JIS» 'J - Clinton County

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Transcript of JIS» 'J - Clinton County

Miscellaneous Heading.

odor fcm s paver to thrill of ths Mule bird 1U1 nag* Uh Set, and to rive a Um*

A HOA G OF TBK BOCL.

I KNOW th* splendid Jessamine* CM dllThe air wild TbeffcalaUf1 know the auft la UVBtttltNU *U»«g I kuow thatuaughl Tla beauty of tie a▲»d ret my entii! • travel/ nmm tw wear A rail through which nor vault m dates Is fair.

rt a_ Mid wild a e«rw:___

a waking oumeth wild n

la Moody. aad tbr air la filial with in ;And not bitty hoi the swtfl, oVrwbelmiiur Mglil caa keep nut fr .Bi a tUeu grim and dire;arriiuFar Wight te piltflTl. atodbl.1r* thr"face

... ii grace.in.

Which cannot lighten

I know a soul who lost aFaor aaal t H uurecd a wild, consuming pain! Door aoal! it* sumra waa too hard t-i benr. Yet aoutfuUy it straggled, though la vain ti roar to Uravra, aad strode along the ikie*: It delved to hull, and heard the dearnas' cries; Thru «»nc* irdk I* toad U* place <>a earth. Resolved to boar lie Killer pater alone.It could not move i tee If id worldly mirth.Fat It had »froug«»r, braver, purer grown;Yet, whoa It fell to thinking on it* loos.It aeoated to murmur at It* heri-avy crtm.

nr.1Ye cod of all things did It moat desire have one eternal, aweet, delightful calm.To that condition did It mat septa Whrre It might iad (MIMdi'i hraiiug halm;Yet never dared H hae for^tfalm Would come to |4ty, Huger e'er and blew;Kur la tu --foggier it had kumt-d that sin aeept memory awake Ibr evermore bad until 1 It could not hone to enter hi To rest, and shut behind ft the world * dour,Awl so It bowed Iwnratk Ha henry triad,And stumbled on ' ninny a weary road.

—hcriWr’s Mont JUs for octets*.

‘•DAT TADDKl S.” j

“Oil dear! whal ahull Ido? 4 juat withHetty waa here, or even Dick, though he is such it torment!"

Door little Elliot A whole week at Grandma I'ey ton's had exhausted the end­less stock of fun and adventure she waa ao sure ol finding in Kadeali. Util there w»* pan! reason for that now, because the child waa there alone—quite another thin* from summer vacation with Hetty and I)ick, and Ruth and Joho, to say noth­ing of Ruble and the baby.

Hear Uncle Will was oft on a long joy. tge. Grandpa Hey ton was quite blind

Independent==£: ±S=

VOL. VII,—NO. 51. ST. JOHNS, MICII., THURSDAY, OCTOBER 2, 1873. WHOLE NO. 303.

-w, , — ntnow, and so old he wanted to sleep all the time, and mustn’t be disturbed. Grandma was very handsome and stately, to be sure, with her snowy caps and snowier curls, her thick black silks and her lace ruffles; but, somehow, she canal iu<>cn foe her for- efgn cnrrwpnndrnee and the B!ue stock­ing Club than for little girls. She didn't understand them at all. Elite's mamma wasn’t her own child; and Madam Peyton had never known how sweet a thing it is to pet and cuddle and love a little turn bled frocked, tangled-rtirled girlie of her own ; if she had, she would have under­stood the wistful, longing look with which poor homesick little Elite greeted her with good-morning and good-evening kiss.

It was all so cold and cheerless and proper, when El lie wanted so much to throw her arms round her grandmother’s neck and hug and be hugged, squeeze and l»c squeezed, as Hetty and tlie boys were doing at home with' papa aad mamma and dear old Dinah!

There was Mehitablelro< Johnson, who reigned in the kitchen, to be sure; but rhe was tall and angular and fierce, with her scanty grey locks twisted into a tight little button on the top of her head. Igno- rant and forlorn to the last degree would have bceu the <Jiihi w ho should look to her f<»r endearment! If cleanliness is aelt to godliness, Mchitable was a long way on the heavenly road. She was af ways “yes# tand the fresh flavor of soap that attached itself* to her rircin- ises as well as to her person would have been a trusty landmark if Egyptian dark­ness had prcvaiU-J throughout Uie land.

“Lutl Mkkr.i JTrt), chi hi I whiu «ir jro moppin’for neow, I’d like ter know? Here, don’t ye go trackin’ my floor agin; I’ve lest got washed up from ver rnedder muck anil the dower mess ve brought In. What possessed ye. I’d like ter know, down that there swamp? Ve uri^ht ’a

Eone clean through ter the bottom, if Tim adn’t lieeni ye yell, and hauled ye acout.

Any way, yer*ehoes air half-way ter Chany by tis time!"

“1 guess, Mchi table, I shouldn't have got clean through, anyway, fudging by the amount of mud Tim put down on the door with me when he brought me home. It was the lovely scarlet cardinal dowers 1 wanted; any wap, I held on to them tight, and you can’t say they don’t look pretty in the old brown pitcher with the smoke-

ant. They are just like streaks of re.” *“Wa’al, ye’re right enoorrh both ways.

If ve’d folloreC ytr shoes clean through to Chany, ye’d both ’a Itcen dirty enough by the time ye got there, and them there cardinals air kind o' den*, andpooty too.**

“Oh, Habitable, can’t you tell me some­thing I can do? 1 am ao tired of huing alone. Grandma says I mustn’t go out of the garden to-day; indeed, I caii t go any where till mamma sends me some new shoes. Can’t I hunt for eggs?”

“Hunt for eggs! I do declare, Elizabeth Adams f Didn’t Mias Pev ton say she wouldn’t her ye climbin'’ the wood pile and pokin’ reound the barn chamber no more? Didn't ye her enough yesterday, I’d like ter know, tumblin’ off the top with ver clean dress, and yer new apron full of eggs, ter say nothin' of breakln* up old Grlzzel-top’s neat. Would *a hatched out next week fifteen aa likely chickens as we should ’a bad for Thauksgivin’. And the muss ye made of yer white dress and silk apron! Ho, ye 'don’t hunt no eggs to-day !**

“Please let me churn, then? I won't upset the churn again. I was making be­lieve it was a ship on Are and we hail to work the pumps, and I turned loo hard and too fast. Y'm know I waa real sorry when the thing tipped over, and the cream spilled out on the cellar dime."

‘ ‘Real aorrn’ don’t pick up spilled cream nor spiled butter. I guess I’ve bed enough of yer churnin’. Tell ya what ye may do, though: Tim’s pb k in the pease*, anti if ye’ll shell ’em clean, and not put the pease in the pod basket, I guess I’ll give ye a book to read as *11 keep ye quiet one while.”

“A booth n bonkl Oh, MebiUble, I haven’t read a bortk since I came here ? Mamma wouldn’t put any In my trunk, because Dr. Felton said ‘my eyes were too big, and 1 was too white and wise.’ I don’t know what he meant, but paps said I was ‘Is f# Is grass' for a andgrandma was lo lock up the book-case. Do you think I may read it*”

“Of course, child; “d’ya think I’d give ye anything would hurt yat It’s my book; had it met since I was a gal no bicuar'o you. That and my We»'minster, dad the Able of course, are all my llbr’y. Ye can fit deown on the front door step —that’s gone to grass, anyhow. I told Tim this mornin’ ha jest better fetch his scythe reound ’Aire Sunday, or he’d ketch H, MAP

Pan shelling waa good fan, any way, without the prospective bribe of a book; but, to deserve the treasure. Mi* devoted nrt Ur# ^thoughts to the prase and the Just nlstribu lion of pease to the paa, pods to the bas­ket. with n scattering assortment of each on the floor, to be sure; but they were clean dirt, however, even in Mehitable’* eyas, who grunted sail* factor? Hr, and pro­ceeded to keep her part of the agreement

Oh, happy hour of perfect, unalloyed delight, possible only to childhood! Bike w«rt passionate book demurer; mere

sas

&

good

that,books st one time,

reason, whlafa huwmsr,did *<* prevent her from wearing a gen- eraily di^« onuolatoaud woe berfnue taper!. Rill* had been din o< ir<-I one day after aRile had been discovered one day prolonged search, flat on the floor In the attic, poring over a mnsfy ship’s calendar, her face radiant with delight.

For a whole week she had not opened a book * Think of having 7%tddeus of War ares, in tour pudgy bn-v the worse for wear, placed in

without any sting of conscience, either, about the reading, because when Grandma Pcv ton went to Woodstock she had told IIfie to mind Mehitable.

N o more weary homesickm-**, no more moping; no more vain asking, “What shall I do?” mi more scrape* Mehitable blessed her lucky thought that had so easily rid her of trouble and care. And Elite! Will there ever come any more hours like those to the little girl, seated on the broad, low step before the porch of the gnat old fashioned house?

The summer air, fragrant with rosea and honeysuckle, that with the ivy and woodbine contested the glory of covering the gray stone wall, and musical with the whir of the grasshoppers and the hum of b«e»; tha sweet, warm stillness of a cray in June; leu years old, and the first ro- laancel Well for the little clrl It was good, pure Jam- Porter's l*M>k, and not aome that came before and after.

Reluctantly she h f&her treasure for din­ner and supper, more relueUurtiy still for bed-time, only coneolod by taking the precious volume to bed, to w ake at day- igld and warp over the sorrows and mis­

fortunes of Thaddeus, the Noble, the Glo­rious, the Injured! .*•*0'/

How she adored Mis* BeauTo* and JLmly Tint*mouth l how tip* hated Diana and Mh* Enphemhi? ho* her heart throbbed at the thought of the good King Mtanis- tU#l with What vengeance she recalled

the Prussians and die cruel Cossacks! The liattU cf Prague! A new glory at­tached itself to tlie very name. She would ask mamma |o let her lMkn it when she went home. Bhe wouldn’t grumble once alstut the tedious practice hour.

It waa the* second morning tliat KRie kftd passed In this unreal worliL She Yfas fh a state when nothing would have surprised her—a massage from tlie king, or a sum­mons fr<»m Thaddeus himself in prison

A shadow deeper than the tlirYering shade from the elm tree fW! athwart her book. She raised her head, and looked out of her groat dreamy gray eyas at a strange figure that stood, gaunt and silent, in the garden path. A slouched hat that would have disgraced a scare­crowr of average sensibility half concealed a huge green patch over one eye, ami did not at all conceal a very red n<»se, long black hair and beard, both ragged ami un kempt; a coat of many colors, that might have been Joseph’s, and defied the ele­ments ever since, hung with dangling sleeves from one shoulder, disclosiug an exceedingly dirty shirt, closed at (lie throat with a wisp of yellow handker chief; a red velveteen vest, guiltless of buttons; and pantaloons that might have formed part of that famous Irish gentle­man's wardrobe,

“W ho** vlDtilatlon ;'anu*nt* through Thr wind bio*l tx-saiifslly blew.

A crooked stick over his shoulder, sus­taining a small dirty bundle, bare feet that looked as though their owner had come through the “medder muck,” and a regular Irishman's dhudeen in his mouth, completed the picture.

The new-comer looked at Elite, and Elbe looked at him.

“Git mesometing to eat—me hungry.”Elbe silently handed him her bowf of

bread-ami inilk which site had brought out for her lunch, and which stood f. r gotten and untouched by her side. The man devoured the contents eagerly. When he hsd drained the last drop be said, fiercely, o- •

* M»*ret f**There was an air of authority that Elbe

never thought of qweetioaing. bhe laid her jtrerious book uow*n on the stone, and went into the kitchen to find Mehitable. She was not there. It was the custom of the house to give food to all who aaked,< and Elbe took from the pantry a huge slice of beef and some bread am! rl^ese. When she returned with her burden thd man was turning over the leaves pf Tkad- dtas with an approving smile.

He accented graciously the bread and cheese and meat, devouring them an J the lx>ok.simultaneously, stopping occasional ly to cross-question Elbe about the book and her admiration for the hero. Her euthasiasm knew no boonds wh* n the dirty foreigner—who imoitdiately be­came glorified in her eyes—assured her lie, loo, was from Warsaw, and knew the King of Poland well. ‘‘Yes, he had ! fought in the battle of lYague—shared his tent with General Iiutzou.

Her lace kindled with enthusiasm, her eyes grew moist with sympathy, us her vivid imagination painted the scenes he must have wltneseed. His invention be­came more daring, his eloquence irresisti­ble, when he quoted, in the very words <4 Thaddeus, though in somewhat broken English, j

Brian. O PolssS' from thgis«agrd slain*.(C. mourning o>r thy nsB but iJvwdr«-fiiaii*«.A l*>u**l*** wiru-h. / wtadir ibrouati lb* world.fna frtuad*. from gnuMUur, sad (runt glory

bnrtod.’”How could she question even his sublime audacity when he added: "Yoo v«#ps!It Is for me. Behold me! I am dat Thaddeus P*

O bliisd, unqueutiimiog faith of child­hood, that could discern the beloved hero in this strange, repulsive guise!

DJ

Her onl y thought was «»f sorrow that she should not have recognised him sooner; that she had not bid him enter: that she had a«»t served him tm bended knsas with s silver salver. Would he forgive her, and know How she sdored him ?

“My lord Thsddeus Constantine, Count Bobieaki, how can I serve you ?*' Cer­tainly that was the proper wsy to addresshim.

»me monish, quick! I must go.” Ellis had a gold pocket-piece and two dollars in her puree that mamma had riven her for spending money. It was her own. Oh, how lovely to be able to glu It to Thaddeus! Thaddeus suflertn sad in distress! Hbe no longer envi Mias Beaufort, who probably had been unable to succor him is prison, since he- Thaddeus himself—was here and In heed, and she could relieve him.

Bhe flew to her room, to her trunk, afid with throbbing heart brought her all and laid it in Thaddeus' hand. It was a very dirty hand; and she didn’t like the kiss with which he thanked her, f< of rum and onions; but sorry only that Thaddeus hurry, and could not stop to tell her any more about Poland and Naftotm shfl the PaUtima * r g

The b<x>k lay neglected on her lap, as she sut with fold*d hands dreamily wish­ing that Thaddeus hadn’t sold his glitter ing uniform and his sword and his sable pallsse, though it would have been un comfortable in summer. At last she full asleep, and there Mehitable found her. hr hen, alter repeated oAlta, she failed to come to dinner. At the abrupt but not unkind touch on her shoulder the child

to i use me bias her, for it smelled she Wai nappy—

is was in such s

------ SB---------- =ftete=1Am AstonlahlMV lit* *

Old Mr. Mugride, who has a collage up at Bhadynook, invited a few of his friends to go up and stay awhile and enioy the country air. As they were all fond of good beer, he sent up a keg of new ale to be put in the cellar and kept until his ar rival. Haturday afternoon he and his friends went up. After opening the par lore and making tilings comfortable, he thought a little beer vtfkkin't go Mb!; so faking bis gimlet and lantern, hi dewg to fill h. f!"W fagrUmrl. Arr

his lantern down, he commenced to it, putting one of his thumbs over I leak; but finding that the light wasn’t good where the lantern set, he took the handle of it in nis mouth and continued boring. Pretty soon the gimlet went through, and the beer came out whizzing; and as he had neglected to make a plug, he had to put his other thumb over It He had the beer all snug enough, but discov- «-im| that he Mmaclf was fa sffa-he inu.it

anybody. He turned his head to the left, then to the right, and then he would drop it in a de­votional manner, and make a noise be*

me he la gan to Tecunder him, and found, by in vest! gat it\^ that he was sitting in a pan of soft -s^ Above him he could hear his friends en­joying themselves in the parlor, playing the piano, anti his daughter singing “Father, dear Father, com** home with me now,” followed by “Thou art so near and yet so far." His jaws began to ache bidd­ing the lantern, and the drool was run- ning out of each corner of his mouth, which made him nearly frantic. His feet and legs ached, too, from **¥ sition which he was in, and ne flld cidrd to let the beer slide, when he heard footsteps approach which proved to be the servant girl coming down after coal. As soon as she caught sight of him she drop.

ell

light out up tl\e stairs, lanJing in a behind the store. The loss of his

pttftJ- While proclaiming nil along that public debt and expenditures are uflag reduced, it is discovered,every time that re­liable official figures are obtafncd.that both debt and expenditures are on the increase. The worst feature of the whole matter is, that the present Administration has not only incteased the expenditure over all |»r« dcceaaors, hut it is each year eclipsing Its own extravagance in preceding years. —i/uincp (fit.) Herald.

-----HoWfapcedily a small puncture inthe gaaJreg of paper credit exposes the weak spots financial Howqtopklv lOtig^oacealed embezzlements and d'Vhtoatl.int crop out. Ovett mon­eyed Institutions, trusted implicitly by multitudes, turn out, on inspection, to be mere empty egg-shells. The secret grabs of directors—the private loans to gam­blers—and the shortages of clerks anuem- fdtiyta, att ooiue to light Unit And yet, amidst all this overturn of rascality and broken faith, there comes a demand for renew<*d confidence.—£f. Paul (Minn.) Pioneer. __________________________ irxT~^f U*at It gp<monopoly—iril is, indeed, the anti monop. oly parly—why, we demand, in the name of ail that is consistent, did it notexertlts own large power to stav the progress of the danger * • * * }Vho is responsi bb tbi#rt*jqrip«rf4rqftMi»g»t Who has Paltered; encouraged and promoted

»wp*i'XPwcayaa8sway? What party has had absolute do­minion in the nation, while monopoly has been building firm and broad the foundations of its supremacy ?—MadisonfW&yMmwdiP* * ™

A Co.of the

If such a house, that has had the unlimited confidence of^ the Federal Gov-

IflAuneht and the f*ople*for yauru cann«»t withstand the pressure, who can? The farmers are bankrupt, and are uniting to save themselves from utter ruin. What busiiUM is in better couditlon? Wh«.

‘ns. 1L X ti pan jx*te

oly—if ft Is, fndeed, the anti monflft-'

Oeucral .New s Sunnnar/,7=

-----The smash-up of Jay Cookei* DVtMjljr teUjr the beginningent

a tufa >fandson solid gn -■ —crisissue crisis

re ring wTtn .

made the old man so irate as to drop his lantern and rehearse that part of the dic­tionary which is left out. After scraping off the soap as well as be could, he wenu ed his way up the back stairs to his room and changed his raiment. Returning to the parlor, he told his friends that he had been out to see a man

The Conditio

The first inquiry that suggests itself to the Western reader in connection with the present exciting condition of commercial and financial affairs at the East is: How are we to be affected by it? In order to arrive at a truthful and* well-defined an swer to this important question it is only necessary to consider a lew fact*:

1. We have just secured a wheat crop throughout the West of averaga size, but of tutch better 'Ylnui ordinary quality, vrwitit bqgan tally to move toward the seaboard, tm* gifil stureof vretiih has scarcely been broached. It is yet mainly in the hands of the producers, where it should lie In an #*ro#*rirencT Hk»» th* pres­ent. The vast surplus i» now to —• forward with no uncertain promise of an active foreign demand. Tbc fbMtnjf «d in prices during the oast day or two can be but temporary, and there Is every reason to believe they will meet with a decided advance sjxWily.

2. The West is freer -from debt to-dafrSSfflSl

all classes to move with caution and pru dence, and to avoid debt. This is espe daily true of the rural districts, upon which our welfare so entirely depends.

J. Our merchants during thejiWst year have operated with the utmqsf enutom. and the records of the eofhfliAf*idl agencies, Kadi and Want. their credit’IITa lM<tMMigwtF* TltlalifluifisP era have bought but sparingly and have not contracted any indebtedness that cam become embarrassing.

4. Tlie lies! element of all is that cryf^ dent, hopeful tone which always |>enra(Ict Western communities. This wss seen in its grandest phase during the early days succeeding tiii; grtal hcc. From ai< pari* of the intfrfRtMffit’wor'h of i»V end vnc our^gemqMt »Thf people were as de UvktoJ tnd staidly as they arc today, scouting the very idea of distrust or panic.

To sum up in one sentence, the West is to-day as sound financially as any com munity under the sun, ami she has the wherewithal in her immense surplus of cereals to pay all her immediate Indebted ness. From'these considerations—and we believe none will challenge their truth— We cafi tee no good reason fur«?ic exercise f of any but a hopeful and confident spirit in the present exigency. Panics are as often based upon nothing as upon sub- statist causes, and there U no reason why the people offfiw? gn a N^ihw* shoo hi la conic psrfaffipflRl If thJPbxdfM-uictM which has -ffi flf JJ jf ij ^'1 jTreckless speculators in railway secuniWm. What we need is simply to exercise that habitual C4M>lness ana steadiness which are so eminently characteristic of the peo­ple of the West, and all will be well.-— Inter Ocean, liept. 22. n

or apparent a, but i* th w

where business men stand shivering fear lest a great financial calamity over­take them? If God Almighty shaft see fit to work a miracle, in answer to the prayers of good men, the country mav continue on utadefr ?h# uyMrm <frgttnlted hnd sus­tained by the dominant parly, but unless something over and above nature is done we shall go to smash sooner or later. The legitimate end of those who run on stilts

pids i«*M

OLM WORLD.According to a Madrid dispatch of the 29d,

the entire British fleet In 8pani*h waters had collected In the hsrbor of Alicante, which city was threstcuened with homtiardmeiit by the insurgent iron-clads. The Britbh Admiral, supported by all the foreign Consuls, hsd de­manded s postponement of hostilities for four days. It was reported that the situsiian of the Car lists In the north of Spain hsd bsoome prevsrlcsi*, and desertions were numerous. Demur silastic*) abounded on evsry hand, riaiihaldl had oflared bis sword to UMSSWice of Bpaln, but this bad been declined with thanks. A proclamation had been made by the President suspending constitutional guar­antees, establishing s vigorous censorship over the press, and prohibiting the carrying of arms by civilians.

A Ixmdon dispatch of the 22d says that on the preceding day a desperate oooflict had liken place In Bury 8t. Edmunds, between a toobnf Irishmen and a bodf gf aniL*m»n Tlie dfH< « rswrrs *<jnqHb-d tou w their cluhs vYgormisly, 'Siid dW not sueteM ia 'dkspersing the rioters until many of them had received severe iujuries. A renewal of the dlsturbaace was apprehended. During the progress of the riollqg several house# were attacked and

The BpAniah steamer Murillo, which ran down the emigrant ship North fleet, some months ago, having arrived at Dover, had »>ecn detained by order of the British Admi­ralty Board.

A Berlin telegram of the 22d aaya that V’k tor Emanuel, King of Italy, had reached that city on a visit to Uie Emperor. It was said that one of the objects of his visit was to se­cure an understanding with the Emperor for joint action against* possible French sggres- siorns imd to prevent the election of a French ultramontane to the papacy.

A dispatch from Gibraltar of the 23d says a terrible explosion had occurred oo the steamer Broombaugh when she was at sea UML milca off that port. Four persons were

y kiltfa imd mar) so M*i>>g*lr jr-aldcd

( Iearing*IIoum* OrtiHratr*

Thf. New York Imnks have adopted the plan of settling balances with clearing house certificate* instead of greenbacks during tli# present fkifry. Td the gmeral public it mav he well to explain what this action signifies. In a time like the pres­ent, everything which tends to economize the use of currency is nrv tanto a relief to the money market. New York being the monetonr*<WiUr of the country, the plage wher* aft otto* tranks kctf> greater or legs balances, ahe must ri*apSSrin with currency wlu-n the tmnks of other cities nail for tlieir funds. Hut for all

r*»Wn *”IC . u**^anything which her own banks may agree to consider good. All the banks meet once each day af the Clearing-House to exchange checks. The Park Hank, for instance, turns into the Clearing-House checks drawn on other banks for $500,000. Tlie other banks perhaps turn

cbe^fa on the Park Hank f<* /jflOL * Tli# Park Uamk, ih'-refore.

res U.S (luring Iloiisc $'>0,000.Psuallv this auih wmtW be paid tn the Clearing-House in greenbacks. In order, however, to economize the use of crrecnbsck*, the Park Bank, its condition being shown to lie perfectly solvent, es in its own check for $50,000

’Is i

A Madrid dispatch of tbe 23d says the Bank of France hsd agreed to advance 10U,UOO,OOD francs to tbe HpauUb Government.

A dispatch from Teheran, Ferula, to Lon­don, of tbe 23d, announces that the 8hah bad returned to his capital. The whole |H>pulattoo turned out to escort him to his palsce.

Advices from Ban Domingo, of a late date, were to the effect that the revolution against Ufa flMfat-rfaMMiit of Preablent Baex bad as- »um$| alums tag proportions, and that there was mryffoppr. t of its upccdy success. Tbe towns of Monte Christ I and Gusyabin were in possession of tbe revolutionists, who were in close proximity to Porto Fists.

A London dispatch of tbe 23d says that Jay Cooke, McCulloch A Co., of that city, had thrown out the drafts of Jay Cooke A Co. that had come to baud since the suspension of the Utter firm.

A London dispatch of tbe 34th says the hows* of Clews, liabreehl A Co. had decided to • us pend. |

A Are brtifa <>ut hi the Athews-um. st Man- cCsIct, Engiihd, of) the 2-ffli, w hfehr had de stroyed 2U.UU0 volumes before It was extin guls had.

W,r\r*

, piisa-Other

bAnk* against which there is a balance do tbe s«in<*. The Clearing-House then issues it# certifioAi* v for an equal aiuouat to the banks winch have a bkfttnce coming to Umrn from the day’s clearings. The sys­tem Is perfectly business like and in *e cord with sound principles of finance, though it nsesasitotes a frequent exAiniaa- tion of the asaeu of tlie several debtor banks by the ClfirtBgilcMi^e Commute* —Chicago Tribune. '— -i ,, i

Stoart Hayings by little Folk*.that on the 19th a terrific storm passed over

Title enfant fenWpIrc an i«n)*trual{ Florida to the vicinity of Taitohassre. A large»le in literature as in

POUTICAL ITEMS.

-----The princient that polwith a clumsy

business of the pres­to

le in lb y patch i

clont. and derlars it “bet­ter aah new/’ Reckless legislation and lavish expenditure of public lands led to tlie Credit-Mobiller scandal and all ths fuss which followed.—Daetttpori (losta) Democrat.

-----Jay Cooke was the Christian bankerand financier, as Colfax and Henry Wil­son were the Christian statesmen, and O. O. Howard the Christian soldier. It is a bad year for that class of men. Jay Cooke’s fall alia ix merely afamerunneaof that of the ItofaSYMhti pnJfrm hffibe* a one of its very main pillars, and it* finan­cial agent. He was the moneyed man of the concern. It has been for two or three years living cm Its wealth, the fruits of

fails, it will dwindle,

JIS» ‘Jild piece!”

have

Andhim

started up, exclaiming, seen him! oh. I have ne

“Been who, child?”H addeuab Thari

he we* pnof a*d hun my lunch and my fold pfafll

Is i!m Jr!»ild crazy? fFhere’s the big silver spoon that was in the bowl ? Tkari dena. indeed t A tfflMfal M VMhPtedl a

Poor Ellle* Herdrean rudely enough.

Mehitable got It all out frees through cross-questioi felt guilty herself for hsvi rh»M the hook,lnd more stl her alone so long Bhe broken little girl as

Ml) the blame beeaetf when Madam Peyton on

of her by bL mint, but ahe ng given the III for leaving

d tha heart- well at she could.

homwtlyshe told th* story mSu her return that evening.

Tim scoured the oMtefllry far day, but nothing more was “4at Thaddeus ’—Harper %

many a heart! of

i-empJMMFally thfagduatink and.

dangerous monopoly In the land. It is an office-holding, offic e creating monop­oly, aad, while tbe people are Just now < imaged in slashing off the heads of the hydra monster, let them plunge the broad axe of their indignation into the egg pouch of the old reptile Itself, the Repub­lican party, that has spawned this legion of monopoh.« upon XL—Madeira (Wfa)

s*^^*w* %-----Ths post-office clerks and gangers

in Iowa are travel iag about dressed in k*rX- •hlMa, Pfai of jeam and hoto m»d4d hbets^Sfriwiirfa• every tyruntram-

patgiv meeting, and howling as If tlllfa be-

The saUry-grab sneakers pretend not to recognise them in meeting, but after nightfall they all go to a hotel and hare a good time on back pay. It Is easy to de­tect them by their scratching, as hie k*>ry shifts don’t agree with their skin.—A. Jr

rolr In literature as in society during these modern days, and although a little of him goes a good way, yet it must beowned that his mvtant are so$i*uumnispicy

A grandfather was holding Master Tom, a youth of five, on his knees, when the youngster suddenly asked him why his hair waa, White . ‘GV’, **wjc» gsndpapa,” that’s oe< a I :n IO old Wffy draFf you know that I was in the ark

“In the ark?” cries Tommy: “why you aren’t Noah, are you, grandpapa?”

,'FaTi. th* iiteumtefm.”f!.. iTwfan^p you’re JspjMfcy

“No, vou haven't guessed right: I’m not Janhet.”

“Well, then, grandpapa,” said the child, driven to the extreiuitr of his bib Jical knowledge, “ you must be one of the

Not less critical was the comment of a lad who was token to church one Bunday for the first time.

ou see, Augustus,” said his fond t» to Impresa his tender

4 at Much *A moment with lasting remembrances, “how many people come here to pray to God f

“Yes, but not so many as go to the cir-J cos,” says the practical lad.

Ouite natural, alao. was the repl little lady who was foun ‘ raoiimr beuauas case of lute companions hsd given her a slap.

“Well, I hope you paid her bsckr* cried the angry mother, her indignation getting the belter of her judgment.

“Ob yes, I paid her back tybrc htmdp*liAtWP'-r*: - j w ,Tlf»

—The Cambridge (England) University examinations for women this year wete attended by 320, against 154 last year, aad 127 the year before. The failures to pass the examinaUoo# by reason of a deficient

<a arithmetic were fewer than;i# *«*.1a**

the studyis beginning to receive some A “first class” in the natural

science group of studies has also been ob­tained for the first time.

r1i<*upon them by the heads of departments m Washington to th# interest of tha Grant

It of a by her

neglefllfli,attention

nette gvare fewer than

ly or Italian', hitherto

Alb&,tai0 to huUkm hsd bceu shipped to New hvi oa that day. la consequence of the outflow of specie tbe Bank of England had advanced its rate* of discount to 10 per cent.

A telegram from Madrid, of tbe 2flth, says that the efforts of foreign consuls to prevent

"the tiomlairdiMent bftAlk-ante by the insurgent men <4 war biff faded. The bOaH>ardment had opened at 5 oVlsck on the raovfang 6t tbe 27th, and too projectilea, some of which were filled with petroleum, had l*em thrown into tbe city. There was much damage, and several edifices were to ruins. A vigorous Are waa returned from the forts and batteries on shore, with effect, /or at Mis mid of seven hours the rebel Iron clads bad flipped their cabk* sad a ill)drawn to s damaged *ooditioo.

A Fart* rpevlal of tbe 2Mh states that ex President Thiers had accepted the leadership of to* part* of tbe left.

A Berta) dispatch of ths 28th announces tbe death of I.*mlse MuhMasuh, the aslebrated Gerutsu nuvehst. ^ ^ ^

THR NEW WORLD.An Augusta, Ga., dispatch oC the 23d says

number of dwellings had been Mown down, and ths crops to all that saifacn ruined. There or four lives hsd been loci, several persons persons injured and s iarg* number' of cattle killed. The town of Bt. Marks had been com­pletely washed away, only two houses bring left standing, and twenty families had been made homeless. The town of Newport hsd also been swept eut of existence.

A telegram from Fhtladelphto, of the the 23d, says that tbe financial horizon bad a bet­ter and clearer outlook, and that by the fol­lowing day matters would resume their nor-

toeua’, tbe Iron, the th*j|cy*tBM hanks had temporarily

Ifa MnttHfficment* bad been made to enable them to resume Immediately.

A New York dispatch of the 23d says that the financial atmosphere bad tieeome much clearer. Tbe business of the day had developed remarkable strength to the banka, only two of them finding It necessary to call for loan cer­tificates at the Clearing House. Tbe Stock Exchange had not been opened, though set- th—rut* were making cm generally satisfac­tory terms. It was thoggat that business to the stock Itoe wuaid speedily be resumed.

A Washington dispatch of tbe 22d says that tbe President and Secretary of tbe Treasury had reached that city. Tbe President felt confident that the right method bad been hit upon to afford help from tbe Treasury, and 1 he general conclusion reached by tbe Informal interchange of views was, that If further help appeared to be needed It should be given so far as It wss possible for tbe Treasury to act. It had been decided to send $20,000,000 to kew Turk, to enable the Assistant Treasurer In that dtp lo hup all tbe bonds that map be

laslon

but no

Chicago, on the ted, prevailed that the reached. Money was

farther fall urea

the impres worst had

tight, beea an

Hi Jbg use of thin leave* of fieri In the ennatnirtton of artificial magheta, M Jam in has to increased th* carrying power of three magneto ae to construct one weighing about four and a half pounds, which could carry a weight of ninety-nine pounds. The great advantage

machine*

the mill girl* at (liicopee, are tw»coming inveterate annff dip- nd on any plea*ant “nooning” of girl* can be seen on the canal

each supplied with a box of----------- a bunch of cotton waste, rwb-

5 gam* arith infinite satisfactionThe mill girls at Lowell hare Iona ham

to l111

addicted to thi* habit, but |te advent to happy teste of tl Ckicopaa is quite raoeal rr fT™ Um repute of the

flgfaoud- f flsl htotory

tfafa to tha t cfly the fatal order

is prises. There scarcely any dealing to “options” In the Board of Trade. Cash wheat sold at $1.05, while teller October ren ee high ee $1.07 to $l.flfffa- “Had It not been for the panic,” remarked s leading dealer to e reporter, ‘‘before the month closed the difference would have been grratoi the other way."

On the 23d, the PreaMeut appointed Oscar Whitney, Secretary of Dakota Territory, ofss Gen. McCook, deceased, end Jonathan Merrtem, Collector of Internal Revenue for theUght mtooG^ District, stss Harper. ab~

sene', and the letter would be ready for bust- ness In e ftwdaye.

In Muw York, np to three •'dad p. m. ufs general feetiter of

Atrudely shahsn bpof the house uf

Henry Clews A Co. This event hsd unsettled tbe feeling of security which hsd pre­vailed, and fears were entertained that the end bad not yet beea reached. At tlie close of business the Government had pur chased aad paid out over $10,000,000 green­backs for bonds, 'ten milllofa more were reedy to be paid on further purchases, and fifteen millions to gold notes awaited the pre­sentation of the five-twenties of IMS, called in for November lfl. Tbe Block Exchange had remained cloaed. The run upon the savings banks hsd continued, but as most of them hsd adopted the time rule for the payment of depositor* the excitement soon a tailed.

A dispatch from Washington of the 23d says that the failure of Jay Cooke A Co., and the First National Bank of Washington, had Just begun to be severely felt In that city. The Reform School for Boys, tbe National Sol­diers’ and Bailors’ Orphans’ Home, the 8mith- sonian Institute, the Children’s Hospital, and other Institutions bed loet sums ranging from $10,0(10 to $20,000. At the time of the failure Ex-Presklent Johnson had $fk),0U0 to his credit; Judge McArthur, of the District Court, $10,300; Senator Patterson, of Booth Carolina, $14,000; the widow of a former Navy Ageut, $14,000, and Gen. Hunter had a large balance.

In Chicago, on the 33d, opinions were freely expressed bp the leading financier* that the liottom hsd been reached. The feel­ing to the Produce Exchange was excited and peculiar. In the morning every one seemed to thtok that the day would look brighter, and Un* market (>i*mcd somewhat hSojaat. It mold nut be kept up however, and prices drooped till wheat got below one dollar per buabsl.

A dispatch from Paterson, N. J., says that, in consequence of the general depreciation of new railway securities, tbe orders for locomo­tives flor three months ahead at Rogers’ Loco­motive Works, In that city, had liecn canceled and Vtu workmen hsd l«cn discharged. It w as feared that 300 more would tie discharged from the came works, and several hundred at the Dan forth and the Grant works.

A dispatch from Richmond, Va., of the 23d, saya that the Merchants’ National, the Planters’, tbe Mechanics’, the Peoples’, tbe First Natiouai, and tbe Citizens’ banks, of iMershuig, had suspended.

The President, on September 33, issued his proclamation announcing that dcff-rentlai du­ties on lm;>ort* in France and the United States had been abolished.

The long expected prize fight Ik*tween Allen and McUoolc came off at Chateau Island, four­teen miles above 8L Louis, and nearly opposite Mitchell Btatiou, on the 23d. The contest lasted twenty minutes, seven rounds were fought, and Allen was declared tbs victor. It was a brutal affair, and the rii«pst«-h stated that McCoole had lieen terribly punished.

A full meeting of the Chicago Clearing- House Association was held on the evening of the 24th, st wbk-h the following resolution wss adopted:

Hash'd, By tbs fYlriro Clearing-Hum* A elation of the city of ( hu sso. that uadi further action, and la rWw of thr disturbed couditlon of affair* In New York and other cities, and the dlfll- calty of cuotrnlnr hala&cc* Into currency, and on tbr ad rice of the Bank Examiner, its member* be recommended and authorized to *ospend cnm ni y payments an suj large demand* made upon them sltbcr from country basks or over tbrtr counter*.

A New York dispatch of the 34th announcedthat Howes A Macey, an old and well-knownhank tog firm, had suspendedL The Clearing- issued another vlu,<iXMuai or Krifficertificates, and resolved to stand by all the banks that refused to pay out currency over their counters, and expel all those that do ooL Brown A Watson, gold brokers, had suspended. Tbe examination into the affairs of the Union Trust Company hsd been concluded, and a statement would shortly l»e made. It was said that the defalcation of the late Secretary would not exceed $2UO,UOO.

Advices from Washington of the 34th were t<xthe effect that the authorities had been dis­appointed at the renewal ol the financial trou­ble la New York on that day. It was reported that the Secretary of the Treasury had tele­graphed to tbe President that, in his Judg­ment, the purchase of txmda should cease whenever ths amount of currency used should reach $13,(100,U0U. Tbe President had not re­plied to this dispatch. An application had tw«u made to the Secretary, by leading fluan- (i*l men, to anticipate the redemption of tbe t3u,«RM),uuu of fire per cent, gold bonds falling due In January next.

A Milwaukee. Wls., dispatch of tbe 34th •ays the Chamber of Commerce of that city had suspended, aad that there would be no trading in grain until farther notice.

A dispatch from Wllkeabarre, Pa., of tbe 24th announced that Brown A Gary, banker* of that city, had suspended.

A Baltimore telegram of tbe 34th announced that all tbe I tanks of that city had stopped currency payment. Brown, Lancaster A Cowell, agents of the Chesapeake A Ohio Railway, baring bouses In Baltimore, New York and Richmond, had also suspended.

A Little Rock, Ark., dispatch of the 34th say* tbe money panic In that city continued, caused not to much by Eastern financial com­plications as by the refusal of the city banks to take the shiuplasters that have been cur­rent there.

A dispatch from Richmond, Va., says that the Richmond Dollar Savings Bank had sus­pended, and that Taylor A Williams, bankers, had failed.

A dispatch to the Associated Press from Brownsville, Texas, of Beptmnber 34th, say* that s series of butcheries and robberies had recently been committed in Mexico, the vic­tims in every case Iwtog Americans. The perpetrators of these crimes were arrested, and tbrtr guilt fully established, yet not owe of them hsd been punished, the authorities tiring either indifferent of powerless. Tbe facts had been reported by the Consuls to Washington In tbe hope that redress would be demanded.

On the afternoon of the 3Bd, Mr. G. G. Lyon, <4 tbe Chicago publishing bouse of Adams, Blarkmrr A Lyoo, committed suicide by throwing himself to front of an approaching locomotive, at Oak Park, Hllnol*. Physical

tel depression I* said to have superin­duced the tragedy.

The New York Republican State Convention at Uttca on the 34th, and nominated

Francis S. Thayer, for Secretary ot State; Nelson K. Hopkins, for ComptreHer. Daniel G. Fort, for TVeesorer, Benj. D. 811 Ilmen, for Attorney-General; S. Mead, for (anal Com­missioner; W'm. B. Taylor, for State Engl

M. K. Platt, for Prison Inspector. Resolutions u era adopted, affirming that thr peat history of the Repuldtesa party was a guaranty that It would b# true to every future obligation and requirement; that thr party hnd overthrown the Tammany iniquity, ele­vated the judiciary, purified elections, and that the completion of the refttan require* a con­tinuance of Its work; that the Republican party had shown itself the true friend of tem­perance; that tt wss the imperative duty of tbe BUte lagffdatnre to provide means for the

transportation of cereals the Stele to tide water; that the sourse of

and Representatives who opposed the^snd that the Republican Senator from

that State be requested to Introduce s bill town, or

publicly or privately n The Dsmorrslh end

tftoua of Wisconsin united at the 34th, and nnmtneted the ttehte: Wm. R. Taylor, Osvernm ; CheteaaD

Kuhn, Treasurer; Peter Doyle,

=====. -SP~fg?the Improvement of the Wisconsin, Fox, and other navigable waters of Wiscooeto at the ex­pense of the General Government; opposing protective tariff lawa, back pay, monopolies, free passes to member* of the Legislature, Credit-Mobilier, sod corrupt legislation, and declaring that the party would vote for no person whose nomination was the fruit of bis own importunity or a combination amoog par­tisan leaders.

The BUte Liberal Democratic Convention of Minnesota met at Bt. Paul on the34th, and de­cided to make ns nominations. Resolutions were adopted advising all Democrats sod Re­publicans to yield a cordial support to the nominees of the Owatonna Convention.

Information had been received at Washing­ton on the 34tb that Collector Weidner, of the Second District of Alabama, was a defaulter to the amount of $30,U(J0. Orders had tieen issued for bis arrest.

Tbe wheat crop, according to tbe returns to the statistical division of the Agricultural Department, published on the 34th, presented an average of ninety five, which is about the same as the September report of 1872. Tbe area of cultivation had tieen much larger this year than last

Tbe Chicago Journal of the 25th says that It had become necessary to say that tbe bank* of Chicago bad not suspended payment or closed their plsciw of business. The action of the preceding night waa not in consequence of a panic, but to prevent a panic. They had not ceased business, were continuing to receive deposits and pay out such sums as might be needed for ordinary business transactions, but when sum* were demanded lo hoard or with­draw from business operations, they hsd re­solved to delay the payment of these until the financial storm had passed. Tbe currency stringency to that city had hsd the effect to bring the extensive hog and cattle trade to a stand-still, it being impossible to make cash sales. The Union Live Block Yards contained 30,000 hogs and 10,000 head of cattle, all that the yards could possibly accommodate, and the live stock commission merchants had no­tified the railroads and couutry shippers that no more live Block would be received until [farther notice.

Tbe Cincinnati Clearance-House Association adopted on the 25th a resolution substantially the same as that adopted on the 24th by the I Kinks of Chicago.

A dispatch from Kansaa City, Mo., of the 25th, says that the tank* of that dty had sus­pended.

A Memphis dispatch of tbe 25th says that the First National and De Boto banks of that city had closed their doors.

A New York disyntch of the 25th says the daj had l»een a c > nparatively quiet one in Wall street. Thi scans of relief adopted by tbe tanks In effee, og bank clearances by loan certificate's had esied tbe pressure oo them­selves, but bad not materially aided others The extreme caution of those institutions sod tbdr anxiety to protect themselves had added largely to tbe actual scarcity of money, and there were grevioua complaints from the great commercial world and the Produce Exchange in particular. Earnest appeals had been made to the Government for relief, and resolutions had been adopted by the Produce Exchange suggesting to tbe Treasury the issue of cur­rency to the tanks and l tankers on evidence that gold had tieen depositedit. of uftipfetrf out?in buying exchange. Tbe breadstuffs market was still under tbe influence of tbe block to exchange.

A Washington dispatch of the 35th sayf that the President had returned to that city perma­nently. At a consultation held between the President, tbe Secretary of tbe Treasury and the Attorney-General, the latter officer held that tbe t«onds of 1874 could not be redeemed legally before maturity. It was therefore de­cided that the Treasury could take oo further steps to relieve the New York market, except as It wss affected by the regular trans­actions of tbe Department. Dr. I .eider man, tbe Director of tbe Bureau of tbe Mint, bad predicted that the effect of this stock panic would be to hasten tbe re­sumption of specie payments. He said that withio a month. It was his belief, that silver and gold cola would be a medium of circula­tion at currency rates. In anticipation of this result be bad ordered tbe mints to largely in­crease tbe coinage,and stated that more bullion would be coined during the next three months than at any previous time to tbe same period. Secretary Richardson had stated that It would be a good policy for all tbe banks to suspend further currency payments. It wss rumored in Washington, on the 35th, that the President had been advised to cull an extra session of Congress.

A dispatch from Bt. Louis of tbe 35th says that the lianks of that city had held a meeting on tbe evening of that day and resolved to adopt the plan of issuing Clearing-House certificates.

A Newark, N. J., telegram of the 35th an­nounced that tbe State Bank of New Bruns­wick hsd suspended. This Is tbe tank that was crippled by the irregularities of Appleton, tbe cashier.

A dispatch from Nashville, Tenn , say* that the National Banks of that city had suspended currency payment* on all balances exceeding $2U0.

A dispatch from Selma, Ala., of the 35th says the Savings Bank of Selma bad suspended In consequence of an extraordinary run by depositors.

All the banks of New Orleans partially sus­pended payment on tbe 25th, according to a dispatch from that city. Tbe suspension was to remain in force for thirty days.

Telegrams from various cities in Georgia, of the 35th, aay the following banks had sus­pended: National Exchange, the Merchants’ sad Planters’ National, the Planters’ Loan and Savings banks, of Augusts, Ga.; the Dollar Saving* Bank, of Atlanta, Ga.; Savannah Bank and Trust Company and tbe Southern Bank of Georgia.

A Detroit dispatch of the 25th announced that Ufi Schooner W. J. Whaling had been beached at Green Haven, Michigan, on tbe forenoon of that day. Vessel and cargo were a total loss. Two of tbe crew were drowned.

A Wapello, lows, dispatch of the 25th say* that on the afternoon of that day Professor Holey made an ascent from the fair ground st that place in his hot-air balloon. Just as the balloon left the ground It took fire near the mouth. He had not secured his footing on tbe hortonotul bar on which he stands, but went up hanging by bis hands, and did not ap­parently see the fire until be wea too high to let gn with safety, hut hung on until he had r roc bed an altitude of twelve or fifteen hun­dred feet, when the canvas that held the hoop at the mouth, from which he

araed away, and ha fell, the earth a quarter of a mile from the of sUrtiag. Ilia body waa frightfully man­gled, the fall driving his leg* Into the hard ground np to the knees. Life waa extinct.

A di.patr-b from Shreveport, La., of the 35th, says the fever which seamed to have stated on the preceding day had broken out with renewed violence. The totems sets ran breed twenty-two.

The Inter taste Industrial Exposition wes formally aymed at Chteejta m tfco arautaff «4

The hugeIt was n that fully

ef the 31th say that a In that city ee that

Ctew* A Co

■■■■■■■■gBBgB'J,!,, ■»,ll ■■li.LBffiicaving the old to be settled Si securities can he negotiated. Gold had taken ao upward turn. At one period during the day R hadrearhsd U4fa, |>ut It subeequsufly receded to llfifc aad dosed at Ufifa. More activity bed beau developed in Western produce. Prime Imukcrs’ sixty day sterling had sold as low as UW, and sight KM, commercial UUls at Kill* KM for sixty days, and HU for eight. The tanks had cleared early and to good shape. Thera had been few sates of stock, but the <!nutation* were not considered reliable. The dty hsd been drained of money st a lively rate. The express compeufae had been carrying away currency at the rate of $3,000,030 a day for nearly a week. It was ruaeured that Flak A Hatch had perfected arrangements to re­sume at an early day.

A Philadelphia dispatch of the 20th says proceedings to bankruptcy had been com­menced against Jay Cooke A Co. The pub­lished statement of that firm shows liabilities of $7,930,400; assets, $15,956,211.

A dispatch from Washington of the Jfith ys that tbe liabilities of the First National

Bank, of that city, are about $l,2&0,fim>, of which $800,000 la due other National Banks. Its assets are not given.

The 20th was Chicago’* “Black Friday . ” The Union National, the Second National, the Manufacturers’ National, Cook County Ns-

and tbe National Bank of Commerce, ail closed their doors on the morning of that day. The Board of Trade of that city had adopted a resolution prohibiting dealing in grain options for the present, on the ground that such dealing* had a tendency to depress prices. In view of the present monetary situ­ation, and the difficulty of drawing city de­posits, the Board of Public Works had decided to temporarily suspend work on all sewer Im­provements not actually commenced. A meet­ing of the Associated Banks had been held in tbe afternoon to discuss the question of is­suing loan certificates, but no conclusion had been reached.

A dispatch from Ban Francisco of the 20th saya the Independent State Convention bad nominated E. W. McKenstry for Justice of the Supreme Court. The Convention adopted resolutions that the opponents of organized corruption form themselves into a political body known as the “People's Independent Party,” repudiates party fealty as s tyrannical rule, sinking the citizen to a servile partisan; condemning the system of using money cor­ruptly in elections; condemning ail political rings and cliques formed to coutrol elections; pledging the party to civil service reform and to resist all Credit Mobilier contracts with finance companies; denounce* the present sys­tem of the distribution of lands and grants of lands to railway and other corporations; op­pose* all kinds of subsidy by Federal, BUte, county, or municipal governments; opposes the present tariffs; favors taxing solvent debts; favors the eight-hour law; opposed to Chinese immigration, and also opposed to the election of tbe President for more than a term of four years. The last resolution indorses the stand taken by Governor Booth to behalf of popular rights against the encroachmeuts of politicians and railway corporations.

A Washington dispatch of the 28th says the Mixed Commission on British and Ameri­can claims had made its final awards and con­cluded its business one day in advance of the time fixed by the treaty. In brief, the result of the inquiry had been that ths United State* Government pays to the English sufferers by our tote war two per cent, of their claims, amounting to $1,923,819, while American claims against England had teen all dis­allowed.

A Washington telegram of the 9IHh says that tbs President had tendered the office of Chief-Justice to Senator ConkUng, of New York, and that he will accept.

A New York telegram of the evening of the 37th says that the week had dosed on a more cheerful financial aspect. The greenback re­serve had lata drawn down from 934,71X1,000 to $12,000,000. Clearing-House certificates hsd been issued as demanded or desired, and it was thought that *Mth the aid of these- and a small infusion of National currency the crops could be moved and mercantile embarrassmentMM MUU1 *. ■•»».«. V

The Third National Bank of Chicago closed Its doors on tbe 27th. The Cook County Na­tional, one of tbe suspended banks of that city, had announced its resumption. Tim Manufacturers’ and Second National Banks had decided to go into liquidation. The Union National, the first of the Chicago tanks that cloaed its doors, hsd announced its assets st $5,000,OUO, and its liabilities $4,300,UUU, and given notice of its speedy resump­tion of business. Tbe Clearing-House As­sociation met on tbe evening of the 27th, and after an animated discus*ion resolved not to issue Clearing-House Certificates.

A dispatch from Bt. Louis of the 37th says that the rear wall of a five-story warehouse on tbe corner of Second and Chestnut streets had fallen, opening a gap of fifty feet wide from the ground to tbe roof. One mau had been killed and two seriously injured.

A dispatch from MaUmoras, Mexico, says that an armed party of United States soldiers had crossed the river from Texas, about forty miles above that place, and that preparations had been made to repel tbe invasion and give the invaders a warm reception.

A dispatch from Kingstou, Jamaica, says the British steam sloop Niobe had arrived from Hooduras bringing the following intelligence: General Strata’s troops, after assassinating a detachment of Palacio’s force, which waa under a flag of truce, approached the fort, sacked Omoa, imprisoned all the British sub­jects gutted the consulates of America, En­gland, Spain and Portugal, tore the American flag to pieces, and sacked the merchants’ warehouses and safes, leaving them perfect wrecks. Tbe Niobe soon after arrived and dt* manded a surrender of the imprisoned foreign • era and an explanation for the outrage. Tbo authorities were obstinate and refused to ac­cede to the demands of the commander of the Niobe, when a bombardment followed until a flag of truce was hoisted. The prisoner* were then surrendered and compensation was guar­anteed.

A New York dispatch of the 28th says that the President of the First National Bank, of that city, had urged the Immediate resumption of specie payment, oo tbe grouud that such action will add $50,000,U0U positive relief to the money market.

A Washington dispatch of the 38th says the President had expressed his determination to recommend to Congress the adoption of a system of free banking. The Secretary of the Treasury had ordered tbe anticipation of tbe payment of the November interest. The following letter had been sent by the Presi­dent to the parties named:

Rxacvnva Msasiox. Kept. 98. I67S. Meflsr* H. B Clafftn and Charte* L Anthony.

Ussm.*WKX: la response to thavlm yon have commaIItested ss to the astog by the President of currency lo restore eonidcnce and legltimato trade and commerce. I have the honor to com ■aak-ate the following The Government ke de ebon* of doing all to Its power to re here the pres­ent ansetUed condition if business affair*, which Is holding back tbe immense resources of thecountry now awaiting transportation to ths

is the firet thing eroded to relieve tfaton and evert the

_____torates ed d* itracttou of

c<SI Its

with Its neeompsnjnj^dhmatoiw, to allof people. To

iMtt ailthis feeling tbs

wtlre co-operationcorporation* of

li.rtW.fcn already

_____________________ ATressary. tbe bank* are dimg sis

ths sauatry WHh tos piswme shrad/t-ij t_. imrcha»c Ov tpGYtffuffit-R» muriiM u bsm rod tlw withdrawal of Urge deporit* from^the

all aM

<4nnklte _« 1 I IBtn U* UW nnwron^. «f the COUB-trymayreqsAre. Close attention will be gtrsw to

STJTZ1ST■tw Right Rev. Orc.M.1 Bishop of Colorado, Nsw Mexico and Wyvm InTdtod at Drover, Oat, rotas 3fith, of

Drover, Cut,of the mining town of Fair-

ptey, Gal., hod boro consumed oo the tath. All the stores, printing the United

with two or exceptions, bod boro utterly destroyed

Auorr the th rilling

(The independent COMMERCIAL.

COMMITS MBTMB.

THURSDAY, OCT. 2, 1873.

■IAi B«TATK Tlfi %*■*'*:ttJ4‘TlnWIewlMfiNlke UtwwHtMn la rani **<

in tb* uffir# of lb# l«(Mw af Deed*

tf tfmtfk. la* Xh»d ■«f Ka»»*4K fini i

•fmM i<>«. Indtk ott l.s tf ft ofanH l«l. »m! *t in at 'tk *Cf <o* X **r tMKt to John Ok**k. viiUg# lot ft* X

IIpmt ttmuk to IftHf k •# lot 1.1,. tb# mil •k* V . 9»U *t tn Width Mc*f< thn IV.SmMmi o.In hteagfi. Marl* Ktittk for fl.oao

lUf.M H t.v«»* lo J.*Hn tewto Lv«u. Yura af )MPd w V. v. H of Ion fiX In ftni«,W UNO

John M TbeUn ta Pater J •ehml'a, W. ft of 8 B ft of tfe*. *, In Doll*., 40 »#rm, for

Af<uU 0. Moran to Aaron V Brawn, II. B. ft nfSne.tt.tn Ovid, OOnora. for 11.300

Calvin r»IIMl In Rllnn J laatwit, ptec# nf land on B. ft of S t ft ft One tt.ln Watertown. lot

lira* f. Tiller tn Catharine WHntO, *WI n«n lot* Mm. I nnd t, In Monk tt» in Mupto Kaput*, for

and ft of

of

III»f M

JU Ha««B ft «»f o B k «f

r ft aftf Kft At nra If, John N Fork**

'o On r««\V, fi«*T, thn nnd ft «. U, nnd thninOmnbuot

t* tvu n Oni*r'<Hi. K W ft M B ft of See. 19, in Bonenl, 40 arr**, for fMn

dehorn Ofumptoo to John TV. Pother. K ft of W ft of S K ft of no U. mi DulU*. for |7S>.

L»ulra M Hail. to n.h'at.l C. Terrill, Village Info N*> I nnd X BUwk IS. In Ovid, hr UNO _ Wm. Shnnnrd. tn John Wed. W ft of village lot Mo. X Sloes 4. In BLagardsvtll*. for (1T W

Tartan Wtlev. to llonarr Wntwn, N I ft nf ft W ft «f Sro. IX In Rioaham. tt or inn. for |Mo

OUrfc. TV ft ft nf K », for fano

Bltennrd, k V of Int t, in P» cn land S ml# wide V nnd tf, nndw.inlltil# Rof.Ute. lor|IN.

•T. lOMISU or reeled weakly by l> C. Htnn,flr* W lift AT- Bntrn

Mnl.lIfsMtJ

•• in. I. UrJMtftfDIUB-Xn #■*» i*nr kiki.

• -I* SI Sh *•OORN URAL |l kftp*t Inn I bn. FKRD II » pnt 144 pontfdn HHAN 'he.pnrlW ponnd* OOftN-MtirMU pnrhn. nhni|«n. UATV 40 »ftJtblp|ief heHAKI.Xr II te|»er cat H1TTTKH tteasts per lb.OIIBBIIR llrnntnpenb.LAUD - 14 vet# p«llh%KtiOtt -|3 *•*»»• t»*r do*. k'OTATOKtf bniKthe.TI'RMIPtf h«..l.t*errhn.OMlOMtf - |1 iftirtr i>u ,WHITE HF. A Stf f I Tk per bn.A 1*1*1.Rtf 4*-<»«»r per bn.

-Dned.lr prr pttend.PORK. — Per barrel. 117 M S R ft F- #4 M to |4 04 per lit U1 DB4I-—Oreon, 4 tw I*.

•• Dry, 14 tn lie.tf A |.T - |*i 2& perhnrral PBLTtf -1 7hte tine M A P1.K ttUOAR. to**lf\o HKKhWAX -ite err II*. WfllTKFItfll - ft M.l. *«.. I ft .* TROUT. - No.. I |4 40.

LEGAL NOTICES.UMTCi %4«ftl 9ALi:.< Ilrhall

ir.'

DENTISTRY.3HUB BBST m THE CHKAPKkTI

L•J Se pronnnud nf 1>B. U. ft. COMBI H for nn

Kttle mwoajr a* at any ofifir* In Mmbtgaa. Herd'* B<iiiJiiV. rit Johan. M4\J

tft. Johnn.Mleh

A. STOUTATTORNEY AT LAW. tft Johnn, Michigan

Otton la Bank Blush, raulh door, Id Soar.

M . Htntu*.

BARTOWt TTOMMBYS ondE Ho lie it or* in l*hai >uuty, Miebigaa.

J. 11 fiMva.A FEDEWA,Counsellor nt Low n

eery, Weatphaha. Clinton

L. W. FASOUELLE, N. D.,hatneui taa manea. OM. « at bln ranldenn*I oa Welker ntrant. mnt of Clinton Avneer, Bt loht**, Mlchlpno Cnlle promptly attended In |SM

WALBRIOGE A COOK,ATToRNBYtf and Cwannollora at low nnd Ho

lie item la 1'hanrar) All heatnenarn treated tn their car* will he promptly and faithful!) attended tn. otten with Pioenreitnn Atinrnry, In the t'onrt llonnn, St. Johnn, Mlchtgnn. 944

, atiBkiaoa. n. conn.

Learie Thrap. to Belinda W ft nf Are X tr IUt» . 40

BXm Hto'n.1. la Bn«m I Mark 19. w» I S rod* E and

Jonhan Ymtna, to Orrilla T Whitney, pane# of lend on N K ft of 4nc. 7. in foot for $M*>

AiSnrt M. White, to Chn* W,»dt. W ft of X W

ftnaro*. W ft of Mft of her. ft. In Otire. for $X.H

ItoMRiaa OihMMi, to Jonlali w ft of Ant 7, In At«:n. for Id

Joanph I’latfn, to Auto** Kite, 4 I to-If tend on foe. X In Wenti hallo, for tojano

Afo» « »• Ja»oe. R Jetrya. W. ft nf M fl ft of S K. A ft «f Am ?, 94 aoran, far |XN, in Ur«-ea

Canpnr Bad re anhet, '»*¥ <*•* torn,) to Anteo Pulte, nt. nL« ptnm nftond tn W.-alphalia, f»r R>,.

Henrr Montana, tw Wei Mr>ataaw. • ft of K Viator, ttoevea. for #l.ooo

Wm. H. Monlapen. to Hnut Montague, N ft nf • * ft nt Her. t, in V|rt*»r. for MOt*.

for |!00 ft nfM

Hen. W. Nor aed J >ha a Porter ta ILnektok Bowley.rtHp af land • lent S Inchea aid. off H ■Ida af vUlnfe lot No. IX Woek 17, In Ovid a W Wehethr to H P. Adam*. A. W

B. ft Sac tt. in Rliay, fot 994.Harriet, L. Pra t »n Henry R. Howard. If. K. ft 4 R. ft of Bra. |i, 40 aerm, tn W*trrU»wn. A*.

Ilmrt R It&wmrd to Ora. Kufor. TV K % of A. B. ft of He*-. 41. in Watertown, for 11.441 94.

John W. Wiiarn ‘by gnardtaw) to Ihpy li. Ben­nett, <»mn«ad>g at the nmth wrat corner af Sec 1. thanae reaninc VO rod* *onth, ikrnrr 40 rod. 44»», thonee toned" north, theuer 40 rod» neat, to fnwHbrf.anlaiiii Wairnown, foi 4*J37.fM.

Lem Ira M Cor la John T. O to* non. W ft ofN. K. ft of Srr. SX m Dnptaln, 40 «area, far fli 4._Wm. tf. Cotftoaa « hr rare nit court wm.) to Oeo.W. Pieraoi*. If W. % of N K. ft af Sac. 90,In Vic­tor. 44 aarra, for »«9 44

Tla ait •• tfrlrkhai/fM» IfftftfrCMDItaT r—The editor of the Ecpuh-

lienn. in hi* Umt imna. area- to think that the brick hot aliened to hare bran thrown nt Mr. Strickland’* head rhmupf* hi* otto# window, on Wndnandny evening of >a*t week. *ai an attempt to do him bodily harm by the anti prohibition i*t*. on nnnonnt of hi* bring ragif* <1 in proonent- ing for Tiointioo* of thr liqnor law. The act ww reprahrnrible. In4 it barn bran done by whotaon- •ver or for whatever purpoee. Thr anti-proht- hRioniat* of NL John* comprlra in nr torn twin- tintha of the bnainem nnd Inhoring men. Indeed 19 to M prohibit! -u nto or. nil that cowld be ■matered at a Town Meeting and I nan hardly brloitro that they are dirpoaed to raonvt to mob law or violence in any form, I am inclined to think that thin parttcnlnr brickbat waa not thrown oa account of Mr. H.*« participation in prone* a ting liqnor eaae*. hot that it wa* proba­bly thrown by some overtealotu friend of the pernoo be *o *hnmefully nhura i and aUndernd nnd the feeling* nf whona family and nninerona friend* he outraged at apnblie meeting, at New­ton Hall, the evening before-which *r and a Ion* outrage he intenaiSed the neal day by endeavor­ing to hare such pereon arrested- Thu latter at­tempt, bow* vnr, to diagrace one of oar mat trust od. e*timable and fnrored eitiiea*. whoae dun- gennaa iUanoa bat n short Urn* at nee Ailed the commamty with fearful apprehension* that he■itotti# ttttl ~mr mom o**A €mi *k. .r ^ InlrrFibn null lufen- wa* foiled- The nholo ooamn- nity felt ontraged by the ooodact of Strickland It waa not eoniund to party or tort—all classes declared it to be aa outrage anparralrllad in the commaoity—the malice wa* so obvions This* outrage wa* the theme of the day. on the atrnnt*. in the shop* and business places. Pally MU prr non* gathered on the A venae, and without nn ng- eeption. condemned the outrage in unmeasnrvd terms. The brickbat wa* thrown the evening following this excitement, and aa ia generally believed, wa* thrown on aaroant of this outrage. Strickland would undoubtedly be glad to barn the community think nn attempt had been made to tomantante him—it is mid that he talks it in that light—and be thn* made a martyr to the temperance cause. Jacg

\fUHTUIbt; *AL»:.-Dafoalt having iYX been mad* In the condition* of a certain laortuagv rsaretod Kovembrr 'J7th, 1*71, by Lnelua 11. Warner and Nanoy C. Warner, hi* wlf*. to William 9. Moore, and recorded Janoary 7th. 1979. at 13 o'clock M., la the utter of the Kegister #V Deeds for Clinioii tounty, MkhUaa, laLibri 30 of Mortgages, on pagv 14. 011 which mortgage thare it rialmed to be due at the .{atc of tlit* no­tice, throe hundred and twanli-t wo dollar*, baaidra •u attorney fee of thirl) dollar*, stipulated In said mortgage to bo paid should any proceeding* He tavkn to force lone mid mortgage ; sad no snil or proceedliNs at law or »a equity having beau In­stituted to recover any part of ihc debt secured by mid mortgag*': Now therefore, ,hy virtue of the power of ml# in mid mortgage contained, and of the atntwle ia such me* mad* nnd provided, No­lle* i* hrrahy given thnt on thr lfttla Step 1*i raaab**r* A. D. II7X at one a'ttoch in th* •Hernoon, at l be want front door of Ike Conrt llou*# for Clinton eonnty. in the State of Michi­gan. In the village of Ht Johns, ta mid nonaiy, there will hr sold at public vendue to th* high**! bidder. Ihc pn niter* dearrthad ia raid mortgage, to wit: The went half of thr soul h east quarter of section twenty-ala*, lownebipaia, worth of range three weal, C'Unton county, Michigan. - Itetad Auguat 14th. 1I7X _ ^J»7 WILLIAM 9 M<H>KK. Mortgagee

OMUlitf ftf* >lf#WiAYIS4.-tfUcte of Mir.htgnw The Riglith Jndtrial Or

cull-In Cnssuanv. Riiaa KuMiimw v*. flaury kohhuM. tfnlt pending tw the Clrenlt CTonrl for the wHiwly of CUiitow, In Chanrnrv, nt tft. John*, oa ihe -inI• d*y of Auguat, 1479 f‘rv**nt. Haary K Wsl ridge. Kaq , Circuit itonrt Cummiaaioner It mtiefbeioiily apDcartng by the afMdarlt of Joel H Cr»«*on. owe of the not tell urn for mid Com plaii>«n', thnt Huhpmna for th* appearance of se*d detewdant has been dal) waned out of mid Conrt and ihni the name cannot be nerved by ran son of ih«- continued abaane* of aald defewdant from hi* place of rnaldence at tft J»haa, In aald Slat*. On motion of tf pausing 4 t 'ranaon. Soil- nior* for Mid CVmplainaai, It 1* ordered that mid defendant <*u*e 1.1* appearance to be entered la kfottnnntf— wwltfn fowaaltf A— llkn 4tf>M

■Bnbe

Ckvpy then-of nerved on the Con*plain ant's Solicitor* within twenty days after aervtc* upon him of a copy of aald Hill and notice of thle order, and In defoult (hereof thnt mid Nil be taken •• eonf***ed by aald Defendant. And II la fur­ther ordered, that the Complainant canoe a copy of ihl* order to be puMtehed within twenty day* in the Clinton Independent, a weeh'y newapnrar printed and circulated In aald eounty, aao that the mid pubitcatton be contlnned once In each week fnr *lt *nccaaa|re w«-ek*. or that she canoe a

! ropy of thla order to he personally served on th* Defohdant at leant twenty day* before th* Urn* above prem-ribed for hi# appearance

IIKNRY K. WALRK1IH1K, Circuit Court ttommloatoner.

Clinton County, Mich. HrttLliM a Cnsnnon SoTr* for Compi't A true copy of the original oed>r on ale and of

record in my office - Itoted tft. John*, August 3&tn, 1471. F. BYRON CCTLER.S44-4 Regtairr In Chnaeerj.\fyywrwj3| Circuit Conrt for th* onvstt af Clinton Lucy L Derry va Cornelia* V. H. Morrl* **4 Caroline MorTfo. Notice la hereby given that oa the 9d day of Auguat, A. D. 19.X n Writ of At­tachment was duly issued out of the Clrenlt Court for the county of Clinton, at th# suit of Luey L. Berry, the above named plalntifl, agalnat th* landa, lancmenla, g>«nl* and ehattela, moneys and eftocta «>f Coi weltus V. II M orris and Carotin* Morris, the defendant* above nomad, for th* asm of ten hnn- dred and leu dollnra, nhlch mid Wsit was return­able on the 19th duy of August, A. D. 1I7X —Dated this l$(h day of 4eplaniber. A D- 1*79

WALIIK1DK A COOK.ttlXw Attonaafn fov PtfAnttC

itl; IIIMII.M State of Mtrhignn,of Clinton. **. At a sraalon of the ,

WM HAVENS, M. D ,nimikinrniv ruraicuii, ■«..

, doors east of the poat ottce. n ill atiewd t«> all call* pawtaming to hi# profession A nper tally an*4r wf laeaarl diaratr. J44 4n.THORNTON'S FINE ART CALLERyT

PIloTt HJ KA I'Htt large nnd siunll, and In fuel | *v*rv variety of ptc‘ur* made ut the above Ool |«ri ,#tther large or email Tarticnlar attention la

sailed to enlarging and if deaired colored in oil, water color*or India I ah- Head of Clnton Avanne, wen fide- f 11_____ L. W. Ttfo**t<." Artut

A J. WIGGINS,PHYSICIAN AND BUROBON (>«c* waul

•Id* Cltntnn Avenue All nmfoeatonal coils, night nr day. promptly nttonded tn. Pnrilaalnr

atUnllon given to Chronic nnd Surgical cnee*

SPAULDING A CRARSOR,ATTORNEYS and OannarUoranl Law. nnd Suit* 1

tor* In Chnnrrty.St. Johns, Clinton Co. Mich, n. l. nrAVLniHn. I *. a cassias.

MISCELLANEOUS.

MISCKLLAM EOUft.

We Study to Please.

HAM GONE AND

J_ 1S/L.

Hna ram* With Ik*

* • *»>•< « aTTflffl

NEW

Largest Stock of Goods furniture emporium!to wur large vormty of

«»*r hrnnghi in tfota irknC.

K W

MUSIC

Fifteen Thousand Dollars Worth

Broadcloths,

STORE!

OF" EVERY DEHCllII^riON.

To wharh w* am nonstnniiy adding

New Styles of Chamber and Parlor Suites.PICTURE FRAMINC A SPECIALTY.

ST. JOHNS MANUFACTURING CO.M.J IMh, 1171-141

IN NT. .JOHNM.

inis raasa wnn:n inrre inonina rrun me unie this order; and that in case of his appearance cause hi* answer to (he Compiainanie bill to died nnd n ropy thereol served on the Complal

Boughl nl aacitom hy thn rt

WM. H. TRIPPand fitted up In snperb ■>!#, ih* building owned by

Having I Tilth# in tlio Liir^eht Ntook of

J« T. tt illluase. Cllafoa Awraam,

lloa there displayed a ttae Hue of

Musical IiiNtrumenttf,Rhonl and • aad Manic,

MtfUHlI count tr

Km bracing the bent nnd Intrat of th# day. Any piece of ainaic or musical Instrnmcnt, net kepi in •toeb, will he furnished on short notice, and ni th* low eat market price. Between 2. M0 and sheets of niostc now on hand. A fall and ci pie*# stock of

Guitar and Violin Strings.

Boor aa nalo la thla Clly»

AT M.

In addition to the above, I shall quality of

keep n superior

Legal Clip,Letter Jk IN eat e Paper

Kn%'el»petf,Ink, I*e

Thn largonc s toe It at

Pour Omn Httoi LATtu** —Thu foBow- uig extracts from the ww regulations of the Tost Office Deportment ore pabUnhmt for the information of oar mmlera. The regu­lations art? prefmctxt hy thi* «|«c, ia) notice :

'* V1I instructions on.l rngolatioM pro mulgatral by the I’oetmastr r tsUDorsl, coo fonnnbly U> law. for the KUKlanct; of iwraons employ cl by the Itoportmoif, are entitled t*» the same resi»oot and oiieJicuce ns a< ta ofI'uHirmu I nv Hio-.r ^ j . ' may be gran led In said ratal#H.jfrwna Any <tinr*tf*rrf or disobedience rbraenpon It »* Ordered. Thai Monday, th* 4th iid sucb rwgalattoua cnLuin upon Punt Mas- day of October, im. at I o'rldk In the afternoon torn, contractor* Mid other employe* of the assigned Tor the heart eg nf mid petition, nnd l ost Office Deportment thn •uw« Uobtlit»uu i ** **,d decr~MHl- •llnnd penalties a* a violatioo of any specific law (J Con^'Mi. Ihc f-'llomtigrc^u atious

Probat* Court for th* aonnty of Clinton, heldan at the Probata ufflea. in th* village of St. Johns,?Sar«flftr*nfef«ffca si.Kx ‘uiu w#jiy •

I’rrant. Joel ft. Crannon, Jndg* of Probate In the matter of the estate of THEODORE

HAURKTYand PRANK II40S.KTY. Minora. On iwadtng sod flilng th* petition, duly vertfteO. of Hugh llsgrrt). Oimrdtan of aatd Minors, praying for reasons therein set forth that he may be licens­ed to anil certain real mlair of mid Mlrore

Thereupon it I* Ordered. Thnt Thursday,the Mb day af October, 1974. at 9 n'ctorh la the forenoon be assigned for th* nearing af aatd petition, and that th# nest of kin of aald Wards, and nil other persona interested In said rotate, art required lo appear at a session of mid Conrt, then to bo hold- •a at the Probate Ottce, In th* village of tft. Johns and show canoe. If any there ho, why the prayer of th* petitioner should nut be granted: And U I* Partner Ordeied, that notiee ho given to th# person* interested In mid estate. of th# pendency of mid petition, end th* henring thereof, b) eauatitg a copy of this order to he published In the Clinton Independent.s newspaper printed and etrculetod tn aoid county of Oltnion. for throe ooe- ceaatve week*, previous to mid day of hearing

JOKL H CRANtfON, Judge of Probnto.(A true copyy. ________ 9U»| JKOBITI. OMDI.M.MT County of Clinton. **. At a session of the Prolmt* Conrt for the county of Clinton, hidden nt the Probate Office. In the village of tft John*, on Monday, th* |4tb day of tfrp cmber. In thr year one thousand eight ha ad red and seventy three

Preaeut, Ju*i II. Cranaon, Judge of Prohate.In the matter of the Batata of 014 VER KVKR-

BtfT, Drcansrd. On rending and filing the t»e- Uiton, duly vended, of Arnold Kverrat, priytng for reason* therein sat forth, that admmtairatkon

t'lltf,

Ami the Ilk*. 1 shall also keep a do* stork of th* hast brand* of

Cigars and Tobaccos.All i hear good* will b* warrant ed oa represent­

ed and sold nl moderate price#N B -Hsac Teacher* can b* fnrntnhod with

1t*1rnV--‘y‘ I JlTilttn TH ifl ffiflBtt ‘ bribroaTW. II.

April ltd. 1979.

J*RT RM i:ilf O

—s» ms—

•urpoaeand utatnictiooa am ntmle fur thenl organising the bumnean of the____meati, and nil official nets of the officers of the Department must be ilone ninl perform- nd to strict cunfuranity thereto Kvrry dn- vintiou from thran nmtracttunn nml rogula- tmao will be foUowmt by appropriate pvnal- tina or ptamshmeiK *

RibirLkTHiatg roil IB73.Hjtf-. HO Msi table matter in tiivtclml into

three cUmen, rig; 1st, Imttrra , At, iCegn lnr prut tod matter , Jd, Mrncwi W.,u. mat ter.

®L—Fired (1nsn. Thin embraces all anriespotxionce wholly or i>«nly in writing exenpt book man it script ami corrected proof nbnnta panmog between aathora ami pub- lisKer*.

fctecnml chaos Tltin emlvrnom all matter exclusively in |>rnit, uul rngularly ivsuml ht xtatsul pen--Is from a known office of puMimUiai, without nldittoo by writing, mark, or *tgn.

Third Clans Thin eaaltracen all |mroph- ltffiX nnnaarmaJ puhlicmtions, trannieutiiewn- papnra, auftfaginus. haailbtli*, poster*, un­healed carcaiar*. |>roapoctitsev, brnka, book niauuacnptM. proof ah vet*, corrttciml proot ehnets, maps, prints, eograving*, bianka, flexible patterns, asm plan of im-rviiamliae tod nacnmliag twelm oanona in weight.

other peraens laterrated tumid estate, are requlr ed tn appear si a session of mid Conrt then to he t olden si the Probate tlffiee. In th* village of tft . j John*, nnd show range. If any «bare be, why the prayer ol 1 Hr pet It loo*-r* should not b« granted I And It t* Purthrv Ordered, that notice hr given to the persons interested In aatd estate, of the non- dency of mid petition, and th* hearing thereof by causing a copy of this order to be pnbttehod la tb* Clinton Independent, a new spa per printed nnd circulated In m»d county of Cilr>ton for three sne- esaalve week* previous to said day of hearing.

JUKL llTcItANoON. Judge of Prohatn.(A true copy) Ml I-------------tit'll-gi.Ve'af lfteUtfS,

onrtU, photographic paper, letteranvelope*, postal navelopoa ami wrapper*, wnb, plain and oruaax-ntaJ papnr. photo graphic ranranentetioaa of different typnn, •ttttflX bnlbn, mUinpft mmte, nckmn,

.rjf1 L"“tter which mny bq dneiarwd mmlabte by tew, and all otbnr artooten above the wntebl

tty of Clinton, a* At n saaaton of the Probate Canrt for the county of Clinton, hold*n ni Il»e Probate office. In Ih* village of St Jobss, on Monday, the |4 day of tfeptsmber, lo the your uw* Manamnnd eight hundred and seventy (brae.

Prompt, Joel H Cranaon, Judge of ProbateIn the matter of lb* Estate of NtCOLATS

KNlBPtt, Derenord tin trading and filing th* petition of Peter Bniene, praying thnt the teal will and taatament of sold deceased may he proved and admitted to Probnto.

Thereupon it I* Ordered. That Monday, the 4th day of OiU> «r, 147X at • o'clorh lath* forenoon, be aa-lgned fort b* bearing of aald petit log. and that tb* heirs nt taw and legal ora of raid dec eased, and nil other pvrwous interested In mid will, or* required lo appear el l seaefon of raid court, then lo bo bidden al th* Probele office, ta the vil­lage of tft Johns, and show mao*. If any there ha, why sold will ehonld not be approved And It I* Further Ordered. That notice he given to lb* per­sona Inter**t«-«l In and ratal*, nf tb* pendancy of the hearing thereof, by canalng n copy of this order to he published In the Clinton Independent, a newspaper printed nnd circulated In aald manly of Clinton, for three eaecogafve weeks previous to sold day of hourtetf.

JORf. fl CHANSON. Judge of Prohol*( A true copy > Ml Aw

Huethirdai with

of kiteweightAll packages of _____

La an wnappud nr aavukia- tadna nr sente, Mini thuar «m-

U rnodily ami Uionmghly sumwtiftowi daattrwyiqg thn

flfl- No writing of

)r Mlnr vntiag m nrof Uus nteaa will on to­

tenf Ik# thin!

ni

bn panaitted

—The iijfifMn rrttirtd by Mr Dttwsy from i freight train ml DrIIbs tttttioQ, a bool four week# mM.in meod- ing slowly. Il Is laand by him that i wmrt of the liltU Anger of ibn hnn-1 will bare to

iRgttr of ibn te)«rbd Im MMMatad. Hn »• m >l<l ring wbiob brokon by ibn car

lo vtek 1m indiii

•nd br ok art by4Tir bin tead, ittd

^ibn Vnod —

be$6 ym wtgk.

STATB MW ■ teas a 41 AN. Tb# Cfrcntt I Conrt for tba county of Clinton —Is Cast cvnr. Mar*ardl Richmond va. Jtftoi * Ekrbuiood.

Al n #*##»«•« of gold Coart, held nl the Court llouae. In the village ««f tft. Johns, on the 4th day af September, A. D. IfiTS. Present, Vsvote i. Lev elf. Clrrtll Jadge. It sniiafartovlly apweoalng to the Court thnt the Inst known pine# if rratdene* of ih* defendant wasinihte Stale, but that bt* present place af rvaldanm cannot he found. On mo« ton nf XU. Part, nf connnvf for complainant, Il In Ordered, that the sold defondnni, Jnme* B.

can** hi* npponranss In (Mg ran*# tn wlihla tbraa months foam th* dale of

i4*r; nod thnt In earn of hi* appearance bn ran** bla answer In Ibn cwmplalnnnt • Nil to bn food and n espy tbeennf to bn rarvnd nn tba anna pint anna'a eulieflev within Iwvnty days after aor- vta* nf* aapy of said bill and noffinnnf thl* order,

■Cana thereof that anM Mil te tones an 'name R. Rleb

wee ora enpy or oam and in d*inab iharuM cowttmood by lb* raid maud. And it In fti

y day* tbn anMX

a notice ofI In i be CNotnn tndapen-

I'Ubtti ao-’C be . -.»,l 7 .*.-.1 II. so<.1I te ffiffib weak ffip St saaMnttnn

nf i Me nntfnv to te

akmnq mtttfatfBl^ffifl fltfn bte aM^raow na m •w»»f ttrnmnwm iw» tfuupmwCf ■HENRY t WALBRIIHIB.

Circuit Onnrt Comataaloner R. U. Danv. Ottaillft ttfr I cert Iff (hat 4b* forofamg tn a trn# aapy nf tbn

artfialMtea file and nn raaavd to my offie*. Wfines# py hand nnd naal af tbn Obontt Count for tba Obnnay of Oils ton. _____Mn^^MtMVonUKImia

Mnar CourtAT. SOMWB, » Mill

JOHN SWEENEY, Proprietor.

Cloiu sure!Tb* finest Invoice of

Spring k Summi r 4>oodsBrer hofora uttered tn thin market, coast sung af

Fine Broad Cloth Suits, Imported Diagonal Suits, Imported Scotch Suits, Cheviot Suits,Cottonade Suits.

1 keep constantly on hand In coanecUea with than* a fall line nf

Geits’ Firiistiif Goods,Also, n full amort men! of tbn hoot sty le* of

HATS Sc CAPS.■lib, Mata a apnclnlly.

E. K. BENNETT.ft. Johns April 9ah. 1474

OF TAM!ranCi »while

fpnabunppiv .-I h.< Min % WlnrafTar l«»linvr tvinr> nvrit Umii any s-itnilm prrpnmdoonvvrofiinxi l« (ton i-ubito. It In rleli In

Table Linen and DamasklaclatilaB all llkn laleal ntylnn and awnnltlns la tfon market.

Everything New& Stylish in Waterproof.lOO Pieces Waterproof at Si par yard.Fine Bleached Table Linen et 60 eta. par yard.Linen Napkins at 80 ota. per dozen.Kentucky Jeans 12* cents per yard.Satinets 30 cents per yard.Heavy Check Skirting Flannel at 25c. per yard. Lonsdale Soft Finish Bleached Sheeting at 13i cants

per yard.Fine Brown Sheeting at 111 cents.

BACC’S

Corner Store!HT. JOI11S to#.

(Jforwavrfy CoJaccff S Xowp.J

Conntoatly nn hand and fnr sol*

Fore Dregs and Medicines!llandarfi Paivai Medlrlann,

Pmmt9t

Otis,Vormikm,Paml Brushes, Toilet and other

Samps,

Dye Stu/fe, Perfumery,

Pure GroundCOFFEE,

Tobacco, all kindt. Ciyrnrs,Yankee Notions, Full line School

Books,Paper SfStationery,

St. Johns, June 2d* 1873.From and after this date I shall soli for

Ready- Pay!Believing ft to he for tb* internet of both seller

and buyer.

Stop and Think.Can yon pay your

Grocer’s BillsAfter running three or alt month*, any had or*

any caster, than th* day yon parr has* 9 Koch day to the fat are, aa in th* poat, will press nod clnm-

1 oar with Its demands.

REMKMBKR

Purs Ground Spues, Full Ime Blank Nuts, Books, cheap.Candies, Pure fFmee andTEAS very cheap, Liquors, for me-

ta daoe. die mol use.

baefnr Raff attends personally ta preparing Prenr rI pilaan.

night or day.

tfPBOlALTIBd:Dootor lfi«trig*a*

Ague 1*11 Ih.Cntlmrl l<* IMIlm, DinrrhfFii IMIIm,l)TM|ie>|if !«• IMIlm. IlVradwoko 1*4 lira,

bait Rh*na (Nnlment, and far all rrnpllan* af ilia nkln.

ttr. 1. M. foalld** celebrated Care far Anltoasa.

fowl aafl fare S#flg Wiler.Jane fid. 1474 344 tf

“Sufficient unto the day the evil thereof.”

is

TRT TUB

—4JF—

NKW ARRANGEMENTM

by Mare all eared •* < ft. 1’ite is a«.lf-era |* ten! w ill 9 vers* m• r 7#S

I r#.ve IL« #*w rwt ■

• dan ttae ataavn-aanud ntecta ef g •v gtat attendlna wa have ttao an ant ceanplnte Han ef

NEW GOODSl» TIK rLUE TO Nt TIM.

.GOETTE(tfaeeeeeor lo Wm P. Flint.)

¥\M JEWELRY!AND PLATED-WARE,

D. C. HURD,Whoa yon want an) thing in tba lkn* nf

Groceries,Provisions,

Flour,Crockery,

Glassware,Stoneware,

Ae , nnd beeomn antlofied that youP*Jteg a* ywn go. Try It.

can do better

D C. HURDJT.JOHN■

Carriage Factory

CARRIAGES AND BUGGIESC/ lot* k

Mptf<ttficl(*tt find CittffH,HcVOlv«» 1*44.

Pocket Cutlery, Ac K< 1 ’’U*“J °*

Oir ALL KINDS,

infseinred In

In this aarknf, end all af fl

40 TO 50 PER CENT. LOWER

tfrBCIAL ATTENTION GIVEN TO

FINE WATCHESAnd tbn parehaniag of tbn

Haring bud many years experience In tb* mak­ing and repairing of Wale he*, Clocks and Jew­elry, gives mn many advantages over those who have bat a vary limited knowledge nf sneh things. 1 oak for n share nf th* public patronage

H. GOLTpC.St. Johns, Jan* |T«h. 1479. 944 U

BEST MATERIAL,AND

All fort My Warranted!

State Prison Wagons,Which I will nod ae

Ttaea they raa taw fwaad la Cetttrffil JHIehlf

Mink Fors at W holesale Prices.

Clothing, Boots & Shoes, Hats &

ft^T. JOHNS

| Bending Works.At tb* tft Johns Bonding Works, near the D. ft I. X ft., nn GHntoa Arenas, It Johns, may bn

toned ni nil time* nCOMPLETE MTOCK

Bflnt Runners,•hafts and Roles,

AT WHOLESALE OB RETAIL.

REASONABLE TERMS,AMD

waada are na timber, nnd era warranted

nf tbn bind assn

equal to everydin ribn with grant

rare, and ana ears to ftv,

P. O. WTIIAHT. Bflnabir lHh, im tow if

ffit Haw Jwtatawm*rpHB CENTER

MEAT MARKETIn atali an tbn

REMEMBER, Fifteen Thousand WOOIJEN GOODS will he closed PRICES.

Dollars’ Worth ofi out at AUCTION

Fresh, Dried ud Hall Bests,

J. M. CASE.BIDDLE HOUSE,

DBTBOIT, MICH

#. F. AWTIBMML.

Warrant Fullythem «%t

A* I do my own aunt.

BARkER.' tn tf

o. wtft Johns, Feb lot. 1171.

R’

On

•oPBRiBfi or Tmm

MEAT MARKETtn tb*

l#T. JOHNS, MICHIGAN.

Tb* proprietor,

H. W. WALTON,W.oid barn any to

ta Ibn i fi Mall

•rolls,Frloa,

• Hash.(That wilt always bn awpplted wti

m anbto. shewnbW nwd 4lgra«tbt* WySMs ran bwy mmssS mania from my wbtob a nww upon tCTmraeta, nn tbn

market nnd nl ns Ins prices«4 tbn

&ft|H 1CTX 944 If

HALX EXCIINCEar RENT.the bwttl IW4IH) known nn lb# M Jack so

Wwan*^ )* »fb-c*d for rain, suifi nn rate. 9m

Fnauri* Baldwin, Afb. tt.JntehlMf.flik tun hi u

FALL TRADE.Jhc independentTEEMS, #1 50 A TEA! II ADViBCE

HOME MATTERS.

Coriithiu UIr Ni. 241,

THI I’AMfllONm

in niLLUMV

•ytfflfff l»ifi ai ink 4 ■•fenafc’i.

^MlTh#rt win be s e*<*t»e OinmmisIwUwi ml Uor

Iwhlas !-»*g. lo fcl. F 4 A. M , a» Mmoi c Halt, IK , «• tk» following AsIm.At Osmi <v v«a W. n.MmAai.M. 4th.Monday. «I - “

A RICH DUPLAY.

Friday and Saturday of last weak were the days aet apart Air the regular annual opening of Fall and Winter Millinery good# at Mm Cole 4 Mta« Holcombe. 8lwl’i Bloek( and deapite the uupleaaautneaa of the weather, the

TO •« « > MiaiM.~Wrt«v«mJfsr palatial like apartment waa well filledtoa**ieei»-4<wli«e Nte^/Md^e**^*!^ with lady viaitor* during the greater

ooNmi ear mcumu splsa ikww eeMiaa (bar portion of both daya, and the large,

*>•“■> r"—*th* Im»kt«vmvt and Detroit Knaa rasas, at is brilliancy, wee diaplayed in the same pm€ peer. #r**i9 »• ___ | in tor eating and attractire atyle ai ou

cunreacoDRTV rtm.TW liar tor tl»* ua>i«l fur U war >t h*nd, an I

in order U nai A >r*i h«il attractive at ia former }Mn, ibe aid rf the Udtes of b Johns usd vleint- tjr Is asked. Aar who feel di-pooed in aid ta Inn name the but will ohh. * by leaving their ninr. with F a. CnUor, (be Secretary. Their sarvKwa will he wanted. common,tng the AI of Ooinbor. (Fri day.) hepMAtsm will be mul* to C-irrr tbeui to and fwa tie |r*us>t. Now Udlet, will you not i»n« forward am«I aid the utcen of n«to«t«iy in making iho coming fair which boo *ceoe»iod it?

A CAKU or TKA^KIi

former oecaaiona The whole place waa a perfect bataar of beauty, and tbe work of taateful bands waa everywhereto be aeeo. on the walla, overhead, oo counters, aod in faot, wherever the eye ehanced to rest. Goode in thia line of every description from the eambric needle to a $25 bonnet. A large mirror waa gaily bedecked with tbe fioeat lot of feathers we aver saw

massed, presenting all of the latest and most desirable colors, shades aod tints now nonght by the Qneooa of fashion. Tbe leading styles of hats are known as the M Belmont,’' ** Normandy," “ Promenade” and “ Mi mi,” but an at­tempt to describe their make up would prove almost fruitions, but suffice it to aay they are lovely. A large standing show-case oo tbe North aids of the

Cmn Kb Ami Cm Nti.W$ km* fwm our srdar fkr tkmt Imf

Ulktd *f Pmmr Pram, and wt taut U- fi*w W sir Ktmdrtd §f kmm§ 0A9¥fk fa fay /ar if. Omr fnmdt

us fAair wmrd fa kelp m wkm to Ik* ftmek, mil aaf, a/ aawrrn,

sav m tujffr an aaaawml *f tkmr nyUd. W§ nti year amufawas sow.

— Ithaca has s new u lock up,'* and the editor of the Jmtmml suggests the i lea of uaiuing it after and in com­memoration of its first inmate. “Hutch innon," The suggestion may be s good one, but we immagioe that the tribe ofHutchiosons would look upou it with '00* *>ot Bl)

here, that wo havalions to Ilia manner aod

a good dsal of contempt.

Ww lAhtlkb oppertu Ity »b<l sitkod of is- turntng thanks i« owr wily frten-a and patrons lb* their esc red (ugly liberal p«lrow| during tbe post year, aod by etch lib. ratity a ad 'support we ore wow ea bled to otrr a Suer line of goods than heretofore la Abe future, as lo the past, It •ball ho our ro stool ate- y bow lo heel pleas* our pot rows, awd ai tbe alum af the present year we hope to bo obi# to note a vast gala la this direction.—Wtthing ooe and all a happy and sue.eaaful future, wo rwmolu aa ever,

Your*. Obediently,Mae. GokS S Mias Hoicowa

Ba Johns, OedohuMeOtam_________ room, filled with the richest of French—A fine quantity of Timothy Seed flowers, elioited the full attention of

for sale at Heaveorich'a. every visitor. The array of Tunqnoise— While others are talking. J. H i and Valveta, neat to thia csss, em-

Corbit beats 'em all on atoves 4 prices, braced all the latest and moat deair"—Fur the latest novelties in Hats »ble shades aud colors, among which

and Bonnets, call ou Mias M. K. Dar- we might mention the Plum aod Navyj Blua. Other new colors in ribbons.

—BUrkwalonts aod Butternuts are fathers and sashes are ludicrous, aod plenty thia year sod are selling m this we name the following two aa a asm* market at 50c per bushel. ple : “ Dyspeptic Frog," * Billion*

—Wa invite tbe attention of our fl^a Tbe Normandy Hats for readers to the new advertisement of cbi|dren present a scene of exquisite Mias Hattie L. llicka, in this issue. bealltJ aud |0?e|ioeip. We hardly

—Tbe Wilcox Band was in town fcnow where to eud our description of rucMi*y and Max Heavenrich shoved this place, hut as our space ia limited

out a new banner in front of bti “One j we Cau aay but little more, and in Price Store. doing eo, we wish to apeak of the as-

— It is reported that tbe Ovid gigt*Dts these ladies employ. TheyL nioo School has 3< nonresident pu- are young ladies possessing rare and pile. Thia outnumbers St. Johns by a unrivaled taste and artistic skill, quiet, large majority. punctual and obliging, and above all,

— Tbe oyster 11 sde has fully Com* I exert themselves for tbe best mtrests meoced, and Mr. 8ietlberger baa been of th,ir employers, who, from such sa­vory fortunate in securing the exclusive al#unce aud through their own uutii- aale of the best brands. Sec his ad- lng energies, proper management, just

dealings and liberal advertising, have gained a large aud rapidly increasing

vertisrmeut.—Bill Crandall waa arrested last

Turo'l.v mgbt bj Night W.tcbm.n ,rad. We iu.iui tbe •lUnlion of Uoolmg for being drank, and taken their fiieod. to iheir card of thank, in before dual ice McFarlau on Wedne.- a0oibcr column, day morning aud fiued $llt including ■copta, which waa promptly paid. Ladies, do not buy your Kid

a .a . ^ m y. -J liiovsa usitl VIM1 hava first examined-All ,.««.»» b.e.og roll, at ibafol^ „ Miaa M K. U.rl.ug'a Johns W ooleu Mill are requested to _____ -call at the earliest opportunity. AUo,j Hesibtinu an Orricaa.—A man

moo\ named Wm. Karar, who, aa i*.nppoaedcarded should bring it immediately, •» . . . rr^ »I «i.fa to close np tbe bu.inem in two k*P‘ * “l<K,n 10 th« Kawmeot ofweeks A. T. Kica. tbe Kxchange. aud for whose arrest a

—People who do their trading at warrant waa ianued some time since by Maple Rapids should not fail to visit Justice Hoyt, upon a charge of having the “Square-dealing Store," for there sold liquor to a minor—after Raping they can get more goods for the same out of sight of Dep. Sheriff Taylor ever money, aod better prices for their but- j since he beard that the warrant waa ter aud eggs than at any other eatab- out—waa espied by the officer oo Tues- liahmeut in that village. Try it. day last, inside of the Maple Hapids

—Remember that Miaa M E. Dar- stage, which waa about to leave from ling baa so unusal large and fine stock iu froot of lhe Gibbs House, aod Mr. of Wonted to select from.

—This ia tbe day set apart for i.j- eng tbe Owner-stone of our 8tale

Oru Faiu.—-We hope none will be unmindful of the fact that our County Fair begins oo Tuesday of next week and lasts four daya. And we further bope that avery one who feels the least interest in the success of these exhibi­tions will be on haod with something to assist in making up n fine show aud a pleasant time.

Robbimy at Ovid.—Four persons employed upon a wood train on tbs D. 4 M. R. R., were arrested on Tuesday nigbt last, at Ovid, by the Marshal, upon n charge of having broksu into a jewelry store in that place aod robbing it of its valuables. One of them waa locked up there, and throe brought here nod lodged in our “Aodentonville pen.”

Correction.—In publishing tbs list of appointments made for thia(Lauaiug) District at the M. K. Conference, Rev. A. L Crittenden waa set down to fill two stations: buplnin and Maple Rapids. Tbe fact ia, he ooly fills the station at Mapla Rapids, aod that to the full satisfaction of the people of that place. Rev. J. F Freeman will serve the people at Duplaio.

Thanes.—Mr. D. J. Finney of Greeubuah township, with a large and geuerous soul, came into our offioe on Saturday last aod placed at our dis­posal a sufficient qnauty of nice eating apples—counting the dtvtl out— to last us until soow flics. This la only another evideoce of tbe fact that this gentleman does tbioga with n **wbcw" to it.

■ ■ ... ■■■ a > ■ . ■ ■

For the Fair.Requested that all donations for the

ladles “Dining Hall." not carried di­rectly to the grounds, be left at the residence of O. W. Barker, on McCon> nell street. Will the doners please re­member that everything that graces their tables at home, from the smallest can of fruit to the largest supplies of groceries, will be thankfully received.

Committer.—Don’t forget the place lo get your

warm dinner Oct. 7th, 8tli, Itth and 10th, and exchange kindly greetings with your friends, and bestow smiles and blessings upou a worthy effort for a good cause.

tha paaaa and quiet af anybody. The ■lak and tha nervous hava been mii< l> annoyed by thia gatharing; and we think tkattha excitement thus wrought op, leaves a ©old and doubtful mind wkan it subsides. More qaiet, candid and earnest reflection would better serve to promote tree, well founded and lasting religion. We tbink about this style of worship-the same as the devil did while sheering the pig : “ Ther’ee a great deal of noise for a little wool.*1 Wa do not wish the members of the Free Methodist 8ocicty to thiok that we hava any objections to their relig-

but they may understand right oat serious objec-

place inwbieb they aet it afloat

UwABUiai Cltiseae.To show who are the law-abiding

citixeos of oar town in relation to the Mdog law,** though obnoxious as it mty be to them, we give below a list of per­sons wbo have taken ^licenses from the Township Clerk, according to law.— The first column give* the uumber of the license; second oolurno, owner's name, and the last column, the name of tbe oherished “purp: ’*

1 Juki !*•«••;...........BlMk Frr4t Mi Ivnm;............CarloLf*U Lfevrvadl....... Harma Link...................DaveJeatfk SsjrSor...........BMgaAlma Civak............ VRsafeJ C Crael................. JasUagUto Wood ............... .JaskWa Baity............... PatrickH A Bass.................... TrtaFtorl* DeVrtet.......... TlWH a Hlltee.................MtV% ta F• udw.............TllpJonM Anicy............. no inmtC II Woal....^^Hf^HMC A »*ry ...........I'erltrTompklm At>by .larky.1 AA t.iftrr .......... . I*tl8t«*j.b*n (irumuwn*...II If !(•«•* ........ .... FrankTom ---- no nanU WtIII• • .............. oo o*nWllitara II Kt*p|n...... no iitw*

Rocsuuruui Attimtioii.—Call at the Manufacturing Co.'s Furniture Rooms and tee the new Ironlug Tables.

TOMB.

s4»aTtt

1011isIS14II141714

Siti

Taylor attempted to arrest him, when a scuffle ensued, the officer receiving aflash wound upon ooe of bis bands, aod

Capitol at Lanaing. and w. cipeci that (h< ^ drol| off wi,h him „e WMcity will experience anck a time a. i* ' ,fu.r„r<1. ,rrwtcd by the Sheriff and has never done before. Tbe State has appropriated $12,000 ta be expended for thia occasion.

— Almost every mao you meet on tha street now a days, has either a new

brought back.

Stovbs.—Tbe atove trade of this reason bids fair to surpass that of many preceding years, b«>tb in tbe amount

stove, ooe or two joints of pipe, a line-1 »*le* and in the quality aod varietyboard, a tin bole or a string of wire. gu<>di rfertd.eaan. McFarlan 4 What better indications can we desire of the fact that Messrs. Kipp 4 Fowler hava n fins and attractive stock of stoves and fixtures.

—For real and imitation hair awitchca and braids, call at the Millin­ery rooms of Miaa M. R. Darling's. 8tovaa, may be mentioned the * King"

—A young mao named Tuttle, well and “Queeo,” “Hickory,**—thrae aixea

Croul, appreciating tha wants of tbe public are getting in an immense stock. Tbeir assortment includes Parlor aod Cook Htovea of numerous patterns, in­cluding some naw style*, as well as old aod popular favorites. In Parlor

known ia Duplaio and Ovid, an “Bub,'' was, wa are informed, a faw days aiuae sentenced ta six years ooofinemeot in the 8tato Prison, and his wife to the Detroit House of Corraotioo for several mouth#, for being implicated ia the theft af soma spoons and other prop­erty.

—A hones belonging ta Mrs. 8arab Gnthridgs, a widow who n aides near Gardner's corners, barely escaped being destroyed by firs, on Tuesday of thia week. The flames wars first discovered iaaaisf from tha roof, and the canoe is attributed to a defect In tbs stove pips Through the timely assistance of neigh bora wbo saw it aad gave the alarm tbe firs waa extinguished before much damage had bean dans. People should look to their chimneys and stave- pipes ■

—Do not make your purchases in Fall aad Winter Miiliaory until yon have first examined lbs unrivaled stock at Mias M K Darling s

Tin Moothly .Sunday Evening Tem­perance Masting, Oct. 6th, at tha M. E, Church, will be addressed by Rev. D B. Monger. AR art Invited.

It la expected that all parties owing id anona time doring tbeir visit Fair sexi weak, will call aod bn same. L. B. Marneo*.

Krrvaann llonn — Mr J. W las just arrived from Denver CHy, Col., where be baa bean attending to tha wants af our fbffiuw-townsman, Mr. Qee. E. Bant, who is now there ill. Me brings the eueeuragiag nova Is hie friends that Mr. H. ia slowly, hut par

—and tha u Excelsior,*' n move re markable for its beauty of appearance. In Cook Stoves are tbe “ New Ameri­can,** and the celebrated M Fearless,” na established favorite. Those men­tioned being some of tbe leading attrac­tions offered. Before yon bay, please call at our store and look at the goods. We will be pleased to show them at aay time. McFablaw 4 CaorL.

AsbComibo.—Frank M. Lombard's Ballad Tronpe, will entertain all lovers of fine music, at Newton Hall, on this aud to-morrow evenings, Oct. 2d and 8d, on which ooeastooe they promise to prscent some of the moat popular mnaie of the day, aoeh aa Duets, Bal­lads, Trios, ate., in character Beared, Sentimental aod Pbuany. Tha Lom­bard's are spoken of in tha soundest of

aa being prominent among the vocalists traveling in the West —

Admission 80c; Children under 12, 90e.

TassrajCAL—Our theatre goiag will no donht bo pleased to

loam that Mearns. Leslie 4 Rogers, as popular in thia eeetioa, will appear at Newton Hall, for six nights of next weak, eommeooing Monday, daring wkiek time they will present tha fol­lowing now aad intonating plays: “Iugomar, the Barbarian,** “Colleen Bawa,” “Kathleen Mavouraeea,” “Ban of lea,” “Ticket of Leave Man” and “Under the Gaslight.** Look ant far

—The Bt. Johns Suffrage tiou will bold their next regular

at tha raatdanoe of Miaa M lng, Oct. 7th, at 7Vf

Tub Onb Price Stmtem.—Thia aya- tem which has beau inaugurated into our village by Mr. Ucavenricb, is working out truly satisfactory ends, not only to this gentleman, but to his patrons. It ia certainly gratifying to parents to know tbat they can send a child old enough to walk to tbia place of bu»iocs*, for so article, and receive it with tbe same satisfactory results aa though they bad went themselves. It te-ichce children the priociplee of jus­tice and learns them to have confidence io others. Ot course it is difficult to make the same claaa of goods boar the same prioe tbe year rouod. For in­stance, a certain piece of ailpeca might be exhausted, and tbe price paid for tbe next pieoe io New York—although identically tbe same is quality, 4c.— should be some considerable higher or lower, tbe prioe then must necessarily change. But thia one prioe system ia for this object ooly. When a new piece of goods, or any artiele ia brought into tbe itcre, a price, in plain flgurca, ia placed upon it, whieh shall not be deviated from by any one connected with the establishment, so long aa it lasts, but of course wheo it is closed out aod eaunot be duplieated the prte- of its substitute may ba higher or low­er. Wheo people ooee become accus­tomed to thia mods of doing business, much time oan be saved whioh ia now wasted in bantering. It should be, and probably is well koown by all per­sons tbat if a merchant lease ns tbe price on one artiele be is careful to make np such lorn on something else, and for this reason we claim that there ia much satisfaction to be realised out of tbe u ooe prioe system.** Mr. Heavenrieh marks bis goods at tiring profits only, aod from bis large patron­age we im magi ns that his patrons are all well pleased.

n

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»:

aiatnasss

Idvl* IHivIdtoa.............Bov*J C Brows......................Jaff DatltB L> rarfcharot ........ Frankri..*ru Monro •..............TlfoFrrd Kalb*.......................no matA U Nickel*.....................ColonolX C Klpf....................... JackX K Wheat....................... FaiO A Kate*.........................KlaorK H Bamaa............ . Bra noP H Lot*.......................... Prior*P H Lot*............................FanniaL C Bie*............................ no mm*A H Rich ............................Ar-emuaJohn WalHaaeo................Prioe*John Watkins................. UsoO L Shepard ... ..............TlppCharts* Morton............LflMC A Baotcy..........................JackJohn Rendl* .................... TteorKale Shield*......................ChubH Fitch .............................Jack FitchL N Miller......................... RotRichard Hrti ten............. FreakA H Harford .................... Roe*H Walbrtdfe....................no nsaeoFrank Beanetl..................PoatoWilliam (Jetton.............. Rer*rMortott WMt ................... flutSltaeft* Honlahory ..........FilmJerry Dwiihi...,..............WatchFrank Heidea.............. ...WoolFrank T—choot ................CarloJerry Atkin ...................... MtohyJohn Arerr ..............FUoO*ory* Hu K*.....................JimHenry Mr Loud............... .PintoX L Levi*........................... OipJams* Larkin*..................1mGardner t onn.... BailorRobert McFartor........... FrankB Haltlrr ......................... TomH W W.lton ................. CorleyH W Walton ................. BankF R Boiler ..........................Shop herdJama* Wllllama.................RoveUnity* GtilUoo .............. . JackB W Waldroo...................Nero<»*cai ..................... Tilpptfocor Brook*.....................SportHetk Brailk........................ .JakoG*orye Kmll.....................JackFrank K DeWltt..............CorleyM J Stock ham.....................DanAlea Marsh................... . CarloII S Towner.......... .... RoverG*orwe Gallup,................. Hhep.Wm Banff ........................... Roveilnnrah Robert*................Plak]I. M Hh«rm»i B P Cana, fyroa Smith.Frank Karber................. .TlyeXJ Fenner................... ... RoverA T Rice....................... . BillyAndrew Hanford ............. RoverII M Bradner...................BobWm Bowen*.......................TrippWm Gleylvr......................TrippL Iloyeamyro....................RoveT H Conydoa........................U *>>rGoo P I»ranyer.................. Flory

• aeaooooooooooo* IbVrWobovtc............... Flaky•**..................Tiany............................Bonytb.............Bonn

Dog I'oisonino.—On the night of the 2*1 ult., some person administered poison to Mr. Geo. Hunt's big yellow dog, “ Bruce." A poet once said of a like event:

so oono ro lorn.No dory to love, non* to karoao,How oan I ever my aodnona ek*proas f Chuoh |« defnact, Hood oa a note,Hashed la hi* barfcln and otlll lo his tola;Oh. seek n tola, whit* oa the end,* »pht did he rhaoo It with a wtfylo

—If you wish to gaio entire astis- faction in the selection of Flowers, Feathers and Ribbons, go to Miss M. E. Darling's

A Rsd-hot Tims.—Binee the ooa- veniag of tbe Fret Methodist Con- fare nee Meeting in our village one week ago to-day, aad wioh remained ia fall foroo np to Marly I o'clock a. m. of Monday last—ws who livo ia clone proximity to headquarters, have bee a much annoyed end distorted by the oootinned midnight revelries by its members. Ws barn never spoken of tbeir doings before, for we believe that

is a free moral agent, and that all bavo n right to worship to tbotr own views, an long

ss they shall hasp within tha laws and and practices of a civilised Nation. Ws botoiv# that tbs members of this 8oo»aly, who make tbe night kldnons by tbeir unearthly arias and grasns, ass jnM an amenable In tbe laws of ardor

might he made wild and franticmdgn

Cbeae It with hope, twteUoy around,’Till overrun he reported on the ground.Now he'* e Kail act, Sod aa aa a a ala,Where am M* bark and tb* way of hie talc I

I dream alone, poor Chunk I nun,Hwlyylng bt* milk or ole# •cmlcklng a flea, 'Ttabut a dream, walk lag I weep.For aadet 2 foot of ground done it* sleep.Oh, hie fall purp, onat full of pla.Haven’t I fed yon dav after day I Glean you milk, gteon you bread.Gives you maey a pat oa the head V Now yon’re e kail act, ded a* a nets.Whore am the bark aad the wag or your talol

No dorg to l*v, nun to karma,Vsooiy I eirlw tbe aad leer* to repreoa, -Why dtd yc die r aadH I moua.Was it from ptsen or ewaliowla • boo* I No waggln tale, no baamln eye,A nee re the gaoottoa, or d*w a ropll,Wa* H a St -stopple of brack - Bat la S mock the aad eaam of BUII not a word, ded aa a sale.Dim la kts eye, eUii taroeor bl* talc.

your dotk I

•TATE TAXTha earnout a# Hut* Tax

aouaty, a a dm Urn varioa* aet* mt Urn L*gialaluta la •17JSI 7S. Ta* foUowiag aru the amouau aa- named upon aa. In ncccrdnaoa with iho retaras af our taxabl* property made to the Auditor Ooaerai- •nr tha hoacSt of the eovarai iasUtuUoaa aad fuade

I las 47Agricultural Collage, Aet No. S3, ISIS,A mil am for the lamas, Kaleiaaaoo, Aet

Na*W» ASYSt*........................Asylum forth* laaaao-Now,-Act Na.

1W, 1«7X ................„....!.................General paiyoam, Act No. 13n, IS7S. ..I net tuUoa for thu Draft, Dumb aad

Blind, Aet No, S4, UTS,........................Military Fund, Act No IS, ISS3................Now State OnptWi. Aet No 4.1471,........State Prtaoa Building, Aet No SS. 187S, State Public School, Art No. lit. 1S7S.

- Aet No 133, 1S7S.State Refoam School, Act Ns. MS, MB, ITalveratty Building, Act No. 7, 1SML...

M Aid, Act No SS, 1973.............Oooat* Indchtedaom te State. Act No.MB* A47L***................. . . ...

RJDRNoUR—la Bingham. Saturday ovuatus. S* ptember Wh, lS7|T*f Cououmptlaa, Almira S., wtfo of Daniel iMmetr, aged 44 ynara, 4 moa.ks aad • daya.Duar wife It duad, how Him a To my aad heart thus*A low days Maun I To night *be * la Urn Spirit laad.

Mother’* dead, whore ’era we go,Thun* words follow sad sad low,Bveiy brooas to sorrow wod.Whispers sadly, mother’s dead

Slater dead- will ws ne'er see her Return te wrkoot* aaf Tm, whoa pallid death shall

rill welroms u*all

LIST at I.FTTI.RU rematninx aaolauae i laths Mi. Joka* Post Ofloa, October 1st, If* 71 In eetliag for the mass partis* will please «ay, "ad-

FtCody, MU* Kate Moova, Mrs. ford A.Dewey, 0. C. Odoaal. HisaUih■ roll. Albert Pearce, KliMoCImiu, Mat:I* Rice, Mim Libby

‘ jYm. cabtki»,p m.

MEW ADVERTISEMENTS.

MIIOHATi: ORDER. State of Michigan, I (bounty of Clinton, sa. At a ao*a1«»n of tbe rrvbat* Court for Iho county of Clinton, boidm at the Probate OSIc*, In Iho village of Bt. Job as, on Monday, the Bth day ol Beptember. In :b* year one thoueabd eight hundred end seventy tbn*.

Prvsoul, Joel II Crsn»on. Judge of rrobst*.| fa the atal'sr of the Estate of GILBERT 8M1TI1. IWeaaed Os roading sad Hllng the pe­tition, duly vended, of Pbebs J. Bml'h, widow ot *ald d*t‘*a*rd, praying for reason* therein aet forth, that administration of said eat at* L* granted Lo Oflof$$

Thorsupou It Is Ordered, That Monday, the 20 h day of October. 1*71. at t o'clock li< tb* forenoon be nsstsaod for the Wes nag of said petition, and tbat the heirs at law of said deceased, and all other person* Interested In said estate, am ro. qulrnd to appear at a session of said Court, then to ho hoMen at tha Prohai* Ofllee, in the village of Bt. Johns, and show ranee. If any there be, why th* prayer of the petitioner should not be grant­ed: And It Is Further Ordeiod, that nolle* be given to the persons interested In said estate, of the pendency of said petition, and the hearing thereof, hy reusing a ropy of thl* order to be published In the Clinton Indepen­dent, a newspaper printed and circulated in mid county of Clinton, for three aucceaelv* week* pr* ▼ten* to mid day of hearing.

JUKI. H. CRANBON, Judge of Prohate. ’ (Atm* ropy.) SASw

Very Latest!

Analkrr NiMMth 8Uek if

CLOTHINGOn I fas way to tl»o

Boston Spare-Dealiii StoreMAPLE IIAPID8.

JJKNHY R. MARVIN,

Liftrj, Sale k Boarding Stable,Cer. Hlgham aad Brush St mote,

)**Sm Jsha*, Vlftrfo.

Yoo/?

•' T£PH(NS0**3

First N ational Bank|

IOK ST. JOHNS.

CAPITAL, Hurplus, •

$60,000UO.OOO

PROBATE OH DEB• —Btats of Michi­gan, county of Clinton, m. At n aeaaion o f th* Probate Court for lb* county of CU»<oe, hoi-

den St th* Probate Ofllre. in the village of Bt. Johns, oa Monday, tbe 23d day of Bepteruber, In th* year oa*thousand algbt hundred aud •evenly- three.

Preeout, Jool H. Creason, Judre of Probate, loth* matter of th* BaUtv THOM AH RKXD.

Deceased. On reading and flliog lb* petition,daly verUled, of George F. Rood, praying for reason* therein aet fon h that the laat will aud to.lament of said deceased may be proved and admitted to Probate.

Thereupon It Is Ordered, That Monday, tbe SSth day of October. 1173, at on* o'eioek in the •n«rrwmn be emlgned for the hearing of mid petition, and that th* helm at law and legatee* of mid deceased, and all other person* Intermted In **td will, am mat trod lo appoer at a aenaton of mid Court, then to be bolden at the Probate Ofllre, In the village of Ht John*, and show cane*. If say there be, why th* will should not be approved. And It Is Farther Ordered. That notice b* given to th* pemons Intemeted In eatd estate, of the pen dency of said petit ton. aad the bearing thereof, by rsneing a copy of thl* order lo be puhltehed In The Clintoe Independent, a wewepeper printed end etrrnleted a said connty of Clinton, for three eueeeeatv* week* pievtooe te eatd da) of hearing

JoKL H. CRANBON. Judge of Probete. t A true copy.) 3443w

nBOBATE OKDI.H -State of Mlehtgan.county of CHaton, aa. At a session of th*

Probate Court for th* eouaty of Cllatou hoideo j at the Prohut* Ofllre. In th* village of 8L John*. , on Retard*} th* 27th day of September, in tb* ! year on* thonannd eight hundred sod seventy three

Present, Joel H. Cm aeon, Judge of Probate.In the matter of the estate of JACOB RIDKN-

A Large Army of People Laying in Wait for its

Arrival !

The People Hlenned by the Advent oftlie ISoss-

I on Bqunre-Dealliifl: Htore.

CHARLES KIPP. President.JOHN HICKS, Vie* President,

S.S. WALKJCK, Cashier.

Dlrsdsn ICassi as Kirr, ALvasH.Wst.gsa,Joss Ilicxs, Jmisb Urvox,

Ssmpbl 0. Wlllll.

Receive deposits, buy aad sell exchange on all potato, dsal in Gold. Silver, Canada Money, United State* Bonds, Ac.. Ac. Receive depositsIn the

Savines DepartmentOf sums aa *msll ns one dollar, on which Interest at the rate of five per cent, per annum to paid on tb* fir-t day* of June and December, on all sum* on deposit one month previous lo thsoc dates, the same ss In th* 8arlogs Bank* of the Eastern Btats* end cities.

KiTSchool Districts In thl* and sdj Inlng coun­ties deel ring to procure menit* to bnlld boa*** by th# Issue of bonds, are deatred to comotanicaUwith ua.

Bell our own Draft* on all place* In KnyUnd France and Germany, aod transact a General Banking Bnslncee. 421

GIVEN AWAY.A Fine German Chromo.wx hid am iLMtir ranoHo. sorrrxi* amp

sbady roe rsAMiMo. mss to evrst a«bmt roa

BCIBCELUkMEOUfl.

ST.JOHNS BAKERY,• slksr Street Wert,

ST. JOHNS, MICHIGAN

DAVID STKLBEtttiER, Pr*p’r

I am now prepared to fornleh th#

CfkbrateA 81. Mu i'rickert,la guantitlce to auM perchaaer* and at price* Ihet will defy competition and I com snfoly wan sat tLeta to be eg sal In all respect* te the

Best Crackers Madela aeaneelion, 1 shall always keep s fuli Ua*

of

FRE8H BREAD. CAKES.PIE8, AC..

And shall hold myaelf in readtuea* to lureieh pri­vate and pnblic part toe. wedding* and festivals, with all th* iosnrtea the ssaano* will afloed, na short nolle*. In connection with my store room I hev* pleasantly du*d s So* room, where people eus enjoy their

LUNCHla peace and ^ulct, at Reasonable Prices.

Of the boat brands, by tb* Cnee, Can or Dish, fur­nished at th* lowmt price*.

Bt. John*. Oct. «tb, 1I7S. SS7 if

orReady-Pay

Store*Having found out by actual experience that a

i credit basin***, la lla general form, I* detriment aud unsafe, w* resulted, on th* first day of Jana, 1473. to close our l ook* and to rail eo more goodsoa time.

To Casb or Ready-Pay CostomenWe would here *ay that you can buy ailre *at

goon* ia tb*

Be on Hand IM)KRUR«1>DTm hav* Iks

OR.Life Below the Surface.

OUR. Due eased. On rending and Sling tbe peti­tion. duly voviSod, of Stephen J. Wright. Admin­istrator d* 4#wm mm of sold estate, prating for reosons therein aet forth, that k* may be llceoeed to soil certain real estate of which aaid Jacob Ri­denour died netted

Thereupon It te ordered. That Monday the 27lh day of <>ctober. It72, at S o’eioek In tk* forenoon be assigned for (he hearing of astd petition, aod that the helm at law of said d*e<«e*d, aod ail other person* lotomated In aatd aateta, ar* reoelred to appear at a eeeaion of aaid Court, then to be hohteo at th* Pro bale Ofllee, to the village of Bt Johoa, and show case*, if aay them bo. why th* prayer of th* petitioner Agfo not be granted. Aod II la Further Ordered, that notice be given to the peiaon* let-rested la aaid estate, of toe pen­dency of said petit Ion, and the hearing thereof, hy •sowing a copy of this order to be published la the Clinton Independent, a newspaper printed and circulated in mid county of Clinton, for fonr aueceeelv* week*, peer loo* to aaid daj of hearing

n»*t w <fe ANSON. Jude* of “ ■{A true cup y J

FIRST SELECTION,Oil sf Iho

BY THUS. W. KNOX.Pigei Ofuva.

180 File EBjrrBYlBgs.

FALL AND WINTER

Tie (.n os47* SS•ss ss47# SS 473 IS

of Tax nod Indcbt I17JII 7S

A LIBERAL SrfBBIAllsatlsa Bssl Beals.

Give m« fifty cenU on tbs dollar of what you owe me and I will rive you a receipt In full of all demands to dale, and If I ever trnal you again, twenty- five cento on the dollar will pay tbe claim.

Brother Merchants, what do you asy to a “Dead Beat List?” Does not our safety demand It? and the welfare of community and tbe “ rest of man­kind" require It.

Truly, yours,fc>. C. Hubd.

P. 8.—While the laasp holds oat to burn dead bants may return.r*r Sale.-Mr R M

bi* reel dene*, sit mu sd in Jehne,nud Ms *•f busteuss, ai s bargain Belli purwtlvuiym

aad UK, sit net ad In the beart

fare

TheAUGUST VLOWKB-

la thu world are aod Liver Cum-

Mart thus trrif -trr paruunk sf thu la thu Ugitud

tori

Millinery

Do Wot BuyYour M11 It*i«»!*;»’ tint II you

have fli*sst cxiiiiiIihmI Hint

of*

HATTIE L. HICKS,Over

Tciichout fit Co.’s Htore.

SATISFACTIONIm the way sf

STYLES and PRICESslwi

October 1st, 1474.

PANIC!PANIC!

PANIC!

Another Panic in Roney Ratters!

Boots A Shoes Down!

In vl#w of tho situation, wo havo roduood tho prloo of Moots and Shoos to oorroo- pond with tho timoo. Tho Larfintt, Moot and Choopoot •took In Bt. Johns. All kinds •Ixoo and prlooo. Will not bo undoroold by anybody In Mtohlffion* or any othor man*

Como and ooo.L HALL A CO.,

Me, I S PllniorN Avenue

Isargest Stockof Clothing

Ever brsaghl Into

Maple ItapIdH.

S. C. SHEPARD,imager.

Sept. 24th. 1473.

$42

Relates Incident* and Accidents beyond tbs Light of Day: Startling Adventure* is all part* of tbe World; Mine* aod M<kI* of Workiec them; Vodereurrento of Society; Gambling and its Horror*; Caverns and tbeir Mysteries; Tb* Dark Ways of Wtek«-ducm: Pr sou* sod tbeir Heerets; Down in tbe Deptl s of tbe See; Strung* Stories of tbs Detection of Crime.

Tb# b»H>k trout* of experience with Incan i utghto is opium d«M* sod rambling bells; life iu prisoa; stories of sail**; adventure# among In­diana. journey* through .Hewer* and Catacombs: accidents in mia**; pirate* aad piracy; torture* of tb# inquisition: wonderful burg! art or. under­world of tb* areat cities, etc., etc.

Agents Wantedfur tbi* work. Exclusive territory given. Agent* can make IIM a week ia telling tbtr book. Bead for circular* aud terms te ageut*.

J. JV. HI RK A HTDK, nADTPOBU. ('OKI.. •* CttlCAUO. ILL.

ESTABLISHED 1856.

GROCERY LINE,

At Greatly Reduced Prices!• ■(art ml from* .. IOH Co 19c.

Toma ml from* ..&Oc* lo $|.t4*

Nolasssr ml from* MK• to SOc.

And all other good* at Xqaall) Lew Trices.

TkanklBg *ir 014 Frlfi4s tfffiPitrfiBS

For poet favors, aod trust i*oo# will become oftended becaum ws bare been compelled te adopt tb# course wbieb we base,sad wbteb I* ear only safe guard for the future

Persona In abyway Indebted te a* am ro- | -7 «4u«*ted to make Immediate settlemoat aad paymeaf.

r. l. tircMSUT k («.Joo. 71 h, lt7>. 147

IN CLINTON COUNTY,

The GreatClinton Hall

Low Price Store•r

S. W. STEPHENSON & SON. ST. JOHNS.

BETTER THAN GHKKNIIACKH FOR UHE AND BEAUTY, IN THK NEW WTOCK OFSuperior Clothing,

For the Largest Man and Smallest Boyla Clinton county, Jo*t meelvcd at tbe Old and Reliable Em port a tu of Fashion Ju*t received, also.

a large and well selected stork of

Hats, Capa, Gloves, Mittens, Winter Caps,•Ilk and Fur Hats of all Styles and Descriptions.

MEN’H WOOL HATH AT

lOIE.ZKlTiSI IEA C H

Fine White Shirts, Under Shirts, Drawers,And every deerrtpiles of

Gents' Furnishing Goods.

DRY GOODS,Plain and Fancy Dress Goods, Gloves, Hosiery, Shawls,

Laees, Etc., at tbe Tory Lowest Prices.

YANKEE YOTIOM8.Just Vteo#lvsd9 s Very Largs Stock of Notlonsv including

Leather A Velvet Bmltm,

Aad alt

OLD LOW PRICE STORE.•#»* BBSs l$ll.

C\ UUBUAKD,

Mm pi* Hmpldt, Mirk.,

Bole Agent fuff Clinton county for th* sal* of

DR. J. BALL a CO.’SNew Patsxt laraovaa lv«.a? aaa Lixscm-

Vita

13 YE CUP!Also, Agent for tbeir

Z$ Zn Eye OIbImcbi k Eye H uh.Alee, « Mermfula MrHlrinr,

For Cleansing the Blood, making a eomhtnaUou of the ft i,net sod most useful things on sole for tb# eyes and Scrofulous Complaints. Them can be no hesitancy In trying their efficery, as a cere to warranted in every rase If used •<-cording to dime- Ions. For fun her perticuiar*,*ddrtea a* above. __________________ 3»*4m______________________

CHOCKHRY !Ooo

anaoHo

W. BUNDAYHas now on band a large and varied assortment of

tbe brat brands of

Of Iho meal desirable yatterae.

A superb stock of

Glass-wareandStone-ware,

Always oa band, aad

AT LOW PRICES.Bt. John*, April tad. tm tm

Nl"Marble Works!

IM HT. JOIINM.

L. M. SHERMAN A CO.,Are now te furnish

Monuments,Tablets,

C i* lives.Capping and

Tombs,Of American aad Fceelga Marbles,

best and cheap a* Uto cheap.

aad Highest

If will i$( 1$ IdentM-May foth, 1STX

Farllralar alien nteue. mam,'

(my

eeiaerSCHatea A St. Jo

t# Whom at Mat caassra.-Atom ta Benghta. yea agent daughter of Mrs. OoodetT of Btughugi tewneblp. toll her home ea the ttb day at naptetobei Intoaai. wm host tot eeuu* *r prove- autlaa. Aad thto aaSlee to for the purpoaeef for bedding all perawae harboring or trust tag hue m ettaer mt owr a*senate, as w* ohal. pay no d#bte mt

the date ef thto wegtee -

current item*.Net ritonn A (UImiuui,iAinortuTi Hujw foe Bubo

Give ua armLBorrow drinks B,000 gtllou of soda-

wsfrar rtefy hot *UjTeibtt women in employed on the

daily preee of New York.Tee orient ice machines need Ie the

Bouth clear 700 per cent profitWet is a talkative woman like the

ocean? Because you cant make her dry up.

A patikmt la the Jacksonville, Ill., In sane Asylum has recently fallen heir to10,000. t

An oak recently cnt on the Derby, R I., turnpike measured nine Ret in ui

For finding a $100 pocket-book, a Rock- >u*r, N Y., bootblack received twenty,

fire cents.Tee* IWistervd Latter Department

earned tl- Government $05,000 net profit the last year.

A Ilona—Tbs man who persists In talk ing about himself when you wish to talk about yourself.

A teact of 30,000 seres in McDowell County, If. C, kas been sold to an emi­gration company.

Tee anchorage and unexpoaed Darts of the Niagara Falls suspension bridge are as sound as when first put in.

A quilt exhibited at the Central Illi­nois Pair, made by Miss Sarah Hreckon, of Morgan County, contains 20,517 pieces.

Two men at Minerville, Mo , hare found, only eight feel below the surface, a lump of lead estimated to weigh 00,000 pounds.

The question of the advantage of dis­posing of the dead by cremation is again revived, and finds numerous zealous ad. vocates.

A Detroit (Mich.) boy makes on an average over $23 per week blacking boots and selling newspapers, and has now in bank $1400.

Ter cultivation of the silk-worm is now becoming so extensive in Mexico as to bid fair to have an important influence upon the silk trade.

Thk hull of the British ship Confidence, the fisc shin in the battle of Lake Cham- plain, is being raised from the bottom ofrlattsburg Bay.

Thk span of the great rotunda of the Exhibition building at Vienna is over 110

Sards, or double the size of the dome of L Peter's, at Home.No actoe has yet been able to counter­

feit that expression of joy which a man shows when discovering a ten cent stamp in his (taper of tobacco.

An historic character recently died at I^ancaster, N. II., in the person of Julia A. Miller, xho was the great greatgreai- grandchlld of King Philip.

The great equatorial telescope now being constructed at Cambridge, Mas* , f«*r the Naval Observatory, will be finish­ed the latter part of this month.

ProTooRArKS of the counterfeit $500 bills have been made six times larger than the originals and distributed to the hanks throvghout the country.

J ames Richardson, who has resided in Adrian, Mich-, thirty-one years, mustered up sufficient courage to take his first ride in the “plaguey keers” a few days since.

Swiden has hitherto mainly depended on England for coal, but henceforth she is likely to derive sufficient for her needs from her own mint*, which are in process of development

It used to be the boast of Oakes Ames that he could imjM.rt iron and steel (him England, make them into shovels, and then undersell British shovel makers in the Birmingham market

The most accurate estimates state that China possesses coal fields to the extent of over 400.000 square miles, one province (Bhausi) having no less than 31,000 square miles with veins from 12 to 30 feet in thickness.

An eccentric old gentleman named Johnston has recently taken up hit abode in the woods near Lafayette, Ind. He has no shelter save the trees, no bedding save n coffee.tack and an old coat, and his lar. der is a hollow-lree.

A Mormon farmer has succeeded in playing a thorough confidence game on the |M>lato bugs. He planted a grain of corn in each potato hill, and as the corn came up first, the bugs thought It was s corn-field and started for other scenes.

Joskth (Jaljcs Founteu. the well known spiritualist, claims the Kirby reaper and mower to be the work of some inventive soul in spirit-land, who dictated through a medium the manner of its construction out of such materials as this poor sphere affords.

The new blacksmith shop at the Rock Island (III.) Arsenal is one of the largest in the United States, if not in the world. It is built of stone sad iron, has s front­age of 210 feet on the main avenue, with two wings, each 350 feet long and 00 feet wide.'

Mice anxiety is felt in Sonoma Valley, Cal , from the discovery of a grape-louse on the roots of the vines, similar to the <*ne that destroyed the grape crop in France. A committee or wine-growers has been going around among the vine­yards examining.

A Boston preacher, in speaking of the danger of permitting the Bible to be crowded ont by the newspaper, perpe­trated the following pun: “Men nowa­days,” said he, “arc like Zaccheus—desi­rous of seeing Jesus, but they cannot be cause of the press.”

A OKXTfifcMAE, addicted to scientific in-

3mry, has discovered that thirty-three I ays complete the cycle of the potato bug

generation; that 700 of the critters are the average product of one female, from which the family grows In the second

Saeration to 245,000, and in the third to ,700y000.Two babyes ware shipped several bun

dred miles by express, in Oregon, recent­ly, and arrived st their destination all right; but the express agent was almost worn out telegraphing ahead for milk, shingles for spanking purposes, and other

Tee Ann Arbor (Mich.) Courier talks of the champion sunflower. The stalk is nine and a half inches in circumference st the ground, and the lineal measurement of the stalk and stems is 151 feet. It has eighty-one fruit bearing flowers, with mors in prospect.

Processor Wtmae, during his cumin stion of the mounds In Florida, found many human bones split up in the same manner as those of anlm»*a. From this he concludes that the aborigines were cannibals, and that the bones were broken to obtain the marrow after the fl.-«h had

When Horace Greeley visited Ybe hung

rol. > visited Yosemite picked up in the trail a horseshoe, aodsg it $n the knot of an oak tree fbr

it No onewh«*ever might choose to 1look it, and hi time fee___ w_______the horseahoe, and recently the portion of the tree containing It was cat out and brought to Man Francisco as a memento of Mr. Greeley's economy.

An old bridge la being torn down in Meriden, Conn , end Mr. Jared Lewis, of that place, states that when a boy be was told feel the regicides of Charles I. ware sheltered under the spot where the bridge has so long stood. They eacaped from New Haven to Meriden m 1AS4, and 1

palled to take rrfhge under thef the ancient structure nos

lag demolA red Iowa father writes to an mm

change feat ha le annoyed by his son staying out at nights, and asks for s r. m edj for the evil The exchange replies: "There art; several remedies. Tl»* - spina sen be broken with an as, or he can he nailed to the floor with a red hoi railroad spike driven through his abd«>

of the Nary has ‘ fill our foreign squad-

A Lieutenant having a year's cruise in the AaE * | " Is debt, the fleers-

with orders to That un­

to broil

oonlatto the cruel Secretory, and thus •eonre his release. As there are doubt- less dozens of other officers on foreign stations who are likewise In debt, they will read of this incident la the light of a solemn warning, and at once borrow enough money from their luckier fellows to discharge their foreign debts before their ships srs ordered home.

Tee other day, as Mayor Me Fad la and T. M. Guggenhciinvr, or Logansport, lad., were oat hunting on the prairie, they came acruas a vary large ami very <xiU procession. The weather had been dry,! and the poods on the prairie had failed 10 water. The turtles and frogs who ksd

living and thriving in the vicinity ids had thus been cut onof the pon

from their supplies. They ■tend it l°r day or two, but finally bees mbs too 1 for frog endurance aim decided to mU When seen by the Mayor and Mr. _ _ genheitner, they were marching In solemn procession across the prairie to a pond three miles distant. The procession was three quarters of a mile ia length aadoite- quartrr in width. The turtles were in the lead, the frogs bringing up the rear. The Mayor vouches tor the truth of the sfrory This occurred about six miles northeast of Kentlaud, Newton County. According to an eye-witness, the frogs seemed afraid of the turtles and remained behind. They traveled at the rate of one mile in three hours, and reached their “spa” about sun down.

The Baltimore JmmWiR describes one of the most mysterious works of art, now exhibiting in Pari*, that has ever been

itoessrd there. It is a diorama of the siege of Paris, sod all Paris is running wild to view It There is some species or optical illusion in connection with it that no one seems able to understand. Al­though a painting. It so closely resembles nature that on suddenly entering the halt the spectator is bewildered .and Invariably complains of dizziness as his eye scans the intervening scenes and the distant horiftm presented to view. The building in which the diorama is submitted is cir­cular, and about 300 feet in diameter,with s glam dome. On entering It Uit visitor passes along a rather dark passage to what seems the centre of the building, and then finds himself on a circular plat­form on the top of a veritable hill of earth, strewn with cannon-ball and shell, the ok ject of the artist being to place him in the fort of Issy, surrounded on evenr side by the incidents of the siege, with the city of !*aris and its monuments, domes, and steeple*, in the distance. By close exam­ination it could be discovered that the nearer earthworks of the picture, and even some of the cannon, for a distance of thirty or sixty feet from the edge of the platform, is veritable earth and undoubted cannon, and real willow gabions and sand hugs, but the exact spot where the sub- stanlials ended and the canvas began was not so easily detected. The whole seems to be a piece of legerdemain in art that has never been attempted before.

The Great American Traveler.

A1. host the onlv fool honored by occa­sional mention is Daniel Pratt, the great American Traveler, snd hardly anybody knows who he is. He was formerly a printer, I understand, and never having poscssrd much good sense, was made a universal butt or by his fellow craftsman, until he lost the little sense Nature had provided him with. Ue went to Liver- pool once In a sailing vessel, staid three or four weeks in England, returned home, and talked so copiously of what he had S4*«n abn»»d that his brother -compositors dubbed him the great American Traveler They ran all sorts of saws on him, put stone* into his mouth of his wanderings in Asia Minor, Greenland, Australia, and Ethiopia, and so bewildered the poor devil that he came to believe not onlj- what he had told them, but that be had actually been in those countries Since that time, he has never been more than WO miles from New York; aod yet he is s positive monomaniac on the subject of travel. His aqu in lances, aware of this, keep out of his way for fear of the fate of Narcissus. They frequently send hint to certain persons by telling him that those person* are deeply interested in foreign land*, am) would In* dcilgtned to near his account therof. This is a standing joke among typos, and is put off on any one thev can think of.

Pratts method is to approach a victim with the remark: “I should like to tell you the story of my travels;” and, if the victim be amiable and patient, he will be compelled to listen to an incoherent gallimatia for frilly half an hour, when the racduateur will apply for a bum of fifty or tw-inty-five emu, by the way of p;ircuLhe*U. The victim will usually pav that price cm condition that he shall hear no more, and Pratt will go oft in search of new beings to Immolate on the altar of superlative proaineas. By such contra- buttons he manages |o live in a miserable fashion, and, at ne has a vigorous const!- tution, and no bad habiu as respecU him­self, there is danger of his becoming a centenarian. The only advantageous use to which Pratt might be put is in the for- tnation of artesian wells. If he were plac^l u|>on the spot to be tmred, and turned round a certain number of times, ha would assuredly reach the antipode*.— AT. y. CVr. t'Axmpe Trikma*

< ounty Fairs.

This is the season for County Fairs throughout all of the Northern State* The moat of them will be held within the next thirty days. This annual gathering of fanners for the exhibition of the re- sulU of their labors during the season which is just drawing to a close, is a cus­tom the origin of which is of a recent date in this country. It is one of the necessary results of progress on th* part of farmers. It will hereafter serve as a land mark indicating the dawning of the era of intelligent farming—the era when men "hail realise the iinpurtonoe, if not the absolute necessity of brain work as wall of muscle work in tilling tha soil.

County Fairs, if properly conducted, are treat educators of the people. They excite rivalry, stimulate Jlkought and in duslry, and afford positive demonstra­tions of the advantages arising from cor­rect systems of cultivating the soil and sound judgment in raising stock. Each farmer learns something from the ex­perience of all the other former*, and ail may thus derive valuable Information which would otherwise coat much labor, loss of time, and outlay of money. The Fair brings the fanners Into communi­cation with each other, cultivates social relations, and contributes largely to the happiness, general refinement, and mu tual benefit of all. Viewed in any light, therefore, County Fairs are deserving of every encouragement. Every person should contribute something towards making them tnccesaftil in every depart­ment and as a whole. The ladles are invaluable con toil niton* at all Fairs. They give cheerfulness, variety and beauty to the exhibitions by their contri­butions of flowers, needle-work, and the thousand other products of their genius aod skill, to say nothing about the more substantial evidences of their worth in the specimens of tfesir Handiwork in the dairy and In elf brunches of labor usually falling to the lot of the former's ***** *Jke Fair should be eacouraged and p »tr--mred by all, and each shouUL there­fore, give it his or her cordial endorse

it by coatrihnfiag eeaaefeing towardscontributing mm |-f<iahMi.

( alters and Rain.

A mono tha littevaetiag paper* mad at the aessioa la Portland of the American Association for tin* Advaaccmeal of flei. eace, was nae on the preservation of for- esta. The writer discussed th* in!i i. ..< r of forests on rllmeto. rainfall, etc, ead recommended Icglslatioa to regulate, pro­mote. and protect the growth of forests • By withholding from sale lends nI—alas to Its possession from nee paynseat *3

for land* planted and inclosed for growth of ft treat *«**; by offering wards for the Inrgeet number of t

rmiM

trees by the wayeide, or la public or pri­vate grounds; by requi ring the elements of forest culture to be tough! in our public schools. There was a general discussion of this sutyect by the A woclallon, sad a committee wae appointed to memorial lee C ongress thereon.

The Jbpfe has on saveral occasions In the past urged the great impurtaaee of forest conservation, not only on account of climatic influences and effects, but for reasons of political eoonotuy as well, looking to the period not far la the fritare when limber forests will be aaooeg the most valuable aad Bead sessions Ie this country manner in which Umber has been wasted aod destroyed hitherto, In the course of settlement and improvement of our vast domain, may be flUy deecrib*! by the single word reckless. Of late, thinking people In all parts of the land begin to realize the feet There is really no need to diminish any more the area of wimm! land, certainly not for a century to coin* It may be reduced in the thickly timber ed parte, but it may be allowed to grow and Increase everywhere else. There Is room enough and good soil enough, properly managed, to support a popula­tion within the boundaries of the United States equal to half the population of Uie entire globe, and yet leave one^thlrd the surface of the country covered with thrifty timber. And, In fhet, one of the miMt necessary conditions of supporting such a population, and of proper manage­ment 01 the soil for all Cue purposes of living, la Uie intelligent culture <4* forests.

For a multitude of uses wood mast be superseded by miners) productions; by iron, copper, tin, tine, etc. But there will still remain the need and the use of wood—at least we cannot conceive of any such change in human needs and con­ditions as to do away with such necessity.

But we may doubt, aftor all, tha wia- dom of some of U»c races)ire* of the leg- Ulation proposed. We have already law* giving land premiums for a certain amount of trc^cultuxebut Uiey are not worth the paper on which they are writ­ten as an incentive. And, as to some of the methods proposed, the people have their eyes open and are already adopting them in some localities. Tree* are plants of alow growth, however, and the care stimulated by judicious legislation will aid in promoting their culture and guard­ing against wasteful destruction Many people doubt that the apparent climatic changes In this country are at all due to the destruction oT forests. In the last three years we have experienced unpre­cedented droughts, and these have been aggravated, as many think, by the cutting a wav of the forests. But, on the other hand, many deny that there Is any mater­ial decrease in the average annual amount of rainfall, and Ihey deny that the area of forest verdure is diminished. A litilu reflection will serve to convince that It is not as much diminished as is often estimated. There are many citizens of Michigan, for instance, who confident­ly assert that forest growth and leaves ac­tually cover a larger proportion of the ftUte now than forty or even thirty years ago. ^The early settlers in this valley well remember that they could drive a fer­riage over thousands and thousands of acres of •• openings" or prairie land* that are now covered with a thick

wth of young trees from five to fifty in height. But It does not follow

from this fact that the amount of forest growth has bo influence upon the produc­tion of rain clouds and the average rain­fall. On the Western plains, and on toward the Pacific, wherever settlement has protected and increased the growth of the verdure, the supply of water has visi­bly increased. This may be partly due to other causes, but the genera! current of testimony in this and the old world is in favor of the the theory that fewest supply and abundant moisture are reciprocally related —(Jrand Rapidt (Rnglt.

A Beginning.

President Grant's new Governor of the District of Columbia Hheppard, is throw, ing out some wry strong hints about an appeal to Congress to assume the District debt—about nine millions in amount, we belle*** wwi m eteleA ♦*.-ton ring strongly backs him in the •rheme. We may therefore look for this proposition to be presented, and pertina­ciously urged, st the aext session of Con- grew

M hat Congress—that is the people of the United States—have to do willi the debt of the District of Columbia, It would be difficult to make out; it is the District's matter, and the people.of that highly- favored section ought to take care of ft. But there is a stall larger tiling behind the proposition; if Congress *hiul assume the debt of the Disfriot, it will imraedi atcly afterward be asked to assume the debts of the Southern States, and the logic that warrants one will be held to Justify the other. Thus: The District debt wu contracted by a Repuhi lean ring, into whose hands Congress in trusted the Gov. eminent after taking it away from the people Congress, therefore. It will be at-

Ked, is morally re*|xinsiblc for this debt t the debt of the bouthern Stale* are the

work of the carittt-bag goverassent* into whose hands Congress ve (Hose States, in violation of the will of their people. As Congress put those fobhers in power and maintained them there, it it responsi­ble for the debts they contracted. This is where the assumption of the District debt will come out at. It will bear a little watching from the people who have al­ready got as many debts on hand as they can take care of —fit. IjhU HrpuNicm

Wintering Bee*.

Cellars are by some thought tp be Just the thing, but many who have tried think less of them than they did ere they pvt a hive Into the usual depositories of apple* and potatoes. In such places it is claim ed that the bees have bmod earlier than if left out door*; but is that a benefit? To have a brood it is neortsary that the be*>s lie active and also that a large share of honey and bee bread should be cm- •umed, for baby bee*, like other babies, need considerable feeding, and the nurse will eat m<»re when employed than when drowsy and half torpid In a hive out of doors. Beside*, is it not a matter of ex­perience that such cellar protected hives are generally in worse condition by the beginning of summer than those left out of doors?

Some people instead of storing their bees in cellars, put them under ground Unfortunnately the largest share of such buried hives come out in condition worse than If filled with frozen bees, for the comb* are a mas* of mold, unfit for any­thing but making wax of and poor wax at that. This, the advocates of the ays- tern will My, is owing fro defects in the putting up, or fhal) I not sav. down?

What is the use of maxing so much fuss about so simple a matter, for bees will do well enough during the winter out of doors, providing there Is such a eirrulatioa of air In the hire as will carry off the damp; and any one may secure this by boring a two Inch bole in the back or the hive near the top, and, for protection against bee enemies, covering it with * ir** doth A few pears sg-> v« n til stion was Cfet rags, but

AMM MOUBRMOUA

| agot rag*, hut some overdid it

for fh*y migkflni wall hare made hives entirely of wire cloth, as the queerthing* dignified with the name. It wns such kina of ventilation ns one would like to enjoy In summer time, but bees, like men and women, like cozy quarters when the cold winds blow.

I speak of bees in Northern Ohio, not In New England or up somewhere in the region where Hir John Franklin was fro. sen la aad died. Rat one thing I may hazard to say, aad that is. bees will live out of doors in properly constructed hives

they will lire wiki In the fta Oftfo

—Dead Shot for Insert*.—fltroug alum water i« a sura death to bugs of any de- script!-.n Take two iMMnd* of nnltrcris^lriptlnu. Tabs two pounds of pulverised or of crystal alum, and dissolve in three quarts of boiling water, allowing It to re main over the fee until thoroughly die. solved. Apply while hot, with s brush, nr. whst i* tletter, ox* * syrfefin In force the liquid Into the stacks of the walls or hrdstea4 The pufnrlgsd slum Is worth fifty rente a In crystal

r*

pear oto fad<

—Tb Tall Good Iffga.—If yon desire to he certain that your eggs are good and frank, put them In water: If the bull* turn up they are not fresh. This Is an tnfelli- ble rule to distinguish n good egg from n bad one.

—It is well known that saddle and har­galis often cause white spots to up­on horses, especially those inclined le or carrying light colors. In age,

white hairs are the result of a want of the deposit of coloring mat­ter In the hair. Blistering and sub­sequent bad treatment will often produce the effect; sometimes blistering will do it under the best treatment. These are accidental occurrences, and we think the only causes that ought to be allowed. The parts to be whitened are made sore by blistering to remove the hair, and, when the new hair it growing out, it Is wetted with a solution of chloride of lime. Or the part may be fired and then wetted with the solution. The practice Is. how ever, barbarous in the extreme, and should not be allowed.

—Gold powder, for gilding, may be prepared by putting Into an earthen mor­tar some gold leaf, with a little honey or thick rum water, and grinding the mix­ture till the gold is reduced to extremely fine particles. When this Is done, a little warm water will wash out the honey or gum, leaviag the gold behind in a pulveru­lent stole. Another way is to dissolve pure gold, or the leaf, In nitro-muriatlc acid, and then to precipitate it by a piece of copiM-r, or by a solution of sulphate of Iron. The precipitate (if by copjK-r) must be digested in distilled vinegar, and thenw'ashed (by puring water over it repeat-

Thls precipitate will beedly) and dr__ _____ r___ ^______in the form of a very fine powder. It works better, and is more easily burn­ished than gold-leaf, ground In honey, asabove.

—Why Potatoes Run Out.—A New York fanner says: Home one asks why it U that potatoes to soon run out There are two grand reasons. There are but few

Sotatoca in a hill that are fit for seed ome are overgrown, coarse, rank, and

will not transmit the original quality. Others are undergrown, and not frill-ue vrlopcd seed. A potato of medium size, perfect in all its parts, with change of ground, will produce Its like, ad infinitum. One other reason, cutting potatoes be- tween stem and seed end continually, will demoralize the institution. It requires the stem and seed-end to make perfect seed. If rut, cut lengthwise. Single eyes will run out any potato. There Is no other seed that will bear mutilation like the potato; the only wonder is, that it does not run out completely.

To oivn an idea of coal production, it may be stated that with 100,000,000 tons s girdle of coal three feet wide and about •even feet high might be put round the earth.

Vinegar tfcat to III Keep Plrkles.I*ru**big*s White Wine Vinegar, Warrant­

ed pure and to preserve pickle*, grocer for U, *ud take no other.

Tea. A*k your

CBalar* aad rala-KIIUr.Pxkkt Davis* Pain-Ku4.br.—This unpar­

alleled preparation 1* receiving more testimo­nial* of It* wooderful efficacy In rrmotiag |t*ins, than any other medicine ever offered to the public. And these testimonial* come from person* of every degree of intelligence, and every rank of life. Physkiana of the flrst respectability, and perfectly conversant with the nature of disease* and remedies, re* commend this as one of toe most effectual in the line of preparations for the cure of Cholera, Cholera Morbus and kindred bowel trouble* now so common among the people.

WnisRY AND TEE Weed— Intelligent physiologists and pathologist* admit that ail so-called medicines containing alco­hol—whether they emanate from the regu­lar pharmacopo’ia and are called tinetmrer, or from the Empirical Hum Mills, aod are labeled "Tonics ’^anre essentially danger­ous aod destructive. The only way in which drunkenness can be arrested i» by restoring the integrity of the nerve* (espe­cially the nerves of taste and the great sympathetic nerve), and purifying the ani­mal fluid*: and .tha*a ohim-i* »*• certainly andawiftTy accomplished by the use of Dr. Wai.klh's Vinegar Biitkk* than by any other means. Hence, proba- bly, the opinions now so generally ex­pressed, that this pure preparation is a sovereign remedy for the evils referred to. Hhould it l*c claarly ascertained that Vin­egar Bitters U b>4 only a »j*eciflc for indignation, liver disease, nervousness, scrofulous ulcers and eruption*, and a host of other disorders, but also for inebriety, thousand* will rise up and cal) thediscov. erer blessed. 10

The National Life insurance Company of the United ft tale* of America, Is in no respect affected by the recent suspension of the large banking house of Jay Cooke A Co. It# securities are such as are prop­er to a con*ervatively conducted Life In­surance Company, all being of the moat substantial description. It holds, invested In mortgage* and in Government bonds, a much larger amount than iu total liabili- tie*, and ail of iu other assets are weath all that they art claimed to be. It ha* not, and never had, a dollar of iu fbnd* invested or secured by the Northern Pa rifle Railroad bonds or stock. It did not even have deposiu with the hanking house of Jay Cooke A Co., or any other private banking house. The policy bidd­ers and friends of the company need en tertain no shadow of apprehension as to iu permanent ability, and of iu fhture prosperity and succesa.

• j mptoMi •€ LI wav Complaint and of •t • B* Diseases Produced Uf I*.

A sallow or ysifeor color of *ktn, or yellow­ish brown apoU ua face snd other part# of body; dullness and drowsiness, with frequent besdsi-bc; dissiacs#, biller or bad taste In the mouth, dryness of throat snd internal beat; palpitation. in many cases s dry, teasing cough, nith sore throat, unsteady appetite, raising of food, and a choking seneation In throat; distress, heaviness, bloated or fall feeling shout stomach and sides, pain in aides, back or breast, snd shout shoulder*; colic, pain snd soreness through bowels, with beat, constipation, alternating with frequent attacks of dtarrlnra; piles, flatulence, nervousness, coldness of extremetiea, rush of blood to bead, with svmptoma of apoplexy, numbness of limbs, especially at night; eoid < hills, alternat­ing with hot flashes; kidney and urinary diffi­culties; female weakness and irogui . iti *, with dullness, low spirits, uusociability tud gloomy forebodings Only a few of the abov e symptoms are likely to be preernt la any rase •* ~ •* AB * ho nan br. Pivare’s itohtowMedical Disco very for Liver Ootnplaiut and its smanttaaAkMis are land is Ma praite. k*all

aplicaUaBs ore brad U Its druggists everywhere.

Bold by42

dkj> <nine Roans a teaew Ilfs, waked sp Lbon.ugh am of frx*T,

ANi> flwaLLiaos are aroused and carried swajr bj 1be Asderwoa's Derm ad or, It

trau all through their old indolenthnsks and starting all the surTonndieg Useaea to healthy action

0m advertisement in this paper.

Tnn superiority of the stock used iu making the Elmwood and Warwick 0>l- lara, and the edges folded nil around, are the reasons why they are liked better than My others.

Ocb Readers should ba careful to notice that Pboctbr A Gambub’s Stamp Is upon toe bare of their Mottled German Boat, as all good articles are imitated, and toii m mp being so popular, other manufacturers have rop'edSalp ■tamp. c-

Farmers sad slock raisers have frequently told us ton! they have seen very good results from giving AArrtrfa*’* (Wry Comftfts* /W- 4rrs to cows and swine before and after they drop Ux-ir yowog The powders put thssn In good condition, and give them strength to cafe and provide far toe sucklings.

Una to elate. Pal niffimiii t*

Mr ahlgh year, with *

by T. 0. Aumca A Boa, a

The Phrenological Journal.—TheOctober a am her of this sterling mngarti several notable aad iaterasttng artistes, which way he noted: "Mika Great, editor of Urn World's CHMs," with portrait; "Is NptrUaaHem ta tbs Bible r;” Hie hard New to*. D. D.,“ with por­trait; "The fan Factory;" Helen Earles' Trial;" M llow to nas Khreoology," lllaetrstad; *’ Genesis of Geology," sic., eu. in the depart meals of Cur­rent Items, Poetry and MWellauy U ta very full and hitersevtag. The Phrenological Is oaa of the oldest aad beet of the monthlies. Published by B. K Wauu, HE Broadway, New York. Tvraae. fits year. IdMHfe!**. ■ •

The Children'e Horn always excites a lively laterest la tbs children as aooa as U ap­pears. It Is emphatically a journal for the Utils folks. The October somber Is as excelleoi one. It Is alesly UI a sirs ted, attractively gotten sp, snd enatatne not only Interesting rending matter, hat, what Is better, pare sad elevated reading matter, feel each q parents who seek the good of their children would like to place before them. Terms, fit.to per year, aod a beautiful steel engraving. Address T. B. Asravn A Son, Philadelphia. Pa.

TTslrtjr Year**

Sm. Wtnu»w,« tevnus Imr U tke prescrip­tion of one at the bast Female PhyMeUms and Nurses in Urn United States, sad has been need tar thirty years with never-falling safety sad success by mill­ion* of tuoU*r* and children, front tbs feeble tataat of one week old to the adult. It oorrecta acidity of the eteanech. relieves wind sotie, regulates the bow ala, aad gives rest, health, sad comfort to mother and child. We believe tt to be the Best and Surest Reme­dy ta Ue World In all cases of DYSENTERY aad 1H AKHHHtA IN CHILDREN, whether M arises from Teething or from any other esses. Full direction* tor nstng wilt accouipuuj each bottle. Noad^tenolae an less the fso^tmlle of toJtUU A PEEElhB M oa lbs outside wrapper.

Sou> av Aix Maatonra Dbalzhs.

Children Often Look Pak sad Itek mss Una having worms ta Ik

BROWN’S VERMIFUGE COMFITSwill destroy Worms without Injury to the child, being perfectly wuira. and free from aA coloring or othertufertom iagredtsate asuaily used U worm prepare-

CURTIS A BROWN, Proprietors,No. SIS Fallow street. New York.

Ookt by DrugytMe and CXeml»U, and Dealer* tm Twenty-errs tsar* a Box.

Tke Hew FamilyLiniment

Ws have olio* W«perron In the country who flora notEftsrhto tk* valor «<f /ehnm’i Ltmtmamt a* a family medicine? Tt Ito must ail purposes, aad Is Urn ban

he used

than* l» a know and

Is the best remedy ta Us world for Us following complaints, visa Cramps la Ue Limb* and Stomach, Jkln la the ilinaefh Bowels or hid*. Khemnetum ta all iu tonus. Bilious Cede. Neuralgia. Cholera, Dysen­tery. Colds, Flesh Wound*. Bure*, bore Threat, hplnai Complaints. Sprain* and Bruises, Chill* and Fever. For Internal and Katernal nee.

IU operation Is not only to relieve the patient, bel entirely remove the came of the complaint. It pene­trate* aad pervade* the whole system, removing healthy action to ail Its parts, aad quickening the

Tut HocsanoLn Pauses* Is Purely Vegetable and AD Healing.

Prepared by CURTIS A BROWN,No. tts Fulton street. New York.

For sale by all DvaggUU.

A Glooht bTATt or tnk Miud. a Dull Head ache, a want of energy, a deposition to magnify every evil, a *eD*e of weariness, and a di*tnclica- tloa to motion, are some <*f the »vmptom# which Indicate a derangement of the liver or Bilious Bystem Speedy relief from so miserable a con<11 tli.a ran be obtained by resorting at once to Dr. 1) Jayne's Sanative Pills

But sun nu»l Fsuu.r Maruciwu.—rw.— Arf^'w.f •£jrrr Inrtgoroloe—a purely Vegetable OSAarfr no* foic-for Inspects, t on sttpatioa, Debility, hick Hesaeche. Hllb.us Attacks, stiJ all derangement ofLiver. BCesansh aad Eawam. U. Aw>ir« of iwseawt. Ask your Druggist* fur

I’RKKLKh*CLOTHES

A CHOLERA REMEDY

WHINGER.If vor heve Chills, periodic beedsche, or any bed

feeling earned by malaria, Hhaiteab*rgar's Mil# will remove the trouble st oace. They are an Asribura

THE MARKETS.NEW YOKE,

BEEF CATTLE...................HOGB— Live..........................H1IEEP Lire.......................IXJTTUM Middling.............FLuUK—Good to Choice....WHEAT—N*. t Chicago...........CORN -Wceura Mired.............<tares- Nwmi Mew................RYE Wsotsra...........................PUKE—New Maas....................LARD.........................................W OOL - Eitra Fleece... ...........

_____ CHICAGO.BEEVES—Choice......................

Good........................Medium...................Hatchers' Block.....Block Cuttle............

HOG0—LiveHHKKf*-4#ood to CVmce..........BITTER -Choice......................BOGft- Kre-h.............................FUlUK-While Winter Extra .

Spring Extra.............GRAIN—Wheat-Bpring. No.*.

Core - No. t...............Gale -No.Rye- No. t................Aar ley—No. 1 New..

PORK—Mrs*..............................LARD........................................WOOL—Tub-washed ................

Fleece, washed." unwashed.......

Paflsfl.................DETROIT.

WHEAT-Ns. I........................Amber.....................

OORN-*........................OATH...........................TOLEDO.

WHEAT—Amber Mick.............No. t IL-d................

HORN - Mixed ...■•■*..«•■ OATS—No. 1 .____ BUFFALO.BEEF CATTLE.......................HOG*-Lire...............................SUEEP-Lve.............................

Peptcmber 17, IfTL....§ t.b0 ffitixa.... tt &.m>.... 4X5 2 ia...........ITS*# .17!

WHEN WRITING TO ADYKHTINEE* vv plenar any yes earn the advrrtleemeal

In thl* paper.

CLIFTON HOU8E,

OOKTCIJAGfrO. ILL.N. W. corner Wabash Ave. and Monroe $1.,

Opposite Exysvllloa Bwilding.This Elegant Note!, the mmt beautiful of Its at re In

Ue Uaiea, contain* JH0 ream*, well lighted, dagiesad ** tmUr, aa parties desire. The carpets are of exqnl*- He design, tits furniiuteof lb* Snr«t liisrrtfemTM proprietor*. Memrt. Jaxaiftsfl n<>Lwas,will endeavor lo make their Uoss* a gen ala* home for travelers.

_JDr. PlwFsJati&rcu"Little Gtnm^ (JTi

po <ref at Lr<« mn.4 l.\*rv*rk,ttrlugai

vilar ««r* is

Dlniaimtnffifi In 1tester?** | to Mead.

saretaww* ^I vnmttk, or m*/fiMy largrrlili

rm in

cwluriK wsr%ktni Tktm4ff afirmlmf. fable, no panic- waveg them, far

hs, _lnspwrePafM In

of Ckftk fsUswk fewritiaS* Fellrla.

a ttma.

CHOLIBA IN INDIA.rasr* Miaeiousar uvi»

_____________ _____ !.1?SatR?»SLrt:checking the team

Rav. CMAKLXa HARDING, hhoMpore. India.'*Its Merita are t ■ surpassed.

If you are sstertag from INTERNA! PAIN. Turns, is Thirty /**»« la « Uut» Wniar will almost la

lyeureyoa. There i* nothing efxmiSs U. la a£mu nuilly 1 v mot

hour MamColic. Cramne. Bimsass. Heerthare. ]

levy. rhm4wiud iu the Bowelsat h. try.pepela. sick Hea

IS fSTO HtNirrs^whrH #U ottoer

It fires Instant Relief from Aching Tooth.la sections of th* country where

Favor *ad A.funPrevail#, there Is so remedy held ui greater esteem.Iff”/hr /W#r ead dyw#—T#k# three teaapoonfals

of thofaju FilxusIs about half s pint of hot water, refleweetened with bums me#, as the sttark Is coming oa.bsUUaa freely the chest, hack and bowels with the iitrdlcine 4 the same time. Repeat the do** m twea to misute# if the Irst dose dor* set stop the chill. tooted tt produce e vondtlsg (aad It probably will If the stomach Is very foal), teke a little Paim Xiliub Inculdwaiuv sweetened FttU •ugsr.sftarr eechspasm. nmvwxxn ta the shove treatmeut has cured many**•• tff$* 'f'hKx'/iT \ V/ /' i* °mT// \ntr V T.Uothlag give* quicker ease la Morns, Cats, jirui.•#., /mains, MHtjsfrom tnsse . aad Hralds. It removes* *?jti^wSsniJrsfs

t}fA. If not a positive cur*, they gnd Ue Hum- * give# them relief when no other remedy will.

ybsy ll rssaaaraa should keep list band, sad applv It oa the tret attack of soy rata. It wiB give sst 1 »facto. V relief and ear* hour* of ■ titering.

Do uot t ride with yourselves by testing untried rem- Wlca, If aure you call fpr th* FAIM XILLAJL |Fwt re(ioua accowipaay each bottle.

Price, . • reuta. M rests, aad fil.dO per Bottla. J.ri.II %HRIBteCO., « larlnaall.O.,

Prop let or* for the Souther* and W cetera States,tSTl or sale by all Medietas Deal we.

pmnr«s

wr HESEBTOm

Ire Sdted b all Climates,sm vauocs roe axow

SSSTT0US11falZATBT TO B7Y1I

lASaSTTOSSLUHFamous tar doing more aod

BETTER COOKING,

yANomyoasmjwitetinffectinm Ivwywhffife

aa® aaiaoCspecUlly AdipteA

run tt mu mambold /srr

aXOBlTd

DERMADOB.for Nina.*

herta, Wc tlsm. Sore

Ml_____ JfBrtiisca. Ihr.

mat, dwelling of Glands, Inflammation of tbc Kyca, Broke*

Breast, From Bites, Ckilblalns. Pile*, Bee Hungs, sad all Boras.

Coed far Beast. -Fresh Wounds, Galls, Pull Evil, vasal**. Bruise#, Crack cl Heel#. Ring Boas, Wma Galls, Bpavnns. Sweeney, Founder, l.vtneiicsg. Hand Crack*, he rale hoe, or Grose a. Mange, Horse Distemper.

Thl* trnlY wsndrrfkl Liniment weediecovered by llOMEH ANDERhON. AM, late lYofeeeor of Chemistry and Mathematics in the Cltatoa Liberal last!tula, of Oneida County, N Y. In experimenting for the purpose of making PnrnMc Acid, bv aatting the independent gaseous bod lev of which It is composed, a residuum was left, which, on bring applied to breiare and in­flamed parts, by tb* Modem# of the Inet Nate, was found to poeaese the remarkable property of toot­ing down and carrying off the inflammation and eocenes* at ooce. aod restoring tbs part# to sound­ness and health la a few boors without pain or iiTttadan.

It la mot A Moating Lfnlasent, hotacts by Its peculiar specific or chemical qualities in dissolving and scattering the soreness and In­flammation of tbs Injured part. By s tore ap­plication. tke red surface sou* become* cool, moist and natural, and la restored to natural health without supparallua or destruction.

As m Liniment fbr Horse Flesh#for the cure of all th* allumu named above, ws challenge toe world to Sad iu equal.Price 25 AM cents per bottle.

D. RANSOM, 80N A 00 .BUFFALO

Sue notice In local

MASUFACTBR1SG COMPANY.612 and 614 N. Main St,

ST. LOUIS, HO.

OOSADAosA

DA L I

S

THE GREAT ALTERATIVE AND BLOOD PURIFIER.It is not a qnnek Dr strum.

Tlio irgmlicnta are published on r«ch bottle of tnfdirino. It ia naod aod recommended by rbjiiciftM nberever it baa been introduced. It will poaitfrely cure HCJfOFVLA in itr tarujvt rlayt *, HJIEK• MA TLSM, WJ/JTi: SWEL­LING, Gon\ can re, EROECJ/JTJS, EER VO US l)ElilLIT Yt JSi U'lEM COE SI MPTJOE\ and alldia- ea>cB ahairglic m sn impure condition c (tl*e bloc d. nend for onrRoRADAi.TB Almanac, in which yen will find cerlificutea from reliable »rd trustworthy Pliyuiciana. lU.nigkiB of tbe Gospel aru othem.

fir- B. Yknicn Carr. ** rautw-ore,•s > e he has ii»« d It ini sms rf B< rnfulasr d other dweaMU with mtuh uialaeI.- ! .

Dr.T.C prgh.of IbWjniff, rreren- mends it to *71 per*o*>« #uflFrring with dtressed Blood, saying it ia superior le any f rrreration he has ever used.

I eY. Dabnsy Ball, of the Paitfarere M. K (cum n«r Mlb, says he La# Iren *0 n u«b h#i>eflttfd by its ore. tb#t he cheerfully re« cn wwnd* It to all Lis flrlrfcda Si d scqua.Uttnrrv.

. CrarenfiCe.i rv.gftvt#, st rorder:•- Jrfllc, Yr .iq it never bee failed loglve(sat.14*<'1 iam'l 0. McFaflflm. Murfrereboeo', jin 1. m, r. ■ it cared bun of kbcu>

__________ I mat iron ubtn aJ else failed.THE BOHAPAUB IK OONNFXrTlON WITH Or*Propr’i

,». T.

$5 to $20 STJrSS*old. make more owner ■

Agents wanted! All classes of peeplewsf efther Sex, young sr

-------- at work for us la I — —moment* or si) the time than st anything el aUrs free. Addre## O. IUimud hCu.r

*«d M W«« Bum

htomffm —FFt DurwAUX tt. Y.

striker that

each wffk-aokvt* wanted.V • “•vA/ buvlr.c## I. £>t ,mete P«r

$125J. WOflTH'M I

A WowrH to Le4y ■xse M asi r actv ata

Agent*. A• Co .Wat

will cure Chills and Fewer, tiu» Complaint, Dys­pepsia, etc. We euarantve Eo*XDXLrs *«. peiinr te *11 other Blood f urther*, head ter Descriptive Circular or Almanac.

Addreee CLEWZNT9 A CO .as. a. ms. Mmanmin #, are.

BOwmbfr to e#k mu ter lltMAOAXie.

NEW YORK, 1873-1. WEEKLY, SEMI*WEEKLY, ANI> DAILY.

THE WEEKLY 8CN ia too widely known to require any extended recommends, lion; but tbe reason* which bar© already given it fifty tliouaand subaeribera. and which will, we hope, give it many thousand* more*are briefly aa follows:

It la a first-rate newspaper. All th# newt of the day will be found in It, con­densed when unimportant, at full length when of moment, and always presented in a clear, intelligible, and interesting manner.

It iaafirst ml# family paper, full of antertutolng and I art r act ire reading of every kind, hut containing nothing that can offend the most delicate and scrupulous taste.

It la a first-rate story paper. The best talcs and romances of current literature are carefully selected and legibly printed In its r*gea.

It is a first rate agricultural paper. Tha most fresh aad instructive articles on agricultural topics regularly appear in this department.

It is an independent political paper, belonging to no parly, and wearing no col­lar. It fight* for iHriocipir. and for the election of the Kt-st men to office It es­pecially devote* Its energies to the exposure of the great corruption* that now weaken and disgrace our country, and threaten to undsrniioe republican.institutions altogether. It has no fear of knave#, and asks no fxvora from their supporters.

It reports the fashions for the ladies, and the markets for the men,especially the cattle market*, to which it pays particular attention

Final. 7. it ia the cheapest'paper published. One dollar a rear will secure it for any subscriber. It is not necessary to get up* club in order tohave THK W EKKL\ 81TN at this rate. Any one who sends a single dollar will get the paper for a year.

THK WF.P.kLT m ft .-Eight pages, flftyalx Column*. Only fl.OO • free, ao discounts tea this rate.

THK SESI-WBRELV nm.-Brnnc six# a* tbe Daily Non, #2.00 a year. A. discount of SO per cent to dabs of 10 or over.

THK DAILY NVPI.-A large four page newspaper of twenty-cigbt Colamn*. Daily CVea 1st loa ovof I *0,000. All the eras fo S crate. Subscription prtc* I Scent* a aioeth of f • a yssr.To Ctebs of 1 o or over, a discoaat of SO per amt.

“THK im," New York City.

CETZE'8NEW SCHOOLS PARLOR ORGAN,L'Tr'^SWrtntYWrtSrjriseat by av#iL Parcs fexa

NEW METHOD FOR THE PIANO.*a an th# bc«t,. sivotearhee in theE m,.«t tho Lit. J._______ ,_______^

start direct mstirer i soln-4 to sapll# of tvm gre«le of •(#*>-, yerstrlDf Uc more sdvaacsd fsr Tborowa* But. heat by bmJL Pmics P*S>lift 1,1. RE REtfiY IT P1F.PTF.XBXR.-W The buret %o4 brat Choir Book,

»*

eaan roa oatauwcxD—tttlfl Sewiitf Mflchiss Cs., New York.

ettreeUvi

“ THE SABBATH,ronutns the sood eld etondsrd teart , ,tr«. of » 1 Urn<>ntii,.i't« ••*. tsd prttlv — rmtreat mUmms. J*aioa#iEl. reMhjrmetL ^wopl# Com Cl. LKI A sAlaKE

' fij Cvwntrr to, htiuttireiA.

foe Church asd pretty melodic# by

be# * VcUBi'l Musicalsd'irrss.

, Ire* to any

CRAB ORCHARD SALTS

WealW* offer te tbs AGENTS AND CANVASSERS OF AMERICA the BEST FAYING snd

EASILY WORKED sgemreia dm vrorkL Tbe who caa offer 11 Atil UAH tbe martIskimc

>1LY WUKMUsa#acy Sfls#

■5S HOW YOUpenoas will do tbe me*/

This Orsmt /Therart Art,ess west

Bee W L WMA. is

frit* to___Now every > frsm

mss v # ien. rHmm trshiss Aasma' remere*prefer

urn psuire wu# eo iae mmsr Umis*## now every y^e Addrees. M mm, E H 4NN AFtlEBfl OU .

m#c«iffcest o*l ebramra. I* ss*>m.v K«*w*o. ready

vies Faiaaow Wrefcbm of 1Uaetrsttfl. iu _ ___________________

HINXfiAL fiP&IHO WATEB.—Kilwaukss.

ws is one w8ll of tbs Msdiag Family tha Uaiea. Eight pagm, or.gfeal, I Re fourth veil use, ba* met with Ifl^recrr##. OrcuLnou See? Ore

silo x :vi^ead rafedfr ferreadag. Care. Dropsy. Dtshctre. Brlghto

m eooght atear aad ua- ta* hi..td»r. aad #11 Mere##* ..f the i aveat tb* ageut; tb* chromre , #ry Orcaa#.

Dlreere. Ston- 'a_ „ "ted allptereaiu of tbe Kidsevtasd Ctire

mameere aarestttad 10 aeate tb# asm t tha dtemaai i are Orueue.' Iwymepaa reeuauueudfl. lead ter sue

MAKE MONEYS—I XI LOAM

‘JTJzxiiSsS’iSS&'ttZX SCHENCK'8 MANDRAKE PILU.to work right i mt aud st#k7Bl3 MtUnT Tbs Sa-•rk tight s\nng sm<

h that they adbrTbs tact hflntetn -vrlaafr-ly of

they suttretyay erf tm l«)«rt«m mt tar livrr.aad are a vteof au old egret a uot seeded «• mtere TtTTZi IZZXTlEfo»mmg°—•, aSsai__

ffi Coaiunag trf tbe Ivcon r ,ro- »)•■«*, Htea nan 4*>f#. IrtleeU#* '■>»F mo# "Cufir usd JTammr • TyyheM aad other freer#. fc..A«-#l[, efogaaiiy teuaad, a share ta tbs . gewaaca'a Maqqaafi rirj—rn roarn at omu. eutflma. 1 F*v stea hy all Dreuufot# -orf Damx|

.^iV^irgoTr^b AU K,nr* W A TTKD ter New nmutreted

mmiothhm mm»■ tow*. Osty want sd-m>~' vn^ng f.imt ... (t,

•tert red «Sfir fenhiAfrft fr-aus

VINECAR BITTERSEJIlUdtUttillHIiaija|l>r. J. Wslktr*# Callforni# 1 la-

tmv!\AFRICA*SEfltlffjSS

I AormtsKawtu, i a co. futetu. Mrt.

IRKMSlSIlvSKffiiut'u

tlte Sierra Nevada mouuUiiiiB of Caltfor- nia, the medicinal propertied of which are extracted tberciruui without the use of Alcohol. The queBtion to alnMiei daily asked. 4* What to the ctiu*e of the unparalleled Bucceas of ViJftoiAR Bit- TEKafw Our answer to, that they remove tbe cause of dtoeoae, and the patient re­covers hto health. Thug are the great blood purifier and a life-giving principle, a perfect Renovator and Invigorator of the syiiteiu. Never before in the history of tbe world bus a uiedkin* beeu compounded pouseswing tbe lemarkable qualities of Vineoas Bitters in bealmzthe sick of every dinease mau to heir U*. They are a gentle Purgative as well as a Tonic, raheviug Congi ->n<»u or Inflammation of tbe Liver aad Visceral Organs, in Bilious

The pro|M*rtiftN of I)r. W’ai.kfr’sVINKOAUliiTTEZ* are A perient, Diaohoretic, Carminative, Nutritious, Laxative, Diuretic, ftedative, Counter-Irritant, Hudorific, Altera­tive, and Anti-Bilious.

Grateful Thousandn proclaim Vnr- bgar Bittern tbe moat wonderful In- vigorant that ever suxtained the linking system.

No Pemon am take thetic Bitternaccording to directions, and remain long unwell, provided their bones are not de­stroyed by mineral poison or other means, and vital organa wasted beyond repair.

Bftliou*. Remittent and Inter­mittent FeYern, which are so preva­lent in the valleys of our great rivers throughout the United States, especially those of the Missiiwtppi, Ohio, Missouri, Illinois, Tennessee, Cumberland, Arkan- ka*. Red, Colorado, Brazos, Rio Qramie, Pearl, Alabama, Mobile, ftavannah, Ro­anoke, James, and many others, with their vast tributaries, throughout our entire country during the Summer and Auturpn, and remarkably ao during sea­son* of unusual heat and dryness, are invariably accompanied by extensive de­rangements of the stomach and livcg and other abdominal viscera. In their treatment, a purgative, exerting a pow­erful influence upon these various or­gans, to essentially necessary. There is no cathartic for tbe purpose equal to Dr. J. Walkfu’s Vinegar Hitters, as they will speedily remove tbe dark- colored viscid n\atter with which the bowels are loaded, at the same time stimulating tbe secretions of tbe liver, and geneaslly restoring the healthy functions of the digestive organ*.

Fortify the body again*! dilate by purifying all its fluids with Vinegar Bitter*. No epidemic can take hold of a system thus fore-armed.

toqKJMis or IfldigPtttion, Head­ache. Pam in the Shoulders. Coughs, Tightness of the Chest, Dizziness, Sour Eructation* of the fttomach. Hud Taste in the Mouth, Bilious Attacks, Palpita- tat ion of the Heart, Inflammation of the Lungs. Pain in the region of the Kid­neys, and a hundred other painful symp­toms, are the ofbpriogs of Dvspe|Mia. One bottle will prove a better guarantee or rts mertu than a lengthy advertise­ment.

Scrofula, or King\ EvlJ, White Swelling*. Ulcers, Erysipelas, Swelled Neck. Goitre, ftcrofaioa* Inflammation*. Indolent Inflammation*. Mercurial Affection*. Old Sores Eruption* of the Skin, Sore Eyas, etc. In these, aa in all other constitutional Dis­ease*, Walker's Vissoax Bitters have shown their great curative power* in the moat obstinate and intractable case*.

For Inflammatory and Chronic Rheumatism, Gout, Bilious, Remit­tent and Intermittent Fevers, Diseases of tbe Blood, Liver, Kidnev* and Bladder, these Bitter* have no equal. Such Diseases are caused by Vitiated Blood.

let* ban leal Diseases. — Persona en­gaged in Paints and Minerals, such as Plumbers, Type-setter*. Gold-beaters, ana Miners, aa they advance in life, are subject to paralysis of the Bowel*. To guard againxt this, take a dose of W alxkk s V in­box a Bitters occasionally.

For Skin Disease*, Eruptions, Tet­ter, S*lt-Kbeum, Blotches. Spots, Pimple*, Pn*tnle*. Boils, Carbuncles, King-worm*, Scald bead. Sore Eyes. Erywipato*. Itch, rienrfs, Iji-coloration* of the Skin, Humor* and Disease* of the ftkin of whatever name or nature, are Hteralljr dog np and carried ont of the system in a short time by tbe use of the«e Bitten.

Pin, Tape, aud other Wormn,larking in the system of so many thousand*, are effectually destroyed and removed. No system of medicine, no vermifuges, no an toslmutitkrs will free tbe system from worm* like these Bitter*.

For Female UomplaintA, In youngor old, married or single, at the dawn of wo­manhood, or tbe tarn of life, these Tonic Bitten display to decided an influence that improvement 1* soon perceptible.

C’lefiMfie thft Yitiati-d Bloca when­ever you find its impurities bur ang throng! the kkin in Pimple*, Bru^-ura*, <w ftoree- cleanse R when you finu it obstructed ant sluggish in the veto*, cleanse it when it k fouIT yoar feelings will tell y on when. Kecq the blood pure, and the health of the system will follow,

■cDONALD M CO.,Dnuririrts aadGes Aft*-. See Flwaoto^Cteifaraie •ed ear. at WaahiSfioa sad (’tete# Sto.. jN. Y.

•tefl by wll Dnsflf Is*# aa* Dewier*.

CONSUMPTIONWlLLHOPTSl

Carbolated Cod Liver OilI# * arirntIftr emablsstioe •# tww welLkaowa awdl- rtsr# it# tease? !• fet ta srtert ui# tcrar, tke*BS JteflSa. VbT+r*~ Ate .hr rfortrWj orfSetT T>S reallj narUla* cure# pwrtarmmi bf NU1- #Q# » OH art prrmt. . . . - 1# tl_

trnn« Into thr rlrralsItes.H of «sre^Wfifftbifi,HM reflack. It phrlfirs mo 1 ‘yat fffosaae. W Ltrsr(Od List OUU

J. |«. WILLSON. S3 J#ka BL, New T#rh.mmnwm IgBaHfffft&gStt

OAlTAMMe BOOK# U#T TUI FOBPROF. FOWLER S GREAT WORKDa Matote, ffattaMteaatltbflr 91 ••«*! lattr-rvntMMiLm, H*law#, Fo«rrr.Ar.

Affsatt a»e Mteaz towa IS ve •**■ —n<l • '-*oT*#«ln« Nn«k fr-e U

Ftm "WUJD9 tntw "

VC?r LOW RATES.tgrjssp*'

I trsssfsju:wer < MI< AOO!

■- IlM-r X.dr wHirraat"at-

<’( BftENT ITEM*.^elrctrd JBfcstelhmg.this auk or ovws.

•*■*» •* how wooflroo# wU# th# world Hw irwwi *11*. r Sr k«|U Ut

n*w *«kW*tH* MW CAM Min k (hr skle#An4 pin* with Mck mw film;

t so ••MU) « hat of srbol*.Mmui on W»lw« i wm4ti

Laugh dona lk« »tun44« or i , w Aad ridicni* ik«lr Mu4w« t

1\« awrwi boy. wttk tlww head Aad ^rufM-r «<lu< SI ion.

I'M p«l (w •k«K*r tkr k«in of kl* ItrMdklhrrlt relation

Wltk k*l that W ko dlt* h. kr |«n <»l puzzling raid* sad rmazhlns.

And rnikr* kT* way. nit host a arralck. Through philosophic btasiMes.

And children of tkr larger growth The fall blow a aira aad wwnru

Of thee# »all|iii«a«d day*—nhv. Ikay Am aarrlr more than huaaau

Wtik kaad* tkai hold aJl Iklaga. tkr* seize Tk* nalrrrar aod wrigk It.

Takr down tkr >•« flaw heaven and try By science to assay ft.

Tkr caaar of all tkat la to tkrai U ju.t a* |>lata a* preaching,

Aad rrrrr useful iking lh«y an*Vfaitr capaMe of Marking

Tkr* know exactly h.»w tkr rank Hr. a air wkat a« Hr hold It.

Aad hint It migkt kr belter bad Tkr task brrn tkrira to Mold It.

Bat a till, ak! allll tkrav hearts of oara Tl»r»*b ia tkr uai old fashion,

Aud fwl. Ja*t as oar faikrra frit.Tkr pang of ron passion*

tiirei progress ha* been tuadr uo dookt.VI hrrr Hririice iprradi hrr highway#;

But wlili poor llautaa Naturr gropra Through many c heerlsas byway*

- I'.tnUl C’oawaflp. la .V f /asapredra/.

CLARA MARCHANT* ROSES.

“ C>h. dear. Mr Hunt,how yoi nUrtlcd me!" said Miaa Mart haul. aa she turned around from the «*j»en window of her pretty sitting room to greet a gentleman hho was entering the dtior. “See my |w»or rt*#e# are all flying right and left!**

“ I bvg your pardon. let uie help you,” said Mr. Hunt, stooping to collect the lovely blonaoiu* of a climbing roae which had juat Iteen gathered.

“Hut they are all going up town to Lady Mrrrimnn’s,” explained Mia# Mar* chant. “ to deck her room* for the ball. <|h. dear, 1 should like to go with them. No, 1 should not! Stupid thing* balls are; and yet. Mr. Hunt, let me tell you in confidence, I feel terribly dull down here.”

Strange word* to come from the lip* of Mioi ( Urn .Man hunt, the rich stockhold­er's daughter and sole heiress of the licaiitiful house and grounds called Bar­ton Tower*, which had lately been pur­chased by Mr. Marchant. Strange, but true; she was dull. The routine to which *he had l>een accustomed for the last flee years of ball and party, dinner and drive, had been disturbed by the move from Iaindon to the country, which had been rendered necessary by her father's fail­ing health.

“Come. Air Hunt,” she said, gayly, “you tell us in the pulpit not to be tii#- contented w uh our live*, but to make the best of them; now. do tell ine what I ought to do I have lived a quarter of a century, and yet 1 have not (p ind out for mvaelf. I have only one duty—look ing after my father; but most part of the

he prefers hi* valet to me, so I have at deal of time in which to make

invaelf unhappy.”Miss Marchant *|*»kc lightly, but there

w a* an air of truth about her words, and Mr. Hunt, the good clergy man. felt sorry for her.

“leant teach—children worry me; I

The Clinton Independent.VOL. VIII.--NO. 38. ST. JOHNS, MICIL, THURSDAY, JULY 2, 1874. WHOLE NO. 402.

... 1

daya great

javedis*

don't like dirty bouses, and I never away a tract in my life.” continued Marrhant; “ »o don’t a-k me to do any a those things ”

“ l*el me help you to put up those flowers,” said Air.‘Hunt; and for a few minutes the two were busy laying the beautiful ro*c» in soft beds of cottou wool.

“ Pity they should wither in Lady Aler- riman's hot rooms!” said Clara Afar- chant. “ Hut. after all, it is better than to leave them nodding their head* o ft in mv garden, with no <>u< to smell them oradmire tin iu

“ 1 fiuitr agree with you,” said Air Hunt, laughing “And now may I bav one lor my pains?"

And he chose a lovely nearly-blown “ <Holre de Dijou.”

“ Oh, ves, but not that; it is too widely opened tor your button hole Here is a little beauty—take this,” said Alias Mar- chant.

” I hold to my first choice.” said Mr.

r V e ;

take it to the farm thia evening I re member the pretty little girl who used to atand at the gate. What a grief for her parent*!”

“They are heartbroken.” said Mr. Hunt; “ and yet a little sympathy com forts them.”

Ho in the light of the evening Mia* Marchant went up to the fanndiouse laden with white bloaaoms, a roaebud wreath crowning her basket.

“ Go in, will you?” said the Nibbing farm girl. And Clara went up the stairs into the room where the child lay.

The father and mother, plain country- people, looked up on her entrance and tried to thank her.

“ She was all we had,” said the mother, plaintively.

Clara stooped and kissed the pretty, white face, and laid the rose wreath over her fair hair

“ I am so sorry for you!” was all she could find to say, but it was quite enough. and then she sat down and heard from |>oor Mrs. May the sad, oft- repeated tale of the sudden illness audits fatal ending.

Aliss Marchant’* name was beloved at the farm ftrom that sad evening.

Tlie time of roses w as draw ing to a afloat* when Mr. Hunt and Aliss Alnrchaut neit met in her pretty garden.

“ You must exhibit at Millfield flower- show next Saturday,” said Air. Hunt, pausing by a standard rose. “ Tills bud will lie perfect then. Judging by the C|ien flower near.”

“Thai bud will 1m* a gem.” said Clara, decidedly; “but it shall not go to that dirty. *mok\ Millfield; 1 have promised it to young "Law rence; it is the nrw rose, vou know. and he w as a rose-fancier in his day. poor fellow !”

“Can’t you make it answer both pur­poses*” said Mr. Hunt. “ Send it to the •how, where it w ill certainly take the first prize, and then give it hi’tu.”

“ I must ask his leave,” said Clara “ Hut why should I patronize the Alillfieldshow ?”“Because it is your duty," said Air.

Hunt; “you are one of the great folks round, and you should encourage the Millfield folk in such a wholesome recre­ation as gardening ”

“ Are pal going?” a-ked Clara.“ Certainly! I shall drive my wife

over.”“ Then let me take some of your children

w ith me ”“ No, thank you; children worry you,”

said Air. Hunt, laughing " 1 am too proud to let mine be in your way ”

“Nonsense!" said Clara, blushing.“ good children don’t worry me.”

” You shall haw* Mrs Hunt and I aura then, the two well behaved ones,” said Mr Hunt; “ami I will take iny riotous boys.”

So Aliss Marchant went to the Mill ffield show and won the first rosg prize, and came home full of a resolve to stir up the Barton j*-oplc to rival Millfield next year Her roses were certainly drawi’ng her nearer to her neighbors, and daily involving a visit to one or another.

Poor young Law rence had the prize rose in a glass in his bedmotu lor many a day after the show; he liked it all the better that it had liven to smoky M ill - field, where his best days were passed

The last rose of the year, a sickly Walking bud, was gathered by Clara and dared in his dead hand as he lay at last ret- from suffering in the cottage mom

“ 1 shall bless you all my life.” said the )ioor, weary mother “ If ever any one soothed a dying man s path to the grave, you did.”

With little Mary May and Oliver Law rence in the churchyard. Mis* A!archant felt she had an interest there. Air. Hunt w as willing to assist her in her plan of

LATENT NEWS.

Terrible Marine Accident Turkish Waters*

A Snd Case •f Trichina Ohio.

Spiralis In

isaaaJiog tkr Pr«* eotptioa aad amendatory ofHorn* •trad laws

Lawless Seizure of m NewspaperIn Now Orleans.

Fiaal Passage ef the Compromiseroaey Bill.

Interesting Personal, Political General News.

Hunt; “ it is not for my button-hole, but making it the garden of the village, andfor one of my sick people ”

“ Oh. sick said Clara Marrhant. con­sidering “ By the wav, I suppose in the country they expert a‘certain amount of soup and kitchen pkvdr from the great house, don’t they? Well, you must tell me. and 1 will speak to the house­keeper. I am new to the work,” she added, smiling.

“ You are very kind.” said Mr. Hunt; “ I w ill come to you w hen such things are needed. Were you going out? 1 wa# go ing to a#k your "permission to cm## the shrubberies to the lower woods, it will save me half a mile ”

“ I will come w ith you! ” said Mis* A!ar chant.

And the two set out on their walkMr. Hunt »top|ied at last at a tiny

house by the roadside, outside the grounds.

** Here I go In,” he said. “ Good by."“ No; you promised to come Imck and

advise me about the ferneries," said Miss Marrhant; “I will sit on this low wall and w ait for you. I suppose you have some sick old woman there?”

Mr Hunt smiled and left her. When he ram# out of the cottage he was ac rotupnnied by a young man—quite young but piteous to look u|Hin. since he bore in Ills face the sure sign of coming death. It might be near, It might lie far. but it must c#»uie.

“ Mis* Marchant will excuse iny asking a favor for you." said Mr Hunt, looking from one to* the other; “ but it would be a great thing for my friend, Mr. law rr nee, to have permission to re»t in your shrub

es this hot weather, he lias to thank you for the ro«e.”

“Oh, no," said Mi»# Afarchant, hastily; “ that is nothing And. please, whenever you like to. come in there—the garden too. Could you get so far?"

The young man smiled and thanked her; he feared he was but a preir walker, but lihwrty to enter her grounds would be a great tmon.

He spoke an well that Clara turned to Mr. Hunt, as they parted, to ask hi* his­tory.

“Just a poor clerk out of Millflehl, dy­ing of consumption." said the clergyman Mw> have manv such here; the air ia considered good, and they send them out to u»—generally to die, though.”

"Coukl I not do something for him*” she continued; " would better advice save him*”

“ Nothing will save him," said Mr Hunt, “you could pleaae him. though, by now and then sending him a few flowers"

“Oh thank you! indeed I will!" said Misa Marrhant heartily “And fruit, might I? Would be be vexed?”

" I am sure he would not. But sup- pose some day, you look In on his mother—a simple. lady like person, who la devoted to him. It la too far for Mrm. Hunt to walk, ami the poor soul aadly needs sympathy. Now for the fernery*"

Rut Harm could not think of her ferns , the patient, suffering fare of the con­sumptive man haunted her.

She ordered a basket of the finest strawberries to br gathered for him, and went herself to the gardener to order a beautiful bouquet for to-morrow

1 maVe a point of calling Mr H

many a one came to her to a*k her advice how to make the last home of wife or child, parent or friend, more beautiful.

And not by her fbrwer* only did Clara Marrhant win her way to the hearts of her |Kw»r neighU»r*; ,*he had kind word* for all. Barton w a* no longer dull, and she hail made the discovery that there wax more than *moke in Millfield.

From the mill people ahecame to know the mill ow ners, and a certain pleasant Mr. Thornbury. of large }*tK-csalon* in the place, was lucky enough to attract the interest of Mi*« Marchant In the ensuing summer he often wore one of her rosebud* in his buttou bole, and before winter Mi-* Afarchant became Air* Thornbury She wa« to live at Barton •till, however; her father needed her andher poor peo| if she could

pie ct leave

tuld not spare her rosea.

her. even

A Mnstaehe.

By all means raise one! My youn7n

Lawrence ” she said, aa

that

“I shall Mr* left

There was no fear sufferer would need ftowerx. ripe frulu could furnish him. a good friend who really aroused in any Lawrence and her tick

on•at

thia poorsuck solace aa gay and kind sympathy Clara Marrhant was

Internet was one, aad Mrs

were eagerof ike mistress of Barton

rasurr

In praise Tower*.

“ Your mean kavn given soek niea at the Wood cottage? said Mr Man* day. "tkat 1 mu»i ask vo'jforaftfWmoru; white thia time 1 .-®«r May'* only Oild. a Bttle ; rl of fm. ke# l ed aod danly of croup, aad 1 want some Bowers In pot around hag."

Let an make a wreathsaid Clara, eagerly, “ I know tke way, and I could

masculine friends, if you have heretofore neglected it. attend to it at once “ iVlavs are dangerous.” “ Pro­crastination Is the thief of time.” Now­adays, to succeed in life, it is necessary thal a man should have a mustache! Witness the following advertinrmrnt, copied verbatim from one of our city dailies:

••Wanted - A youngyentlemaa te art a* clerr la a dry e«**d» *t«m Must W ri|*erirnr<-d In tb hn«lnr««. uf a<l«tr«-»* and prr|MM»r*,lnK ap pearanrr, /Mr wit A a rmtttnrk*

Brains, you are, an* at a discount, but hair on the upper lip is at a premium Everybody appreciates amus’athe; but few people have wit enough to appreciate brains, even when they come into the vicinity of them—which, by the way, ia not oft*en

A mustache makes itself evident at once, unless it be of a pale yellow kind whirl) require* the observer to use a microscope in order to detect it. Brain* are not supposed to be rUible, and. in dirations of them are not always surface indications.

Blonde mustaches are all the go with novelists; tawny they are sometime* des ignated, but never red

Somehow. nowadays, everybody seems to avoid correctness in everything and it would be dreadful to describe a hero with a red mustache. So. young man. if you desire to be in style, raise a tawny mustache Let it grow long, so tkat your mouth will be sub­merged—so that nobody will know for certain that you have got a mouth It will teach lookert on a lesson of faith in things unseen.

Young ladies like mustaches. Of course they do A hero with chin whis­kers or mutton-chops would be nowhere.

Ho, fNMfirst principles—by

gentlemen, to go back to all mean* raise one!

Oil it. Perfume It Comb It. Brush it. Wax it Curl U. Twist it. Twirl it If necessary dye it, and on no account atop stroking It. for If yon do you will ahow MW gfcnerving world that you are think-

king else, and what fashion­ing ofable young man ever forgets t|»e ex

his mustache ?—*«<« TWa’s II

example of tb 1 tlgflsk law Sj tad (a shown in

the strictnessagainst mir­

ths rase of

A srorxixo With Which the En der is interpreteda woman who •rHetnatkally starved hertwo-year-old child to death Tke unnat­ural creature wua committed for trial on the charge of wtllfal murder

Tn* Iowa grasshopper has been checked in Its earner of devastation, not muck, however, to the favmors' Joy. for

la n red-headed bug. an Inch with an appetite marvelous for

itsmtta

a Hbai The

This1 libel euit

rhTi!u2!3?krisimply want# to ■hi* is what might

▼IIX 01.0 WORLD.On the ’JDth s motion prevailed In the French

Assembly to continue the existing condition »»f affairs for two years Linger, the t*oieminent to have the right to nominate all Mayor* <»f cities. On the MU) the French Government issued an order forhtddiug the distribution «*f the photographs «>f the Prinrc Imperial (Hi the 29th the French Assembly ratith-d without debate the pn«tal convention be. tween France and the l uited Htatea. A I’ari* dispatch of the Jftlh sajra that the police, on the preceding day, made domiciliary vUll* to the ofllces «»f the Imperialist Journal* and the residence* of well-known RonafUrtM*, and M-izcd several hnj**rtant document*.

Thu British people celebrated the thirty- seventh annhersary of Queen Victoria’s ac.

1 cession to the throne on the 2rt(h The dav was observed by the riaging of hells and the tiring of aalutea.

Tut striking miner* of Yorkshire, England, have concluded to accept the term* offered them by their employers, and have gone to work at a redaction of 13}y I** vent, in therate of w ages.

Tiir meeting of the International Diplo­matic Congress at Brussels, Belgium, has been |MMt|toned to July 27

Tiir fHitch ('hanabera, on the ‘JTHh. rejected the Government bill lowering the fram hi*c, whereupon the MlnUtry tendered their resig­nation*.

On the IPth an Fgvptian Te«*rJ ran Into the Turkish vessel Kara, in the A-» nt MASznora, and 'tJi of the :*40 persona on l»owrd the latter wrere drowned.

A t»i*r*r« h was received from Nrssnburo, Brazil, on the *22*1. announcing the successful laying of Ibc Brazilian cable.

The English latMirer* are tvlng shipped t«* Canada and the l niu-d State* in large nun- j

I atw-ra.Tue Butillme Porte has forbidden the clfcu*

1 1st ion the Bible in Turkey.An album and a valuable collection of dife

monds weir presented to the Pope on the £|d I by the American pilgrims On the eiening of the 94th there were anti papal dem*»w«tra

1 tkma in Rome, which for a time created con ] sideralda uneasiness. The ringleader* acre | arrested and quiet wra* restored.

The Bpanlsh commander has decided to build a series ««f fortifications extending a< rox» Spain, so leteated as to confine the ( arl- ists within a *mall area destitute of the mean* of sustenance. According to Madrid dls I

1 patches of the 94th the CarlisU had captured , Br I) mount on the pre«rdiog day. They had established their intrenched lines near Estella Bayonne dispatches of the 34th say the ( ar- lists had raised Ihe seige t*f Flgueras. near the French frontier, (ten Concha’s attack on Estella was hourly expected Don Carlos wan dire* ting the defruae in person.

A<i«J*f>lw«» to Calcutta telegrams uf llie A*»th the distress consequent the famine in that country had measurably abated.

Til VC NEW WORLD.The President signed the bill providing for

a reorganization of the government of the District of Columbia on the ‘JOth

Rs< entlt a German family named Eilers, in Toledo, Ohio, ate of partially cooked sau­sage, and since then the mother and f*ne child have died and another child was In s preca­rious rood it taw. A microscopic eiaminstian of portion* of flesh taken from the lungs, limtr* and other parts of Mrs. Eller*’ body- re sealed the fact that the whole system aw armed with trichina. In luni|* of flesh no larger than a pin head were found from flf teen to twenty of the encysted par*slt«s. It l* sup|M»*cd that Mr Eilers’ life wa* savi-d by the violent purging and vomiting which he underwent the next day after eating of the aausagi k

< in the morning of the 21st as the last form* of the New Orleans BufUfim were being on- rryed to the press they were taken pomrsalon of hy the police and locked up in the station house. The editor says the seizure was made without legal proems ami hw the purpose of • iippersaing the papvr because it had op p*s*-d tin Kellogg administration.

Thk Mil for the distribution *4 the l**ocvra aw ard, which passed both house# of C<*ngrr*a on the 01, provides for flve commissioner* U> distribute the money, and limit* the time of acrvke to one year and a half

(I* the 9M notice was given that the Provi­dent had signed the Currency Mil.

New Tone dispab kus of the 22d say that the signing of the ('uirrney hill had caused great buoyancy In the railway share market. Over Xn.OHO shares changed hands at from Q to 5 per rent, advance.

Amqjio the bills passed by the late Congress was oat providing that prepayment of postage on newspapers shall commence Jan 1, 1975. and that the rate shall be two rent* per pound on weekly and daily paper*, and three rent* per pound on all publications less frequent than weekly Postage on public documents was fixed at tea rents per volume.

On the 2Sd the President nominated Alex ander R Bhepherd, late Governor of the Dis trict of Columbia; UUliam A. Dennison, of Ohio, ex Postmaster-General, and Henry T Blow, of Missouri, formerly member of Con. gr«-aa from that State, and afterward Miniater in Brasil, as a Commission to govern the IU* trict until the new form of government shall have been prepared and adopted The last two named were promptly confirmed but the maainatioa of Shepherd was defeated hy a vole of six to thirty six. 8«frequently ex Rrnator Cattell, of New Jersey, was nominated aod confirmed.

Tm following are the more Important bills Which go over till the a«xt session of too

4"T» protect thr uavigshle waters of ths 1'aited

Hiaiva from iojnrv slid obstnirli»aHouse hill for tke rcorgsnlsstiou of the army. Iloiiae bill to equalise bounties.

IQ The hill granting pensions to all Soldiers of the war of 1*1* and their widow* and children

For the eonstrwrtfou and repair uf (hr Niiila sippi Ktver levees.

Tkr McCrary hill regulating charge* fur railway transports! tow.

Hon**- bill amendatory of the Nteanboat law. fcenat* hill* for the abolition of rompnlaory

pilotage and to authorise the organization uf na­tional nauhs without rtreaiation

All land grant hllla and many hundred bills for the relief or lndivtdaaia.

Theme were In the United Btates, on th« 1st uf June, 19,492 sutMirdlnate Grange* «»f the Pat runs of lliislMndry.

On the evening of the ‘Aid, at dyracuae, N Cur- L * atrawtierry festival was lielug held at the

parlors <»f the Central Baptist Church, w hen, without any premonition, the floor gavr way, precipitating th«- rootu full into the story I*-

and The parlor was uu the second fl<M»r, andthe room underneath was also full of people Fourteen were killed and a!»out two hundred injured, many of them dangerously.

Josei-ii A Tircoim wa* nominated by ac. elsmalioti for Governor of Maine bv the Maine Htate I>enio< ratio Convent ion on the 2Md R» xr.lutn.il. were unanimously adopted . favoring the early resumption o# specie pay­ment*; declaring for free trade; condemning the reernt course «>f the Ri-publirsn majority of the United Btates S*-nate In attempting to establish s censorship of the press .J the coun­try *t the National capital; denouncing tin* Ri-puldiean party f«*r InU-rfermce with the government of the «everal Mtatrw, and the imurse of the Kepiiblicaii Congress on tin- *ui*- )e< t of civil san toe refonn.

ON the 21st «»f June ther*- wrere 4**1 (irangers In the Mate ..f WiserMWin, with an aggregate memliershlp «»f ‘Jh.Mai.

A* < on HI NO te s reernt derision by the flu preme Court of Wisconsin the legislature had the right to rc|»eal a clause of the charter of the West Wisconsin Railway exempting certain lands from taxation. The friend* i*f recent Wisconsin railway legislation claim an appli« ation of the principle* enunciated in that decision w ill end all doubts *• to the con­stitutionality of the P«dler law. The West Wisconsin Railway Company ha* is-md order# for trains not to stop at llanuuond. Wi#., l*c« ails*- the agent of the company there had been fined for selling ticket* at a greater rate than allow*-d hy the Potter J*»

P<»xTN v*Tr.n Gen. CmMWRIX tendered his resignation to the President «*»i the '14th. It waa accepted, an<J lion. Eugene llale, of Maine, was ap|>oiuti‘d as liis successor.

A Mtvtb Prohibition C«»nventi«m wt** held : st Auburn. N Y . on the Aid, Myron 8 Clark j wa* uouiinsh d for liovrmor, ll**race V. How i laud for Judge of the Court of Appeals, Daniel Walford for Canal t ommissioiier, and Ira B»-il ! for Mat. Pri**m Inspector.

Tmcoi**»he Ti i t«»n putdi»h«-d in the N.-w York Ton*s on the AMh a long article relating ■

I to what ha# tw-en < ailed the B*-»-* her scandal, j I Tin- statement concludes a* follows; “After I i had tw-en for flft«-*-ti vear* s member ITy- I mouth Church, and had become meanwhile . an Intimate friend «*f the pastor, the know]-I edge came to uie ill 1*711 that he had commit­ted against mi- *n offense w hich I fort*ear to name or characterize. Prompted by my *clf- respeet, I imnn-diatelv and forever ceased my aitendam e on his ministry."

Tnr corner stone of the new Cu#tom House in Chicago wa* laid on the 24th, under the auspices of the Masonic frsternity A large number of |»erMin* and organization# from abr><ad participated in the <errtn«*nie#

The Iowa Anti-Monopoly fMate Convention assembled at De# Wine* on the 24th. 8cv. enty.siz rountie* werr r« pre«. nb-d by l«e tween JiXl and 441 delegate*. The following p*-r*ons wrrr nominated for Atatr officers: He< retary of htate. David Morgan, of Ma­haska; Hlatr Auditor, J M. King, of IH». tmque; 8tat» Treasurer, J. W. Barnes, «*f IV** Moines; Att<*rrie).Gem-ral, J T, Kcatley, ,»( Pottawatomie; Clerk of the Bupr«*me C«*urt, <*ei*rge W Ball, of Polk; BupfWUie Court R<*|a»rtrr, J. M Weart,*4 Buchanan; Regiate <»f the htate lomd Office, M Ridarinal. of ht«*rv. Resolution* were adopted—Indorsing the d«* trine **f the inviolability of htate and individual right*, and denouncing tlie Administration in that it had iutrrfcrrd in certain htate* with matter* with which it had no proper ronr-cm; condemning the extravagance and waste of the Government as now administered, and It# total incapacity to meet the vital question* of tin-day; declaring that the faith and credit of the nation must he maintained Inviolate; that the public debt, at whatever kind, should t*c paid in strict accordance with the law under which It w a* contracted, in­sisting that tariff* should tie iuqfor revenue oniv; that r:iilro«d« should sub­servient to the puhUr g«sa|, ami d.-mandltig *uel» legislation a* will secure the industrial and producing Inter* *t#.*f the country against all form* of corftorate mon**pr>ly snd ext*»rtion; depria ating anv »< tion calculated to rrtard rallrt»ad enterprise* or w«*rk injuslh-e to tln-*e invaluable auxiliark.-* to commen-e and eivilizatimi; favoring the limitation «»f th«- Pre«id*-ncy b» a single t»na and the ele. tioii <if |*re#id« at, Vice President and Senators by dlreei |M«pular vote; de­manding a modification of the Patent law#; in«i*tifig that the |erM»n#l lll*rrty and s«M-ia]

( Maas.) dispatch of tIn* Ufltti.determim-d not b» run for Cottgrras or any other |Mmilioii next fall.

A New Yoke telegram of the 9ml» *ays that Mr.Bee* her had »Uted that he should not tweak the alienee he had bcrrbdore observed in tv- latioii to the Tilton matter. Another d ia (Hitch of the same dale say*: “ Mr. Bee* her, iu eon- versathm with a reporter, said be had at pres­ent uo intention uf saying anything in reply to the recent statements. He had a large pastorate under his charge and had no time for per aotial controverslea. If, however, the eiam inert of Plymouth i’hurvh slmuld decide that It would lie well for him to s|»cak out in re- gard to the recent letter, he would do mi with­out hesitation "

Ali. the agents of the civilized Indians have tjmu relieved, except the agent of the Uherokees, and a central agency ha# t*eeu hi. rated at Fort Gibson.

An offirlal opinion hag be* ii given by the Attorney -General of Iow a that the State Rail- way law i* valid and it* enforcement feasible.

TIIK MAKKKT*.Jine 17. 1*74.

New York — Cotton—ltP.OtTe. A7«*»r-<»«a*d In choice, p UdlJD; white wheal extra fl*> >•*«/. a 10. M'Seuf— No 1 Chleaxo. ft 4>*(.1.41; l»«i prlnc $1 «K(I U: No 1 Mllwankre aprlui;.

4«Jt) 4.V Ape-Western. |l iffVtl 14 Aur/ey VnV.I VS r#»ea-4a«ri*dr r>»/# Nea U. st

exa. tlttSfqt. Porl—Srrr mess, fltttzscllt li*t A*uf-ll>iUIISf. Wool—Domestic fleece. 4?»#'«w*r Hrrr*0 flUTSWlt-TV //««/* I*r. -sed. |T 7*it* •

Tkr Currtmrf Bill.

I!

f i" niir xextra. X.*. t ft l***,<J.t t»l,- N« t 45',e4X^

<E7 N7>i. NAee#* Live. $4 C»M> «( Hit — /Ieer»s—t'hoiee. ft. ■»: nssl

ffl.TOfBfl-flfl; medium, fll TW-VVl: hutriirr# Mork. |t 7*dS.v ■ ai; #to< k rattle. f.X iMfet h.% Uoq» - Live. NArrp Claad tor holes, »i HI H*tt*r i liolee yellow,tk^xxir. A’py* Fresh tl»t1<*,e. Pork - Mess, new $17.»dl7 4n loni $11 izMttl Plomr White sinter extra, fs <■*.»# i«»; spring

A W *ruf Wi»rln*r No.form- No * flnvaftlV.

/fpe — No X thUk Harlty —No. f. $1 r. Wool Twhwssh*d. ttdMt; (t< eee. washed S#fT M« . Il«x-er unwashed. ’Ifd-tV ; nulled. .17^4-IMr. Lnmbrr First clear. f'oat,t .'Ain. M-rnod el»*ar. $47 '.4* *■!; ( otnmtiaHoard#. $n<l<4|Y«l»; Krn< Inc $11 >ltf> It •••; -A Nhlngles $t VI Lath $i fdXt 17*,.

(’IS* IMS ATI. PUittr fh Ilk*# Ci *1 A tot $1 it Gf.\ tA. Com IflUftt. hit x#».r*7r thitt in * ’##- H-irlry $1 ShU 48> Pork $17 F7‘,t»IS

Hv Lot*is. 4’nttlt Fair to ehol«e. It W'4 ti Hog* Live $1 *#»•».'* w* Plomt XX Kali p't* fft.90. HA/ot No 1 H« *J Fall. $1 W’l Corn -No. 1 aardi ,r. frit* No t 4'# l*'»e. Hy*

/t.iriry ft *r<, 1 4% fork Ness.$l#tV>Lta.Vl K'trtf |«Vtc.r,|l»,c.

Mu.wat'htz Flout xprinz XX $.'i TV* >’•It Ami Npring No 1. $1 *: No t |1 Udtl «\ Corn No i. o.it* V. i4ll4V Hy*-No I. tW^rJke H'trUy No t.

CtBVBLAHI* 14 Amt- No. 1 No i Bed $1 A44ftl it ,. t orH

Bed. ft 9*0 t It TiV'trii •fit*

No | vv^v-lirraoiT it A^i' Extra $1 ‘U ',1 M

**#<*«?<-. ttntsTot iini - It Asir Amber Mt« h fl 27-71 7*.

No. 1 red. $1 /Twftl •» Corn Mixed, rs’i '*».* ,« Or*/. .VNlNW

Hi rr*ni /fore. $*- SY-o, TV //><y* — Ll*«-. $.*> 7X t# J* SALive $4 M»'A.On

Hast Liaaim -(uttl* Hr.t. $»-t.'Do-dinm $.** 7i-fc* Hog* \ orkrr. $"> ’si '•». Philadelphia $*. Ykrca »>. Best pm.(V To. grhh!. $1

r010KK**IOVAL.In the Senate, on the 20th, pewolulion*

were passed —(*» print extra < uph-s of the re-p««rt of the Helert t i.remittee tm Transportation Route# to th«- Mr-abosrd. and X*#» copies of (he report uf the ComtwI#.lower »»f Kdnration H«a«<- J J«>|ut resolutbin to purchase the watch presented i to IaIiuII. hy George Wa»hii>t.*fon, snd author­izing the restoration thereof to (hr heir* of I .a favelte. Neveral bills on the calendar tinohjerted to" were passed The Nuudry t'l*|| Approprialion hill was taken ttp. snd several ami-nduirut* were agreed to. among which was tb»- striking oat of the set tion abolishing the Civil Nervier j Commission and suh*tituting therefor a I vision restoring the (‘omml.sloB and ating $.Yi>0) for the expenses thereof hills were reported favorably from committers and placed on the calendar A message was re celved from the President recommending an In ariK of th- r a* • >t interest n the Honda I a

pro

The following ia Ihe full text of the new Finance hill which Anally passed both houses of 4'ongreaa and waa signed by the President on the ¥2d ■

Mb«-tiom 1 The set entitled “Aa art t.• provide a national r urrenry. seenred bv a pledgr of t’liiled Htate* bouds aad to provide f• ir th*- tireulation and redemption thereof.” approved June t. IMM, shall in- h«-r« aft* r kuoau as the National Hauk act.

nic t That Hoc. SI of the Xathwial Hauk act he ao amend***! that the several associations therein

1>r«rvidrd for shall not hereafter be required to t* ep on hand anv attomnl of Bioaey whatever hy reason of the amownl uf tlo-lr respe* live rlrewla-

tion*; hut the moneys required hy said section to , t at all time* on baud shall he il -

hv the amount of deposit* in all respects a* pro­vided for In Ihe said section.

Mae 4 That every asstM-iation organized or to he organized under the provision* of the said set. and of Ihe several acts amendatory thereof, shall at all time keep and bmr «ui deposit in the I am ury uf the I lilted Hlates. In lawful 1I uited Htatea. a sum equal to 9 per crniiifi uf It* rirtaiation. to he held and i aa I for the redemp- ti<»n uf such clrrniathm. which sum shall he eonnted as a part of Its lawful reserve, a* provided in Her t «<f till* ai t and whentlo* (irculatiug not*-* uf anv such association, assorted ur aua* sorted, shall he presented for redemption In sum* of $| irii ur anv multiple thereof to the Treasurer of th*- United Htate* the same shall be redeemed in l uited Htate* notes. All notes so redeemed shall he (barged hy the Treasurer of the I'niird Htates to the respective a»*oriation* .suing the same, and he •hall notify them severally on the first day of each month, nr oftener, at hia discretion, of th*- amount of such redemption; and whenever such redemption* of any associa­tion shall amount to the sum of **rti «nrh «*s<*cl- ation *u notified shall forthwith deposit with the Treasurer of the United Htate* a sum In United Hlates notes equal to the amount of It* circulat­ing notea so redeemed; and all notes of National Hauk* worn, defaced, mutilated, or otherwise unfit for circulation shall, w hen received hy any Assistant Treasurer or at any designated depos­itory of the Lulled Hlates. he forwarded to the Treasurer of the United Htate# for redemption, a* provided herein; and when au<h redemption# have been so reimbursed the circulating notes so redeemed shall h*- forward'd to the respective a«*«M-latlon* hv which they w**r* issued; hut if any such notes ar* worn, mutilated. d*(h*ed. or rendered otherwise unit for use.* her shall he forwarded to the Comp­troller uf the Currenrr and destroyed and re­placed a* now provid'd by law ; /‘roridnl. That each of said association* shall reimburse to the Treasury the charge* for transportation and the

Tcost* for assorting such note* and the *s#««-la- tion* her* after organized shall also generally re­imburse to the Treasure th*- cost of engraving • ii* h plates a* shall be ordered hy each a.socia

. tion re*|*ecrfve!)r, and the amount assessed upon ea« h ass«iclaflon shall be In proportion to the clr-

, « nlattou redeemed, and be charg' d to the fund on deposit with the Treasurer; .4*«f proritfnl. furtArr. That ao murk of Hee xt of «ald National

' Bank a* t recognizing or permitting the redemp­tion «if its circulating notes elsewhere than at ti« own counter except a* provided for iu this are-

' lion. I# hereby repealednr* 4 That any a»s**cl»tlon organized nnd*-r

this act. or any of the ails to w itl< h thi* i* an am* ndment. desiring to withdraw Its circulating

I notes, lu w hub* or in pari, may, upon the deposit of lawful money with the Treasurer of the 1 nlted Htatrs. in sums of not le*. than $u take up the bond* which said association lias on «l*-j*o*,t w Itta the Treasurer for the *« c uriti of *urh Hr u

j lattng notes, whb h bond# shall be assigned tu the hanka Iu th«- manner spe-cified In the nine

1 feetilh section of the National Hank art. and the | outstanding note* of said a**m tattou to an amount

equal to the legal-tender botes deposited shall be redeemed at the Treasury <*f the United Htate#• ud destroyed as now provided by law : /‘ror><l»<l. That the amount of the bond* oil dejxcslt for cjr culatiou shall not ha reduced below $'*»<»■•

Hac ft That the Comptroller of the Currency : shall, ander such rule* and regulation* a« the j Heeretary of the Treasury niav preserittc, cause

the charter number of the association to be I printed upon all National Hank note* which may

!**• h*-rc-aftc-r i#su*-d hy himHz* a That the amount of the I sited States

note* outstanding aod to be i»saec! u a part of the (irculatiug medium »h*l! not exceed the sum of | W.tinfiE which said »um shall a} in e** h monthly stateme nt of th<- pub'.tr and n*> part ther* of shall be held or ii»*‘d g* * reserve.

Hbc 7 That so touch of the act entitled. “ An set to |*rovldc for the redemption cif the X par centum temuevrary loan cerUflc ate«. an*l for an Increase **f National Hank note* a> provided that noeirrn lathHi shall be withdrawn under th** pruvtatons <*f Hec 4 of said act until after the f vt unnn

ia Her 1 of said act shall nave been

into thr “ V” sliapt J \orfex formed liy the falling timliera. At the mo meat *»f the fulling uf the floor the scene within the parlor* whs oue of haopy en­joyment. While all were pleasantly engaged, without a single sign of warning, the floor suddenly sank heneath them, and in an instant all were buried in a nut a# of atrugglinif humanity, intermixed w it Ii falling timber*, furniture, etc., and in utter darkness, the gas hav­ing been extinguished hy the breaking of the gas pipes. An instant after the fear­ful descent had been made, all wa* #ileut as the grave, but immediately after heart* rending ap|teul* for help were to he heard from hundred* of those who were in agony. Immediately after person*were seen issuing from the doom and windows, which were smashed out by

' frightened people, aud an alarm w as sounded. The uninjured within the church who were able to free themselves from the mas# began at once to a*#»st in rescuing others. The flremen and police were quickly at hand, aud tailored nobly in the work of rescue.

The scene within the building was ter rible in its detail#, and that without the edifice heart-rending Indeed. Father# and mother# searching for their children, : husband# looking for wives, wive# in-j quiring for husband#, brother# tor si# ters, and children for their parent#, of who#e fate all were uncertain and in dread tjuickly and rapidly th»* work of extricating the people was carried on by aid of lanterns. A# fa#t a# the living and dead were rescued they were pa*#cd out through the windows and door*. I where ready' hand# a#si#fed to convey the dangerously injured and dead to the physicians' offices and ncighlioriiig houses.

The excitement without the church wa# terrible, and a# the bodies were being carried to adjoining houses the mass surged back and forth, ail terriblv anxious [ to a#certain who tlo \ w * re ana whether ' dead or alive. At the height of the ex citetnent not le## than 10,000 |ieotile were crowded into Montgomery and JcfTer-on street# and in adjoining premise#.

The floor which fell was *u#)iended by iron rod* from a wooden tru#.# uuder the roof. The#** ohI* went through the lower.

Not a forty

Coal oil, as a rule, la down, but R goes up ticcosAoaally.

Go to Culpepper, Va . and live ease of consumption there for year*

I ill woolen mills of Halcnt. Or. are now the pnq»eiiy of the Bank at British Columbia.

BtatToH is running parlor palace horse cars that are pronounced perfect in point of beauty anu luxury.

The. potato bug baa crosaed the Alle­gheny Mountains, and the Harrisburg patient chronicle the arrival of the Colo ratio conqueror at the capital of Pennsyl­vania.

Tiik number of old bachelors and old maid* Is greatly on the increaae. Club life is taking the place of borne life. JoI* plMMassachusetts there are 900,000 old maids.

A YouN« lady in Iowa Laving con­tracted a hill of twelve dollars for chew - ing gum her unreasonable papa refuses to liquidate the debt, but he says she can if she choose

Nashville, Tcnn., recently celebrated the success attained by the tobacco in dustrv there, the quantity of tobacco re­ceived having increased from HU0 hog# beads three years ago to 3,700 last year.

A la jut it frog, whose age i« placed in round nutuliers at 1.000 years, wu re­cently found ten feet lielow the surface at ><m1u*. -N Y. lie jumped away quite lively a# soon as he could remember how be u#ed to do it.

Aa a bride and bridegroom were about to leave Cleveland, a constable stepped into the car with a new attachment and seized the bridegroom's beautiful plug hat. The dishonest groom went on with his matrimony barehead.

Tiik quiet services in a colored church at Vicksburg. Miss., were rudely inter­rupted on a recent Sunday evening by two women, who, after glaring at eacu other a few momenta, sprang at each other, and before the rest of the congre­gation knew what was going on, were fitrhiing like two wild-cat*. They were separated by their friends and then left the church.

I il ks# the He no 1'rr**er\t exaggerate#. Senator# Jones and Stew art may be left #otne day without a constituency. Tlia amount of water accumulated in Laka Tahoe i# more than a thousand times that which devastated the Ma#sachu#ettn val­ley. and this inland sea i.# held back by an artificial dam The CVr«<v/«/ think# that it i# only a question of time when the dam will give way and the valley be overwhelmed by a roa'ring Niagara.

A# a young lady w a# preparing to retire in Attgt*i#fa. Me., a few nights ago. a cat overturned the kerosene lamp in her room and set the table on Are The frightened girl bid herself iu the closet, cl**#ing the door after her. and si-reamed, Imt could not be beard by the other member* of the family, and aa no one

tru##. The lower chord had been spliced the wrong side up, and that side wa.# the flr#t to gin* way. The floor, having no prop* beueath it, sunk in the form of a letter V The tno#t of the

’ deaths were caused by falling timber- of the lru#s; some, however, were smoth-

; ered hy plastering. The floor# of the * church were sup|Hitted originally by the j pillar#. A short time ago the Church ’ Building Committee, with the consent, a# I they #av. of the architect, removed the

iron pillar* The inis# wa# very imper­fectly con#trurted, be#id< # being spliced

, The ino#t prominent builders in the city j declare that it was rotten It w *»# put in green, and ha# the drv rot,

iqH-aro#bt.

shirkDistrict

It la proposed of Unfambta. *

u* fand th*- deht of the I shirk t»es#aj>*- was referred

to tke Ia«rsti^aMng committee Th*- Jn>' Committee made a report adverse to the craatitf of the petition of Husan H Atithonr f**r the remission of the fit**- tm posed upon her In the United Htate# Distrirt t'onrl for the Northern District of Nr# York A message #•• received from the House refusing to agree Tu Ike report of the Conference Commit tee nt the Indian Appropriation hilt, abd askloc a De« conference, abtek *t# grauted.

In the House, on the 20th, a re*olution j eoattnalag tke Committee on Arkan#*# Affair# : during the vacation •*• agreed to . The confer- j

! enre report on the t orrenejr hill « a« taken up.( aud after considerable per#**nai debate aas

agreed to ttl to in The ronferrnre report on j the Indian Appropriation hill »a* rejected—a*

1 47. oa»# 147 —and a ne w conference «*• asked for The President’* message relating to the Dl*- |

i trul of Columbia bond* »»* received and subsequently rep*»cted on hy the Joiut lavUgntlng < umaittea, the opinion **f the committee remaining un* hanged a* to the propriety of filing the interest **n the b*»nds at the lov* rate of ft a& ...A bill a as passed tc» amend the (sold Hank law so as to allow th* rirtaiation of guid note# to be ta* per rent in j stead of ti per cent of the par valnc of the

apnropri- IHcveral *"keu up Is hereby repeated, and It shall be the l»rr. dotv of the Comptroller of the Cunrncjr. under the direction of the Heeretary of the Treasury,

i to proceed forthwith, anci he is hereby author Ized and required from time to time, a* appil-

. cation shall be duty made then-fur. and until the full amonnt of the $.M <Ex> dnr» shall He with­drawn. to make a requisition on each of the Na­tional Hank* described In said section, and In the

i manner therein prodded organized in Mate* having an exceas of circulation, to withdraw and return *o mu* h •»/ this circ uiatton a* hy said srt may be apportioned to W withdrawn from them.

, or iu lies thereof, to deposit in the Treasury of | the United H*ate« lawfu> money snfflc ieut to re 1 j d*-ein such circ uiatton. aud. upon the return of | i the rtrculatlou required. *»r th* deposit c»f lawful i | m«»n*-* a* heretu provided, a proporti<*nate I ! amount *>f the t»ond« held to secure th* circula­tion of such association a* shall make such re­turn or deposit shall he surrendered to it

He* 4 That upon the failure c»f the National Hank* upon which rec|utsiti**ns for circulation I shall he made, or of any of them, to refuru the ! amount required, ur tu denosit In th«* Treasure • awful noHiejr to redeem the rlrculatiun required, w it hi t* thirty days, the (*>mpt roller of the ( ur- r«-nc-v ■hall st onee set). *• provided iu Hec 4‘* **f the National Currency act approved June V l#Ai bond* held t«* secure the redemption of the clr- I dilation **f the (MMsiatiou or association* | which shall so fall to an amouut siifficieut I to redeem the circulation required of such ! •••«*iation **r assorlation*. aud with the pro J reed*, w hie h »hall Is- de|M**ited in the Treasury of the | uited Htate#. •<» much of the circulation ot ;•aid •• cms tation or aa#4zciatt«*ns shall b**

but not through the ttjqHT cbard of tiir i came to her rescue-lie threw the doorO|ieo and, with a wtntlru tjuilt. put tha fire out.

Tiikhk i# a party in Northeastern Mex­ico which for tlie "la#t fifteen years ha- favored the e#tahli#huient of the Hierra Mad re re pu blip, tien Vidaurre in IHfil ile#ired the Confederate Government to

hi in in carrying out that enterpri-e. I*re«ident Du vis, through fear of iuvolv. ing tlo- Confederacy in a war with Mexi­co before tlo- final triumph of the former wa# ac hieved, refused the aid solicited by the ill fated Governor of New Leon It i# now #tated by a correrpoudent of the <i«l\c-#tc»n \<or*. who writes from the ( ity of Mexico, that the Mexican were #ioni#t# are -till alite and active, and that Let do de Tejada will soon send a force of *1,000 regular troops to be ata tinned along the Kio Grande imrder. for the purpose, ostensibly, of maintaining order and treaty stipulation* with the l tnted Mate#, but in reality with the oh Jee t of overawing the party which favors the new gepublic.

An incident occurred near the old Mohawk bridge tlie other day during the sudden rise of the river which showed the intelligence of the mice and the care exercised by the mother for her voung Tlie mother evidently had a ne#t in the -tone wall near the bank, in the garden of Mr Y'an Epps. A# soon as the water reached the neat, or near it. the mother w a# seen to come from the wall with one of Iter youne in her mouth and de|»osit it beneath a tree on the ground out of danger from the flood, bhe went back anti forth, taking one of her young each time, until they were all *aved Od an other rwc»#i*»u. «t the same place, an old mouse diet the same thing and more. When -he had rescued a part of her young the water had ri#en so a# to cut nt( communication with her nest, but

cMafia of th# thsrs

I For th# r*itof of owner# 1*4 pcarekasrr# of lam! mvM Rk (Bract tag## 1v f»#«rr*nt*Mrv Htat##

■ttaa of th« art approved J sly.It# la taring# hank#

ai way# to th*- Tsiromi*-# ths righ» ■frahttr taotfc fa ft# UalteM Ht#t#«

To #oah4« tV# CtatnJ Braoch of th# Ualoa Fa rifle luiltra/ CMfaay laMflarit Itsrlalm agatnst th# CaM Matas aaftw Ms aMHaa laws ta 4s- ri#toa of th# 9aprmH

T* sstaMlsh sn<1 *dApofi|||Yf$ flfi 0 B7 00

t«. tnrorpoci# the^To^X^flTCrRiaof lam# rslotlof to pshltr taafl M

Amoortmuwr of th* nriliM ToB

• aattonal *#riag#

T«Sfia«aUl

rigliU of the Htizc-n* -liould not Im- il*ri*lgrd or ecHitrcJlrd hy Irgislative rna< tinc-nt. c-xc-rpt #y far I* may l*r necrasary to pmaiutc- the pc-sc-v and sr* Ifarc* >4 soriety; favoring the oc|uslizatii*n of iMiuntle* to soldier# and #aiL or#, and sdmrating #uek legislation as shall grant to ra* Ii one uf them or to his widotr and rhlldrrn S homestead uf ifiO aerr# *4 land.

Ltm*n K Baas, the Buffalo (X. T.) C on gTi-##man who wa* appointed and eonflmied aa Assiatant-HeereUry of the Trt-asury, de­clined the appointment on the ‘24tb.

DesPAtaiNnof ejeetlng a United Htate# Aenator, the Rhode Island Legialaturr on the 2Mb adjourned to meet in January next.

Hon. llENar L Dawks,of the Masssehusetts Eleventh < ongreastanal District, has written a letter to his constituent# declining a renom- Ination to Congress.

Thk Democrati< Htate Convention of Ver­mont was held at Montpelier on the ‘JMh The following candidate# were nominated; Ocrvemor. Hon. W f(. II Bingham; Lieu- tenaiiL-ftaiemor, Henry Chase; Treasurer, Otis f’hainhrrim. Resolution# were adopted rexM-wing devotion to the Demucratle party; favoring the repeal of the prohIMUiry law aud adeqeiion of a stringent liernse law, and hailing with )uy the pens pert of the early completion of the t aughnawsgs Canal, as heneflclal alike to the farmer, manufacturer, producer and ronsumer.

A oonvbntion of the friends of the Improve­ment of the Fox and WUeonsIn River# wa# held at Oshkosh, WI# . on the 94th Col C. D. Rohlnsoo. of Green Bay, was choaen Fraal dent, with A. J. Turner, o4 Portage, and Cur Us Reed, of Menasha. aa floeretaiio# A aerie# of resolution# wee adopted urging the tm portanre and neeee#tty of the prupooed ia provemeut of sold rivers. A letter wa reed from Gov Taylor, stating that the ohjorte of the roovcalkm had his hearty approval

Tnr official rote hw Otmgveeamoa from Oregon la reported oa follows; Lad**w i Dem k Rfldfl; Williams (Rep\ M40; Davenport find IUID

brif# Bcaai so, a Uncola (Boh.) aaidea. rot—My ill—pflid to light a fir* with the aid of kerosene o41 The usual mil fottowed The young w— vM fearfully burned, end

hiti r I Boab

bond* depc»si*e«1 The Judieiarr committee re- j r|cc-tu*-d #• will *-qual th# an»**unt required and ported a resolatiun for the **f ' ‘ ‘ ' 'Jncig# Hn»f*^*d «*f Alabama -Nt the rrrmng •«*as|ccn a vut*» v* as taken *>tt the Hij{i|»|* ni«-i*tarv t |v|| Kiehts bill and resulted c*-a« 1**Th'-rv n«*t b»-iug t*a«»-third* lu It* fa*<»r *• re­quired bv th** <*rd* r under a hi* b ih*- hu«n». •• on in# Hprakvr's tab!* s a* tak*-o up th*- >*ill>»v» n<*t passed, hut still r*-matur*1 <ui th*- Hj^-ak- r‘- tahls .. The report of the s*Mr**nd • «afrr*-nrr ( oramllteeon th*- Indian Appropriation »■»*! « *■ sgre-ed to... Adjoiiri***d.

In the Senate, on the 22«l. the Tarit! bill #*• »m.-n<l*-«l and pa#s«-d and * • <*nf* r«-n« •< ••mucittr*- *s •• siib»*-c|M*-ntl) appoio!**cl <>u th«- am*-ndfn»-Tits and thrir r*-|M»rl at th*- *•»• t»in»; •*••■ 11*1) # a* z^-rT^-d t** Th*- r**nf* r» n* • r* i»*.rt »*n th** !*<*«t‘*ffi, r Appr<»priatlv»a hilt * %• rrj*-* t.ci *• r**1 a to rt rummlttr*- »i* appcMuted Th*- c <*«» f*-r**nce rrjH*rt **n th«- (;**«• va Award hill »a*

to Th*- ll'»ase hill gr4iittnk* th* rich* <*f vtc to the Arksnas# Valiev Kalla ay t **«ipau* was pa«s*-d A < **nfrrrnr# Commit!*#- sa# >*r d* r.-«! and app**tnt^d **n tta»- Hrnat** #*n*-ndni* n*» t*> th** H#ndr* < ivil Xppropriatiun hill N r. »<* tort*•«> **f th*- ll*»u»*- r»tshmn<ib<- #*-ss|nn **f c**i» i^»»s» until f**ur orlora p. m uu the 2M *»• agr*^d to,

In the Hou#c. on the 22tl. sz-Ni rii! ofth# Hruatr am*-ndu»'-nts t** th** Hundry « ivil \p pr'»priatlon bill s*-r*- n**n e»»n* urr* d to a»nt a t «infc*r*-i>cr Committee #*• apjM*int**1 Th* tciBfrrrncr rrp»*rt on the Geneva \#ard bill **v agreed to Th*- Heuate amendment# t*» th*- Tariff hill were n**n e*»n* nrred in an<1 r* f*-rr« *1 t«» a » ui»frr«-nee Committee A eonenrrrnt r»-««*ln lion *#■ ad«>pt*<I ettendln^ the •«-««|*>n nntil f*»«r p m. on the gW .. H* natr hill# «»n th*- Hj*eak*-r’a table sere dl**|*os*-d of a* f*dl«»via: T«* prevent hazinz at the Na»al Aeademv; pa-sed T«* #et• part » iMirtiun of Mackinac f»!*nd Mich . *• s nations! park; laid *m the Uhle T*» exempt military bounty land warrants and land# obtained thereby from #sl* or execution: referred For the better organization of the United wtair# Dis­trict Court# in lyonl-lana; left **n the tshle

In the Senate, on the 2JW. a ntr##age wa# reeelv*d from the llo«#e announcing th«- non cuneurrence of that (indy in the report *»f the Conference Committee «>a the Tariff bill and a#k Inc a n«w conference A motlou to iwvatpone the hill till next December wa# agreed to Amnnf th# hill# p#»a«d aere: Mon#e hill #uthoriz1nf and reqnlring lesuanc# of patent for certain land* In Hcott County. Mo ; House Mil to extend the time for computing entrlea of Osage Indian land# In Kansae. la relation to court* and Judicial **ffl cer# In ih# Territory of Utah, with amend meats, providing for ihe sale of Kansas ladtan land# in Kansas (<• actual settler* and tor the dl* position of the proceed# <*f the sale ; House Hill to confirm the agreement mad*- with the Hh*-h*»n«- Indians Eastern band, fbv the purchase **f i portion of their reservation In Wvomlng Ter rltory .. The hill* providing for the admission of Colorado and New Meftco Into the l nU»n were laid aside. c*blretlon hrlng made to their consideration . .tar report «*f the t onf*-rene* tom mi tie# on the Hundrv Civil Appropriation hill was agreed lo ...A committee app**tn»*-d for that purpose rep«»rted that they had notified the President that (ungreas was about to ad Joura. aad that he had no further eommuntrartoa to aead la .. A resolution was ad«ipted teadertag rhsnk# ta Henstor Carpenter for the court 0#y and aMltty with which he bad pruaidod over th# deliberation# of the Heoate and #ft#r s few• pprnprlat# romsrk# th# prvstdlng #flk«r i ( or p#at«r> declared th# Hsurie adjourned H** dfe

In lb« House, on th# 2Arl. conference report# oa the River and Harbor th# Pw#to4Ure sad th# Sundry Ctril Appropriation Mila

to■grandMil in relation to coart# and Utah vrera concurred In W«I

iuIt* to tb#

ndfetal #fli 111# w#r#Heoate MU extort ng th# time for thetion of ##rto4n l#nd# tm direct taxes: ft----MIU xrlih Senate amendment# extending rb<- tlme for —plrifug th# entry •f ft#

M the Committee# on

iic*t retnrned. and If th*-re be aiir exce## <*f pro^ c<-**d# c»ver th*- amount required f**r #u< h r»- deni pt ton it shall b«* rc-tumed tu thrasscM-tation or association* whose bond* shall hare Int# sold; and ft shall bethe <|utv <*f the Treasurer. Assistant Trea# ar* r* designated depositories aud Nati**uai Hank <1,-p«•• irort*-• of the l mt«-d Htatc-s. who shall be k«-pt inf*»rtne*l hv th«- Cc*mptroller **f the t ur- rency of such association* a# •hail fall to return clreiitation •• oqiilred. to assort and return to the Tr«-a*nrer f*»r redemption the notes of #nch ascNM-tnltous as •hsll come n.t<» their hand* nntil j th*- iffloant required shall be redeem' d, and In like manner to assort aud return to the Treasury * ,f*»r redemption the note* of such National Hank* j con net" ten a# have failed or gone into voluntary liquidation. f**r the purp.MM- **f w Hiding up tb*- affair# c*f such a* shall hereafter so fall <>r go into liqnidatiou

Ha*-. 9 Thai from and after the of thisact It •hail h«- lawful f**r the ( ••mptrolier of tb* f urrenry. and he Is hereby ordered, to Issue clr rulating note* without delay, i* appli* ation* tl»er*r*r are made, not lu ex***ed th*- •nm <*f $\1 iMi.un t<» ••*.»« lation* organized. <>r to h«* organ ized. In lh*»*e Htale* and Tcrrit*cries having !•■*• than th*-ir prt*|*ortton **f circulation under an ap |M»rlionmeut made on thehaei* of population and <»f w eaftli a# «h*>wn hy th*- returns**! the* ce*n#n» of I<1» #n*l every •••*•« lation hereafter organtz«ri• hall he subject t«» aud he governed hv the ml*-#, restriction# and limitations, and po*#*-ss Up­rights. nrtvil* ges and frauchiar* now or here after to ne prescribed by law to National Hanking Association*, with the aame power to amend• lire and repeal provided by the National Hank art: /'rori'lzef. Tbst the whole amount of rir filiation withdrawn and redeemed from the hank# transacting hnslnc## shall n**t exceed and that such circulation -halt he wlthclraw n and redeemed I* shall he necessary to supply the clr dilation previously Issued to the buna* iu those Mat*-* having les# than their apportionment: ,l*of pro*/-/*./ furtArr. That ind more than $.*M#»».tzz»• hall he withdrawn and redeemed, as herein c**n templa’ed during the fiscal year ending June :«t.IR7X

The title of the bill Is amended to read as follows r

•* An act to fix the amount of United Htatr* aide*, provide for the redistribution of the National Ha

The l<Mtikrii|it Law,

Tiik |>rint i|>a1 prorlsions of the new liunkruid law |m#m-<1 |»y CongreHH arc a# follow >..

Forty day# are allowe d to elaji^e iw fore a inert bant or trutler who fails to |»ay hi.# rotiunert ial |»a|*er i- lialile to h«* thrown into bankrtiptcy. The M**enl of «»ne fourth in nunttn-r mid one lhir<l in value of the creditors i# required to throw a debtor into bankruptcy Tbi# provision relate* Iwck lo Iho first of 1**1 Dereni

I*r<H eedinc*> may lie discontinued whenever the debtor pay# those secured debt# which were the ground of throw ing liiut into bankruptcy, or whenever the consent of the court can be obtatued and a majority of the creditors shall ask for * diMcontinuancc of the proceeding# In order to set a-tde hyjiotliee ated pledge# or loan#on the bankrupt's eatatr. it niu#t ap|tcar that the party dealing with the bankrupt knew that he intend ed to |d rpetrate a fraud on the Bankrupt law. and that lie iutended to go into bankruptcy. When » loan i# made to * bankrupt in giMwl faith, and security taken, w ith the intention of aiding him to pull through, it shall he considered a* having aetual value, and the -eeurit v -ball not he invalidated by proceedings in bankruptcy. A voluntary bankrupt may have hi# discharge if bin estate pay# J*i |ier cent, of hi# debts, or provided be ob­tains the consent of the same number of hi# creditor# a* is necessary to throw him into bankruptcy. An involuntary bank­rupt can get his discharge if hi# conduct i# free from all fraud *nd lie i# innocent of any violation or infringement of tlie Bankrupt at t. Assignee# are prohibited from dividing fee# with other |**r#on# engaged in the ca#e. Com promise by creditor# may be made with the *##« nt of the debtor, providing a majority of the creditors join, when approved hy the court, for the release and discharge of the debtor. Tlie fees anti expenses are reduced one-half until the Judge# of the

uprrme Court shall esiahli-di a perm*- reduction and simplify the pro­

ceeding# All the act# of tlie pe r-on# with the execution of Uie I

law shall lie made public in the full and miiiule report# from the lJerk, the assignee, the M*r#hnl and the Kegialer. Ongiual jurimliction i# conferred uiwin the Territorial (’ourt#. with an appeal to the Supreme Court of the Territory,

e plung1 the n«

ednest

intoand

thin did not stop her. Mu

brought away several young mice in this way. holding them in her tnoutb above water while she swam with them to dry land. This feat waa witnessed by several \ ersons—Schm«i<idy i,V. T.) I’m ion.

The Comet#

During the month# of July and August the new comet, which is "approaching iMitli the nun and earth with a constantly- accelerated velocity, will be a rerv con- spicuous and U-autiful object in the western sky. This stranger wa* discov­ered at Marseilles. France, on the 17th of April la-t. It is now risible lo the naked eye all night, being situated directly be­neath the polar star, about twenty-five degree# from it. The romet will soon be

A l*er#ian Stun.

iuk cnrreBcy, and for other purpose- *

The H) rat use Horror.

A RnuccaE (N. Y.) dispatch of June 24 given the following particulars of the recent accident in that place caused by the giving way of the (entral Baptist Church buildi.ig, in which a festival was being held:

The lint of killed numbers thirteen The number of wounded foot# up 100. of whom twenty are seriously injured

The occasion of ihe gathering lost night won a festival given by the ladies of the church, and a concert by “ The Little Old Folks.” At the rear of the church are Sunday-school rooms, ocru pying the first floor, and the church

the second floor edifice was in

and concert AtKrlor#, oecutiyiog

it part of theuse for the the time of belnhad

festival the accident su

en

wa#hit

red for the occasion with•erred in the central par

pper lor. w

preparetables, etc Tbit room, which waa forty feet square, wot filled with people, the •eoaioo room below lie inf deserted save by a few persona. The number !■ the •upper room ta variously estimated at from 250 to 500, mostly grown persons At the time the floor fa vs way the ehil dreu of the congregation wens in one of tke ante-rooms, being prepared for the “Ancient Coacnrt” mat for this fact ths Uat of dead must kavn been very t.... t larger, aa many of tke kelpies*

little onee would ktri been crushed to death in Ike mam at humanity crowded

A terrible story mine* to u* from Per­sia In one of flic districts a liilmring mail bad been sentenced to be hastinn- I doed for sonic offense, receiving IV) , blows on the soles of hi# fret. A* be I sank down on his knees after the sen­tence had been carried out, and it w a# lielieved that his injuries were of a se­rious character, he called the Judge to his side, intimating that lie had a terrible secret to reveal. As he could only #|h ak in a whisper Ihe Judge placed his ear to the lips of the fainting man. when the latter seized it with hi# teeth aud in hi# agony hit it completely off.

In Persia the hiss of an ear. no matter under what circumstances, is coimidcrcd a lasting disgrace, and the Judge #o felt it. He at once gave order# to hare the prisoner carefully cared for. assuring the physicians that if they did not save hi# life their own should pay the penalty, and they succeeded.

When the prisoner had fully rrcorered he w aa ntcnced to have hia teeth pulled out one hy one In presence of the ntob. anti thia frightful sentence waa carried out, two days being exhausted in the work No pain* were taken with the horrible job. and the jaws wen' broken and crushed and the whole lower part of the man’s face waa a mangled niasa. and hia aufferinra were ao great that many of Ihe tnrn fainted in witnessing the o|tcra- tion Two days after the little life in the ntan was beaten out of the aolea of his feet, and the Judge, having fully satis­fied hia thirst for vengeance, committed suicide.

Thu Oawei

• seen onlv in the early evening hour#, set­ting in the northwest. Prof. Lewi#Smith

i write* the following aliout our celestial visitor: “ If at the time of its nearest ap- proach the moon should be absent, we may expert, from present indication#, to be treated to a comet ary display which may rival the tran#il of Venus in IWTU* lar a# well a# in scientific interest. The comet will be brightest on the evening of Aug *N. being then 245 times a# bright a* at the time of discovery, while now it

I i# only five and a half times a# bright, and in the absence of the moon it will be subjected to spectroscopic analysis under circumstances more favorable than inay

| again occur in many years."—Chicago In- tcr-Occan.

Bit-khant on Colt-Breaking.

Wiikh in Kentucky last week we saw a two-year-old colt broke—dead broke— in a half hour, so that he worked a# amiably as a trained horse. The colt had never been bridled He w a# attached to a t urriele called a “ break dray,” and put through astonishingly quick. The break dray i# nothing more than a strong broad tread dray, with long shafts, the tail omitted, and a spring seat between the wheels. Tlie harness wo# strong, and so arranged over the hip# aa to prevent the |>o##ibililv of high kicking, and the colt w a# hitched so far front the dray thathi# heels could not possibly rear driver. The process of hitehin

ih

ego 1rants who tried to shut the public out

Time* says: “ Tlie cormofrom a view of the Niagwra /alls hare succeeded beyond their expectations. In consequence of charging twenty-five rents admission to the bank where a good view of the falls ia obtained, people are tealounly staying away this summer The hotels are still empty.

—The production of lumber last yenr on the upper Mississippi aud its tribute ties la estimated nt l.ott.Iflft *** feet both

Included The ton of

feet

nes is esumsteq st i.izu.iwsw ir logs and lumber being Include- •upplr of logs on hand for the se . *• ■ 4 ia flflUmaied at H. -* VY| rt"" fet

Ir yeur brain fte on fire, blow it oat.

theig wa#, of

course, very delicate, as a colt i# excena- ively tk kli#h. and is apt to let his heels fly "awkwardly. All being ready, one ntan held the colt and another took the #eat and reins. Tlie colt was then let go to plunge a# he pleased. The break dray •—which was so broad that upsetting seemed out of the question—was pushed u|hcii the colt, and tne colt pushed side ways until he started. A few plunges settled him. He went as he pleased, up hill and down hill, and so on, until he finally struck a sober trot, and was thor oughty broke. The confused and liewil- tiered look of thst colt was pitifully amusing. Mr. Hob fttroder was giving directions, and upon one of the breakers raising bis hand to slap the colt to urge him Mr. Rlroder said: ‘Don't do thnt. Never strike • colt when yon are break­ing him. Push him sldeway*, or any way. Let him go Just where he will and bow he will. Let him fall down if he will, but don't strike him ” When the coll waa taken out of the shafts he was as wet as if He had been in water, and a child could have handled him He had not beeo struck a blow. The draw, we be lieve, waa invanted by Mr. Strader.— DnffUrn (0 ) Journal

Bald Mocwtain k likely to become more bald than ewer; worn ny tba feet of tuany tourists, particularly todies, who think n volcano is " so sweet-”

ehf Sndfprndfnt •TILAi.

I •TAR-

THURSDAY, JULY 2, 1871

nJal olirg«4 and I ublisbrd igtisit th« Ktv. Ii«nry Ward Beecher, Paaior ot Plymouth Church, Brooklyn, N. Y., by MiaVictoria C. Woodhnll, in November, 1872, ha* been again revived, and thia time by ihe Uev. Theodore Tilton him- acir, who in a *even column artiole in hia own p*[*r, The Gulden cat out that via supposed securely bagged, and by so doing seems to have removed the last remaining doubt as to the trnthfulncsa in the main of Woodhnll's most damaging charge against the moral purity of the greatest divine of the age. Mr. Til­ton's excuse for thus reopening the great scandal, is the alleged attempt of Mr. Beecher by his friends, among whom is the Her. Leonard Bacon, L>. D., L. L. D., President of an eastern College, end who presided over the late Council of the Congregational Church­es to haul Plymouth Church and Mr. Beecher over the coals, and were de­feated by Beecber'a heavier artillery, who, on his icttirn from the Council of which he was the President, delivered au add u-ss, which was published throughout the country, Ludiug Mr. Beecher in the most fulsome manner for moral purity, aud denouncing Mr. Til­ton as the author of the slander and as responsible for the scsndsl published by Mrs. Woodhull, and even went »o far in his denunciation as to call Tilton a dog. Thia was more tbau Tilton had

now gives the n-i ord to the couLtry. He admita that heolder

Lsltsr frwwa L. 1. ■alll»*a.Wi have bscn permitted to use the

following from % private letter from Mr. L. B. Mattiaon. who is still itSalt Lake City, to a gentleman in this i ▼illsge, which will undoubtedly be read with iutercet by all who know kim and have entertained any idea of ever visiting that country :

41 Salt Lake City is a beautiful town of 26,000 inhabitants, situated on ele. rated ground, overlooking a beautiful valley twenty miles in width. Thia valley extends north aud aouth, and aau be seen in either direction from the City with the naked eye, a distance of 100 inilea. On either aide of the valley are mountains of an enormous height, whoac {teaks are cove ml with snow at all seasons of the year, while iu ths valley the climate is mild, the mercury usually standing at about 75! degrees. Tbe streets of Salt l^ake City are very wide, with U-autiful lines of ab&de trees an J clear, running brooks, counting along each aide of all street*.The water fiom these streams is us- 1 ed by familie* in irrigating their j yards und gardens. Kach family ha% j with it* dwelling a hue yard and or­chard, and fruit in abundance.

The Mormon Tabernacle is situated ; in the centre of the City, on a block of ground containing ten acres, surround* bargained for, aud be ed by a masaivj wall twelve feet in height, of aolid masonry. The Tal*r- narle is 250 feet long, 150 feet wide, j of octagon shajie, ami has a seating ca­pacity for 14,0*00 jieople. A massive, organ which cost 8100,000— tbe larg- j eat m America— and a choir of 50 well trained singers, Insides a prompt or, furnish the music for the devotional exercises iu the Tabernacle. It is here that Brigham Young presides. The pulpit w here the revelator officiate* is 1 in front of tho organ, and at tbo right, of Brigham’s pulpit is his first counsel­or, George N. Smith, and on the left is Daniel W. Wells, second counselor, while on the right and left of these dignitaries, in circling seat* facing Brigham, are tbe Prophet* and Elders of tbe Mormon Church, with their counselors. Brigham reads tbe hymns, and calls upon such as he chooees to address the audience; and his hearers seem to give the moet marked atten­tion. Brigham is now- 72 years of ag*», although in ap|*earauce he is no more than GO. He has a keen eye and a firm voice. He tells his people that if they will obey his commands tbe\ will yet become one of the richest nations on the face of the earth. Bnglmm and hia first counselor, George N Smith, on returning from their southern trip to St. George's, Utah, where they had been spending the winter, claimed that while absent, God had given them a revelation concerning His People, and commanded all Mormu'is to turn over their property to the Church, that oTerweers l«e ap|H>inleJ in each branch, and that each should share dividends ; hut the job was a grand failure. The Saint* saw through the shrewd scheme of the inspired levelator*. and are los­ing their confidence in the schemer*, who are fast waning in j*»wcr.

1 have recently made a trip to th« mines and Salt Lake. The latter is situated twenty mile* west of the City, although it appears to 1* not more than four miles distant. The f«ake is 125 miles long and 75 mile* wide. It is fed by numerous streams of fnvdi water, and ha* no visible outlet ; yet it* water is so salt that tbw barrels of it will make one of pure Knit. It is clear a* crystal, and a |ierHon can float ujioii its surface without the leaM ef­fort. No living thing exists in this Lake. T wenty rods from its shore* rise mountains thousuul* of feet high, presenting one of the finest sx»ne* 1 ever saw. The celebrated Moio silver mine is situated 35 miles west of Salt Lake, in Dry Canyon. The Moro has, a shaft GOO feet in depth, and from it is being taken 83,500 worth of ore per day. This ore is packt-d by mule teams to the smelting work* in the City, and run into silver bars and then shipped East. Dry Canyon is some 20 miles iu length, and at each side of it are innumerable hole* made in the earth, much resembling woodchock holes in appearance. Hich mines are being dis­covered almost daily. It is estimated that the shipment of bullion from Salt Lake City average* $53,000 j*t day.It is also estimated that 1,400 visitors arrive in this city each week, which furuiaha* plenty of business for livery men in taking new-comer* to the mines. It seems that the w hole of the mountains hereabout* contain almost inexhaustible supplies of mineral ores.

I find the Mormon fanners in good circumstances, having fine farms and ranches. The agricultural resources of this Territory are immense. I had no idea that such enormous crops could •rProTe4- be raised by irrigation. Farmers in­form me that they raise from 45 to 60 bushels of wheat to the acre. The country is also well adapted to the rais­ing of cattle and sheep. One Mormon Bishop has a ranche and 8,000 sheep.Many others have from 500 to 1,500 head of cattle. The crop* in the Ter­ritory hid fair to be the largest ever before raised. I enjoyed the trip very much. I took my blankets with me.Thera is no danger of taking cold in alee {ling out, the air being so dry and

fire, and the altitude being 6,000 feat.am recuperating fast -gaining con­

tinually—and hope to return to 8t.Johns much benefitted by ray long ab­sence. I consider this one of the fin­est and healthiest c lima tea on the coast. We have had all kinds of vege­table* and fruits in our market for tlie past two months. Farmers are now catting their clover Harvesting will commence in earnest about July 10th.

Bb Ciiim How Yoc Shoot!--

As some of th# boys are getting their implement* of death ready to kill ths robins and other birds that loss chcr rios and bevvies pf ?arioos kinds, waed? toCom_

o person shall at any time, with State, kill any robin, night

LEGAL. NOTICES.

MIIMTSAai »Al.k. USmU having Sms Mad* la Ik* road

Motigmgm Wm bW'I H*V' r m Let a ad CaiKarla* HbaSr.

Wins, awd 1 ihe

lltoM* of | *»*.*:•►to lflfc.i

•>( MklC far tiBwtoims ana Devries pi vanon* sums, wa .«.#ana* a«vwsrr «r m*4s fa* ub»iu>. coum

kefla* proerfat further1

.WiM U... »bi«h reads as foil...

b) hlrl la A Jam

Ml*, la ll- ton coon ^,

•la# hundred

at

nion(a|< . la b# paid •hotsId aay proceedings taken Iu foreclose sold auniagr . a ad a* Mill o* |irutMdlii(( at law ar la M|Hli* Mtuif baaa t as at.

HI SI!

)

BACC’S

C orner hlore ! Iml a( disputed l itie# t«* !(• a Sr

Hrl\ JOHNN. >11(711.

Ill this stste, Sill soy room, night- pruawrdli.g* At law ar la as*y!t» having tsaaa iaati T1ATC EITT^ T1 ATTITWT ^ITT’bs*k, whippoorwill, finch, thrush, Isrk, £N TIKE NEW STOUK..

' . , rront dooi ol ta# i »wrv n«»u#r air s uaiaa rowing,or sny song bird, nor rob the nests of Michigan,!* t»i# vttlag* or hi J*ha#, >* «aid c»«asurh birds, uaAer a poatlif of Sr. ! attS&^ySttttSSSrAItt dollars for snch bird so killed aud for a* follow*: it*.-North bail a th#_RonhW#ateach nest so robbed.

Th# mil______ rtu r ofrun, »Maa(«d Is the

low nab ip of Ulugh**, I miles south and 1 * .aat of tk* villa** of Hi. John*, the ronatjr seat of Cllotoa roantjr. Tkr plate bat Su aem Improve meat. all kind* of fruit, comfortable four* and barn, well feared aad good water Tin* ptaee will be a«>ld ter) low for rub, If *uld *oon.

Wlf t.ht.IKH Foot OAce Address, Hi. John*.

June ISIk, tST4 «Ul *w

u After of Section number I hlrl tea, Towuehlp et* furtli of K.uifc't lout M eat, In i ilntonm.iiai),

— Ul< liluan.— ifoted April let. 11*4 ^ ApAM Wild II, Mortgager

$5,000.Worth Spring 4b Summer Clothing—now styles.

NT. .IOIIMH,

1 FeiWerly ( clwrii 4 4

UmUMI) on hand and for *ai*

Pore Droit aod Medicines!btMMdard toss I an i Srdlrlnra,

TUa]

MOM1I.U.I SALKa- Default harm* been aiade iu Ihe ruadltlua* of a certain

mortgage, >.•I

Cam* into tlse a*s aaelaaare of th**

■a baa fiber, on <>r about the loth instant. • dark roan Cow. medium atre. aad from all appearame. between four and See year* old. She ha* a young white ealf with her. The nwner will plea*a anil, pav ehai gea and take her *w *y. M I’.ftlNX

ftiugham. May Jft'h, 1*74. ih*'

TO TIIK «>!.!> I’ATKONH OK TUB

St. Johns Woolen Mill,And liar Publlr fsrurrall) .

I wiah to *a> that I hare engaged the •«• relcc# i of a 11 rat-etea#'Carder of twenty live year* egparl- 1 enre, have rv fitted the machinery and pin. < d every •

■ halt he |*re- I mn el ve w.hiI

g. and will warrant tin workmanship toBeecher sod tho esuse of Christianity, i of it# W order, in ail cam* m * hick •. fail

through fault of out* th# account will l* ma Ir

” J* * * . #u«*e, hare r» fltted the machinery and pifoolishly consi-ntcd to keep Silent in thing In the heat W..r*lng ordsr. and •»er to ««ve the cb.rscUr of Mr. Cr^MiVSS

A. THay 1*1. MT4

RICK, I’rop’r.WO 3m

and also because of ths strong appeal | «<x>d m money kind of Beecher to him for forgiveuc** and to save him from exposure. He pub- lights an extract from a I tter from Her. Mr. Beecher «obtaining thia appeal, aud an apology for his crime, lie also declares that a suui of money wan offered him—which he indignantly rejected—if be would make certain statements for the benefit of Beecher.

The Detroit Tnbune, which has stood by Beecher and iunisted upon his inno­cence up to this expose by Tilton, is staggered and closes its comments oo the expose u» follows :

It is announced thst Mr. Beecher * p r H/\¥ i’All l)V will adhere to hia policy of absolute COIiK i\ HULvUMll \

A full aaaorimrnt of all the latrat hoteltlM tn

French Millinery, Straw Goods,

Ribbons 4b Flowers,~ AT—

willaulead.

silence. Hut that mil mot do f Iu our judgment he must now crush his sc-, cuaers or stand convicted in the eyes of his fellow men of an offence which un­condoned bv s contrition so ample as to include public humiliation if neces-1 sary must leave him marked with the vilest brand of hyporrtry.’

And so ssy we.

The State Pioneer Weellug atl Hny Clip.

Li». Ixoritbpbbt: — At the cl»»MJ of the Bioncer Meeting held at Bay City last week, the President thanked the pioneer* fi>r their gencial attendance on that occasion, when Mr. Bealey, of St.John**, was called upon to respond to the President Mr. Besh-y saiJ: “Mr.President, 1 am one of the pioneer-* of Clinton county, and iu the early days of our settlement we had a 4th of JulyCelebration, when the Orator of the day said : ‘ 3Ve were proud of our adopted Mate. With the country, a» it theu wna, l could not * see the point.*But now in traveling over our country, wherever I go over our beautiful road*, handsomtly decorated by beautiful farm-houses, iu place of the log cabins, w ith here and there s beautiful village,To day 1 am proud of our * adopted country.’ (Cheers.) History tell* us of those who lived in ancient days, ex­hibited their friendship and respect for one another by meeting together and * breaking bread.’ Thus have we broken tread to day as pioneers of our Stste. May we ever meet sod * Iresk bread’ once in every year to long aa there is one of us living. I now tender tbe thanks of the pioneers—first to the !President—for his kind reception, next to the citizens of tbe Saginaw Xalley for their bountiful supply for the inner : man. and especiallv to the ladies of

, Ha, C itv for theit kindness aod atten- j tion in seeing thst all our wants and desires were supplied upon this happy ; occasion.”

Resolutions were then presented and adopted tendering thanks to the ladies

! of Bay City.The President in his closing remarks

said thst it was a pity not to bold an evening session when there were so

j many still brimming with interesting C’rookcr;, i events of the early days of Michigan.

A Mrmbkr.

eu'rulrl (Alolar lat, A i>. IMS, t Kugrit. Hrya, 4'alberta* llr>a, Frank Milter ai.Mary Muicr to John 1* Huae.ll, an«t r«ror<l#«l la the ulllrt- of the H«*gtai«-r ot lv«d« for Clinton count*. Michigan, MarvltSCMli, A. (I. l*7u. iu Ul*f -U ot mortgage* on |>ag Or. on which mortgag. there i* claini.1 to be •* the date of thia no tier th* a it in of three han-lrcl •ixl aiity eight <fol-

_ | Ur* an«l She cent*, brai.io* an •tiuriw) fee of twenl) Sr# ifoliars la m1<I mortgage atipolated tn be pan!, should any pro*, . ding* be had to fore elnee aald mongage, aud oo #u.l or |»ro« ceding- hai Ing been Inalitututed* ai Uw or In i'juii», to re cover any part of the debt aerated hy said morl gag. Now, i hcref.we, t»> virtue of ikw power of •«lc In aald mortgage c#wiiatn«-<1 and of th* «tatute In nii li car* • marl.- and nrm nled. N lice la h.-tri., gltcn that on the )fV«| <t m , ot bugual, I.1>. on* or tor k In the afternoon, al lit*\|‘e«l front do. r of the t >url II uti«e. for < Union

)county, Mi.hig.n, In the tillage of Hi. John*. I' i *w»|* viit'il •aid •'oUllly, tlierr will b* M»ld a1 poHllc Vendue In i P* *

I the btghesi bidder, the |.r» »ni*et. In aald mortg ig. l dea.-rttwd vil Village l i * one and two in fo.M-k fort r. In the vdiagrofHt. John*, t'l.i.ton com.ft,Miriitgan, according tv the recorded fd^t of »»L|

| tillage listed Ma) IMh, |S74.JttllN 1* kl'«HKt,h. M.wigagce.

.1.0 Hrima, AU'y ft# Mortgage.

MOIllt.thl. S4I.I., IteUull hating been made in the eon<ll»»»»na of a certain

mortgage credited Mar h I'Jih, Ir.J, h\ ttcorge l». Palmer and Mary K I'almer to tieorge W I^vid yi'l nculdad In the ..Hire of the lt.-gt*l< i

1 .if iJee.la, for t'llntoii eounly, Michigan, on the 12th dar of March, l<?rt, la l ib* SI ot m.wlgagea on page Ml. which *.»»d mortgage wa* dul) a*ei^i«e.| hy aald (ieutge 'V l. >v^n tn Marvin llalmei ub aatd l«th da) of March, and « hich aall assignment was dal) ry orded in m!<I It.-glatet • . illc . <>a the agin* da), ro LUer 2V of assignment*, on page fo", on which said mortgage then- I* claimed t »T«# due al the dat* of this not lee, the aum of two hun­dred and sclent) hint do,Ur* and fifty alt eenta.T.’TtH) beside* an itlnrief U * of tweiity-f]\e dollars In said mortgage, stipulated to be paid la rase aUT t*roeee*ting* H«- iab>u to fnreeloae the same; and no suit er proceeding* at !aa nr In equity having Imn-h instituted to recover at > part oft tie del.i secured hy add morgtge. Now, there foie, hy virtu* of tl*e power of sale In aald mort gage contained and of the statute In iut.ii raa.-s, made and provide-1, Notice I- hereby given that »h tl.i fffl 4a) ol Au|uil, «. lb. Ih74,atone o'clock in the Nfierinvon at the West front door of the Court llouae, for Cliuton o.unty.Michigan, in ' h* v ilhge of Ht Johaa.in *a.d county,

1 there will t.* aoid at putdtc vrodue to the highest I htddcr the pten.tact In s«M rnor g «g* deacrlbed.rll i Tt.e M>ul|i w.-st iji.aiUt of the south ewat quarter and the aouth anal quai ter of th> south aeati.uar

| let of section flft’-en, In t'.vrnahip fire north of ; range four Weat in the Htate of Mtrhtgm — (bated i Ms) 14th, |«I4

MARVIN RAnCfbt'K Aaalgne#J <1. Hiu>tr. Att’y for Aaatgnee.

n’h ath ' “fl brriTHT.Ty!tKIT N’oTliJL. -\Su«ri»s Application haring leci, n.ade

to the undersigned 'lownshlp I'ra.n Commia •loner of the Towt.al.lp of HI *y, liy Robert IV*-

1 body. Albert Jones and Thomas Jones, persona - mteteated In establishing and iocatlng a ditch, for the purpcM •? draining tl - ..... la, mat shea

$i3:88(iotnl iliiHineHN Suits onlv....................................__ wGfKxl all wool HusinefiH SuitH only...............200 piece* New Style* 1***1 Print* only 10c. per yard.100 pieces ^ood yard-wide Blenched Muslin, only 12 1-2

cent* per ynrd.100 piece* Stripe and Check Shirting.Good heavy Shirting only 18 cent* |w*r yard.100 New Style* ot Spring Shawls..3,000 Boll* new style* Wall Paper. Good paper

cent* a roll.o0 pirct** ('ottoiiadi*-. tlo4)l (’oltiinncle* t»nl>' 2*3 mid *»0c

Paints,Otis,

Varnishes, Paint Brushes, Toilet and other

Soaps,Dye Stuffs, Perfumery,

Pure GroundC OFF KB,

Tobacco, all kinds. Vtyars,Yankee \otions. Full Ime School

Boole,Paper Stationery,

Pure Ground Sptree.Full line Blank

»nly 8

Suts,Candies,TEAS very cheap,

to close.

Bools, cheap. Pure tCinee and

l.iyuore, far me. dtcinal use.

h »o•300 dozen bent American Spool (’otton only 1c. n .’L3c. per dozen

200 pnir* extra hen v s ('ottoimde Pant* only ^2 a pair. A large assortment of Juvenile and Youth s Clothing. Good Paper Collars only lOe. a box, or 3 boxes for 23c. Ladies' French Corset* onlv 00 cent* each.Gentlemen, g<» to St^phen*«»n'* for n nict* Neck Tie.St. John*, March 10, 1874.

I, or

Datlnr Hugg attend* |*er*»nall|tw ptrparlitg Krrtrrlptlant,

ul«kl • r 4m | .

HFKCIAI.T1KHDoctor HittfH<M

A^iic 1*11 In,(.’atliiirtle l*lllaA,I>itil-i li<i-tt IMIlaa, l)VMp«»pti<' 1*111 wm.I lVn<li»«'l»«* 1*111*4,

wall Ukruiu Oiiitiurni, nn4 lur nil rrnpllani *f Ihr akin.

Ur. I. II. foaallM** rrlfkralrd < m rr far Antiiuta.

tool lit Psre Soda Hitfr.JuarM.lt;: 344 «f

It. STRICKLAND,htaeii**a*, faitirawi at

mm at»4 net t le_ dlspaled tut*# tto k.«l Ratal r. (oavr>aacing don* with AaMwu-h, Aa*at Iw aaia ab4 l anl.te* of land. UBor »| inMian I. It t'anti ('•ait H.#*a* Hgaar*, **t John*. Mkrb 174

DENTISTRYMlk HI kT IM TUB « HMM M f

IIIMa) be prm nr#4 of i>H O h COHH1M fog as littf* rnooey a* at anyirUcela Michigan. Hurd a Bnlidiug. Hi Johns- AM ijr

SVLVCSTER HOYT,A r roliNKY nttd t-onnaeloff at Law aad Hu

I let lot la Chanaarjr I'artuaisi atuath.* giv*a to ci.lleelii.g aod a*ltl|ag title Iu real sotata

(>81 i-o la Mr Farina A UiUoS's Block, tupeu.ra, Ht. Johns Midi ___ __ _ __ AXA t f

A STOUTATl'OBNKY AT LA W, Ht. John*, Mlchlgsa

(title* la tiaak Block, swnlk door, M Boot

M BUS— J H Faai a *

BARTOW 4 FE0EWA,ATTOBNBYH aud Cuunaellors at Ur aad

Hutlnu.rsia Chaocgiy, Weetphaita, Chat on t ouuty Michigan.

L. W. FASQUELLE, M. D ,l> ii i ,i<'ia a hi. at aaaoa. OHU-« at hta rwatdeace, I on Waikt r street, eaal of C'llafo* Avenue, Ht i - y i. gaii I alia prurnplly BlldUtf lh <

WALBR1DGE A COOK,Ai I OU.N kl Bangl'auuaclluri at law aud ••

ilrltora ta C hnuerry . All tuatueeecatrueted to lti*irrar* will b« promptly and fait hi ulty attended

to. little-* with l’ro#*c ullng Attorru y, ta the Court II.mac Ht. Johns. Michigan 24ka w * i aai nwg. A. cool.

THORNTON S FINE ART GALLEH TPHttTfHJRAFli* large and antall, and In la. t

r very variety of pic'ura mad* at th* alrovatia. lery .«Hh* r larg* or email. 1'arU* aiai atlentlon i*

aaiird to ruiarging and If ikalrvd colored In oli water color* or I ml in Ink llaol of ilaion A vena* want aid# • l , I. W. Tiaufkii Arthl

A. J. WIGGINS,IyllVrdt IAN ANli fUKUKoN tlflar w*a.

• Id* Cliatoo A vruov. All professional rati* wight or day, promptly attended to 1'artlctola* alt*nti<»n given to Chronic and Hurglral raa a

SPAULDING A CRANSON.TToKNKTHand t '..unaelforsal lotw.aud Holn tors in Chanc*!) , Ht Johns. (Ttlntoa Co Mlcl.

•. L. DFlCLI'IIA. 1 J. I.OBAIAOIA

Tl

It ha* been often and truthfully Mftid

^miK (’ENTER1MEAT MARKET

la at 111 on l h* upward track, and |>• •>1.1• find th* heat of

cat. Ikri

Fresh, Dried aud Sail Meals,A* h*t*tofor«, and It shall br my futthar aim tn

dev is* mean# of fieat scrrlbf my customer*, all «l whom will plearn* accept ray warmest thank* I. i their kind and liberal patronage In the (.oat, and I trust by keeping g-*od meats and dealing alike unto allm*nto merit* <-<>nttiiuanr* oft h* a»»r *

W MHt J.ihaa, March 22d, l«7S

H k. H I k \174 It

46 It

HicwlV Block, ST.JOHN*

All good* lo our III • and tvrt kepi In tl<wl t *nd awamp* along th# iiim of said pr»-|x>s*4 ditch, III fo ordtrvd promptly and satisfaction guar {located In Tovnihlp alx, 141] north of rang- No

i* more Blmeil Iff (Bve

(lut ii to llereive,”

NEW GOODSt)D TIIC PI. VI i: TO Bi t THEVI.

Shilllons for IN74.

3W-f

C. TURNER 4i SONS,

I MllllUikFKS.NT. .IOIINH,

W* haven aplaittild > l \k III tlisr,• nd are huw prepare.! tn at tend funetsl* ef f.t r in the r.(lagr <>r Countr) Wt krep • good •••< rt- mmt of

Keudi-Ylade ( ofliiiN oil liimd.Allrmllu prouiptl) allni4r4 It.

e11feter da) «g nlghl.

New Firm

M

.IfUQ.

FACTS FOR THE PEOPLE

thr. e. | 3 wear. Htate of Michigan: (omm.ncing UK- r«*d 111 on th* coot aide ef ihe ro.id, running

*-uth between Hecthm twenty-two, |2S] running • eat aiong tbe 1‘uhlie lltghwa) forty iod*. (go thence r».»rth four rods. (41 them* n»nh wot twenty rods.f 'JB) on tw the a«alh one half of the southeast on* t.<urth of Section sit teen, ,1RJ. |

katarda) the 27ih Bay of J M lir, at ten o'clork Iu lh* f. ren<-un. at the bow*.* of John Holme*, in aald Tow-tship • f Riley, *• lime and place for th* < * treination of the ah>te- «ai*1 •]>| I., at • >n, according to 11.» slat ii'«- In sucfi case*, rna I. and provided fK’ed Hlley, June

I \ Mr - V 111 I. S K- I*ratn Coin mi as Umer f<>r the

3w | ___ Township of Riley,OK I I. till v tl I . lean made In the conditions rd a certain

mortgage executed October 24lh. 1447, 1>T John Kell) to tieorge U . Kmm..na, and recorded Orln tier Aih, I v.: at Iw oVie« k A M , in the (.dice of the Regiat.-r <.f Ibiilr f-c(' inton r -uu'i. MIchlgan, tn Liter “U' of MortkUge*. (>•) page 421. on w blrh m>*rigage there Is ri*nt>. d to 1m due at the date of thi* i.oitc.', i«u hundn-d and eighty two dollar* ami thirty ceuta fw-oidis an arlorne) fee of thirt> dollar*, •i.ptilaie*! la aald nor*gag* to he paid •hould ato> procs'S'dinga le taken to forreha. aaid mi rtgige, and im> suit nr proceeding at law ot In e^utf) hating been inatltuted lo ifrovn alt) par* of tire <i*'-t n*. nr*J b) aald n< >r1gage, \,»n (fore fore, hr virtue of the pom r <>f sale tn aald mort­gage ronsaltiei ai.d of ihe aiatute it. surh ran made and l.hrtl'lerl, NiMic la b< rfl) given that wa !be li tin) ml hrplr mkrr. Iv7« a' one o'clock in lire of'rrtMMMi, at Ihe 1Vr«' fmtrC doot of the 1'oiirt llouae for t’hn*iin connty. Michigan, In t h« thing* <>f !*t John*, la said coanly, there will be sold at pahllc veodae to tto- high.at bolter, Ihe preir.ses in aald moflgog. de*»-rih»-d, vll ' |yil h-i en in ftiock one, m tbi- vuisgc .if Kmnaonarllie, in i'iinlon count) . Michigan [i*r« d lun* 4’h. I'71

UKhRUE W KMMiHVR. M vr g g*> .IVaaiN* A Rat nan. A U’y a foe Mortgage*.

People may fulls uml* r*tnn<l vvhv I have always jfiven »uch

bargains when selling th» in good-.'

Mv stock has ju*t b.*en repleni-hetl with new ami desirable

gotmK. which hast* been purchased at extra low figurea and

will be Mild corr. 'pon linglv Seasonable gnotln at low price>,

in cxrbange for ca>h or PrtMluce. i- the lnont 1 can now offer.

*. ( . MIIEFAKD.

Mav 1 .ilh. Is,4

i«. tioiyrrinu< rtiior tn Win I* folnt »

FINK JKRMRlAND PLATED WARE

VVKOI T*% two highly hre«i at alitor.* mil a *ta fid f-r aiar*a tha pee ten I *•**>> D at bis

; nTABLLH IN ST. JOUNS. at the ettrame foa figures of

N in (o MIA to laiwiii***.

Harm not returned aa *• direct or ported mih , before f.mling tune o.oaiderwd m f<«J.

These term* are mode partly o* account of hard time#, and the request of man) fnanda of this stock, that their aerviee* alt be id ranch

f ! a0 ___rilKKU TIIOfUH bIKKHi M\UJ«V

< locliM,M|M»(ttlll*IOM < 'itHt'N,

UfTol \Fockel ( ?u(l«*ry.

Hl'kl'lAl ArrtSTIt»N UlVkK TO

Fine WalclM’h

wa

It

TATTERSALL,liar— Fnuled in

it band* high, f'ati »pe»-1 fa«t

M

6n. t a i.wtoa.

Slrml hy

lat darn Kemorae. hy V;.acker, be h« Wagner i f dam Temptation, bv I tn ported Traat*« th*

arv-nt trotter.3d dam I.ad) Jncka n by Sumpter.atb dam >a«»c) Tmvhw by trap Spread hag..Mb dam b) M Kinney’a I*, anCth darn h> Kain lh w.Red K>r i« half brother t<< l.*v-ngt -n

Irruia. BIO tw lainrr

A >.d t he pui< haamg of I he aa rar

IIat Ina bad n»«n) >ears er perienre inihemaklog and repairing rtf w.iehea Clock, and Je* *#ir^ h) { hampto*. Jr. elry.,l»e.ui#tuaay*d»aulage. over thr... who,have bat a very llmlled knowieilge «.f am h ttoiig* ■ y-I ask for a abate of (be pahllc patronage

li. <w<>>'M lobua, June |*t h. lR7fi.

r*:.J4* if

We Study to Please.I’ll* P.obnte Court

d Mil'llAKI. FKI>

Hux-k af Ij ly therein, would here aay to thr pe<->p|e tit >t the). are In want of

GREENBACKS,< *t> II BB ( B* V I*B*04lll4,4*. \f,

In eirhang* f.

AT CAr H OK

( OYDIOI ( Ol Mi ll..• racial, nit I*Mobpat Evawiao, June 24, 1474

Thr Hoard met, pursuant te adjourrmmt, and was called to order hy the Prcaiieat.

Roll eallad- Prcoetil Trurtre# Bonday, Camttf- ton, Fowler. Padler, Nr loon and Hendersou.

The mtnutra of the last meeting were mod aad

rakacarartoit ar ram toga A petmon signed hy J 1L Cole and James N Van.

ata was presented, praying that the B vard would grant them permission to erect a bowery, In which to giro a bowery dance on the 4th of July

Referred lo Committee on Fatitiono raastwranog or CLaiwo.

The following account* wore preoentod and refer* red to thr Commituw on Claim*, vis :Arc’t ofChna. Williams, burying dag...............f 1 00

" W. lUWrta, 4k day* on streets ...• J Robert*, 4 days do.............................** O Roberta, t daya do wtlk loom........

4 00 4 00 0 00

Sl'.t I K (»F MU IIl<IAX • for the County <*f Chat on In the matter of th. relate «

K W A. <le« «-aee«1Notice la here'.) given that ail clam a and de­

mand* against SMI-1 dt-esua* 4 , m .11 hr re. rivet], rlA I’m . a v-r JH , aramod and -dj'»at.-«l * > t fo- Judg. «f sel l Court,ACCONHaNT, and added large .t U,* 1*,.,U!. ..fT,.. ,n tfo nu.g. jfBt Johns,on

\t rdnes-la). the 224 dat of July. 1*74. and «-o J Tura'liii. Hit vih ilai of riecrmher, 1474, at nine oVIccl i v rtf each ef said dav* avid R'h <la) of Ihe^iiiler '<t11 g the >••' day of tl»* ttm* allow.-•! f.»r ctnlUrtr* i,. present ;hrlr (lulma against s..id

J deceased ]'at<d J..n« 4th. iNTgJOfcl. ||. i U.t SiK'X.

Judge <if I'rohate

ClOtl niSMOMM'S MITH I'm bej mallei <>f Ihe Ketate of John C. M v.U-ni ll,

IN-'eaae^l. V\'<- the undersigtinl, hating t<«-*fiatitM.iittnl h) J.»el H t'r*iis.»n. .Iiidgeuf l'i«»batc for

! the eounly of fiintna, Htate of Michigar>. t otn- I missioner* to r»-«'*ive eaamine and adjust all claim*| and demands agaitoal a.ud d.-f-aaed, do hereb); give notice (list rre will ttv.-el at Keed a Hotel, in

t he v I ilage of Mi pie Rapid*, tn said fount). «.n Haturda). the Ikth ilav «.f Jut). 14*4. and at the

|j I’m*.*!* ..Bice In the Tillage c.f Ht. .luhna, in aald roustv, o* M n l*r. ill* lat dav of Oetoher, 1474, at V o’rlnek i v of mch of aa|.l daya, for the pur- pi*s<- *if teeeivIng aiid adjusting all claim* again*! •aid .foceas* d . and aia no ntha from the |at -lay of April, 1*74 !• the tln»#- alirtm-d Hy said Court for creditor* to preeent tlielr «iaitna for adluat- einnt and ali*-wai»« r, — l»at, <j Ht .Inhtia dune lkth.1*74.

HAM C El. REED. KtHIAK r» MOHH,

' **• • i C-wunvlaalonera.

1)MOHll I ilMIH M. fMCounty of CM tolOO. #*■ At a aeaolon of the

I’roUt* Court fur the countr of Cliuton holder at the Probate Office, tn thr v lltage o| Hi Job to*, on Haturda)', the l)ih day of Jane, In the year • ne thoaaaud eight hand red and **vr ntyfou r.

Present, Joel ll Craoaon.Judge of Probat*.In tbe matter of the Ketate of JoplAlt B

H"M» Deceases! On o|etilr.a atsl reaillng an la- , •trumenl dated Heptembrr 30th, 1«73. purporting

, lo l« the Isal wt I and tralamenl of aald d»ce»*.'I hereupon It ta Ordered. That Monday, thr 41k

day of Jaly, 1474, at 4 o'clock la the forenoon f»e assigned for the proving of aald will,and that the heira at law and .gate*-* of said deceased, and ail other person* interested inaatd wiU.are n ejuir-

I ed to appear at a aeaafna of said Court then to ho )olden at the Probut* office.in the village of Ht. John*, and show cause, if any there he, why

| the will should snot be approved A nd it la Further l trdered, thai notice he giren to the persona interested la aald eatate, of the pen­dency of the hearing thrreof, by causing , a copy of tbla order To he published In the Clinton Independent, a newspaper printed and circulated In aald coaoty of Cdntoa for threeaur- ctaaiee week* nrerloua te aald day of hearing.

JOKL II. CRAXH09. Jndgeof Probata.(A true Bopy) _________ ____ ______gnu a

HOBATf 44 44 Ol JT^tate of illchigao countr of Clinton, aa. At a gcaaloa of tho

NEW

Ready-Pay Prices.

In addition to a fine stock of <J roc eric* and Provision#, wa aha I keep a well selected stork of the beat brands of

FURNITURE EMPORIUM!Havit.aremorodonrvtork of Foml'are lo the P.umateadcrttarr, ae ask thr atteni.«»v of tht| ahl|

to oat large variety of

HtonosWure mid

GIiimmsWii re

hTIHve mo a rmll wheuever yon have anything |* Huy wr arils

Vauconsant tit Leland.Ht. Johns, May 24lh, 1474. JP7

LEGAL NOTICES.

DROBATi: OB DEM Bute of Michigan,

OF KVK1IY DEHC:i«l»TION.To which wc areconatantly adding

New Styles of Chamber and Parlor Suites.PICTURE FRAMINC A SPECIALTY.

ST. JOHNS MANUFACTURING CO.

WINES. LIQUORS,

DRUGS & MEDICINES.Pas t Alcohol at

I >1*. S I omIcii'h.

Pure Port It ime atl)i*. sf onIpu'm.

Pure Cali fern to irme atl>l*. •! «»Mlg*»B*«4s

Pare t'atau ha H me at1>I*. .1 OmIt*Ik*44.

Pure Coucoid Grape M ine at1>I*. sJ OhJi'Ii'm.

Pure Clinton Grape li me atI>t*. .IomIi'Ii’h.

Ptie \atire Grape JVme af1>>*. • I omI«*aa*#*.

Pure F.lder herru H'me at1>I*. al OMl(*4a*M.

Pure II tne Plant IC$me at1>B*. aJe»Psl«»IB*M.

Pure “ Frcneh Brandy ail>r*. sIomU'Ii'h.

Pars California Brandy at1>b*. JomIpii'm.

Pure Holland Gm at1>i*.

Pure Jamaria Bum atl)r.

Pure Medford Bum af l>t*s

Pure Bye IVhtsley at1>|*.

Pure Bourbon It hisley at

Pure F.hrtr of JVme atDr. sVoRk|g»n*«.

rnKWi TKimiMi j»nLLR\.“RICHARD A.”

HaJT—Foaled in lf*T® hand*. Can «how a wonderful am..unt

ha by______ __ he »y Altoack. he by Mem

briar, and he by Imported Me»aer>gcr.Ilarn of ftrincll'a Champion was Spirit. <»ul »f

Sirenr. by Kelip*. The dam of Champion. Jr, wa* a Red Bird mare Tbe dam of Richard A-

| it by liurnu* Kcltps, he by Tumaun'i Olipa. h# i hy Cr<« ker Erlip*. bo by f>..n Quitut, and he hy I Imported Meaoeoger.

It Will be seen that Richard A. trace* on both vide of sire aud darn directly to Imported Mrs •enter, and from him came both th* great trot tiug families, the Harabletouian* aud the Mem I>riuo«. Aud the ( Lampion# erenow but little

' lea* fatuous for pr -luciug trotters, i'hampiog, Jr has trvdled in \ nod a quarter m W set <>nd*. lie «tred Mr. Itonner’a Auburn !l«rv. with reeofd of lib: llankadora who trotted la 2 J6 Norwood who tndted in fdtk ; Whiteieg

! who trotted in 2 5k. and tbe Seoby mare wh>. t rot tel in 2 30- Ife aired tho Hoodwin Champi ou. wb>. now •land* near Canandaigua. V V.. al #)Ui, who aired Sf. James and Castle Hoy, who astonish* •! the world lust summer at Buffalo and Cleveland, their first aeao«.n on the turf, trot tir|t in 234 and 2:27.

for style and beauty thia bora* cannot ba excelled 1**11 aud hint.

Ternaa. %l& la Imamrr.Inquire of A. BTOl’T.

1 . B. BTOlTJ3*s or F- >*. HAIIAY.m

SWOSitt TOIU.J.P.

('■ earsttraf l*eaa*a la

• I ORfl#-ll*au.

• I OM I V* II *#*.

• I OMlfll

Igra4waia4 alfoe1 ytaif uytrUatt,

Hr. Fltler’a Vrfatahla Rfoamaaatta I raoroatee It au lalalUhlo swea foe Barra, Id-

>4.a«aeaa. geirato,tldaSMk JyrlLKt- F A. OB80URB. ffmmy NUk>foa-

ttai rfiMfoHCodhlt!

gmuLaaoi1^^*.uroDoohlrg^ap *’ fy.foAd tg Jgmtz^ao.

P H.—Dr. Fillet'• nil* (20 eenta) should be usedwith Hyrup 24g l>

IIOC lil

• IomI4*m*m.Oo

oo

A |o«4 supul v of .and for o1

»ur-'P

county of ('iinttiD, a*. At a aeaston of the Probate Court for tbs county of Cllatoa holdeo at the Probate Office, la tho village of Ht John*, oa Wednaaday the 24lh day of Jane, In th#vearonethoasand eight hundred and seventy four. _ ______ _________

Ifoeaonl, Joel H. Crauaoa, Judge of Probn'e. Probate ( aart for the county of Lhotdp, holden In th# matter of th# eatate of LOVINA *i tbe Probate ofllc*. tn tbe n lag* of Bt. John#,

May lkth, 1473 -341

P!nJohns, In tbj

OF BT JOH5B.

FOX, Deceased Oa reading and dilng tbe pe- OB Wedneaday, th# loth day of J ane, ... .... tltioa, duty veriiad. of John Hower* prayfng that . yMr on# thousand eight hundred and seventy th* last wilt of aald deceased may b* prov#d and four

Rial Ejttatr Tea Kant** -The follow iag ur# th# tr—rtions in rad estate m ibis oovutjr, ns sppssn by the rweordo in lh# office of Um 111 X'«ter of I foods, for the vssk •mdinf July Sd t

H M aad P K Perrtn to P R Wekator, n#eth % M I. Mk. 14, In Bmmaw*eiHa, fee 4224

H M. and P. R Perrin to U B Weboler. wrath tf lot 1. hfh IS. m BmmowartHe, for $tU.

Mary Knot |# W. J Btohardoaa, seuU-vwi | tf aeeth was* g Bat. 1. in hart, for #1.404.

O W Bavwsa to Motor Millar, worth-a* et % of north wost g Baa. to, to Riley, for 41,to*

Mary III to lau PwtoB#r, want H ml lab I und 4. MR. li to Bufto. for #70#

at. M«»wv#g*# i#|aiy Mans ago#. a#w»h JE sf north H et ###th-«ato g Bar t, to Xtmmr, 4sr #44»

Atotsoa VadiM U Phu»r If. Ptoga, a pie## af totvd ea Bee 14. to Waaaweta, far #244.

O. W MBtotoMi to Jehu Tamav( wank M af swtk^Hl g et worth-weal « Baa t, to BtogSum.forJIJdl _____

sltonbetk Rtgg# to Pkilkp Crip paw. a ptoe# af Ua4 an Oat Lat B.la Ovid, for #4to

Wm. Kennedy to C. ■ Reuaody. 44 emm eM met smi ef north g ed worth wee» fl g Bra I, to Beth, for #444

• O MoClowd, 4 dav* 4a,............ 4 00*• II McCloud, t day# la.............. I 00" O. MeCIowd, 1 day do with team,.... 2 00" C. Kavenoagh.4 day* do..................... 4 00** A Ingram, 4 day* d#,-..-^........ 4 00- H. Vaad#rhae*o, 4.004 brick............MOO

The lust a«mad account was referred to lh# Com­mittee en Engine H#aa«.

The CnmmltW to wheir wss referred the petttioo of J. H. Cole and J. B. V awe tee, preying that the Board would grant them pevmawSoa t# arret a b#w. ary foe a bowary dance aw the dth of July, reyrarted to flavor af graf ting th* pvayar of th* pettuuwera.

The ComaHtlee ow Claim# reported buck the M- lewtwg aesnaato wt'b the rwuaweaiHim that they ho allow od, via :Ace*! af W. Robert•................................ ........#4411

** J. Reharta,......................... 4 to 1** U Roberta,.................................................... 4 to !*' O MeCIowd.................................................. 4 ST)•• II. MoCtowd...................... a s*- O BoCtowd................................................... | on

C. Kavasmuigh..4 44M A Ingram................................................... 4 44*' 0. Wiutoww, 11, allowed al............. .. . 14

Th* report was accepted *w4 th* aeeeewl

admitted to probateThereupon it I* ordered. That Monday th* 13th

day of July, 1474, at 4 o'clock In the forenoon, he aaetgned for th# hearing of said petition, asm that th# hetr# at law and legatee* ofaaid doe. a##d aod ail other person a Interested In aald will, are rooatrad to appear al a aeaaion ofaaid Court, thento be holden at th# Probate Office, lathe village _ ___ __of HV Johwa, and ehow eaooe.lf aay there be, why , day orjaly, 1474, at 4 o'clock In th# will should wot he approved : | he aaaigned for the hearing of said Aud It Is Further Ordered, that aatlu he given to the peraona Interested la aald estate, of the p#w-

t hereof. hy r published la

■ ape per printed aad circulated ta aald county of Clinton, for threeawrcaaalva weeks, previon# t# said dat of hearing

JOKL II CffiA .VBON, Judg* efPr

4#oev er to# hearing eaa*(ng a cepy of this order to the Cllatow independent, a

crlu

Probat-lit Sw

th# eoadtttoo# ef a twetaia emecated May 2d. lit*, by James Bell L. Bell to Richard Klltott, and reeorded

la th# office of th* Register «f Deeds for Cllilsa rvuaiyTmtohtgUA, ou Jaw* 4»h 1474. tn IJ bar 33 of Mottgaga*. *• page 23d. oa which raid avortgage ther# to r lalaaed to to d«ae ot the dat# of thtow—to the aum of two hundred und ninety all and 24 kgU itollara. besides an at torn*) fee of twenty ivc «I«H

I'reoeot, Joel ||. C moan a, Judge ol Probate In the matter of the estate of HILAM R

JON EH. Deceased On reading aad filing th# po- tlUoa, duly verified. ..f Loren C hhclley and Lemy C June*. Administrator* of said Wat*, p avtng for raa son* therein set forth, that fbetr fret and dnai aceoant mat he settled ar e allowed. Thereupon It I* Ordered. That Wsdneedav th* 4«h

the forawuww| aaaigned for the hearing r.f said petition, and

that the heir# at law of aald deceased and all other peraona interested la said estate, ar# required to appear al a *e#ah*n ofaaid Court, then to be hold au at the Probate Office, la the village of Ht. Johaa and show eauso, )f aay ther# to, why lh# prayer of th* petitioner should wot he grained

Iter (

CAPITAL,Hurplqs.

fAO.OOO90.000

Merchant Tailoring.

Ilav'of fully recovered from the effort* of the fire, and secured rooms, for the present.

the nhrtv e for Medicinal i*u prteea^nnly.aml for other purpose* none need a, ply”* In addition to the comwieiweal of liqnorw. will be found a good atock of Drugs, Medicine* Rolld and Flold Kitraeta and Ttaeiares of ihe moat re I labia make, also a sure Ague Kradicatar

‘j** ^ Towte for Weuk'y Female* in the World. Bight and day rail* promptly attended toaaueuui O. C Jt»Hl.lN M. I».

Ht John*. Jan. Ifth. 1474 rf'74 tf>

MIMVAV.

H.

I*'™*MWSmortguga. #seeate aod Mary L. Belli

* Ml

raver of me pentioaev ahouil not he gram* ^*dlt 1# Further Ordered that not ice h# etvi to th# persons lot created In aaid ratal#, of th* peadeacy of sold petition and th* hearing thereof, hy causing a copy of this order t# he published la the Clinton Independent a newspaper printed and circulated In said county of Clinton, for three successive weeks, t.revloaa to said day of hearing.

JOKL 11 CRANHOB, Judge of Probate (A true copy). 40# Iw

>44014 « rft'6A‘MW7-*at7^ Michigan | Coanly of Clinton, as At a session of thel

The Ceustoftte* to «f W. Vawdarhavoa, *f gto. reported Iw fovwr ef al towing the

«n wi i ■ wy I #1 W ■■ v^^^ageww ema • waaae wy ” • —

*4 the power af sale la «wtd amrtgag* rent at ne<1.ap<1 nd the statute la such own a* made aad providedBelie* te hereby given, that ow th# T#P#lftladay wf keplemtor, A. D. 1474, at mi

mhat# Court lor the mualy of Clinton, holder at the Probate oflfoa. In the village of Ht Johns,

of June, In the year and set caty foar Judge of rrototr. relate of Ct’BTlH U« reading and Ullng

the pet It Ion, duly verlBad. of Hewrv l*. Fly aa creditor of aald decease L praying for reasowa therein act forth, that admlwtotrafoa ofaaid ratal* may to granted to Jonathan A. Hwcet

he 4th• ing ta# aamc topitmaer, m. u. is.a. ai oa# met ha granted to Jonathan A. Hwert.t».^ .,i(k.hmwio- •«“» jSZ£ZTRJzfl2£ S2L777'."TV?"iL*?°7^r7,TV’,__• Is* t-mrt Hmsi hr tilatm msaty, HhMfaa, la Ut of July. 1474. •* 4 or fork In ihe forenoonL toe rlHwgeef H> Johwa, Iw mU^mmwty. there will h, aaotgwed for tor hearing of said prVHto*. ant

“ * “ * **' " ~ aetd 4eeaaaad aw*» « I liege ef fh John*. Iw WM SOUBty. there Will aald wt wghMc vends# to Um high#** bidder, to# miwt de-c'ihad Iw aald marl gage, aa follow*:

that the heira st law of and all other

CO A HI.KB KIPP. Praaldoet,JOHN IfICKH, Vie# President,

d.B WAI.KKK. Caahtov

ntrwcfmra:Cstaiis Kim Atvaa H Waiaaa,Jog# Mica# Joavas Criss,

4 a at B t. B Wants

Reoolvedepoolta, hay sod aeli eschang# oa all points, deal la Oold. Hllvot, Canada Money, rolled Stair# (hinds. Be . Ac Receive tep »f>a

Sa?iflis DepartmeotOf saw*# a* aovall a* ow# dollar, oo whl«*h lo'ereat at the rat# of five per cent per annum la paid oo th# ir*t days of Jar.* and December, on all *w«nt on deposit um month previon* to thee# date*, the aam* as I# th# Having* Bank* ef the Ksalera Htate* and rttto*

l^P*t-hool I net rVt# la iht* aad a«|> Iwlag c> aa tie* deal ring te procure naena* te ha I id hwwacs hy the icans of howda. er* desired to MMwmnwIceW with aa,

Hell oni nun Draft# oa all place* In Ragland Brower and (letaway, and liiaanl a U*ncta jBanking B wet a*** 321

Pianos, Organs,Or any Mutoral I oar t a meat

Tiif( Br Re^ilrH PrBB^il).f*lano tot rings conotanlly mm hand

T. n 8AL8DURY.

IN CINBOND9 BUILDINC,Would her# aay t* mv old frlauds and pai ran# that

.1 hava )«•* opened a

FI!\K 1,1 M i:

PIECE GOODS!kaUvdag all th.

I.alf't and hoot Desirable Myles

Gents’

JJKTIIOIT A

KffCK If

• HI 4*L mil farther Wntic#, traina uiU teava Nairn

Johns as under;DOING WFST-

vh;ih oou o

W. BUNDAYHaa now on hand a large and varied aaot-rlmeat

t he beet brand* ef

*1 Bh.l# a.m. for Ora ad Kapuiaoalv,y •lr*p,r‘« mmiho(ar Orawd Uapidv and Orawd Haven

“ ‘t f#r Orutsd Ilav |K a press at I.JO an. I3etm.it. with

(or (JMail at

liOIXO Nightsleeping car attached Mi«#d at US p m. forOvoatn.Mail at 14.24 p m. for D#tm,t Asrnmimndaiiow leave* *4 7.«w a m. arriving ja potrr.it ai U.dSmmu r#taruing leave. Do if"*} •-*•.• hfrlvlwg |w B(. John* wt M toTrain for BavCfte leave* Itotmit al 4 43 am Jt^Throwth) llektoa to^all point# Cwet and

^ toirhuss.1 at th# D#pr,i.Hlamutmg Cure mm mil MlgAf trmino.

Refreshm#wts at ltotrr.il. Owoear. aud Orawd Havww. UM #p-u ( ompaay'a Ferry Btewmer <.a !totrnit River. Cumf-rtaMe hoimf afo£J Xrfod at Orawd Havew.| ( eoa.eWteo. At Detroit, w.th t.rent West

• hs moti davlrabla pan# r me

•m aad Orawd Tran

Business Suits 'Which will tocat aad made ap te order fa the

Idtl vast M| q Is*

Lae* R»d Mteh. C entra) a d 1 IWngni for Or*a< W«*t

OsspsyS Ferry Rteamv Itock st f.J4 awd ll.toa.m as

all put*is ■ them R>.

Ai.d aanst ea bat not lei moaner | wsiruat my gtw.do to to aa rap mas and) a Mu. all ganwcaio <wt aad aste by am to b# pagfoct Btriug aad welt

fo^f eiilasR done is Brd«r.

JOHN LYNCH•• ISM. a—i sv, MM

HtLK. ElfltNiK ar KENT.

C entral god Mich, S- ata Railway, g* at l>. A If r R

sad 4.2a n m._ TTwAtnoM,

ii au oa.. mf"* towoiafoa.

CiriitUai Lotte Hi. Ml,K. ffir A, M.

, jMto Wttl ho a regular Comm a ale at lew #f (tor- Inthlo* Ixrtto# Rrt $41 F A A. 8.. •* Mamvo r ■all. Hi Johan. Mi#h.. aa th* foltowiag date*.

Bv Oawaa oo raa W MMaaday. Joawary I, lt7«Mew«ay. Aegwet t. 1474

• Weisrnmti % - - August tl, •• Bank # fo - • Of*, n, -“ April A, “ •“ (totoher ft, "• May A, • * fwv 2a. «- Jew* C • - D## to •** Jaty t. •

A aapet b *4*. a J

Glass-wareandStone-ware,

A i way a ea hand. aaJ

AT LOW PRICES.Johan. April tto. |47» tit

— *!£;•-ttLsscusrsLL- Eto John# Jo•> »«h Iff i«Ri I MAX. tt'8 1

DR. J. BALL A CO'DBeer Falral Isoprwved Irsry a sad

It mg was lliar

EYE CITPH!• WITHninr mvunn m mi ftUTEMB*

By act# ciee rendered am k#a ; aaivrwi sight •ad preserved t# th# lal##t period of llfo : t*^0*!!* M l*Bam»d eye# and 1Bel# By# Bair#, warranted to cur# Uw of IsBamattaa with th# Catarrh Bant J. Mall * Oa.*# Bs to tola MsfMw^v

iwasoisiialwa th*

awd Hda, a I*" th* worst ease*

kind wfAiwa, Dr

wwrvawied t# gwaruwte# a

the opart#I direrir# ar mfaskd th# •«##* whew the aiiwJal dtrec Beery y mssa StghClW asf I#

rentes#, Cap# « medic*# »h#«M annl. t« my _ mimla t KAwtoii,tetouBame. Clinton O Miri

w1 msunr

— A IUM narnd Htepbcu iVrtj, *(run GraMbuiii, vu jvaicnUj umiiJ Tkc following r#ply to w irtu it m aud iniite to pay $10 <1$ (of befog drunk lb# Hubberdston Adwrttttr «»f the I4tk

hiw Ant ‘nn w tu w*- u » * j offering to whip tvtrj mi fo 8i. i *lL. in relation to the tburehe* and A •••'•■•ha- wmi aJCr im»r« Johns. morals of 8t. John*, i» from the |>en of

Baa-lay, Si Jofcaa 4i.|i I

TIE <MB<B TR9IBI.F.

A ■*!»• •! TriMMrari iMawMlif .c-ajsts

Tint UtuTiAK Ciactn. — Thi*.wondcrhtl combination which has beenattracting •u<*h croud* ami mining up A « A ^ «. • .the dry bone, of the Micbfoanden Z <* At MoFarloil <fc Croul S, St. JohllS.

Kb. I BBKf bbbbbt •—Tb* Kev Ben . wWa hat, COOMat(.,| l0 eihibil1-"^™ ---------- - --------------------— III.*. Uru r*|ortf J lbatK.lt. K*r 1). B M»ui*r, ot tbia villa**, auJ ja*ia K.anklio Bickfor.1, Faator iujn 8l. Jobu*. on Saturday July I Mb _ AM'AK. Ntw Advertisements Concerningthe

I'uWUabud *»•») Tkaralt) , kjrCOHBIT Sl EMTKh,

uaoasa • oaasiv. ami ». laui

Blacksmlthing.__ ____________ _________ o gi___ . _

tbc |ilau of •• giving tb« devil bia due, I be evidence of tbit autborabip re-U «Licit aie bard to believe, but aud vending u* all there, aare bia dear ou tbe atatementa of (be editor* of the uoveriheUaa true. The Detroit 7ri»i«* „ ,

—,---------------------- *"•£- «• *■[' 11 ubbardatou 4**rU~r and the Maple Juuc Ut, apeak, ihu. of .be -Devi.. J.ta29PBgttCW8»l

B-ved tbeaaiue to|g irillulltU> KyWopaljaa*, aod tb* ,. P *ho h*'«; 10 Iban • Th.. ,bow guve exhibition*, , #t, which added to «t*ather, all floundenug, goue or going 1 c ergwm n in charge of the Episco-jon Friday aud Saturday to four of the •wrwawrlf N»r4 uj Ja«. i.wii.

And tali kinds taf

AVKICt LTlR.Ua IMPLEMENTS,• -

At I'oM'In* Him toil.

■uy leaving them ba, no reference to defamer and alanderer. Whether jtut ‘be wonderful perf*uru trouble; their union aud ability . , J of five trained clephatit* mbeing much iu advance of a year ago. ^ ”r u,,Ju*l‘J» * i''1* ' »ew taken, is a features are all excellent. ri

TDc uii^erai sii<<1 lux a<•*1 Ml 10*1 OMIt, rTirmanccs imdI Um at t *-• . . I*r. wh«-r*> hr will k«-.-p on Land an<J m II at the low

itrai a «rn> mi fur*

time, will do well to call on hiu».— Kuiuous Brother*. jewelers, have _ ___

purchased the stationery stock of Wm. J * VS*.1?’ *52?.®f W'l!‘.!!*!., *#* Hnbbardefoii Adrtrtuer and the .Maple 0f J

TERMS, >1.60 A TEAK IM A.DVAS0E. H. Tripp andtbeir establishincut ______ ____ ^

HOME M 4T TERS. tbeir former stock of Hoe and desirable to the doga, and only out little oaaia P*1 Methodist churches of our til* \ largest audiences ever assembled iu De v.*o.iid .t.t* u. tbrir irtnfe .».4 th« public i*..____ _____ good., make* a rioh line to wleet from, in «b* gr*at Ht. Jobu. doaert The lag*, that Mr. Bickford waa the author. *ro,t- l ll« .paciou. pavilion, were' “JJi},hS}^1wlu koM '•

_C.ll.nd — tb. »«. .toek of Itcnteuiber that tbeir place i» the bead- °°)/ <xception to the common -aa.e If , be editor, of tb.« paper, do.not e*ch *1‘«rt..muen« and the <IMi<>>I w<>|...

ladiea’ mrge .hoe. at Sanford a quarter, for breworka and flag, jhoo<| You .hould hav* put that littlei‘ „ , "* re,poo.lent.are, who(wal thllt •„ Wi, 0II(, of ,|1C (>0.t cvcr ,nJ— By small bills we learn that a — Yesterday morning Smith Hunt, paragraph next to the bottom iiibig*Uoe8 1 ,U#J%0 t*,IB remark because | seen in Detroit. The exhibition em

number of exciting horse race*, will a carpenter, fell from a scaffold of a Roman letter*, for all the re*t. uo »om»‘of the inembeta of Mr. H.'s con- braces s great variety of features, aud ShocillL; & Ctllliagc Ironingtake place at Maple Rapids on the 4th. new barn in the course of erection for doubt, was written for that. gregation bccuj to thiuk that the edi* feature is ftrst~claas. I here ure j a hpkaiai.ty ll opine tor eriu * numi

V. n . *u a, i m , I > ; i • a* , a • . g The K cpu 1! lean aud Dr. Baruuui ion af tin. shivu ... two large tents, in the first of which is ,,r su».ik- Miroooge, «• rtmnin. oa#*n-— Os I si the 8t. .lohns Manulac* Murnt V rink, in Bengal, a distance of . f' . * - ,, , »ors oi me aoove namca journals mav . . n r • i *n,,T-...... * probably can take care of themselves kma.t u i » ..'a vcrJ *arh® collection of animah, LOTT A WISEtuie rooms and see the choice eollec* twenty feet, and was seriously, if not ,n this matter. I have no iutcreet iu Wul 1 •PP^bnid there brought fiom all (^arteia ol tho globe, si.Jofcu., Jsssiaui, 11:4 *tion of ebromos and wall brackets. fatally iojured. Dr. Wiggins was cither, but the statements concerning jctM 1 e DO *^o in the premises.— (foimiug a grand menagerie, to witness <v ic%» depot him

— The Snffrege A»ei»ciation will called to h i relief. the other objects of Index's “ sarkasti- The evidence is such at least that which is worth the full price of admiss- ^ #bold their next regular meeting at the - We l^idenf* and other oBccr* uu“*k' 1 'vuulJ, corr^t The everybody, and nearly evciybody’s wile, »on‘ In the Mcond tent, wl.icli leads ||0||S(MI0hl I4 II 1*11 it II IT

« t» o. 11 j *« __ 1 - . ^ 1 1 . Baptist** have not ruu down this spiing, 1.. ii..*.. .l.. .1.^ ....1 4l I from the first, is the circus proper. ItrrsDleuee of U. Strickland, Tucwday of the day are requested to report at ‘ *• *i T.. ®* tMltivea that the author it correct y *. .1 . 1r . 7 • ™ J as a growing congregation, a floutishing . J * is of mammoth sue and wilt accoiu-evening, July *th. I ireiii**ns Hall as early a* possible on Sunday-school, aud twrkti-tiirkk ad* u*®e **.* oTC ’ *n^ p'*rjl)odjr, in* moJatc from five to six thousand

— W# are pleased to learn that Mr. the morning of the 4th. And all per* dition to the chuicb sinoe last fall attest, j hi* wife, pronouuce the state- people. The ring performances here,tico. Thomas of Ksglc, is building s aona ba\ ing flags to spare will confer a That they have had trouble in past menta of the author as defamatory, acan^including horseback riding, tumbling. hUH brick (.rm re.idenee, thirty feet f,u>r by le.vio^ ihcm *1 il.r «n.e J«»'» i* true, bot M« the preeeat, au.l J.|ou- and f.Ue, and tbeir autiior a p-if-rroanoea, the Iadian

wjuare, two storice. plac«‘_ A two yeer old cdt l»-lo..ging to Tnu.l'lTTl I Hn. ______ be'"*

Mr. H B. Swiler of Kaglc townaliip, rtiue to his death but a abort time since by catiug Paris green

— The Suffragists of St. Johns will fiiruish ioc cream, cake, cold meats, A*‘ , on the 4th, in front of i'onrt House Square. Pationagc solicittwl

— The report which gaiu**d circula tinii here last Monday to tho effect that several U*y* wt-re drowned in Muskrat Lake on Sunday, is without foundation.

--The bosom of •‘Sami' the bar lacr »•* swollen with a good rifl'd “joke.” su l he dare not ‘ ventilate * it lest he should be attacked by a ^even* case of Sweeney.

♦ We understand that a hur**c ra«-e —trotting —will take place at the Fair(.round, on S.lu.dev, Jnlyllth. I. «•« pndr. wo h.d mad* larger pr«. Our fr,

tween noraoa owued hy Iriah and Church going place, although we are f ' r ' w“,l,u •nerwarua ui^avowShaver, for a purse of $10. well supplied with Chmches. there be- * ow,l‘ ____ friend declares it iu hia belief that these

— Matthsl Bale w ill so.,n be aUrnt iog six in the place There is very Bkoxm hi** Leo — On Monday Uat articles, if written by btm, were writtenralliag people .none .id. and ..kin, ^ <b*Hie I..... .. ** of llira.......... of *'*en -uf.cn, fro. .bia c„*them for the amount of their village janc<MI Al|(j rowdyism, but there is very to*u a »•* year old, in jumping I understand, also, that Mr. B » wife Ux. ahich will be very ui<**bast. W e |jttlc g-v.»l breeding The pla.'e is over his brother, who wss ►tr»-ti hod 113M *^ja* he is subject to sorb cou- mean the Marshal cur*wd by spintnaliswr, infidelity and Upoli x\ir floor, broke Li** left leg be-1 *I*,*0,i* •,|J nfter severe and long

— Ladies, ars >f»u aware that you whisky , I ut the great spirituali*»t mo- |Wt,0U ^ jj||ee auj amklw Dr Fas- .continued mental application he wouldgul, Bnrnuui, is about “played out.

4 « la .A SPLENDID ASSORTMENT

UddM

uo?

ifi

or

I* ^ » » «» Y U HI I Of iUWOther «*l (HrMiblc bgurt-a, «ti article* in b<* !me of trsUf

TU Hr U f.»r tbr «|e of Kum*1I'i M >*rr*ndirnwsa I • r• • M*. w...* «.«*« iu sursins VI a year ago. - '. V '."V -------» - - j iwwawws arc an caowucui. It* pnr- ------------- — , K*na-,... , . . .1 11 11 1 the Methodists, uuder the pastorate of '|nesiion of private opiuiou, for each formers, as a rule, are all fir**t-cla«i. ft'** Jnuti l*rill, Hr. Pto»e, llarrovt, *n«l *il oth- IA\ r Cop}’ t'CloW I roill the llubbaru* . I , n . ... 4, , , , . , , 1 J. * * , 1 rf kind* •>! rcii'-tilluml lfnflmi* nt*. c >n*t«ntlr on.. . . . VI I I, I jour old fellow townsiuiu, \N in. (hdby, ouc to determine for him or herself —I Madame ( ordclia ranks among the hl„j. wm. u. yocxus. !

stou Advertiser and t lit- • laple Uspids are in as loalthy a state as for years, W|iat defense can he 1 ut inf M host of lady bareback riders iu the r. wIk a-mion, .fui*« so. l#;i. (ai.2«.

SinrCHi

JU8T RECEIVED,AT

STEPHENSONSLow Price Store,

AT

•• eoaaidet ...... uutd «e are fall* eon htl’r- HdilioM H*»> "»uld u.d ..........attar .. ( All AN I l

viuced to the contrary :St. Johns, Mich , Juuc Db, 1*7 1.Kuitok At>vi*Ti»ia: — As you arc

loubt !»**• i nt create*! m )<>ur neighbors.*ome items concerning this place may be welcome to vour columns. . \ _

The census gives us a population of boca,,,c fa,hfr of f,ia thoughts.■ - h is somewhat cutifog to Tb# sditwr of tb id whim id •

friend Index will find it hard.1.4 **,,,nK "p lv ««hi

tka paat *|>riaf a*4 **rk alun, .,uiu- ,.,.oc and r*li*va all coaeerned froa maa quaetly m4 lefil.matal, in S-mJ.y. unplea,.,., cmUr—ncu. jschool as their neighbors. I am in- , Jclimd to think Index has nightmare * undtistand that on# of hia friends land wr«»tc undci its intinencc when his *tab* that he wra* at College with him, distorted fancy pictured ruiu to those and d .ring hia College course he was be jealooaly rr,anltd, until b.- • vii.be* ^bjeel’ta oeeaaional aber.tion. ut m.nd

which were attributed to over mental exertion and application, and at such

inrlh ill)

CELEBRATION.

Greatly REDUCED PRICESGood Linen Goat

ONLY $1.Miiiitinoi* 1 ia(N,

In l.irr) \ arlrijr.

rn«-i)n|,K at tti« North » vat corner of th« L.»*t half of the Houib weal i,u%>t#r of Mclluu ten. (,|o) Id Townohlp cigbl.t >) North of Kadkc W«al,lu Ciinion rountf, Mlthi^sn,running tbt-n*« fail Mity (SO) r<>Jk ; ih«t»*-r Suuih os* biindmt »i.<1 six ro-lk krJ h-fciitii-n ItnWa , lltrnr* \V«*i »my <fVO) i ro-lk . th«nc« North to tba i l» « of k-4-a*»>onv Tb«* Inlwrrat of mI<1 Mltior In tho abo« r r«*«l Mtat« la, L.TI*. < u Lilfi!•* i , • .i’ K I I* * I Ulld I , VV HIM "RR " Wl‘l)ukr<ll*ii of Mill Minot hurl St.John*, run* iWh, ISTt K 1.1/A .lANK SfOTT.

Uiiai.llau of Ali«r Adrlpln > Minor.ored shlrlH,

times would indulge in language he would afterwards disavow; and this

-t >t, if Mi< Lu*. 'AI i icMionuf tht* ”,lf’ 1'^* pflrr# that mill MtorUh ym

Ha i ill

(I. \V STKFIIKNSON&St. Julibt, June 2<*lb, 1 AT4

OK I II I

ON

At St. JohnsSATI'KDAY, JULY I 1-Tl

OUATOII.

e.n procure a n.re liltii.g akit of linen * ^ I: ¥,„,<aH ot tbj, r,U(C it,'OWI1 <|nelle oia.le all tbiojf. rigbl. *•* unable to obtain .leep during anly railing np<n. Col* * llolooa.1.. St. il<cu woou«ro.« brave in e-pouain, tb. . .r**"n entire twentyfonr l.onr. There i. inJohns v Also, that these ladiea are cause of the vagabond shows and mak 11 rr %rtmi.s : addition to these statement** of hiael«wing out their stock of Millinery at ing war ou the village board for taxing Wl‘* u pubic* parade oi the trieusla*. a*>rue proofs of this alleged in-

S. L. KILBOTONE. Esq.OF LANHIXi.

I>uo»« i rt: ok in ick County **l Clinton. ...

I'roUutr Court f>»r !hr 4'ounty n* t'llnton. lioMrti »t tlir I’rolntr (Ulli-r. In the tllUfrof tft.>loliM, on Monday, the 'JVih day of June, in tbc yr*t • Inr i h<Hi**tid nglii hundrtd and aerttity -four

l,r"«plit..f<*e 1 II. t r.ii*»n ,.t tolift of I'roliilr In thp Mutter <>f * he L't.iv of JACOB

W AOS Kit, |H-(i**nl. <*u rt-kdirif .in<l Ultra thp |.etm«n. du'y iciirt»-.|, of Ann \V»^nrr |*r»y- lug that the l.«t will of •*!<! dccciH l uin> 1>* jimrnl and t>lniilt*<l to |irohste

Thpr*ujw»n It i* Ordered, that Monday tltt Asl day of July, A l». UT4. ut w o'clock In the , fon t,r*oti,Wu*ki|fTK-dfor t ),p licuring of >utd fx-tltlon and t li.| the h.-tru at l»w klul It-yvte*-* of .uid deceukpd. »i»d ull other j>*r*on» ln?erc.ted In .ul<!*k.ll, are r< «|utrrd to appear ut * ae.klon rif atld court, then to holdebat the |*iol>ate liffitr, intL« i lhatf« of jdt JoLnaand khoW rau.e. If»ny there hi . a tty the will ahoald not ! e approved And It i. further tfrdered, that notlco

/> A A n d a b a a i ai o vo U U U D A If Wa dk I Tw 9■ cop) of tula order to b* paMlilird in tWCItn- ton Indep* n.lcnt, a new • paper printed andrlrru- 1 luted in *a!d rouuty of Cltbton, for three •uccet-

J J I KK All I

;4th of July!NnNV H TII K TIME T»» OK I

prices gieatlv reduced thwm. It would be as well for our pa Ft. John* Fire Department «»n the tlh- The 4th of July <\.®u.itt« have f^r’ ‘° ,ook ,OB‘ for 1U,r, nf J»> J«'j •* « F. M. It i.

i- - ■— * i. vu ?cjr!rE-i i. "r-1 r-...... . w1 K' i > Cm th< Fity »>f great doubt ax (<• whether tbey could lr,,*,,“

Laoefog, to deliver the O ratio a here kc*p Kldcr Muogcr another year.the Fourth He is a young man Tbt*> tr* ftrJ 0W,,*K lo lhr

nud au energetic s|*eaker

omtk.KS OF TilK II %%«r«ki amii.ii* lo avid day of hparltf J<)KL II i IIA N -< *N -I udgf of I’rovatT

AT TIIK

unsettled slate of afiairs have run d >wn considerably this Spring.

If. I‘. AnaU'*,t'hicf Kugineer

sanity in the artiehw th«‘ms**lrcs. The tsrstiimai is not only bad. but the c*»m ,-..-.1.0,1 i. inferior, and the e*pr**ion lo* and vulgar, and ... h a. *„.,hl notbe nj.-ot.-.l fr -m a Collegian and di- J,,“"Jj;r,^!'*T.'"i.i “••4l "• *'

Iw

Vri ki lpnt (1 \\ iSTKrilKMkON.• V r i 1 ■O

a. K

vine uubas In* waa inaatieHiIhtinp. Ktl

IT Y> Ip

A tme ropy )__________________________________ _

1>KOM II • OKIII IIk County of Clinton, •• At a *»-•«• on of the

1‘rohatc Courtfor the county of Minton. hoJdon at t Iip l‘ro(i*t#DlBrt«, in thp t llltp- of Ht.Jobrta. on WednewUjr, the- lat da\ of July, tn the y ear one thousand nifhl hundrral and apirnijr-four.

Prims testa i'(»n#.,n, .iud*e -fIn the matter of the Kotat* of ilORACX

WI Xr*oN (Wirk*. I. On rpaditiac and ft mg tho pptitlon, dnljr TPilflv-d, of Tharlro K Oaiton.

N« »ti • r — Wepraying for r*«*ona thrmo »Pt forth, fluil ho uiay Do app -lntod adrainlatraior of aald i*tau

Blaekmai Datentthe 4lb or »ny oth^r dsy, »nd desire s maintsiuing its own. Formerly it was j.- >j.,rf ,r tjieg*Hid cigar, cell ou Mr. Bennett at the moderately prosperous under KldcrStar Clothing Store and he will fur- K*rlf' "l,° w” ‘l“'“ l-opnl.r. It* '

. . . " . . . ... . numbers ire now «iuite *msil. It wss nlle*iu,.l> you with Bin.etb.ng that ..II tend ooforUna„ itl Ml. Rarle. but ,table, have been left with u- to tillt*. promote bappinem sod coutentuient. when the year tolled around some bet-

— Mr. O. W. Barker’s creditora ter place demaaded hia talent.Lave concluded lo run him through the ^ bt‘ ^•P^*coI*a^ * hurch bad thought

to take a new start under their present *"** *£•’

11 II K i.k<*r r>pooitit. f*. f AlPtJM*1pr. Watertown . John I ' C-IJM . NTrwiphaiu ;• K. Joam Victor.

... . tate*l upon the ver^e of idiocv, as he topwi^r OKJf.o. L HrAL'l.ltlN*w lid inform those v. * 7 • htwMa»tf\ H A MVI Thp'n-upon it I. Urderr.i. That M»edajr. tb*mtli

Jay of July, 1 **T *. at 9 o'r lock In th« fort noon.. i»»i t . .* ------ ----------------------- ---- ----------- - - ----- j tMtaaulgTi.J for the liexrtni of aaid p«-ttth>B. and

thus »*0 atiddenlv have been brought var.C'haa nmln.O. W W itir. ti e t o»Mt. ( . j tll4t ,7;e hetraat »« v( mid 1 ttiH. and ail ... * , " . , . . . | a. fc'pp. Hlr»m Hkfp, II. O.Tripp, Frank Tp»rh- I other pr-raon. lotrrratcd la anld rafale, arcrctinircd

» , | _. ,1 .. . B l ., , i , wit lull the spoerc i»l. au '• assasv at a •**•#! on «>f **t! •-•m rt. ; he ntuat they can ha\e the same \ r ___________ b»l4riiat U*rl‘n.bstroffirMnthr rllUfrofm.

hi once bv not if vine us as the °* Die pothou«e. i and stow «*••*, if an* th*r« h», whytha

h at Mr B or hi. ORDER OF PRIM Evs|0\

_ Ib.ya. .ben yon Man Tb. MktMM « bur.-l. i. hardly pm. |,„ 10g , rdaeu I M, w mild not bare l.lb-u (row gnm aa4

such orders, and for delivery to any who mav wi*.h one of the greatest nov*

friends will give to the public, through

Bankrupt picker ; which conclusion is minister, but they ire very small, the w?l St. Johns Mas Vo <

satisfy the community and appease the piesent unpb asant state of feeling. If charily is justly demanded an I Mr. B.

Dimimkokp.— hdgar (i. Newman, ir justly entitled to it, there ia do com­bo waa arrested here on the 17th of munity that will award it more gen

aLV^ other inducements, have Jnne laat. on suspicion with having rrously than the people of St. Johnsbees c*»t»neetcd with John \V. Martin X.who was killed by officer Booling on

I'rormiusvlll form ut lh** hmd of Clinton ... . . , , Airnur. at |l o'rlark A M , iff] m»frh tDrouth

• •nr village papers, something that will ih# pri»<ipai urwo • »t«ad tH*following ord« r

r.uain, con.iderable uoea.tneaa am- n, j„ lbt oare. They havethe " prefsired.** Fadley found too been striving Iwrd to build up their much opposition to the dray ing business, tobool from the other schools, and by- H. K. Retao, of Ovid. «.* again

nefore Justice McFarlan, on Tues*lay C’ongrcgati.mal Church, thoughlast, charged with selling liquor to not doing as much as it might, is talc- | minors. Tbc juty dtMgreed—stand mg the lead, the congregations ami tbc the night previous, iu robbing peopleing four for conviction and two for ac rtullda7 •cLbo°l i,ew* tUr iar«“t ,U*| uf their property, w aa thoroughly cx Mrs. Hildreth, our I’.wt NUtrem ia •juital. It will be tried again to-1ekurcbea*1 <? f ltl J,.> amioed before Justice Mek arias, on complimenting her farm by erecting

morrow.

itn.i.% iri;ns.

The wcatber has been oppressively Saturday last, an • dischHrgf-l tr«*ru new barn thereon

!•! HI. John* foiTtai llktiilSd Pr- klJrnt. ClMplato. Orator nul R<-«iJ--r 34 —Vlr# Fraklji-nta#fh — l*r«wld»nt* and Hoard* of Trials* "I tD

n;.*f,k-.fHt John, tod i it til 4th —HI Jolio* Sir KnlfMi MD Ladi*-« unj l*rtitlerr»*-n r•pr^*^^• tr.k- h

Htot*. aod TrrrHoriM?lf, CiUsew* in earn*ft-, ■ml on fo..-

OKDF*R OF FIFRM^FS:l*i Prayer »*> th* Chm|>lain. 21 Muktrbjr ihetilw CloK XI- kfwliM of the DerUntton 4lh M ttkke r»y thf Hand.4fh—Oration4th Mode by th« fll*e < l«D ?<h Mll*l*- hy U< ItvU'l »• h flenedirlMN.

1___ _____________ *rdrrr«!. That soil.* (irroto tDr j'vrkon# int*rr«trd in mhI e*Utr, ofth* pro- j Jcnry of .aid jvrtltion. and lh* h^arma therwf, , b* raiikiaa i fony of thi* ordrr to hr puDUahcd in tn* Clinton IlhlrpenJent, a nrw*pape*r printed ■ ml circulated In **l<l county of Clinton, for thrra »u> • cwne arr*-k*. iirevloa* to ••id day of hrarinf

JoEI. 11 t llANSON. JuJfrof I’rutatr i A t rue c*-py ) 4c* }w

Star <lof liinir StoreK» cry if.-a* y<*u < niU a l<li {uf. •**• D ■«

Fl»»«» NIiIpim,

Nllk Bills,stlllt Ilaaidket*<*lil(*lM,

I - ft Ad-1 ■ a 4 'out m,

M lilt c \ «*saI a*.

And no end to the a.*orlia*-nt of

Hen 1*1 m. N«M!k*TI«>< ol III I'M.

>• * a i a«t

l)V

I n.li-).en l«n

— We notice by the Landing Journsl wami and there m considerable sick- Jfikriy

tbat Mr M L Alexan-ler. ..f DeW.tt 7beo*«m*<be .V.°.ta ' clkmrrai.LT !*„-t -On Sundaybae rieeomr a pailner *.tb .Ur. 1. 1-. jn roo., p|aet.a. Cor. and onta 1*»«, '-'-lb inataut. a boy ten year. old.McLouib. in tbe tobacco bwiMn ik j look wdl. Ixnai aou of Wallace Uwia, of Kaglc town.be c.*y of l.ao-iug They will do a. gr Jo7,~ jaDe ^ ^74. »b,p, while playing with a loaded rewholesale sad n*taii l usmess. Kditoxs Msssaxusa : -The last 8ab volvcr, in company with his brother, s

Stick to the farm, boys: t bath iu May si* a dsy of besnty to the lad about fourteen, the deadly weaponCongregational church aod Kabbatb w„ accidentally diachargcd, the hall achool in tb.- place A gr.at profua- fnl„ ol„ of tllt ,un tlie Joaug. ion o! nowetm was displayed around the ■ 7 .pulpit, and Ibe pn.tor preached a dia-' ^ »« *“ *l l«* •«««'>»«• Dut

Worm a and wet weather have injured coru to some extent in this vicinity, rendering the fields rather spotted, as is the case w ith many whcitficld*.

AWSEMESTS:

Th« far at *• tbr |Dm urr hards ars Inadsd u*d*| ;

To** ut fro* at U.« a v Is tkt attniala,A ad MMtartk mt all y*s

B«t •<•) n th« tana a who* IsAftr

At 2o«lork iltme) Plf Bar* tt.il lake ptarr f«*r a purs* nf fd. whtrh will Do follosnl Ly Hark Ka<o, Wbo«-IDarr»tr lL*r# and rllmfdnjf a (iroa.v

M .*. Pnlt* harkwarda with a loaf nf Hr*-ad nn*lor ra<-rMost of the people of this vicinity arm. ai lovimk ihr

sre intending to *p'uJ the coming 4tli, ^ \ a\ XI11*^ ^1 I * I A Hin St. Johns. .... , . „ . ... .\% III apprar in foil dr*a* parade- undei imntr-4-

The Forest Hill Factory u receiving iairro«n.ar*.i of iuj <^j;ichaa.* ® headed bjr Ihr TVkktrlllt Trumbonr t ontrl

daily, nearly 3fXM» pounds of milk. It ka»d. wW,at tread axpraar a«d aurw r.r»atlrln«' J * out of rrarhofth* odli-e-ra of thr law Lair prr

is estimated tbat 3u lbs of milk is re- psved tlirmarltra for this lie**»*on Thr Drur» lrmnaiata of 1 jU rrllahlr men of llitmr Ouarla of

11. \ ' N M*1 If K-ttica i* here by Riven that applkotlon Dan ,

l- r n ma<lr to ua i«» can at a elite h, or waU-r roarar, to L*- rm;wlrue-t*il k ro**lhr followICR dracrlhrd '■ml#, rlt TLr n«,r'n half of tba north-wrkl e. uirtar of p-riimi It, the a»at do arrr* of • rtL- * • u t h • w r* <4 o art>f he-r-tioti ?, cf thr towaaDIp e»f (),t*r, and across thr south e*a*t rjuarte-r of Hertlon 12, thr aouth- ra* quarter o' hrrtion IX, thr .--utD w.ai >,uartrr

n i. ;h- aouth aa«t ,.*art*r of -» . a e

II. and thr north wrat quarter of (SectIon II, of It.lay. In l'hntr-n rounty, Michlfan. I# Sailed thr Hnuth an<l M e-rrhant dtU h All persona int* rratnl inaaJ-1 dlt«'h. or watrr ro-ir**1, will therefore take notion that *«- will make an #• lamination up r v i n»n oa tha SStii day af July. |t?4,at lu o'clock In the fora nuetti at thr Shla^ir Far- ! ft ©n Srrtlon 12. in Kliry

THOMAS W BALDWIN. JAMKrt M. HI K.NS.

I • -> ,!’•.< >n •- ofDIhrtnd Ullty 14021

■ o thr I hJ lr« I hav.lot of

pit the Si

I I clHlil Mil 1*1 «*l*na flop

to mention.

fihi: WOlHiH.

Haaka^r^nm^ - P^P**’ *,M1 P*"1*1 f* T'H7* " Wl* 1 , ■» , ». »»« a _ finirod to l||ks | vyouild of butter the late war. A par Dr Indiana, as—bora of tin-Daat ho f% a harry to^ra ft BTM to thd Sabbstil school, appro- fhs attending physician says it « ill If ... ‘ ? , New Ye»rk Bt.M-1 Kx- hsi.f Jay t ook A t'o'a

- An exchange w»cl, ..v. « Be pn»>c to .he oec«ion, rinding hi. .ub-' in.po-.ll. for bin. to recover *hll« l*-“uJ» 1-““J ^’rSSS^.T^.^.SrT^!!^for. yon-k a favor of any m.n, con ‘"‘'•'ig .be fl„«c„. Th..cl.urch --------- ----------------------- The 3U lb. of milk d.liv

% x .. is tjuite Urge, and the >«bliatli-school l ot rtii o» Jt Lf 1*artist.— ]4et it ered at the factoiy At ooc cent per lb.,** 7. . *** '*?* 'T .f*n ^UU " numbering 10©, uuite proeperoua. Tb* rrmembcreil by tboae wbo wnb to brings the producer JO cent., and which,avoid it, —eond. can the on* yon ap- Bentiat church which ba* been unite , , . . 'ply to grant it; third, would you, if .hiring during the winter; ukd.1 it. »“*"* ‘ ^ ?TT* ',"*^1“ 7^ T. °^7sL plac«a were r*ren-d, do for your P«*ent .nin..ter, Mr. Mungcr, e-peci- **««*; ',0,J *Ul *'> 16 » ««• »h«1> " P™*friewd wbat mk bim to do f r *n «omp»r»soti with the past, hss can do so by g'*ing to Newton Hall, sire that chcesc-makmg is much morerien * *m *’ been very roach depleted in its Attend-1Hi. Johos, ftawi’l Reed s. Maple profitable at present prices, than but-

y >urse tore inj >anday sehool, of life, ntpi,jgt F. Coh-mau'-*, Orectibuah; H. ter making. The stockholders of otir

Tb# day will rloar Dy thr grai»le*t diri lav of fire work* rvrr ah—wu lu i’tlnton 1 nuntr. AVtil De- dtaplayad In thr Court llouar Yard ao that rvrrv on* ran havr a |nn<| vtrw. t'uMr one, feme all and havr a foot) old fashioned time.

Thrrr will hr a Ball at Newton llall, on the riming of the %* Dill fll VS. inelnJing refresh­ments.

National Halair and ringing of Hetlla at aonrlar.

FLAGS*Fire Works, dec..

—FOR

— At a panorama of the Bible in a owing laigely to hia absence .and to neighboring town bat n few evenings serious doubts ss to whether they conld

Lc«‘ s, Fair (ironnd ; Buroes Hall, fsetory are convinced that tbeir money----- ---------- ------------------------------- - . u .. „„ „ , , COMMERCIAL. 4th. of Julv,ene*. a i.ttU .^bty-roldc -t wrap- -pport hi... another year I.baa be«, «““«<> "» »*U Wy in ,h< fcrtofV " J ’. . . .* until 11 oittor of rarpruw that the Mflbodut Olive. The propuetora of the above Itrvortvft. ®»* dOHmm MAKKaT.

pe« in a< mira oo a e seen t cfiorch is so small. Formerly under mentioned plseea are all making exteo- cwmird waraiyby B.W.Kaiaweta.krarrr at tiik-foe pteinre of Jnrob sni Rebecca at Klder Karle, the atUudancc was verT ^ |m|(|M||| fof g . big lillie , Barker »• Oli» KurLovris —The erlcvt far rar«arv‘Pradaru. ,

IkPkood. ,h*Epi.coi»l.hurcb...m.llL T|>, ^ |kkata laag. frow *|.50 - m.jorily of the hand, lately raployed , ,2 “ , JJ am tftf|1|n uputn ])A|)|pic-1 ttoifof very thinlv attended, and bol ing . in Mr. Barker’* carriage shop, have Dmnaprr bo........... ................ - •• *• i ^ Ui. JUllflu NSWu KUUM

the Hunday-school in the sfternoon in to h^.,mi per eoapic. . Brrawsx prr id.............................. 2* sn

Saniloirn Trunks!L**r Drought to Hi. J.ibn*

Vlriiir ( all hiiiI ftrr Thra.

E. K. BENNETT.■ y. var . t tii it

L. Hall & Co.,THK-

Popular Boot & Sboe Dealers.NTII 1, i xint.

An«l arr, as In iintr* paat. •. It.ng tDa

BEST AND CHEAPEST

BOOTS ami SHOESUNDER THE SUN.

fb# well appeared, when be looked up good The Episcopal < hurch is smalf lfTtn^*riLl* ^ ^

and fod : “ Pa. do yo«“7,’ ‘1l M lT* a°"'r" tilUkHy ap ! V : .»d .re H,,a .< work

www®77____ t , . . ing in those who belong to other Flo*■ or Sch«m»i..—Last Friday the Mi. J. li. Wise, a well schooled^ rH<>t * *r,<**** oi lbt ^ ichoola, about which they have noseru- achools of this village closed for a va-1 carriage ironer, has a«Aociated himself

Snpreme Coart eseas* to Uy plea. Tl»e writer s|>eaks of a simple 0f 1^,, weeks, witk soemiug in business with Mr. Jas. Lott, wbo is

Butter |*rr ID.Hu<-k whra» floor par 160.HkrVjr prr bo.........Baitrmai© par Da ... ..(‘•Dl«f« prr 100 ............Clovrr arrd prr bo Corn prr Du

bratv.Poor M Qwids,” by It was first published fo 16*8. and tbs bosk ws now spook of is owe of tbs 81st sditfoa, tad woo printed fo 1795. It ia of a moral and religions character written with mask oars and evidently

Mr, Brisker

u , maintain tbs interest* of oar sitisens, et»U vsrv much Tbs school*, e* far soeisiies aod organisatiooa.

’w^L’ShSTS -7-r—.*^aocss as pomibls which ars only bleed vo^king condition under Ibe toper- oamage trimmer, may be found over fog tbs people these hard tinet ead risieo of Prof. Bookrr. and with A. Cattenoole’s shop, where work so-

peer* epos tbs ly leaf, was tbs original

iLg toe people meet nara umeo» aa< sapping tbs morals of tbs place. B.

Wasted—All pioatera, tbeir rela­tives and friends, after eoliing open " Father Beeley,M to step up noire and see tbs eboiee eollectioo of plain tad fancy fomitore, wall paper nod erery

' fo

the work will trastod to biai will be promptly end ge bravely so. A complete report of satisfactorily done, tbs aeboole is new being prepared by These men are all worthy of tbs eon Prof. Banker, which may be fo modi jftdeoee and patronage of the pablie.

** ___ I — Notwithstanding tbs bard times a— A alee emortmewt ef children s very large and exfwneive

at ftenf'x 11 op'* fo this village last weak

16 (ft 143 M <m 4 oe it* (« 1 :»M (4 nN 06 i«1S (*> j a 66 SIM

** 41 1 66 12 (a I*.

A I 066 (« 41 4 It I

»6 <4 12IU (M II12 6t 1*IU US 12« uo *

ft <* t12 <tf 14ID 4 *4

12* '4 1WII M 131

4 06 (# 6 W.40 44

te e iso 1 « W 1 461 <0 44 1 24

• 4* 1 !46 « *•I* 1* 1 60

OF

|R| kin*, rwlwr wr alar aaal Keja* llsrk, prat nrrtl an «karl ■ •I Ire.

CALL AND SEE US

K BROS L. HALL A CO.J«»# tttk, K?4.

4TH 4»r Jt 1.1, itTi.

Its. 1 |»*f baWe.t port*.................K*-d, p*r ba.............................A a Dir prr Vw...........

■trial! Price*.

Flags, Ac., furuithed for Pic rbf p*tl»i la lavltrfl U* allrwd a parlj at

Nict and Celebrations, ColemBn’s Hotel,

oRxxNBien.AT Friday Ltralai, Jaly Id, lllg.

Mood amir will b* la auwdswf.

T. 5'-| R«du«*otl __________ rc.ui»».iHv.

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Return tag fri>tn Uio tuoaquerode, I went u* an Armenian house where 1 hadan invitation to be iireaent at a wedding. The " young lady tilth# house" was to marry a young clerk who works hard from uiornlng tITl night for a oouud and a halt mi a week. The bridewa« well off. haviug two houses and '40, UNI Turkic lnaa ($100,000) as a marriage portion. This Was alt given over to the bridegroom, Vsk strange to say, did not seein to lc«4 a bit gratelul. 1 should if someone woulu give me two houses, with ail theft furniture, including slaves, and $ 100.00; but then I am a heathen, and not an orlliniioX Armenia*.

When l arrtved the bride was just dressed and l was invited into tbs bed- rootu where *lv etax, to see Iter in all the glory id' her aUi/* She siiM»d in the center ol the n«in, and all the slaves and old S'Hiicu stood oft to give uie a better viefr i>f tier magnificence. I walked ai'iund her twice la-fore l could see where h(*T lace was, or which was the front of her. Min* was covered with a most curious veil made oi long slips ol gold linse 1, which reached to her feet.

Through this you o»uld not see, except the Is•ilom of her dress. The Armenian women are generally very pretty, but a-rtect f*m>!> in manners and expression

ly two hours before alt ww to eat at all.

(the looked tired enough ever, for she got nothingThe Armenians me {. •<i

eaters I think, by the wav they cleared the

Sleaiituilv furnished table, and it waaavlight before we bad finished. We

lin n ft ad coffee again, and all went borne—CoHsbinitnopU Cur. ((Airs //<irjsr) Sam Frant into Alta

An Appropriate Text.

Tug incident I atu about to relale oc­curred in a m-wly settled portion of Michigan, something more than twenty years ago. There w%» a young niau In our neighItorlMMHl by the name of r.phraiin He was a worthy and exemplary young man, hut one of that unfortunate class who ftn<l it so difficult to get into the '• good grace* ’ of the fair sex. It waa gennally be lie v ed tliut Kpltrufiu wanted a wife, yft ur*nc* of the girls seemed anx­ious to secure llic position After aw bile, he began to pay particular attention to a daughter of Deacon H, a pretty and in­telligent young woman, who ap|>eared to regard hi* suit with favor, aud Kphraiui w a* happy; at leant lie ought to have la-en AIh.ui thi* lime a Congregational MN'iety was formed at a village near, aud a preat her from s distance was hired to mi ulster unto (he jw-opk' in spiritual mat­ter* 1'eiM on It. lx in if one of the lead-

io much that when one mnu w ishes to I jug niemlwrs of the soc iety, and no doubt offend antttUsx he says: "Pretty Ar- feeling a oh Amend able interest in (be menlan’" wtdeh really means a fool, welfare of bis neighU»r*. invited the new The WMUicn die** like Europeans, in minister to hold occasional meetings at general. ■ our school house, to which he readily

Ttic w«>mru,wf*er 1 hail tw ice made the mn-ented. and oue Sunday, not long after- circuit of' Um; rail, lilted it in front and j ward, our little school-house was well se|varated the h og strings of tinsel, till 1 j filled with listeners, who were seated in couul see tha' Uit bride wa» dressed in j accordance w ith the gtKxlold custom, the white silk, brocaded with silver and men on one side of the lmn*e and the

women on the other. The seats on ln»tl»sides faced the ccuter of the room, so that with a little care in their selection John and >u*au mold gaze at ca« h other all through u meetln*" without ever torn

real ot the face waa as j jng their heads, and thus avoid those un inout cosmetic could | plea*ant lectures from the old folk* after

reaching home. Well, a* I was *aying, the house was nearly full, and services

t had commenced; the flr*t prayer was over 1 ue iusidt ot In r fingers'| and the first livnm bad been song when

|warls, anil that around her waist was a wide belt obtaining a fortune in precious stones. Ib r clucks were painteii a deep crimson, laid on in a heart sha|>e, and au other heart w t» artistically put on the i. iiin. w li tie Um* white as lb*' lb it bring it. The eyebrow a met sml also stretched fpThe pair on each side her temples, ad 1 were ss Mack as they could lx* painted.ends and fingertcrimson. Her h thick, tboOgb Co

ails w*-re stained a deep iir, which wa* long and irse, was braided tull of

little jingling cPins Th«- outlines of her form w« re. a* usuai, totally lmldtn by the clumsy made clothe*

1 admired her to hir heart’s content, I jn>» hurriedly. j>a*se<l to another seat, butold 1 Kpliraim nothing daunted, sprang nfler

the deacon antf his family t ntered. The daughter w a* no xoontT seated than I'ldiraim. not satisfied with the prospect of gazing, lawinded from Ids seat, c rossed the riMim with hem y strides and sat down beside her >hc looked ama/ed. and.ris-

and even hint far as to take up a It•f -ar

n iwiu r.|inraitn. noemug ciauniea, sprang art it sewn on her with surprising agility, and was once c evident ni<>rc safely si-ateif by her side. There nt would I were merry twinkles in other eyes than onp us is those belonging to the voung folk, and

considered a delicate flattery among these- something like u smile flitted over many

her dresatu sec if the | s<i lavishly Here real ones, to th pleasure «>f all present; for what wouit Ik- the height of ill brceding among ii

w tun. n.I forgot vo look at her foci, and w as

uls*ui to go and sit down, when she stuck out first one and theu the other, that l might Me that they were shod with velvet slippers, embroidered with pearls, and then sl*'Hoi1 me her earring*, which were large solitaire diamonds She had on no br*w>ch nor necklace, ami one of the wotni-n interpret! d for me, and told

the -room was to g*\c them alterii• ceremony.We then all ant down and coffee waa

brought in hwte cups alsuit the sire of ar. egg shi'll, ans» carru d in little gold fili­gree bolder*, l would like to immortal* 1 i/e the cottge they make here, even as j Lamb did his vanity, Imt l f. el made 1 quale to the task it is tttr luhlimated | t - cnee of the spirit of* cofita oi which '

(fit 4 hxAmrr ica. Ishall bn up a lurk with Die, with all the i apparatus lor coflet-making, when l re- I turn to America.

After tilt* episode all the lady guests went into another room to see the trous­seau, which was laid <>ut for their in ► l** ction. Many ol -Jo <kicB*ea were very , elegant, but 1 found it very tiresome, as l must examine every article, lx-- t ing the rnuestitara or guest ot the j g>i‘ - ’ s. I i* ed at

•lore ilie thing* were all ln-r ot the Itryle entereil

>ni* to the lartrer r*s>m, t«-II-

dx o'clock, and -xatnined the m ii.t! c nl

* fa< e Ju*t then th*- minisU r. who had been waiting for the new comers to get M ated, arose to announce hit* text, and, surveying his mirthful audieme with calm dignity, said in a solemn and com munding voice;

' Let Kphraiui alone, for he is joined to his idol*.'

The effect of thi* can la-tter hi* imag ined than described. Kphraim's face glowed like a furnace, and the whole congregation fairly shook w ith suppressed laughter. The minister not In ing per sonally acquainted with hi* hearers, w.» in no way resjtonsible for the aptnesa of lii* text, but I dou t think his sermon that day wa* of tutu h beuefit to the young iN-ople. w hatever it w as to the older one* For my own part, 1 confess to being very

I glad when the services were ended and I I found mv self well out on the Louie j w ard roa<i where 1 could indulge in a good, hearty laugh without feeling a«

| though 1 w a* eommitliug an unpardoii- . able -in. and l guess there were other*

in the same fix. Hut. ala* for poor Kph* rmim! 1 never knew why it ua*. but he went no more to see the dca« daugli-

| ter However, he is in no need of our sympathy; he married well a few year* later and lead* a happy aud prp-perou*

1 life —yirtMt'U Frirmi

leu u>■*§> spre

must *ed m

whir

ad for the come ami long, cold ft h*oked

l.lt- w% that 111*' tab tuarri.igu least, and w»* l.Mik at it, W** traver* saile to Ihu «Upp* r ro *Ul| really very han«.»**me, mu it wias bitterly I cold, there tieing no appliances for tire.

We went then to the parlor to await the arrival ot ib« bridegroom and Un* priests, four of whom were to perform the cere inonv. The tifi le waa uj*»n a sortof chair, without a bock, and her veil ar ranged » aretullv so *<» t»» e«iinpb-ti ly h:de her. The mnm* in all the bouse* here are furnished v« ry simply, this one hav. ing but mis tattle an l • ne cha r. There were divans ail round the walls, and in the center of the room a fountain very handsomely carved. 1 h* floor was cov. ereil w ub an elegant Persian ctrpeb'and the ceiimg ioifly festooned with lamps.I think we funn*h our tiouse- too mui h generally, mud they none **f them l«*ok so really elcgUnt a.* do thfsc houses here

The brivUgff! un and bi* friends arrived about nine, ami other lji«*nd* and sc quaintances Ix-gan to arrive, hit the priests did not come. We waited and waited. Ten o’clock! i^cven ! and still no prie*u». The father ol the hr id* went to see what ww* the r» is*»n of the delay and S4M>rt refu*ncd to say that they were at another w*,i ling, but would surely tar hen- mm»b* 5a we had Coffee and more sweetmeats, i wan’t-d to go home, but those who had brought rue w-otild not hear of it, anil I wa* C"ni|x lled to remain, though more prod than ever before in tnv life, 1 think Twelve o'clock came, and half pa*t, and then one, and uo priest*. A boy cam* and said the priests would be along diracUy, and he «prewd a piece of carpet in the middle of the Thom and re­tired. The people did not M-* ui to mind the delay, but 1 felt sorry f«*r the poor bride, who sat erect all this while on her chair, *pcaktag to no one, nor even mev ing. I hail the corner divan, and with all the cushions 1 was pr* tty condor table, and I am not quite sure l didn't go to sleep, fnr 1 found 1 mixed things a lilUe alter w of >

At huif post one tl-e priests arrived, preceded by a crow* i of 1e)ys Uaring censers and bumble Iw-cmg some M*rt of a thing I supipo-' they called zinging. The priests were4ec«*rat< d with g<»ldendiroid- i ry from hu»«i to foot, and the chief prie«t a sort »»f miter on his headliterally blazing with jewels. The carpet that had b* < u laid by the l»oy was now covered by uAe tar more elegant, and hav ing tasaels of pearls at each comer. Th« chief prWal to. k his place on the center of this, and the other three itehind hint The father of the bride took her by U*e hand aod led her forward to the bride, groom, and th** twro then stepped be lore the priest. Two boys brought < ushlons with a green w reath on each for the bride and bridqgruorn. The bride’s was kept in place liy le Urm-1 veil, but that «>V the unf*»rnrfra^ daahar kept sliding forward or backward all the time, making him very owotisbi triable. I he bride w as rather under than over the ordinary height for woman, aad the bridegr.ma it very lafT mail, and they were obliged to stand With Uu r forebeals touching each other dufing the whole reremt^oy. which took opiaigly an hour. It toc*»nstsf mostly of swinging ot the < so** rs and • tigMMi hy the boys, and a *ort of n»onotn»t"Vis chant by the three priefU. At last^l was finished by 11 ask or handing a plain .gold ring to his bride and rncely. ing oofinifft h* r in exchange, and then both nheeliup for a few momenta while the prirats chanted and the bojs swung the < i liners v urtd, very clone to the heads of the unfo^unate couple. They then rose, and tfle priests departed after having regaled themselves In the supper-room alone.

The bcMu was then placed npem the same o|i*tJ. find the bridegroom ram for* word with a richly-trimmed <shioa, bearlaw the bridal presents —a watch and chalnJMHS»**nd brooch and earrings, and HhrfUif and a large knitted purse

Ud «W.cnbtI s*kod uiy guide bow be was abie to ▼e •wo expensive presents, and was Id that *di her d<»wer was made over to at the day before th# wedding. After

wele the bridegroom the yell and placed the jewels < bride, and then the descended from the chair and aH proceeded to the supper* room. she was lifted by the amand seated stride a small barrel of wine, end the feast commenced Abe was obliged to sit there till oil drank out of that barrel, which woe

Manner* at ( roquet.

Tin kk i* n<* *|*ot wlicn- well br»-d pro pic arc Hpt to approach so near to ill- i>r«H-ding a* on the croquet ground The cau*e of the trouble must inhere in the game—w hick yet appear* to la- of the most simple and refined order—for other out door *|Hirts fail to irritate the feelings or irritate the feelings or ‘rutile the tnu per a* this doe* It U as if some tiny imp of discord pervaded th** field, devoting himself to the ta*k of drawing to the surface whatever is contrary in the dis position of the players We have seen girls go almost into hysterics and young men become sullen or disputatious over a party " croquet" or a wicket doubtful ly run The game intended solely tor amusement becomes the source of disa grecuient and wrangling, sailing all pleasure for the |»eaee lox ing a* well as tor the contentious

The origin of most rroqurt disputes lie* in the diverse understanding of the rules. Nearly a* many manuul* an* pub­lished a* there are games placed, and rarely is a tnateh arranged where the player* have all learned of the same au. thorite; lo ner the difference of opinion The sole way to avoid dissensions i* to select lln* best book on the subjett and make its decisions final on mooted |*oinls It does not matter if a different authority be used on every ground (though for those playing tnueh together it i* more satisfactory to bu'e the saiuel, provided it i* regarded aa an authority liefore a match Is l*rgun Bui it does matter verv much that p* rs**ns meeting for pleasure should so conduct themselves as not only t-« banish pleasure, hut to I*»««* their

lo the torment of her base ingratitude!”The mlked'ofi haeU lu grow rich, in

forty nine comm out of fifty, is simply the struggle for existence, lu the metropolis more than elsewhere such talk is lira-somely common, notwithstanding that we have a tenement house population of over half a million. Do these unfortunates, deprived of fresh air, sunlight—of the stimulus even of a future—press forward to wealthf With penury, toll and Rotter’s Field alone before them, are they feverish from the pursuit of gold? Among the educated and less unlucky classes it is not much belter. It is computed that gener­ally six or eight persons rely tor support on each able-bodied and able-minded man. Thus, between the competent and incom peteul, the self-sustaining and the depend­ent, there is so little chance of reaching the goal of wealth lhal thought of it sel* dotn distui bs their mind. They whor.au- not take care ot thcuiM-lves are n«>t likely to spend their force m running after the unattainable. Those that are borue down by burdens are not apt to start on a con test for speed.

The fault ol Americans, Instead of being in baste to grow rich, is improvi­dence, the adopliou of habtU that render riches impossible. They need to tie en­couraged to economy in sit ail of lietng lectured upon acquisitiveness, which, despite the opposite opinion, they hsve less of than any other nation. The com paralive tew who steadily seek fortunes here are nearly as much influenced by- love of excitement os by love of money After getting money they s{*end it freely, recklessly often, as if tliey wished to la- rid of it in order to increaM* their incen tive aud zest for obtaining more The unrest which is in the atmosphere of the country impels them, to exertion when exerlion is not necessary. Their passiou for doing, for achieving results, holds in abeyance the mercenary feeling They think less ot the profit than of the pleas ure of the pursuit. Nevertheless, iu»on these may Ik* charged the haste to grow rich; upon the* great mass, in consequence ot circumstance and disability, it never can be charged with any show of justice

By continual carping and harping on the disjjositiou to accumulate property, as if it were sordid ami degrading, much harm may t»e done. The national ten­dency is in the opposite direction. This is a republic of spendthrifts, a common­wealth of prtxligals. We have so abun dant resources that we art- improvident from overconfidence not leas than humor. We imagine we car. repair to morrow the extravagance of today; we waste silver in the vain hope of replacing it with gold, unmindful that the habit of fqwnd ing defeats the prospect ot restoration. Homilies on the* haste* to grow rich have the effect of exciting a contempt for money l«x» great already in this country. In the endeavor to avoid precipitation toward wealth we fall into precipitation toward poverty; and pox*erty is far easier to reach than wealth. The former lies at the Itoilom of a hill, the latter on llu summit of a steep and craggy mountain Having no other standard of distinction than money, and contemning that stand ard, we think, in our wild repub­licanism, to show our superiority to princes by outdoing them in |*ecuniary profusion. Kr»ry American dreads to I** consideitd tm an in a finan­cial >*nse; consequently be affects indif­ference lo dollars, an<l adxcriisc* his in- ditb rencr by ostentation.

There is no mistaking the nalionalitv of the stranger in fotndou, w lio, seeing the first strawberries of the m ason in a fruit­erer's window, entered the shop and asked for a saucer of them, fx veral (English­men inside wailed lo see the ** ^ anker s’’ amazement and hear his protest when he should learn the price of the dish he had ordered. Having eaten them, he was told they were a guinea. Instead of show­ing the surpriac he felt, he asked for an­other saucer. •

This fixdish extravagance of our people, litis disposition to underrate money, re­quires checking. For the next few years wre might with a*!vantage substitute for the old and well w* rn subject, “The Haste to Cirow l*<**r,” which particularly marks our nadonal character. Would that we had a little more ha*tc to grow rich; for the haste would insure the dta- p«x»)tion anti Ix-get an adequate economy! Few persona carry out their ends; a thousand things jut vent; to plan and ex­ecute are essentially different. If many of us should try to get rich— no large numtier are likely to embark with any show of sue real* in an enterprise so for­eign to their constitution—more of us would tx-come independent. Aud inde- pen deuce of circumstance rate* next In value to Independence of sp.rlt. The conditions are correlative; they are in ward and outward One is M»-p* ndent on the other. No man can be entirety Indcfx-mlent spiritually unless he tie in. dependent matt rially. We m*ed not fear to iteoome hardened by wealth, which always con trivet not to l*e held by ttx> many. W> net d not fear either that we are growing sordid and mercenary be­cause we live w ithin our means and iabor to at id something to our store. Ameri. cans have struggled long enough to make everybody rich but themselves. If they turn their efforts homeward both their circumstances am) character will be im­proved—Juntvt Htnn Urgent, in fon t Journal.

friend*' ncr’s 1/

an<l their own nt hi $ f<>r J ulji

roped.—»riA-

“ Haste to firsn Rich.”

In this Republic, where- every man bos at least a chance, th* chance of genuine pecuniary pnmprrity is almo-t too small to enter into calculation. The material condition of the great majority is fixed, or, if not fixed, is limited—limited b\ temperament, training, habit, surround- ing* The capacity to make money— ml licit, not ennobling nor intellectual—Is one of the rarest. It is a peculiar talent —difficult to cultivate, next to imptxisible to inspire. They who {xniscss it mani­fest it early. Tliey who imismws i! n«»l are not slow to discover their lor k. what­ever their pretense to the contrary. It would seem to be a secular obligation for a man to make money, whether his con­stitution and taste so incline him or nd A certain amount he must make—enough to provide for himself and those naturally deDcndcnt upon him—or forfeit some­thing of his self resfiect. The very best that most of us can do is to keep even with tae world. Not one min in fifty, it is said, dies out of debt. The esttmofe may be excessive, but it is fair to put it at one in twenty. Think over your ac­quaintances! How many of them are not in arrears? And, of those in arrears, how many will be left so with advancing time?

It sr iiears strange that he who goes not out of life poorer than be caste into it shonld he an exception; and yet such is undeniably the fact. What idleness, then, to talk, in s general way, of the hurry for wealth! Children cry for the moon, but not long. They soon learn that they cannot get it; that It will not come lo them f<*r all their tears « Ho with men. They may enter for the race; they may eee the prise afar off; they may start upon the course. A brief whiie shall convince them they are wast­ing their breath, exhausting themselves to no purpose The strong runner# ouU strip them at naca—laave *hem hopelsaely behind. It Is borne in upon them that riches are not for their winning, end thereafter they reel content with—rather are reeifnnd to—hnmhtn aaeninqa. To

Daedal haste to grow

rich must sound satirical. It is not an like the penurious father who gave his hoy a penny with the couneel not to make a beast of himself Not untike the U-mulent

they ifood to—humble earnings

these, who have despaired of fins fortune, Um iteration tssot I

vaga'tosd, who, taking ho nan ion after a fortnight's debauch, asked bis poor wife to prepare dinner. « Din oer!" she echoed; “ 1 have nothing la the bonne. I ala the Inal nruel this morning Ton have not given me n cent than a month! How eon yon to pn-paru dinner without money 1”

" Come," taid the husband to hU fel­low, « In ne leave this mercenary wretch

Fans (*recn.

Lx*t year, when the demand for 1‘ari# green ar»»se in conM-quert «• of th»* potato beetle’* drptedations, a large quantity of adultt raft-tl green was thrown up«»u the market aud told at lull pricct. Hevrral gradta ore manufactured, ranging in price from twenty to forty cents s pound. It is put up in cans containing tourlrcn or twenty eight pounds, and when purchased in ibcac front well known dealt-rs may lx* regarded os pure. As the average farmer does not require a whole can, two or three individuals will find it to their advantage to club together, ordering directly from the foriory. There are two ways of using the green. First, in the form of a powder, mixed with forty or fifty times iu bulk of plaster, or ffour, or t\nm .ntddling*. aod dusted over the (xitaio top*. Second, as a liquid, mixing a tahlc*pt*oritul of the green with twelve quarts—that is to say, about a pailful—of water, sprinkling It with a coarse brush. The liquid method is Ixlieved to !»e the iiest. as the operator is far lest likely to be poisoned.

In handling the green great care is necessary. Package* should he invariably marked “ poison” in large letters. In mixing it a fine dust is apt to arise, and this unconsciously inhaled or alisorbed through the pores is apt to 1>e injurious. While working with it the hands and face, and especial!/ the nostrils, should be pro treted as much as possible, and carefully washed after the job is done. I lensils in which it is placed should never lie used for any other purpose, os the green pene­trates wot si and lodges in ths crocks of metals and in the pores of earthenware. Scratches on the person, however slight, develop into malignant sores if the green effects a lougmenl. The free use of milk as a Ileverage is undoubtedly a good anti­dote, hut the best Is hydrated per oxide of iron. This mev be had of any druggist. It is quite harmless. l‘sed os a salve on sores caused by the green, it prevents their progress, and it should betaken internally iw ice a day while working with the green, a teospoonful being dissolved in % wine­glass of water for the purpose.—OhioJBm

Tnxei-CTilef of Police In Terre Haute, Ind . married under rather unusual cir­cumstances His son. less than a dozen years old, suggested the desirability of a change in the domestic arrangements, and named the lady he would accept as a step­mother. The ex-Ouef sought the lady, told her what his son had said, and inti­mated bis desire to gratify his eon's w ish The lady heard with respect, awakened her little daughter, received the daughters consent, ana then gave her own wedding took place the next day.

I ARM AND HOUHKMOLIft.

—Keep soft-soap three months before using.

—Bar soap should be kept in a dry

filace several weeks before using. It will sst much longer

—Molseers Candy.—One cup sugar; one cup molasses; piece of butter an inch square, stir; boil until it will rope; lost of all one teaspoon of soda.

—Corn Htarch Cake—One cup butter; two cups sugar; two cups flour; ons cup tM starch dissolved in one cup of sweet milk; ono leasptxm soda; one ounce ert-am tartar , whites five of eggi.

—Himply wetting and rubbing the stained cloth in cold water will remove all Users of grass stains. Fruit stains will disappear on application of boiling hot water. No soap should he used in either cose.

—The best thing for cleaning tinware Is common s<»da. Dampen a cloth aud dip in the stMia, and rub the ware briskly, after which wipe dry. Any black* net! or dirty ware can tie made to look os well as new — Rxthnngt.

—Violet luk.—Dissolve one half ounce gum Arabic in one pint of hot water. Then add sufficient violet aniline dye to make it the ri^ht color. A few cents' w<»rth will make one pint of ink. Get violet dye at the drug store.

— Breakfast Rt»lls— Incorporate well two tcasptxinfu's of cream tartar and one tcazptxmful of lard with one quart of floor. Dissolve a small teasptxmlul of soda, and mix the whole together with cold sweet milk, ami bake immediate.

— Iced Apples.—Fare, core and slice applet of s large, tart kind. Hake them till nearly done. Fut them away Pi gel entirely cold ; then prepare tome sugar icing, and, first pouring oil ail the Juice, lay the icing thickly on the lops and sides, as much as you can. Return them to the oven to Just harden and set. Serve with cream.

— Bread and Apple Fudding — Cut bread in slices and dip them In cream. Line a pudding dish with slices, then (tut in a layer of rl:ced apples and a little sugar, then bread and cream again, and so continue until the dish it filled, having a layer of bread come on top. Hake in a slow oven two or three hours with a plate over the top of the pudding and a weight on it

— Making Citric Arid.—Treat fresh lemon juice with powered chalk until all the acid is neutralized. Citrate of lime will lx* precipitated, which wash and then decompose by means of diluted sul* phuric acnl A precipitate of sulphate of !ime will then tie formed while the cit­rate at id dissolves. Kilter, and the sul­phuric acid will then deptiait itself in crystals when the ronerntxatod liquidCtXlln.

^Sour Milk t nfit fur Cows.

Tiik Ilural AVtr Yorker, in answer to a question, advtM s against the feeding of sour milk to rows. It says:

We have in the germ theorv an explana lion of the manner In which milk is changed from its normal condition and rrntb*rt d unfit for human food. It has been proved that stagnant water—the water from filthy pools—is slive with or- garisms, either animal or vegetable, that make it unfit for use or to allow cows to drink. It has l»een show n hv the invent! gation« of l*rof Law- that living organ-* bin* can lx* carried in water through the tsxlv of the cow into her milk anti retain tli« 1 r vitality. It has l»een proved by ex- perinient that by feeding cows distillers’ slops the yeast plant peculiar to brewers’ yeast has thus !»een conveyed to the milk anti has lx*en found growing therein. The acidifying germs in sour whey,when ft d to milk corns, retain their vitality in the milk of such rows, causing ii to sour prematurely. Numerous well authenti raft d ca*t ■* are recorded where nnlk has ix-« n injured by the rows breaching the foul tvfors of decomposing animal mat­ter— the emanations from putrifying car. ca*-t-s of calves and horses Irft rxp*»*e<1 in the pasture Hence ir must lx*evident that sour milk when fed to milch corn* must have more nr less Influence on the milk yielded by ihe caws, affecting its flavor and rendering it more susceptible to dec *m posit ion than it would be if this character of l<*x| was not jgiven to the Cows.

Hut if niilk is liable to be injured and tain’id from the causes we have named, as well as from a great many other causes, such a« ordinarily cause the varioua dia. eases incident to the animal*, neglect in tli a case of dairy utensils, unci ran line** in milking, etc. etc . we increase the dif- Acuity by putting such milk back into the Ixxiies of the cow* to lx* again Used over in the process of secretion, anti sowing again the se«*d« of decomposition for a rr«*p of had milk.

Again, as a matter of profit, we are of the opinion that sour milk can lie used with more ad vantage as a ftxxl for hoga than f<»r cows. Hour milk makes a gtxxf diet for swine, and in connection with grain is **id to give a most excellent flavor lo the meat. Indeed, it is asserted that no f«xtd, in connection with grain or meal, is lifter suited for fattening hog* than milk, both for the increase of weight anti quality of meat which ft makes It is undoubted)v a g*x*»i, healthy ftxxi for ► wine, and i« Itetter adapted to the making of meat in this class ol animals than the production «*f inilk in cowa The best ftxmJ for milch cows is gtxKl. sweet gras* from upland pastures It ran tic produced more cheaply than sour milk, and with the light of our experience and observo- tion we should say that more profit can be realized by feeding such milk to swine than to cow*.

Teach \onr Children Practical Horti­culture.

As children have every tiling to learn, it is im|xtriant that some competent and patient person should give them encour­aging instruction alxuit preparing the soil and planting M*et|. A front many intelligent and highly-educated adults know nothing alxuit gardening |{ow, then, ran young children lie exjtecled to prepare the ground or pul in the seed without first tiring taught bow to do H? If children are at all inclined to work in the garden, lay out a plat of rich land for the boys where they may raise all kinds of vegetables and a little spring grain; and designate another plat as a flower garden for the girls, and manure the toil hnunlifully and let It be plowed or spaded deep. Then encourage the children to mark out the ground In drills, and make small bed* here and there for raising only s few specimen* of every valuable veg. l iable that is usually produced in kitcheo gardens. Provide a hounliftil supply of flower seeds for the girls, and encourage them to plant, cultivate and love flowers. Bee also that they have suitable tools to work with, and do not turn them away with an old htw or a miserable spade that a skillful gardener would reject with •corn. The heavy labor of preparing the •«il thould be performed by a strong man. os the strength of children soon fails when engaged in such fatiguing la bor as spading the garden, especially if the soil be heavy. If required to do ths spading themselves they oftet. become disheartened in their gardening opera

j Hons; and for the want of a little assist- once they ahandtm the enterprise and engage in something else. By memos of a few dimes' worth of seed and a few hours' work aod a few encouraging words small children may be taught lea sons in agrUftilture, horticulture and floriculture that will be of untold value to them when they grow up.—AT. Y Herald.

The

—How to Tell Mushrooms —prink le •ah on the spongv part of the gill of the mushrooms lo Iw thrd. If they turn yel­low they are poiennoua, but if they tarn block they are good Allow the suit to

time before deciding upon the mushroom has a

decidedly pfees set edor, end le never •limy, while those that ere dangerous have • bad odor, or ere quite devoid of

net • liuleooior Ev

How ro htipAii Calf’* Head—A correspondent of the New York Tribune,

► igns himself " Michigander,” thus tells bow to prepare ibis usually neglected dish, so that it will be fit to grace a King's table. He says : It had to be washed in cold water and then scalded. The hair was then scraped oil clean, aod Ihe head split with a sharp ax down the center, faMlwRiiiitli <M> lent, inte

Is not re­st of

off. The tin

cold water. The heed ie washed in eev- eml wafers until perfectly cl—> One- half of the heed w1 make a dinner far ail or seven hearty people, which, at theprice the heed costs, le certainly cheap

rrttm oexween me cars u> uie hi'hi two equal parts The longue le l moved, but ie epllt along with thethe heed. nor are the ear* cat ofl

enough. When washed clean the head le boiled for an hour in water with a hand fill of salt, ths head being kept covered with water lo prevent unequal discolora­tion. The brains are boiled in a little water by themselves, aad when cooked ore broken up with the water and mixed with butter and flour for thickening, and a chopped hard boiled egg, and some chopped parsley. This is served as sauce. The sauce may be poured over ihe head in the dish or served in a sauce tureen separately. The head is cut up in thin slices above the cheek, so as to give to each slice an equal portion of all the delicate parts of the meat. The lower Jaw-bone may be removed easily when the head is sufficiently boiled, and the knife will then take • portion of the tongue with each slice. Those who like it may boll a small piece of bacon in an­other pot and serve it with the head; but I advise the farmers aud the farmers' wives who read this to give the baron to the dog and eat the call's head themselves

ithout it, which ip exactly reversing the present order of things. Prepared in this wav, a calf's head is one of the in<at de­licious dishes, as well as the cheapest, that can find its way to the farmer’s table, or any other man's.

— .... —

Colorado.

Colorado to-day is the renter of the best •• well as tne largest emigration from the United State*. And with reason, for both in the way of geographical po aition, internal resource* and cape city for diversified industry it stands at the heatl of all the Terri tor fee.

Geographically, Color at lo is In the very van of the column of solid mlgra lion, being the western front of that great tier of pros|>erout common wealths which belt the Union— Prnuaylvanla, Ohio, lilt* nois, Indiana, Missouri, Kansas, Colo ratio. Emigration ala ays moves lu straight lines—the population of any one climate, soil, or temperature follow mg lu parallel of latitude. This has lxen the uniform history of settlement in this country.

Colorado, however, will have the ad­vantage of her older sisters in that, w hile their settlement was slow, fortuitous ami disintegrated, hers is rapid, organised and systematic-while their* was the aork of individuals, liers is the work of great organizations, supported by fX|x-ri- ence, capital aod oombination. Hbe lx* gins at a point the others only reached alter a generation

Already her condition reveals her vantage ground and demonstrates her position as the leader of the gnat column ol Ihe Middle Slates.

Colorado Is even now an exceptionally favored territory for any one thinking of going West to settle. Sticiety is already established there; railway communication with the Atlantic and Pacific Stale* is direct and gtMxl; the Territorial Govern­ment economically organized anti hon estly administered, extmpting the settler* from onerous taxation. Witness the fo|- ’owing lit ins:

Tax km —There were no Territorial taxes laid in 1H73.

Public Dkht.—There is no Territorial debt, and a balance of in theTreasury.

S iiooml—The educational fscilitles of the Territory are first class. The common school system is well organized. There are gotxl ladies’ theological, conventual, anti bovs’ schools. There is a college at Colorado Springs.

Tiik I'rbm—There are 7 daily and other pajx*r* published in Colorado.

Ha NX* —There are 47 banks.TkLXtiRArn.—There are 1,01H miles.

(XUTIIKKS COLORADO.Suit hern Colorado is the richest, most

fertile and miidcaLtempered section ot the great Territory of Colorado. It is a State within itoelt of magnificent propor lions, incalculable natural resources, and a diversity of soil i.nd climate, and a ca­pacity for agricultural, pastural, mining, manufacturing and commercial develop mi nt which renders it self sujxtrting.

Lying south of the Great Hivide it is the most genial climate of all Colorado.

IhcArkanssa, the greatest river run­ning from the Ihtcky Mountains, give* it the richest valley and strongest water power in Colorado.

Embracing in it* limits the South Pari and Han Juan country, it covers the rich­est mining district* of the Territory, it* minerals being not merely gold and all- ver, but coal, ir n, copper, marble, ;x*lro- leuni.

I*UBBL0.The capital city of thi* great region i*

Pueblo, located on the old trading route of the Santa Fe trail, just where that an­cient highway crossed and the trunk line of railway now crosses the Arkansas Rin r.

Pueblo is an old, well established point. It ha* been a missionary station, a trailing post, a military fort, and is now i thriving Western town. It* location Ua* been determined by the established route* of travel lor over a century. It ha* therefore a solid foundation. It is now a railway center. Five roads, two built anti Hirer building, converge here. At thi* point will slaud theOHKAT CILNTRAL CITT OK TH K FAR WRaT.

In every respect of centrality, climate, local situation, position with reference to North, South. East and W’rst, Pueblo it destined to become the great commercial city of the Rtx*ky Mountain*. For l.(NN) mile* along the base of the mountain range there is no point equal to it as a commercial center.

enmi jtkblo.The systematic development of Pueblo

toward Hiis, it* own proper ptxiition, is now going on under the suapices of the Denver A Kio Grande Railway, who have opened to colony settlement and improve­ment the land on the sooth bank of the Arkansas, heretofore unoccupied by rea­son of the want of capital in Colorado to construct the great irrigating canal nvcca- sory to supply water.

south rueblo has been regularly laid out and platted, streets opened and graded, !0,000 trees planted along the avenues and public squares, a large park laid out and planted, bridges built, and all the founda­tions for a prosperous town broadly and Intelligently lai«l. The streets are 100 feet w ide, the central boulevard l.V) feet. Arequiaa, or miniature canala, run along the front of each sidewalk.

The main work, however, is the great irrigating canal, twenty miles in length, which has already been built at a cost offiio.noo.

This canal covers and waters a tract of 10,000 acres, and this tract constitutes Ihe colony settlement of South Pueblo.

South Pueblo differs from the generality of towns just starting in having already established railwsys,telegrsph and express and postal connections with the enti.n country.

The old town of Pueblo is located on ths north bank of the river, and just op­posite South Pueblo, being connected hv lour completed bridges and a horse rail-

<^o1on!tYs, in addition to the facilities of

the new town, will hsve all the ad van tages in the way of markets, society, etc., afforded by the old town.

South rueblo is not an experiment One thousand people are now on the colony grounds.

The title ie clear and simple, confirmed by a recent act of Uongreee, aod now in the trustee* of the company

Jun Brxtam Taonreo*. FVlMt1e1p*»ta, /VxiAwt B- M. th

Rtim M fnma, fMMtWh,LaU /VeiwiM• 6B.HR CM.

lx>r» n Him, Baak«x. N«« York.Schools. Church ho. Etc —Largs res

orvation* have been and will be made for school, church, park and other public purposes.

Excesses of Emiobatioh—Persons holding certificate* of membership, who apply at an early date, will secure pea- sags and freights on household goocU, from the East to South Pueblo, at greatly reduced ratea.

These prices new art about as follows for /krm-eUm tickets t

PfcUsOsIpkts t» OmUX Pusfcta ........ PM WCWcteestl to Ooeik PsoMo................ • «r>Chisago le Ooetk Pas Ms O—ha io iiel r “Rt. lx*e»s to0o« k

* exeat -The scenery le the grandee! and most heautlfal on the continent

Soil.-The valley of Ihe Arkansas raises fifty bushels of wheat to the acre.

Social Chah< Ba —Every mans Chil­dren start equal and with even chances in the West. ...

Golowy Plah—South I hie bio is h*i°* settled by the Denver A Rio Grande Rail­way, in regular course of their plan for the systematic development of the coun­try along th# line of their route, under the same plan of colony which has proved so successful In the case of (>olorado Springs, the great pleasure and health retort.

This plan secures to the individual settler all the at Iran tages and reductions of colony emigration without subjecting him to the ordinary limitations of colo­nial enterprises, i. e , moving with a large body, or at a given time.

Full details of this plan, with pamphb ’ and map. will be furnished by either lisa* ss **i» Ritt Gasans Raii-waT Co.,

sis Sooth Fourth fttrsvt, Philadelphia. Thomas 0. Paamikm, Trra*u»*r.

Houth Put-Mo, Colorado. Nblaox Jt Hoi i Ba. t iarlDostl. O.Ifoi saooa A Pux. Bu»u>u. Mam W . O Hi • xanax. M<>Dir«*l. fanstl*.(1st! P M< Paalaxd. Hsrrtabsra. Pa.A. H-r mi maihsm X*omm Pacific Depot.

Ksn.s* City.J. Hcaos** Raowk. Csairal Ind Is* spoil*.Alaawbm Hat IIill, Loridou, Knglsud.

Dm R V. Pi «at t. *4 thr World’s IM*prii*ary, Hufl.lt>, N Y., sIium* K.onilv Medichi os lis't* won goldt ii (tiihion* slid at-lilt*vt-d world aide reputation, tficr pstlsut study *nd mui It ex­perimenting. IU( mtlrd In |K*rfv4-|ii>g a < oiu- In>ulid Kslrst t of Hmsrt Wnd, or Water P«-p- prr, that la dfstiiit-tl to txronii’ as crii-tirated as hU oilier rued hints It owe* Its t-flh ary util etilirrly lo tlm eiusrt Wt-rd, wlih h, how . svsr, is s ftotrrrigti miit-dial agent, but largt-lv to a bappv t oiiilitnatlon of that iterli with Jamah a Gliitft r and other irgetalih-agenta. The roinMiialhm is su< h a* to make It a w-ry pit atiaiit mm dv to take. Taken llib-rnaUv, tl cures Iharriio-a, fttsrtilrry (or Hh»<>d> Hus), Bummer Complaint, Cholera, • hok-ra Morbua, Ctioh ra Infantum, < oik,Cramps and I * a I It III the Stomach. breaks up Colds, Cramps, Febrile anti liiflaiiiiiiatmy Attack*, Hhruinati*iu and Ni-urnJgl*. Applied titer- nnllv, it t lire. Hpraln* and nruUea, Yntmi Kite*, Chilblains, F<-h>n«, Kht-umatlr Affec­tion*, (halt!*, Horn*, Cut*, Neuralgia. Pain in Hat k, Homie** or Htiffm ** of Joint*. Hting* and Hite* of Poisonous Insert* and K< ptlh s. Caked Hr»-a*l or " Ague in Breast," sml F.u- l*rge<t Glwiids ; in *ht>rt. Is mii iinext elhti Lini­ment for Man and lh-*»t. It is sold lij drug gl*t*'

Wn norr's Tonu u not a panacea—is not a cure fix everything, but is a < atholiron for malarious disrates, tnd day by day adds fresh laurels to Its crown of glorious sutress. Ku gorged Livers and t*ple« ns. along the shady bank* of our lakea and river*, are restored to their healthy and ntxmil set-re lion* Health and vigor follow Its use,and ( hills have taken their depart ure from every household where Wilhoft s Anti-Periodic is kept and taken ft*.n’t fail to try it Wu at LOCK, Ki.m.ay A Co.. Proprietors, New Orleans.

Fok RA1.K AT ALL (IRIOOHTI.

TooTHm Rt proceeds from ague in the fare operating upon the exposed nerve of a de. rayed tooth. Hub th«* gum thoroughly with the finger wet with /nAw**»n’» .(*<»/yv /.ISl- tnmf, heat the fat e weft, and hip a flannel wet with the liniment >xi the fare. al*o put s little of the Uniimnt Into the ratify oi the tooth oil cotton.

( of t mki « discovered Aroxrh a, but It h** tiecn found tliut the only economical « for children are the celebrated HILVKK TIPPED Never wear out nt the tor. and arc- worth two pair* without Tips.

All Lb zlt-r* sell them.

Tnr system frequently gets out of order anti should In* at tmee regulated, t l-e other troubles w tl) rn»iie; when physic is needed take /'iir***' /'ttr/l/st fl*lU ,* they arc * safe, wholesome and natural inediclnr.

Ths NokTiiwssrzKH Horsb Natl Co.’s ** Kinbhrd " Nail is the Iwwt in the wtxld.

KZ

art a par mi tm Um frill farea, and willume to time aa those fane <

HftALTB-A.il the world orado to find health Health man's capital

turn reduction

RdtoOoL

lathe poor

Thirty Years* Fipriicars of on OVq Harm.

Mas. Winote's Sooratss STare Is the |>r«wriir- tlos of use of the bast Keatwie Physiclsas saU Santa la the Called Siauw. and has bees asrd for thirty years with sever-fablo* safety sod surer** by milk lows of mothers sad children, from the (cable Lsfaal of owe week old to the adalL It corrects acidity o' the stomach, relieve* wlad colic, regulates tha bow­els. aad gives rest, health, aad comfort to mother and child. We believe It to be the Beat aad Barest !>ms dy in the World is all cases of DTSEXTERT aad DIAKKIDLA IN CHILDREN, w bather It arises froai Teethia* or from soy other cause, fall dlrerUoas for wstag wtil sreompaoy each bolt:*. N« n* Ceoaloa aaieas the fac-elsiUe of Cl HTlb A lYUkiM U oC the outside wrapper.

0ou> sv all Mamas ■ Dbalbbs.

( hlldren Often Look I'wle nod Stek

from ao other rsose l baa hsetag worms la tha stom ach.

BROWN-S VEUMIFUGX CoMFITtwill d**tr«g Worms wr.hoot lojont to tha child, beta# perfectly w hits, sod free from all coloring or other Itjurious litgredieau usually used la worm prepsrn

CURTIS A BROWN, Proprietors,No. O filtoo street. New York.

Solt bf /trwppUM and Ckrmuu. and baaian m jfsdKiaM.ai Twsjf-rr rivsCairs a Dux.

T e Old tltsn Rsilssg l.liiliiunl ha*pr<>doeed nxx* cures of rheumatism, beursIgUt. ■prslns. scalds, bums, salt rheum, sore alpplea. sweil- lutf. :*maoe««, cbappeil baud*, pots*>n»a bit**. stings, beulsea, ata . etc., va men. *umn sad ehUdrea ; sod • prsln*. strala*. *wlk. stUf joists. luSammauoa. etc., la beast*, than all other HolmenU put together. It will do vhat I* promised or ye tna>uey refunded

11# animating the Hair.— Wheo the l.alr eeaar* to draw from the scalp the uatwrs) lubrlraot which U It* sasteoaace. Its vitality li. a* It were, sus­pended, and. If hot promptly illrndal to, bsldaes* will be the certala result. The one sure method of avoldlag such aa sopleaaant catastrophe la to use Ltoh's K ath aiu<>x, which, wheo well rubbed Into thr scalp, will speedily re a Lima te the hair aad pre­vent It from fa.Mag out.

The Secret of ( a )>t I vsl Ion.— Feature* ofGrecian mrxild. a well turned neck and besntifalty- fouaded arms, are so doubt very nice thing* to have, aud ladle* who p#wsctw these ebann* have reason to be thankful to Mother Nature . yet. after all, the most captivating of all womanly rharms Is s pore, fresh and brilUant rtxnplcxioo. Thu superlative faactna- tioa any lady may secure by using Hasan's Ma<*so­us Hal*. _________________

The brand Devolution IV MSBPTAL TBBAT- iiv r whlt-h was commenced In ISO) U still la prog­ress. Nothing can stop «, for It la founded on the principle, sow universally acknowledged, that phynl- cal vigor U the nrnit formidable antagonist of all hu­man ailments, aod experience hae shown that Plas- Tation Bittim la a peerless tnvlgorsnt, m well ss the beet possible safeguard against epidemic disease*.

meat.Asra■ a can be enrsd. bee Hurst'* advertise

Profitable Employment.Wwrklht hivrrytMuiy. Ussit Wsyrt. Per­manent I oi inr st. Rrn and \% <mii« n

wanltd. Full part irwlars fFre. Address W. A. IIETDERIOX A ( O,

rievtlsad. O.. or M. Lesla Mo.

Hsrket st , o r Wsshtngtoo Chicago. Ill .$2.50 PER DAY ! 200 ROOMS I

J. ItPLB wiLkOH. Frwp*r.

Golden sunbeams.The latest sad best Mode Boot for the Owndny

School sad Roms lire* ham pie Copy sent on rw- ceipl ot .*> rsuia. 1.XK A IRKfAllO, kxtui.\f I IV 1-' VT talltTwHim' TtiBs-vl I £j 1 IMIX1RTFR*' FRD Its mt gw»«Tg up Clsb* In Town* aad < owatrr. for th* oldest Tea Co. I* America. Greatest Inducement* Send for 11renter CANTO* TEA TO , IW Chamkere sc. X T

- I ambs' Fsisnp** mottlna 1 articles ecd*-d ky every Lady—.'Meat Needle

Threader, *cl**wr*. Tbuwhi* he guar, sstred worth |tVS S«nip<e Ooi. hy mall, » rests. Agent* wasted Fl.U HR A CO , IMS IU street, Philadelphia. F*

To Miller* and Fnglne Owner*.To nearly doable roar steam jwevr sod ww fast so. address J,r TALLANT. Dnrttagton. lows.

* PER D * Y Coomtestow or f Ml s week Ml VAtJ eey. aod esn—sol We oft-r It aad will pos 1* Aroly paw. H. Wtdtlwr Afs.. Hart.

I0NEY! M’SJSS.isr,MX owtoHotven •—tre ba |»vo0i Address sictRITT rt’kDs.FTo. Hot MW Ctoc

secsrtiy __ J* ftirtsMtl

Victorious at VioiaiTHE dying bodyOvftf 81 Competitors.

WHEELER&WILSON’SNEW

ISS7-E2 U3-CT

Sewing Machine,No. Ov

FOR FAMILY U8E,

HeavyTailorini anil LeatherWork.Attention Is Invited to the Snperlov etrell*oe« of

th.* Machine, suute of the point* of which are ;1,—A Higher Rate of bpeod, with less lability toWfir.•J,—Simplicity of ConatmcUon and F^se of Manage- meat.

Ja—p.HAinvenea* and Certainty In all Its Morement*. .—The Independent 1 ske up, draw mg up the hi itch

when the N»- n.i;n j ,i , t u, •,Furtvoted btreugth of beam aud Dcauty of► tit#h.AiisptaWMty to a much wider rang* of Work than any other xewing Machine lu ei,»ienre.

T.—It i* the o*»l| e-'Wlog vi*< hine * isi>t.-d to th*-IA> f < f M'l : - -( <>rd • Utuul U.« s*« of RtUbl AtU' liuttidi therefor.

PRIV( If* t L OFFH K,

625 Broadway, N. Y.Agencies Throng boat Ike ( iviliaed World.

HOUSEHOLD “"i' w',,

PANACEA To all persona tuff-ring asp tmm Rheumatism, Neuralgia,

Cramps In the limbs or ttotn- ach. bilious Colic. Fam In tbs hack, bowels or aide, we would

y Ths Hocsshold I'anacsa awo Faxilt Ltstxsjrr Is of all

HOUSEHOLD Others the remedy yon want PANACEA *ur lBtrrn*1 external u*s.

FAMILY

LINIMENT . f>at“ fe

FAMILYLINIMENT

It ha* cured the abeve com- plaint* ts th#>u*and* of ca*c*. There U no mistake ab#>ut lk Trv <t gold by *1] Druggist*.

MSB

<~o8-JP

|??| §S ^ ? S “ *2 •r-yXHir3 t*3 W Z. V »f . ; m ri S

"THE THRESHER OF THE PERIOD.

fe

THROAT and LUNGDISEASES 11

It I* the vital principle ot the Pin* Tree obtained ly s peculiar process in th* dutiustion of tne tar, bw wtuch its highest mcd> nal propm.es are rvUjited. Y*t evea in t* crude state ha* been recommended by eminent physician* of ctc-p i W It is confidemly ufl'rcd lo the afflicted for the following simple reasons;

»» It CV»«s,-mX b t** ccag*—but by d.vsolvtng the Dhifk*p and ouutmf a*/«># to tkruw off the unhealihy^tnatter causiog th* imtAt>oa. In cases <•/ CORttr*rnos it both prolong* andleader* leas burdensome the life of the aflli ted sufferer.

e. lu healing principle acts upon the irritated tor. fcce of th* lunge, fmet-.iting t* ml di/#aW/set, rwoev .ng pam. ana amddmtmg mjtan notiew.

Y It rvairiK* awp imkmu tw* sloop. Pnettiwo- ty ewrlag sM humors, fr m the cummoa rtwrLS or ■avmoM to the eeverest cases Z Scrofula 1 housand* ot • IS da eft* could be prodt. - d ft m th«.ae who hav* Wt the beneficial effect* of ptw* Ts** Ta* L>sdial la th* various diseases sm ug from tarvaiTi** op th* stnoo.

* A MUfyii a/#i the d+esth* errant and entreat the aefietitf

AU who bar* known or tried IV L. Q C W%. kart’» remedies reoutre no references from us, but tha

e* of thotitan'l* cured by them can be gives to mx wksdsabkasr Dr L Q C

i and>«

tf&s: Great Ameruan

BUPPIJIIJ WITH THft

VIGOR OF LIFETHBOUOH

DR. RADWAY’8

Sarsaparillian Re­solvent,

THE GREAT BLOOD PURIFIER.ONE BOTTLE

will make the Blood pure, the Skin clear, the £y*e bright, the Complexion smooth and traaepareal. the Hair strong, and remove all bores, I'Unplea, Blotchee, Pustule*, Tetter*, f anker*, etc., from the Heed. Face, Knelt. Month sad hklA. It I* pieMSul to take and ihg do*« M small.

It Resolve# sway Dteeaard Iicposttsi It Purifies the blood and Renovates the System. It cure* wUh

certainty all Chronic blMain that have lin­gered la thesysteui fivetx ten years, wheth­

er It be Scrofula or SypbUttic, Heredi­tary or Cobtaglou*.

ss it seated is tm*

Lungs or Stomach, Skin or Bones, Flesh or Nerves,

CORRUPTING THK SOLID* AND ViTL'.TIKQ TUX PLUGS.

IT Pi THK ONLY FOklTIYE (1 RE P0R

Kidney and Bladder Complaints,t rlnary and Wf.ntb I)i#run. Gravel. Dtsbctcs, l>rop-•T- stoppage of b»irrt Incontlnrnce of t’rlim. Bright’• I»’»* s*c. Albtiritliiuria, sod In ail room where I-• r. are t fick-dnet deposit* ; c nr- he rofula. Glandular hwt-lMi g. flat king Dry ( owgh, C*tM«rou» Aff* < th,r *. HtiU.TlIttc < •tniplalufs. Hired- Ing of the Lung*. l>y •••cp*la. W *tt f Hrasli. Tic Pouloo- r»-ux, White hueJIltiiMi Tnmor*. I'lrcra, hkln and Hip I>1»< *•«-#. MemirlsI Diseases, Fetnah- < otrtolaliit* Gotti. Rk k«’t*. halt Rhetnu ttrunrhitl*. t rxt-•umt'tum l.ivrr Complaint*. Hern Ir tt*#* Throat, Mouth, Tumors, Nods* to the Glands and other part* of the ay*i«’m, Hor* Py**. htrumor* u* i>t-« h*rg» • from the Kars, and the worst furn-s of Mt'n {>►• **«-», I "t. fr*X f-’O*. Mil Hrul, I: g W .halt IClteum, Kryslp#-!**, Arne, Bla# k Hpota. WOrtit* In lh* Flc*h. Ca#>r»*r» In thr Womh. and si w«-sk*aing and painful dl*< harg>-s .Sigtit pwests. Loss of sp^rut, and all waslrs ot the Itf* principle are » It tiln the curative rangr of this wonder of Modern < tieuitstrv. tnd * few d«v*‘u*# will prove to any pers«in using .t for either of Uiesc form* of dhn ast: IU p >l«-ut power to cure thciu.

Sold by Druggists. $1.00 per Bottle.

‘ CRCCI7. tfttC^iS!^^

Tkte 1* the fnm<m* “V ih« tw»x'* Tmbk*iifil which has •• reatevi turh-a rt rolulmo in ti.e tmie *n<l twwwmte m n 11 t ear AiitrsifRD ss th* "lealins Tlire»hcr" t>f this flat and generation Nortthsithou A.in-1 gram ml**r# jxtnM*»incc t hoc machine*SXTIRKI.T t >rgi ALijtti for gnua saving, lime saving. an<l tnonev miiinf.

Four alsra made, wist 14-lnth, M- I*»cli. 3i>ln< Ii, mikI 3ti*lsrk (tllnders, w Ith ft, H, IO ami I ff-llorac ** vf out,ted*' P‘<wrr». A Iso %• pnrulurs •• alone ** ri# nrrsvlt lnr^i<-s,n l'<iwrr,aii«l Improved l*t> m T % ii1.1; HiKin K.Nt*lsi.n for XIcmiu .Tfai illnca

All |er*m« inlt'iwlirff to hue Thrc*h>r r Mt eklne*. <x be;*irat<>r# "altar," or If >r*c l*"wcr» ’bliMif." nsrll aiiiRtiv I* xts r. xs «si> j «gwSRS sl srieanwl to the le-l it h ant« re, arc ini ital lorcnd for <>tir new forty page liju*tmlc*l f tniphlet *rwl Cirv-ular* [eenff-ee' grt it*g full tetrti* tiljr* al*>ut Um-or Iinpiuvol M t* lunca at*! oilier infor tnaisin valuable lo fsju.crs an-1 thresher meg. Addrssq

Mi'llOldk SUEP ARD A CX>.Battle zVswA.

WISHARTS

v/ • / : h • t> '■CVy dy i V

mNatnro’s Great Remedy

RADWAY'SREADY f RELIEF!

Ths Cheapest sod Best Medicine tor Family Use in ths World 1

ONE 60-CENT BOTTLEI wrti.rrRE Mor.ECGMpi aints as i> pkfvfntITHKNY-TEM A«»Alb-T BI DDF.H ATTA<hnt»K

E.PIbKMl* h AXP ( i'M AlilOC* I»IH AM s HI Mf ONK HUNDKKD DOLLAR)* BXPXMDF.D IqR OTHFH XLLDltLXu OR MkIM« AL AlTKM> A>L.

Tt!F. MOMENT ItADWT AY'S BEADT PFL1FF T-. AITIIt-D K.VT KRNALLV—OR TAkth IVT1U

| Vi A LI Y A< < OltMMt TO pllll' TlnN' PAIN ' FROM W1LV LU CAL sk. cLX'te Io K\l-* f.| IMIH1RTA VT —Miners. Fanners, sad other* rt-sld [ tr.g la apses*!/ Frilled district* vfcm- It is <1 fhmlt to I ►• urtt th# •crtieca of a physician, RADW AY'S

KKAPT KFUKF ts lATsfwabla. |i i»« l<* u«<4 »na p'.altivc ••sursticc of d*»ti.g g«M>d is a.I ca*-s wrbcrw i>*in or diHoiufcrt is exprri-nccd i or if *t»*cd with Itifiarnza, Dinlithcrla. bore Threat. B*d < ougt>s, H mltous Colic, laflaiumsiiori >f the Bow-rls. St ntsen. Lungs. I.lvcr. Kldn# y* *nr writh Croup, unlnty, > ever and Ague, or with Neuralgia, llcsd* *i h«. Tic Honlnnmjx. Toothache. I aroche; or w •* LoinNog ,, pain In the Back, or Rh'-umatlain ; or with Iiisrrhira. t bolcra M'Xbus or Diorntrry-. or with Burn*. ncaM* or Hrwisc* ; or with plrsiua. t rwmp* nr >■!•#»ii.• Tha application of KADVAt 1*1.ADTill I IFF will core you wf th* wuist ot ILcoc ot-iu- plaint* Is • few hours.

Il.tV •At II. HKAKTBI KV hit K HKADA- 111 DIM:- KHtdk. DVnXSTIKY, < 1>U« . W IND I> IHE R* • w hIJt. *nd all INTERN \L PAIN*.TrwirU r* should always carry a tM*ttl* of R\D- W \T h Rh ADI KFLIKt with them. A (• * water will brevent skknews or pains frr»m vhsng* < f water. It fa bcUcr u-ac French Rrwody or Rittcrv a* S sUhiUlasL

Sold by Druggist*. Pried, 50 Cent*.

DR. RADWAY’S

RE6ULATM FILLS!Prrfaetly tastclcas. rlogsntly coated with sweet gum. purge rfjrulate. purify, rteackc *' d strength«*u r.Vn- WAi *S I ILL*, fortkeenrr of ail disorder* of tti* hU»msch, Llvrr, lWiwrls. Kidney*, Bladder, Nervous Disease, Headache, t oull|utl«Q ( «*liif«#*«. Indi-

.. Dy spends. HUIbMn w*. B.'!'*»» 1'^ ■ Infiam- mstl< n of the Bowel#, P:lea. and all Derangement of ;rrn»l Vi* e-% W arrant*d l«ef' enrw. Purely Vegetable, conuuntag uu inert ury, m aerate or 4*l«teH*w drug*

{ jr< ihscrTe the following •tmi’torn* rccolungfrum Di- orders of the Dlgeatlve Organ*:

t one m pat Ion. Inward Pile#, r'nllncw* of th* n> od In the Head, Acidity of Uie Stomach. N »o*e». Heart­burn, Disgust of Food, FulJixn* of Weigt.t In the btoinach/V-jur Eructation* Sinking or Fluttering at the Pit of Ui« htotnach, hwimniirg of the Head. Hur­ried and fdfflcurt Breathing, Flnticiirg at the Ile4rt. ( huklng or huffocstiug SenMtiona vhm lo a Lying

nines* ofl temn. fh.i* r»r "•night. Fever and Dull Pain In the Head. Iieflclency <-f |*. r,pieatl->o. Yellowness of the hkm and > ye«. Pain in the hide, CTirat, L)m>**, sod huddea j !u*b<-« of Heat. Hurtling I* the M«-*h.

A few d«<acs of BADWATTI PTI.1A will free tbs •y*lriu from *11 the above-named duxirdera. (Price 25 ct*. per Box. Sold by Druggists.

Reoxl “FALSE AND TRUE."S- nd one letteratamp ta H U'T AT A CO , No. XI

Warren street. Kew York, lofunuation worth thon- •aada will be seat you.

Kschino Compuy

-------------------- ---------------- l>yif*prmweww Simas Imnrv have never bean eg____•nte ky all Druggwts aad Storekeeper*, aad at

Dr. L a C. WISHARTS Oflea,Aa, Ml M. Maenad Mi^ PhUndTm,

|~A8THMA~Pephaiw s Asthma SpcclOc.Warras 1*4 ta rdsw umj ram la

rsa st,tm• T"we SeortSe ta Mow euro*

ma. aa4 tl Wo* r,Xev»4 m vWs I **V# two#* frn«a " CftOaoa Ha»iaa-T. t-.a—Un,. M.

■Md *r all o-wccwta. »1 b*s. U ma*. *a*iv&l-CTBIII, I’ If k AG F FKFK

AdSiwsi lorl,«»ii« Moot),,t. roPN*n « m,

rtsantnu, rn#The Mfr

and Publlti Service* mtBy C. Edwards Lester This work has been seme fear* in preparation, moat of the matter having hewn furnished by Mr Sumner Miner if < ootaln. pages. •• etspsolmsM nortratt and numerous ItwstrmtMoa

' toi trnwmSmi* Belt very. AbkTTS

NEW STYLE OF MAPS.^X*f* of th* United State* to arranged ss l# ffvw the pwrtbaser * map »( any of tb* w eaicrw States he mar With to sre-M,ipary |( on the e*m# shaet. lt* ■*btb*m is!Htm**lMT of style under H » tnsrked sncceea Trnns mxklxist (o Agent* wishing tb sa.l m by * idrwiag R I FI !BLtujl 1KI».

< lath Xlivet- 4 h ItsgW

CHARLES SUMNER

frr unilxf vutd ta U* Ibaissry Um. Mirra tha it

HAIHILTON, OHIO, or ST. LOUIS, MO.* ■ 1

Inqalrer* please m*aUsa where they saw UI*.

SKLTZEK

If Ihe ktsmsrh I* wrsnf all Is wrong. T * w- ittr's Dnmw ivt ftbLTxga ArniivT. whil* sellng as a corrective wpon that org* n. geullv expels all tnorhtd matter from the alimentary eaoal. and

> healthy acuvity to ths slwggUb Uvwr.impart* a health* aciSold by all druggist*.

WANTED NTSioDAY.

TStoll »N- HOME aHtTTLF »KWI»i.Mlf 111\ K where we trv not represcytad. Reader" L’fLVi ■‘Me money **l)iwj the “IIOMF TLX” Whether yon are fcX PERriTM KT» ir nm orsec If yon wish to bwj iliwus for family nee our rtrr-uiar* wffl

. -HI T-In tne bust ai *<-■!>•

yu« bow to

< L ARK A CO., Cine***, ltd.

Ai XTHD ta Ladle*' w

OBH fl WAffTHl ba ssH Articles foer>lately nacess* ry. R <Y, They give roo *►Y C AM HITIl.%I>k 4 lh) AN IT

UtudUrr-dar. "H rnRlkEUlZlU't).iiuDh-', xireed. vm York.

W* *!»

m>ncMl t hat

Ssftr itima baa.Pi a a

CS^LL1

r\ *

OB. BAW’i ft. rtTOM*BFAMILY PHYRICIANWill hs *ent free by mail t« aar an* I

i to II* •» saw at. hiw Ton

M JPfSWf,o4SSRST0KSl 55 nV.il‘jicww OTarff faii^rar fOSH.-W WTTBie wjr IMHHqi b.\,b4M BAMM oVBPhlh A hm. H. a t eft m « rt s- a i « ui mi i

msmnm on *♦»*• kWi.

H • rWPT « pftft r A | W v T MThU itwnk wWHHVk tty titty, e »#•,« . # mm •» IFt • XiHA >*■« < naHaehtol P»h tw.X» la

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