. Tho fol­lowing table, showing tho size of some of the big churclies in Europe, will Im apt to astonish some;

/’(-rvoji .8 t . P e te i'H C h iiro ti a t R o m e w ill h o ld ................54,90<>H tla n C a th e d ra l ..............................................................37.0008 t. P a ii l’a a t I ln m e .'............................ ; .................... .. .82,000Ht. P a u l ’s a t L o n d o n ............................. 35,600S t. P e tro iiio a t B o lo g n a ............................................. 24,40f»F lo re n c e C a th e d ra l ..................................................... 24,300Antwerj) Cathedral.............................................. 24,00S t. S o p h ia 's , C o n t ta n t in o p is . .................................. 28,000S t. .lu h n I .a te ra D ..................................... 22,000N o tre D am e a t P a r i s ............................ , , , . ' / l . a o oP isa C a th e d ra l ................................................................ lft,0O)S t. S te p h e n 's S t V ie n n a ............................................. 12,400S t. D o m in ic 's a t O ologo* ......................................... 12,(X5iS t. P e te r ’s a t B o lo g n a ,................................................11,400C a th e d ra l o t V ie n n a ......................................................11,04)S t. M ark ’s, V en ice .................................................. 7 ,0(0S p u rg e o n ’s f a tw ra a o la ................................................ T ,0 'oD r. H a ll’s Cfinfoh, F if th a v e n u e , N ew Y ork,

s e a t s ............................................................................... 2,000-------—------------- ——.Mb. Maus, of St. ttoeejtoa Mo., was

driving his horse in a race frith another, condnotod by a negro 1 ^ , when toe two sulkies came into ooUirion witii, the g a ­zette says, tho foUbwIng' sad effect: “ The darkey boy had a leg broken, and WHS afterward kiUed to pnt an end to his sufferings. This should teaoli a lossoii on the subject of horse racing.”

\

1870.

THE OLDEST HOUSE IN TOWN.

HALL & CRANE,

—A present of a watch wasmade to H r. William Reigart, an engineer of the Toledo, Peoria and Warsaw railroad, b j the general manager Mr. Remington Vernam. It was given as a reward for having run for a year without killing any stock.

o o ^ r to tb« P u b l i c a t l*r|{e, one of th e beat MleotoU Htookii o f m e rc h an d ise lo b e found In LlvInKStoD C oun ty , oom prlsing In p a r t as follows'

s u n w A m

T IN iD S H E E T U N WilBE,Glassware, Queensware and China,

r O I L S T a S r S t VjLSBS. S T A M T B -D A .Y1> JA T A J^'B D IfA 'K B ,

B I R . 3 D O J L O - E S ,

Guns, i* ittoU , AmtHU H tiiou, Stonew are, f a i n t s . Oils, Varnishes, H Ai/e-w asA, f* a in t, V a m isA , Scrub a n d HvrseBruHAes, Saw s,

CAisets, A u ffers, f* lanes. B its , Screws, JVaits, Horse SAoes a n d ^ a i l s , L o cks , LatcAes, CAains.

Groceries Staple and Fancy.F lo u r, S a lt , JHeal, F isk , Green, C anned a n d D ried F ru its .

We w ould call p a r tic u la r a t te n tio u to th e

“Woman’s Eights Cook Stove,”

bi'lni; th e boat cook ev e r uft’ered in Ih la aeolioii, H aving sold n ea rly tw o lium lred w ith in th e la s t tw o y .sirs, we know w hereof we ufHrui, w hen we say they a re

" I 'a r K xcellenee, A. No. 1, an d c a n 't be b e a t ,"

m m m aJron, Wood a nd C hain. 'I‘he G ould’s Jt'on 'Pum ps” s ta n d u n r ira iled ,

a n d the W ituh ip IVood P u m p , ta kes

th e lead in th e N orth-w est, as h u n d red s cun tCHiify who a re u sinu th e m In th is c o u n ty .■ Tn ■We got n e a rly all o u r goods in ca r loa^l lots, th u s waving la rge ly Tn freights, w hich we

propose to d iv id e w 'lth o u r custom ers, an d on large sa les we <-an afford to se ll, and will sell on very sm all p rofits KOH C.\.SH, lie leiv lug in the old iiio tio , "t^ulck sa les and sm all proflla.”

270 TB.OT7BZ.S TO S B O W GOODS,w h eth e r you buy o r n o t—we sh a ll even be glad to see you , a n d co rd ia lly Inv ite ou r lu.s

of frien d s to call a n d see u u r im m euwe stuck of goods. Hoii'l fo rget llie place, a t

The only Brick Store in Town.

—Mrs. Mary Basset, M. 0 ., is said to have an anuual income of •8 ,000, derived from her profes­sional work in Oooperstown, N. Y. She has met with prejudice and liv­ed it down by fathful Nwork; with bitter persecution, and has ignored it altogether.

—An application recently made to the Supreme Court to “ disbar” Mr. R. A. D. Willbanks. clerk of that court for the Southern Grand Division, on account of alleged un- professionkl and fraudulent transac­tions, has just been refused by the court, at Ottawa, the court finding nothing in the record refiecting on his integrity in the slightest degree.

—A man named George W, Williams, who hired u team and carriage from Mr. Jefferson, of Champaign, and drove them to within twenty miles of Cincinnati in four days, was sentenced on Sat­urday the 6th, inst. to state prison three years, by Jmlge C, B, Smith. Williams managed his own case. “ Williams” is a false name. lie refuses to give his right name. He says his father and one brother are physicians, and another brother a lawyer. He has a wife. He is re­solved that none of them know his whereabouts. His greatest trouble is to account to his wife fdr his absense, when in the future he may return to his home.

— man named David Robinson living near Greeiitown, Howard county, Indiana, on the evening of the 4th inst. attempted to murder his whole family. He shot one of his sons, a little boy, who was lying in bed, and afterward cut the throat of this boy and that of a little girl. His wife fled from the house with the oldest boy, e’ght years old; and

•^lobinson shot at them both, wound­ing the boy in the face They es­caped. Robinson then mounted a horse rode to Kokomo, where he got on a night freight train of the I,. P. & C. R. R. Next morning his dead body was found beside the track, near Jacksonville station in the adjoining county of Tipton. He is supposed to have jumped or fall ' en from the car.

DEALER IN

Lath, Shingles, Fence Pests,SASH, BOOIIS. BLmSS, HAILS,

Patent Building Paper,LIME, HAIR, CEMENT,

Piaster,Sric!;,Stooe!l;SaEil.A large stock of the celebrated

I t l E K P l E t S O N ' S

PU M PS !—AND— , ,

E A V E S P O U T IN G .C-onstanly on hand ,

^ At th|» Red Offloe. W est of the Depot.

, (;HAT8W0RTH, - ILLINOIS.

—The following, from the Times of Tuesday of Isat week, is the lat­est in regard to the new Chicago Custom House; “ Mr A. IT. Bur­ling, the recently appointed .superin­tendent of the new Custom House, on Monday accorded an interview to a reporter for the Times, and gave him what information there was to be gleaned about the new Custom-House work. Mr. Burling, says that they have pulled down all that is needed for the proper erec­tion of the building, and that they will proceed with its erection at once. The calculation is to put an­other story on the present work be­fore the winter sets in, the only dif­ficulty experienced being a deficien­cy in the quantity of material, as they hardly get enough of the large stone to get along systematically. The attention of the staff at the Custom House has been turned tothe buisness of getting the practical

a ‘working force in order, ana the ar rangments in regard to rigging, roacninery, etc., will occupy all the time for the next few days. Mean­while the work, of laying a solid concrete foundation around the building is proceeding rapidly, and directly a sufficient quantity oflarge cut stone arrives, work will beposned on the east front.

ROBERTS & .R R IC H A M .UBALEKB IN

a A R 6 > W

Railxroad Tim e Table*

T . P & WGROCERIES, STOVES,

CORDAGE, &C.R A I L W A Y

On and after Sent. M. 1S76, trains w ill leave Cbatsworth as followa:

GHATSW ORTH

For b a rsa lu s go to Robkktb S Uk iqham ,Birgalus go to hobkktb tu iiKi mioleHale and reta il dealers In

HARDWARE, TIN, COPPER AND SH EET IRONW ARE,

FLOUR, SALT, MEAL, AND SEEDS.

Farmers' and Medianics’ Tools

BABTWAKD.T b a is No . 1 leavee C ba tsw orth a t^o .W p.

m ., d alljr , ex cao t S u n d a y ,a rr iv in g a t G ilm an lu .e i p. m . W ateeka Il.ao p. m . Sheldon 11.1 0 p. m . S tate L ine ll.M p. m . LaKay- e tta l.is a . m . In d ian a p o lis Liu a , m . Cln- c ln n a tt l 84ft a . m Lonisville ft.M a . Co- lu in b n s n.4ft a m . P ltu b o rg l .u u p. m .

T r a is No. 4 leaves C batsw orth s i l.Sft P -m ^ d a lly ex c ep t S unday , a rr iv in g a t O ilm an 8 07

r. m . K ensing ton 6.w p. m . G rand Crossing IH p. m. Chicago ft.4A p. m. W atseka 8 43.

m . D anv ille 4.»ft p. m . T erre H aute ‘20 p. m. B heldon 8.u0 p. m . Htate

Lino 8.16 p. m . L ogansport 6 60 p. m. I jtfa y e tte 4.*o p . m . IndlanapoUB 6.46 p m . O ln o ln n a ttf 10..W p. m . Louls- v lie 11.00 p. m .

Through coaches for CbicaRO on No. 4, con­nec t a t K ensing ton w ith fa s t tra in ol MlchU gan C en tra l ly y a tf tf tT p . m ., an d a t Q.rand Crossing w ith L., 8. A M. S., and I*„ F. W. A C. a t 6.10 p. m., for all p o in ts east.

Tk 4 IN No. 6 leaves C batsw orth a t 8.06 a. m., d a lly ex cep t S unday , a rr iv in g a t O ilm an 9,60 a. m . Chicago 7.30 a. m . W atseka 8.3v a. III. Sheldon 4 ^ a. m . S tale L ine 4.10 a. m . lyO gansporl7.86 a. m . C olum bus ft.ftft p. m . I’t tisb u rg 8.03 a. m .

No. 8 m akes close connection a t Chicago ............................... ‘ — -'1 th ew ith m o rn in g tra in s for th e east on all

roads.

OF ALL KINDS.

IRON, STEEL AND NAILS,

W X STW A B D .'Ts a ik N o. 5 leaves (.'liatsw orth a t 6.01 a. in .,

dally excep t S unday , a rr iv in g a t C benoa 7.‘26 a. m El P aso8 ‘10H nshnell 18 50 p m . B urling ton 8.3o p. m. K eokuk 4.88 p. m . W arsaw 8.10 p. m .

T kaik No. 8 leaves C hatsw orth a t 12.37 a.m ., du lly excep t M onday, a rr iv in g a t (;henoa 1.38 a m . K ll'aso8 .18 a. m . i'e o r la 3 30 a.m . B nshnell 6.36 a. m . B urling ton 9.10 a. in. K eoknk 9.61 a. m. W arsaw 10.40 a. m .

T rain No. I leaves C hatsw orth a t 1.06 p. m ..In a n y u u a n tlly , from 1 lb . to looo lbs.

Im m en se stock of Cook, H ea ting an d P arlo r .stoves.

d a lly e x o ^ t S unday , a rr iv in g a t C henoa ‘2.18 D. i n . El Paso 8.55 p. m P eoria 4.30 p. m.

T r.mns .No 8 an d 5 m a k e close connection

T H E N E W W E S T

a t B u rling ton an d K eoknk for a ll p o in ts

K o rtIc k e U a n d fu rth e r In fo rm atio n app ly t-> M A. Whteeler. Agent, C hatsw orth .A . I,. H o p k i n s , H . C. T o w s s a k d ,

Receiver. Gen. T icket .\g t.

'The liest CTKik Stove ever m a n u fa c tu re d lu th e U nited s ta te s , an d is used h II over the w orld.

CHIOAQO A ALTO N R A ILR O A D .

T H E ORAHD URION,On an d a l te r October 16th, 1875, tr a in s will

leave C henoa as follows;

GOING NORTH.

No. 8, w eighs 300 lbs,, and sells a t th e e x ­trem ely low price of 8‘2 6 00, an d w arran ted to g ive com plete sa tis fac tio n .

E xpress and Mall, No. 1, 3.50 p. m ., L iglit- n ln g Express, No. 3, 3.36 a. in. D enver Ex-

resH, No. 5,11.15 a. m .

Butter, Eggs, Paper Rags, Old Iron,

Hides. Furs, Sso., &c.

F re igh t Express, No.igh Frelicn, -N-o. 13. 7..v» p.

m. s to ck E xpress. No. 16, lO.'iO p. m . stock -- ...

presi 11.1.4 0 a . m . T h r o u g h F re l ic h , -N-o. 13. 7..Vt p .

E xpress, No 17,7,00 a. m . Way F re ig h t, No. 19, 1.30 a m.

GOING SOUTH.

E x p ress and Mall, No. 8, 1.18 p. in . l.ight^ n ln g Express, No. 4, 12.54 a. m. D enver E x ­press, No. 6. ;i,50 p. m . K loom lngton F re ig h t, Nt. 12, 8..50 p. m. K ansas F reigh t, No. l i , 1.40 a. III. T hrough F re igh t, 'o . l 8 , .5'.6 a. in .W ay Freight,.N o. 19, 1.12 p. m.

Don't forget th e place th e on ly place lu to w n —old store of K enyon A B rockw ay. —

C. McMULUN, Gen. .Snpl. JOS. CUARI.TO.N, Gen. T icket Agent.

Cenyon w ay.

T O T H ENEW STORE! NEW GOODS!

TAKE THE

ISAAC MILLER,DEAl.Kll IN

@ U T O N « % n U 7 - £ I

E O L 2 .It Is th e S ho rtest, Q uickest an d on ly Line

ru n n in g th ro u g h coaches—TO—

UEH'S, SOTS', aid CBIUUN'S ffEAB, TTTTlT TT A Pfl LISEATS, CAPS, TBVITXS, ’

Valises and Furnishing Goods.- A N D - .

I C7 m j w . /m . 'V K .

My goods a re d ire c t Arom th e m an u fac to ry ,id ei ‘

W ith o u t change o r ad d itio n a l charge , and one t r a in In advance of o th e r rou tes.

T he on ly d ire c t rou te to

a n d em brace a l l th e new designs In p a tte rn an d m ake-up . My m o tto w ill h e L O U I S V I L L E ,

Good Goods,Zaow F r io e s ,

And th e ftoulh . « a .T h e sh o rte s t line and ({.ulckest tiinu v ia . Iiid la iiapolls to

—AND—

SATISFACTION GUARANTEED,

Columbus, Newark. Zanesville, Wheeling, Baltimore, Washing-

ton^ Fittsburgi Fhiladelpia, New York and Boston.

T H E BEST ROUTE TO

G ive m e a ca ll, a t Met'tes’ Old Stand,

Chatsworth, Illinois.

CLEVELAND, BUFFALO, NIAGARA FALLS, ALBANY, AND ALL

NEW ENGLAND CITIES.

AUGUST aBENDINa.M aniifastu rer an d D ealer In

P u l lm a n ’s P a lace D raw ing-room a n d S leep in g Cars

A re ru n on n ig h t tr a in s to INDIANAPOLI8.

Sadd lea. B rid le s,

P arlo r ca rs w ith S ta te Kooms a n d R e c lin ­ing C hairs a re ru n on e v e n in g tra in s to C in ­c in n a ti v ia . H am ilto n . C onnections a re m ade w ith th is a t C ham paign or M ansfleld.

A .G B T YOUR TICKETS BY TH E

Collars, Whips, & c ., & c .REPAIRING PROMPTLY EIECD TED !

My W ork Is all m ad e of th e Best M aterial and W arran ted to g ive sa tis fac tio n .

S E O . W IL T E D %. C O .,

— AND—

' CHATSWORTH, ILL. •

l„ B. & W. ROUTE,A nd yon w ill avo id th e changes a n d delays

in c id e n t to o th e r ron tes 'GEO. B. WRIGHT, Receiver.

JN O . W. BROWN, G en ’l Pass. Ag’t .In d ian a p o lis , Ind .

IK . I t 3EXSZXTC,DBALBR IN

Staple and Fancy Groceries!Crookeij, Glass & Qu^suswars,

Woodenware,CAN NEB A DRUB FRUIT,

CIGARS * TOBAf;CO,A nd e v e ry th in g k e p t In a F irs t-c lass Cro-

eery S tore.HIGHEST MARKET PRICE PAH) FOR

PRODUCE.B em om her th e p lace , opposite S tlllw e irs

W arebonse.My Motto Is P a ir D oallna,

eUICK SALES AND SMALL PROFITS.CHATSWORTH, , ILL.

NEVFALlandi

H av ing received m y

1 1 . 0 1

Hats, Caps,

4*

Prints, W aI am prepareil to offer

c ln lty , th e b est a

th e best varlc

be had I

JOH27G

Watch

AND JE'

Repairing Prr

a ;. I w i i i n u i t e d t o g i v t

(xive m

At the Post C

W m . A1DEALI

D R ¥ ( ;g r o c e r :

o x j O t :

IQ0O

^ P lO

AlllgheHt m a rk e t pri

p u K lu c e .

C H A T S W O R T H ,

r i ju e T a b le .

8c WW A Y

, 1876, inOna w ill leave

CIq *Co-

VAmo.'b au worth aMO.W p. lay, arriving at Ullm an b ll.ao p. m . Sheldon e U.66 p. m. LaKay- apolU l lu a, m. aU vllle 8.60 a. tiaborg T.uu p. m. hatswortli at 1.86 p .m ., arriving at Gilman *.o7 I p. m. Grand ('rosaliig

p. m. Wataeka ‘i 83. p. m . Terre Haute

1 8.U0 p. m . StateIxbgauBport e (>U p.

p. m. IndianapoflH ;{ 10.66 p. m . Louls-

Oblcago on No. 4, oon- tb fa it train ol MlchN 'p . m ., and at Grand M, S., and 1*., t \ W. A

poinU eaat.Ihataworth at 2.06 a. m., , arriving at Oilman lu a. m . Wataeka 3.3v m. State Line 4.10 a. m. Columbus 6.66 p.

)r the eaat onJhlcagc all the

WARD.ataw orth a t 9.01 a. in .. Arriving a t C benoa 7.26 m . P eoria ».40 a, m. H urllng ton 8.3o p. m. b raaw 6.iup . m . ihataw orth a t 12.37 a. ay, a rr iv in g a t (Thenoa a . m . P eoria 3 3o a.

B urling ton e.io a. m . raaw 10.40 a. m . hataw ortb a t 1.06 p. in., Arriving a t C benoa 2.12 n P eoria 4.30 p. ni. la k e close connection ie o k u k for a ll p o ln ia

le r In fo rm ation app ly nt, C hatsw orth .H . C. TowraAitD,

Gen. T icket .\g l.

rON R A ILR O A D .

ir 19th, 1875, tra ln a will

NORTH.

[>. 1, 8.60 p. m ., Idg lit- 36 a . in. H enver K x '

P re lgh t Kxpresa, No. F re lgn , -Vo. 13. 7..jo p.

. 15, 10.20 p. m . stock m . Way F re ig h t, No.

SOUTH.

o. 2, 1.12 p. in . i-igliN :.54 a. m. D enver Kx-H loom lngton F re ig h t, naaa F reigh t. No. l i . e ight, ' 0 . 18, 5.66 a. 111..12 p. m.

MI LUN, Gen. Hiipt. I. T icket .\g en t.

THE

a wlickeat an d o n ly M ne lugh coaches

I f o l is ,

d d ltlo n a l ch a rg e , and ce of o th e r rou tes, rect rou te to

I T I L L E ,le Rhorleat lin e and i. Ind iaiiapolla to

iirk. Zanesvillt, more, Washlng- 1 Fhiladelpia, ind Boston.IIOI'TE TO

^FALO, NIAGARA ^Y, AND ALL ,ND CITIES.re D r a f f i n f f - r v o m t f i f f C a r t

a to INDIANAPOLIS.

e Kooma a n d R ecliu - v en ln g tra ln a to C in - n. C onnections a re npalgn or M anafleld.

CKET8 BY TH E

f. ROUTE,I changes an d delays then rontea- WBIGHT, Receiver.1 Pass. Ag'A, In d ian a p o lis , Ind .

iR IN

icy Groceries!& Q n 0 i p 7 a r e ,iware, •'W iD F R U IT ,’OBACCO,In a F lrat-claaa Cro- tore.PRICE PAID FOR JOE., opposite S tlllw ell'a

a ir D ealing ,

SHALL PROFtTS.1, i ILL.,,

I l l Mil ladWITEI (ODDSH av ing reoflived m y stock of Kali an d W in­

te r

Hats, Caps, Boots, Shoes,

Prints, W all-paper,&c.I am prepared to offer to c h a tsw o rth an d vi'<

c in lty , th e best selected s to ck , and

tb e best v a rie ty of goods, to

be had In tow n.

JOHN YOUNO,

CHAT8WUKTH. Ill

jom r G. TKT7Z,

Watchmaker,

j . Zi. z)oz.oxra’s >

B I D M I T I------ AND---------

CONFECnONERI ESTABLISHMENT.( W a NN’.S o l d 81’AND. )

H av ing purchased th is p ro p erty iVom s tre e t to a lley , a n d renova ted an d restocked th e es tab lish m en t, the P ublic w ill And It the “ Boss” place In th e city , to ob ta in a n y th in g ■ line.

DEALERS m

In m y llI

WAHM MEALS,Served on short notice, a t p rices to s u it all.

o i r s T s z i s IIBy the Can or ^ i s h , Cotd

Z u n ch , IPies, Cakes, a n d Crackers m variety .

SW EET C ID E R !A lw ays on h an d .

F R U I T S A N D N U T S !a specia lty . The la rgest an d best stock of

'A M . I

A m je w e l e r .

Bepalring Promptly Done,

b

Ai- 1 Will ran ted to give .sativfiictlon. ‘

Give me a call,

At the Post OfElce Building,

IO h atsw o rth , III.

In th e C ity, Toys a t to s t , Choice Tobaccoes an d C igars, K m okers' a rtic les of a ll k inds. Ceil Is’ P ap er (.'olUirs, Ac

Qive me a Call, and I will send you away smiling.

It. A. VANAUSTirifE,

Drugs, Medicines & Chemicals,Dye-Stnifs, Pharmaceutical Preparations, Fancy Goods, Toilet

Soaps, and Powders, Hair Oils, Handkerchief Extracts,Feather Dusters, Clothes, Crumb, Hair. Tooth

and Nail Brushes, Painters’ Dusters’,Varnish, Paint, and Striping

Brushes, Whitewash Brushes,

TK'USSZS AKD S-U-FFOIt.TS:B.S.M anufac tu rer of

HAIR OIL, POMADES. CAMPHOR ICE, COLD CREAM, COL­OGNE, EXTRACTS FOR HANDKERCHIEFS, FLAVOR­

ING EXTRACTS, TOILET & TOOTH PASTES AND POWDERS, &o.

PROPRIETARY MEDICINES!Bang.s Ague Cure, Pectoral Tonic, Cough i^ rup , Cough Lozenges,Black­

berry Carminative Balsam, Peruv. Bark Bitters, Essence Jam. Ginger, Tasteless Castor Oil, King of Pain Liniments,

White Pine Gum Strengthening Plaster,Dandelion Pills, Green Ointment,

Condition Powders forHorses and :

Cattle, Neurtalizing Cordial, Etc. jW e have th e b est stock o f n a tiv e an d lin ix irted . I

W I 2 S T E S J V 3 S T I D L I Q , T J O E . S ! |,Ever brought to th is tow n , an d sold for m ed ica l use on ly . We alw ays keep on h and

a la rge slock of !

P a in ts , O ils , V a r n i s h e s , Glass a n d P u t ty , !P h y s ic ia n ’s P re sc r ip tio n s A ccurately d ispensed a t all hours, day o r n ig h t. I

C H E W I N G A N D S M O K IN G T O B A C C O S |BLANK BOOKS, WALLE'1'8, .STATIONEBY, PENS AND FOHTFOLIOS, PENC ILS, POCKET

BOOKS. Also flue C utlery , c o n s is tin g of UiVZOKS, KNIvES &C‘. j

W J L L X j I$1,0(10 w orth ol new p a tte rn s for S p ring trad e . W indow F ix tu res , Paper, Cloth and C ottage C urta ins, (,‘ords, Tassels,. A ll paper triiiim etl ready for hanging , free ol charge. ,

ZXzrC70B.B’S

O S W E G O

m a n u f a c t u r e r ,

P U R EA N l)

Silver Gloss Starch,I FOR THE LAUNDRY.I MANUFACTl RED BY

CH A TSW O RTH . - ILL IN O IS , | T. K ING SFO R D and SON,

THE INTER OCEAN.T H R E E ED IT IO N S :

WEESLI, SEUI-WEESIT ud DM1;. |--------- » • • --------- I

E stab lished less th an th re e y e a rs ago as a ' R ep resen ta tiv e R epublican paper, pledged to j m a in ta in and defend th e prliic lp ies a n d o r . | gaiilxn ttous of th e N ational R epublican P ar- , tv , th e INT E R OCEAN w as ea rly pushed to th e forefront of Jou rn a lism an d ach ieved , a snccPHs uiipreceilonted lu tlie h is to ry en terp rises . By un iversa l as.seut It n assigned th e iKisition ns

of sucli la s been

Leading Republican PaperTHE NORTH-WEST.

rrlngps. Wmrons anil Itiigglps of all k inds, inadp from th e bpst n in terlu l and In

the lnl<-sl s ty le . ALso, a ll k in d s of

THE BEST STARCH IN TH E WORLD.

G1\E.S A BEAl ITKPL FINISH T o THE I.lN E N .a iu l the d lfterenpe In post betw een I U an d tioninion sta rch Is sea reel y h.alf a pent ' fo ra n o rd liin rv w ashing . Ask you r G ro cer; for 11.

MVVa C ircu lar Saw and

W m -A LTM A IT , Pl.AJiTI3SrC MH.1. IDEALER IN

U M I d O O U SG RO CERIES, A N D

o i j O T H i i n s r a - .

I ZINGSFORDOswego Corn Starcli,

I Fur riiudiiii^, ice Crcaiii,Ice Cream, &c.

Is the o rig in a l—Established in 1848. And pre­serves Its rep u ta tio n ns Pl^KFHt,

STB liN tiK R an d MORE D ELI­CATE th an an y o th e r u rtt-t X « l. . 1. t tv. ->s .1

. e ith e r o f thesam e nam e or w ith o th e r titles .

■Stevenson M acadam, Ph D., &c., th e h igh­est chem ical •luMiorlty of Fmrope, careliilly analyxed th is Corn S tarch , an d says it is a m ost exce llen t artic le of d ie t an d In ch em i­cal an d feeding p roperties Is fu lly equa l to the best arrow root. _

D irections for m ak ing . udUlugs, Cuslard;>, Ac., accom pany each one pound package.

For d ressing I,um ber. Do not fall to call uit«i rA U u i im - iii> vvoik a i i i l pi

before nurehaRiiiH; elHPwliere.For Sale by all (»rocers.

r

I Ugliest m a rk e t price paid for co u n try pioduce.

CHATSWOBTH, : ILLINOIS.

CH.YTSYVORTH MARKET.R eported an d corrected w eekly , by H all A

Crane, dea lers In S tap le an d F ancy G roceries H ardw are, Stoves, Q ueensw are , Glass, T in ­ware, E tc., Etc.

C23

II ^

Chatsworth

M i l l s ,Have on band at a ll

tim esCORN M EA L,

HBOUND FEED 1and

GRAHAM FLOUR, f^ash Paid fbr Grain,

j JM IITIU V IU .

2640

69 @ 70 60 66 76 @ 80 20 a £3

1 00 a 1 26 76 O 1 80

40 @ 45 86 @ 40

New C o r n ..........Old Corn ...........Bye......................W heat .................B arley ...................O ats.......................F lax R eed ............T im o thy Heed....H u n g a ria n .SeedM illet S eed ........G lover............................... ..................... 7 76 @ 8 00P o ta toes.................... ................—...... 20 @ 26B u tte r ...................................................... 12 @ 14L a ^ ........................................................ 18 (gi 16L ive H ogs.............................................. 5 75 @ 6 00Live B eevee.........................................4 so <@ 4 75T u rk e y s ................. - .............................. 6 a 8C hickens p e r d o x .............................. 2 00 a 2 6oEggs p er d o z ......................................... 21

RETAIL M ARKET.Coal p e r t o n ......................................... 3 00 a 4 00F louk—Sp rin g per s a c k ................ 1 70 a 1 80

‘‘ —W in te r per s a c k ............. i 90 a 2 50“ —B a ck w h e a t p er s a c k ....... i oo a 1 lo

C om Meal per sa ck ........................... 40 a 6045 a 50 30 a 35 .35 a 40 10 a 15 26 a 36 6 a 14

............ ............ ...... 80 a 160'• —-Japan 'per’ Ib .............................. 76 a 1 M" —Oolong per lb ............................ 70 a 1 46“ —G un Pow der p e r i b ............... 1 26 a l TO

S y m p s per g a l..................................... 60 a 1 8COi l —Carb o n p er g a l ......................... .*2 a 28

•• —L ln a e e o p e r g a l................ a... * ^“ —M achine p er g a i ....................... 80 a 1 M" NeaU foot per g a l ....................... * 59•• D an fo rth ’s F lu id b er gal ....... » ?5

Lim e p er b b l...................................... *d e m e n t p e r b b l ................................. • 2®Sand p er to n .......... ........................... .^ ^ 2N a i l t p e r l b ....................................... * a 8Brick p e r m ........................................ l* 9®dom m o n L u m b e r ............................ ” ®®L ath p e r m ............................... - ........ * ®®F lo o rin g p e r m ............ ................... 40 4)0 a 46 00

DRY GOODS.

A pples p e r peck..O nions p e r p eck .........P o ta toes p e r p ec k .......B eans p e r p ee k .............Ooflee p e r l b .................

Tza—Jawing Hyson

led M uslin per yard..Mas lip per yard......

I per yard;............. ...........p e n n lm a p e r ^ a r d . . . . ............Je a n s p e r y a rTloklng p e r yard».

MSP«1

C otton B ats p e r lb..

riannm s per yard Oantain per yard..

ao .a 8019 a 80 10 a 80 26 a 4016 a 26 90 a 28

.21'UCrash per y d .......

•Not alone on its politica l ch a rac te r does th e INTER-OCEAN res t Its c la im s to po p u la r ftivor. It a lm s at th e h ighest excellence in all d ep a rtm en ts , and In th is e ra o f progres­sive jo u rn a lism a ^ i r e s to a positio n am o n g th e best. T he INTKR-OCF AN m akes espec­ial claim s as

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TH E AGRICULTURAL DEI’AR'ITMENT [Is care lu lly ed ltod by gen tlem en of a b i l i ty j

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T U e i« ^ A m in t o n th e lOM dow b « lo w ; t&e tu r r io g - fro g a c h irp a n d err ;

lt% ohiU whan tUe sun Is davni, snd the sod Is uut yCfl 4rjr; * .The world b s l i^ r l r pbe<-', it seems, end I duut

know Why. • ' - '

domestic felicity, all the eleniente of art and natnte oonaptred to bring it about. 8o when he ste[ x>ed to the door of the office and to<%>Ded |o a y o m ^ m ^ ^ r ii i a strip of oommenSal raper in his haid and a peuail behind his ear, with that general air of brisknees and alpr^wdneai about him that hetukened a puooeasfM

fence , how w earily tru d g e s , j l o w i l - t o w n m e r c h O t l t i n e f f i b r1 SM , Ut I IC«1Q OQ th e l>air;

W ith th e fee l o f th e S p rlu g ui h is l>ouee, like it weak a n d e ld e rly i iu iu ;

I ’t e h a d It inAny a lim e , bu t we m iiht work w hen vse can .

Day a f te r day to to il, a n d p\(*r fro m ann to su n ,T h o u g h u p to th e seaaou h iro u t, a n d uo lh iu g In*

le f t u n d o n e ,l a end ing ’ t t tw elve like a t lot'k, an d be^^imiiug again

a t one.

T he fr«"^'? m ake a Ki»rruwlul n<»ihe. an d yet i t ’s ihv lim e ihey m a le •

T h e re a Homt-thiug comeM with the a ligh l-nebb or oU r a w eight ;

T h e n 's aom etU uig eonn s vuth th e sp r in g , a n d it beeniH to m e i t ’s la te .

It*H th e h a n k e r in g a f te r a lli< th a t you never have le a rn e d to know ;

IVh th e tliaco n le iit w ith a h ie th a t w alw ava thuH an d Ku;

K ’b the W Kudenng w hat \vi- a re . a ;u l w here "O are going to go.

H y life in lucky e n o u g h , 1 fane;>. to uiobt m en 8 ev ‘

a la iu ily grow s, th e o H en er som e one

liU i oii bo i'^rig. it foU ld ii't Im‘ o th e i-

►Vir th« n .o nlilVf*.

▲ml it b now wise.

, an d J a n e th e m ia-

A nd H U tcr Ja n e a n d uiyHeH', vve liavt* lea rn ed to cla im an d y ie ld :

Hbe ruleH in th e hou se at will, am i I in th e b a rn an d Held.

3o . iiJgh upon th ir ty j e a r s !—a* if w ritte n an d s ig n ed an d aealed .

I c o u ld n 't ch an g e it I w ou ld ; I've lost the how an d <he w hen ;

One day m y tim e w ill be up, trebB th e n ,

f o r Hingle w om en a re tough a n d live dow n th e aiu- gle m< u.

Hhe kept m e bo to htTnelf «Lo v.aB alw ays th e ^ s tro n g e r h a n d ,

A nd uiy lo t show ed well en o u g h , w hen I looked a ro u n d in th e la u d ;

But I m tn*od an d so re a t h e a r t, a n d I d o n 't q u ite u ndertitand .

I w onder how it liad b e e n if I 'd tak en w hat o thora need.

T he p lag u e , th e y say , o f a w ife, th e ca re o f a y o u n g ­e r b re e d ?

I f K dith P leaaau to u now w ere w ith m e ithh e e d ? f

Suppose th a t a Bon w ell g row n w ere th e re in the place of D an ,

And 1 le l t m y se lf in h im , as I v^as w hen m y work Ix'gau ?

I aho’ild feel no o ld e r , su re , a n d c e r ta in ly m o re r m an !

▲ •daughter, l>c8ide. in th e house ; n ay , let th e re be tw o o r th r e e !

We n ev e r can o v e rd o tb o d u ck th a t can n e v e r be.A nd w hat has com e to th e unvat m ig h t also h av e

com e to m o.

I ’ve th o u g h t, w hen a nudglibor's w ife o r hia ch ild was c a r r ie d aw ay,

T h a t to have n o lo ss was a g a in ; b u t now , 1 c a n h a rd ly s a y ;

He tHt-ms to poeBcas th e m still, u n d e r th e ridgcfl o f clay.

And sh a re a n d sh a re in a life is, som ehow , a d if fe r­e n t th in g

I lo n i p rtip c riy h e ld by deed, a n d th e r ich es th a t o ft tak e v .iu g ;

tee i HO e’oBt- lu th e b r e a s t !—I th in k it m u s t l>e th e touring.

I ’m d ry in g u p lik e a bn>ok w hen th e woods hav e been c lea red a r o u n d ;

Y ou 're su re i t m u s t alwavB ru n . you a rc u se d to th e ' s ig h t a n d so u u d ,

B u i it shriukH till th e r e ’s only le f t a Ktony r u t in th e g ro u n d .

T h e rv 's n o th in g to d o b u t tak e th e clayB as th ey com e au il go,

And no t to w o rry w ith th o u g h ts to show ,

f o r people so se ld o m talk of the to know , *

th a t n obody lik es

th in g s th ey w an t

T h e re 'b tim es w h e n th e way is p la in , a n d e v e ry th in g n early r ig h t,

And then , o f a s u d d e n , you Btand like a m a n w ith a c lo u d ed s i g h t ;

A b u sh seemR o f te n a b eas t, in th e d u sk o f th e fa l l­in g n ig h t.

m u s t m o v e ; m y jo in ts a re fetifl ; th e w e a th e r is b n fd in g ra in .

A nd Dan is h u r ry in g on w ith h is p lo w -team u p th e lan e .

go to th e v illage s to r e ; I ’d r a th e r n o t ta lk w ith J a n e .

A STORY SUCCESSFULLY TOLD.A>

Pretty, plump Mm. Archibald Steele wrote tiioTollowiug paragrapli iu oue of her lettere to her iiuMoauu t.uc uLIkji day:

“ .Johu must come clown tiere at ouce, whether you can spare him or not. Our dear little Laura is greatly taken with a hill, tliii) youug mail, with a hooked uose ami tliiu lips, called Stuyvesant. I t is whi.sperod about the hotel that he is a very good matcli, and h:is the veritable bhte blood (jf the old Dutch Goveruor in hiB veins. I must say it has a queer way of showiug its(flf, for the youug mau rs as piilc as a specter ; and dressed in that white thick, with liis siuikeu eyes and biUoius skill, is enough to frighten one.[ have growu to hate him, wliile Laura in growing to do (juite tlie contrary, I ’m afraitl. '•'All the evening he leans up against the wall, never dancing, or open­ing liis mouth save to give vent to some ......... ..hateful sarcastic criticism upou^he scene i _anjaround liim, and yet dear' Laura’s eyes— —as, iutleed, all the other pretty eyes alKuit —QTO perpetually beseeching him for attention. In the daytime he is al­ways with a loug black horse, that covers more ground with its legs when it is going than any animal I ever saw.W'heu Laura goes out to drive behind it, and vanial,>e8 out of sight with the 1)011 V *eahM»,|L^O’em l# lo tliinjj jfcow dren'dAil iV WOlfli® be xfonr deaAltlle girl would beediue part aud pafcSl of this wretched mau aud his wicked beast.Ho I tliink John liad better coine down at once ; I quite loug to sec Iris liand s o m e face and bear his honest voice, and I think it is about time John should tell his little stoi-y to Limra,and have things »<-ith'd comfortably.’'

Mf. ArchiW ldj»M'

iujwii‘iv/wu uloluxmuv ID QH uiyO* Ju*Steele smiled the third time, with the airof one who was not at all afraid of any bilious, blue-blooded obetacle that might Ih> thrown iu the path of a domestic hap­piness which he firmly believed hael been airangeil by an omnipotent hand.

“ John,” said Mr. Steele, closing the I door of his private ofiiee, and looking upon his young clerk benevolently,

' “ I ’ve got an order here from Mrs.I Steele, wliieh 1 wish you would at- ' tend to.” . .

“ Certainly, sir,” said Johu. “ Sliall i I go out aud get ^ e article myself i”

“ Why, the fact is, John,” said the j merchant, enjoying his joke more and I more, “ it’s only one article—a rather I bulky one. It was bargained for loug I ago. I think you will have to go with

it, John.” ,“ Down to the seashores !” said John,

getting a little hot aud fluttered, “ Is it a very valuable parcel, sir V’

“ Well, perliaps your natiuM modesty may depreciate its worth, John. Mrs. Steele and I think a good deal of it, and Laura, too—I ’m siu'e she does. The commodity is yoiu-self, John. Mi’s. Steele wants you to go down and take a little holiday there.”

When the -name of Laura was men tinned, the young man’s face grew more flustered and hot thou before.

“ You ore very kind, sir,” he said, “ and Mrs. Steele is always more like an angel tlian a woman.”

“ Rather solid and plump for that,” in­terposed Mr. Steele, but liking the phrase nevertheless.

“ But it is simple madness,” pursued Johu, “ to dream of further happiness than I enjoy now—your affection and that of your wife, my position here; I don’t dare—I can’t hope for anything more. Oh, Mr. Steele, I can’t tell her

j my story, sir. She would shrink from me with horror and aversion, she is so

I young, so beautiful. Let me at least en­joy the present.”

• • And in the meantime some cadaver­ous, bilious, blue-blooded scoundrel will caiTy her off from us a ll!”

Then John’s face grew pale aud stern. ‘ ‘ If there is the slightest feeling upon her part for—for any one else, then in­deed, Mr. Steele, my case is hopeless.”

Tlio commerci^ paper fluttered from his hand, the pencil fell from his ear; he leaned liis head against the desk aud trembled.

“ Why, who would supixise you could be such a coward?” said Mr. Steele, im­petuously. “ You sliall go down with me this very day.”

All the way to the seashore John’s face wore the look of one who had resolved to storm a deadly breach, but who did not hope to survive the attempt.

Even the ocean, when it confronted them, wore a threatening look. Upon the horizon a pile of clouds formed a background wan and gloomy, a great black mist lay in the zenith, a dense red vapor almost touched the water-.

“ A very nasty sen,” said Mr. Steele. John snuffed it in, his eyes dilating,

his broad shoulders expanding, his head high iu the sea scented air.

A tramp on the hard, wet sand, and like a meteor a long black horse shoi, by, disappearing in tJie mist, leaving for Jolm the memory of a charming head crowned with blonde curhug hair, two kind eyes bent upon his own, a white waving hand extended in salutation.

“ John,” said Mr. Steele, “ did yon see the face of that man ? I coimt upon your saving Laura. Did you see his thin, cruel lips, his treacherous eyes?”

“ I only saw Laura, sir,” said Johu, simply.

Later on, Mr Archibald Steele and his plump pretty vil■e were alone to­gether in their private parlor. Her dimpled luuid lay lovingly iu his, her shapely heao, fresh from the hands of the coiffeur, rested recklessly on his shoulder.

Suddenly the door opened, and there heard the rustle of silken drapery.

different versions of the alfaij:; but one and all agreed that the rescuer ooold be nothing leas th a n a chainpiou swim- autf.' - • •»

” A regular 'sriiter-dog!’ said one gentleman to Mr. Steele ; aud os the meroliaut had lieard tbis epithet used bqt uttce before iu bis life, and on an oooasion of vital interest to himself, he sought out the hero of the boor, and found, to his unbounded astouishmeut, it was John Waters himself! He was (luite enveloped in the floimcos and fur- l^lows of pretty and symiiathetic wom­en, who insisted iijm)!! knowing every’ lialf second if he was mire he felt strong autl well, aud how iu the world could he buffet those dreadful waves in that grand, heroic way,,aud how did he man age to drag poor dear Mr. Stuyvesaut in to the shore ?

John, like any other hero of the hour, enjoyed this womanly adulation, but looked anxiously at Mr. Steefe when ho approached.

“ Hum I” growled tliat worthy mer- clumt, “ a pretty fellow you to inter­fere with other jreople’s plans ! How do you know he ^vauted to be res­cued?”

“ Ho appeiu-od anxious that way, sir,” said Jolin. “ Ho wrapped himself about me like a devil fish. I thought one time we’d both go down togotlier. There ought to be a school for teaching people the easiest thing in the world ; the wa­ter itself is an accessory, if you manage it right.'”

“ Oh, do tell us how, Mr. Waters, please!" chorosed the pretty and sympathetic women ; aud as John began his lesson, Mr. Steele slipped away.

“ Oh, papa,” began Laura, “ how is Mr. Stuyvesant.”

“ I don’t know—I tlidn’t ask,” he re-I)lied, “ I was so interested in the fel- ow that dragged him ashore. He’s an

old friend of ours. Tlie way we niatle his acquaintance was on just such an occasion ; he saved a lady from drown­ing.”

“ Why, papa,” said Laura, “ he must be a splendid fellow.”

“ Magnificent!” said Mr. Steele. “ You see, we had traveled over consid­erable of the world together, your moth­er aud I, while you were yet a babj-. And we found it rather odd one morning to discover tiiat having crossed the ocean aud the Alps, loitered in the Hud-

Highlands, traveled tlience downsonthrough the Mississippi Valley, across the American Desert to California, aud back again by another route,your mother had never been up the East river as far as Morrisania. I t seemed so absurd to liave neglected this home excursion that we determined upon it at once. The morning was wet, but that didn’t matter.Your mother looked prettier in a water­proof and rubbers, with a shovel-hat tied under her chin, than most women would for November, in a boll-dress. She wasn’t a bit afraid of rain or mud. She was a little too reckless, for getting ashore to see oue of the institutions for vagabond boys, her foot slipped off the plunk, and she dis­appeared.”

Mr. Steele stopped a minute; his voice faltered; the littie plnnip hand of liis . . ,■wife slipped into liis own; lie clutched it Ame.nca and went on again.

“ One minute I saw her as neat aud trim a little figm-e as ever graced a water­proof and shovel-liat, tlie next she was gone.”

“ Gone!” cried Laui*a. “ Gone where ?”

“ Into the water, child; into the hun­gry green waves that surged up to take her away from the fondest heart in the universe; and if it hadn’t been for one of those verj’ vagabond boys, who had been lurking there for a chance to escape from the island, you’d have lost us both, my dear, for I made an agonized phmgo after her, though I ’m ashamed to say I

Laura stopped oue moment to whisper to her mamma, and Johu gaspe4j>al Mr.Steele:

<*If I daroa—if I odIt dorec tell her—”

“ I ’vd told her m yielf.^n^d th e a e r- ohaut. . '

*‘.That 1 w a s a paup^ -without home or friends?”

I told the stoiy' iu my own -way, John,” oontimied Mr. Steele, “ and I flatter mvsidf I told it successfully; don’t spoil it ii you please. I have managed the past and the present; do yon look out for the future, John.”

And Jolm did. Laura walked through the parlors that night, the envied of all the p r e t^ ' and sympathetic women and brave and appreciative men that congre­gated there.

^ ‘W ^ ■■ '■IVhat Becomes of the Alcohol

,, Drink.Now, after an investigation of a very

elaborate character, Dr. Austie and Drs. Thudichnm and Dopree have satisfac­torily proved that only a very small por­tion of tlie spirit which is taken into a living body is expelled out of that body 08 alcohol, in the secretions, and that there must be some other means by which the spirit is disjxised of in the system. In one very remai-kable aud memorable experiment, Dr. Austie gave a dog, weighing ten pounds, the liberal dose of 2,000 grains of alrahol lu ten days, and on the last day of the ten ho administered ninety-five grains of the spirit as a final dose, and then two hours afterward killed the dog, and immediate­ly subjected the whole Ixidy—blood, se­cretion, flesh, membranes, brain and bone—to rigorous analysis, and he found in the whole texture of the body only about twenty-three and one-half grains of spirit. The other 1,976 grains had clearly, therefore, been turned into something else witliiu the living system.

'rhese experiments directly refer to our query—the settlement of the food- power of alcohol os a doctrine of physi­ological science.

Before reasoning out this proposition, we must state certain facts which it seems impossible to reconcile with any other theory than tliat alcohol is a food. Dr. Anatie relates the cost) of an old soldier who was under his care at the Westminster Hospital in 1861, who had lived for twenty years upon a diet com­posed of a bottle of unsweetened gin and “ one small finger-length of toasted bread ” per day, and who maintained the structures of his body for this long pe­riod upon that v e^ remarkatile regimen. Similaily, an old Roman soldier admired by the Emperor Augustus, when ivsked how he managed to keep up such a splen­did development, replied, “ lutus vino,

Txrirwextus oleo"—“ With wine within and oil without.”—Pojndar Science MoiUhly

A Central American Confederation.During the post three or four weeks

says the New York Herald, rumors liave reached us from Central America to the effect that a rerival of the old “ Federa­tion of the United States of Central

is soon about to take place. It \rill bo remembered that after throwing off the Spanish yoke and undergoing a number of vicissitudes, botli foreign and domestic, Guatemala, Costa Rica, San Salvador, Honduras, and Nicaragua formed on the 1st day of July, 1823, a federal republic under the above titie. After fifteen years of civel feud aud wrangling among themselves the union decreed its own di.Hsolution in 1839. Since that time until now the States wliich acquired their separate sovereign­ty have never ceased to regret the dis­ruption of the Q<)nfederation to which they ouce belonged. In the present

Mf. Archib^d(% ale, ^ e d when lie put the letfor of Tiis W e luBis waist-

wasA still shapelier little head, and fresher from the hands of the cciffeiir, all un­rumpled by the audacious touch of a

I mortal, peeped in at the door. Laura was pale; her little white hands were ciasped togetlier; her musical voica trembled.

“ Oh, papa, mamma, come directly! Mr. Stuyvesant ventured out too far,

Was dro-wned?” said Mr. Stoele, with a pecnliai- combination iu his voice of pity and relief.

“ No, UQi how ,can yon suppose so dreaditil a tmng ? ^[e was rescued, but he is very weak and ill. He has asked forme—aud may I go? Will you come with me, mamma? Oh, do, I beg of you I Can’t she, papa ?”

Her blue eyes tilled "with tears; her little feet seemed panting to fly tlirough the corridor.

“ Certainly not,” said Mr. Steele. “ Let him wait till he is able to come to you or to me. Eitlier a man is drowned or he isn’t. Because he was imbecile enough to risk bis life, that is no

I i-oason. for your being the talk of the I hotel.”

_______ _____________™ movement, initiated for the pm-posc ofcouldn’t Bwim a stlroke, and should only i restoring the extinct federation of Cen- ivoyrt iiwi iTrtffnni ft plnmiTiofi i Anioirctt to itfi lorincr plftCP umonffof lead, but an official standing by caught

Laura raised hot head proudly.“ No danger an ,

IS odCfi|ucH now withv,.kti-pockei, a n d picking tip the morning j sides, every ono imper, scanned Ihcpngh bisgolo-ximmeU the one thatres«ied him.” spectacles the nOwl Qf the day. iiofhiB^ therein to niflle the axobediugly j p Fatiftfactory couditio?i of affaire, he put it down, and smiled again aa only a wroe- porous, contented; down-town merchant can smile.' * He wq^sjqe o t tWae Imppy cxcepti'oa^to'ihAbrdhiiiiy fills, xritli Tfhbm e^rythifi^ weiii well.His whole appearance was an oxclama- »ion point to that effect. If he vontoied a Hale hazardously in trade, for^ne fcrlr'raoil bor sails to favor himi I f hs •e t hie heftrt npon anything telating to

and, l»e-

d what madman was that ?” said poor >mTite^wlib,dohldnqt,tecoiicile Inmsclf to the ^present coiiditibn of f- fairs. , .

“ I don’t khoW-htf I believe ;I was so interested ifi Mr. Stuyvesaut I forgbfcto ask.”

“ i*[ said Mr. St^le, geltihgiinipnhis root, and walking to the dw n “ I ’ll go and And out all about i t 'D'o’yon s t ^ here till I return.”

Before he had gone far Mr. Bteolobeard from the excited guests sereral

and held me, aud cried out that Johu Waters had her safe as a trivet; and pres­ently that vagabond boy came up ^rith your sweet mother on the other side of the boat, and tlie official cried out, ‘ He’s a regular water-dog, that Johnny Wat­ers !’ And these were the very wonls a guest hero used iu relation to John a minute or so ago.”

“ John I” cried poor Ijewildered Laura, “ our John? Mamma? My mamma? Was mamma the lady? Was John the | boy ? Aud is it John, our John, that i saved poor Mr. Stuyvesant!”

“ The very same, ilarling—John, our i John; he’s always ou hand where there’s trouble or danger. ”

“ Oh, mammal mamma!” cried Laura, forgetting nil the years that hatl passed since the accident, and crumpling both the coiffured heads in a most reck­less manner.

“ Papa,” she theii said, “ we must go and find John. I want to tell him how much I — I—”

“Yes, dear,” said Mr. Arciiibald Steele, aud all tire way through the corridor and into the parlors of the hotel, with his plump and pretty xriffe on one arm, his lovely tlaughter on the other, ho smiled.

But John was still surrounded by the pretty and sympathetic women, who bad cmejly deserted the blue-blodded de­scendant of the old Dutch GoVemor, ly­ing in his most graceful and laug;uid of attitudes on a neighlxiring lounge—the descendant, not the Governor—and had flocked oue and all to the lumdsome and heroic founder of the new school for teaching people the way to be rescued from drowning.

These charming creatures spent so much of their time at the sea shore, and i t was BO necessary and sO nioe to be wise I

John was almost hidden in flounces and laces;; but when his eyes met j u r a ’s, ha plunged out of these cosily blUows nftth his''-usual ease an d . ihlrepidity. There waa something in Lanraw eyes that he .bad never seen thece'before; a temptmg languor, a bewitohing shyaess, a bewildering splendor, that steepM his 8ool in a a a d sweet h c ^ .

America tothe nations, Guatemala takes the lead.

The figures given below show the area iu squoio miles and the population of the five independent states comprised witliin the limit of the contemplated con­federation.

.1 real),Ueptiblirn. S /jiia r f mileK. l'o]iulalim>.

1. U u a to m a la ..................................19-2,876 1,180,(1002. S au S a lv a d o r .......................... T .x a (MK),Q003. H o n d u ra .s ................................... *7,093 350,0004 . CoBla R ic a ................................... 21,495 16,5,000B. N ic a ra g u a .................................. 58,171 3.50,000

[A w f i te r l a ttie H «w Y ork H tn t id a l la d M t o U « ra v aaea o f th e “ fe v e r In th a tiS la te , f jo iu1831 l o 18M, w h en M ich ig an rece iv ed te n s of th f ii- aan d e o< Mew Y ork e m ig ra n ta , (luoiea to ik h td

Y au have y o u r S ta te o f V arm o H u t - H a t w hat o f a ll th a t T

Be au re th e g ir ls a re p r e t ^ _T h e c a ttle very fa t.

B n t who am o n g h e r D io u n ta ln a In c lo u d s a n d auow w ould e « y ,

W hen he co u ld hav e a p ra ir ie lu U lch -i-g an -l-a 7

T h e n th e r e ’s y o u r M sfsach u sv ttz—Once good e^toogh, be su re ;

UBt n o w SMB’s a lw sy a la y in g « o T a x a t io n o r iB au ttfe . ...

She costs you pack s o f tro u b le .Y et devil a l>eck can j s i y ;

W hile a ll IH S c r ip tu re m eaeu re Til alichd-giLf-i-tt.

A nd th e r e ’s y o u r la u d o f lU ue I.aw *W here d e su o n s c u t y o u r l i a r ,

F o r fe a r y o u r lovkg au d te u e ts S h o u ld n u t exactly a i iu s re ;

W here l>eer th a t w orks ou tHauday A p e n a lty m u s t pay ,

W hile all is f ree a n d easy In M Ich-l-gan-l-a .

T o ta ls ............................................326,970 2,645,000

Eartliiiuakc Waves.A. L. Cox, of Santa Rosa, Iihs just

returned from a trip up the coast, where he has been engaged surveying for soifae days past. He informs us thaf:" the hoariest sea known in the past four years was rolling mland on 'Tuesday and Wednesday, along the north coast. There was no wind. Tlie schooners George Letris, Champion and Sarah Louisa had anchored at Stewart’s Point just before the heavy sea set in. The swell continued to increase in volume until it rejjeafiidly swept the decl^ of the vess('l.s. The smml boats were stove up or washod overboard. The men on board had no way to get ashore and were in great danger. John Dinsmore, a carpenter at Stewart’s Point, with a heroisnii vyorthy of all praise, volunteered to go in a small boat and bring tlie men ashore. He made three tripe, la n d i^ tliei OTews of each sohooner safely. Dinsmore, wbfiso cour­age did not fail while hi* brav^ ^ r k was in bond, fainted from exhaustion and ex­citement when it was over. Tlie George Liewis had received tlie most injui'y when our informant left, but no serious ac­cident had befallen either vessel, though the swells were breaking over them.— Santa Rosa (Cal.) Democrat.

Pith and Point.Tub alligator that syvallo-wed, a corse

is dead. It stayed on hia stomach.We are told that notliing was mads in

vain. But how about a fashionable girl ? Isn’t she maiden vain ?

BEWAiiEof that friend who comes with the steel of a dagger concealed in the soft velvet of a compliment.

Reject^ Love- — But couldn’t you learn to love me ? Young Lady—I might if—if I never saw you again.

“ CouRTSHn* is bliss,” said an ardent young man. “ Yes, and matrimony is blister,” snarled an old bachelor.

Troy has a yvrinkled, sallow old iMU who, being about to seek a young wife, inquired at a drug store for “ the man as enamels faces, b o ’s to make em look pooty.”

Dom P edro of Brazil will bring $200,-000 worth of diamonds when he oomes to visit tliis country. He is going to rfye them away to young men 5Wio part their lioir in the center.

Up and down stairs—Young mistress (at the parlor door)—Eliza, what is the bell ringing for so violently ? Cook (be­low)—It’s on’y me, m’nm. I want you down in the kitchen a minute. ,

A STRANGER kissed a LaCrosse girl by mistake, and was then licked by her two brothers for being mistaken. He then deliberately kissed her for being who she was, aud was licked for bemg impu­dent.

Now TH A T foreigners are ot last allow­ed to travel in the interior of Ghina, what a splendid new field is tims un­expectedly opened for the life insur­ance, lightning-rod and sewing machine men of America.

A M ISS of ton or eleven, on her 5vny to school, 5vas heard saying to lierself: “ A noun is the name of any person, place or thing, aud if any of the girls have hooked that apple from my desk I ’ll raise a fuss with the whole school.—Detroit Free Press^

During a clerical conference the fol­lowing conversation was heard between t5vo newsboys: “ Isay, Jim, what’s the meaning of so many ministers being here altogether?” “ Why,” answered Jim, scornfully, “ they always meet once a year to swap sermons. ”

Yesterday morning when the fire bells rang a man hurried through the Post- office, looked all around, and then in­quired of a boy: “ Sonny, was that an alarm of fire ?’ “ I heard the bells go­ing,” replied the boy, “ but I don’t think they alarmed the tiro much.”—Detroit Free Yress,

“ I d i d n ’t steal no pound of terhack- cr,” said a prisoner in Springfield, Mass., just 08 he was leaving court, no proof having been produced against him; “ I didn’t take more’n a handful.” “ Come back,” said the Judge, “ and be fined $10. The Court convicts you on your own confession.”

Mr. B.—“ Good morning, sir; I come to tune your piano.” Deaf old gent on the porch— “ Eh? didn’t understand what you said. “ I come to tune your piano. ” “ You will have to speak louder;1 can’t hear what you say.” “ I oome to tune your piano.” “On, you come from Louisiana, did you ? Well, that’s good;sit down and tell us all about it.”«

The following lines appear in the Bos­ton Olobe:

W hen th e p a s se n g e r w ishes to leav e th e c a lr ,H e m a s t r in g th e b e ll w ith m o d e s t a ir .M u st bow to th e g e n tle m a n ly d r lv a lr A nd ra jr : •* B eg p a rd o n , ex cu se m e , ea lr ,B u t re a lly T d lik e to g e t o a t o f th e c a lr .”T h e n th e d r iv e r w ill t o m w ith a t e r r ib le g la re .A nd sh o u t a t th e w re tch ed p a s s r n j a l r :" A b lan k o f a p lace to a to p th is a i r M ach in e , o a tb l a g r a d e : you h o ld o n th e r e .”A ud c lam m y a n d co ld g row s th e p aeso n jiiir . A nd he w ilts lik e a b lig h ted c u c iu u b a ir .

Tbi

of hi* mates,inquired a school boy of one

“ wliat is the meaniog of relic*?” “ Don’t you know? Well, I oon tell you. You know the master Uok4iil fno iu school yesterday?” “ Yes.” “ Wen, he wasn't satisfied with that, bnt kept me after sohool and licked mo again. That i* what 1 call a re-liok,”

A Curious Fact.The greatest merchant in the worl^

bears one exceptional mark of peculiar character. I will explain by saying that A. T. Stewart never -was a clerk. He was, in fact, not bred to any busi­ness, but came to America an educated

oung man, whose ejnyeotations were to ecome a teacher. He found employ­

ment in this business until he wi s in­stinctively led to the dry-goocis trade, which he has pursued to his present greatness. Claflm was a clerk near Wor­cester, and subsequently became a dry- g(90(ls retailer in that thriving town, whence he came to this city os a'partner in the firm of Bulkley & Glatlin. As Stew­art never liad any business education to prepare him for a mercantile career, wo see more -vividly the power of genius in creating a vast business, and ordaining a system of government such os the world has never seen oqualetL I t is, perliaps, Imcauso Stewart bos never been a clerk that ho has so little sympathy with tliis unfortunate class. He has the repu-, tation of being a very hard taskmaster, (uid I have been told tliat one of his rules is to never give employment to any one who had ever loft his service, either vol­untarily or by discharge.—WcM/ lo r* DeUtr,

Co i n amh

On the 2 moising, t Batilt was 1 stolethe iMstitui offered, bu were fruitl* knew, how< readily be i -ed patiectlj by Joabua ' tw ti^ , wh<

ed his trip the safes th be exchang dicationa wt committed He procoi<e( seen iu Wiz, robbery, « bank offiGta their nnml m th author given to Od tl/rop, and he went to 1 jty.

An arraii bairglars’ ag secluded pit and the p< burglars off< tie* except the currencj that was th to the gover care to nee seqmed indir and twirled asked what ( the other sec

“ My dir( cent of theply-

The interv three hours, lected for t] the burglars’ to restore all reucy and go burglars hoti asked time fi the bank.

Ool. Wing mission to tl unanimously should be pai a Receiver bj ing, a decisio the appointm Receiver con and obtained authorizing 1 exceeding $1( “ certain asse' The Receiver 000, and anth property. Oi Wing started agent of the aud Col. Wir agreed by teh S t NiohoLis I 27th. AU pa meeting was a ing up town ii flights of stair a saloon, Ca on time, and n robbers’ ageni Ho was not th Wing had seei dently did nc Tho collar of drawn up aroi hat was down 5 v h i t e handkc completely coi $10,000 was ii gart handed I agent handed Taggart Th< had promised Immediately a the man went market value c is $50,000.

A New PT(M. Cecil, a 1

vented a new materials for : receiving the of-Wat, and in tho French an increased p properties of by avoiding th ting the grail pounds of brea make what is t Tho new proce The qpgr- watotV af ing'eylint its outer husk,5 per cent, ol oi-e then soften

space ol ftS to turo of seven! licit. They ar made into dou| usual.

BoninanibuA enrions cai

tho London A’< re.spondent at ( mutgfir ii> the

he says, begins of his Koraa i peats the dirit shortness of ti lenrih of ete: finally, winds i or sluiek, h D i tho soundest ol way to put a st tiini the man c any one awake eyes for a mini ty n jq o ^ th p fl commenoe his

N - l - A .

!« ra U s U v d M t o U e r in UtsbBtate, faoiu oelred tena of juid qn<AM tbwofd>1V arm ouut—

«U*»-luntalna rould M y , prairie

nafUuButU— e B u re ; Kylcg OD

•Atrouble, i**y :ueasurv

of n in e Ijiw -i uur Hair, d teuetB i|u ar» ;

oa Bwuday

ny

*Olut.kvallowed, n corse liB stomach, ling wafl madQ jnl a s h io D a b l e g i r l f

I who comes with ioncealed in the icut.5u t c o u l d n ’t y o u ;g Lady—I m i g h t a g a h i .” said an ardent ad matrimony is bachelor., sallow old D^n ek a young wife, a for “ the man as

make em look ^

I will bring $200,- whcn he comes to is going to rfye

,en AWio part tueir

-Young mistress ilina, what is the mtly? Cook (be­am. I want you minute.LaCrosse girl by licked by her two ttaken. He then ir for being who d for being impu-

s are at last allow- iterior of China, field is thus un- ir the life insur- d sewing machine

fen, on her way to iig to herself: “ A ly person, place or ) girls have hooked sk I ’ll raise n fuss A.—Detroit Free

onference the fol- as heard between f, Jim, wliat’s the inisters being here

answered Jim, ays meet once aI

when the fire bells lirongh the Post- und, and then in- onny, was that an card the beAs go- “ but I don’t think

much.”—Detroit

)O u n d o f t e r b a c k - i p r i n g r t e l d , M a s s . , r c o u r t , n o p r o o f

a g a i n s t h i m ; “ I a n d f u l . ” “ C o m e 5, “ and be f i n e d i c t s y o u o n y o u r

irning, sir; I come Deaf old gent on

lidn’t understand ome to tune your ire to speak louder; » y .” “ I come to In, you come from Well, that’s good;1 about it.”•appear in the Bos-

9 to iPBve the ca lr, m odest s ir ,

ily d r lv s lr xenso m e, aair,It of the c s lr ." r llh s te rrib le Rlarv, p s s s e n j s i r :[> th is a irm hold on th ere .”ITS the pasnenjiur,I cucum balr.

Fset.lant in the worl^ mark of pecuhar plain by saying lever was a clerk, ired to any busi- rica an educated peotations were to e found employ- until be wn in- dry-goods trade, d to his present a clerk near Wor- ly became a dry- it thriving town,1 city as a'partner i Clatlin. As Stew- ness education to lantile career, wo Dwer of ^n iu s in s, and or^ining a suoli 0 8 the world . I t is, perliaps, jever been a clerk mpathy with tliis [e lias the repu- ' hard taskmaster, at one of his rules lymenC to any one irvice, eiUier vol- rge.—New YorL

'7

EMiANt'E OF C'BIME.f ' o H i r s m U l a g w i t h B u r g U i r * —T h « K o b -

b v c jr ■ » n l t r u p t e d t h e W l o t h r o r < M e .)B e e A —p f e l e e j r C o m p r p i u l s e d U n d e r O s u r t

* * ^ ^ ‘ *1 ‘ i I* I , i.On the oi July 1^^ in the evly

morning, th© safe of the Wintlixop (lie.) Bank was blown open, and the burglars stole $9€,U0i in bonds, bankrupting the institutien. A reward of $10,000 was offered, but fciie efl’orts of the detticUves were fruitlesn. The ofiicers of tlie bouk knew, however, that the bonds could not reatlily be nnffotiated, and so they waitr 'od patiently. The first clue was obtained' ny Joehtta Tagigart, the Philadelphia de t^tii^e, who, being in Boston on busiuees

d i^ « f ta ? th o robbery, extend^ ed his trip to Wiutlirop. He examiueU the safes that had been sent to Boston to be exchanged for new ones, and the in­dications were (bat the burglary had been committed by persons whom he knew. He procured a descriptiou of certain men seen in Winthrop on the day before the robbery, and aeon after wrote to the

. I

Ir«B versus Wood on the Farm,“ As Hook at my iron field gatee,”

says the celebrated English farmer, J.J. Meohi, “ iron wire fences, iron sheep linrdl««; siinnlied t'C nin by tny friend Garrett,' t h ( ^ odd years ago, but,all perfect now, and whan X oompare them with the rotten gate posts and other \fOodeu matter of an equal age, X <i>i only wonder tliat agricnltiire stilt runs in the old wooden rut. Iron tubs and iron barrows stand alike heat and cold—no cooperage aud carpentering. The posts which support our e d s i^oold, if of wood, have thou: feet placed lyt^u^ ihe socket of an iron lupe driven in,Uie ground. I saw this a<lmirably dohe at toe Earl of Easel's, Oassiobtiiy, iriierethe lower en,d of''uijpiauea“ nr. pdies ‘ reubid iii the socket of iron pipes (Oa. each), firmly timbedded in the soil. Pig troughs and I SouMb, Sc tlriuking troughs foi auimals ami poultry li?d tiuT wISi! appear to be nearly evorlaeting, while the water in them Is alx^ays acceptable.We find the large cuculor pig trouglis very convenient in the sheep'fold, for their weight anti form prevepta their be-

Gaisiiil IS FoDsils of M .fT T jm i?

8 0 O t« B S B W K W ,li« ., jM i. l7,U 7l .H R. Si(l. i _ait—1 u » n u*d Itn M I »b*’ ■ ‘ . . » K- m lu wont fo ra to t^iUn'

tWOllUT I b S t ---------- ^

tw*. Blut tU hon

' .. .b. S tS tu ,.

DYSPEPSIA.8 V liIP T0 1 l 8 .-W » p t of SDOotlto, rUin* of food and

wind from {So itomBoh, Boiaity of ths BU,m»ch. no*rt.

1 nimblln ^ y d jiw ln i co e ^ n e e i. which I4 og4«iofl. ^i«M>49lg-g-dBMTfea»;-rTtfi iiuwfM too anna. TUa h U cUmmy, 01 b u a aour ot bliiar Uate. QUtat

h v ,* f* " A * * * ' ' ^ oaJplmion of tha<ll»«rdera I ^ i e MtuSTaa aaoinw «^bh.,Sc. la«J»to»nar»ld*iki ,Un«uor»nd»ae7

•Ion to moMon, d«iactiun of the apirftj, dlatutoad i Im p

G E M S O P

ENeLISHSONG» • ■ 1. '»

7 6 S o « s « , ssch S tru< Q tm uu4«BlsM y P o p u la r. t.I Amonji Uie BtltMiUae ttllee see:

IV n ic A rc th .

I t i l t lb ; A r c tu lc e .

t i t c H i M S « « .H o a c n fa r t o .

T U B G E M S O F K I V G I .1S H S O N G la * book of foil .m ialr , 1.^

Amon« tba Autbort kra :lU D T SOOTT. C aMPAMA, I4 M04AT, OoUNOD, H aTTOS,

UOW X.TOPUPF, B a h n b y , OLa BIBEI., a b t .Tba O K M H O F E N G L . I S H IM>WU wlU beeent,

poM|aid, to Aliy addrwa, for the ReU ll Price, which la.In Bdarda.SlW; inC'lotb.^.OUi out, $GM. • ‘

Feel Myeeff a New Man.

bank ofliciais asking them to send one of j iug mpset by the sheep» snd water their numlmr to Philadelphia at once j J^t. The temperature of (he water is with authority to act. The mission was j also slightly raised by the lieated iren. I

iyea to Otfi. Gharlee Wing, of Win- i imve seen lambs iujiired by drinking

Mr H . m St b TBNB:N a t ic x , Htaa., June l»t, 187X I

iStiptember i full author- i

Ag, 'hrop, and on the 6th of

he went to Philodelpfiia with ity.

An arrangement was made for the bairglars’ agent to meet Col. Wing in a secluded place on the 9th of September, and the person who represented the burglars offered to restore all the securi­ties except tlio government bonds and the currency. Ool. Wing saul that if tliat was tlie final conclusion in regard to tha government bonds, he would not care to ne^tiate. The robbers’ agent seemed indifferent, and smoked his cigar, and twirled a cane. Finally Col. Wing asked what could be doue in regard to the other securities.

“ My directions are for twenty per cent, of the market value,” was the re-piy-

The interview was tlieu adjourned for three hours, and another place was se­lected for the second meeting. Then the burglars’ agent offered for 310,000 to restore all the property, except ciu-- reucy and government bonds, which the burglars had disposed of. Col. Wing asked time to report to the Trustees of the bank.

Col. Wing reported the result of his mission to the bank officers, and they imauimously thought that (he 310,000 should be paid. As the appointment of a Receiver by the court was then pend­ing, a decision was deferred until after the appointment liad been made. The Receiver concurred w-itli the Trustees, and obtained an order from the Court authorizing him to offer a reward, not exceeding 310,000, for tlie recovery of “ oertain assets set forth in his jwiition. ” The Receiver then gave Col. Wing 310,- 000, and authorized him to recover the property. On the 25th of October Col. Wing started for Philadelphia. The agent of the robbers was in New York, aud Col. Wing and Detective Taggart agreed by telegraph to meet him in the St. Nicholas Hotel on the evening of the 27th. AU parties were prompt, and a meeting was aiTonged for the same even­ing up town in a small back room, up two flights of staii's in a building occupied as a saloon. Col. Wing and Taggai t were on time, and a few minutes aflerward the robbers’ agent enteve<X witll a package. He was not the same j^rson w'hom Col. Wing had seen in Philadelphia, and evi­dently did. not wish to be recognized. The collar of his heavy overcoat was drawn up oroimd his neck, and his felt hat was down over his eyes. He held a white handkerchief to his face, which completely concealed his features. The' 310,000 was in 3100 bank notes. Tag­gart handed tlie money over, and the agent handed a package to Detective Taggart. The securities which the agent had promised to return were all there. Immeuiatedy after receiving the money the man went out of the room. The market value of the securities recovered is 350,000.

A New Process of Making Brcail.M. Ceoil, a French engineer, has in-

new process of preparing

'*** And emrneat panuAAlon

V EO K'TIN K for D.vsi>epBla. ol wlifc-h I IiAve eudefud for 1 “ »»« »«»d onlr two koWlea, aad Alraadr (eel myealt a new man.

HwapactfuUj, D R J . W. C A R T E R

D O N O T F O R G E T O U R O T H E R R E C E N T B O O K S ,Soho Mo n a r th , 71 cenie, fi-r'SlngfnB Hchooli.' Sh in im u U iv k b , 86 coiUa, (oc Kcl«>oU.H iou Sc h o o l CHom. t l OO: for High Nchcwla, Ac. I4 VINU W a t ek h , ‘M cento i for Praleo Meetlnge.

O L I V E R D I T S O N A C O l . B o il o n .

C H A S . H . O I T S O N & C O , 711 Broadw ay, N . Y .

water immediately taken from a spring, at a,tempera(Aite of#boMt)48 deg., in hot weather. My twelve-iron rick frames (Garrett's patent) are worth as much as they were thirty odd years ago, when first put down—no rato. By the by, this reminds mu that my praotical friends | sarcastically suggestetl thirty years ago i that I should want no such frames, for I should never gi-ow up enough to till ray now great barn. We evidently, on the score of profit, should pass more rapid­ly from the old wooden age to that of iron, cool and brick, with steam us a mo­tive ijower. Who would liave .tliought, forty years ago, of building iron ships V

A Source of Great Anxiety.My dAugbter baa received

V b s k t ib er ban received treAt benefit from tha oaaof

lia r deaSalnS'uaalth waa a eowree of graAt an ile ly to all of her (rlenda. A fow botUea of the Ve o b - TlMB reatorad bar bealtbl atranuth knd apbetlto

, J „ . „ N. U . T lL b K M .Ine. and lUat Eatata A (t.,« Saara'BnUdiow. B o bto n , Mam ., June 5, 187S.

PeipCURE„„_„Ing. P r o f . D . M r a k c p . 1*. O. E o i 475. LAp..rte, Ind

The moct tooceMful reiikedy of the pre«> entdfty. Send forPe- l>er on Oyluni lUt-.w Y

Y<<u w jn i to make \1 ^ ^ PHOK^TH ■ ■ ■ H SelUnctbo l>€)ft article

H •reroffored to A g ^ U .

in three boars.One Agent made $ 1 5

T r y I t . AddreM,H O O u A J 0 8 K P H , Indianapolis, Ind.

WHAT I KNOW ABOUT VE6ETINE. iTfaDelQKly moi

„ _ _ So u th B o it o n , May 9, 1870.H. R S t e v e n i :

Dear Sir—I have had conalderable einarlenoa with tha \WGKTJXK. For dyepepela, general debility and impure blood, the Veoetine is aupkiior to anything vrhich 1 have ever ueed. I com m eno^ ^taking Veoetinb about

c<l Now B n lT a T o B i l l R . f V o I v e r l ( r M ■ With 100Cartridgee,$V.U0 !|lll,(JU0fold I eaeryonow

tiefnetIon guaranteed. rUuttraUd Cftiahn/u^

' SAFE AW0 RgLIABLE.H a v e Y ou W e a k ^ i in g s ?

I H a v e Y ou a C ough o r C o ld?H a v e Y on P ain , in Y m ir Bre^m t?

I H a v e Y ou a n y T h r o a t Di.seiase? ' Consw iw ption ?

' USE Db. L. Q. C. WIRHART’S ' PIME TRBB TAR CORDIAL

A re Y ott W e a k a n d D e b ili ta te d ? i D o l f o u S u ffe r f ro m In d ig e s t io n ?

D o Y on r e q u ir e a Toi«ic? i H a v e Y on N o A p p e tite ?I D o Y qu M eed B u i ld in g U p ?

Do You wish f o be S tr o n g and H e a l th y ?

D5E De . L. Q. C. VISMRT’S PINB TUBE M B CORDIAL

Sold b y all D ru g g is ts .P r iu c ip g l D e p o t,

No. 2.32 Z-iorGi S eco n d S t.. P h ila ,.'?d : butififaetton guaranteed. W uttraU fi Cutaftn/ua f 'r r r .\ V £ S T £ U N O C N > V O R K S , C h ie n g o , M l. ,

GO Dearborn-st.» (M cCormick

warmn-« F rre ,

I m p o r t a n t iM PH O vEM Eirriir T r e a t in g IluprcBB.—Tlie EIohUo T russ Company have produced a g reat revolution in tlio trea tm en t of ueriiia. T heir new" Truss is worn easy night and day ; adapts iteelf to every m otion of the bo<ly ; never displaced bv hardest exercise; re­taining n ip tu re oom loruhiy , till soon perm a­nently cured. Sold at the office of the com­pany. No. 088 Broadway. New York city. T russes sen t by mail. Send for circular.

the middle of last winter, and after naing a few bottles it entirely cured me of dyspepsia, apd my okiod never was In so good condition ss al the present time. It will afford BM pleasuro to give any further partleqUrs relaUva to what I know about tba good medli ' will oall or addieaa me at Biyxati'

Very reapectfully, MO

Iciue, to any one who DCS, 8S8 Athesu atrawt.lO E P A R K E R ,

386 Athana Street.

T h e sweetcBfc w o rd in o n r la n g u a g e is health. At the first iudicaiiou of disease, use well known and approved remedies. F o r d rs- pepsia o r indigestion, use Parsons' Purgative Pills. For coughs, colds, sore oy l ^ e stom- ach, use Johnson's Anodyne Liniment.

A CASE o f clurouio rheumatism o f u n ­usual severitj’, cured by Johnson's Anodyne Liniment, is noticed by one Of onr exchanges, A largo bunch came o u t upon the b reast o f the sufTercr, aud appeared like part of th e breast bone. Used interuaUy aud externally.

V e o e t in e , in s te a d o f b e in g a p n f fe d -u p medioiuo, has worked its way up to its present astouishiug siiccees by actual m erit in curing all diseases of the blood, o f whatever nature.

A ten-dullar bill of 1 7 7 0 Bent free for Stamp. Addreaa ('. l IU llS T A CO .. 7 5 N itM u Y .

D A IT aV W l T i V K S S for 5 0 oenta froiir now to I n i January on trU l. I Merchants l>e \vttb< ;out D.' ily MarKet Keporta of Pro- i duco, Clg^e, SOk M i oW. KvetyUidy wants t<» hsar of Moody and Sankey's work. Subscribe at once. Office, ‘Z \ Spruce Street, Now York. ,

JO H N D O U G A IX . *

IT M 3 T M B

W H - A T I S I T a —Something new. Sells at J L Bight. Hig induoemenU toAgenta. Stiuplus, *4.5

centa and atamp. AgenU wanted. Send for (;atnloBoe. U. 8 . S P S O Ia L t Y ^ . . 7 »nd GFulton^t., BoeWn.

X C E L i3 IOW e have the hni ____M V « d l l I O D I B I C Publixhod

K a i t f r i a v i n t f a . D l w k R B i j £ r c l g l i t p a l ( r e W eatemBible Houte,

hneat and chnapeat ibllxhed—1X)U0 i s Terma and

Looia, Mo.

AO E N T S S“»AB lggeatPay . R ek d , WicxRRfii OroOTM tiilea from Boaton, l ^ l i l

LA M P C H IM N EYS.

T l i e j r a r e ly u ir te o f * t te b e a t L e a d G | a u a n d w l l l S t a n r l H e s t b a t t e r t | i a n a n y o t h e r s .

S . H . H A R R I S ’0 « m ake money an S n t - I m p r o v e d C h i c a g o B I R E a n d B U R G L A R

$10 to 25 p e r D ay ?t“hrr‘:n"efg‘ari?y'o!S2men loacllan a rt ic re a iB T A B ljftt iO O E rE E .tu P a rm e raaud clhcri in their own m ii(hlKirho<Mis. P a rticu la rs Pree.

Addiyu—T H E C E N T p N N IA I. CO ,, St. Loui», Mo.

7___ - _ ln „ _-...■BU., Ohromo, Beat Paper,

R e e d , W ic x k h sh a m A Co.,PhUadoIphia. — — pittjbarghorChlesgo

Burnett’s Cocoaii?e is l ie best and cheapest H air Dreesiug in th e world.

B C H E N C K ’S p u l m o n i c s y r u p , f o rT H E C U R E O F C O N S U M P T I O N ,

C O U G H S A N D C O L D S .T ba g rea t v irtue of thfa m edicine la th a t It lipena the

m a tte r and throw a i t o u t of th e ayatem, puribea the blood, and th u e effeota a cure.ftOHXNCE^S 8KA WBCD TOBIC, rOB THE CORE OV

D Y0P£P8IA, ISDJOUTION , BTC.The Toolo producea a h e a lt^ j action of tb ea to m acb ,

creating an ap p e tite , form ing c t^ le , and curing the moat obatlnate caaea of Indlgeation.BcHENCE'a M a n d r a k e P i l l s , ro B t h k C o r e o r

L i t k e Oo m p l a jn t , E t c .T heta Pilla are altera tive and produce a healthy a e tb n

of th e liver w ithout th e leaat d aag er, m Uiey a re free from calom el and yet m ore efflcacloua in reatorlng a healthy action of th e liver.

Tbeee rem edtee are a certa in cuPe tor Oooaaroptlon, ae th e Pulm onic Kyrup rl|>ent the m a tte r and purines the b l< ^ . T he M a n d ru e PilU ac t usx>n th e liver, create a healthy bile, and remove all dU eaeet of the liver, often a cause of Conauroptlon. T he 8ea W eed Tonic gives tone and stren g th to th e stom ach, m akes a good dlgeetion, and enabfoa th e organa to form good blood, an d thua crea te a healthy circulation of hesTthv blood. T he com* b l n ^ action ot these m edicines, aa Uiivi explained, will cure every case of (km aiiinption.lf taken in tim e ,an d th e use of th e m edicines poraeverM In.

Dr. Soheiick la profeeslonaUy e t bla p iioolpal office* oom er Klxth and Arch 8treote. PhiiadelphiA, every Mon­day, where all lettern fi7r advloe ihay be addieaeed. 8cheuck*B m edicines for sale by aU DruggUte.

O P I U Meoribe ease. A ddrew Dr. F.

G

H a b i t C u r e d A t H o m e . !No publicity. Time ihort. Terma ' moderote- l.UUO teatlmoniala. 6thyear of urmaralleled aucoees. De

B. H arsh , Quincy, Miob.

S A F E Sa n d V A T ' L T D tM Y R S a r e I h r B E S T a n d t ' H E A P E S T . M a n i t f u c l o r y i i in l K n l.!*- ivK tiii, Z 3 .C '4 .'i E a v t U i t u d a lp u - a ( . , C U ic u g u .

IN C T N N A T I D O L L A R W E E K L Y S T A R . I A n Independent F u n l l j Nawapapn. N P oom . , 4 H Columna of Readln,. m j l P e r Y E A R . I Specimen Cup, rsK E . o D X Free of poaUaw.

Addreaa T h e “ S ' l 'A R ” C O ., C i n c i n n a t i , O h io .

CnO CAl C CbIcMto Bubniban Lota at $l'X) each,I U n v n L l a l 9 I6 down and SSm oiitiili for balance, within a abort 4 i*tanc«Qf C it j Llm lU, with bonriv tralni and cheap fire. Hand for cfronlari. I K \ BR O W N , I wlfii 143 LoSoIlo-al., Obiooco, l i t

T h i s Paper to printed with Ink node b , O. B. KaneA Co., 131 DMrbom Street, Ohlcoco, and for laie

bjr ua In larita or tonaU eoantitieo.O H IO AQ O N E W S P A P E R U N IO N ,

114 Hoaroe Stroet, Obioopo, UL

•< B S Y C n o .Y tA I V C V , o r S o u l U h a r i i i l n ( ( .How fl.llaVl lU'A |IIA> )|4«U,IUlli* tolUl KalH 1-«V loVt 4.lnl

hITi'cIIt'll .ii liiiy ) t'liiHuO', iiiNi.iiitli. '1‘I.Ih i,ft utl cmiipo<4wfA«, Iri’f, by ni«ll. 2** crniN: toccthur Itli a L<*v©r s K optlan Orscle. IlrPHitis. Illiitx It* I-a<llrN. i t . 1,000,fiTtO *old. A 4\ucer book. Adilrees'i*. tVJLI.lAklb A CO., Pnl ’*. PhllailHiihia.

C A R H 8 a* * 9 0 white or tinted Brintol, 9 0 eta.: 5 0 bnowflake. Marble, Uep. or DamaAk. *35 ota. ; 5 0

Olaaa, 4 0 c U .; with yuur name beautifully printed on them, and GO aaninleaof type, agents' prioe-llat, etc., sent iiy return mau on receipt of price. Dficount to Cloba. Beat of work. W. C. C A N X ^ N , 4 6 Kneeifind Street Boston, Refers to S. M. P e t t e r o i l l A O a

I Y o n r N a m e E le g r a n t l y ^ P r l n N ied on 12 TRAivsrARCKT V is it i .xg , Ca r ps , fo r26 OntSa EachcArdconUim |

A 9ceriB which !i not visible until

C AGENTS WANTED FOR THE

ENTEIMNIAL IH IS T O R Y Of t« e U . S . !

T he g rea t in terest In the thrilling history of our country m akes th is th e faateet eelUng lK>ok ever publlshod. I t cutitaiae 4 4 2 hne historical engravings and pagee, with a fu ll account of th e approaching grand Oen- tenniai KzhIbiUon. Send for a tuU dcsciiption arul ex­t r a term a to Agents. N a’HONal P u b lish in g Oo ., Chi­

cago, 111., o r 8t. Iduuia, Mo.

This new Truss is worn witD Derfect cem fort uigbt aRxl day. A dapts Itself to everv motion of Ihe body, retaining n ip tu re uu der the hardest exercise or aererost •tra in OBtii perroanertljr cured. Sold coeap b y ti is

Elastic T rass Co.,B r o a d w a y , N . Y . C i t y .

Oall or send for Utroular and be cu red .

N O . 6 8 3Sent by mall.

ir,^* tav t"( J1 ntnin S l o c k P r i v i l e g e * . *’® ® ( ) I | J i l j

E x P l n n a t o r l how $1 In Sto< paid and

MO to

held towarda lha liKhl.______ . n America. Bifcmduce-

N o v iL T r PsikT iico Co.,Aihlan<l,.MutNothlnrlikathemevcrbaforeoflctadin America. Blainduce

lU to Agent*. ” ~

paid and will n n y J ,a r | ( «P r o l i t a . Hallrofuf Stock*,Bond* and OokI boneb t on, M i i r K in n . I n t e r e a t S ix P e r (D e n t, allowed on depo- <it* aubject to * l,b t drafto.

B U C K X V A L T E R f i C O . , I t n n k e r a a n d Bi'tikci'M , N o . lO A V a l l S t r e e t , N e w V o r k .

New York.LtD G o l d

_____ ______ _ liiTL'O.vervolinlM. and I* offareri »t retail o t irado prices to keep our workmen going. Dills under 8U>. P.O. (jrrior in advance, Ovai 9 1 3 , C.O.D. priTlleca to aiam ine. CataloGUes free.

T : t T X T A C L J 7 8 1 Broadw at . Ne L * a a J3l numufacturerof SouJ K W K L K Y of every desciipUon. The stock is is

vented a materials

thefor making bread, which has

receiving tlie apprcival of tlie Mhiister of.Woe* and 11131 ItereftjCter be adopted in tho French army. By this iirocess an increased percentage of the nutritive properties of groin is retained, so that by avoiding the usual grinding and wet­ting the grain that would make 116 pounds of bread in tho ordinary way w;ill make what is equivalent to I'lO poiincls. Tho new process is described as follows: The T|pgr\|imd QjMP is fixst stfcped in w at^, aitWDvhi«M is p l ^ d ifi revolv- ing'cylinoOTB, by wfiich It is de^riv©d of its outer husk, which contains but 4 or 5 per cent, of nutriment. The grains oi'c then softened by forming them into

turo of seventy-seven degrees Fahrcq-, heit. They are then cnished under njut made into dough with salt and water, as usual.

S I L V E Rt i p p e dS H O E S

Rennomy, oomfort, combine fA> ra a k i

look*, all S15 CUN.SILVER TIPPED

Shoes indiopeniabla farofalUIrcn. Never wear through at (bk too.

Also try W ire i^ iltod Soles.

1 ievbte temlcva, borer Crenloetlea leckx; wamstfli fvo<vtaotvtti borroli, ood o good •bootcr, ea no BALa; vM PloaX, rowh aad WU-«etwr. Tor |lk Can be wnt C. 0 . D. vltb pHv-Dece to naaJBebeforepaylQgbai. dend&utnpDretnMjUr b P*yoW ILL A BOV. Ova DMdert, B8 Voio Bu. ClaclooaU, O.

How delightful to beve dry feet Farmers, mechanics, everybo^,

GABLE SCREW WIREBoots and Shoes never rip or leak. _ ,

Also ask for W ire Quilted Soles.

S10S8500

Have you ever seen

Invested In Wall Ktrfcot. often loads to fortune. A 7 4 -pagu book explaining

Th« niQstratod Catalogtie ol*f*As Jbe«5 fot* S 3 fresa

PorfahUPritiiin^ I'rtsteMf S3 Presa ooYr ready. £very manA(» ovn nrknter. A few dollars buyt 4 ' prOM and typo for printing cards, labels, envelopes, oto-iAt ^uartar priUtora* prices. Save mouetf and fnerrosa hwine»t By u<fver(i«- tR-7. Kend two stamps for catalogue to the MamfaoiHtr-•|s, W . UKl^feiKV ^ CO«»licr%leu« C b n tv

T^al free. Ind.

H O T l f i l A s b H C A T A R R H ; fvk^Ouvb. _____H o I n iv lH Addfofis W. K . B g ix ig , ludianapoUs

NomnanibullHin Extraordinai^,A curiouR COSO of somnambulism, says

tho Loudon F.oJin, is reported by a cor­respondent at Calcutta, of which a Hthid-

i t i th e je i^ W of his friends is

he Hays, begins chanting vorae aftel of his KoroB and of sacred hym peats the divine precepts ; critici Hhortness of time in this world, le n til of eternity in the next.; and, f i n ^ , winds up xritli an onearthly.howl or sliriek. " Diirilo^idl ithis time he is in' the Roundest of shimbbrs.o.'And tkti 6hly * way to put a stop to tlxis hullabaleryiti tuni the man on his side ; for, ishONld any one awake him, ho will just otmn'hie eyes for a minute, and if allowed ttoJeou-

ho Wiildencommenoe his howling hymns. ' ‘

maD) r-verpoM 18 J re- ies the id the

$ 2 9 6 it

$5 to $20 ‘sti’sbO*SbiKlftirCbramoCatalog,.

ia O j . n . BirrroaD'8SoN8, Boatop, Mo«a.

$12 a r *

WtaiiM kkerrwhara. O., R icbm anSi'.lnd.

OTen tblnH and eivinH price nf stocks O n i i T r o c c J o h n H IC K I.IN G .t o o ., Manner* O C N I r n C C . a B ro ken .7 Broadway,NewYorto

eiVEN AWAYTo every reader of T 'lio P i i i D l I y J o u r i l n l *

CENTENNIAL AMERICA,A 6 1 0 T f f lf i f d r t n K r l lv r i ie f , ■lx*'

Our Lanre wid Tinted JCngravlng.c^mtaJ^gover ‘VoOlIiMtorivaJ Views nn<l TuiiMlTs ot all leading •vantEaBd pmaonitfes. frhm the lartdhig of ColumbuRtothe present time, including n miignliicentview of t h e b t F U U n g s i n l-jiirmonncI^I'K 4tPhiladelohlA. will be givi n 7\» The liea .irr*

1 D ri^ fM ilI, C 'h a r c h ^ H a l l ,Arir i»av:—

"The demnnd for your F<*siii in­creases rapidly. Nevera coniplKint.”

«Toiif’s , K riA iiC ’i ’&C'Oa. H f-arr^ I\m. , aoi/;—** Hjiva sold your Sea Foam to nil classes of Irade. It uever lailed in give aatisfaclion."

Diggert tiling to raise you ^veraaw. GvegtcaU hliKtosdl you ever knew. Many valitabre conking n clj>effEent free. Segdat onoo for Uiriadorto

. c iK O . F . W A N T/*11 70 D i i n n c S t .) STeM T o r k a

S e l e o i o d F r e n c h H u r r M i l l S t o u o LOf a ll Hi/.r-.to, apd #iip< ii»)r

' UDrkin'rtHftfilp.OrlkKcltiAIg .>UUjs iiprer <>r m idef V i i h f o i - F a r m . or M e ro lt f f i it M rerk.

f ic - i l i i it t e f l n t c l i A n - 1 k e r K b U lt y c C lo t h . T if l l

F fo h A . 0 6 rn Shelii iK aixl | I l^einijerN,Gearing. Sliaftiiiff, ,

rnllleH, lfiiTig<’i «•. etc.; all k in d b 4»fMili )la( iiinet y no I f Mlllerf*’ ><u|iplie7<. J* rid It j i'uiiipiilor. N frt iiiV T l i i l i M 'oiii|»ftnv, Ih ix I 1 3 0 . i

THJfi

H O R S EHcinntlflcAlIji explol8e<I. Uow ^ ju;^o ,n4 naro for him. TTio requinte

O F o r W O T H lW G v A* O Addroo* J . K E N N E D Y

buunboInit arxl4to* 4hAddretf J

A«e»t* wanted. S4<b<a*t-*elUiK wW-Li I04)«l*D e t r o O

' <310 A Tinxiv t® Af*"** 85 ridtroftMUAmerica, will).;30o ~

$ 7 7

'AttWAKVATATh Mlllli'n* Ofl w p a i tune* mad* with 1'TOtt Bnoai New

W E E K G U A fiA ^^■•iid*'F'8Tiilaie, iu|

W . N. Y

,E I) to Affent*. eli^oirij lonalltr. F R E E , Addiios

p f(5? V in ? fB R V > A n ,a * t i, Miilii*.

li v

$2iS0 | SM iLauto.

r i i —Acanta wanred

eent fra*. Ai

bar*. MO Par- iRTH *

AVUK ton , 1*7 w^h'

and 4alt«.,...^ ______________ 0*ri-W ublnxton S t , Ohlooco, 111.

PhlladHlphla, will l.e ylvi n 7 />r H 'O 'Or' '0 uur <,r«(JA Itro rg ami H itld xi 1‘u jy . T/u dnriihoe rmiyCbnWftiM Three rAnfftified ----- " * ' ‘with short sketches .ind « *argo amount,of reading. Sent f<mr iiionlhson trlAl, InrlndtiigGhe Kn- ITT»Tln«. uoBtpaid, for 8 l.O O . A vy ,V ur.,0 ,i ! , r <n H ^ r t ytnt a rf»y>*/ or tuhiftt* The /timi'j/ Journat, AXABro a^ ag f V- . {* ^A geiita W anted Cveryw he^N B W a n r i » » * « “l* « * « fL I N S T U U M B N T .

: I ;' Y fJ-J’’JTJ

- . . requliI M ia u formcbd,arid «n

nurktice fully demon rtrato^ A svprkot»** ilinterest to horse ovmflrrj nml brooders. A lso ,*1v. inn a S ’>rr C .;r- /V,r A’oi.3P o i^ P«U0B 3 .'*.Gk n t b . Adcircss .7. P . V I ,\C 'K o.'IM

i i AdHUfVB >^ANyBDf,r<ra»mwb<vok op

'MOODY and SANKjEY

CABSJJR PKGMJ. ’An opnfdnk^onrkn tnuch of that of the t»Uno . .

i Enulank.

ndMPAT

Mr. ABTICI* dotked

8IDKNT

onvertit

lANTKD IMMEDlATELlf113 More Young 3fen fo l^ arn TRf*- K G R A P H Y . Good aituations guaran- ■ teed. Addr<*sa. with atamp, SLM^KU- H IN T K N D K aNT UNION T K L K iiU A P H ■ CO M P A N Y. O B B R 1a1 N , 'O H 1 0 .

i K T c y c r i n . 'E i

W * A . D B 0 W & C 0 ’.^

UMBRELLAS.P I l I I d A D F l A P I l l A m id X E A V V O R K . - T b e

qualittea marked with their came are couBdectly ru«x>n*- mended.

WIFE NO. 19BY ANN E L IZ A YOUNG,

B r ig h a m Y o u n g ’ s R e t ia lllo u s W ife .Tlie only roiriplcfo E xih-c of oil (he S E C R E T S ^

B R IQ H A M 't i H A R E 'W ever written. Horn In iloe- monInn, A N N C C ^ Z A nnw expoen to (he world. A S N O O T H E R W O M A N C A N , ihe S E C R E T ^ , M y s t e r i e s ami c r i m e s ‘ fthe horTibic *y*u«aof Polygamy, from (he very beginning. .Venrly POO New lllu«trntinni bfsutdv the Wx. It is the he«( Vlling bookSnblibUed. | more Agents, im-n ar d wnincn, caa

uve employment umTiimkc fn»m $ 5 to % I O doily. A U U vriting for IlTu8tralc<l ('irrulars

Bent free. LH> uot delay, butQ IL M A .N A . O O ..ILL., or CiirctK.vxTi, Onio.

OnlyThinkofItA la r g e

48-COL. WEEKLY NEWSPAPERW ill be sent three months, postpaid, for T w e n t y - r i v e G e n ts . Address

CRAMER, A IK EN S & CRAM ER Prop 8 of W eekly Wisconsin,

Milwaukee, W is This offer open until Dec. 1st.

B urnett’s C ocoainePrereDts the Hair from Falling.

B urnett’s C ocoainePromotes ita H<!aUby.Q.rowth.

B urnett’s C ocoainef Is not, Grea»y nor Stisky.

B urnett’s C ocoaineLeaves no Disagreeable Odor.

B urnett’s C ocoaineSubdacB Refractory Hair.

B urnett’s C ocoaineSootiios tbo Irritated Scalp-skin.

BiirneLt’s C ocoaineAflbrdg the Richest J.ustro,

B urnett’s C ocoaineIs not .ID Alcoholic Wiisli.

B urnett’s C ocoaineKiDo Dandruff.

B urnett’s C ocoaineGives New U fa to the Hair.

B urnett’s C ocoaineKemains Longest Id Elfoct,

Prepared only byJOSEPH BURNETT & GO.

2 7 C o n tra l S tre e t , Bo sto n . And Sold Everyw here.

1 3 O I V f t L : ’‘S F W l N G F-a P E R

Hf :l' : 5v;v 'M

"DOMtCillC CO NI|\ Vf.'r.;

•T rlf , f llljl RAp dpb 8L,Ch . I l l

ig to th« ctpArltyol theforte and h*ri>.j W llh r

of a purf*, Oil a Cl / , UCIk*ll«V x urow*. , ’ ' ' 4 -----blnaUon or lb * (a«nt KAIM. .

nFSS?.?»"-AC.YV.’.'XMG«tS'So f^ e organ, to which It ad(jii greatly In vivacity, merYAf6ty„a4kpdfcMiet<yWroU4bwtderrangeof n^alo. *

*T;irculkri, kni(‘hlir<I'w<iTlp|lin*.'f '

Adams Street, CmOAOO.

HA LL'S P « T tN v .1 T A M 3 /^ H Q

P.Vm witbjMolytjlen ee th e b e ^ . oangfn|E ImH flnahQa, verjlgo ’

m l l n c a n d e fl|uU U tj|* .U *»U T al*

Tarrant^s EtferteJoe'nv M tiiar XIohonld be a t one* leaortad to.

SOLD BY A LL ORUOOISTS.

Ilk f xV>- dlm-

ithioiu,V

jrlenl

AT"HARC P.AN 'PtUCES. WALL’S SAffi^.LOCKCC.

-a ' t * ^ ^w l “ 9 / — ^ f Im

D.^. U. Ba44lW ^K N W Rm iNI ’TQADfymTnBSU, *1 .JP.***"® yon Mvruie adrertlMoMitoi In tfita p«pev. , ■

i

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i fr

u

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eUATSWORTHi X \-----------—P LM ID EA LER . A good MBortment of glOTW And mittens

At tbe Postoffios.

J O m i JA O K tO N 'Id lto r.

8ATU&DAT, NOVEMBER 18, 1875.

T o w n a n d V ic in i ty -

Croquet is ripe. Puli 'em.

Have you tried pumpkin pies—on?

Do not forget that on next Toesda/eren- Ing, the Baptist Church will be prepared to furnish ail, that may call at Jones' Hall, with a good supper in the best of style. It is the first festival and oyster supper of the season, so do not fail to attend and have a good time. Take your wife and little ones; your sister or some other per­son’s sister, and be happy.

The great vegetable remedy; Bangs Neutralising Cordial will cute dyspepsia, sick h*wltr»ha and all diseases arising from a disturbed stomache.

Have you tasted that nice cider at Wake- lin’s. Our devil says it is Just splendid. We return thanks for the cidsr, William, and the devil does the same for the pitcher. Du it again.

Bangs’ Toothache Anodyne subdues the most agonizing toothache In one minute

Ask Orr Times.”

Brigham for the ‘‘Chicago

For liver complaint and all diseases arising from Impurity of the blood, use Bangs’ Dandelion pills.

Just received at John Walters, another car load of that superior and celebrated fiour, which will be sold by the 60 pound sack or by the grain aack, at the lowest market price. Beware about buying fiour made from new wheat; take only the beet; to be sold to suit purchasers.

ilOOfOOO at 9 per cent.To loan on Improved farm property, ply to "The Bank of Chatsworth. ” —

A n t h o n y , D b n h a b t & W u s o n .

Ap-

Looktight?

to your chimneys. Are they all

Initial paper and envelopes at the P. O., at 26 cents per box.

The supervisors accepted our new court house from the hands of the contractors on Friday of last week. On Saturday last it was thrown open for public inspection, and was visited by many, who expressed entire satisfaction with the fine structure. We can now boast of a court bouse sufilcient for all demand, for years to come.

The question now is. Have you had the 'zoo tic?

A certain and permanent cure for fever and ague. Bangs’ Ague Cure.

Bangs’ Peruvian Bark Bitters taken reg­ularly will prevent ague.

How are your griddles? buckwheat cak^ are ripe.

Scour them up; Scratch us.

The Rev. Mr. McAfee, of Chicago, will preach at the Presbyterian church to mor- row.

We notice the residence and surround­ings of S. D. Webster, are presenting an improved look, all accomplished by the free use of brush and paint. It is astonishing what amount of improvement might be made in our town if more of our citizens were of the same turn of ndnd.

A few light Bramah cockerels for sale by N. C. Kenyon, at $1.60 each.

Dr. Badgley, shipped some very fine blooded fowls to Iroquois county, on Tues­day last.

What has that force pump in front of Gunther’s shop been doing, that it has to Htjind out in the cold all winter? Who can tell?

Dr. Ewer, with a small audience, took a flying trip through the heavens and among the other worlds, on Monday evening, at the Methodist church. His panorama com­manded general attention, and his lecture was very instructive. All returned home with colds, from exposure in the night air while looking at the stars, &c.

Teacher Wanted.A male teacher for district No. 5, Bren-

ton township, Ford county. Apply to J . W. Skinner or J. P. Jefiery, Piper City.

A lot of bargains in broken suit* of cloth­ing, from the main stock, at Wyman’s.

We notice Mr. J. T. Bullard’s residence is taking on a paler hue. Some painters from Fairbury are plying tlie brush, we un­derstand.

The “ Fairbury ludependent” came to us this week, enlarged, and bearing the ap­pearance of a desire to please. We be­speak a lively time in Fairbury, in the newspaper Hue, for a short tiuie.

On Saturday last, a very pleasant party assembled at the residence of Prof. Crary, it being the twenty-flfth anniversary of the wedding of the Professor and lady. The party consisted of the School Board and teachers, together with a few friends. A short time was spent In a very social and enteriHining way, and after partaking of a feast of good things for the inner man the party dispersed with many well wishes for future prospeiity.

Burglars apjiear to be quite lively around our neighboring city of Pontiac. Ten bur glaries are reported within the last four weeks. A vigilance committee should be ihe nextything on the- programme for that jilace, '

Do not fail to look over Wyman’s conn ter of cheap clothing. You will find bar­gains there.

Cjrktsworth ought to grow intellectually, if societies will do auy good, A Lyceum is on the tapis. Let’s have one, by all means, and have a place for the young folks to siiend the long, dreary winter evenings.

List of letters uncalled for, and advertis­ed Nov. 8th, 1875:

Phil. Banck, J. H. Ballarny, John B. Buckley, James Daftin, A. Janes, Henry Kring, Peter Ulfers.

N. C. K e n y o n , P, M.

Farmers are very slow to commence com husking. They complain about soft com, and unevenness In ripeulm:. But very few have cribbed much, and it is likely that there will be considerable in the field next ■pring.

The first regular' socl.tble, under the management of the ladies of the Presby terian church, was held at their hall on Thursday evening. It was a very beauti ful evening, and although the attendance was not very large, the interest manifested was lively, and all decided it a complete success. How could it be otherwise, when conducted by such entertainers as Mr. T. Y. Brown, Mr. M. A, Wheeler, Mrs. Os­born and Miss Ella Lucas?

Bangs’ King of Pain. The best liniment and pain killer in the world, every bottle warranted

We understand the T. P. & W. R’y pro­pose laying a new side track on the south side of the main track, commencing near the depot and extending east to somewhere near Mr. 8hroyer*s oflBce. The prospects for an increase of business makes this nec­essary.

Quite a number of our young ladies and geotlemeo, met at the residenoe of Mr. Clark Hall, on Tuesday evening last, and spent a few hours very pleasantly and prof­itably In entertaining each other, and do­ing Jnatioe to the repast fomisbed by the kind boatess. All went many as a mar­riage bell.

Chineee women sell for prices ranging from 10 cents to |6 each, at ^an Francisco Now boys, is your chance. ' timoke one less cigar to-morrow, and indulge in the luxury. No well regulated “batch” should be without one. Who bids first?

S f b in o f ib l d , 111., N o v . 8.A F B O O IiA H A T lO N 0 9 T H A N K S a iV IN O :

In conformity with the proclamation of the President of the United States, I, John L . Beveridge, Governor of the State of Ill­inois, do hereby recommend that Thursday, November 26, 1876, be observed as a day of thanksgiving and praise to the Supreme ruler of the universe for the bounties of His providence.

In testimony whereof I have hereunto set my hand and caused the great seal of the State to be afidxed.

Done at the city of Sprlngfeld, this 9th day of November, A. D. 1876.

J ohn L. Betbbipob, Governor.

B y the Governor: G e o . H . H a r l o w , Secretary of State.

Grammar School;,Miss Maggie Spc.irt, Teacher.Whole No pupils enrolled, - 42Average dally attendance, 89Per cent of attendance, • • 71No. not a b ^ t during month, 18

H ig h School .Whole No. pupils enrolled, 84Average daily attendance, - 28Per cent, of attendance, • • 82No. not absent during month, • 18

The following named, pupils attained a standing of 100: Cbas. Fenn, Pearl Young, Wallace Daufortb, Fannie Chambers, The- ressa Kenney, CarrteMsll, Satte^Bilgham, Minnie Smith, Carrie Bigham, Alice Royal, Mary Foedlck, Lizzie Bigham, Nellie Hall, Elia Welnland, Rosa Reiss.

Summary.Whole No. pupils enrolled, - 225Average daily attendance, • - 172Per cent, of attendance, - - 78Whole No. not absent during month, 68

A. A. Crary, Prln.

—Dr. John Rayburn, of Fairbury, drop­ped in on us very unexpectedly on Satur­day evening last, and spent the Sabbath John is a Jolly youth, and la always wel- oomeed by his many friends. He Is of a drawing nature, and it is to his interest to be always looking down in the mouth.

Geo. Walter & Co., have ’em. We mean oysters. If you do not believe it, call and see, and you will be satisfied they are the beet in town.

The members of the Conversational So­ciety are requested to meet at the parlors of Mrs. James Btrawn, on Tuesday eve­ning, November 16th.

By Order of the President.It is to be hoped that the attendance will

be large, as such a society is always bene­ficial to a community, advancing its mem bers socially and intellectually. This so­ciety was organized last year, and was complete success. If each and all of Its meihbers will take that interest in the soci­ety that should be manifested, it will also be a success this winter.

Thousands can testify to the value of Bangs’ Condition Powders for keeping horses and cattle in a healthy condition. No stock raiser should be without them..

We have been having some very beauti­ful moonlight nights, and we are sorry that they will not continue, but our experience has been such as to teach us that they are all a fleeting show, and soon shall give place to those nights when it is so dark that you can feel the darkness, or the side walk, and when a person comes up against a lamp-post or a dry goods box, it is not very easy to sit down, fold your arms, and in a nicely modulated voice, wonder where those street lamps are. No it Is’nt, for we have tried it. We have beard several citizens speaking in regard to tlie lamps, and they all seem to think they would be a good thing to have around. Say one at the depot, one at Nagle’s comer, one at the next corner east, one at Walter’s comer and one at the hotel comer, would light ourtown very well, and not.be of very much expense, while persons coming on night trains or out on any business at night, need not mo the risk of getting into the middle of the street or knocking down awning posts.

Albunu in great variety at the P. Q j

This Means Ton.Parties kLowing themselves Indebted to

me, are requested to call and make imme diate settlement, as I most have the money at onoe. I have carried a great many of your accounts along for a greater length of time than agreed upon and must insist upon a settlement.

J ohn W a l t b b .

They can’t be beat,—those Walter's. They are got up in

oysters at any style.

All persons having paper currency, whether opposed to Inflation or not, and want to deposit it before the resumption of •pede payment, will do well to call on W. H. Wakelin, who is ready to take all that is offered him, in exchange for staple and fancy groceries, salt, crockery and glass­ware. Com taken in exchange for goods.

la another column will be found the pros peettwof the '*‘lDter-Ooeaa.” This vahi- ablc^oonal Is too well kaown lor ua to past many oonunenta on, fend nyuds but a paiM f M tloa.' ItinoM g< 0M(b«et fami­ly papwi la Mae VKirth-iNst; m d next year b th ^ e M o t Malible hveoti^ m ^ ak the PieMdeollal ekofloa'and oenlcanlal oele-

the jBlfBOlaa-totMm a paper they w kf

txmMpiM, aid the '*ffikerboMuU** Is one ,of msay papsn that shookl Hod a ready wid some In ewy boWhold.

We were trying to decide ss to the rela« tive value of several articles we bad Just clipped, when our attention waa attracted by some remaiks we heard from a peraon sitting near. We listened and beard the following remarks: “Dot paper up dar’s sbust DO koont; day ahuat out bieosa out ov onder papers; day bab no brains at all; day shust clip and cot all de dime; day pot no brains in at all; poor paper; de beeplea read onder papsra and dan find all dem in der PiiAnronALBR; de beeplea at Pipw •ay der same dings. Day say it run not two years; It is no koont.” We simply tamed a aly glance at the genUemm and •aked where he lived, and he said: “ Too one dem men op der.” We slgnifled that waweta,andharemarimd,'*By sheeminylla dot so,” and quietly took his hat and laft, pofflng at that ponderous ptft like a loco- mothre.

Btereosoopio views, $1.00 per doz. at the Poet Office.

Oo to DeLong's reataorant for delicious fresh Jellies and canned fruits.

Hehool Report for October.Eirst Prinuuy Department; Miss EUttie

Dennis, Teacher.Whole No. piqdls enrolled, 61Average daily attendance, 88Per cent, of attaidanoe, 76No. pupils absent during month, 10

Seoind Primary Department; Mrs. E. J. Crary, Teaohwr.Whole No. pupils snrol)ed,Average daily attendanoe,Per cent, of a ttetitn ^N o . n o t ab aen t d a r in g m o n th ,

In te rm ed ia te D e p a rtm e n t;Burgem, Teatter.Whola No. pupUa mroDad,Averaga dally attendanoa.Per cent, of attandanoe,.No. not ihawt during

MIsi

46898416

Mary

This Means all PersonsKnowing themselves indebted to me, are

8684U

hereby requested to come forward and set­tle the same by cash or note. All accounts not settled by December 1st, will be left with a Justice of the Peace for collection. I will pay the highest market price for com on accounts, and will pay above mar­ket price in exchange for goods.

M. Rbibini}.

Wakelin’s is the headquarters for the genuine New York buckwheat flour, corn meal, graham flour,ROCK ISLAND, FEORIA, AND BEN WALTON'B spring and winter wheat flour.

Personal Paragraphs.—Mr. John Stillwell, took a sly glance

at Peoria, on Tuesday.—'Squire Sears, took in the siglits at Gil­

man, on Monday.—Mrs. Hagaman, started for her new

home at Elliot, on Thursday of last week.—Miss Christenia Smith, left on Tuesday

evening to spend a few days in Chicago.—Mr. John Bullard, boarded the train

for Logonsport, on Friday.—Bollie Dennis, thinks there is no place

Just like Chats worth, to spend Sunday in.Mrs. R. B. M. Wllaon, of Washington,

111., is visiting In our town this week.—Mrs. Robt. Wilson, is enjoying a visit

from her father and sister, from Blooming­ton.

—W. 8. Hall, Interviewed the furniture men of Chicago, this week. Look out for a whole ^ f t of furniture soon,

—Mrs. Hszelett, after a few weeks pleas­antly spent with friends here, returned to her home at Zanesville, Ohio, on Tuesday.

—Will. Dennis, could stand it no longer, and 80 he took Sunday to visit Frak Doo­little. Fairbury is a fine place to visit.

—Mr. Chas. WjHnan, a limb of the law at our neighboring cM of Oilman, was in

—M r Geo. Taylor, “drapped” in upon us on Wednesday. We do not see George upon our streets quite so often since be has moved upon his exteasive farm. We sup­pose his blooded stock takes up most of his Idle time. He reports every tbing do­ing finely, aad says if the frost Jvill stay off a few weeks, he will have an immense crop of—weeds. He has been troubled considerably this summer, with John Still- well’t peafowls, which have a natural tend- ancy toeat his garden tmek. We would advise giving them a little salt, which will, in all probabilities, break them of the habit.

ADMINISTRATOR’S NOTICE.

town on Wednesday—Hr. Frank Drake, a former resident of

Cbatsworth, took a view of bis old home on Monday.

—Wilson Ong, of Piper, put in his ap­pearance on Monday. He one of the boys when be is around.

—Robert Rumbold, .our popular insur­ance man, made a viait to Fairbury, on Tuesday. Business, combined with pleas­ure, was his object.

—Mr. and Mrs. Stoddard, returp^ from their visit with their children in Missouri, on Tuesday last. They appear as if the Journey through the West bad had an in­vigorating influence upon them.

—Robert. Kelley, returned this week, from Egypt, the land of the kuklux, where he baa been taking a view of the country and its inhabitants. He reports things qui­eting down considerable, since the arrest of some of the leaden.

—Mr. Stnickmyer with his family, mov­ed to Forrest last week. Mr. Stnickmyer retnmed recently from Colorado, and will go into the harness and saddlery business, or in other words, start a horse millinery establishment at Forrest.

—Mr. Rairie, one of the lint setUen in these parte, was in our office on Saturday last. Hr. Rairie lives near Gilman now, having removed there last winter. He looks as well as he has for years, and may many happy months be his in the future.

—Isaac Miller, of Pontiao, dipped in on our burg last Tuesday.'^ IsaM has a cloth­ing establishmeat here, and was over to look into its affairs. We suppose he found them all under the management of his efficient and gentlemanly olsi^ Mr. Jo­seph Klein.

—Mr. Charles Bradford Bohnea, Esq., of the “Livingston County Blade,” graced our office with a call on Monday last. Hla i ^ j was very brief, and aa bo left, wa Im- aginadwaiawafaint gU now rotladnsai, sweep over bis onoe n^n>7 cwtsnted oountsuanoe^ bat wa majfftm sash Is the

Estate of Samuel Harsbbarger, Deceas­ed. The undersigned, having been ap­pointed Administrator of the estate of Sam­uel Harshbar^r, late of Sullivan, in the county of Ll^gslon, and State of Illinois, deceased, hereby give notice that he will appear brfore the County Court of Livings­ton County, at the Court House in Pontiac, at the January term, on the third Monday in January next, at which time all persons having claims against said estate, are no­tified and requested to attend for the pur­pose of having the same adjusted. All per­sons Indebted to said estate are requested to make immediate payment to the under­signed.

Dated this 4th day of November A. D. 1875.

J ohn J . S h e a r e r ,n. 18 3w Administrator.

STATE OF ILLINOIS, Livingston county,—88. In the Circuit Court, to the January terra, A. D 1876.

Margaret Thomas vs. Geo. W. Thomas. In chancery divorce.

The above named defendant is hereby notified that on the 16th day of December, A. D. 1875, between the hours of nine o’clock a. m., and three o’clock p. m., of said day, at the office of Wm. W. Sears, Esq., in Chatsworth, Livingston county. State of Illinois, I shall proceed to take the depositions*of Margaret Thomas and Geo Johnson, residents of said county of Liv ingston, before Wm. W. Sears, Esq., a Justice of the Peace, in and for said couu-of Livingston, or some other officer author­ized by law to take depositions in such

ofcases, to be read in evidence on the trial the above entitled cause on the part and in behalf of the plaintifl', at wlilco time and place you can appear and cross-examine said witnesses if you see fit.

Dated this lOtli day of November, A. D. 1876.

To Geo Thomas, defendant.G il b e r t W y m a n ,

Complainant’s Solicitor.

STATE OF ILLINOIS, Livings ion county.—ss. In the Circuit Court thereof, of the Januaiy term, A D. 1876.

Margaret iDomas vs. Goo. W. Thomas. Divorce.

Affidavit of the nonresidence of Geo. W. Thomas, defendant above named, having been filed In the office of the Clerk of the Circnlt Court of Livingston countv, notice Is hereby given to the said Geo W. Thom­as, that the complainant filed her bill of complaint in said court, on the ebimeery side thereof, on the 27th day of October, A. D. 1876, and thereupon summons liuv ing issued out of said court against the said defendant, returnable on the 1st Tuesday of January, A, D. 1870, as Is by law re­quired . ,

Now unless you, the said Geo. W.Thomas, shall ^rsonally be and appear

■ ■ Circuit Court of Livingstonbefore the said countj, on the 1st Tuesday of January, A. D. 1870, and plead, answer, or demur to the said complainant’s bill of complaint, the same, and the matter and things there­in charged and stated will be taken as con­fessed, and a decree entered against you according to the prayer of said bill.

J o hn A. F e l l o w s , Clerk.By J a s . R. W a s h , Deputy.

G il b b b t W y m a n , Complainant’s Solicitor. Dated, Pontiac, October 27th, 1876.

7. FSZiZSZl,

D B A L B R IN

GENERAL HARDWARE,

-AND-

Agricultural

Iki . kliida,

sap o o n s ta a tl / Is, Lim a, H a ir / . a ta ll Una of Bw i t h ________

•Isnaasot lor

on b and L um bar of all ■ur, Sand an d Brlok, togatbsr oTB alldlna H ardw ara. I

M U H H l i u l i '

V O L U M N I I L

B U SIJri

B. A. BANOS.

E. A.BA-B A . 1 ^ ;

O H fT 8¥

CollMiion* Mad

i Ownl lukt

Bank ofI tainl 8u 1qii{

D rafts d ran ro o n al U n ited B tatas an d T ic k e ts sold. CoUeo Ib le po in ts .Ch a s . E. A v t b o v y , :

HaaBY DaaHA O. M. Airr

C. A

Am thobt a Db n h a i BANKERS,

W a sh in g to n , lli ln o i

8AHT7SL(hssHMrU

i n o B m u nC h •t•w o rt^

w il l p rac tice in LI co u n ties . A ll legal I ca re w ill rece iv e proi

G. T O R

w il l p rac tice In LI c o u n tie s .

PhImiIh IttMtiM

Alio, JnitloOffloe over th e Poatofl

DSL O.OlBea over Bangs’ d

•m erly oth e honse fo rm erly to n .

CHATSWORTH,

D R . O . HHOMCEt

P h y s i c i a nw il l a t te n d ca lls da

D oolittle’s g rocery sUCHAT8W

M . O S l

C H A T S W O BG ive m e a ca ll and

p rices. F a rtlo n la r al tkien'8 a u u B oys’ auiU

C H R I S . ClD ealer in a n d

Harness <Collars, If h ip

eEPAIBINU'WIAll w ork w arraoitad

n o charge . Com e am

2T. O. S—DKAl

BOOKS, STATNotiona, Pa:

AT THE P(

C h a ts w o rth ,

TONSORUA t m y r o o m s ,

S C r a n e 's , w i i m a d e s , ^ a i r i f i i m e s , J

F*or S ^a ir Cu e s t s f y t e , S h a n

p o o i n g , g t r e m


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