5
ten LOWELL WEEKLY Office in Graham's Block, Up Stairs. "Llborfy ancl Union—Ono and Inseparable." V O L U M E VII.I Tpnr.s, 31 50 per year in Advance L O W E L L , M I C H I G A N , W E D N E S D A Y , A U G U S T 1871. m m h e r ter pn:c ffhc f o u ' f U loutnal, i." rrni.MiiKD txtur AVndncHtln y Momlnp;* AT LOWKLI., MICH.. —IIY— MORRIS & BINE. -V ••i Ni n • 1 i» |, Tl... rtlPi; Hr-a iisea. sod, I- the the re at,'. Chok; her. i; o: ore m v- res, Buck. 0. Burt. Bur ( Cci» and Its. Ofllce, 2(1 lloor OraliKinV lllorjt. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. For one year $1 .'Kt For *1* months, 75 II ileliTercJ by Iho Carrier, 2 00 RATES OF ADVERTISING. Ten IlncRof Nonpareil, clone matter make asquare " Space. | 1 w I ' l mo.' j 3 BIO. I 6 mo. | 1 y r #12.00 Fort's Wostorn Modloino ManTx Co I O W K h l . , Mich. CbartTi-d Cnpluil «IIX),000.— i I'teriili-ni, K. I.kx ./r. ; Vice I'litt,, >1, It. Uuib- I.M r ; Si'p'y, W. W, Jmi.xtiO.v ; Treasurer, .1. W.Xoii- TON. Ili.fi-r.'iice L.y iiennlt'l'm, l.owell Nntional Il.NNK. : umce on Iltlilg.- .-I. K. .M. KoKT, Oen'l. Agent. J o h n T o y l o r , I UO.V Foumkr .nil manufaciurcr of varloni kimN of: I'lown, llarron*. Cultivators, Scnpern, hob sleigh' ' | and ill kinds of/saMInx to order, l.owell, Mich. | | H. ROBS. H Or.SK.-Siijn, Carriage and ornamental I'aintlnR, Graining. Marhehng, I'aper llanKing, Kali>o- mining, Kc., Barbin's shop, .Iiinctlon o| River and II road way atrcets. John Romig, S HAVIN'O, Shampiioing, Hair Cutting, and whl»- kei 1 * dved nilli neatness and de^atch. Kooms, 2d Boor Graham's Illock, apposite National Bank. 16.00 25:00 10.00 75.015 LOWELL MATIOKAL U M OF L O W E L L . CAPITAL, - - 3100,000* , SURPLUS, - - - 10,000. DIRKCTORV, Il.A.Ricr, FRaxeiR ICixa, WM.W. HATCH, C. It. HIM:, MvHON H . NOIITON, C T, WOOIUNO, A. .S. STA.VXAKU, A.J.KCKF.R, JAH W. NOHTOX. InteroHt Paid on T>ci>oslts. II. A. RICE. President. JAS. W. NORTON. Vice Pre HENRY Jl. CLARK, Cashier. Lowell, Ang. Oth, 1871. N E W YORK STORE. You Can Take My Hot. We wore once coming over tin- railro i'l I r o i n W a s l i i n ^ t o n c i l v to timord, ulien wo observed .1 peculiar •'(), } oiir tick- t ua.s i,, vo r- sort of a man silling i..,,-.! by—a tall, ljaiul , 1 ,1 0 - ' i-»", oand . iuggesied tlio conJuclor. slim, good nalured fe low, I>nt one '• i i c k e t ! I i a v e n 1 ' v.-i jim* k T ^ - k o d i t o u i o f llie •.vin.Iuw, hai ;uul ill?— Do \on want i n a d d insult to injurv your ik-k-'t -.vas in -.nur i^t- "S 1 Square. I $1.00 $8.601 «0.00 I |3.00 2 Squares 1.60 6.00 1 8.00 1 12.00 * Column, 6.00 8.001 lf..00 1 20.00 « " 8.00 13.00 25.00 30.00 1 '• j U.00 20.001 30.001 40.00 Looalit 10 cents per line lor flrat insertion, fcac'i I subsequent insertloa SMntiptrllfCi Marrlane anfl Df»th nollc«sfree. Obituary notices, 6 cent* per line. Card* In Bustnes* Dlrectorr$5 per annum. Yearly adrertlsers eutltled to change onarterly. Legal Noticesat Statute Rates. All legal must he paid for when eflldaTit la made, rranalentadrertisemeots must be pre-paid. ' These terms will be strictly adhered to. / business i. o. o. r. B 'ARMONV LODGE, No. 148, of Lowell, Mich., meets every Monday evening, in old Masonic [. Arrlne Peck, N. O. f 8. B. Knapp,Sec. J . M - Mfttbewson. urc 1. XJOTARV, Attorney and Solicitor. Will attend to liroai- Jxj busineas In any of the State er United States Dlseac Courts. >K Iro. . Bpedl attention given to Conveys tiling. Collecting ' aad Onancerv business. Ofllce ever Lowell National Bank, Lowell Uleh. T . J . BUjrton. A TTORNEY at Law, and Solicitor In SUte or Uni- tedSutesConrta. r « m and Tillaft property for sale or rent. Llcens- I'CHin ' f j Claim Ageatfor pro curl a g Penilona and Bounties ' . from Gevernment. Office In Graham's Block, up- in, LowslI, Michigan. wmpifi i.ablo..^v|' nd n e n , , 0 XV8'. A Milton M. Perry. Ml Estate, Insurance, and Collecting Agency. pHce over Hloe k NOkie's Store, Union Block, t«le. R o b e r t H u n t e r Jr., r ITlCE of the Peace, will attend promptly to Ool* lectlng. Conveyancing and all bnalneaa intrusted to my care, Ofllce oTer Hunt k Hunter's Drug Store, Lowell, Hieb. illy one', f our w ' enloyD j their r , [ell." Tr •';? uvnely ^ .-g b b s , or r " W. Falleu, M.O.. P HYSICIAN and Surgeon, Lowell, Hicb. Ofllce over National Bank. Bealdence on Hudson St. opposite reeideaee of C. B. Hiae. J. Hovmrd BmiUi. M . D . TTOMKOl'ATHIC Pbysiciaa and Burgeon. Offlee JTl front room over tb« Met office. Residence on Depot Road. Call* attended promptly, day or . Bight. Dn. Peek ft MoDtnnell. ph/slciani aadStuyons, Office in Masonic BulK^. * o. oiiicnAKW^, MRS. J . ROMIO, m a n u f a c t u r e r nf Switches, Curls a Braids. Keeps on hand a good assortment of Mohair Switches, Curls, 4c. Cash paid for Ladies' Hair. H o w k f t W h i t e , D KALERS in Bools, Shoes, Leather, Findings, kc. Particular attantlon given to custom work- Store in Checkered Building, ne*t door west of JWa- sonic Hall. C. Broad & S o n . D EALF.RS in Boots, Shoes, Leather Finding* Ac. Custom work done with neatness and despatch. Remember the place first door west of Graliam'a Illock, Bridge Street. O . R . Covlll- G ENERAL Canvassing Agent. A!! kinds of book* can be obtained of him at lowest rates.— Address l.owell. Atkins & Somerby. D EALERS in Agricultural Implement*. We also sell thejustly celebrated Lumber Wagons and Ruggies manufactured by J. A. Adam* Bros. Busl- i> "ss place one door East of Posi Ofllce, Lowell, Mich. Devendorf & Blain, D EALERS In Fancy Pry Goods, Ribbons, Carpeting, Hats, Cdps and Notion*. Flint door west ol Lo- well National Bank. Oeo. B. Balcom, P RACTICAL Watchmaker and Jeweler. Watches, Clocks and Jewelry repaired and warranted.— Jewelry made to Older. Shop In the Post Office. Simon H. Hanson, M ANUFACTURER of and DnUr in na-waro, Copper-ware and Sheet iron. Special attention « lven to roofing, e*ve-troBghiog and Job work,— bop opposite Hunt k Banter** drag store. J a c o b R a m a d e l l . H ARNK83 MAKER aad «addler. West Side Plat Ri»er. The beet stock Manuhetarad, and first class workmen employed. Grand Rapids Business Di- rectory, P e r r y B r o t h e r s , l^XOLU^iVE DKAL«fc3 IX Hats, Cape. Furs, •Ci Glo Wholesale and Betall, Ko. 11 Mon- roe strc ^t Grand Rapids. H. O. Stephenson. H OM«PATIUC PhysUUa k Serge Especial attenUonflrento Syphllrtlca chrenlcDi• ILDRE X "SK UlepfciasM-s Patent Tr- ^ Hnppo,,. eroftt # er*, mannlactured to order. vork w , rrt Bted to tse of 11 give satisfaction. Residence, first House ^ th r UnI0n gchool jmulaiK Bouse. *111 * Sv*. Th lu n U I r n p D V T . B . Lamb, M. D., 14 J -ATHIC Physician and Burgeon. Office ^nsldeiir niTI 1 -'- Flit River. CalU at- . t e n d e d rtU,promptness. Wm. Pullen, T\EALEB in Ready-made Olotblug, Cloths,Gent's rard. ^ U FnrnUking Goods, lists, Csps, Bdols and ^ CloUilag cat and made to order. Store P fa., w m" Block, Shoes, Pullen's street. h 18,1W -i'-' i Gere • A useful s orv-i Yd icssesel thesyiif ,1 WARDi'fll ion, J R e e s B r o s . T\»ALKRain Dry Goods, Clothing, Yankee No- ll Hons, Bats and Cap*. Clothing out and made to order. Store in Oiaham's Block, Lowell, Mlclr Sherman & Mills. TSEALBRS in Dry Goods, Clothing, Bsots, Shoes, 11 Hats, Caps, Vutnishing Goods, Ac. Union Block, West Side. nry/mni: Uf. .• „ „ M "nBALERS in D17 Goods, Groceries. 2?' ,1' JJ Shoes, HaU and Caps, Crockery, kc . . u ';' W Graham's Block, I^iwell, Mich. of Ini,'. lis hom: : C. 0> Stone ft C o . Groceries, Boots and Store in MPSO.V iennar^. Hlne ft Noble. V TV BALERS in Dry Goods, Clothing, HaU Caps, '* JJ Groceries, Ac. . . , . - IJ. B.—Clothing made to order. Store in brick block, opposite Franklin House. K 'WM ; frequr:'] recomn/ja liifs, l-ui. ' A s out of 7. v, I hair W vith a ci. ft ices a n d ; . ® sefulntt# B liart !or full CO!/ lyllrm. u ta/t It may '•>{* ry bt:.cf S LUK'S. Chaa. Althen. EALFR In Ready-made Clothing, Genfa Fur- "? "RiSnlahlng (• oods,'Hats, Capi, AoT" Comer store ^ w - J ^ u d Fist River Bridge, Lowell Mich. UD. g wr C . ate* •1 dall, >, rhilaiM m the nm ;j J o h n K o p f f t Co. D EALERS In Furniture of every kind. Patent Spring Beds, warranted. Ruady-made Coffins constantly OR hand or made to order. Manufactory and Ware-room nearl). k M.Depot. Wilaon ft Sdie- A ll kinds of Blacksmlihlnt, Uorse-ihoeing wag- on and Carriage ironing duuo promptly. S d g a r M o r a e . O MNIBUS Lino from Clifton House, and all other Hotels and Private House*, tn aud from all train*. F r e e O m n i b u a B . A . Harlan. A TTOENEY at Law, Solicitor in Chaacery, and J\. Judge of Probate of Keut County. Offlco In County Building, Grand Rapids, Mich. Bweat'e Hotel, G RAND Bapiils, Mich. X. H. Lyon, proprietor, formerly of the Rathbun House. Rathborn House. A KTISDEL k HAWK, Proprietors, corner Moo- roe and Waterloo Streets,Grand Raplds,Mlch. wTp.BarkerT D ENTIST, 66 Monroe St., Orand Rapida Mich. All work done io the bast manner and at reasonable prices. Loomls * Brown. T HE PLACE to buy Boots and Shoes, I* at Loomls k Brown's 30 Canal Street Grand Rapids. S- D- Parks, D EALER in .Watches, Clock*, Jewelry and Silver Plated Ware, No. 22 Monroe Street,' Grand Rap- id*. Personal attention to repairing, and work war- ranted. J a m e s Q a l l u p , W liOLKSAI.K and Ret >11 Druggist, Ko. 6 Canal street, Orand Rapid*. A. Preusser. W ATCHMAKBR k Jeweler, and dealer In Fine Uold and Silver Ware, 21 Monroe street. Al- so all kinds of Sporting Implements, Grand Rapids. Sonthwlck ft Wright. D EALERS in Crockery, Glnsswsro, Silver Plated Ware, Chins, Table Cutlery, Ac., 41 MonroeSt., Graud Rapids. Currier ft Putnam. D KALERS in School, Mlscellsneoui, and Blank Books,also,Stationery, WallPapers, Ac., Book Binders and Box Manufacturers, No. 10 Pearl street. Grand Rapids, A. W. Carrier, T. O. Putnam. B . M . Stowe. TXTHOLESALE and retail dealer in Hats and Caps, Vy Furs, Rolies, Gloves, Ac., and Fashionable Millinery Goods, 40 Monroe Street, Grand Rapid*. Established 1837. Sil- E B. DIKEMAN, Watches. Clocks, Jewelrv ver and Plated Ware, 26 Canal street, dpecta cles a speciality. Harness and Saddlery. B AVING In the Inson, ai A VIJjG recently purchased the stock and Interest basinets of Barnard k Son and O. A. and opened In the building south of U. B. Williams, west side of Flat River, lam ired dlery to Attend to all business in the Harnesa and Sa^U line. It i* mv purpose to keep the BEST STOCK AND WORKMEN. and spare no pains to build my busineas upon an honest foundation. Do not (ail to give me a call and examine my (tock- M C 0 P RAMSDELL. Lowell, J u l j 13th, 1870. 7-44 7-44 Reward Given. A LL WHO have got the Catarrh will | get a reward by procuring a bottle I of DR. H. It. PECK'S CATARRH SPECIFIC! ! As it was never known to fail in any gen-1 nine case of Catarrh, and glvea relief, the | tint dose, causing no pro*lrating effect on i the *y*tem. Sold by Druggists. Lowell, Nov. f5th, 1870. 7-44 7-44 1 o o VILLAQE LOTS FOR SALE, W E S T SIDE, ON ftiftg. MfiLL'8 ADDITION T 0CATED on Water, Broadway, Hndion. Mapla JLi and Brush Stress. For particulars, enqalre of Mn. Bnell, or 0. B. Williams, at the "Elk Bom Store." These lots will be sold ea time. , „ . 0/4R0L1KK SNELZ,. Lowell, Februarv 28th, 1870. Siatf NOAH P. HUSTED, Proprietor of GRAND RIVER NURSERIES. One hundred acres under thorough cultivation, to the hardiest varieties of Fruit and Urnamental Trees,Shrubs, Roses, Grapevine*. Small Fruits Ae.— Can and furnish Apple. Cherry, Pear, Sitxcrlan Crab, Peach and Plum Trees. Orapevines,Roses, Shrubs Ac., of extra sits and quality, very desirable (er village and city yards aad gardens, well grown in Micm- K n soil, and can he lifted and transplanted without currinr the risk of loss bv transportation and delay, when oroered from a distance. Lowell.Mlch., Jan. 26th, 1871. PARKER & BODELL DEALERS IN Fresh Meats, Poultry, Oysters, AND ALL KINDS OF OAMB IN SEASON PAID FOR ALL KINDS OF Live Stork , Salt Park , Hides, Pelts, &o. Central Market, Bridge Street, Lowell, Jan. 4th, 1871 W PARKER, J. BODELL. D R . A I K I N , O f f i c e , H C a n a l - s t s G P. <». i)raw*T 2091, G r a n d R a p i d Firatstairs nortlA: Sweet's Hotel./ i Rapida Mich. BSrSkllleJatleiitlou given to allclasscsof liscas-1 Vinegar Works. VfOTICE ishereby given that I am now prepared to furnish at wholesale, a good article ofCider Vinegar, as cheap as can be bought in Detroit or Chicago. Loversofgood vinegar Will do well to re- member tkUther "n get an article of mc, free from acidand all other deleterious substances. E. R. Pica. Lowell, Mareb 30th, 1870., For Sale. A HOUSE AND LOT with sll the convenience for a pood home with rhede trees, fruit and shrnb- ; bury.and a good cellar. Imjolre of the subscriber, C.BROAD, l.owoil, Sept. 20th, 1870. _ I , JMippose you stop the train and go Popular Goods at Popu- 0 ""V*? 'IT "f ""n"" 1 " f « l ' Mli ««>" «»ia ti«, i,ai>, 6S 8«,. ^ P r i c e s - o £ " ^ ***** - " u D . E . S P R I N G , Ha* just opened a large stotk of D R Y G O O D S , Near the D. A M. Railroad Depot, where you will And a good assortment of LADIES' DRESS GOODS, Gents ' Furnishing Goods , Boots & Shoes, Sheetings at 6 cts per yard, Calicos at 6 cts per yard, Ladies' hose 7 cts a pair, P. K's very cheap, 4 ply Brussels Carpeting 51.65 per yard. Oil Clolbs at Redaced Prices. LADIES' SUMMER SHAWLS Also, WHEELER & WILSON'S SEW- ino MABHINES, sold on the most favorable terms. D. E. S PRING guarantees to seli his stock of Goods at New York prices. u . E . SPRING. THE PLACE TO BUY G R O C E R I E S ! Bead I Read I Read I V. D. Y O U N G HAS IN STOCK THE FINEST LOT OF TEAS, COFFEES, SUGARS, SPICES, FRUITS, AND GROCERIES OF ALL KINDS IN MARKET; BESIDES A FULL ASSORTMENT OF YAN- KEE NOTIONS, WHICH HE WILL SELL AT LOW FIGURES. GOODS DELIVERED FREE TO ALL PARTS O F H I E VILLAGE. V. D. TOUNG. Jan. 18th, 1871. SnailA BIKILIBns cveahtub. HUMPHREY'S HOIEOPATflIC SPECIFICS S f A V E PROVED FKOM THE MOST AMPLE EX- L perlence, an entire succeaa; Simple—Prompt— cicnt and Reliable. They are the Best Family Medicines in use—so simple that mistakes cannot be made In using them ; so harmless as to be free from danger, and to efficient as to be always reliable.— They have received the highest commendation from the thousauds who have long used and knows them, tnd will nlway* render satisfaction to those who frv them. No. Cores Price in Bout. 1. " Feoers, Congestion, Inllamatloos 2. M Worms, Worm Fever, Worm Colic 1. " Crying-Colic or Teething of I nfanta 4. " i»iarr*«a of Children or Adults 6. " Dyienlery, Griping. Billions Colic 0. " Cnolera-Morbus, Vomiting 7. " CoKfAs, Colds, Broachitis 8. '• Heutalgia, Toothache, Faceache 9. " Htadathti, SIcli Headache, Vertigo " " Dyipcpiia, Uilllous Stomach " Supyruitdnr Inegular periods " Whtlei, I " - , too Profuse periods 10. 11. 12. 13. " Creu^. Cough difllcul't Breathing 14. '• Kruplioni, Ss|l Rheum, Kryslpclas 18". Cent*. 26 25 26 25 25 25 25 25 26 25 25 m-, » MW oro<l my i„quiry M to wl.r.j "Well, sir, I shall paMjoti free over me "! !r C v "' C S!k, " , tllC r " : " 1 1,16 conductor me to keep betweeu the object ol my | Mtemjiting to go on with hi, duty, notice and h.msoll, W he should "Tl.o priee of a ticket, .aid Beau come over to our seat, as my eompan- " i . "one dollar] my beavor eon me a ion said tliat he knew huo but did not V. Your good .'entc will a- one,. Wisluo recognize him theiv. i 9 how you that there is a balanci of (4 Tl,al | ' s B,!a " H . ««"l he,' in my favor at any rate." a man that is universally known in The conductor hc.itated, Deau -Vs.hington a. one of the most ac-• looked like a gentleman to on. not complished fellows in the rity-a;. well posted up in human face ; he was ways ready to borrow of or drink with well dressed, and hi, indignation ap- you. Ha tevtr has any money how peared most honest. ever, and I am curious to know how| 8ec vou . fter , h3v( , co;lected ^ ' f o r C r r r 0 Wilh0 ° t , pa) -; replied the conductor, ing, for he'll do it 111 some way." 1 p!1Bsi g 0 lhr0 ^ h t h e c a r Beau sat io silent indignation, frowning upon everybody until the conductor returned, and came and sat down by his side. Beau then in an earnest undertone that we could only hear occasionally, talked to the con- ductor "like a father," and we saw the crestfallen man of tickets pay the katless passenger four dollars. The trick was at once seen through by both my friend and myself, and the next day, over a bottle of wine.at the Monument House, Beau told us he was bard up, hadn't a dollar, picked up an old hat at Gadsby's Hotel in Washington, clapped his cap in his pocket, and resolved that the hat should carry him to Baltimore—and it did and four dollars more. ray, "Probably he has got a ticket—bor- rowed the money to buy it with or something of that sort," said I. "Not he. Beau always travels fr»e, and boards in the same way. He nev- er pays any monev when wit or trick pass current in its place," said my friend confidently. "What a shocking bad hat he has on," said I, observing the dilapidated condition of his beaver. "It's some trick of his doubtless, for, yon will observe, the rest of his dress is quite genteel." "Yes, I see." My friend went on to tell me how Beau had done his tailor out of a re- ceipt in full for his last bill and the landlady at his last boarding placr, and also various specimens of his in- genuity and wit. "He owed me ten dollars," said my friend, "but in at- tempting to collect it one day, I"ll be hanged if he didn't get ten more out of me; so I think I shall let the mai- ler rest there, for fear of doubling the sum once more." At this moment the conductOl* en- tered the opposite end of the car to gather the tickets from the passengers and gire them checks in return.— Many of them, as is often the practice with travelers who are frequently cal- led upon on populous routes to show their tickets, had placed their tickets in their hats so that the conductor could see that they were all right, a;id not trouble them to take them from their pockets at each stopping place. A man who was enjoying a quiet snooze in a hay loft at Wellsville, Al- legnany County, the other day, had a narrow escape from a very unpleas- ant death scc-ne. Several mUchiev- ous boys conceived the idea of making him the victim of a practical joke, and they therefore tied a rope around his ankles, w hile he slept in blissful un- consciousness, and, carrying it up* through the scuttle, stood outside and", pulled him up to the roof where be hung head downwards until matters were becoming serio s far him. The lads saw no danger in the sport, but the poor fellow's screams attracted. the attention of a neighbor who was passing, and he was rescued. It will be advisable for the young jokers to As the conductor drew nearor, Beau j ^ ee P 01lt 0 fthat man's way for a while. A L T I I O R I T U B ON A DVERTISING.— Without advertising I should be a Khiumaliim, Rheumatic Pain* Frrtr 4^ Jgie, Chill Fever, Agues "ude a.i s .... in 1 1/. . eases. Seaiinal Weaknets, etc., posiUvely cur<'J. ; mO FRANKLIN IIOUSL. All orders left at Tate s j y important esse., stop unreliable 1. Llftry iUui* u- t» i» or eseleis tTtatmmtf ami consult Dr. Aliin st eoeee I For Sale. li. W.COBB.Proprietor. Omnibus Line. , debility * "'il 1 - "f " l ^3% S UAW i: BURDICK, carry Pasteugcrs to aud from . the diiot, or to anv pait of the town, dav and it. l,oaw your ord'»rs at the Post OBice, and ride new omuibns. tSlMLL 1; counter;- t ura of C \- wrapper ; s arc c . V at th'j 1; V4 Utrect, 1. i| * rwtiw, -• mmStCfc rs in Mt.f e fl | !C i '1 ti^ij t 7 1. 'J art.:.! Hunt & Hunter, Specialties : Scrofula, Cancers, Consumption, . uofSE AND LOT on corner Bndge and Orover 2 > .'mpa'• N . <r ;r'i. t . emtl '^ JC r hr0QlC A streetl Good house, well, eistsrn and ( . u c - LADIES out of health, assured of easv, 'afe cure. 1MMl . 3 n l y , rl i n i co i,- shaded with tree*. A desirable •Confidential, successful treatment for alf private dis-1 Uce- i u ', lulrvo f j, v.s. KCKER, or MORRIS A H1NE. Call or write lencloslog postage,! whatever your cas II For Sale or Rent. W Will T HAVE for sale two lionn's and thrae lots, i IMJ «oM together or seporately. Terms easy. Oneofthe !iou«es Is for rent until sold.'Rooms sultablefor scholars to board tin mselves. JOSEPH HALL. Lowell, Aug. 9tli, l^T B A R R & L I E S V E L D , ! - p a y N o A t t e n t l o n (Succtvors to Win. Laraway A Co.,) Dealers in fJIO ONK_ MAN'S advertisement or anntber'i, bjt D EALERS In Drugs, Patent Medicines, Perfumerv rain's. Oils, Ar. Store at the aldstaud ol J. U. 1 ahear. Bridge street, Lowell. Mich. . Dealers m i- lork for yourselves, and buy yoar goods where M-B. Blodgott- vou can get the bt^t good' and the most ol them for "T OWKLL Woolen Mills, manufacturer of Plain and i FOREIGN & DOMESTIC MARBLE, Vourmoney. K.l: Horn Store. h m z r t t & z s i | a r ^ . , s r . M •well, Mich. All goods made from Pure Wool aud aiarDie, free from flscks. Highest maiket price paid for Wool., 163 Mouroe & 9 Fouutaiu Sl.« M. C. Barber, Lowell, Oct 12, '70. S UCCESSOR to W. A M.Barber, dealer in Oroper- les Piovisions, Crockery,f.lassware, Yankee No- tions, and a full absorUncut in the Groser aud general I'roduco and Provision Line Terms cash, and will correspond with Gold at fl 10. Ice cream and soda water it* thsir seaso?. Bridge steet, Lowell, Mich. U . B . Williams, yvEALER in Groceries and Provisions, Crockery, If Class Ware, So. Store at sign of "Elk Horns,'' u1|Stand, West Side. For Sale! IQA ACRES of fanning land, being the R v ofN, E. I ' m ,»A D.niJa - - M of section 11, In the towhshlpof Lowell, on* UraUQ napiaSs ly hall-n-mUf south of the Railroad Station. En- quire of Francis Palms, Detroit, or l>. It. Smith near y Fowlison & Quick, ^ Tchitects&liuilder^, and dealers In-lumber of all J\. kind*. Lowell, Mict,. C. KUSTERER, B U K W E R & M A L S T E R Citv Brewery, jKAND RAPIDS, - - - MICH STOCK, XXX & P R E S E N T t l S E ALES, & DKAUGHTLAGER. Eastern HOPS and MALT at Market price ; prcimsrs. 17. " Plltl, Bllud or Bleeding 18. •' Op(Aa/nty, and Sore or Weak Eyes 19. " CafarvA, acute or chronic. Intluenia 20. " Whoopinfeuugk, violent coughs 21. " Asthma, oppressed Breathing 22. " Lar Ditcharget, Impaired hearing 23. " Sert/fula, Enlarged glands, swellings 24. " OeaerafDsbility, Physical Weakne-s 2.1. " Dressy and scanty Secretions 20. " Sea .Wcilarjs. Sickness from Riding 27. " Kldatu DiitOMe, (iravcl 28. •' Xtrcuut Dtbiliiy, Involuntary Seminn DiH-iiarges 29. " Sort Mouth, Canker 30. " Crinary IVealcnfii. Wetting Bed 31. " Painful Periodi, Ilysterl'i 32. •' Sufiringi at Chsnge of Life 33. " Hpilepif, Spasms.St. Vitus Pane* 34. " Dipkthrria, Ulcerated Sore lliroat Price in vials, large sire thrust his head out of the car window 1 and seemed absorbed in contemplat- ing the scen'ry on that side of the road. The conductor spoke to him for liisjP 00 ' - n i : l n to-day.— //. T Helmloldt. ticket—there was no answer. I success is owing to my liberality "Ticket, siri" said the conductor,' in ^verti«ing.-.flo>,nm tapping him lightly on the shoulder. ^ advertised my productions aud Beau sprang back in the car, knock-j ma, J 0 m o n o y' Nicholas Longmrth.— ing his hat into the i )ad and leaving j ^ u,ls:a " 1 "'id persistent advertising it in one minute nearly a mile behind. ] ls a 8,110 P ,-e ' u ^ e ,0 wt-ahli.- He looked first toward the conductor j ^ irari ^ then out of the window after his hat I llivc,bts 0 nt' dollar n busi- and in a seeming fit of rago exclaimed ,IC8S 8 ' 10U ^ invest one dollar in ad- "What the d - l do you strike a T. Stewart. 50 j man in that way for? is that your 1 {WC, | l, e wiy success in accarriula- 501business? Is that what the company j t,n " a mil ' l0n i,0l ' :irs teQ y' ;ais to W |hires you for?" ' lt, ' c unlimi'toa U". »r printer'-) ink.— io j "I beg your pardon, sir, I only want ^ & arn,,nl - w'your ticket," replied the conductor j A mall w h o isi liberal in advertising i oo nicekly. j is liberal m trade, aud such a man t _ succeeds while his neighbor with 50 | J^ioo! u TicU(Jt! 0 it > 8 :iil vc wvll n e i g u o o r wiu.j.i.t Maroce*, *{ih | „ J . . . y . as good ^'oods tjiius and drop* out ol market.—Horace Greeley. 80fll ,M J >"•» . •vpiiv>.l IJI-UU W|1.1iuil<: up. in [taper case, with book n. TKHJSAIC r SPKOJFtCS. 33 Urge 3 vial", cor.tainin.* the above list, with book ofrtirectlnii"romnleU', 20 •' 20 P - j m i l y CASES. for you to want my ticket, but I want ?, 6llS|my Aa/T replied Beau bristling ii|i. 00 1 "Very Rorry, sir, really. 1 banly Cssesof io i*oii viuis in fluid, ioo d<.«e» e a c h , w i t h l t 0 call vour attention, and I maoualol dire'tr-ns, jiving full »cfmint of a l l ' , i .1 i ' dtreases of Uoraes, Cattle, Sheep. Docs W"* Hie only IID'ans in mv power, nud nogs, "itU lull dirsctions for uw. In c,,;.] #1,,. o,.,,*!,,, Dtat walnut case, complete |10 00 COIKllK tOl. POSD'S EXTUACT, ' u\- , i i , Cures Piles, NouralKia,Toothiicho, Bleed- > O'l ha .l bet.er USe ft ca/2:'I ' :U- mfc ofthoLunKo. Stomach, Nose or other' tract ft person's a'tentioil Organa, Burns, Bruisos.Lnmoness, Sprain 1 .I U IKIOII Hh€umalun. Sure nroaf. Sore \ : uul hit llllll over tllC head Ine lirjt hinnt-j M- dittnt knauh nevt tim.', u^n.oids,,.,. n* ttm I 'MVI I..C irt-a.. -r.h it , it S I 0 0 , Q-arrt si 75.: ho happens to be lookinir li.c other |y These i.emedies, except PON U S EXTIlAlT, 1 ' * . by the case or single box, aiesenl to aiy part ofthi iway !" replied tllO in'li"iir',ti! liOiUl. country, by malt orcxpre«s, free of charge, on receipt [t ,,. ,, , ofthe pnee. j "\\ oil , sir, I a m rt, i>Iv to apologize Address lli'Ki'HKtY's Si-Kcinc IIOKKOPATIIICMEU- I "oui'Axy, OlBc- and Depot, No. 602 Brosdway, New York, •i.NKCoui'Axy, oiDce aud DepotV I to you ajjaiu if you wish. I have pnir of shac-; '* A darkey was boasting io a grocer "I 'he cheapness of ten pour. ot s'i- gar he had bought at n rivtl « hop .— "Lot me weigh the package," -ai 1 the groner. The darkey assented, and i : was two pounds short. The " •. .•-• d g e n t l e m a n " l o o k e d iici ] mmient, and then said didn' t cheat dis chile mi he was getting the suga ; r a ' : s.s lie ! 'r while stole two A full assortment ofthe above for sale hv HUNT ! doDC SO alreadv OIIC'', said the UOW k T1UNTEB. Lowell, Mich. i; , 1 ,l* • I — . . . i disconcerted ofticial. Attention I 1 LI. THOSE who hold claims sgaiust Wilson! iA. Gardner k Co., are requested to hand them in | to theuuderslgccd; andthoseindebted to said Wilson | Gardner A Co., are expected to settle their acconnlH | without delav with the subscriber, as their books /ANE House and Lot desirably located. The!, must and wlU be closed up soon U House is new and compleUly finished. For I SI. M. PERUY, Assignee iMloby AVBRV 4 JOHNBON. For Sale. of Wilton, Gardner A Co. I Lowell, June Oth, ISTU If you want t «i make dull times "Yes, no doubt, but that don't res- duller, the sur. st way we know of is tore my property; that's gone." to grumble about it tell e ;. ry' oody " Well , sir, I can ' t wait any longer it's dull , no money, etc., an : then II t a ^ e your ticket il you please," j take your advertisement out of ilio said the conductor . i local paper.

LOWELL WEEKLYlowellledger.kdl.org/Lowell Weekly Journal/1871/08... · Ri»er. The beet stock Manuhetarad, and first class workmen employed. Grand Rapids Business Di-rectory, Perry

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Page 1: LOWELL WEEKLYlowellledger.kdl.org/Lowell Weekly Journal/1871/08... · Ri»er. The beet stock Manuhetarad, and first class workmen employed. Grand Rapids Business Di-rectory, Perry

t en LOWELL WEEKLY Office in Graham's Block, Up Stairs.

"L lbor fy ancl Union—Ono a n d In sepa rab l e . "

V O L U M E V I I . I

Tpnr.s, 31 50 per year in Advance

L O W E L L , M I C H I G A N , W E D N E S D A Y , A U G U S T 0 » 1 8 7 1 .

m m h e r

ter

pn:c

ffhc f o u ' f U l o u t n a l ,

i." rrni.MiiKD txtur

A V n d n c H t l n y M o m l n p ; *

AT LOWKLI. , MICH..

—IIY—

M O R R I S & B I N E .

- V

••i

Ni n • 1 i» |,

Tl...

r t l P i ; H r - a iisea. sod ,

I-t h e

t h e r e at,'.

Chok ; her . i;

o: o re m

v-res , Buck. 0. Burt.

Bur ( Cci»

a n d I t s .

Ofllce, 2(1 lloor OraliKinV ll lorjt .

TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. F o r o n e year $1 .'Kt Fo r *1* m o n t h s , 75 II i le l iTercJ by Iho Car r i e r , 2 00

RATES OF ADVERTISING.

Ten IlncRof Nonpareil , clone matter make a s q u a r e

" Space. | 1 w I ' l mo.' j 3 BIO. I 6 mo. | 1 y r #12.00

F o r t ' s W o s t o r n M o d l o i n o M a n T x C o

IO W K h l . , Mich. CbartTi-d Cnpluil «IIX),000.— i I'teriili-ni, K. I.kx ./r. ; Vice I ' l i t t , , >1, It. Uuib-

I.M r ; Si'p'y, W. W, Jmi.xtiO.v ; Treasurer, .1. W.Xoii-TON. Ili.fi-r.'iice L.y i iennlt ' l 'm, l.owell Nntional Il.NNK.

: umce on Iltlilg.- .-I. K. .M. K o K T , Oen'l . Agent.

J o h n T o y l o r ,

IUO.V F o u m k r .nil manufaciurcr of varloni kimN of : I'lown, l larron*. Cultivators, Scnpern, hob sleigh' '

| and il l k inds of/saMInx to order, l.owell, Mich. |

| H . R O B S .

HOr.SK.-Siijn, Carriage and ornamental I 'aintlnR, Graining. Marhehng, I'aper llanKing, Kali>o-

mining, Kc., Barbin's shop, .Iiinctlon o | River and II road way atrcets .

J o h n R o m i g ,

SHAVIN'O, Shampiioing, Hair Cutting, and whl»-kei1* dved nilli neatness and d e ^ a t c h . Kooms,

2d Boor Graham's Illock, apposite National Bank.

16.00 25:00 10.00 75.015

L O W E L L M A T I O K A L U M

OF L O W E L L .

C A P I T A L , - - 3 1 0 0 , 0 0 0 * , S U R P L U S , - - - 1 0 , 0 0 0 .

D I R K C T O R V ,

I l . A . R i c r , FRaxeiR ICixa , W M . W . H A T C H , C . I t . H I M : , MvHON H . NOIITON, C T, WOOIUNO, A. .S. STA.VXAKU, A.J .KCKF.R,

JAH W . NOHTOX.

I n t e r o H t P a i d o n T > c i > o s l t s . I I . A. RICE. P r e s i d e n t . JAS. W. NORTON. Vice Pre

HENRY Jl. CLARK, C a s h i e r . Lowell, Ang. Oth, 1871.

N E W

Y O R K

S T O R E .

You Can T a k e M y H o t .

W e w o r e o n c e c o m i n g o v e r t i n -

r a i l r o i ' l I r o i n W a s l i i n ^ t o n c i l v t o

timord, u l ien wo observed .1 peculiar •'(), } o i i r tick- t ua.s i,, vo r-sort of a man silling i..,,-.! by—a tall, ljaiul "» , 1 ,1 0 - ' i-»", oand . iuggesied tlio conJuclor . slim, good nalured fe low, I>nt one

' • i i c k e t ! I i a v e n 1 ' v . - i jim* k T ^ - k o d

i t o u i o f l l i e • . v i n . I u w , h a i ; u u l i l l ? —

D o \ o n w a n t i n a d d i n s u l t t o i n j u r v

y o u r i k - k - ' t - .vas i n - . n u r i ^ t -

" S

1 Square. I $1.00 $8.601 «0.00 I |3.00 2 Squares 1.60 6.00 1 8.00 1 12.00

* Column, 6.00 8.001 lf..00 1 20.00 « " 8.00 13.00 25.00 30.00 1 '• j U.00 20.001 30.001 40.00

Looal i t 10 cents per line lor flrat insertion, fcac'i I subsequent insertloa S M n t i p t r l l f C i

Marr lane anfl Df»th n o l l c « s f r e e . O b i t u a r y notices, 6 cent* per l ine . Card* In Bustnes* Dl rec to r r$5 per a n n u m . Year ly adrert lsers eut l t led to change onar ter ly . L e g a l Not icesa t S t a t u t e Rates . All legal must he

paid f o r when eflldaTit la made , r r a n a l e n t a d r e r t i s e m e o t s must be pre-paid.

' These terms will be strictly adhered to .

/ b u s i n e s s

i . o . o . r .

B'ARMONV LODGE, No. 148, of Lowell, Mich., meets every Monday evening, in old Masonic

[. Ar r lne Peck, N. O.

f 8 . B . Knapp,Sec.

J . M - M f t t b e w s o n .

urc 1. X J O T A R V , Attorney and Solicitor. Will attend to liroai- J x j busineas In a n y of the State er United Sta tes Dlseac Courts. >K Iro. . Bped l attention given to Conveys tiling. Collecting

' a a d Onancerv business. Ofllce ever Lowell National B a n k , Lowell U leh .

T . J . B U j r t o n .

ATTORNEY at Law, and Solicitor In SUte or Uni-t e d S u t e s C o n r t a .

• r « m and Til laf t proper ty for sale or ren t . Llcens-I'CHin ' f j Claim A g e a t f o r pro curl a g Penilona and Bounties

' . from Gevernment . Office In Graham's Block, up-i n , LowslI, Michigan.

wmpifi

i . a b l o . . ^ v | ' nd n e n , , 0 XV8'.

A M i l t o n M . P e r r y . M l Estate, Insurance, and Collecting Agency.

p H c e over Hloe k NOkie's Store, Union Block, t « l e .

R o b e r t H u n t e r Jr., rITlCE of the Peace, will a t tend promptly t o Ool* lectlng. Conveyancing and all bnalneaa intrusted

to my care, Ofllce oTer Hunt k Hunter 's Drug Store, Lowell, Hieb.

illy one', f our w ' enloyD j their r , [ell." Tr •';? uvnely ̂ .-g

b b s , or r "

W . F a l l e u , M . O . .

PHYSICIAN and Surgeon, Lowell, Hicb. Ofllce over National Bank. Bealdence on Hudson St.

opposite reeideaee of C. B . Hiae .

J . H o v m r d B m i U i . M . D . TTOMKOl 'ATHIC Pbysiciaa and Burgeon. Offlee J T l front room over tb« Met office. Residence on Depot Road. Call* attended promptly, day or

. Bight .

D n . P e e k ft M o D t n n e l l . p h / s l c i a n i a a d S t u y o n s , Office in Masonic BulK^.

* o. o i i i c n A K W ^ ,

MRS. J . ROMIO, manufacturer nf Switches, Curls a Braids. Keeps on hand a good assortment of Mohair Switches, Curls, 4c. Cash paid for Ladies' H a i r .

H o w k f t W h i t e ,

DKALERS in Bools, Shoes, Leather, Findings, kc. Particular attantlon given to custom w o r k -

Store in Checkered Building, ne*t door west of JWa-sonic Hal l .

C. B r o a d & S o n .

DEALF.RS in Boots, Shoes, Leather Finding* Ac. Custom work done with neatness and despatch.

Remember the place first door west of Graliam'a Illock, Bridge Street.

O . R . C o v l l l -

GE N E R A L Canvassing Agent. A!! kinds of book* can be obtained of him at lowest rates.—

Address l.owell.

A t k i n s & S o m e r b y .

DEALERS in Agricultural Implement*. We also sell t he jus t ly celebrated Lumber Wagons and

Ruggies manufactured by J . A . Adam* Bros. Busl-i> "ss place one door Eas t of Posi Ofllce, Lowell, Mich.

D e v e n d o r f & B l a i n ,

DEALERS In Fancy Pry Goods, Ribbons, Carpeting, Hats, Cdps and Notion*. Flint door west ol Lo-

well National Bank.

O e o . B . B a l c o m ,

PRACTICAL Watchmaker and Jeweler. Watches, Clocks and Jewelry repaired and warranted.—

Jewelry made to Older. Shop In the Post Office.

S i m o n H . H a n s o n ,

MANUFACTURER of and D n U r in na -waro , Copper-ware and Sheet iron. Special attention «lven t o roofing, e*ve-troBghiog and Job work,—

bop opposite H u n t k Banter** drag s tore .

J a c o b R a m a d e l l .

HARNK83 MAKER a a d «addler. West Side P l a t Ri»er. The beet s tock Manuhetarad, and first

class workmen employed.

G r a n d R a p i d s B u s i n e s s D i -

r e c t o r y ,

P e r r y B r o t h e r s ,

l ^ X O L U ^ i V E DKAL«fc3 IX Hats , Cape. Furs , •Ci Glo Wholesale and Betall , Ko. 11 Mon-roe strc ^t Grand Rapids.

H . O . S t e p h e n s o n .

HO M « P A T I U C PhysUUa k Serge Especial a t t e n U o n f l r e n t o Syphllr t lca c h r e n l c D i •

ILDRE X " S K UlepfciasM-s Patent Tr- ^ Hnppo, , . e r o f t t # e r* , mannlactured to order . v o r k w , r r t B t e d to

tse of 11 give sat isfact ion. Residence, first House ^ t h r U n I 0 n g c h o o l

jmulaiK Bouse. *111 * Sv*.

T h l u „ n U I r n pD V T . B . L a m b , M . D . ,

1 4 J -ATHIC Physician and Burgeon. Office ^ns ldei i r n i T I 1 - ' - F l i t River. CalU at-

. t e n d e d rtU,promptness.

W m . P u l l e n , T \ E A L E B in Ready-made Olotblug, Cloths,Gent's

r a r d . ^ U FnrnUking Goods, l i s t s , Csps, Bdols and ^ • CloUilag ca t and made to order. Store P

f a . , w m " Block,

Shoes, Pullen 's

s t ree t .

h 18,1W -i'-' i Gere • A

useful s orv-i Y d

icssesel thesyiif ,1

W A R D i ' f l l

ion,

J R e e s B r o s . T \ » A L K R a i n Dry Goods, Clothing, Yankee No-l l Hons, Bats and Cap*. Clothing out and made

t o order. Store in Oiaham's Block, Lowell, Mlclr

S h e r m a n & M i l l s . T S E A L B R S in Dry Goods, Clothing, Bsots , Shoes, 1 1 Hats , Caps, Vutnishing Goods, Ac. Union Block, West Side.

nry/mni: Uf. .• „ „ M " n B A L E R S in D17 Goods, Groceries.

2?' , 1 ' J J Shoes, HaU and Caps, Crockery, kc . .u ' ; ' W Graham's Block, I^iwell, Mich.

of In i , ' . lis h o m : :

C . 0 > S t o n e ft C o . Groceries, Boots and

Store in

MPSO.V

i e n n a r ^ .

H l n e ft N o b l e . V T V BALERS in Dry Goods, Clothing, H a U Caps,

' * J J Groceries, Ac. . . , . - I J . B.—Clothing made to order. Store in brick

block, opposite Frank l in House.

K 'WM ; frequr:'] r e c o m n / j a

liifs, l-ui. ' A s out of 7. v, I hair W vith a ci. ft ices a n d ; . ® sefulntt# B liart !or • full CO!/ lyllrm. u ta/t It may '•>{*

ry bt:.cf S LUK'S.

C h a a . A l t h e n . EALFR In Ready-made Clothing, G e n f a Fur-

"? " R i S n l a h l n g (• oods , 'Ha t s , Capi, AoT" Comer store ^ w - J ^ u d Fist River Bridge, Lowell Mich.

UD. g wr C . ate* • 1

dall, >, rhilaiM

m the nm ;j

J o h n K o p f f t C o .

DEALERS In Fu rn i tu r e of every kind. Patent Spring Beds, warranted. Ruady-made Coffins

constantly OR hand or made to order. Manufactory a n d Ware-room n e a r l ) . k M.Depot.

W i l a o n ft S d i e -

All kinds of Blacksmlihlnt, Uorse-ihoeing wag-on and Carriage ironing duuo promptly.

S d g a r M o r a e .

OMNIBUS Lino from Clifton House, and all o ther Hotels and Private House*, tn aud from all

train*.

F r e e O m n i b u a

B . A . H a r l a n .

A TTOENEY at Law, Solicitor in Chaacery, and J \ . Judge of Probate of Keut County. Offlco In County Building, Grand Rapids, Mich.

B w e a t ' e H o t e l ,

GRAND Bapiils, Mich. X. H . Lyon, proprietor, formerly of the Rathbun House.

R a t h b o r n H o u s e .

AKTISDEL k HAWK, Proprietors, corner Moo-roe and Waterloo Streets,Grand Raplds,Mlch.

w T p . B a r k e r T

DENTIST, 66 Monroe St . , Orand Rapida Mich. All work done io the bast manner and a t reasonable

prices.

L o o m l s * B r o w n .

THE PLACE to buy Boots and Shoes, I* at Loomls k Brown's 30 Canal Street Grand Rapids.

S - D - P a r k s ,

DEALER in .Watches, Clock*, Jewelry and Silver Plated Ware, No. 22 Monroe Street,' Grand Rap-

id*. Personal attention t o repairing, and work war-ranted.

J a m e s Q a l l u p ,

WliOLKSAI.K and Ret >11 Druggist , Ko. 6 Canal street, Orand Rapid*.

A . P r e u s s e r .

WATCHMAKBR k Jeweler, and dealer In Fine Uold and Silver Ware, 21 Monroe street. Al-

so all kinds of Sporting Implements, Grand Rapids.

S o n t h w l c k ft W r i g h t .

DEALERS in Crockery, Glnsswsro, Silver Plated Ware , Chins, Table Cutlery, Ac., 41 MonroeSt.,

Graud Rapids.

C u r r i e r ft P u t n a m .

DKALERS in School, Mlscellsneoui, and Blank Books,also,Stat ionery, WallPapers, Ac., Book

Binders and Box Manufacturers, No. 10 Pearl s t ree t . Grand Rapids, A. W. Carrier , T. O. Putnam.

B . M . S t o w e . T X T H O L E S A L E and re ta i l dealer in Hats and Caps, V y Furs, Rolies, Gloves, Ac., and Fashionable

Millinery Goods, 40 Monroe Street, Grand Rapid*.

E s t a b l i s h e d 1 8 3 7 . Sil-EB. DIKEMAN , Watches. Clocks, Jewelrv

• ver and Plated Ware, 26 Canal street, dpecta cles a speciality.

H a r n e s s a n d S a d d l e r y .

BAVING In t h e

Inson, ai

A VIJjG recently purchased the stock and Interest basinets of Barnard k Son and O. A.

and opened In the building south of U. B. Williams, west side of Flat River, l a m ired

dlery to Attend to all business in the Harnesa and Sa^U line. It i* mv purpose to keep the

B E S T S T O C K A N D W O R K M E N .

and spare no pains to build my busineas upon an honest foundation. Do not (ail to give me a call and examine my (tock-

M C 0 P RAMSDELL. Lowell, J u l j 13th, 1870.

7 - 4 4 7 - 4 4

R e w a r d G i v e n .

AL L WHO have got the Catarrh will | get a reward by procuring a bottle I

of DR. H. It. PECK'S

C A T A R R H S P E C I F I C ! ! As i t was never known to fail in any gen-1 nine case of Catarrh, and glvea relief, the | t i n t dose, causing no pro*lrating effect on i the *y*tem.

Sold by Druggists. Lowell , Nov. f5th, 1870.

7 - 4 4 7 - 4 4

• 1 o o

V I L L A Q E L O T S F O R S A L E , W E S T S I D E ,

ON ftiftg. M f i L L ' 8 ADDITION

T 0CATED on Water , Broadway, Hndion . Mapla JLi and Brush Stress. For particulars, enqalre of M n . Bnell, or 0 . B . Williams, at the "Elk B o m Store ."

These lots will be sold e a time. , „ „ . 0/4R0L1KK SNELZ,. Lowell, Februarv 28th, 1870. Siatf

N O A H P . H U S T E D ,

P r o p r i e t o r o f

G R A N D R I V E R N U R S E R I E S .

O n e hundred acres under thorough cultivation, to the hardiest varieties of F ru i t and Urnamental Trees,Shrubs, Roses, Grapevine*. Small Frui ts Ae.— Can and furnish Apple. Cherry, Pear, Sitxcrlan Crab, Peach and Plum Trees. Orapevines,Roses, Shrubs Ac., of extra s i t s and quality, very desirable (er village and city yards aad gardens, well grown in Micm-

Kn soil, and can he lifted and transplanted without curr inr the risk of loss bv transportation and delay,

when oroered from a distance.

Lowell .Mlch., Jan . 26th, 1871.

P A R K E R & B O D E L L

D E A L E R S I N

F r e s h M e a t s ,

P o u l t r y ,

O y s t e r s , AND ALL KINDS OF OAMB IN SEASON

PAID FOR ALL KINDS OF

Live S tork , S a l t Park , Hides,

P e l t s , & o . Central Market, Bridge Street,

Lowell , J a n . 4th, 1871

W PARKER, J . BODELL.

D R . A I K I N ,

O f f i c e , H C a n a l - s t s G P. <». i)raw*T 2 0 9 1 , G r a n d R a p i d

Firatstairs nor t lA: Sweet 's Hotel . / i

R a p i d a M i c h . BSrSkl l l eJa t l e i i t lou given to allclasscsof liscas-1

V i n e g a r W o r k s . V f O T I C E ishereby given t h a t I am now prepared

to fu rn i sh at wholesale, a good article ofCider Vinegar , as cheap as can be b o u g h t in Detroit or Chicago. Loverso fgood vinegar Will do well to re-member t k U t h e r " n get an ar t ic le of mc, f r e e from acidand all o the r deleterious substances.

E . R. P i c a . Lowell, Mareb 30th, 1870.,

F o r S a l e .

AHOUSE AND LOT with sll the convenience for a pood home with rhede trees, fruit and shrnb-

; bury.and a good cellar. Imjol re of the subscriber,

C.BROAD, l.owoil, Sept. 20th, 1870.

_ I , JMippose you stop the train and go

P o p u l a r G o o d s a t P o p u - 0 ""V*? ' I T " f " " n " " 1 " f « l ' M l i « « > " «»ia ti«, i,ai>, 6 S 8 « , .

^ P r i c e s - o ™ £ " ^ ***** - " u

D . E . S P R I N G ,

Ha* jus t opened a large stotk of

D R Y G O O D S ,

Near the D . A M. Railroad Depot , where you will And a good assortment of

L A D I E S ' D R E S S G O O D S ,

Gents ' Furnishing Goods ,

B o o t s & S h o e s ,

S h e e t i n g s a t 6 c t s p e r y a r d ,

C a l i c o s a t 6 c t s p e r y a r d ,

L a d i e s ' h o s e 7 c t s a p a i r ,

P . K ' s v e r y c h e a p ,

4 p l y B r u s s e l s C a r p e t i n g

51.65 p e r y a r d .

O i l Clolbs at Redaced Prices.

L A D I E S ' S U M M E R S H A W L S

A l s o , WHEELER & WILSON'S SEW-

i n o MABHINES, s o l d o n t h e m o s t

f a v o r a b l e t e r m s .

D . E . SPRING g u a r a n t e e s t o

se l i h i s s t o c k o f G o o d s a t N e w

Y o r k p r i c e s .

u . E . S P R I N G .

T H E P L A C E T O B U Y

G R O C E R I E S !

Bead I Read I Read I

V . D . Y O U N G

H A S IN STOCK T H E F I N E S T L O T

O F T E A S , C O F F E E S ,

SUGARS, S P I C E S , F R U I T S ,

A N D G R O C E R I E S O F A L L K I N D S

I N M A R K E T ; B E S I D E S A

F U L L A S S O R T M E N T O F Y A N -

K E E N O T I O N S ,

W H I C H H E W I L L S E L L A T

L O W F I G U R E S .

G O O D S D E L I V E R E D F R E E T O

A L L P A R T S O F H I E

V I L L A G E .

V. D. T O U N G . J an . 18th, 1871.

S n a i l A B I K I L I B n s c v e a h t u b . H U M P H R E Y ' S

H O I E O P A T f l I C S P E C I F I C S

Sf A V E PROVED FKOM THE MOST AMPLE EX-L perlence, an entire succeaa; Simple—Prompt— cicnt and Reliable. They are the Best Family

Medicines i n use—so simple that mistakes cannot be made In using them ; so harmless as to be free from danger, and to efficient as to be always reliable.— They have received the highest commendation from the thousauds who have long used and knows them, tnd will nlway* render satisfaction to those who frv them. No. Cores Price in Bout. 1. " Feoers, Congestion, Inllamatloos 2. M Worms, Worm Fever, Worm Colic 1. " Crying-Colic or Teething of I nfanta 4. " i»iarr*«a of Children or Adults 6. " Dyienlery, Griping. Billions Colic 0. " Cnolera-Morbus, Vomiting 7. " CoKfAs, Colds, Broachitis 8 . '• Heutalgia, Toothache, Faceache 9. " Htadathti, SIcli Headache, Vertigo " " Dyipcpiia, Uilllous Stomach

" Supyruitdnr Inegula r periods " Whtlei, I " -, too Profuse periods

10. 11. 12. 13. " Creu^. Cough difllcul't Breathing 14. '• Kruplioni, Ss|l Rheum, Kryslpclas

18".

Cent*. 26 25 26

• 25 25 25 25 25 26 25 25

m-, »M Woro<l my i „ q u i r y M to wl.r.j "Wel l , sir, I shall p a M j o t i f ree over

me " ! ! r C v " ' C S ! k , " , t l l C r" :" 1 1 , 1 6 conductor me to keep betweeu the object ol my | Mtemjiting to go on with h i , duty,

notice and h.msoll, W he should "Tl.o priee of a ticket, . a id Beau

come over to our seat, as my eompan- " i . "one dollar] my beavor e o n me a

ion said tliat he knew huo but did not V. Your good . 'entc will a- one,.

Wisluo recognize him theiv. i 9 how you that there is a ba lanc i of ( 4

„ T l , a l| ' s B , ! a " H . ««"l he , ' in my favor a t any rate."

a man that is universally known in The conductor hc.i tated, Deau

-Vs.hington a . one of the most ac-• looked like a gent leman to o n . not

complished fellows in the rity-a;. well posted up in human face ; he was

ways ready to borrow of or drink with well dressed, and h i , indignation ap-

you. H a t e v t r has any money h o w peared most honest. ever, and I am curious to know h o w | 8 e c v o u . f t e r , h 3 v ( , c o ; l e c t e d

^ ' f o r C r r r 0 W i l h 0 ° t , p a ) - ; replied the conductor, ing, for he'll do it 111 some way." 1 p ! 1 B s i „ g 0 „ l h r 0 ^ h t h e c a r

Beau sat io silent indignation,

frowning upon everybody until the

conductor re turned , and came and sat

down by his side. Beau then in an

earnest undertone tha t we could only

hear occasionally, talked to the con-

ductor " l ike a fa ther , " and we saw

the crestfallen man of tickets pay the

katless passenger four dollars. T h e

trick was a t once seen through by

both my friend and myself, and the

next day, over a bott le of wine.at the

Monument House, Beau told us h e

was bard up, hadn ' t a dollar, picked

up an old hat a t Gadsby 's Hotel in

Washington, clapped his cap in his

pocket, and resolved tha t the ha t

should carry him to Balt imore—and

it did and four dollars more.

ray,

"P robab ly he has got a t icket—bor-

rowed the money to buy it with or

something of that sor t ," said I.

"Not he. Beau always travels fr»e,

and boards in the same way. H e nev-

er pays any monev when wit or trick

pass current in its place," said my

friend confidently.

" W h a t a shocking bad hat he has

on," said I , observing the dilapidated

condition of his beaver.

" I t ' s some trick of his doubtless,

for, yon will observe, the rest of his

dress is quite genteel ."

"Yes , I see."

My friend went on to tell me how

Beau had done his tailor out of a re-

ceipt in full for his last bill and the

landlady a t his last boarding placr,

and also various specimens of his in-

genuity and wit. " H e owed me ten

dollars," said my f r iend, " b u t in at-

tempting to collect it one day, I" l l be

hanged if he didn' t ge t ten more out

of me; so I think I shall let the mai-

ler rest there , for fear of doubling the

sum once more ."

At this moment the conductOl* en-

tered the opposite end of the car to

gather the tickets f rom the passengers

and g i r e them checks in return.—

Many of them, as is often the pract ice

with travelers who are frequently cal-

led upon on populous routes to show

their tickets, had placed their t ickets

in their hats so that the conductor

could see that they were all r ight, a;id

not trouble them to take them from

their pockets at each stopping place.

A man w h o was enjoying a quiet

snooze in a hay loft a t Wellsville, Al-

legnany County, the other day, had

a narrow escape from a very unpleas-

ant death scc-ne. Several mUchiev-

ous boys conceived the idea of making

him the victim of a practical joke, and

they therefore tied a rope around his

ankles, w hile he slept in blissful u n -

consciousness, and, carrying it up*

through the scuttle, stood outside and",

pulled him up to the roof where be

hung head downwards until matters

were becoming serio s far him. The

lads saw no danger in the sport, bu t

the poor fellow's screams a t t r a c t e d .

the attention of a neighbor who was

passing, and he was rescued. It will

be advisable for the young jokers to

As the conductor drew nearor, Beau j ^ e e P 0 1 l t 0 f t h a t man's way for a while.

A L T I I O R I T U B O N A D V E R T I S I N G . —

Without advert is ing I should be a

Khiumaliim, Rheumatic Pain* F r r t r 4̂ J g i e , Chill Fever, Agues

"ude —

a. i s

. . . . i n 1 1 / . . eases. Seaiinal Weaknets, etc., posiUvely cur<'J. ; m O FRANKLIN IIOUSL. All orders left at Tate s j y important esse., stop unreliable 1. L l f t r y iUui* u- t» i» • or esele is tT ta tmmtf ami consult Dr. A l i in s t eoeee I

F o r S a l e .

li. W.COBB.Propr ie tor .

Omnibus Line.

, debility * " ' i l 1 -

"f " l ^ 3 %

SUAW i: BURDICK, carry Pasteugcrs to aud from . the di io t , or to anv pai t of the town, dav and

it. l,oaw your ord'»rs at the Post OBice, and ride new omuibns.

t S l M L L 1;

counter;-t ura of C \-wrapper ; s arc c . V

at th'j 1; V4 Utrect, 1. i |

* rwtiw, -•

mmStCfc rs in Mt . f

e fl | !C i '1

t i ^ i j t 7

1. 'J art . : .!

H u n t & Hunter ,

S p e c i a l t i e s : Scrofula, Cancers, Consumption, . u o f S E AND LOT on corner Bndge and Orover 2 > . ' m p a ' • N . < r ; r ' i . t . e m t l ' ^ J C r h r 0 Q l C A s t r e e t l Good house, well, eistsrn and ( . u c -

LADIES out of hea l th , assured of easv, 'afe cure. 1 M M l . 3 n l y , r l i n i c o i ,- shaded with tree*. A desirable •Confidential, successful treatment for alf private dis-1 U c e - i u ' , l u l r v o f j,v .s. KCKER, or

MORRIS A H1NE.

Call o r write lencloslog postage,! whatever you r cas

II

F o r S a l e o r R e n t .

W

Will T H A V E for sale two lionn's and thrae lots, i IMJ «oM together or seporately. Terms easy.

O n e o f t h e !iou«es Is for rent until s o l d . ' R o o m s sultablefor scholars to board tin mselves.

JOSEPH HALL. Lowell, Aug. 9tli, l^T

B A R R & L I E S V E L D , ! - p a y N o A t t e n t l o n

(Succ tvor s to Win. Laraway A Co.,)

Dealers in f J I O ONK_ MAN'S advertisement or anntber'i , b j t DEALERS In Drugs, Patent Medicines, Perfumerv

ra in ' s . Oils, Ar. Store at the aldstaud ol J . U. 1 a h e a r . Bridge street , Lowell. Mich. .

Dealers m i - lo rk for yourselves, and buy yoar goods where M - B . B l o d g o t t - vou can get the bt^t good ' and the most ol them for

"T OWKLL Woolen Mills, manufacturer of Plain and i F O R E I G N & D O M E S T I C M A R B L E , Vourmoney. K.l: H o r n S tore .

h m z r t t & z s i | a r ^ . , s r . M •well, Mich. All goods made from Pure Wool aud a i a r D i e , f ree from flscks. Highest maiket price paid for Wool.,

163 Mouroe & 9 F o u u t a i u Sl.« M . C . B a r b e r ,

Lowell, Oct 12, '70.

SUCCESSOR to W . A M.Barber, dealer in Oroper-les Piovisions, Crockery,f.lassware, Yankee No-

t ions , and a fu l l absorUncut in the Groser aud general I 'roduco and Provis ion Line Terms cash, and will correspond with Gold at f l 10. Ice cream and soda water it* t h s i r seaso? . Bridge steet, Lowell, Mich.

U . B . W i l l i a m s , y v E A L E R in Groceries and Provisions, Crockery, I f Class Ware, So. Store a t sign of " E l k Horns, ' '

u 1 | S t a n d , West S ide .

F o r S a l e ! I Q A ACRES of fanning land, being the R v o f N , E.

I ' m ,»A D . n i J a - - M of section 11, In the towhshlpof Lowell, on* U r a U Q n a p i a S s ly hall-n-mUf south of the Railroad Station. En-

quire of Francis Palms, Detroit , or l>. It. Smith near

y Fowl i son & Quick,

^ Tchitects&liuilder^, and dealers In-lumber of all J \ . kind*. Lowell , Mict,.

C . K U S T E R E R , B U K W E R & M A L S T E R

C i t v B r e w e r y , j K A N D R A P I D S , - - - M I C H

S T O C K , X X X & P R E S E N T t l S E A L E S , & D K A U G H T L A G E R .

E a s t e r n H O P S a n d M A L T a t M a r k e t p r i c e

; prcimsrs.

17. " Plltl, Bllud or Bleeding 18. •' Op(Aa/nty, and Sore or Weak Eyes 19. " CafarvA, acute or chronic. Intluenia 20. " Whoopinfeuugk, violent coughs 21. " Asthma, oppressed Breathing 22. " Lar Ditcharget, Impaired hearing 23. " Sert/fula, Enlarged glands, swellings 24. " OeaerafDsbility, Physical Weakne-s 2.1. " Dressy and scanty Secretions 20. " Sea .Wcilarjs. Sickness from Riding 27. " Kldatu DiitOMe, (iravcl 28. •' Xtrcuut Dtbiliiy, Involuntary Seminn

DiH-iiarges 29. " Sort Mouth, Canker 30. " Crinary IVealcnfii. Wetting Bed 31. " Painful Periodi, Ilysterl'i 32. •' Sufiringi at Chsnge of Life 33. " Hpilepif, Spasms.St. Vitus Pane* 34. " Dipkthrria, Ulcerated Sore l l i roa t

Price in vials, large sire

thrust his head out of the car window 1

and seemed absorbed in contemplat-

ing the scen'ry on tha t side of the road.

T h e conductor spoke to him for l i i s jP 0 0 ' - n i : l n to-day.— / / . T Helmloldt.

t icket—there was no answer. I success is owing to my liberality

"Ticke t , siri" said the c o n d u c t o r , ' i n ^ve r t i « ing . - . f l o> ,nm

tapping him lightly on the shoulder. ^ advert ised my productions aud

Beau sprang back in the car, knock- j m a , J 0 m o n o y ' Nicholas Longmrth.—

ing his hat into the i )ad and leaving j ^ u , l s : a " 1 " 'id persistent advertising

it in one minute nearly a mile behind. ] l s a 8 , 1 1 0 P , - e ' u ^ e , 0 w t - a h l i . -

He looked first toward the conductor j ^ i r a r i ^

then out of the window af ter his ha t I l l i v c , b t s 0nt ' dollar n busi-

and in a seeming fit of rago exclaimed • • , I C 8 S 8 ' 1 0 U ^ invest one dollar in ad-

" W h a t the d - l do you strike a T. Stewart.

50 j man in that way f o r ? i s that your 1 { W C , | l , e wiy success in accarriula-

501business? Is tha t what the company j t , n " a m i l ' l 0 n i , 0 l ' : i r s t e Q y ' ; a i s to W | h i r e s you f o r ? " ' l t , ' c unlimi'toa U". »r printer'-) ink.—

io j "I beg your pardon, sir, I only want ^ & a r n , , n l -

w ' y o u r t icke t , " replied the conduc to r j A mall who isi liberal in advert is ing

i oo nicekly. j is liberal m trade, aud such a man

t _ succeeds while his neighbor with 50 |

J ^ i o o ! u T i c U ( J t ! 0 it>8 : i i l v c w v l l — n e i g u o o r wiu . j . i . t Maroce*, *{ih | „ J . . . y . as good ^'oods tjiius and drop* out ol

market.—Horace Greeley. 8 0 f l l , M J >"•» . •vpi iv>. l IJI-UU W|1.1iuil<: u p .

in [taper case, with book

n. TKHJSAIC r SPKOJFtCS.

33 Urge 3 vial", cor.tainin.* the above list, with book of rtirectlnii" romnleU',

2 0 • '

2 0

P - j m i l y CASES.

for you to want my ticket, but I want ? ,6llS|my A a / T replied Beau bristling ii|i.

001 "Very Rorry, sir, really. 1 b a n l y

Cssesof io i*oii viuis in fluid, ioo d<.«e» each, with l t 0 call v o u r a t t e n t i o n , and I maoualol dire ' t r-ns, jiving ful l »cfmint of a l l ' , i .1 i ' • dtreases of Uoraes, Cat t le , Sheep . Docs W"* Hie o n l y IID'ans in m v p o w e r , nud n o g s , "itU lull dirsctions for u w . I n c , , ; . ] #1,,. o , . , ,* ! , , , „ Dtat walnut case, complete |10 00 COIKllK tOl.

POSD'S EXTUACT, ' u\- , i i , C u r e s P i l e s , N o u r a l K i a , T o o t h i i c h o , B l e e d - > O' l h a . l b e t . e r U S e ft c a / 2 : ' I ' :U-

mfc of thoLunKo. Stomach, Nose or o the r ' t r a c t ft p e r s o n ' s a ' t en t i o i l Organa, Burns, Bruisos .Lnmoness , Sprain 1 . I U I K I O I I

Hh€umalun. Sure nroaf. Sore \ :uul hi t llllll over tllC head Ine lirjt hinnt-j M- dittnt knauh

n e v t t i m . ' ,

u^n.oids,,.,. n* ttm I 'MVI I . .C i r t - a . . -r.h i t , i t

S I 0 0 , Q - a r r t s i 7 5 . : ho happens t o be lookinir l i . c o ther | y These i.emedies, except PON U S EXTIlAlT, 1 ' * .

by the case or single box, aiesenl to aiy part ofthi iway ! " replied tllO i n ' l i " i i r ' , t i ! liOiUl. country, by malt orcxpre«s, free of charge, on receipt [ t , , . ,, , ofthe pnee. j " \ \ o i l , sir, I a m rt, i>Iv to apologize

Address lli'Ki'HKtY's Si-Kcinc IIOKKOPATIIICMEU- I "oui'Axy, OlBc- and Depot,

No. 602 Brosdway, New York, •i.NKCoui'Axy, oiDce aud DepotV I to you ajjaiu if y o u wish. I h a v e p n i r of s h a c - ; '*

A darkey was boast ing io a grocer

"I 'he cheapness of ten pour. ot s'i-

g a r he had bought at n r iv t l « h o p . —

"Lot me weigh the package," -ai 1 the

groner. The darkey assented, and i :

w a s two pounds short. The " •. .•-•d

g e n t l e m a n " l o o k e d i i c i ]

m m i e n t , a n d then sa id

didn't cheat dis chile mi

he was get t ing the suga

; r a

' : s.s l i e

! 'r w h i l e

s t o l e t w o

A full assortment ofthe above for sale hv HUNT ! d o D C SO a l r e a d v OIIC' ' , said the UOW k T1UNTEB. Lowell, Mich. i; , 1 ,l* • I — . . . i disconcerted ofticial. Attention I

1 LI. THOSE who hold claims sgaiust Wilson! iA. Gardner k Co., are requested to hand them in | to theuuderslgccd; andthoseindebted to said Wilson | Gardner A Co., are expected to settle their acconnlH | without delav with the subscriber, as their books /ANE House and Lot desirably located. The!, must and wlU be closed up soon U House is new and compleUly finished. For I

SI. M. PERUY, Assignee iMloby AVBRV 4 JOHNBON.

For Sale.

of Wilton, Gardner A Co. I Lowell, June Oth, ISTU

If you want t«i make dull times " Y e s , no doub t , but that don ' t res- d u l l e r , the sur. st way we know of i s

tore my p r o p e r t y ; that's g o n e . " to g r u m b l e about it—tell e ; . ry'oody

"Wel l , sir, I can 't wait any l o n g e r it's dull, no money, etc., an : then

II t a ^ e your t i c k e t il you p l e a s e , " j take your a d v e r t i s e m e n t out of ilio said t h e conductor . i local paper.

Page 2: LOWELL WEEKLYlowellledger.kdl.org/Lowell Weekly Journal/1871/08... · Ri»er. The beet stock Manuhetarad, and first class workmen employed. Grand Rapids Business Di-rectory, Perry

T H E N E W S . a u d ; a r o u a p p o h e d to be I ' l o ^ a u n . C i t i z p i u

t r o o p s f r o m F t . Ell is a r e in p u r s u i t .

WM. CROSS was a r r e s t e d at D u b u q u e , o n

T h u r s d a y . A skiff load of dry goods , e tc . , val-

u e d at *400, wh ich bo h a d utoieii a t Glen H a -

v e n , Wis . , was f o u n d in b i s posses s ion , l i e a cknowledged t h e t h e f t , a n d was t a k e n back t o Glen H a v e n .

J o n s THOMAS, e n g i n e e r of a f r e i g h t t r a i n o n

t h e Co lumbus , Chicago a n d Ind ia t i a Cen t r a l

a i l road, h a d h is skul l f r a c t u r e d b y b r ing ing it

in contac t wi th t h e t i m b e r s of a b r i d c e a b o u t 100 miles ou t s ide of C h i c a g o . H o

idge al d ied

Mlttccllum-OH*. THE P r e s i d e n t has appo in t ed L . W. S m i t h

a u d T h o m a s H a r d m a n , J r . . of Georg ia , c o m -

miss ione r s t o the o n e - h u n d r e d t h a n n i v e t s a r y

of American I n d e p e n d e n c e . MB. FBSSCU. t h e miss ing cash ie r of t h e De -

troi t T r ibune , was s e e n on T h u r s d a y at T r c s -

d e n . O u t . No exp lana t ion is yet m a d e of t h e

cause of his sudden d e p a r t u r e . A s r i T to recover $0,000 f r o m t h e Wes te rn

Union Te leg raph C o m p a n y , f o r a n a l leged o r - shor t l ime . ror iu a c ipher m e s s a g e , was t r i ed at C i n c i n - CAIT. JAMES SLANTS, of t h e s t o n e canal -boat

uati a n d decided in f a v o r of t h e C o m p a n y . D . H e s s , was i n s t a n t l y kil led on tho

A CAPSIZED schoone r wi th six m e n c l ing ing Il l inois cana l . Monday n i g h t . T h e towing-pos t

t.i h e r was passed at sea , t w e n t v miles f r o m of h is l>oat b roke u n d e r t h e s t r a i n of t h e tow-t o h e r . « a s passe i a . . , i n i , i # U l i a t r ik ing h i m o n t h e h e a d , b r a i n e d B a m e g a t , on Tuesday. A heavy sea j h im! k n o c k i n g t h o l)ody i n t o tho r ive r . v e n t e d tho r e s c u e of t h e u n f o r t u n a t e m e n . T i | f G r 0 0 U , i 0 | d ( M o . ) Vide t t e s a y s t h o body

THE a m o u n t paid fo r w l 7 r , , , , , n P o f an u n k n o w n m a n was f o u n d h a n g i n g t o a t iaUng t h e new loan u p t o J u n e aoth,- not in- ^ ^ ^ > b o n t a w 6 e k R g 0 . l t

eluding the cost of pape r or t h e work of e n - u B u n | ) c c t 0 ( i t h a t h e was one of t h e horse -g r a v i n g and p r i n t i n g in t h e b u r e a u a t « a s m t v t | , j C V C 8 w h o vrero p u r e u e d t l u o u g h tha t town t o n . is *315,5GS. uomo davs ago , a n d t h a t h i s c o m p a n i o n was

IT is repor ted t h a t tho Seminole m i n e s , n o r t h

of Rawlings. of which so m u c h h a s b e e n sa id A g s m o r s s t a b b i n g a f f r a y occur red a t Dye r s -

of la te , are upon tho s u r f a c e of tho g r o u n d ; y j i i ^ i 0 v va , S u n d a y n i g h t . Two young m e n

tha t all the c la ims consis t of p i les of s t o n e s n a m 0 ( j j . s t a g n o r a n d H e n r y l lag ley go t i n to a

with p a p e r s tuck u p on t h e top . d i spu te , w h e n Uagley s t a b b e d S t a g n e r wi th a IT is s t a t ed tha t t h e P r e s i d e n t h a s wr i t t en a dirk k n i f e , t h e b lade e n t e r i n g l u s b r e a s t a n d

l e t t e r ea rnes t ly r e q u e s t i n g S e c r e t a r y Fish t o p e n e t r a t i n g ^ l u n g . T h e w o u n d wiU p r o b -

Xlio Strpauilet.

DY J . T . TBOWBR11W1E.

It in only the tlulcet a ln nui. With uothmg whatovur to do

But to creep from Its mo -<•», aud gleam In Ju*t a thin rlbbou or two,

WIHTO it spills from the rook and benorluklei The flowers all round 11 with dew.

8L\ IX PARIS.

American Women n n d t h c l r for I ' l emure uml KxcHrmrnt—A\ ti«t II Cosl Io W i n I tie a d m i r a t i o n of the Empero r

From LljipeneoU's Magazine for Augus t .

Half-wav up the hillilde it sli; lYo in "darkness Into the lio

Slides over the ledges, aud drips

... lips Krmn'dafknes* mto the Ught,

i d r i liriah

„ leado lu silence it sinks out of sight.

In a liasin ail tmiibling aud briaht Then once more iu the long meadow grasses

. M i s c e l l a n o o t i s I t e m s .

SOME New York newsboys clear $5 per day.

T H E R E nre 913,162 more women than men in Great Britain, ^

A CHARLESTOK c h i l d w a s d r o w n e d i i W

a barrel of molasses. i A N E O R O owns ono of tho best dry

goods stores in Richmond. BDFFAI .O, N . Y . i s t o h a v e a n e w

So slender, so brief In its course I It will never tie useful or grand.

Like the waterfall, foaming and hoarse. Or the river, benignant and bland.

That sweeps far away through the valley, And tu rns all tho mills lu the laud.

Just a brooklet, so perfect, so s w e e t -Like a child that is always a child I

A picture as fair and soraplete. As softly and peacefully wild.

As if nature hail only Just made it, Aud laid down her pencil and smiled,

. . . . . .

O, teach mo your song, happy brook 1 If I visit you yet many times.

If I put away bua inon aud )>ook. And list to your fairy-bell chimes,

Will your freahnoas breathe Into my versos. Tour music glide Into my rhyme* 7

j and Nor th t iek l ; 1 examined the patch ! last Thursday ; it seemed to be in very 1 good condition. I went on du ty a t 12 * o'clock, noon; I rel ieved the engineer, i H. Brown.

Robinson appeared perfectly sober, i all rumors to t h e contrary, notwith- T r e a t i n g of t he politics of women i t j standing. H e gave his s ta tement of would hardly be a possible th ing to ig-1 affairs in a cool and collected manner. u o r e t he hegira of American women to

T H E X C M B E R o s ROARD. • Pa r i s dur ing the last twelve years. To i There were f rom 201) to 250 passen- pain Paris has been the end and aim of - ^ ^ n g 1,000 acres.

gers alumni at t ' ^ e , ^ [nTatimted countrrwomen. I t ' h a sbeen TWENTY-FIVB dol lars is tho average

take^T Most of the passengers were to them what riLg in * < * * * * * price paid for the manuscr ip t of a d ime congregated almost directlv over the Ti l ly hlowboy— ' t h e snmnut of human novel. . . . . {

boiler on the southerly part of tho h a p p i n e s s , t h e highest pinnacle of earth- X K W YORK has twenty-nine mi es of boat, in order to catch tho breeze blow- ly hopes . " And once there, throwing W f t U . r f r i , u t a l u i 0 v e r seventeen miles of

appearences, to the winds, those hns-bandless wives led a cureer much more Paris ian than tha t of the Parisian themselves, paying little heed to tho convenances, which are almost always roimnliui nv Enroneau women. To bo ad-

abandon hit. in ten t ion of r e t i r ing f r o m t h e cab-i n e t a n d il is u n d e r e t o o d t h a t t h e l a t t e r h a s decided to comply wi th t h a t r e q u e s t a n d re-ma in . at leas t , f o r t h e p r e s e n t .

FBOM official r e t u r n s m a d o t o t h o B u r e a u of

ably p r o v e fa ta l . THE o r o - c o n c a n t r a t i n g mi l l a t G e o r g e t o w n ,

Col., k n o w n a s t h o W a s h i n g t o n mill, was d e -

a t roved bv lire T u e s d a y m o r n i n g , t o g e t h e r with t h e v a l u a b l e R r o m c o n c e n t r a t o r s . L o s s about f21 ,000 , a n d n o i n s o r a n c e . I h o l o s s

TERRIBLE BOILER EXPLOSION.

A S l » t e n I s l a n d F e r r y b o a t R n r a t s H e r H o l l e r — r i f t y K i l l e d O n t r i K h t — O v e r O n o l l a m l r e d a n d T w e n t y W o u n d e d — C a u a e o f t h e A c c i d e n t .

. ing from the south . When visited b y a reporter , last even-

i ing, they were comparatively comfort-able, and hope to bo able to endure tho

i journey home by to-morrow. Mayor i Carrol was able to sit iu a large arm chair. His hands were enveloped in

i cloths, which were continuallv moisten-1 ed by soothing liquids. Thei r asso-I ciate, a lderman Bradley, was doing all I iu h is power to alleviate the i r sufleriuga.

C A U S E O F T H E E X P L O S I O N .

If one-half of t he reports are true, t h e Government Inspector should be indicted by t h e grand ju ry . Had his examination of the boiler been thor-

saloons. AUOUSTA* Ga., sent North in four days

recently 15,829 watermellons. And ye t the season has hard ly opened.

A MAN <who once peddled apples in xt . - / . . i l . ;«i a m i l l m n i l f i l l i i ru igardod pv European women. l ^ Doau- ~ — i s n ; w worth* a million dollars.

w E S H e made il all by be ing honeat . l i .

• T , . YorV t h e y would bo immediately recalled i n , adoption o f t h e now city charter , ha\< every club and parlor in New York, paid 131,069 in fanes for dereliction otfv, have a European infamy in this way, i of duty. and, unfortunately, the i r example! AT Cambridge, Mass., las t week, the spread, for they were all handsome aud l ightening s t ruck tho house of a l ight-gif ted. They bought beau t i fu l dross- oning-rod-maker jus t to show its impar -cs for their fr iends a t home—they were tiality. courted by the more decent Americans, , PINK-LINED sunshades are going out

FROM omoial r e t u r n s m a u o t ^ n e uiureao^w T h e lose of 3 0 J h . i n t h e s l i p a t W h i t e h a l l

S ta t i s t ics , it a p p e a r s t h a t j s , , ,i t h i s c o n c e n t r a t i o n mi l l will bo seve re ly f e l t b y g j r e t , ^ f h e c o n c u s s i o n w a s t e m f l c , end ing J u n e 30, 1871, t h e r e a r n v e d ac Uie ^ m i n e r s iu t h a t r e g i o n . B h a t t e r i n g t h e f o r w a r d p a r t o f t h e b o a t ,

f Bos ton f r o m f o r e i g n coun t r i e s , 11,- A t j s c k s o n v i U o , HI., F r iday n i g h t , a n d k i l l i ^ p m i i \ e c a l d i n g a g r e a t n u m -

i s senge r s . of w h u m in ^ wero e tm- I r i 8 b m e n < n a m e d W i t h a m and O D n e n . w e n t ^ o f l e T h o h u r r i c a n e d e c k , , 6 ,®2 males , a n d 4 410 f ema les , o a h o u s e of iU- fame k e p t by G e o r g i a P o t t e r , w a g c a r r i e d o v e r b o a r ( 1 a i l d f e U 0 V e r a trn *\ya IrrATirARHlhlA rontl ict botW600 • I flAr Win- . • • • al a .

,0* T i i * , . YU i oxigh the disaster could not ha \o hap- c o u r M H l ^ l l l o u c v o u v . xaNK-iii^uu auxiauuuco mv ier The Sta ten Is land ferry-boat W eat- pened. I t seems tha t the engineer ap- v e . j t o b e a ( imi t ted to the ' fu l ler- o f f n 8 i , ion among the ladies, inasmuch

field, exploded her boiler a t 1:10 n. m., prehended au explosion for he says he i e 8 e v e n b t h e l m c k H t u i r H i n H t h e v • v o ^ t h o c o m p i 0 x i O u a very of Tuiv jmfh m fh« »!,« at Whitehal l looked at t he pa tch on tho cylinder last T l i e c u r t a i n i i a 8 f aUen on unhappy t ry ing color.

Thursday. Pa r i s whose folhes wore those of the ; \ DnifCT.iVFn in

port of B o s t o n f r o m f o r e i g n coun t r i e s , 11,-

400 p a s s e n g e r s grants, 0,0.12 n.-.—, — -, j0 a nouse oi lu-iame aopi u> v«ouigi» »

O w w o t o t h o i r r ep ress ib le conflict b e t w e e n a n d c o m m e n c e d t h r o w i n g b r i c k s a t h e r win-

Secre ta ry Ikmtwol l a n d Commiss ione r P l e a s - j j j r a i p o t t e r a r o s e f r o m h e r b e d a n d a n t o n , t h o s u p p l y of p a p e r f o r tobacco, wliis- - - • " • ' L -• • . 1 - A I . - _ v o v n t l IIA u t • « T H E S C E N E r i , . . u iochs rged a d e r r i n g e r p i s t o l t h r o u g h t h e w i n -ky, boer , a n d o t h e r in t e rna l r e v e n u e s t a m p s , d o W i f h e bal l e n t e r e d W i t h a m ' s s ide , mt l ic l -excep t tho adhes ive ones , is rapidly b e i n g e x - ing a w o u n d which will p r o v e f a t a l , h a u s t e d , a u d u n l e s s s o m e t h i n g b e d o n e soon , T h e 8 o H t h t , , t o r e p l e n i s h t h e s tock t h e b u r e a u will bo u n a - ; , 1 a n d l i t t l e o n e s ; w o m e n w e r e d i s t r a c t e d | ble to supp ly t h e s t a m p s to dealers . P l e a s a n t - D a . E . D . D r o i t s , of G r e n a d a , Miss iss ippi , . l o g t j i n 8 b a n d 8 a n d c h i l d r e n ; ,

. f i i c h BoutweU revoked , a t M e i n p h i s , S a t u r d a y , o n M a t o j . c h i l d r e n w e r e c r y i n g f o r ' on m a d e a c o n t r a c t , wfiich BoutweU revoked a u d ordered h im to m a k e a now ono , which r i e a s a u t o n r e f u s e s t o do .

I T is es t imated tha t t h e g o v e r n m e n t i ncome

f r o m t h e Alaska seal i s land d u t y will b e g rea t ly

The curtain has fallen on unhappy trying* color. ^JiursUay. . . ^ Pa r i s whose follies were those of t h e ; B I U C K L A Y E R in Phi ladelphia h a s

The examinat ion of t h e c y ' i u ^ r Russians and Amoricuns far more than Upoii bound over for tr ial on charge of and ki l l ing ana scaimug a grea t n u m - w h i c h was blown out, shows t h a t t he , . , a t k a s t of these poor v • mnefnr intn tho to of j S u p t o Tho h u m c a a e deck iron had been aalau out a round th« i ^ T a S t t T g W 8

i b e o n "p p r o " | w a s b e y o n d d e s c r i p t i o n . M e n w e r e I f a v o r i t e " i s t a k e n a w a y , a n d w h e n l ) r J " t e d o r 1 p p ' . i s truck d u m b at the loss of their wives The F locks of North Missonri Almost ' b e a u t y goes and only the memory of | THE longest s t ream oi water over ' and l i tUeones : women were dis t racted | E n t i r e l y ue . t royed . f o l l v T , t b r o w n i b y a eteam fire-engino, is 8a.d •

Yet the stoiy i s as old Messalina, as to have been 827 feet. The engine wafy

•v V* • V-. ^ - w — " — A 1 * v. t o u u «

large number of persons in the water, of paper , who were drowned.

DISEASE AMONG SHEEP.

D a . E . D . D r o i t s , of G r e n a d a , Miss iss ippi , a t ^ . l o g t b n g b a n d B a n d c h i l d r e n ; ; f > o m the s t . J o ^ p h Herald. Y e t t h e s t o r y i s a s o l d M e s s a l i n a , a s t o h a v e b e e n 8 2 7 f e e t . I h e e n g i n e w a s ;

suic ided a t M e m p h i s , S a t u r d a y , o n • I a u i ; w b i l e l i t t l e c h i l d r e n w e r e c n r i n g f o r l A f e w v e a r s a g o , s h e e p - r a i s i n g w a s ! T h e o d o r a , H e r o d i a s , W o m e n w i l l . t h e " G i f t , o f C m c i n n a t i , i n I t o b . 4

s t r ee t , by t a k i n g m o m h i n o . C a u s e , i m p e c u m - ; w b o w e r e j 0 8 t . T h e b o i l - j e x t e n s i v e l y e n g a g e d i n , i n n o r t h M i s - d a n c e b e f o r e k i n g s , a n d t h e y w i l l w o r - j M A I N E r e p o r t s o n l y a t w o - f i f t h h f t y ^

osity. i e r w a s s u d d e n l y b l o w n o u t , l a n d i n g i n j 8 o u r i , a n d t h i s r e g i o n g a v e f a i r p r o m i s e ! s h i p f a l s e g o d s . T h e y i n a g l i t t e r o f a o r o p . N e w h a y i s n o w s e l l i n g i n L e w -

. , i . n i i a n k a seal i s land d u t v will b e g rea t lv A BOHSAMBCLIST n a m e d M e y e r wa lked o u t of j ^ b o w ^ d i 8 t a n t . . T h e f o r - o f b e i n g i n t i m e o u e o f t h e g r e a t w o o l , fictitious b r i l l i a n c y s t i l l s o m e d r e a d f u l : i g t o n a t ^ 3 0 . T u " " " * r ° t h , t h a t n o seal oil is be - a t l u r t - s t o r y w i n d o w in t h e G lobe H o t e l a t j w a r d , p a r t o f t h e b o a t , t h e u p p e r c a b i n 1 p r o d u c i n g d i s t r i c t s o f t h e U n i o n . S h e e p s p e c t r e o f a g r a y h a i r o r a l o s t c h a r m 1 5 .

u . T I l 0 . o n t r a c t binds the lessoee to Louisville, Sunday morning, and sustained fa- ; a n d ai] ) W f t 8 ins tant ly shivered and I r a i s ing is over, however, for the pros-1 which tells them tha t they have eaten of ; <<cilftl

nav Ae Kovemment sixtv-two and a half cents tal injuries. 1 split into a thousand pieoes. As an ent, in all t he count ry nor th of the Dead Sea apples. ica is said to a ca l lon o n t h e oU t aken , bu t does no t b ind CONHTABLE BODOHA*, who w a s w o u n d e d , e y e - w i t n e s s e x p r e s s e d i t , t h e f o n v a r d M i s s o u r i n v e r . F o u r o r five y e a r s R i a , w h o h a s

b . • •«. " ^ly whiio a t t e m p t i n g to a r r e s t a a e o p e r a d o n a m e d ; p a r t o f t h o b o a t w a s l i f t e d fifty f e e t I n 1 a g o , t h e " s c a b " m a d e i t s a p p e a r a n c e 1 - -:f0' Armstrong, near Springfield, Mo., a day or two | the air, the smoke-stack fell, and then among the flocks, and so rapid and

10 ago, has Since died. j everything was bur ied in the hold, terrible has Ijeen i ts efi'ects,that few are 1 J -,1 TVvi:* rv̂ lcrtvwA Hrinc I "Dnaannrrnra luirSOM. l..ff «1ittAMaA it. 1R R11t)1)nflP(1.

Death of the Donhle-Hended Child.

champion pardoner" of Amer-d to be the governor of Geor-

gia, who has granted 348 pardons since August , 1808, including 48 cases of murder .

j gal lon on m o o u lanou , ^ -t h e m to take a n y o i l ; and , as it is w o r t h only t h i r t y - s e v e n a n d a half c e n t s in San F ranc i sco , A r m H t r 0 n g i U 0 t t r o i I 1 X u B u o i u , ^ v . , — 1 i u o u u , m c o i u u n . c - a w ^ n . a u u vuvaa b i u o u k u i e u u v i t o , a i m dw t n p i u «uv» ..

rot"af("er*«1 >e?t is li'irmped^n^^ ago, has since died. ; everything was b u n e d in the hold. terribTe has been its ef iMts, that few are W e mentioned in ou r columns yes-1 M r Postoffice-man I want to pay

s r e f — ^ s r . r r . , - ' ^ ^ ^ ; " I ^ l n s ' Bailroad to t h e f o r m e r f o r a t e r m of u ino ty -

n ine years , was agreed u p o n aud accep ted by

a largo m a j o r i t y of t h e s tockho lde r s . T h e

proi iosed p a r t i e s t o t h e lease a r e t h e Cincin-

nat i . Hami l ton a n d D a y t o n Boad , t h e i ' e n n -svlvania Company , now ope ra t i ng t h e P i t t a - h a v e b e e n p o i s o n e d • . . «... « a% rtrx t i n t 1 tt

nnL' in iippn wa te r t o n milo« below ( J r a u a u i u w u n u n . S m i t h , w h o f o r m e r l y h a i l f n l i r . i r n i a n n d t w o I C C T — n u d a l l u p o n a ' SOME b e a r h u n t e r s i n M a i n e h a v i n g Tower between St. Louis and Cairo. Loss ( er had the i r children blown from their thousands of sheep His b r o t h e H n - a i l e b o d T h e ^ l _ f o r sucL was: received $18 bounty for three beare . i- ' i , l u , i ronP„ ^ ooo ' a rms. The water in an instant was law, Dr. William H. Crawford, of 1, wwi w eveninir at No Q i killed on Sunday, have quieted their 610.000— . l o i j v o w i f h man wnmfin fln.l ohildron ^'dilwell county, has l o s t , Tl „» * rtn,n iiunii I consciences bv oivinff t he money t o n

hiirg. Ft. Wayne and Chicago Bail way, and the wa. found on the p a ^ m « o ^ n . ne« . , w o u W ^ v e W „ safe t o W ' ^ v e W n Ifcduccd from a n d ^ d S L ^ a Z i " v T w d l ^ h v don ' O r a n d Bapids aiid I n d i a n a Ba i l road ^ m p a n y . ! , a c k y . Sunday n i g h t , i n a d y i n g { o r t h e u l l i n j u r e d b u t t h w e r e a u i c . 1 0 ^ j . I t i B B O m e w l i a t d i f f i c u l t . a U ^ ^ b o S f t v e L n t W s m a r ^ l l o u s 1 1 ™ ' H n L 7 i t a T r a t V i f ^ -T h e t h i e e c o m p a n i e s m e n t i o n e d g u a n n t e e i n - , J0H.S C o u a s , a n E n g l i s h m a n , was m u r d e r e d j — , 1 1 „.I 1 •. 1.: I . I U . ; I S t a t e s w h o h a v e s e e n t n i s m a n e u o u s | o o m e d o w n s t a i r s < W i l e — J i l C I U I V V | •— — — —— 0 - - | „ _ . . , w

t e r e s t on <1,800,000 of t h e b o n d s of u i e i u c h - 1 C h a t t a n o o g a , S a t m d a y n i g h t , by H u g h

Bichmond Boad b e t w e e n F t . Wayne a n d m a c e a n d s h o t h i m twice . T a l h t y h a s beon B i c h m o n d — t h e c o n s u m m a t i o n of t h i s consol i - a i r e s t e d . dat ion—will give a c o n t i n u o u s t h r o u g h l ine b e - . ACOOOSTS f r o m Kalo igh , N . C., s a y s t h a t tween Cinc inna t i a n d L i t t l e T r a v e r s e Bay, a , a r e 0 v e r o n e h u n d r e d ind ic t -

dis tai .ee of a b o u t ^ O n u ^ ^ m e n t < , m e m b e r s o f t h e K u - K l u x in t h a t

GBtTNLEAF WHITE a n d David Call, b o t h of ' ^ t a t e . a n d t h e n u m b e r wiU p robab ly be inc roas -

f o r t h e u n i n j u r e d , b u t t h e y w e r e p a n i c - 10 to W head , I t is somewhat difficult 1 g t a t e 8 v h o b f t V e M e Q t h i g m a r v e U o u a I O o m e stnoken, and leaped o v e r b o a r d w i t h o u t to estimate the immenselossthe "scab I ^ o { u a t u r e w i I 1 l e a r n i t 8 r regard t o consequences. 1 ' — *v^_u — " " • * 1 J - 1 ^ *0 *

Many persons were drowned 1 harbor pol ice boat oame to the gage in m e Dusiueso iiivrm uo ucccnom r and gent lemen who were in a rtw boat to b r ing the i r stock to s ta r t with f rom npar the ba t t e ry saved several lives, diatant states. The firemen also went to t h e r e s a n ^ a n d bravely d id they work. The debr is

" O h ,

GBtrNLEAF W m a ' a ^ D a v i d Call, both of j *«ate,ud the number wiU probably be incroaa- I n ' i i ^ i o r e ' p a r t of the 'ha l l ^ f l r a t " 7 e - T h e ****** In Pers ia . HaUowell, were drowned near Bath. Me., on ^ to ^ t h ^ ^ b y ^ ^ e epmflrf tor m o v e d . The cries of the poor half-broil- ] Special cables add l i tUe to t h e i n - , a n f l w n n m i g t l C ana piayim. ; . ^ Saturdav evening, by the upsetting of a boat., ' P ; ed n o t i m s were hear t reniuug. _ S t i m u ; f o n n » ^ o n received of the droadlul fam-1 S i n c e r o a c h i n e B o 8 t S n , a few days [ o r cus tomers b ^ pu t t ing down t h e

- • 1 , 0 ; lants were given them M they struggled ine In-parsia. The drouth last year , in a i n c „ t h e o t h e ? _ o r t he o ther h a l f - w a s f , ires to the lowest limit. j beneath t h e beams and oils ponred on . fce central and southern proyinees j f i i b ( i n R ^ v ftnd d i e d V M t e r d a v after- VRHT beaut i fu l cloaks for dr iv ing

burns . As fas t as the wounded consequent u p o n the par t ia l failure of recovered• they were borne to the 1 the crops, caused great des t i tu t ion and

or chilaren. as i t would almost seem where, and i t won' t was proper to allude to t h e phenomenon- -1 know what to do at a l l ." Dad oujoyed excellent heal th f m m her T i 1 a t i , l t 0 E continnes brisk.

S . S e e , a t ^ t o h u T e ' oae exhib- i » ' nm

n S . h » h a t e f e W e w T r t a i l i teds igna of a t a r a s ^ This, h J , w e ' ^ . toking out full eomplemenls ot pleasure

J S r a - a n d J l ^ - k e r , . The c o Z p a n i e . « W d i n g

Ls Phi lade lphia , o n T h u r s d a y , Char l e s

Schiffley was he ld t o a n s w e r a c h a r g e of ob-

t a in ing m o n e y f r o m t h o postoff ice on f o r g e d ,

m o n e y o r d e r s . A 82,500 m o n u m e n t , m a d e of t h e s i lver- i

t i nged g ran i t e of New H a m p s h i r e , h a s been 1

e rec ted over t h o g r a v e of t h e la te Sec re t a ry 1

Death of Bober t Ful ton ' s Engineer .

From the M. Y. Son. j their burns . 1 were

CUvsU 1/* ***0 • • • .1 • i VxiaaV'V« •'J —" • • - - - - - - — —

, „ . E Smi th Mr. Dyke was b o m on t h e ' minutes ambulances f rom Central St. Stanton, in Georgetown. j 3 t b d a y 0 f j n n e , i 7 8 6 , a n d in his earl ier Hospital were a t W h i t e h a l l The ^ ,

Massachusetts Bhode Island vears followed the t rade of a carpen- scalded victims were placed in ambit- of revenue to the goverumeut nal r e v e n u e m M ^ h u a e t t s B h o d e I s l a n d ^ H o W f t 8 a t o n e t i m c c a ^ n t e r o n l a n c e s — ' ^ -a u d Connec t icu t . J u l y 1st, 1870, was 154. T h e , o f t h e o l d 1 > a r k T h e a t e r - ^

n u m b e r now e m p l o y e d is 93. . . . . . _• 1

. T h e new Governor promised to raise ui tonnecucui. jmy I »» , IOIU, W M - " " I T H E B t a g e o f t b e o l d p a r k Theater , speed. Pr ivate carriages aud express not onlv the usual sum b u t still more. " ^ n i V T u u ' i w "in f tUT amber now employed i» J . Having a na tura l ta lent for engineer 1 wagons were also b rough t in to reqoisi- and this oppression orove the rest o* I a n that medic-1 aid c THE bam and stables of Hon. J . • • i , ,^ however, he turned his a t tent ion tion. The insurance pat ro l wagon bore : t b e t . o n n t r v people f rom their h o m w ; d bu t it was t " t W^pole, Mass,, w w consumed n to tha t business, and soon became an several loads of moaning human beings and th rough t h e cities, which pay no ; , j j j ^ d j t b

iy, with a large quantity of hay aud grain. to the hospital . Some died on the way, The fa i lure of the W o p s in i ' l f T ^ J " „

taken sick and died yesterday after-noon, as already s tated. The two por-t ions of tne body were so int imately connected t ha t t he dea th of one ren-dered tha t of t he other inevitable. The spectacle was equally novel, strange, and unparalleled. Upon one end of the body reposed the head of the dead in-f an t ; upon tho o ther t ha t of t he live one, with

VERT beaut i fu l cloaks for dr iv ing and theatres are of black cashmere, made in the shape of a circular w i th deep cape Open at the back, ande lahoz t ately embroidered with white P rus s i a^ f^ braid and t r immed with black an.Z white fr inge a finger deep.

A H U S B A N D advertises t h u s : My wife Maria has strayed or been stolen.

E a s t

day . L o s s $15,000; i n s u r e d 55.500.

MAY & BOQEB'S lower p a p e r mill , a t L e o . j ia . 1-1— — • flistant engineer on xwuen. JC miuu n Mass. . wiw b u r n e d on S u n d a y . L o s s . i?15.- a t e n m e r C l e r m o n t o n h e r first t r i p to 000 ; par t ia l ly i n s u r e d . A l a rge n u m b d r of A ik^Y. . . T h o o l i i o f f n c r i n e p r w a s a

IU several loads of moaning human beings a n d th rough t l m c i t i e s , w h i g h p a y uo j T h e c b i l ( i d i e d i u the presence of its a—~ to the h o s p i t a l Some died on t h e way, tax«e. The fa i lure of t W W p s in n t . The oorose nresenls tlie ap-1 In 1897 Mr. Dyke was engaged as as- and o thers were d e l m o u s with pain. Lar is tou wes rendered m o w d W r o n f i ) e u n i n c e o f t w o J n f n i

Il t s a , l e 6 p . A p . i A c ...

" ' One ambul mce was hlled with children, , because other provinces, which mostly j J,..,.,,,,!!.. ( l l p v nH,...,,,.,! the ordinarv suf - 1 conductors has just been tr ied in an whose eyes were closed imd their whole r a i s e d opium, ami cotton, and silk, de -1 • i l l c i d t . u t to ' " A \*aA

expert. ' ' jU7 -Mr. D y k e w t

sistant engineer on Rober t Fu l ton ' s

b a u d s are t h r o w n ou t of e m p l o y m e n t .

DUBINO a s e v e r e t h u n d e r s t o r m a t W a s h i n g -

ton , Pa . , W e d n e s d a y even ing , Mrs . J . Allen

was i n s t an t l y k i l led , a n d h e r y o u n g e s t chi ld and

faces swelled beyond recognition. Their l i t t le feet and legs were cooked and the i r tender muscles laid bare.

At least thirty-five persons mus t have been killed and drowned. This is bas-

1 A l b a n y . T h e c h i e f e n g i n e e r w a s a

S c o t c h m a n , a n d o u t h e a r r i v a l o f t h e b o a t a t t h e p o i n t of d e s t i n a t i o n , h e

c e l e b r a t e d t h e e v e n t b y a r o u s i n g s p r e e , was i n s t a n u y l u u e a , a n a no r y o u o g e a i c u u u m m t ] ^ r e s u l t o f w h i c h w a s t h a t M r . F u l t o n u e e n HIUUU HUU UIUWUCU. - t i

a lady n a m e d E l i z a b e t h Wolf were b a d l y s t u n - d l H c h a r g e d h i m a u d p r o m o t e d M r . D y k e ; i n g i t o n t h e l o w e s t e s t i m a t e s .

n e d by l i g h t n i n g . 1 t o h i s p o s i t i o n . T h e w o u n d e d w i l l r e a c h o n e h u n d r e d . Two s i s t e r s , aged e i g h t e e n a n d twen ty -one . " *

n a m e d E l l en aud H a r r i e t L a y t o n . d r o w n e d

t h e m s e l v e s in t h e H u d s o n , nea r Y o n k e r s . be-

c a u s e t h e y could ob ta in no o m p l o v m e n t . The i r suic ide was de l ibe ra t e a n d p r e m e d i t a t e d .

GEH. EDWABU N. HALLOWELL, w h o com

m a n d e d t h e F i f t y - f o u r t h M a s s a c h u s e t t s (col r _ , r t , . y

o r e d ) Beg imen i a f t e r t h e d e a t h of Col . Shaw, o n h i s o w n c r a f t . I n o n e o f h i s t r i p s t o ; a u b o u r u f t e r t h e e x p l o s i o n . j p a h a n ,

a n d was b r a v e t t e u Br igad ie r Gene ra l , d i ed at N e w O r l e a n s w i t h o r d n a n c e a n d a m m u - T h e m o s t r e l i a b l e r e t u r n s of t h e c a s - c o r p s e s M e d f o r d , Mass . , ou T h u r s d a y .

u uio uiuer umv ui .uu i . . * M a r i f t B t r a Y e d or beCU stolen, eyes still b r ight and cunous , j yfoQQxeT returns her will get h i s head ings ui full breathing order. | b r o | . e As to t rus t ing her, anybody ^ a n

could accomplish j d o jf they see fit; for as I never pay found unavai l ing. , ^ o w n d e b t 8 , it 's not likely I ' l l pay

•jr'n."

infants asleep. Ap-1 \ C A ^ o f ^ .^wspaper * tho ordinarv suf- oouductors has just been tr ied in an

to death lor ihe 1 Engl ish court . A gentleman had sent

a , opened | examination. I t is doub t fu l if t he

Mon-t fa rm.

j , none have exhibited any unusual develop-ments. Nor can tliis extraordinary de-par tu re f rom the laws of nature be ac-counted for. In Phi ladelphia , where all the medical Solons undertook to

nrdvoueu DnKiujer uenanu, UAOU new yjgivnuo j IJ^ mcmi reuauie icturun ui M

, Mass. , o u T h u r s d a y , n i t i o n f o r G e n e r a l J a c k s o n , i n 1 8 1 4 , . u a i t i e s b y t h e d i s a s t e r g i v e a

iain bu i ldu ig of Dick ' s i ron works , a t : D y k e a n d t h e c r e w w e r e p r e s s e d 0 f k i l l e d fifty, a u d w o u n d e d o u

e, I ' a . , was b u r n e d T u e s d a y n i g h t . 1 i n t o s e r v i c e . T h e y f o u g h t g a l l a n t l y i n d r e d a u d t w e n t y . TBF main

Meadvi l le . L o s s , 1*20,000; i n s u r e d f o r •10,000.

h a n d s a r e t h r o w n o u t of ea i i j loymei i t . machinery had juat been put in.

HOSOBA.GKEATO.V, a wel l -known rag-p icker

of New York c i ty , d ied a day o r two s ince . She

h a d a c c u m u l a t e d live t h o u s a n d do l l a r s , which

.b . toquath*! t o . U.U.girl .ho l.«i liv^i, ^ ^ ^

" " • Mr. I-aao Taylor « ..ear w e , . 1 Rantoul , informs us t ha t he has now

e ' t he third crop upon a piece of ground

fought gallantly Fifty ; the defence of tha t city. Mr. Dyke re-New 1 ceived a wound iu the leg, and lie bore

the scar to tho day of h is death.

Three Crops From the Same Field This Season.

t o t a l

one hun-dred and twenty.

8 T A T B M E N T O F T H B E N G L S B E B .

Robinson, tho engineer, makes following s ta tement :

the

1 'UD, " " v " J ; ; all the medical Solons undertook to men were caught diggi g u] | B O j v e the problem, noth ing whatever to feed their s tarving families, w o 9 b ^ % | | t The child was

and the pesti lence in consemience com- ; l o o k e a u ^ I 1 . w i t i 1B

a u i u z e m e I 1 t ,^,1 mtor-mitted fea r fu r a v a g ^ One-haif of b ^ a t t e m p t , to account for i ts Persia is said to be depopulated. •' - ^

A Curious Case.

A Jacksonvil le (HI.) correspondent of uwmg s ta tement : , i...,,!. the Democrat says a sui t involving

! V 0 Staten Is land , | p r o b a b | y nearly a million of dollars has abou t 4 vears of a c e : have been an 1 {"

GEOROE W. GBIST, while out bnnthig near o n i,j8 f ltrmt H 0 W n the present season, ; d i d U o t re Detroit, was killed by the accidental discharge j i e H 0 W e d b u r i e y t which came up j b a d ent i re of his giui as he was putting il in his wagon, t j | j e j y a | , d b i d f a i r to yield agood crop, hoat. I t is a uuu-uuu . .....

THE failure of Capt. J. D. Johnson, a prom- b n t j b e c ] , j u c h hugs got into it, and 111 Sundays between regulur trips. I , merchant of PitUburgb, isannotinc- tt HJ ,o r t t ime i t was ruined. He plowed on the" boat when the explosion 1 liabilities will fall little short of jt under and planted the Hold to corn, place. I had jus t come oil" tho d

' 1 * 1 . . . ( . t i l l ( l l t l / k maVAk IA — A i . . . * . M « r A n a t n t t ^ A A O

i n e u t coal

e d . IliH

(200,000.

years. I got a certificate and passed an examination. I d id not b r i r g my certificate to the Company, for they

lot require one on th i s ferry, ent i re charge of the Westfield

a hal f -hour boat, run on was

took ! IV Uimcr unu ifjutirevi «uv ^ uinco. A uuu jus t COUie Oil" the dock. I The corn came u p aud also gave prom- i t was then twenty-five minutes past

Mas. BOWE. living in the township of Pipe- jse of an abundant crop. But his hopes (,ne. I went down' into the fire-room, stone, in Berrien county, Mich,, was killed a 1 a f , w e i i Us his corn were soon to be One of the engineers, Patr ick day or two since by falling in front of a mow-| blasted. The chinch bugs at tacked it Finnigun, was in the room. I ing machine. in force, and the dark green leaves said, "Pa t r i ck . how is the

As-eaoSAirr, named Jonas, connected with wilted and turned yellow. Again the water?" and he replied, " All r i gh t . " Grady's circus, iu descending with a baUoon in j plow was started into the field, and the Maseillon. Ohio. Saturday, fell in the canal, corn was plowed under. This t ime and was drowned. j buckwheat was sown, and once more he

HEBHKBT F. NOUBSE, indirted for the mur-; has the promise of a c r ip , from tha t der of Wm. Park and W.Leaatwood. last De- field. Look ou t for an early frost, cembar, was tried in the D i s t r i c t C o u r t a t i Inaac vou know they sometimes visit

j mUtT buckwheat fieldn. Not tliat we wish

am a b o u t 40 years of age ; have been an , f ^ n ^ m e u ' c i d ' in the Morgan county engineer for twenty yea r s ; iCircui t Cour t by Rebecca Vail, Wm. employed by the Company for sixteen H C a r f o n f ^ a u d y RoWe, Mary Baker

aud eight others," against Kit ty F lynn , Thomas M. Carson, Thomas Rowe and fourteen others . The bill alleges tha t , on a day too remote to be mentioned with certainty, but abou t ono hundred j e a r s ago, one A. M. Rowe, of the s ta te of Virginia, became possessed by dis-covery of a le r ta in precious stone, re-morkable for its hardness and brilliancy, and, so far

1 to Chei-enne . a n d f o u n d gui l ty .

THE Chicago C l u b h a v e purchased of I ' o t t e r

P a l m e r t h e la te r e s i d e n c e of H e n r y F a r n u m ,

o n Michigan a v e n u e , f o r a p e r m a n e n t club-

house . T h e pr ice pa id was £45.000.

GEOBGA WASHISOTOS is d e a d . H e was run

over by a c o n s t r u c t i o n t r a m on t h e Peor ia and

Botk I s l a n d B a i l r o a d a n d kil led. Deceased

was a m e m b e r of t h e l i rm of E . Wil l iams A-

Co., of Galva , HI. A MAS f r o m M o r g a n c o u n t y . HI., n a m e d J .

Wells fel l fro-n t h o p o r c h of t h e S h e r m a n

H o u s e , ut Quiucy, T h u r s d a y n i g h t , to t h e p a v e a f e u t . and I r a c t u r e d h i s skul l . N o h o p e s ; s o t h a t t h e t r a i n s c o m i n g f r o m d i n e r -of h is recovery . I e n t d i r e c t i o n s w e r e l i k e l y t o c o m e i n t o

A FABrv of I n a i a n s r e a c h e d t h o Gal la t in j c o l l i s i o n . T h e s e m e n a r e d e s c r i b e d a s

Yalley, nea r Gal la t in City, c a r r i e d off a l a rgo 1 , ,1 r e s p e c t a b l e c o n n e c t i o n s , a n d w e r e

m o u n t of s t o c k , a n d killed two m e n . T h e y i m e r e l y e n j o y i n g t h e m s e l v e s .

discourage you, but then it is I e s t to be prepared for d.sappoii i tment.

Two MEN in Eng land recently set out to divert themselves, and having don-ned female a t t i re as au appropr ia te costume in which to make mischief, set upon a poor rai l road switchman, bound him hand and foot, singed off his whis-kers, and then h u n g him by the heels.

1 Not liuding sufficient amusement in tliis, tlie.v set the switches and signals

At th i s t ime I approached t h e boiler and tr ied the third cock I found tha t the water touched the thi rd cock. The boiler has only three cocks. I then went u p to he engine room, and pass-ing the do< r, w.-nt in. I found t h a t the boiler cairied twenty-seven pounds of steam. I then went 011 tho dock two

as has been tested, i ts char-acteristics are those of a diamond of the first water ; tha t th i s stone is one and a half inches in d iameter one way and something near a quar te r the o ther way, and is of $800,000 value; and this stone is now in the possession of Thomas M. Carson, of Jacksonville. The plaint iffs ask tha t the de fendan t s be compelled to br ing this gem into court, anil a receiver lie appointed by the court to sell it aud dis t r ibute the

T . • Vi0 u t I ! proceeds among the heirs. The value minutes. I went againon the boat and i)f fltone W ( ) g b | ) t r e ( , e u t I v u b C , r . into the pilot-house. I h e captain was t a u i t h l , H g h it has beeu in the pos-in there at t he time. J u s t as I was go 8 l . 8 M i o n „ f Will iam Roe and his heirs

1/11%. L \ I » •» A AID *• * »» i a o AtV f

by the court tha t a contr ibut ion sejtft unsolicited to a newspaper ceases t o ' b a the proper ty of the writer precisely as though it were an ordinary letter, * aud tha t he cannot insist upou i t s r e tu rn in case it is not used.

THE New Bedford (Mass.) Mercury says tha t a seaman, re turning f rom his first voyage in a whaleship recent ly ar-rived a t this port , found await ing h im a letter from thetfxecutor of h i s fa ther , who had deceased dur ing his son's ab-

wu, uub mi nt*i;ujpw> w avvuuuK iu» im seuce, announcing a beoues t of a b o u t existance were futile. I t is regarded as $60,000. Tlie heir was of course pleas-more of a curiosity tlian the Siamese | ed at tliis substant ia l token of h i s twins, and most certainly the spectacle | fa ther 's affection; bu t to the suggest ion was more pleasurable to tho eye. The 1 tha t he woidd now give u p the sea, re-child was shortly to have been exhibi t-! plied : N o ; I shall look af ter m y p r o j ^ ed to the public, aud would doubtless | erty, aud then probably sh ip for Jf i-here, as elsewhere, have at tracted otlior whal ing voyage. throngs of visitors. Th« parente were A M E U B E B of t he Arkansas L o g i s k -especially devoted to »he fitt le marvel, t w h o f ( ) r e c o n o r a i n « b l i c

and their sorrow is gnevous . expenditure, in speaking on ,au extrava-

TrpMtiM Siirueif * o n t f l P l ) r o P r i a t > o u . indignantly ex-Treaties Signed. , c l | l i | n e d . "Qent lemen , talk abou t ' a d -

Postmaster Cresswell has returned i equate compensation of publ ic ser-to Washington from Long Branch, ! vants. ' Why, sir, dur ing the late where he went to obtain tne signature I was in thirty-seven batt les, - was in thirty-seven batt les, was

wounded thir teen times in the cause of the South, and the entire pay I re-ceived was $30 dollars in Confedera te money, every cent of which I gave fo r one glass of old rye whisky."

THE strength of the Masonic Order in the United States, as reported bv tho Committee on Correspondence of t h e Grand Lodge of Pennsylvania, ap Rates as follows: Number of lodpo 7,495; members initiated d u r i n g £ ^ last year, 41,93(1; total number of mem-bers in th i r ty-e ight States and one Ter-

ing down stairs into the engine-room, the explosion took place. F rom where I stood 1 knew I could not get th rough the door ; so I opened a trap-door. As I did so I saw the fireman, Rober t Crossou, coming up the trap. Tho boiler had been in use nine years. I t was considered a good boiler. I cuu not tell what caused the explosion. The boiler had a pa tch on the cylinder part when the explosion occurred. The boiler was overhauled lust w in te r ; iu fact the boilers of bo th tho Westfield

o v e r a c e n t u r y .

" D o they miss me at h o m e ? " is not much sung in that family.

CitoqrEi is becoming passce. ety waits lor a new i u \ e ition.

Sooi-

of the Pres ident to the treaty for the interchange of money orders between the United States and the United King-dom of Great Britain ; also the postal convention between the United States and the Argentine Confederation. Tlie latter treaty establishes a direct ex-change between the United States and the Argentine Republ ic by means of a line of mail s teamships plying between New York and Rio Jane i ro and between the latter point and Buenos Ayres. Tho rate of postage established by this convention, which takes effect on a day -.1 r ~ r VT " T " " to be designated by the respective1 r i t o r y , i ^ m f h e o r d e r s t h e s t rong

postal depar tments o f t h e t w i T o u n - r V " N e ' 1 % f l o W h e r 0 . t , , f l r e n.C ^ tries, is, on a single letter of one-half! 0 ^ g e s ll1", 7 ^ ? 1

, e r 8 , i1 ' io1 9

ounce or under, fifteen cents. ™ l .n e H • W l t 1 ' 0 0 ( 1 tt.n<1 33;-991) members. Pennsylvania has 310

'' WHO dale spit tobacco juice on t h e ! 1 i m 1«0 8 "» t l 3 2 . 9 5 8 members. Hoor of thi« (Mir {" savagely exclaimed ! THE following is a vr.bratim copy of

written and read by a . our city in 1857, his age being 10 or the reabouts ;

. BOY.—Once there was a two boys, one was a s h a r p

fellow, and tho o ther was a dull boy, so the fa ther sent the dull boy to a ton

—0- . , . . v . . . v v . , - r — dollar schoolmaster, to get h im sharp -er, slapping tho o ther in a fr iendly j ened up. After a little while he grew manner upon the shoulder, " give us j so keen tha t you could not touch hin|\ a chow 01 tobacco." | without cut t ing yourf ingers . F . D—

erately ejected a quant i ty of the noxious saliva upon the lloor ol the aisle. "All right, my f r i end ," said the first speak-. . M &l. . . 4 I > <.•>.]

FOR THE BOYS AND GIRLS.

Lit t le Girl Le t t .

^ Dt MIONOSETTE.

Wlieu ahn was younger, by one swift year, On a niiil-aiinimi r weti lng, m mnlit. ami frweet

With tho gardfii 'f swiiW'U* olomna, n r miued— All at ouee—the sound of her litUe feet j

Slli-sod her footHteiw in parlor aud ball. Her hlrd-llke rhfrpitigii. h r r iiierry about.

Anil we laughud toencli other—"Siiiilx-ani'iiaoBtlll— What new mlaclilef U Sunbeam about 7"

Lightly thrnugti all the room* wo rau— •Swiftly we searched the garden walk*—

Ami close by the "pen gali- wo found A HIIOC. and mio of her nee while noekH.

" S n n h e a m l Sunbeaml n How frlHliteno.1 woweri.^-A mile like that In T e i t rMta ui n igh t !

Tlio river BO near! H.I way" wr ran— " Have you (ecu her—a hahy dreaaed In white?"

Ami jimt UM torror hud f ro ten our heart* To a »low, hunl tliroh. wo met a man—

A nxigli, good follow—with 'lloam In hlsarms. Telling him how nho had " yau aud yau."

Willi teari, omlloK, icoldlngii. we carried her home— . IVnlteut run-away 1—cwlug so low

'jjN'aughty SuuhMni—to yuu away I • ^ N a u g h t y S u n b e a m - t o frighten 'oo BO ! "

One year, and tho m i d s u m m e r night again. In Rllvery whiteness. In Hcnauotia blo<im.

Enfoldeth tho world. Tho home la as Mill— And our hearts are as Htlll—as the tomb.

Gone f rom na music and laughteY and sung Life—a poor plaything—behind her towed,

Out through tho gatf of Death she haa run. " Sunbeam "—the Ught of our hearts—la lost 1

A W o n d e r f u l P a r t y .

There was a ra t t l ing a t tho door of the Greenhouse, Riohard, the garden-er, laid down a boqne t he was making, to open it, and let in a blas t of cold a i r and a queer little body t ha t looked like a great bundle of shawl, -with a pa i r of smal l f ee t a t the bo t tom of it. At the top a very rosy l i t t le face peeped out,

. and at ono side, where you might sup-liiose a hand to be, h u n g a basket, p " M o r e greens, R ichard ,p lease :mam-

/ ma s a j s y o u may b r ing the lilies as soon as yon can," said a cheery l i t t le voice.

" W h a t kind of green will she have? And how do you find yourself this raom-ing, Mr. T o o d l e s ? " said the kind-heart-ed I r i shman, as he l i f ted tho child 011 u table where ho could see all around.

" I 'm r ight well, and please to hurry , R i c h a r d ; " then as tha t did not seem very gracious, he added, " I am he lp ing mamma so much ; don ' t you wish to-n ight was here ? "

" Well, if the work was done, I might , b u t I 've enough to do to fill in the t ime, sir. And won' t you wait and ride u p on the wheelbarrow? "

Toodles looked a t t he barrow wistful-ly and then at the basket doubt fu l ly , j j i i in an instant h is face clcared up . ^ n i take the basket u p first, R icha rd , " lie said, " and then come back for t h e r i d e ; " and he scampered away as f a s t as as the shawl would allow the two leet to t ake him.

" I ' m here, R ichard , " said the same l i t t le voice a few minutes after , " a n d mamma's all ready for the lilies, and says she can spare me a little while, I 've beeu so much he lp to h e r . "

" I t ' s useful you '11 be to me too, m y boy, '1 said the gordener , as he p u t t h e little boy on the barrow. " N o w you hold on to the po t s , so they don ' t s l ip off, and you '11 b e usefu l and orna-mental too. Hold on now, and we '11 be to Boston in less t ime than you '11

lunk " As t h e house represented Boston,

id the distance was not qu i t e half a piare, it was reached in a short t ime,

Toodles (his name was Walter, bn t every-body called him Toodles) followed Richard into the hall, where h is moth-er was waiting for them. There were two large voses, one each side of t h e door, and in these Richard pu t t h e heavy po t s with tho lilies, aud laid tho cut flowers ready to be arranged a round them. Toodles s tood quietly watching his mother, until , as she was p u t t i n g tho finishing touches to her work, he suddenly asked, " M a m m a , who is coming to tlie par ty to-night ? "

" O , evoxybody, I suppose," she an-swered carelessly, " l o u w o u l d n ' t Jtoow if I were to' toll you . " 4 " P l l tell you, l i t t le boy ," s a i d a m a u -l y voice behind h im as a s trong pa i r of arms l i f ted him u p and carried h i m into tho dining-room. " W h o was i t we read about last night? Cinderella and the nrinoe, and her two wicked sis-ters, and Goody-two-shoes, and J a c k the Giant-Killor, aud Red Riding-Uood, and the Pr ince with the t u f t ou h is back, and the Princess tha t s lept so long, and all t he good p e o p l e ! "

" O p a p a ! If I could only see t h e m ! " and the little fellow's eyes were opened t o their fullest extent.

B u t iust then black Martha came for t h e little boy to get him ready for din-ner, so no one answered him, and bo th fa ther and mother laughed, and then

^ i r g o t all about it.

And all the ear ly evening a very t h o u g h t f u l little boy sat staring at t he fire; pusscame and rubbed against h is knee, a n d even caught hold of a s t r ing tha t hung from his "pocket, bu t he took uo notice of her. The big rocking-horse, that usually took him to Boston and back each evening before bedt ime, s tood with his head down, and the spr ing unwound neglected in the cor-ner. Bu t everybody was too busy to notico him, and he stayed there unt i l Mar tha camo to take him to bed.

" M a r t h a , " he whispered, as she was carrying him up stairs, " M a r t h a , do you think any one would see me if I were behind the cur ta in? "

" L a w , chi le! what cur ta in you talkin a b o u t ? "

/ * " Why, in tho parlor, Martha. I / • l^Dt to see them so bad . "

" N o w , you chile, you just hush , you 'd be asleep in less'n uo time. Up-sv-daisy! Come a long! off wid his clo'es! Tuck him u p warm! Now shet u p his eyes tight, and I ' l l tell h im sech a s t o r y ! "

B u t the l i t t le boy as too Excited to care for a story t ha t night, and Mar tha herself was anxious to get down s ta i rs again, and helf to entertain the very fascinat ing waiters who had come out from the city to arrange the supper-table. So af ter a l i t t le while t ha t seem-ed verv long to both of them, when he l>ad become quiet , she slipped down stairs leaving the room ajar, so t ha t if she heard any uoise she could quickly

. r u n u p to him. However, t he at tract-i o n down stairs proved so strong, t ha t l i f ter ' a while she forgot all abou t the

/ restless little boy and enjoyed herself as much as possible.

l u tho meant ime he lay d reaming of

his fairy f r i ends with all sor ts uf fan- calm euough to tell what was tho real tastic th ings jumbling iu his head. ! s ta te of affairs. And all t h e t ime lu? hoard the most Some t ime after, when the whole beautiul music, but it gradual ly died story had been tole with a great many away. Thou came a loud crash ' tha t tears and sobs, and the little boy lay awakened him, ami he sat u p t rembl ing exhausted in his f a t h e r s arms, appar-all over, with a faint l i t t le cry for | ent ly a lmos t asleep, he suddenly open-" mamma ; " b u t t h e noise had changed ed his eyes aud asked, " O, papa I how into some beaut i ful music, and one o f , d id he come here ? He is au Ogre, ist ' t the S t rauss waltzes came floating up i he ? " to him, mingled with the h u m of voices 1 " W e l l , ye s ! 1 suppose so! All men aud l i t t le laughs, and the nol le of are a l i t t le ogre-ish at first, I think.— people dancing. Shall I tell you about him t Well, once

F o r 11 moment he could not romem-1 there was a handsome young Ogre, who her, then it came to him in a flash, fell iu love with Cinderella, and ho Here ho was, up stairs—in bed ! and * though t she was so good aud beaut i fu l jus t down tha t one llight of s teps were that he made up his mind to t ry aud bo all those people, of whom he had as good as possible, and perhans she heard so of ten tha t he knew their stor- might learn to love him. So while ho ies all by heart , and had thought of was wondering what he could do to them so" much, that they seemed like make himself worthy of her, Jack tho old fr iends. He felt that he must see Giant-kil ler camo along, on the way to them, no mat ter what was the conse- to fight against a d readfu l giant that quenoo. : was des t roying all tho country. The

So ho cl imbed out of h is crib, ami Ogre asked Jack if ho might go and went quiet ly down the back stairs, . fight too. J a c k said ' Yes indeed ! ' h e holding h i s long night-gown away from would need all the help he could get, his bare l i t t le feet, through the dimly for the d readfu l giant had a great many lighted large dining-room, where he men t o fight for him. So this Ogre did stop fo r a minute to s tare at tlie ; went and fought so bravely and behaved table with i ts pyramids of f ru i t and | so nobly t ha t all the papers told about

of a side flowers,—out of a side door, along a passage in to which a door opened from the parlor. Fortunately the door was ajar, and no one was in the en t ry to in-terfere with lum ; so he knel t down on the soft carpet and peeped th rough t h e crack in t h e door. How his hear t d id bea t ! There they were su re enough. Right in f ront of him was a p re t ty little gir l with yellow curls, in a shor t blue silk dress. He could see the toe of her white shoes, and • very nnturolly mistook i t for her stocking.

" T h a t must be Goody-two-Shoes," he said to h imsel f ; " b u t I think she might have found another shoe to wear here."

Near t h e centre

him, and his friends praised him, and felt that the ugly scar on his face and the green spactacles are marks of honor and they are all mere proud of him than ever. And Cinderella likes him BO nuoh that I shouldn't be surprised if she would many him some day.'

Bnt just at this most intereaiing part of the story, a deep sigh interupted the speaker and showed that the little boy's troubles were ended for a while, and the party for him was over.

The Gypsies and the Artist.

The " B o h e m i a n s , " as we call them, abound iu Caucosus; yet ou

of tho room stood , tSTar id s teppes they retain the same three ladies talking. One, with a very 1 dist inct ive characterist ics tha t they do sweet, p leasant face and soft brown i n E u K i a n d a u d ou th i s continent. But

in large bands.

face aud hair, in a long gauzy white dress was i U,wo"Thev "move Cinderel la; one e l the others, who waa dressed in a beaut i ful crimson silk t r immed very much with white lace, bu t who unfortunately, had a very red complexion, of course, m u s t be one of the wicked s is ters ; t he th i rd one was

Wagons filled with baggage of e v e n ' variety aud description—beds and ket t les and tents—with the swarthy heads of the women and children peer-ing above the mass, present a curious tableau. A cloud of dust usually

the princess who made a ladder of her ] m a r k 8 t b e c o u r 8 e 0 f t he miserable pro-hair for the pnuce to climb in at the | c e 9 s i 0 n out of which arise discordant

"" ' " B W sounds, cries, and f r ight fu l oaths. Es-tower window. Her ha i r was plaited, b u t was twisted in to a mass at the back of her head, so large it was a wonder how she could carry i t all. and a great deal of i t still h u n g down over her shoulders.

I n a comer stood Jack the Giant-Killer, in a blue coat with brass but-tons and a s tar on tho shoulder . H e was ta lk ing to the good girl who work-ed so h a r d for the cross old fairy and went ou t a t the n g h t door, where the gold poured down on her . Some of the "gold-dust was still in he r hair .

P r ince Riqui t with the t u f t was there, b u t he was dressed very plainly in black, uot a bi t like the gay suit he wore iu the picture. All around the room were lots of people Toobles d id not know. " T h e v must come from the back of t h e book,^ he Mid again to himself, a f te r an anxioua b u t vain search fo r t h e " f a i r one with tho golden locks," and " R e d Rul ing-Hood." He wondered if they could be in the libra-ly, and though t he 'd go and look, b u t jus t a t t h a t moment Bluebeard oame u p to Cinderella 's sister, and she seemeu so pleased tha t Toodles though t per-haps he might marry her . I t would serve he r r i g h t !

Jack t h e Giant-Killer danced with CindereUa, and they stopped right un-der the large chandelier. O, how pret-ty she looked as she stood t h e r e ! Tood-les fell in lovo with her, head over heels, and thought next to his mother she was the prett iest lady in the world. But , while he w a s a d m i n u g h e r with all his hear t , he caught a gl impse of some-thing t ha t made his blood run cold. I t was an Ogre, of course, for the face had a grea t scar ou it, and a pa i r of dark spectacles over the eyes made tho white face soem whiter still. Tho black ha i r was cut short t ha t no one could possibly have caught hold of it, and the round head was as shining as a man's head could be.

I t was dreadful , for he came right u p to Cinderella and she looked at him «o sweet ly ; even Jack was deceived, for they shook hands. Toodles 's in-terest in this group was so great that he soon forgot all the rest.

Present ly Jack went off to talk to some oue elE3, and iu a few moments Cinderella unsuspectingly pu t her hand iu the Ogre 's arm, and they walked in-to the conservator^' together. Of coursc he was going to kill her aud eat her up in there. Behind the large orauge-tree was a space whore Toodles hud hidden . away many a time, and there the Ogre seems t o point to a southern origin, would ea t her up, and n o one would >/• T. Jleudlcy, in Scribner s jor An-see him. | gust.

All t h e chivalry

ANOHIKU INDIANA SCAMP. Siifli i-. Fame.

F r o r a t h e O o l d u n A g e .

An amusing incident is told b y a re-cent writer, which i l lus t ra tes at once the value of popular myths and the

! l imitat ions of all ear th ly renown. Not I far from Tappan, on tho Palisades, the

There languishes in the Sh - lby CO. {tree is pointed out from which Andre

S e v e n W i v e * n m l '• w r n t y . M n e S l i i t c * I o I l m r F r o m — A . ' ' ta i l Mini P r r a r h r t M U i - M r . l i e r c h r r . L e c t u r e * I . i k e .1 11.

a n d G e l * M n r r i e i l L i k e C . C". I l u w e u ,

Correapondence of the New York Sun.

jail one of the most interesting culpri ts f have ever heard of. I think I may mult iply adject ives on this fellow.

Charles Mc Will iams is his name. Th is is not by any manner of means all his names. He has called himself Har ry Wilson and a half seoreof o ther taking sobriquets . His proper sur-name is supposed to be Mc Williams, as ho was born under tlmt name some thir-ty-five years ago, in the little village of Crotesville,in th i s state. As fa ras heard from, there was nothing particularly attrocious in his antecedents aud early history. As may be supposed, he was a comely lad aud

THE PET OF THE NEIOHBOBHOOD.

In this respect he has held his own remrkably well for nearly forty years. He is a tine looking fellow and exceed-ingly mild mannered. Ho is tall and graceful , has good featureh and com-plexion, and au al luring smile, while the fascination of his gaze is as irre-sist ible as tha t of a serpent.

I n addit ion to his personal charms he has a wonderful memory, and can preach like a Beecher, lecture l ike a Gough, and s ing like a mocking bird.

L a s t summer he spent at Monrovia, Ind . , where, as au interesting widower, he caused qui te a sensation among the fair. As a revivalist his success was a credi t to the Uni ted Brethren Church. His success as a sensationalist was complete when arrested and lodged in the Koussclaer jail.

AN ACCOMPLISHED CLEIlOtMAX.

The requisi t ion from another county was fo r breach of t rust . He had sett led down in a communi ty a« a Christ ian

was hung. I t is ra ther a notable fea-ture in the landscape, and as a local memorial helps to break the monoto-nous refrain of " t h e house in which Washington s lep t . " A traveler was under escort of a farmer thereabout who pointed out the t ree :—

" Tha t ' s a famous tree, there ," quoth the farmer.

" What is it famous fo r?" " I don ' t remember exactly—4mt I

believe a general was hung there once."

" Wha t general ? General Washing-ton ?"

•' Yes : t ha t was h is name." " What did they hang him for ?" " Well, he cap tured sombody, I be-

lieve. I don ' t rememper exactly." " Wasn ' t it Andre ' " Aye, tha t was i t . They h u n g him

for cap tur ing Andre. I remember

liiiimrianl Tux Decision.

The following important decision of the Treasury Depar tment was made

1 pit Mir to-day: 1 L E P A R T M E N T OK J R S T I C E , )

O F K U T OF SMLICITOB OF T i i E A s r n r , ' ' WASHISOTON,].). C. J u l y 21,1^71. ) i S l i t :—I have the honor of acknowl-i edging the receipt of your le t ter of the 13d iust. , t ransmit t ing one from the , aud i to r of the joint railway companies of New Jersey, aud one from the Com-

| missioner of Intern-d Revenue iu rela-: t ion to claims for taxes under the act 1 of J u l y 10th. 1870, made on said com-panics by the Internal Revenue ()ffico, for IH71. I t appears that on tho •J7tli

1 of February , 1871, the Commissioner of Internal Revenue decided in respect to the liability of corporat ions to tax ou

; the interest of coupons, under sections ; 120 anil 122 of the act of J u l y 30th, 1861, us amended by the act of Ju ly 14th,

11870, that no tax should be withheld from interest, or coupons represent ing

' interest, fall ing due and payable within the period of live months from August

! 1st, 1870, to December 31st, 1870, and 1 tha t interest fall ing due on or subse-quent to Ju ly 1st, is taxable at the rate

I of two aud a half per cent., and if such

tabl ishing themselves iu the neighbor-hood of a large town, they ply their va-r ious vocations,—chief among which are horse-trading, thef t , and fortune-telling. I t is singular how this strange, wander ing people should not only arro-gate to themselves tho power to fore-tell t he fu ture , b u t everywhere find such mul t i tudes to believe them. Per-haps i t i s thei r isolated wild l ife and myster ious appearance that make them seem l ike beings oonnected with the supernatura l , and give them such pow-er over bo th men and women.

A Russ ian traveler, in his rambles t h r o u g h Caucasus, camo upon a band of these, and made sketches of some of the most marked characters. H o found tha t a l i t t le money would secure a sit-t ing, and he began h i s work. Bu t h e ! w a g " w a n t e d , " he repl ied: had completed only a few faces before a j " T h e r e mus t bo some mis take ." rup tu re of a comical character occurred. | " Y o u are Charles McWilliams, of One day the whole band crowded, Beusselaer, l a t e of Monrovia ?" a round him, loading him with rt> 1 " Mistaken again. I never was there proachcs, and heaping all sorts of op- . i n jjjy, i i f e i The fact is, I am a twin, probr lous epi thets upon him. I t turn-1 b r o t h e r resembles mo very much, ed out t h a t the hand of oneof the b a u d , , Now I come to think, I believe he did whose por t ra i t ho had sketched, h a d , gpend last summer in Monrovia. He become diseased, and they leaped at | i s j^y tw in ; looks astonishingly l ike once to tho conclusion that some sor t ! m e - " of poison had beeu inculcated in the ; " Y o u , " said the officer, 'Hook enough process of taking the likeness, and they ii i j0 t he man we want to suit us. Come oried ou t as he appeared, " You are a i along. •' demon,—you br ing disease upon us. " 1 The moment they were outs ide the

They h a d no idea a t first of t he object j ^OOJ. IIE commonced swearing, and a of the ar t is t in desir ing a sit t iug, or in gentleman who was present says he fact wha t he was after—they thought never heard such blaspaemv before nor only of the pay they were to receive. B i n c e i

But when they saw the likeness of 1 j j jg 8oft-hearted captors permi t ted themselves produced on tho paper they b i m t o b f t v e n i i the whisky he wanted, were astonished, and looked upon it as ftUj b v t i i e t ime he reached the J u s -a species of necromancy. The effect, t jco's office he was uproariously drunk , was ludicrous. Some, on seeing thom-, •\vith all he sa id nothing to criminate selves as i t wore in a mirror, laughed himself, as his captors thought ho out r igh t l ike children,—other became w o u i ( i when unde r the influence of suspicious, as if the devil or some oth- i i q U o r . er mal ign influence had reproduced Consigned t o the jail, ho stiU had a them in a manner wholly unaccount- j ) o r t i o n of whisky left,, and tho first able, and they would steal silently th ing he did was to compel the few in-uway; and no br ibe, not oven t h e mates to go down on, their knees, as he s t rongest to them, "dr ink-money ," expressed it, t o " t a k e the sacrament ." could tempt them back again. The T h i s b lasphemy over, he snatched a beggars were tho most docile subjects, q j j i e f r o m 0 U e of the cells, and be-

But who are these Bohemians or g inning to piav, ordered the pr isoners gypsies, aud where d id they come from? t o ( j a i . c e > H e ' behaved like a madman, Savans have in vain tried to answer u n j the poor follows were forced to this quest ion. The simple and only o b e v | , j n ^ well-known fact is, t ha t they are found Then he formed them in a line and scattered over Europe, Asia, and even j H n n g a b o u t a hundred hymns to them. America, and that their physiognomy ; A s j- b e { o r e , his voice is really presents a typo wholly exceptional to niaguificent.

now Now, how much of written history i ; n l c r e 9 t ftC

Kcraci1 1 ' ™ to Augmt

rests on jus t such luminous and authen- V " T f S t " e c e m , , e [ 3 . 1 5 tic test imony as tha t ? Certainly the I question cannot bo answered, but i t 1 * ' suggests a wholesome skepticism a s t o 8 • 1 ' „ , • tb^appropr ia te o t m u s p h m . iu winch to . A c . t " K ' ? reall those . l a te ly records t ha t are

S n * h S h " ^ " " f " have repeated. How startled it is to in IS"! On get such agl impseof tho mental horizons • 1', f •Unv l^ - l H10 ut- r bv which so many of our fellow-citizens t h e e ' e v e n t h

) o f . ' > h e

i |A t , t , r -

are girded abou t ! We had supposed ! ^ l , n e r a l ' u i T l , S U T ™ f -.TT . „ ..1'• I had been referred by the Secretary of the Treasury, having dec ide i l t ba t the

But i n i M . r ' t i i T f l i ' " " ' t h e i m • I * ' " " o ' S S y I 4 t i £ Bu t i t seems to be certain tha t there l s 7 0 j l i c a b l e t o i n t , r o s t p f t a s u b : / n — . i i - r ; — . ~ " v 1 are nooks and recesses of human b f e I ' ., OamnbeUite) minis ter on condit ion ! a us which even that awful renown , * T r 'f . 1 a r t S h-i t l i i r L J S .

t ha t he should be funi ished with a i.nH ; n . . n i i„ , i , pr ior to January 1st, 1871, the Commis-

ho r seand buggy to make the c i r cu i t I m l e e d t h O T e i 8 n o such th ing as an ' T M " Barkis was willing, and straightway a b 8 ( j l u t e i v universal renown on this • set out on his mission. In p ' " " ' , o a

preaching ho got doctrinal mixed up with a more liboi salvation tha t ho created In a secular po in t of view i t ' would have beeu considered a general row. The accomplished gentleman, snuffing the breeze of discontent far and near, took unto himself t he horse and buggy and decamped.

F o r this offense he was arrested and landed in the close quar ters of the jail . H e was waited upou in h is new quar-ters by a couple of brethren in the fa i th . He was asked why he had uot preached tho doctrine ho had bargained to.

" B y G — , I preached a b e t t e r doc-t r ine of my own, and if you will ge t m e out of this, as sure as there 's universal salvation, I will preach for you aga in . "

I n connection with his arrest the re are many interest ing particualrs. WTiou accosteit in tha t friendly way known to police officers, with 0 slap on t h e shoul-der and a gent le admonit ion tha t ho

the races they wander among, aud

of J o c k the Giant -Killer, aud the St. George who fough t the Dragon, and all h is o ther heroes together , could not surpass tha t in

A Vermont Man's Wonderful Cb i k.

Mr. R. D. Munson, an old resident of _ . Wilbs ton, Vt., has just completed a

Toodles 's t rembling l i t t le body. He j wonderful musical calendar clock, which could s tand it no longer. Gather ing , has a t t rac ted visitors from la r and near. • ^ , , 1 ^ „ n r r ; „ . i , . n t i.is -Kv«tpni of u p h is night-gown, away from his bare | u is in every detail his handiwork, the f I * K ^ S l e s l i t t le feet with ono hand, ho rushed old farmer havihg spent his spare hours knavery within a radius of a few miles, among the surprised guests u p to his i n working upon it, for the pas t e i g h t ' . one occasion ho was a\ g t mother , seized h e r d r L with L oth-1 ^ fias produced an eight-day : ̂ t h e c o n n t r * w l i e u 116

or hand , aud tried to draw her toward clock, whoso dial marks the second, min the conservatory. '

" O mamma, come! please c o m e ! " he screamed. " Quickly 1 He's going to eat he r u p ! O, please come! O—"

" W h y , Wal te r ! What is the mat ter ?" said h is astonished mother , as she fol-lowed h im into the oouservatory aud

Christ ians who would be astonished a t , -the announcement tha t Jesus Christ is • t h e ^ I ' a m e s who. by the lo th sec-

tion above-referred to, were authorized dead. We impose upon our own ima- ^ deduct the tax in question, made re-giuations by speaking of this century t u r D o f t h e a m 0 u u t e retained for the Gov-for only a small f ract ion of the people t t o t b e C o U e c t o r ) ) f t h e d i s t r i ^ who bve in it Many areye t no further t h w e r e i n f o n u e ( 1 o f t l i e r e v o c a t i o n of

on than he fifteenth century; ^ " y the'deeiaiou of Februarv 27th, and do-more dwell in the tenth and the h f t h : d W f l 8 m a d c f o r a ^ o { 2 j . . ,

L n ^ - f i r r , cent, u p o n application to the Com-fnmily are still in the age before the m i s 8 i o n e { o u 26th of May ultimo, Christ ian era, Wlion wc call this an a e 8 t i n ^ ^ t , a 8 thev had complied enbgh ted age, we s ta te what is t rue of ^ t h / i l l 8 t n i e t i o n . s of the Depart-only a slight nort ion of i t - a l l the res j ^ re turns of 1 1-2 per being still u n d e r t h e ancient shadows of t , 8ho,Ud be permi t ted to opacity and superst i t ion. The m o s t ; k ' ^ r o t u r n t o ^ t b e v

penetra t ing reputa t ions among man- w e r e i u f o r m e d tha t he could not aceede kind, those of Alexander, Socrates, t o the request unt i l authorized to do so Cfosar, Confucius, Jesus Mohammed . t h e ^cn-wy of the Treasury. On

t l ^ X e S u C i X r • 6 1 - r opiuionis ' . a . W be legally x 3 - , • , 1 1 t 1 " *1 ' whether the companies can b t

One day which was celebrated "8 the equitaWy hehl t o account for the tercentenary of Shakspeare, I talked , d e t b . U C y that has occurred in conse-in London with a Londoner who asked | ^ „nHon nf th* m e - " Who is th i s fellow Shakspeare J o f f i c e r o f t h e Government, that the^r are making such a row about s ^ h b e n g a b r i t . f his torv o f t h e to-day ? When, 111 the same city, the i t i o n i n v f ) l v e d i n the ease, I have to m o n u n g papers announced the dea th of t h a t t l i e C o m m i s 8 i o i l e r 0 f in ternal R icha rd Cobden, I met there an elegant- j ^ V ( . u n L . i s t l i e recognized author i ty ly dressed and genteel English lady, d ( , r t h e l a w l u l J i u ) r a c t i c e t l i r o u g l l who innocently mentioned that she did ; w l ( l e c i s i o n B arising u n d e r t h e inter-not remember ever before to have heard , , a i e p r o ^ l l l g a t e d to the his name. After these experiences, I u l ) l i c His decision of the 27th of had no surpr ise in England at the rev-1 | . b w a 8 o n therefor, upon which elation of English ignorance concerning ; i u this case had a right to the famous men of o ther countr ies es- The joint railway companies of peciaUy our own; and I came to take it N j e r J v d i d u o t J i t 3 0 f a r

as a scarcely noteworthy affair for Lug- ^ t o ^ t h e i n t e r e 8 t ( f u e t h e i r

glish clergymen and others to say that c o u ' a n d p a v t h e same to holders they hadneve r h e a r d of such Americana t h e ^ ) t The companies can only bo as H e n r v C ' a y . Daniel Webster, aud r e g a r d e d , under the law, as agents of J o h n C. Calhoan. . . . I t he government in r e s e m n g the tax

B u t in America, the paradise of pop- { r i i m t h e i r b ( ) l j d h o l d e r 8 a u d pgying the ular education, i t i s not easy to ad jus t a m o ^ t h e T r e a a u r v . f b e y l i c t e t i one sse l f tosuchphenomenon. Andeven i u t l i i 8 c a 8 ( l u n d e r d iVection of the when we concede the possibil i ty of our p r i n C i p a l in the first instance, aud by having fellow-citizens who have no dis- o f t h a t a o t i o u b e c t t I u e i u . tmct idea of the F a t h e r of his Country, v o l v e d i a t he present controversy. I t we are still in t rouble at the discovery • f f l i ^ t o a 8 S u m e t b a t o w i

tha t those living names, which at this t o ' t l i e change of ownership which is moment are tossed up i most constantly C ( m . H t a n , | v o c t . „ r r inL ' in th i s form of

^ . . . , . 1 . V is , perhaps, fair to assume, t ha t owing tha t those living names, which at 41118 to t u e chance of o w — ^ 5 - J o

, , . oustantly C ( ) n a t a i l t | v occurring on the waves of talk, are unknown p r o p e r t r / t h e companies would be un-

.hopar t i c i - - h l i ( • to enforce the collection - . 1 1 .i t he balance of tax now of our goodly laud. It t he census h e l d t o b e d n o f r o m t , l o S e t o

uames to many Americans whu pumci - - j . -pate with us iu tho common beat i tudes ^ of our goodly laud. If t he census ( were to have a column for the record of . h o m i n t o r e g t W M ^ a u d f l . o m

such items, it is probably that bun- w h ( i u f a o l i t l u . t i U i 8 d l u , a n ( i i t ereds of American citizens would be en- c o u l d m ) t ^ l e g a l l y enforced to the in-tered there as unable to tell the name o f , . 0f n u v persons from whom the tax the Presidential office. Is it conceiv- w a 8 u o t d y e I deem it unfor tuna te for able t h a t any citizen among ns has not the government tha t the quest ion has heard of that name which, for U-u years, a s 8 U U K , d a u . . ttitmle where the a l tema-hus been the pet and p lay th iug of the t i v e B e e m g t o b e t o ( . o n i p e l t h e d e p a r t -newspapers—the _ u a m e of the ^ ice j m o l l t f o p n f f ( , the collection of the

found white men in Virgina wh

clock, whosoclial marKs uie secoua, min- . U p o n T j ute, Lour, d';y r.f t he wwk, day of the I h c { ) ) n n d i t ^ d b e i o n g e d t t )

mouthy moutli of Uieyear ; a the rmome- ^ b h w t U e a e n t of he r

i S r iff i husband 's estate it was takeu to pay the s ta te of temperature: t he bal of ( b d b t 8 A U t l i o p e r t y 8 b e 8 . the ^ n d u l u m contains a mimature | ^ o r b a d ft \ . M l u ^ i n t h e

t ime piece which d e m o s it* motive , ^ ^ u e ( ( W a- n d ^ . . . . . , . u V ... pow«r solely from its vibrations and M ( . W i l l i a m 8 actuaUy married her

p icked him up in her arms. " Y o u l l , keeps accurate timo I here is ttl80, R I ^ t e Veuiug, and the next morning, cylinder musical at tachment which , ^ ^ d r ( ) r o t h e c o w a n d

may be set to play any one of seven ( ^ t h o u e i m . 8 t t o w U i 8 0 | d t h e m and 111 tunes a t t he end of each hour. In this j ^ raout.v i u h i s p o c k e t T h a t

B u t he was deaf to all her questions, l i s t feature it can be so adjusted and ; w ( u j t j i e j n 8 t g ^ e u 0 f b i m b v t i 1 0

J u s t then he caught a gl impse of Miss I such was the intention of the maker . . . .

AS A DidAinsT

also he is a great success. Ho has two wives in Wisconsin, three in Indiana , and two iu Ohio. As a general th ing . . , i r . •> 1 t t 1 cuuiaumcco 1 am v/i/.i..—. ....... he married daugh te r s of well-to-do men nothing of Henry Ward Beecher or Hor-1 j 0 p a j j v a u d equitably, the department iu whatever church he happened to b t - ; C ' r e e l e . v ' Mnckmen who learned , i 8 ^ t b e necessity of yielding to the long to. His favorite modoof proceed-1 ^"'Ui uie for the first time, the names p r e s e n t request and of desisting f rom ing was to forge certificates of license to | of ^ " n d e U Ih i l ipe . and ^ f o r c i n g ^ c c o l l e c t i o n of the tax in preach, and i t is astonishing how sue- reuncK J ouglass. : quest ion f rom tho companies who pre-1 • f

U 1 8 U A t h e V 8 f f tu

m e :4

a n u u c e r t a i n ^ the application. The enclosures are blast blown th rough a t r u m p e t and r e t l i r u e d | v o r v r . .Hp tvtfully. audible only to here and there a l is ten- , £ Q BUOTKLD Solicitor or. And so sl ight is the impression T o H o i i ^ g ; BoutweU,'Secretary of mode by tho loudest names blown forth , Treaaurv upon the-world of men, that the name 1 of. the great pa t r io t who hangs the spy ' ia liable to be subst i tu ted for that o f t h e spy whom he hangs.

uiustanees I am of the opinion that .

catch a dreadful cold ! what are you doing ou t of bed ? And where is Mar-tha ? "

rorepa-Rosa .

A private letter from Madame Parepa-, Rush to 11 friend in New York says, " I ' come to you iu the dear old States with j renewed vigor, aud all my euergies put

up for work, and doing it as well as Both Carl and I have beeu

Thoresby and Major (^railf admir ing as to plav " Old Hundred at the end some ferns " O , l a m so g lad! There I of each hour on Sunday, and " Old she i s ! " he screamed, s t ruggl ing out 1 Folks at Home," ' ' Swis s \\ altz, '"Star of his mother 's arms and running u p to Spangled Banner, " Had Columbia,^ tho astonished young lady. " C o m e | " ^ " " k e e Doodlo and " Sweet Home, right o u t ! " he said, t r y ing to p u t hie I respectively, on each successive day in arm around her. " Come! q u i c k ! he 's t he week. Tlie ent i re mechanism going to eat you u p ! "

owed bride. His trial does uot como off for sev-

eral weeks, aud he ia hopeful as t o tho result . L . R .

THE Boston Journa l of Chemis t ry gives the fol 'owing recipe for a cheap ice-chest • l a k e two dry goods boxes.

Crop Returns,

Returns to the Depar tment of Agri-cul ture to Ju ly 1st, show tha t the acre- possihle. ago of sugar-cane is greater this year at work for ou r season, now for over han 1 at in South Carolina, Georgia, eight months , a n d all is very well ar-

Florida, Alabama, Louisiana aud Tex- rauged I believe, aud we will eclipse us. the increase ranging from five to our former doings I hope. My voice fifteen per c e n t ; while in Mississippi is in excellent t r im, and I am working the acreage is two percent , and in Mis- hard learning new parts. We are go-souri twenty-five per cent, less than ing out every day to balls, parties, ami lust year. All t he states east "f the , operas, and I feel qu i t e strange a t Mississippi report tho crops i u bet ter hav ing noth ing bu t pleasuring. ^ 0 condition than last year. leave, please God, on the 2'.lth of Ju ly ,

lu tho acrcage 01 tobacco, New York ou the Scotia, and a few days alter m y f hows forty-two per cent, increase over arrival in New York I "am going t o

placed i u a black walnut case, which , o n e jg enough smaller than last year , Illinois thir ty-fnv, Penusyl-1 Sharon Spr ings . " 0 W """0 • I ' A . m A 1 " 1 A A * I 1 '*A XJ \li n.li« *•' II %•••••• • " O, Wal ler ! what are vou do inc ? m e n s u r e « f e® t l n f h ' , n e h ^ 1 tho other to leave a space of a b o u t ; vania tweuty-seve

I never saw the child so excited before. J i ® three inches all wound when i t i s ] and Connecticut Come and tell mc what But for the first t ime mother ' s voice had 110 control At th i s crisis, fortunately, tuc nmuer i • , , , , 1 , - r w i

i came in and took the little boy in his P r o u d o f w h t t t 110 1 , a 8 "-complished, j arms, aud carried him up stairs. The i . 1 feeling of perfect safety was so great , j A MAN who has repeatedly tr ied them ice.

crops 1 small' pipe iu the bottom of tho cheat I generally below the average, excepting

' to carrv off t he water f rom the molting iu Alabama and J exas. For family this has proved H H I H I

WITEBE should post-men be bur ied?

en, Wisconsin th i r ty , sixteen, while Keu-

ent. de-Tenuessee

no Mir} • b r o j d t r ^ f h e overskirt is t r immed to motch, aud thu waist is made in the

VKKT elegant morning drosses are of th in yellow batiste, made with alter-nate flounces of white aud yellow ein-

j and tho nervous reaction was so strong, 8 a y a t h a t all the shor t cuts to fortune q ' d t e as serviceable and as economical WIIEBE shou I t ha t i t took a long while to get him I a r e horr ib ly overcrowded. 1 as more costly " r e f r ige ra to r s . " I In a post-scrip

, shape of a lose sacque c u t open at tho I back.

Tin: best t h i n s out—Out of debt .

Page 3: LOWELL WEEKLYlowellledger.kdl.org/Lowell Weekly Journal/1871/08... · Ri»er. The beet stock Manuhetarad, and first class workmen employed. Grand Rapids Business Di-rectory, Perry

T H E W E E K L Y J O U R N A L ,

J A S . W . H 1 N E , E D I T O R .

L O W E L L , - - - A U G . 0.

HORRIBLE SCENE.

A l t h o u g h R a i l r o a d a n d S t e a m b o a t

d i sas t c rH, m a k e f r e q u e n t i t e m s f o r t h e

p r e s s , ' t is s e l d o m t h a t w c a r e ca l led

u p o n to r e c o r d HO h o r r i b l e an acc i -

d e n t as t h a t o f t h e t e r r i b l e s t e a m b o a t

e x p l o s i o n in N e w Y o r k on S u n d a y

a f t e r n o o n J u l y 3 0 i h .

T h o Ker ry b o a t W e s t f i e l d w a s

c r o w d e d to h e r u t m o s t w i t h p a s s e n -

g e r s g o i n g on a s h o r t e x c u r s i o n t o

S t a t e n I s l and . W h e n n e a r l y r e a d y

t o s t a r t , thi; l ines w e r e c a s t oft', g a n g

p l a n k s r p i n o v o d , a n d a l l o n b o a r d

h a p p y in a n t i c i p a t i o n o f an h o u r ' s de -

l i g h t f u l r i d e on t h e H a y , w h e n s u d -

d e n l y t h e r e c a m e a c r a s h — t e r r i f i c ,

a n d h o r r i b l e b e y o n d d e s c r i p t i o n , — '

T h o bo i l e r h a d e x p l o d e d a n d t h o

s c e u o t h a i fo l lowed w a s o n o s e l d o m

e q u a l l e d in h o r r o r a n d d e s t r u c t i o n .

T h e w h o e l h o u s e , h u r r i c a n e d e c k ,

l o w e r d e c k , t o g e t h e r w i t h t h o l i v i n g

m a s s w o r e h u r l e d i n e v e r y d i r e c t i o n ,

a n d in a m o m e n t t h e w a t e r n e a r t h e

a t e a m e r w a s a l i ve w i t h t h e s t r u g g l i n g

m a s s , t h e d e a d a n d d y i n g , a n d t h e

w r e c k o f t b e b o a t t o g e t h e r p r e s e n t i u g

o n e of t h o m o s t p a i n f u l s c e n e s e v e r

w i t n e s s e d .

M e a n s w e r e a t o n c e o b t a i n e d t o

r e s c u o tho u n f o r t u n a t e v i c t i m s , a n d

m a n y w e r e t a k e n f r o m t h e w a t e r

f i n d w r e c k s c a l d e d , a n d e v e n c o o k e d

t o t h e b o n e , a n d m a n g l e d i n a l l c o n -

c e i v a b l e s h a p e s .

N e a r l y a h u n d r e d l i v e s w e r e l o s t ,

b e s i d e s t ho m a n y w h o w e r e m a i m e d

a n d d e f o r m e d , s o m e o f w h o m w i l l

n e v e r r e c o v e r , a n d t h o s e w h o d o w i l l

l i v e o n l y t o b e m i s e r a b l e o v e r t h e i r

m i s f o r t u n e s .

T h e c a u s e o f t h e e x p l o s i o n i s a t t r i b -

u t e d t o a d e f e c t in t h e bo i l e r . T h o

a f f a i r is n o w b e i n g t h o r o u g h l y i n v e s -

l i g a t c d .

• T h e p re s s c e n s u r e s t h e m a n a g e r s

o f t h e b o a t u n s p a r i n g l y f o r g r o s s

h e e d l e s s n e s s a n d n e g l e c t , t h e r e s u l t

o f w h i c h is g r o a t loss of l i f e , t h e

b r i n g i n g to w i d o w h o o d a n d w a n t

m a n y w ives , a n d g r i e f a n d m i s e r y t o

m a n y a d o m e s t i c c i r c l e , w h e r e b e f o r e

a l l wan h o p " a n d h a p p i n e s s . J u s t ice

\ t i l l i leal s t e r n l y w i t h t h e m if t h o ev i -

d e n c c a d d u c e d p r o v e s t h e m t h e pa r -

l i e s a t fiiult.

VICTORE'IVICTORI-A

d o r s . Y o u w o u l d r e a l i z e y o u r d i s a d

v a n t a g e in t h i s r e s p e c t , a s w e l l a s i n

m a n y o t h e r s .

T h e o l d ' s h i p w a n t s a n o l d e r t a r

t h a n y o u r s e l f a t t h o h o l m . E x p e -

r i e n c e , p l u c k a n d e n d u r a n c e o f m i n d

a n d b o d y a r e r e q u i r e d t o n a v i g a t e

h e r s u c c e s s f u l l y o v e r t ho y e t u n s o t -

t e d w a t e r s .

C a n d i d a t e s f o r t h e P r e s i d e n c y

s h o u l d e v e r b o t h o s e , w h o b y t h e i r

a b i l i t y a n d e x p e r i e n c e in p o l i t i c a l a f -

f a i r s , h a v e b e c o m e p o p u l a r l y k n o w n ,

a n d m a y a t t h o o u t s e t j u s t l y c l a i m

t h e c o n f i d e n c e o f t h e p e o p l e . T h i s i s

n o t i m e t o t r y h a z a r d o u s e x p e r i m e n t s .

T o p u t o u r b e s t a n d m o s t t h o r -

o u g h l y t r i e d m e n a t t h e h e a d o f t h e

G o v e r n m e n t is r i s k e n o u g h , b u t to

l a b o r f o r t h e e l e c t i o n of an i n e x p e -

r i e n c e d a n d u n r e l i a b l e c r e a t u r e l i k e

V i c t o r i a W o o d h u l l , t o fill t h a t pos i -

t i o n , is in r e a l i t y a po l i t i ca l b u r l e s q u e

w h i c h c a n o n l y b e e n a c t e d b y t h o

b r a i n l e s s a n d b l i n d .

A S A D A C C O U N T o f a n o t h e r s u i c i d e

o f a p r o m i n e n t g e n t l e m a n , M r . J o s e p h

F r e n c h , C a s h i e r o f t h e Tribune o f f i ce ,

o f D e t r o i t , h a s b e e n c h r o n i c l e d s i n c e

t h e d e a t h o f M r . B a r n e y t h e i o r m e r

E d i t o r o f t h a t p a p e r .

T h o f a c t s o b t a i n e d s h o w c o n c l u -

s i v e l y t h a t M r . F r e n c h b a d b e e n l a -

b o r i n g u n d e r t e m p o r a r y i n s a n i t y . —

H i s a b s e n c e w a s d i s c o v e r e d a n d

s e a r c h d e v e l o p e d t h e f a c t t h a t h e h a d

t r a v e l e d s o m e d i s t a n c e from h o m e , a s

h i s b o d y w a s f o n n d a f e w d a y s a f t e r ,

floating in t h e r i v e r b e t w e e n W a l l a c e -

b u r g a n d D r e s d e n , C a n a d a .

S t o n e s o f c o n s i d e r a b l e w e i g h t w e r e

f o u n d i n h i s c o a l p o c k e t s , a n d o t h e r

f a c t s o f t h e c a s e a r e s u c h a s t o e s t a b -

l i sh t h e e v i d e n c e o f s n i c i d e .

S T A T E N E W S .

W e :ii"e h o p o r e d r e c i p i e n t s o f a c i r -

c u l a r f . o m t h e g r e a t M e t r o p o l i s , en t i -

t l e d t h e " V i c t o r i a L e a g u e . " T h e a n -

n o u n c e m e n l m a d e t h e r e i n t e l l s us in

w i n n i n g wor . i s , t h a t t h i s L e a g u e is

a n " a s s o c i a t i o n n o w o r g a n i z e d , equ ip -

p e d a n d in w o r k i n g o r d e r , a n d ii«

g r e a t a n d g l o r i o u s m i s s i o n is t o u n i t e

t h e p r o g r e s s i v e p o r t i o n of t h e A m n r -

i c a n p e o p l e i n t o a n e w p o l i t i c a l o r -

g a n i z a t i o n , c a l l e d " T h e E q u a l R i g h t s

P a r t y , " c o n s i s t i n g o f b o t h s e x e s , a n d

f o u n d e d on t h e c o n s t i t i l t i o n a l r i g h t of

s u i f r a g e w h i c h t h e L e a g u e c l a i m s t h e

1 4 t h a u d 15 th A m e n d m e n t s , v e s t in

w o m e n as wel l a s m e n .

T h i s l e a g u e d e m a n d s f r o r a C o n -

g r e s s at i t s n e x t s e s s i o n , a d e c l a r a t o r y

a c t s e t t i n g f o r t h d e f i n i t e l y t h i s i n t e r -

p r e t a t i o n o f t h e s e a r a e n d t n e n t s , t o -

g e t h e r w i t h i m m e d i a t e l e g i s l a t i o n t o

i n s u r e t h e f r e e e x e r c i s e b y w o m e n a s

b y o t h e r c i t i z e n s , o f t h e e l e c t i v e f r a n -

c h i s e , in t h e s e v e r a l S t a t e s .

N o w c o m e s t h e s u g a r a n d c r e a m ,

" I t n o m i n a t e s , wi l l s u p p o r t a n d " e x -

p e c t s t o e l e c t " as t h e n e x t P r e s i d e n t

o l t h e U n i t e d S t a t e s , b y t h e c o m -

b i n e d s u f f r a g e s o f m e n a n d w o m e n ,

i n 1872,

MKfs. VICrOBI A WOODHULT^

o f N e w Y o r k . "

T h e c i r c u l a r c l o s e s w i t h a t e n d e r

a p p e a l f r o m t h e L e a g u e in w h i c h i s

e a r n e s t l y e x p r e s s e d t h e h o p e t h a t o u r

e d i t o r i a l g o o d will , m a y b e " t h e i r s

( w e s u p p o s e ) till d e a t h . "

C e r t a i n l y . V i c t o r i a is a r i g h t l i ve ly

f e l l o w a n d w e l ike t h a t in h e r , b u t w c

c o u l d n ' t s h o w o u r g o o d wi l l , b y v o -

t i n g foi h e r f o r P r e s i d e n t . S h e is n o t

o u r m a n . W e m a y h a v e a n o t h e r w a r

T b e l a r g e s t s h i n g l e f a c t o r y in t h e

S t a t e is a t G r e e n v i l l e .

D e W i t t a n d G r a n d L e d g e b a y e

b e e n m a d e m o n e y - o r d e r o f f i ce s '

I m p e c u n i o u s l o a f e r s i n D e t r o i t

s t e a l b i b l e s a n d d i s p o s e o f t h e m a t

s e c o n d - h a n d b o o k s t o r e s .

T h e P e n i n s u l a r r a i l r o a d wil l s o o n

b e c o m p l e t e d t o S o u t h B e n d , I n d .

T h e T e n t h M i c h i g a n I n f a n t r y a r e

t o h o l d t h e i r a n n u a l r e u n i o n a t F l i n t ,

S e p t e m b e r 1st .

T h e b a l a n c e in t h e S t a t e T r e a s u a y ,

J u l y 1 2 t h , w a s $ 7 6 6 , 4 8 6 . 8 2 . I n c r e a s e

s i n c e J u l y 1s t , $ 2 4 , 5 7 3 . 7 7 .

D o w a g i a c p h y s i c i a n s a r e g e t t i n g

d i s c o u r a g e d ; t h e y h a v e t o p r e s c r i b e

fo r 3 0 o r 4 0 p a t i e n t s a p i e c g e a c h d a y .

A D e t r o i t r a g - p e d d l e r r e c e n t l y p u r -

c h a s e d in C a n a d a $ 1 0 0 , 0 0 0 o f C o n -

' e d e r a i e t r e a s u r y n o t e s a t t h r e e c e n t s

p e r p o u n d .

T h e a n n u a l c o n v e n t i o n o f c o u n t y

S e h c o l LMiper in tenden t s of M i c h i g a n ,

wil l b e h e l d a t C h a r l o t t e , o n A u g u s t

2 ' J th a n d aOth .

T h e H u d s o n Post s a y s W . S . P e n -

field, o n e o f t h o l a t e e d i t o r s a n d p r o -

p r i e t o r s o f t h a t p a p e r , w a s a p p o i n t e d

t o t h o p r o f e s s o r s h i p of m o d e r n l a n -

g u a g e s a t t h e r e s e n t m o o t i n g o f t h e

t r u s t e e s o f A d r i a n C o l l e g e .

R a i l r o a d m a t t e r s c o n t i n u e t o a t -

t r a c t t h e a t t e n t i o n of t ho p e o p l e of S t .

L o u i t . T h e y a r e n o w c e r t a i n of r a i l -

r o a d c o m m u n i c a t i o n wi th t h e S a g i -

n a w s b y t h e 1s t o f M a y n e x t , a n d

t h e y h a v e g o o d c a u s e t o r e j o i c e .

T h e o t h e r d a y » b a r d w o r k i n g G o r -

m a n , l i v i n g n e a r T h r e e O a k s , in a fit

of d e s p o n d e n c y , t h r o w o v e r $ 5 0 0 i n t o

t h e s t o v e a n d b u r n e d i t u p . I t w a s

t h e r e s u l t of m a n y y e a r s h a r d l a b o r ,

a n d c o m p r i s e d n e a r l y o v o r y c e n t h o

w a s w o r t h .

T h o C h a r l o t t e Republican s a y s : S i x

l a d y c o m p o s i t p r s h a v e g r a d u a t e d f r o m

t h e Republican o f f i ce , w i t h i n a b o u t a s

m a n y y e a r s , t o w e a r o r a n g e b l o s s o m s

a n d t h e i r r l ' t i r e t o d o m e s t i c l i f e . I t

m a y s a v e u s t r o u b l e to a d d t h a t t h e r e

i s a t p r e s e n t n o v a c a n c y t o b e filled.

T h e S e c r e t a r y o f S t a t e h a s g i v e n

n o t i c e t o t h e e o u n t y c l e r k s t h r o u g h -

o u t t h e S t a t e t h a t on a n d a f t e r t h o

1 7 t h , i n s t . N o t a r y ' s P u b l i c wi l l h a v e

t o p a y t h r o e d o l l a r s e a c h f o r t h e i r

c o m m i s s i o n s , i n s t e a d o f t w o d o l l a r s

a s h i t h e r t o u n d e r t h e o l d l a w . T h e

e x t r a d o l l a r g o e s i n t o t h a S t a t e T r e a s -

u r y .

The Aubacrluer wlnhcs tn iurorm hii frivDili and tht public KCD*r*lly, that hr Lm putiuaUrgf Miiorl* inent of Orocerlm, in the M*ionic bdldlng forraerljr aocupieu by KBIU Bcebx.nt

LOWELL MARKET REPORT.

CORRKCTIB AVO. 9, 187 1.

Wheat (white) ^ bu I 15 Wheat, (red) V bu 1 05 Flour, 3 25 Flour, tfbbl - 0 76 Uueknhcat, V bu — CO Buckwheat Flour, V cwt. 3 00 Barley, cwt * U ' Corn, V bu Corn Meal, cwt. Oats. V bn -Middlings, V ton Bran, f ton Butter. IP lb Egg*, T doE Cheese, T lb Beef, T tt Pork, V tt -Pork, suit, T t t Hams, ylh Shoulder f tt Mutton, s, tt Ohichcn Tp tt Turkey*, " Lard, " Tallow " Potatoes, eld Vb* Turnips,

Beans,' • Apples, " • Applei^drled, 7 tt Peaches, " T tt Honey, V lb Colt Mini, F lb Hidesgrfen, V l b -Hides, dry, (r lint) tt Sheep Felts, • • • Wool, tt - -

1 50 4i

25 00 10 00

14

15 7 G 8

10 to 12 7

W 10 12 10 7

7Oft"5 20® SO

1 00 1 00

40 07 18 20

mi 70 12

2501 25 40050

N E W T H I N G

UNDER THE SUN!

W e s t ' s A m e r i c a n T i r e S e t t e r

F o r S e t l i i g C a r r i a g e a i d W a f -

0 d T i r e s C o l d , o o t h e w h e e l ,

WHh which a I-rr of Bt oov TIKE* can be S*T ia

T e n M i n u t e s .

» r . , i , , o i l i o i i . h W one of the mosi wonderful time and labor-M. T h e M i c h i g a n b t a t e S a b b a t h S c h o o l j rin^ mRcWnes »f the

C o n v e n t i o n wi l l m o o t a t M o n r o u on Xoleaiii.gthe wheeMo pieces, no taklncout bolta. . I ni> lirenkin^ paint, no bumiiu the felloe or boring

tllO 22(1 Ol AllgUfet, a n d c o n t i n u e I new holes, 1ml Simply taking the wheel from the axle, v , . , | putthig It Into the machine, nod returning It to the

t h r o u g h tllC 2 3 d a n d 2 4 t u . the nwner, tiuliu-m-d In tlio moll S3tl«(actory mann«r, 1 nil in two or three miootea.

Tl»« nmlurhljtncd hii« one of tliese machines at hi* ii!uck»miyi simp, and has the

EXCLUSIVE RIGHT

, For the town of l.owell. All who Imvo ueen il operate j pronounce It tho best lorention in UM? for H'ttlng | tires.

And will sell at ratos too low to be beaten by any, for

C A S H O R R E A D Y P A Y . Call and see my flnestock nf choice Rloaml Jam

Coffees. Sugars. Salt and Dried KUh, Pickles, Sauces, Hne-cut Cliewiug and Smoklog Tobaccos, Foreign and Domestic llrlwd Fruit,Soaps, Lard, Hams, Dried Beef and Mess Pork ;Wood, Willow and Stone ware, and

T H E H I O H B 8 T M A B K E T P H I C B A T A L L T I M E S , F O B C O U N T R Y P I I O -

DUCE. Call and mtlsfy yourselrns Hut you can get your

G l l O C m t l E S M cheap as you can at Omnd lUpnJs or /.owoll.

Don't forget the place uuder the Masonic Hall. Remember my motto,

Qulok Balos a n d Small Frofl ta . M. R E M I N G T O N ,

A d a , NOT. 1 6 l h , 1870. 2 0 M S • .

T H E

E Q U I T A B L E LIFE ASSURANCE

S O C I E T Y ! Of tbo United Slalea.

NO. 120 BROADWAY, NEW YORK.

WILLIAM C. ALEXANDER, President IIFNRY A. HYDE, Vice President.

OEOROK W. PHIL/.IP8, JAMES W.ALEXANDER Actuary, Secretary. SAMUEL BORROWR, City Manager.

EDWARD W. LAMBERT. M. D., > u - , ALFRED LAMBERT, M. D., f M e <" B*»« n " WILLARD PARKER, M.D., Consulting Physician. nENRVDAY, HENRY M. ALEXANDER,

AU»riifjr, Counsel

A'wetta, - • 918 .000 ,000 0 0 Income, - - 7 ,600 ,000 00 Puraly M u t u a l - A l l Cash-Annual Divi-

dends-DlcldcndM Paid at the Pint and crrrj suc-

ceed hi ff year. Sum Auured, New Builneas.u

per last Official Rvturus, ' j5r .02i , i4i oo

JAS. EDIE, Manager for Western Hcbgan

First-class business men (who are

temporarily or permanently out of busi-ness) wanted as agents.

I N S U R A N C E ,

M o r e I n s u r a n c e ,

M o s t I n s u r a n c e

WHOA!!

A m a n n a m e d J o h n P o t t e r w a s ar - j

r e s t e d in A d r i a n , l a s t w e e k on a ;

c h a r g e o f f o r g e r y , a n d tak jen t o N e w

Y o r k o n a r e q u i s i t i o n f r o m G o v . I l o f f - j

m a n .

H e n r y S h u c k s , w h i l e e n c a g e d in li- j

l i n g a s a w a t a mill in G r a n d K a p i d s , I

o n t h e 21s t . , w a s b a d l y m a n g l e d a b o u t j

t h e a r m b y t h e s u d d e n s t a r t i n g of th i -}

m a c h i n e r y .

G r e a t p r e p a i a t i o n s a r e b e i n g m a d e ;

b y h o t e l s a n d b o a r d i n g h o n s ' s in H a s - j

t i n g s , t o a c c o m o d a t e a l a i g e i n f l u x o f j

s t r a n g e r s to t h a t c i t y d u r i n g t h e V a n -

d e r p o o l t r i a l .

P r o f . F r i e z e , of t h e t ' n i v e r s i t y , a n d i

h i s f a m i l y a r e t o sai l f o r E u r o p e on '

t h e 1 2 t h ol A u g u s t , l i e wi l l r e m a i n

a b r o a d f o r a y e a r m a k i n g h i s h e a d -

q u a r t e r s n e a r S t u t t g a r t .

A y o u n g l a d y . . a m c d E m m a U ^ - i

t o n w a s d r o w n e d in t h e L o o k i n g g l a s s j n i i c i i i T U i i i P

K i v e r , on t h e 27 th n i t . , b y t h e b r e a k i n g BLftCKSIt l lTHING

d o w n of

w h i c h s h e

Poland

Hogs

LOWELL BAKERY

T

Grocery and Pro v i s ^ o

STORE.

Anyone wishing, to ge t into this valuable Breed of Hogs, will do well to g ive a call, t s I baye a pair of

FULL BLOODS

seven months old, in modeiate breed-ing ; flesh weighing 510 ibe. The actaal growth of them the last month is, 1 lb. OA oz. per day each, as they are in no better flesh than they were one month ago. For further particu-lars inquire of

li. B. WILLIAMS, DEALER IN

G R O C E R I E S a n d P R O V I S I O N S ,

C R O C K E R Y A N D

G L A S S - W A R E , A T T H E S I G K

O F T H E " E L K H O R N S , "

" W E S T S I D E .

I l l a I •

FILK.'IKH *nn he procureil In any or all of tbe fol-IOWIOK rclluMe Compnuiei, by application to

Milton M. Perry, Agent

Anlei, of Cincinnati, AsseU $1,501,723 Ltrxllard. ofN. V- " 1,71J,900 Mirchanti. of ''bicaao, " • 803,984 /tom&fie, of Cbirago, " 1,723,770 •Vrrartfy, ofN. V. " 1,870,715

Amount of AKM-U reprosenleil, |7,0BL>201

Policies are i»siiti<I fortliwilli upon application at his nfBce, witliout the delay of referring it to tho Companies.

Office opposite llie Franklin House, Lowell Mich.

A G O O D

A n d r e l i a b l e p l a c e to- b u y

g t x x K i s a t L u l l & O w e n ' s . —

W i f e t e l l y o u r .

f i n e

H U S B A N D '

T o [ c a l l a n d E x a m i n e trlu

s t o c k o f s u g a r s

G U A R A N T E E D

i l i ru l f io Hoar W n o o n . t a , h e n s c h e a p w a n y h o m e i n e w a s c r o s s i n g m a w a g o n . 1 r n •

| L o w e l l , a n d o n e p r i c e T h e D e t r o i t , L a n s i n g a n d L a k e . H o r s e S h o e i n g a Specia l ty 1

M i c h i g a n R a i l r o a d o f fe r t o i ron a n d jatu.uauop. we ba*«got aagoo.i bone *ho«r« u T O E V E R Y

there are in tbe State. r , l o l o j horwa, aa'\ ] M a i l , WOt tUin a n d c l u W , a n d TOf tS

c o n d i t i o n t h a i t h e

e q u i p a r a i l r o a d f r o m L a n s i n g n o r t h I - . . I-.? . i—. *i... i bar* tbemflicd; also vour

t o S t . J o h n s , o .

Cutter* anJ Drags

e o m e t i m e , a n d i f s h e w a s P r e s i d e n t

w e ' d b e a f r a i d t -he 'd c r y a n d w a n t t o g r a d i n g s h a l l b e d o n e t h r o u g h loca l f r o t t i l l C N a g S a n d R a C e F S

g o h o m e . T h e n s h e ' s t o o h i g h s t r u n g B u b s c r i p t i o n f .

f o r p o l i t i c a l l i f e , a n d w e t l u u k h e r ^ ^ S t , J o s o l , h j T *

e n e r g i e s p u t f o r t h m t h e ( h l i t r ( . g i o n f o r ! 8 d ^ , . T h e g r o u n d !

c f m a k i n g r a g c a r p e l * , w o u l d , 0 t b e d e p t h „ f t w o o r '

i n m o r e g o o d t l f a n i f w a . ^ d o n U e , ^ ^ T h i 8 l i a s M r i o „ s | y d r i e d

p o l m e a l " d e s e r t a i r . N o V . c t o r i a , ^ ^ h h M c r o p ) w b i c h w i u

e x c u s e us. P a r d o n o u r o b j e c t i o n s . — | n 4 , i o n

JOHN C. SCOTT, MIDQE STREET,

2d door Katt of Flat HI ver Bridge, opposite Foiest Mills,

I J o w e l l , M l o l i .

W l r o l e M l t R e t a i l D e a l e r I n

Sheli and Heavy

H A R D W A R E ,

B u t l e r y ,

S t o v e s a n d

T i n w a r e .

ALL KINDS OF

DONE ON SHOUT NOTICK.

H . J . B O S W O R T H

Keeps constantly on band, and fur sale ererytblnE generally fonnd in a Flrit'daas Bakery. Fresb Drend —of the best quality—baked tyety day. ALSO

P I E S , C A K E S , B l i N S , ^

G I N G E R B R E A D

S P O N G E D R O P S & c .

Warranted

G O O D T O E A T .

In connection with tk« Bakery, I alio keep on band a sholco assortment ot

GROCERIES. 1 am making a specialty ot the ^

DRY HOP YEAST UNIVERSALLY pronounced the best erer used. Also, HOLLMTERS DIJilOMh BAMMU POWDER.

" V e g e t a b l e s o f a l l k i n d s

i n t h e i r S e a s o n .

1 also hare for sale DR. CRONK'dOBUBBBATED

T SABSAfUUUIEEB.

C A L L A N D S E E M B .

H . J . B O S W O S T H .

SPRAQUE

BR O ^ ,

Dealers in

OMOVEliTES,

T h e c u t of y o u r c . o t h e s i s o n e , l l ' c I b e l T i e B i n - ^ o r d c r . I t w i l l a l s o L t wiuon-.oidrt.op.

' d i m i D i 8 h t h e l ' e a c h croV> w h i c h W i l 1 ./• «• l

n o t r i p e n u p m o r e t h a n h a l t o l i t s

P r e s i d e n t s o f t e n a v o i d i n s u l t a n d in

j u r y b y b e i n g a b l e t o k i c k o u t i n t r u . I b e g r e a t l y in e x c e s s o f l a s t y e a r .

t l i a t w i l l s u i t a n y

O L D M A I D

T h e h i g h e s t p r i c e p a i d f o r a l l

R E P A I R I N G D O N E I N T H E o t > 1 0 d u r e - 1 > l e a s e c a l 1

B E S T M A N N E R a n d e x a m i n e o u r g o o d s a s w e k e e p

' 1 a s l a r g e a n d a s f u l l a n a s s o r t m e n t

o f g r o c e r i e s a s a n y s t o r e

I N L O W E L L .

L U L L & C o . I .i. A'. Ed ie . Wilson & Edie. Union Block I West Sidr. !

P a r t i c u l a r a t t e n t i o n is ca l l ed t o

T H E D K T U O I T M A K E O F

STOVES, RIADE O F L A K E S U P E R I O R I R O N

And xcarraxUi uot Io Cruel.

U n i v e r s a l a n d N o v e h y W r i n g e r s

A n d

D O T Y ' S " W - A - S H E E ,

I h e Bes t i n t h e M a r k e t .

All ;ood» n-arrantod a" reprcsouled, and io

Price and Quality,

I C A N T B E B E A T .

G E O G K R H Y ,

GLASSWARE,

WOODENWAlfe. B a s k e t s , F r u i t , P o r k , H a m s a n d

B a c o n .

I N S H O R T

E V E R Y T H I N G

U s u a l l y f o u n d in a first c l a s s g r o t o v v

S t o r e . G o o d s d e l i v e r e d f

F R E E OF C H A R G E

T o a n y p a r t o f t h e c i t y b y

PONY EXPRESS.

W e a r c a g e n t s f o r t h e

. / E t n a R e a p e r ^ M o w *

e r , t h e M a n s f l e l ^ k

R e a p e r a n d M o w e r j

i > n d t h e M e a d o w

K i n g M o w e r .

Give us a Call Come often.

B P R A G U E B R O S .

\

L o c a l B u s i n e s s N o t i c e s ,

Bnrr's Ague Medicino prever-ti a chill after

tbe first dose. Sold by Wooding k Look.

D U E N D O R F & BLAIN . h a v e ^ u l l agsortiuent of every Ibing in Iho

Dry Goods line.

1 0 con t s b u y s a h a t a t t h e S t a r H a t

S t o r e G r a n d R a p i d s

Invest One Dollar in BAUR'S PKCTOUAL ELIX-IR, and Hop that troublesome fougli, For Sale by Wooding k Look.

Good Sheeting one yard wide sold fur 9 cts.

per yard, al Devendorf k Klain's, first door

west of l.owell Nntioual Hank.

A good linun Uauiank 50 cts. per yard, at

DerendorfA Wain's.

Nobby hals at Perry Bros, (iraud Uopida.

A full line ofTrunksa t Devendorf k Blain's

L ine® C l o t h i n g b e l o w cost, S t a r Cloth-

i n g i ^ n s e G r a n d R a p i d s .

DEVEHDORF & BLAIH. Btill keep busy putting np those fine dress

goods, fheelings, ban , cups, 4 c . ^

BARR'H PKCTORAI. EMXIR is simple, pleas-ant, and a sure cure in all diseases of tbe

Throat and Lungs,

Call al Lull k Go's and sec their splen-

did arrangement for keeping butler cool.—

Different from anything ever before in Lowell.

Thousands of people die every year from

starvation, but while lher« is »bakery in

Lowell it would be very foolish indeed for any

to even go hpngry.

Bap ' s Ague Medicine ia a sure cure for

Cbillkand Fever.

tyruggisisall sell BAKU'S PKCTORAI. EMXIR for Colds, Coughs, Croup, kc.

Boy ' s C l o t h i n g b e l o w cos t S t a r Cloth-

i n g H o u s e . G r a n d R a p i d s .

Fresh Stone Lime at U. B. Williams'

Summer hats, choicest styles, at Perry Bros.

11 Monroe street, Grand Bapids.

A desperate and tenacious cold can bo bro-ken up and exterminated by using BARRH PF.CTORAL E L I X I R .

E v e r y F a m i l y Should K e e p Patto's Arn i -ca Oil in t h e House.

It cures scalds, burns and itching humors,

Obillblains, wounds, and painful tumors,

AU bpntfng Ointment I who can find

A g u ^ e r blessing for mankind.

' P a g e ' s M a n d r a k e PiUa Are mild, certain, safe and efBcient.

Page's Mandrake PiUa euro Dyspepsia.

Page's Mandrake Pills cure Headacbo.

Page's Arnica Oil curco Rheumatism.

Pa^es Arnica Oil cures Pimples on ihe Face.

Sold by Hunt k Huntec.

Barr'a Ague Medicine is purely vegetable iu

its compoiition. Sold by Wooding k Look.

N E R V O U S D E B I L I T Y .

THOUSANDS tuffrr from i t—.4 ictak, nervous, ezhaiuted feeling, no energy, animation or viytr, low tpirilt, corfuied hnrd, weak memo-ry, nocturnal or involuntary teminal emiuiont, with toil of power and threatened impotence.— Tht'WnBequence of excesses, overwork or in-disci^ions. This is NEK VOUS DEBILI-TY, and it finds a sovereign remedy in JIUMVIIHEYS' lIOMKOPATniC SPE-CIFIC Sx TWENTY EiailT Thou-sands have been cured by these simple sugar pills. They tone up the system, arrest the discbarges, dispel tho gloom and mental d"-preesion, and rejuvenate the system. Price $5 for package of five boxes and a vial of pow-der, which is important in all old long-stand-ing cases, or $1 per single box. Sold by all first-class druggists, and sent to any address on receipt of the price. Address HHM-PHREY'S SPECIFIC HOMEOPATHIC MED-ICINE CO., 5G2.BROADWAY, New York.

Grea t Closing O u t Sale of Dry Goods, V Boots a n d Shoes.

I wljuld respectfully inform the citizens of

Lowell mid surrounding country that I have

just returned from a trip lo Kanfas nnd Ne-

braska, and have decided on making ibe for-

mer Slaie my future home. I therefore shall

on the 1st day of August next, at Dsn. Wright's

store on Main Street, opposite Pullen's Block,

open a Dry Goods store. In which I shall offer

to the public as fine assortment of Dry Goods

,03 ever came lo this village. The Goods are

new and pood, were bought by Wm. Pullen,

at New York, last Spring, shilling Prints will

be sold at ten cents per yard, 2 shilling Delain

nt twenty cenU, and every thing else ic pro-

p o t f k a . 1 have also a fine lot of ready mnde•

Clotli^fe that will be sold below competition.

Every'Saturday afternoon your bumble serv-

ant in person will offer goods at Auction to the

public at whatever they please to give. Ral-

ly lo the standard on the double quick, for 1

am bound to close out in thirty days and be-

fore if pessible. I will sell for cash only, for

I am a strong believer in lh« maxim t h t t a

"quick sixpence is better than a slow shilling."

Lowell, July 17lh,'71. JOHN A G m s o s .

Barfs Ague Medicino is aroost excellent Ionic.

B U B L I N Q T O N .

l.CMlnmhe KMtaml arriving nt CMfiRO or Imli-miai nliK, Low uliall wc reach lliu Wwl r Tim lt«»l line IN acunowleiltrtil to be thw C . II. k y., joined toRi-tli. e r» l4 tlie ll. k. M. llnllroad by the Iron liiidgo at UU:: 91^.1,. AMI called thuBCKLINOTO* KOI TK.

Tilt A n lino "f Uie rAuto ruiinlnK to UnmliR.rnn-noc'.̂ nLM the great I'RCIHC Itoidn. aud lornm to-dajr the leading route to Cnlifumia Tlie Middle Branch, entering Ncbmka al rialUmoutli, parses tluoiigli Lincoln the Stale Capital, and will thin jear be lliil*h-ed to Kort Kearney, formine llie ahortet* loute acioM Ihe Continent by over IWl mile*.

Another I ranch oltho B. M., diverging at Bed Oak laIN into a line running down the Miutmri thiuugh St Jo-i to K.-iimaii City, and all XanMi Pawongem bv tlii» route to Kaimaii, i>ee Illinoiii, Southern Iowa, and Mi'i'ouri, and by a Flight divergence, can »eo Kc-braska alro.

l.OTera of Hue vlewn should remember the llurling-lon llouto, for ita towna ••higli-gleaminir from afar'' —its tree fringed Ktreama—iu rough blulla and ijuar-rle«--il' corn ocean* iitretching over Ihe [irairie* fur-ther than tho eye can reach.

Land-buyers will bo cure to remember it, for llicy have friends among the two thou«and who have al-ready bought (arms from Geo. 3. Harris the land Com-taisiiioner of the B. & M. It, It. at Burlington, luw.i, or among the four thouiuind homc-ateaders and ine-tmploi" who Iaui year filed claiinn in the Lincoln land otlice, where "Uncle Sam is rich euougli to give ui all a farm."

L O C A L M A T T E R S .

Cfcu r t l ) B l t e c t o t g .

OongregatlonalUhur«b,HudsuBalre*t,«erTlc«ieT eryBabbath at I0:3o A. M. and 7 P.M.Prayermeetlng on Thnrsdar evening, at 8 o'clock. L.S.OrlggaPaa-or. Babbath School at 12 M. 11. M. Clark, Jlnpl.

BaptlatCharch,Bridgeatreet. »errice»every Sab-bath at 10:30 A. M. and 7 P. M., Prayer meeting on Thuraday evening, at 7 o'clock. Chaa. Oldfleld, Pastor. Sabbath School at 13 M. E. H. Peck. Sort.

Methodist P.. Church, Brldgeatroet. services eyery Sabbath at 10:30 A.M. and 8 1*. M. Prayer meeting on Thuraday evening at 8 o'clock. Bev N. Beasoner, Pastor. Sabbath School at 12 M. MlasS. Jennings, spt

Lowell Pott Office--Time of Arrival and Cloning of Mall*.

Eastern—Way. arrive 6:60 p. m. ; close 10:10 a. m. Through—Arrive 6:46 a m. ; close 8:30 p.m. Western—Way, arrive 10:80 a. m.; close 4:26p. m Southern—Alto, llowne, Harris Crook, Killtnore,

North Irving nnd Hastings, arrive 10 p m : close 7 a m.

Northern—Fallaasburg, Smyrna. Grant, Otiacoand (Irennvllle, arrive at ll a m ; closo 2 pm.

Alton uiid Oraltan-amvoiTuesdays, Thursdays and Haturdiijs, at S a. m. Clnaea 8W a. m.

Keene—Tuesday and Friday, arrive 4:30 p in ; close p m. omre Hours-Vrom 7am to 8:30 pin. Sunday,

rom 12 to I p m. A.M. Kl.SWOBTH.P. M.

T o C o r r c s p o n d o n t a . All communieafiorj unlets accompanied by

the author's tiame, will be rejected. The name will not be published unless desired, but is a mat-ter of good faith.

AU communications must be received al this office by Tuesday morning to insure insertion.

Patrons and others are respectfully requested to furnish us with information of all deaths known to them, in their vicinity, together with time, name, age, Jfc.

D. & M. R . R . T i n e T a b l e .

GOINO EAST. Mall. 10:50 AM Thro. Freight Mixed. 1:00 PM Express 11,20 PM

GOING WEST. Freight. AM Mixed, 1:00 PM Expresa 5:45 " Mall, 6:05 P M

\

T o - D a y ' s A d v e r t i s e m e n t s . Blacksmlthlng—Wilaon k Edie.

Chips a n d Splinters-

Send in your locals.

"Ude" lo tbo Lowell JOORNAL—$1.60.

What's sauce for Ibe goose, is worth two io

the bush.

L. B. Lull k Co's new "htp d e l w y " wag-

on is 'ansome.

Tbe Ibird trial of Vanderpool was com-

menced yesterday.

If a full grown male Turkey is a g o b b l e r -

is a young male Turkey a goblet?

Muskegon bas subscribed $600 to aid Van-

dorpool in bis defense on tbe third trial.

Manistie got scorched to the tune of $4,500

a few nights ago. Livery Stable burned.

From a field of 10 acres, Mr. John Delaney

of Yergennes realized 383 buibtls of wheat

this season. Not bad. Grand Rapids boasts of a female plasterer.

That's nothing. We bare seen hundreds of

female painUra. Whal'a the "hods?"

Tbe Excelsior Agricultoral Society of Green*

ville, will bold its next Fair on Tuesday,

Wednesday and Thursday. October 10, 11

and 1 2 .

The firm of Avery k Johnson has* been

changed to Avery k Huggins, John Hoggins

having purchased the interest of Morris John-

son in tbe planing mill.

Dennis O'Brien, saloon keeper west side,

was arrested and fined five dollars and costs,

for keeping open l)is saloon and selling liquor

last Sunday. Tbe Marshal is still looking

around.

There will be a grand Sabbath School Pic-

nic at Brownville, on tbe 16th inst Several

Schools are uniting in tbe necessary prepara-

ations. The picnic promises to bean interest-

ing affair.

A fire broke out at the upper end of Fulton

sleet, Grand Rapids, on the morning of lhe4lb

inst , destroying several dwellings and one

store. Fires in Grand Rapids are getting to

bo monotonous.

The Marshall Statesman gives a glowing de-

scription of a coffin manufiiclory at tbat city,

and closes by urging "all to call and encour-

age the enterprise—which means of course,

everybody procure a coffin.

Tbe Hubbardston Advertiser eays, tbat over

1000 persons of that village are suffering with

the ague. Tho Editor afterward amended by

deducting 950. How about that Mineral

Spring, Phisler ? Don'j that euro "fevernagur?''

Tbe wing of Mr. J . J . McNaugbton's bouse,

in Bowne, was blown down by the gale of

Monday night, which completely demolished

a stove io the kitchen. This part of tbe bouse

had just beetr erected and was not enclosed.

We are indebted fo Mr. P. D. Saealhen of

Boston, for some of tbe finest harvest apples

and cherries wo have seen this season. Mr.

Sneathen will excuse us if wo say the apples

and cherries didn't keep a remarkable length

of time. ^

Tho Greenville Independent bas been enlarged

from a suveu to an eight column paper, ma-

king a decided improvement iu that sheet.—

Tbo paper now contains a good supply of lo-

cal and general news and deserves to find a

place iu every household of that vicinity.

The Ionia Sentinel says tbat a resolution

was adopted at tbe railroad meeting at Battle

Creek, on Thursday last, lo build a railroad

from that place to Stanton, vm. Ionia. The

Sentinel expects lo announce next week the

organization of the Ionia k Battle Greek Rail-

road Company Bona tide or "paper?"

Tbe Ionia District Camp Meeting of the

Methodist Episcopal Church, commenced to-

day, and will hold over next Sabbath. Ser-

vices will be held as usual a t tho M. E. Church

in this village, li the pastor Rev. N. Rea-

soner, is not present, the pulpit will be other-

wise supplied.

The $50,000 addition lo the Capital Stock

of the LoweM National Bank has been sub-

scribed, and all paid iu. The Cnpilal

Stock is now $100,000. .'1 dividend of $33,-

744.03 was declared at this Bank on tho 7th

inst.

S a i l r o a d .

On Wednesday evening of last week, a

number of citizens met at tbe office of Mr. J .

M. Matbcwson, for tbo purpose of conferriog

with President Green, of tbe Marshall t n d

Coldwater Railroad, bo having previously

announced bis intention of coming to Lowell

at that time, to discuss railroad matters, and

learn the "situation."

Mr. Green not being prepared to make any

definite propositions, or to enlighten us as to

tbo extension of tho railroad north from Ver-

montville, but liitle was accomplished except

that tho facis developed in regard to certain

proposed routes wo believe clearly proved to

Mr. Greene's Batlsliiction that the ono from

Vormontville lo Lowell, would by all neans be

the most available and profitable.

A geographical survey of tho routes under

conteraplalion cannot fail to demonstrate the

fact beyond all doubt, that tbo advantages of

a road from Stanton north, do not begin to

compare with thoso which would bo realized

by an extension of tbe road north from Lo*

well over tho table lands, and through the

m y heart and harvest of tbe pineries.

It is certainly strange tbat our southern

friends have have not, ere this, become mora

fully aware of these facts. There is t ine bow-

ever for them to Investigate, and if they will

only take tbe task upon themselves, we shall

be pleased to see their report comparing the

advantages of said routes.

President Green said there were advantages

in faror of the Lowell ronte that be bad not

considered until pointed out to bim at tbe

time of bis visit here.

Tbe truth is, those railroad men sontb must

become better acquainted with us before they

can appreciate us. Hastings is perhaps as

well posted in regard to our "sitnation" as any

other town south, and we see by the Journal

that a meeting was held yesterday (Tuesday)

at that place to determine upon some plan of

securing a road running south to Ohio and

Indiana, and ror tb to Lowell and tbe Pineries.

It may be after all that while the discussion

is yet being continued in regard to ot.ber

routes, Hastings will go to work nnd do some-

thing.

TEACIIRRH' EXAMINATIONS.—Tbe examine,

tion of tho Teachers of Kent County, for the

fall of 1871, will be held as follows:

Grand Rapids, September 1st.

Grandville, September 4tb.

Ada. September 5tb.

Lowell, September 8th.

G rattan Center, October 9lh.

Rock ford, October 10th.

Cedar Springs, October 11th.

Sparta Center, October 12lh.

Let every Teacher who thinks of teaching

during the coming winter, present himself at

some one of these public examinations.

The changes made last winter in tbe School

Law, render it nearly, if not quite, impossible

to examine at auy other time.

If there are any other teachers "halting be-

tween two opinions" whether to teach or not

to leach, and not feeling certain that their

friends cannot persuade them into the work

'Just one term more," they would do well to

prepare themselves with Certificates; then

they will ueitbnr be troubled themselves nor

have occasion to trouble others, in case they

need them.

Every Teacher should prepare him-

self for tbe examination by thoroughly review-

ing all of tbe subjects on which be is to be

examined. I hope to be able to favor, in fu-

ture, those who will obtain nearly or quite

perfect marking.

It need bo but little trouble fur any teacber

to know how he will stand before comiug.

Let some friend take bis books and read |

him all of tbe questions in every part that hc!

is not positive he knows nil about; nnd if he '

can answer every one exactly right, without!

bis friend's being compelled to answer anolh-;

er to "put him oa tho trock,' ' and, in arith-

metic and algebra, be able to solve all of the ,

"miscellaneous examples" without much besi-1

tation, be may be tolerably certain that bis1

marking will bo perfect; but if he misses 40,;

50 or 60 per cent, of the questions, it is quite |

possible tbat his marking may not bo 10.

H . B . FALI-ASS,

Co. Superintendent. !

UPPRR BUIDQK.—The frame work lately j

put up on tbe two sides of the Upper Grand '

River bridge was blown down by the heavy :

winds of Monday night. The work was not

completed and consequently tbe timbers were.

not sufficiently supported to withstand the |

gale.

Contractor Brazee commenced work again j

Tuesday morning, and will have the bridge |

up and in a sound condition in a few days. |

The damaire is not great.

PKRSONAL.—Websler Morris, of Ibis office, |

has been on tbo sick list during the past t vo

weeks, but is now again able to resume hisj

duties nnd smoke his pipe.

Mr. Ralph Rees, ol Minneapolis, made Lo-

well a visil last week.

Mr. C. C. Sexton, of the G. R. Times, called ,

at our ofllce yesterday. He looks 'arty.

BlTTKN BY A RATTbESNAKK.—Mr. JaS. L. I

Allen, of this town, lost a fine horse a few J

weeks ago, from the effects of a rattlesnake

bile. The horse while feeding in Ike pasture,

was bitten a liltle below the eye, and suffered

thereafter until he died, nearly three days.

Several rattlesnakes have since been killed in

that locality.

TRY IT.—If you would keep cool these hoi

nights, just lie down on a copy of the the

Grand Rapids Qmes, then cover yourselves

over with ft copy of tho Eagle, and if you don't

sutler with tho cold bufuru moruing, call us a

swindle. The coolness between these "sheets" j

will run Mercury down to freezing point, j

in dog days.

Tho G. R. Times is running a serial story.;

Now Sexton get a fast horse and plajn* "Bon-1

Lowe l l D i r t r i c t A g r i c u l t u r a l Soc ie ty .

An adjourned meeting for the purpose of

perfecting the organization of the Lowell Dis-

trict Agricultural Society, wo* -"Id «t Pullen's

Hall, in Lowell, on Saturday afternooa Aug.

5tb, 1871.

Meeting was called to order by chairman

Elsworth, who, after stating tbe object of the

meeting, called for tho report of tho committee

on Articles of Association, whereupon Mr.

Mathewson arose and submitted the same,

which on motion of Mr. King were accepted.

On motion of Mr. Hatch the meeting pro-

ceeded to adopt said articles separately.

The Articles of Association of the Lowell

District Agricultural Society as adopted are

Q3 follows:

The undersigned persons^ inhabitants of Ihe

SARANAC.—This neighboring village is mak-

ing rapid progress of late, in respect to im-

provements. Tbe citizens have voted a loan

of $8,000 to bnild an iron bridge across Grand

River at that point, and the contract has been

awarded to the Canton Company, Ohio.

Several fine brick buildings have been erect-

ed this season, and others arc in course of con-

construction. '

A mineral spring has recently been discov-

ered near the village, and Ihe organization

of a company to make it available, is being

talked of.

Our informant tells us that the people of

Saranac are becoming quite public spirited,

and intend to keep "dressed up" in future.

At a meeting of the Directors of tho Lowell

Stale of Michigan, al tlio village of Lowell, j ^ l 9 , r l c ' ^ B r ' c u " n r a l Society Wm. W. Hatch County of Kent, Stale of Michigan, this 5th • was chosen temporary chairman, and M. M. day ot August, A. D., 1871, do hereby asso- Perry temporary secretary.

Upon motion of J . M. Mathewson, Arvine

Peek was elected President of the Society.—

dale themselves together for the purpose of forming an Agricultural Society, and agree lo the following articles of aflsocia-U O D : Milton M. Perry was duly elected Treasurer,

Article 1. The name by which such Socle-1 and John Huggins was elected Secretary of ty shall be known, shall bo "The Lowell Dis-13nid Societv * trict Agricultural Society." j . , ,

Article 2. Tho particular business and ob-1 U n m o U o a d u I ^ s « c o n d e d , J . M. Malhew-jects of such Society shall be lo promote the 180Di , ' n o ' Huggins and M. M. Perry were best interests of Agriculture, Horlicullure and j chosen to draft By-Laws for said Society.

Ar t i c l e" ' 0 The number of Director, of said M o T e d a n d C a r r i e d l h a l , h 9 a o -Society, shall bo Thirteen (13) and the names of tbose Directors who are to servo the first year, a r ea s follows: J . A. Duga, Arvine Peck, John Loucks, F. C. Mapes, A. Calkins, W. W. Hatch, M. M. Perry, Francis Crakes, A. M. Elsworth, J . M. Mathewson, S. E. Hoag, P. D. Sneathen, John Huggins, and shall hold tbeir office for one year each, and until their successors are elected.

Article 4tb. The officers of said Society shall consist of a President. Secretary and Treasurer, and shall be elected annually by tbe stockholders of tbe Society, at tbe aonnal meeting. Any vacancy occurring between au- Other articles are, on the "City of Jericho nual meetings may be filled by the Board of j the "Velocity of Light ;" "Help Wanted,"

the "Grain Fleet of the Hudson River ;" and

licit names to tbe Articles of the Association.

Board of Directors adjourned to August 12,

A. D. 1871, at 10 A .M.

Dated, Lowell, Micb., Aug. 5tb, 1871;

M. M. PERBT, Sec'y.

W B commend to our readers' earnest at-

tention Rev. Dr. Cuyler's temperance appeal

in tbe Illustrated Christian Weekly of this

week. It is entitled "Over the Falls" of Niag-

ara, beautifully designed and printed.

Directors. Article 5. The President, Secretary and i , , , „ . . . saaurer. shall conslituto a board for f h n , the "Lost Sheep Found," besides

gereral articles. For sale by tbe newsdealers

at only five cents per copy.

Treasurer, shall constitute a board for tho management of the concern of said Society, a majority of whom shall bo a quorum, and i t shall be the duty of said officers to manage the properly aud concerns of 'aid Society as will best promote the interest oi said Society.

Article 6. Any person who shall pay into tbe Treasury of said Society annually, in snch timo and manner as tbo "By-Laws" thereof shall direct, the sum of one dollar, and sub-scribed to tho articles of association, shall be a stockholder therein, and entitled to all the privileges and immunities thereof.

Articlo 7. The office of said Society shall be at the village of Lowell.

Article 8. The annual meeting of tbo stockholders for tbo election of officers, shall be on the first Tuesday of December in each year, after the year 1871, The officers elected at such meeting to commence service on tbe first day of January following.

Article 9. No money shall bo disbursed except on an order signed by tbe Secretary j Mr. N. C. Johnson of Bowne, tells us tbat

' h e 1 ^ Article 10. Tbe District organized under I " ' 1 u 8 i D 8 t b e w e e d l a 8 t 8PriDK. t o b o i l d h i m

these Articles, embrace all of the following a "bran fire" new gate. He thinks it would Territory or Towns, to w i t : Town of Can- j be a good thing if others would go into tho non, Ada, Cascade, Caledonia, Gratlan, Ver- I gennes, Lowell and Bowne, of County of K e n t , , g b u 8 i D l 8 3 t b e B a t n e W f t J -and Towns of Otisco, Keene, Boston, Camp-1 •" bell, of County of Ionia.

L I S T OF L E T T E R S remaining in tbe postoffice

nt Lowell, Kent County, Michigan, August 9,

1871:

Gents' List—0 A Bishop, George Bartlett,

Charles Daniels, Fisher k Vanevery, James

Kain, C W Munson, John Pike, Horace T

Todd, James Talent, John C Wickham.

Ladies' List—Willmetta Dawson, E A

Fletcher, Nellie Hosford, Ellen Roberts, Jen-

ette E Sayles, Mary Treaner.

Foreign List—Wm Girt wood.

Persons calling for these Letters, will please

say "advertised," and give dale of this notice

A . M . E L S W O R T H . P . M .

Great Sacrifice in Sommer Clothing, Star Clothing House, Grand Bapids.

Dried beef new and cheap at John Giles .

Fresh Lime at U. B. Williams'.

AH kinds of Produce very low at John

Giles,' and delivered free lo any part of the

Lowell, Mich, Aug. 1st, 1871.

Article 11. These articles may be amended at any regular meeting of the stockholders by a two-thirds vote of such meeting.

Article 12. By-Laws may IVJ p .w.d at any regular meeting o f t h e Board ofDir.-ctors.

Article 13. Tbe Directors may and shall require of tbe Treasurer such security as they may deem necessary for the safe keeping and proper disbursement of tbe money belonging to said society.

Tbe above Articles being signed an d stock-

M R .

Dear S i r :

If you are not using the Pipe Tongs you

borrowed last Spring, return them, and oblige

Yours, Ac.,

P . J . C O P P B N S ,

(P. S.—No charges for use.

L O S T I L O S T ! !

, Many a young man has lost a first-class sit-bolders' fee paid by nearly all present, the, u a t i o n b v b e i r | ( t f l ^ w r i l e r

meeting proceeded to elect a Board of ibirleen p r o f 'c Ft G r e g g ) n o w i n t 0 W 0 i n o d g i v .

Directors, which resulted in the choice of the j j n g A v e r v l h o r o o g h c o u r s e o f i n s t r u c t i o n i n

persons named in Article 3rd. t h i g M d | ; n e g I c c l e d b n i D c h o f education, Pen-On motion the meeting adjourned. m a n 9 h i p i ttt t b e U n i o n S d l o o l i I o u , e C I f t ? 8

f A. M. ELSWORTH, Chairman. h o n r 3 f r o m ,3 . t b r e e 0< c ) 0 c k t o / 5 ) fivc p. M

I JAS. W. HIKE, Secretary. , . ' nnd (7) seven 10 nine.

L. D. A. 5.—As will bo seen elsewhere in Mr. Gregg has no superiors and but few

the columns of to day's JOUUSAL, the organi- I equals, as a teacher, in the Nation. His Pen-

zation of an Agricultural Society was com- mansbip shows for itself.

pleled on tbe 5ili inst., tho name of which is 1 A 1 1 persons who desire to improve tneir

"The Lowell District Agricultural Society." hand-writing can r«3l assured that now is the

Twelve towns t'orom the counties of Kent T'1"1) a n d M r . Gmuri is just the MAN lo in-

and Ionia comprise the District, the names of | struct them, as ho is au experienced teacher.

which will be seen in Art. 10. Terms $3 for a course of 20 lessons, payable

Much might be said ia regard to the nd- ' n advance.

vantages growing out of such an orgumzation, • clastes and styles of •Card Writing, fine-

but to that class of people who aro competent b" executed

to aid and give it strength, elucidation is un-! Drawing laught in a Scientific and System-

necessary. | a t ' c manner.

Still, the success of any worthy enterprise ! Call at Franklin House.

does not depend alone upon the knowledge 1 ^

people may have in regard to tbe merits of it C. E. GBRQO.

Beyond this they are expected to go. They 1 D o n . t g o w i l W „ ^ o f g(X>d m M a

are expected to enter earnestly into the work | w b i I e y o l l c a o g e l it for 8 c. a lb , at John of encouraging and promoting its interests, by G i l e s d e I i m t a f r e e j., a n y | i a r l 0 , l b e

the use of brains and money. • village

Next Saturday the executive board will meet to determine upon tbe location of the ' A lull line ol looking Glosses just opened at

Fair Ground. It is tbe purpose o f t h e Society j Devendorf k Blain ?.

to hold a fair ibis fall. In order lo do so it |;.in. s Ague Medicine is sold for ono dollar

behooves all inwrested to begin the work of per bottle.

preparation at once. There is no lime tol spare. The citizens of the various towns com- IdUCU P a n t s 5 0 Cts., S t a r C l o t h i n g

prising the district il is hoped will be thor- G r a n d R a p i d s .

ougbly awake, and fully realize tbe importance

of earnest co-oj-eration.

Plain directions in German and English a r given wilh BARR'H PECTORAL ELIXIR. FO sale by Wooding k Look.

Hams from 8 to 15 c. a lb. at John GileV

and delivered free.

DEVENDORF & BLAIN. can be found at 1st door west of Lowell Na-

tional Bank.

It is sickly. Don't increase the danger b

roasting yourself over a fire on washing day

Tho cold water soap will do il without a fire

and little or no labor. John Giles keeps it

Linen Coats 75 ct&, Star Clothin? House, Grand Rapids.

Buy your Fresh Lime at D. B. Williams'.

Ice cool butter at Lull k Co's.

Farmers take home a box of nice acalde'!

herring, while you can get them so cheap H

John Giles.'

Hundreds ot new hals at Perry Bros. Grani.

Rapids.

j ^ J O R U I S & I I I N E ,

Real Estate

A g e n t s ^

L O W E L L , M I O H .

Wi l l a t t end to buying, sollincc a n d leas-ing, Rea l E s t a t e or P e r s o n a l P r o p e r t y , also

C O N V E Y A N C I N G . '

Parties wiahing to rellor purcbua Rnl Eatat-nill iln<l It tn their adranUge to give DK a call. VE a-lvertlne property put Into our hands fret of coat un lea* the owner witliJriwa the aame from market. In which caxe our regular advertlalng rntea will b* charged. No expense will incur until the propertj la aold, when our regular commimion will be charged, unleasotherwiae agreed upon.

12

A Farm of 40 acres in Vergennea, miles Irotn Lowell, comfortable bouse and sutballdlngi.—

Farm ia well watered with springs. 400 choice apple trees all bearing, 200 peach trees and other fruiU la abundance. Price $2,700.

1 ACRKS In Bowne six miles south of Lowell 101/ Village. SO acres ImproTeil, balance wel' timbered. An excellanl slock or grain farm with small houae and I am, altuated un a good road tu Lowell. Price l-IO per acre—one-fourth down, bal-ance on time lo suit purchaser.

10

AHOUSK and corner lot on Bridge St. No better location in the village. Houae laige and con-

venient ; beautiful yard umi garden with an abundance of small fruit. Good well and cistern. In every res-

Kt a desirable place. Qood bargain offered. Terms i f .

2

2ACRES in the village uf Lowell, nicely located with street* on three aide*, gnod soil, well slocked

with small frulla,and In -very respect a desirable point for a re'ldence. Price |800. One fourth down, balance to suit the purchaser.

A b u i l d

0 FARM of 80 acres, RT2 improved : situated in the

township of Campbell, (toml house and ont buildlnga, ami a splendid orchard heating choice fruit. A good sugar bunh of abouMOO trees. Farm well fenced, and under good cultivation, also well watered. Price |3,«ii)0 Terms—one-half down, balance in two yeirs, with annual installments.

5 r j j . ' j ACRKS nf oak timbered land, located one mile •J— from Lowell, supplied with an abundance of living water. An opportunity for a good bargain. H

1

AFAIlMol 100 aores, 2 miles from Lowell, 6fl acri" improved, extra bearing orchard, new

houae, gnod burn and ont building), good well and cistern, besides living water In :il>undanee. Tim faini Is well fenced and ran be l>»ught at a luirgain.— Tlie farming utenslla will be «oM x ilh the fai m if de-•ired. Terms easy.

11 HOl'SK and lot on cornei nf llrldge and Orover streets, iJond Imn'e, Wi ll, ristern and fences.— A

Plea leuanl yard, well •hailol ulili tree*. Good bargain. 0

AHOUSK and corner lot within tun minutes wall nf the Bank The lot ia nrlllrlired nnd eon

tains a good wtdl and ei.tern. (Inod aidt walks lead ing to the iiremlse.s. I'nce I I . I ' I M I . Terms—one halt down—balauee in three vara,

13

AI10U8K and 3 lol« on llrldge street, LoweII.— Qood liHrn and out buildings. Mmd well and

cistern : Two good collar.. Stdrwalk* and fence, iu good mder: houae large and convenleut. Pnoe $2,000," payable In .ult lli- puiehnser.

O VILLAOK lots on Monroe St , ontainiug a good O lioiiseaiul nut litiilding^—well supplied wlthfruit and ahrubberry. Price SWiO. Will exchange for a good leim. wagon and harness, a> purl payment.

3 J A AURK^ in Vergunnes, one nulefruin l.owell.— T t ' Partly Improved-excellent laud for fruit.— Price flu an acre.

A FARM <'fl'i2 v : . . , . •. .ii-I three mile, west ol the village of Lowi-'l ; Mia improved, the

leiUnee well tlmbend s cIhmu t mi'.'nr'-ltard of 76 tree* of the bi'st pustihle v.v i.-iie- f imi abundantly natefed by never MlHnc •• r >._•• IVn is-a moder-ate payiiuuil down, t'le 1>il:ii'i'» .i v iMallments A rare elianee.

Fre-h lire j.-it-e feathers :'or sale at IJoveti-1 dotl 'a IIIHIH AW KM, M ATI

wi'igbing l.i

For Sale.

A OA.—A game of base ball was played Sat-

urday the Dth, between the Mechanics' club

and Trundle Bed club (both of Ada.) The re-

sult was a victory for the Mechanics. Tiie

"Trundie Beds" exhibited some very line play,

ing for boys. Only three innings ware played

—score standing 10 to 14.

Business is picking ui- gradually. Wheat is

coming in quite briskly. Until Saturday last

the price ranged from $1 10 io $1 20. the lat-

ter price being pai 1 for clean, unmixed wheat.

Daniel Kinney and James Bristol, s'art for

Omaha, lo-day, (Aug. 7th,) to seek their for-

tunes in the fa r off West. May success accom-

pany thom.

E. Kinney has just purchased another large

stock of Boots and Shoes, which is expected

soon. Ada can now boast of a good Boot and

Shoe Store exclusively.

Clark Washburn is receiving his share of

lbe Dry Goods trade. He expects to go East

soon, lo replenisb his stock.

Yours, MARK.

"M • paII of Mules, i-well brokeifniliandrell-

l*o, .i . m'" " 4 n tnd Itnnble Hsr-nr.- Mii.il>--,,. i l i i t i 'hi•• k' from Ihildale or Willi liuuil IrMii . u .••!, r. nna Kasv.

I nnulr- ; v " i l \ II. Kl.i lVIIKR, at Tucker'* Factor • on , u.-. i.i 1 Depot,

Low II, Ju • Illl , I'Tl. n2w3

A now arrival of nice Green Ten at 10 c. a

lb. and Snpir ut !' c, a lb , and delivered free

to any part o f the village, at Julio Gilen.

Fre-h Lime it I'. B. Williams'.

Straw, silk, wool and every other kind •'!

' hat at Periy l!ro,-. Grand Uap'uU.

j Dollar Ci g I'DH ^CO fur 7.'i c. al John Gile<.

f " | Ribbe l Hose 10 cts per pair al Devendorf A

! Blain i.

i Fresh bread, pie», cake;, Ac., baked every

I day at Boswonh's opposite I'nllen s l'!ock.—

Try a loaf of l.is biead.

' The linesi lines ol Tea, and ('ollecs lo be

' ibund in the Slate, at John liili"1.'

, H o a s e , G r a n d Rapids . JOB PRINTING! \ Remember John Giles is selling Petroleum

Fluid for 'JS pur gal., and delivers goods pur-

•cbascd of him free lo any part of the village.

Notice. 1 \ ' f ^ 'IQllHU \ having lelt home

wlthoui I I I > •viiM-ui, a id rontMiv tomy wishe-this is tn Inform the public H.at altei tli'n dale I will pay no debts whatever (•i n,,r..oted ny him. and all per-sona tr« therefore warned u ; t • iia !njr oi trust lum on my account S. OODKKKV.

August 2, 1871

On short Notice, AT THIS OFFICE.

Page 4: LOWELL WEEKLYlowellledger.kdl.org/Lowell Weekly Journal/1871/08... · Ri»er. The beet stock Manuhetarad, and first class workmen employed. Grand Rapids Business Di-rectory, Perry

Thr Sin guv. u r j o h n o . w n r m i B .

\ i arH sincc (but imnuK I • mo Ijcfor*-), T w o BlRlorc umiftlii nt rv.1 my d o o r : T w o hone blrdii wiindoriug f r o m t h e i r n c f l , A g r a y old f u m h o u M iu tlio West .

T i m i d nnd yomiR, iho elder had E v e n then u umllc too sweetly B a d ; T h e c rown of pa in tha t all n u m t w e a r T o o early pressc i l h e r m i d n i g h t h a i r .

Yet ere the Ki immer cvo grow l o n p , H e r modest Hps were awect wi th nong A nicronry bauDtinl all h e r word* Of olovcr-llelda a n d xtnging b i rd* .

H e r dark . dlllalinK cyoi c ^ r c w c d T h e broad horizouH of t h e W m t : H e r speech d r o p p e d prair ie flowers; the gold Of harvest wheat about h e r ro l l ed .

Forc -doomei l to song chc s e e m e d to m e ; 1 quer ied ni l w i t h d e i d i n y : 1 knew thu iriul a n d iho neod, Yet all tbe m o r e , I «»id, Ood sjH-od!

W h a t could I o t h e r than 1 did 7 Cou ld I a f i t i g i n g b i rd forbid 7 D e n y the w ind - s t i r r ed leaf? I l e b n k e T h e m i u i c of thu fores t b r o o k ?

S h e went with m o n r n l n g f r « m m y door , B u t left m o r i c h e r than Imfor . - ; T h e u c o f o r t h 1 knew her voice of checr , T h o welcome of h e r i i r t u l t a r .

Yea r s passed : t h r o u g h all the land her n a m e A pleasant househo ld word l - v « n u < ; All full t ieh lnd t h e s inger s tood A sweet a n d g rac ious w o m a n h o o d .

Her l ife was ea rnes t work, not p l a y ; H e r t i red feet CIIIIIIMVI a weary w a y ; And even t h r o u g h her l ightest a t t a i n We heard an u n d e r t o n o o f p a i n .

Unseen of her h e r f a i r f a m e g r e w , T h e good she d i d she rarely know, r n g u e s s e d of h e r lu life t h e love . T h a t rmued its t ea r s h e r g rave •bovo ,

When last 1 saw her , ful l of peace , A Bile waited f o r h e r great r e l e a s e ; And that old f r i e n d so sagu a n d b land . O u r la ter F r a n k l i n held, hs ld b u r h a n d .

F o r all Unit pa t r io t b o s o m t s t i r s H a d nn vcd t h a t woman '* heart of hers, A u d m e n w h o tolled In s t o r m a n d sun F o u n d h e r the i r meet c o m p a n i o n .

O u r conversi ' , f r o m her suflferlng I k m I T o h e a l t h f u l t h e m e * of l ife *he led ; T h e o n t x l o o r w t r id of bud a n d bloom A n d light a n d 8»ui ttieM tilled h e r roam.

Yrt eve rmore a n n n d e r t h o u g h t Of l"*s to oome within u s w r o u g h t . Ami nil the while wc felt t h e s t r a i n Of thu s t rong will that oonqnurcd palu .

ti "1 glveth qu ie tnes s at l a s t ! Tin- c o m m o n way that all hove j e s s e d H'le went , with mor t a l yeu rn lngs foud , T o fu l l e r life a n d love beyond .

1 ' I d t h e rapt sou l In y o u r o m b r a c e . My .tear " t ies I Olvo ihe aliiBnr placo I T o you, to he r , I know not wbe te ,— 1 lilt the si lenco oi a p r aye r .

F o r onlv t h u s o u r own we A n d ; T h e gone bofore , the left N-l i ind, AU mor ta l voices die b e t w e e n ; T h e unhea rd reaches tho unK-on .

Again the b l ackb i rd l i n g s ; t h e s t r e a n u Wake, l a u g h i n g , ( rem the i r w i n t e r d reams , And t remble lu t h e April s h o w e r s T h e las«els of t k e maple flowers.

Hut not fo r h e r has s p r i n g r e n e w e d T h e sweet m r p r i s o s of the wood ; And b i rd a n d flower ar# lost t o h e r Who was t h e i r bolt i n t e r p r e t e r .

What lo shu t eyes has Ood r evoa lod? What hea r t h e ears that dea th h a s foa led7 W h a t u n d r e a m e d beauty p a s s i n g show Uequite* the loss of all we k n o w 7

O silent l a n d , to which we m o v e . E n o u g h if t h e r e alone be love ; And mor t a l need c»n ne ' e r o u t g r o w What It U wal l ing to bestow.

0 while s o u l ; f r o m tha t far -off shorn Float some sweet song the wa t e r s o'er, O u r fa i th conf l r r a , o u r f ea r s d ispe l . With t h e old voice wo loved BU well

Atlantic Monthly for Augiut,

MY HOIK OF PERIL.

' A licrce gleam oi wild delight shot from 1 his dark o.ves at they Ml upon nu1. I Seizing the ku i fe ' iu ono hund, ho

brundished it over Ids head, nnd with u hmgh, loud and diabolical, ho drew it several times acrosH his throat anil forehead, and I was in momentary ex-jiectatiou of seeing u frigidfnl wouud uitiicted.

" L a u r a Moore," he exclaimed, (Moore was my maiden name), when you were young and hamlHome, I loved you, adored you as no man ever before

1 adored woman; but you Hcorued my i love, you spurned mo from you; you j smiled graciously upon my hfttod ri-val, aud you gave him tho precious

{treasure oi your heart, but I 've got you Inowl You refused to he my bnde on ear th ; you shall bo mine in Heaven I Thither I am going, and you shall ac-company me ! We'll consummate our vows here, aud to the celestial abodes of Paradise we'll go together. Here is the instrument that will take us there! "

Saying this, he advanced with rapid strides toward me, secured mo by the arm. nourished the deadly weapon dex-terously over mv head, brought the blunt edge directly across my throat, and fell back to tho door, and stood gazing upon mo with those wild, glaring eyes of his until the blood froze in my veins.

I essayed to rise, bnt terror rendered me powerless. I t seemed as if every mufiolo denied me. I glanced toward the door. Herbert Stanley must have interpreted that glance.

" You cannot escape," he exclaimed exultingly; " I have taken care to pre-vent that I 've fastened tho east door aud there is the key to the front."

And he took from his pocket a large brass key, and held it up triumphantly before me.

All possibilty of escape was thus cut olT. 1 was in the power of a desperate, merciless madman, bent on my des-truction, as ho had expressly avowed it, and that paralyzed every nerve and muscle.

" Ood help me in this hour of peri l !" was the prayer that arose in my soul, for I knew no human power was near.

! Ago in the madman advanced with the i glittering blade quivering in his hand. ! I felt the iron grasp of his hand upon my shoulder, saw the bright blade of the bowie-knife pointed directlv at my heart, aud stood powerles, aud motion-

j less as a statue. I But with this hour of peril came strength adequate to the emergency.—

| The courage whicn had for a moment deserted me revived, and triumphed

I over fear. I knew that to plead for I mercy, to sue for life would be in vain. ! My treaties would be unheeded, and perhaps instant death would be the con-sequence. My only Hope then laid in stratagem. A plan whirled through my .brain with lightening speed, and

j upon it I determined to act. j "Release me, Herbert ," I said with i as much calmness as I could command, j and come and sit down by my side. I want to talk to you."

j He obeyed. "You will be my wife?" ho said.

You accept my proposition." I bowed an assent. A triumphant

smile lighted np his features. " Herbert " I began, you offered me

j the rich treasures of your heart, but 11 i blindly and foolishly refused it. I

EXPLOSION AT WASHISWTOS. and I saw that an attempt to escape would bo but to jump into the jaws of; death. Iblt US my llight grew more | T h e S i g n u l C o r p s . i l M g a z i n o n n d L n b o r -

hopobss, my mind grow more audi n t o r y B l o w n U p .

more active. A bright thought crossed I Washing ton d i spa t ch t o tho New York Hera ld .

it. i Shortly after 3 o'clock this morning dying brick against their frame tene-

! Although several families live within • sixty feet of tho site of the magazine, none of them sustained any injury iu person. They were, however, consid-

j erobly alarmed by the pelting of the

" I f I remember rightly, Herbert, ; n terrific explosion occurred at the m^nts. said I, "youused to be a great admirer Washington Arsenal, located on a pen-1 Beyond tho eastern branch, in the of the canine species ?" j insula in tho southern part of the city, neighborhood ot Anaoostia and on the

" Y e s , " was the reply. I and jutting into the Eastern Branch. ! heights about Uniontown, window "Now," said I, " I will show you a ! ' f h e shock was so severe that it awak-' panes were demolished by thousauds,

most splendid specimen of a dog ; he j ened people throughout the District. is as ounning as a fox, and possesses | Windows were rattled with a greater traits of character and sagacity not un-1 vigor than ever Boreas dreamed of, worthy of the human race. Here Nep-, vrhile startled sleepers were prone to tune." : believe that Washington, in the march

And a large, shaggy Newfoundland i d improvement, had been treated to a dog camo into the room, wagging his j y o n n g earthquake.

plastering was ripped from ceilings and walls as neatly as if done by sharp instruments. All the glass in the win-dows of the Government Insane Asy-lum was broken.

None of the valuable ordnance stores were destroyed, but some iuconveni-

Wlt a n d W i s d o m . CAM, a spado a spado. You may cnH

stockings, hoes. W H E N a girl falls in love with an

unlucky Irishman, her heart always goes pity Pat.

M OTTO for a rejected suitor—He wooed, and she wouldn't. He coood, and she couldn't.

" E Q U A L I T Y , " says a French writer, " means a desire to be equal to your superior, and superior to your equal."

S O M E reckless fellow detines tippling to lie " holding communion with dis-erahottled spirits."

PiiAViNQ at Doctor—" Ma, dear, Ada won't take hor physic. I've mixed her

tail with doggish jov. • [" Immediately following the conons- ence may be experienced by the Ord- a dose of sand, and she says I must " T h i s is our only errand boy," I j a i o n w a s a n alarm of fire, followed by i uance Department in providing for the take some first. Doctors never do, do

continued, pointing to the animal, I ft general alarm, summoning the fire 1 destruction of the pyrotechnic works, " and a better one could not be found. | department from all parts of the dis- "8 the appropriation is quite limited. He does our marketing daily and saves I trict to the scone of the conflagration. ! us a good deal of trouble. Such a sa- This, with tho brilliant illumination, j The Decadence of Entrland. gncious creature you never beheld. All i brought thousands of people into the i F r„m 1^ HpccUt()r. I have to do is just to wnte upon a lit-1 Ptreets, and, in the stillness of the , There is in this country but one tie bit of paper whatever we want and the quantity, and put it in a basket, which Neptune takes in his mouth and presents to the butcher, baker or gro-cer, as we tell him ; and forthwith he returns with the articles desired. Now let mo exhibit one of his exploits and you shall see if I have overrated them. We shall want meat for our repast, and I will send for some."

I took my pencil from my pocket and wrote upon a little scrap of paper these words :

" M B , B R O W N : For Heaven's sake come immediatelv to my rescue. I am' completely in the power of Herbert Stanley, a maniac. Gome with force suiflcient to save me and capture him.

" L A U B A Mono A N . "

" W h a t have you wri t ten?" inquired Stantley, whose attention had been for tlie last moment only diverted to the dog, perhaps fearing that in spite of my ready compliance to his wishes, I m ig l i yet play him false.

" L i s t e n , " I replied, and I will read it to you," and I neld up the note and read from i t :

" M R . B R O W N : Please send me n nice piece of tenderloin steak. I have

they, ma?" COOK—" Oh, i t ' s y o u r pa, is i t . Mas-

ter Tom ? Well, the telegraph may be very wonderful, but it don't hike me in, and if that's your pa's writing, I 'll

. . . . . . . , . . . . . ^ . . . . . „ eat my head." night, the bursting of bombs aud tlie ; g r e a t j)0litiCal institution left alive, and I N G E N I O U S youth (whispers)—' I see Mscnarge of s m ^ arms comd be dis-, jjjat is apparently endeavoring,to com-1 you constantly stand on one leg in tinctly heard throughout the city.— 8 U i c l (]e by asphyxia. The throne | church. May I ask why." Ingenuous General Dyer and Major Eddie ttn" as a political power'is dead; the lords maiden (whispers)—"\ou may. I t is other officers with the men of the post, . n r e d v i n g . a n d i f t h e H u U B 0 o { C o m . -were soon out, and, finding that a mag-, m o n 8 loses the respect of the country, azme and small laboratory had been t h e r e ^ b e n o t h i n g left. Every sign ,Wr ,v™l hv fhA nnrl f W . a e e m 8 t o ^ ^ ^ ^ f a 8 t ^ g ^

From every part of tho empire comes up fierce complaint that the House of Commons attempts to do everything, will do nothing, and will suffer nobody else to act. Ireland is in such a rage at the dead-lock of her private bill

destroyed by the explosion, and that a storehouse immediately north of the site of the destroyed magazine was in flames, as also No. 2 storehouse (the two-story building immediately south of the office), they had the hose at-tached to the fire-plug and a stream of water thrown on the burning buildings. In the meantime, engines of the Wash-ington Fire Department reached the scene of the fire, and were soon in ser-vice.

Whiie the fire was in progress there were a number of explosions from shell and loaded muskets, and at times the rattling of small arms and bursting of bombs was appalling; but the men stood their ground, bravely battling with the flames, and fortunately none of them were hurt . The flames were not subdued until long after daylight, and the Navy Yard engine and other

to save my croquet foot." So jie one wrote to Horace Greeley, in-

quiring if guano was good to put on potatoes. He said i t might do for those whose tastes had bfecome vitiated with tobacco and r u m ; but he preferred gravy and butter.

W H E N you make cider, select nothing but the soundest turnips, chopping

I ' l l - . . . v - . . thom into sled lengths before cradling legislation that schemes are seriously t l i c m I n bofling your cider use plen-cons ide redfo r t r ans femngtha tpor t ion ,^ f i c e a n d w h e n - b o i l o d h U1) i n at least of Irish business back to Dub- t( i e flnn t o d 0 r f c /

lin. We ourselves described last week 1 . ^ , , . . . the irritation in Scotland at the impos- A Y O U N G manwants to know whatbus -sibilitv of making wav for tho Scotch ! n e™ J16, ] " * b e t t e r 8 ° . 1 n 0 th.f. t

education bill. The English are wait- e,m.,)14

u ^ ^occnyy t i high position in ing in no pleasant mood for at least a ^ h , m ^ roofing business dozen reforms, not one of which can be I | n [hat trade a smart man will soon get so much as attempted. Tho country, ! t o t h e t o P o f t h o l a t l ( l e r ; weary of tho long talk, almost ceases i I n court tho other day, a witness to expect anything from Parliament,! being asked how he knew that a_ man and concerns itself so little in its pro ceedings that the newspapers find any-thing more interesting to their readers than accurate Parliamentary reports.— The speeches in the "Commons are re-duced to a summary which olten makes them unintelligible, while one-half of all that occurs in the Lords is not re-

The threat of resistance

engines were kept in service until unexpected company to-day, and I wish u e a r noou playing on an immense pile to provide a dinner worthy of my I of blankets, &c., which continued to guest. _ L A U R A M O R G A N . " .burn. I t is not yet determined wheth-

I trembled violently as I read, for I er the explosion took place in the small saw the maniac was still suspicious of | niagazino, situated a few yards east of , ported at all. me. With every movement I was in, Nos. 1 and 2 storehouses, about on a ! to measures, forcible resistance—as, for momentary expectation that he would line with tho south end of No. 2, in ! example, to parts of Mr. Bruce's licens-saatch the paper from me to ascertain which were several hundred pounds of j ing bill—is frequently heard, and to all for himself if I had indeed read it as it powder, or in a small frame bui lding ' appearance cieotes no irritation, while was written, aud I knew well that the, about 100 feet northeost of it, which ! in one-third of the empire county after detection of my deception would be; w a s used by Sergeant Flint as a labor-1 county sends np a representa-instant death. Hastily folding the atory iu wliich to make signal rockets I tive who toUs the House of Com-note, I dropped i t into the basket and 1 f o r the United States Signal Corps. In j mons that the one passionate desire placed i t before the dog. | this same building the Sergeant wos at I As for our other emperor aad em-

" I believe, Mr. Stanley, I said, ^ork yesterday afternoon, bnt he re-i press—they of the French—nothing is " t h a t you have the key to the door in | ports that all was safe when he left, i to be said save that they quietly pur-your possession. Do me the favor to ; ^ t any rate, not a trace of either of I sue the even tenor of their way, and unlock it, for Neptune to pass out." ' these buildings was visible af ter the 1 seem to be more contented and happy

The request was made politely, and explosion, with the exception of a few . than ono would think possible. Tne Stanley, equally polite, opened the door for the dog. Hope once more en-tered my heart. My dreadful situation would soon be known, and help might reach me.

A half hour passed. Neptune had not yet appeared. Stanlv grew iinpat-ient 'at the long delay. Again he drew the knife from his belt.

" L e t the marriage vows be consum-mated, and let the marriage feast go," ho said angrily.

Some thought me plain, many passa-, r e c y 0 ' B 9 iy threw away my own liap- \ But I skilifully and adroitly manag-ble, and a few decidedly handsome, j n i n e B 8 but the act was thouchtleas. an ed to draw him into conversation upon

feet of the wall of the magazine. The one-story storehouse nortU of the mafj- :

azine was entirely destroyed, and in it was a large number of old shot and shell, which were unloaded.

Emperor comes to town almost every day, and one sometimes sees him stroll-ing down the sunny side of Bond street, or looking out of the bay-window of a club-house. The other day, accon>

In No. 2 storehouse there was an im- j ponied by t h e Prince Imperial, of whom menso quantity of cavalry and artil- ne is excessively fond, he wont to Wool-lery stores and accoutrements in the 1 wich to visit the Royal Arsenal there, lower portion, and in the upper story I and it is worthy of remark that the was located a very valuable museum, in I workmen, on his arrival and departure, which were many relics of the military shouted themselves hoarse in his hon-art in ancient and modern times, in- or. Tho affection which the working eluding ancient weapons of warfare, 1 people here entertain for him, and armor of the middle ages, shot and ! which they manifest in every possible

Another wild, shrill laugh resounded

the flame of his told him several

1 -ij i . i a ™ u s i n & anecdotes of n D d a n n B 0 | a i m o s t every nation of the my childhood; spoke of my early school t ftnd ^ fomiing a coUection days and his college life, and the honors, c a ^ n e v e r bo replaced. Of the uc had won. . . . . . . curiosities stored here but few can be

At last steps were heard on tho pmz- f o u m l v e r e a l B 0 m o d e , 8 o f

za. I diBtingnished mv husband s ^ 8 h e l l B ^ f f t c t o f n ( 5 a r l ^ voice and the toead of half a dozen ftie ^ in war in ou r ' own

.. v. men. Stanley too knew the voice, H r

plished, talented, and in every way a | Btand the powers of my charms. La-1 His rich melodious tones had years bo-1 ' , . . , j , , - - - , . most eligible match. George Morgan, d i e s a l w a Y 8 c o u r t e d ftnd admired me. I ! fore grated harshly on his jealous ear. No. 1 storehouse was in great danger A , ,out iu.v0 mumuo » 8u u muu my second suitor, was a lawyer from have been for vears the centre of uni-1 Springing like a tiger upon me, he 1 o f burning, as a iaothe pho topanhga l - ed Isoah S. Humphrey, empbyed

thoueh 1 shouted ui a voice of, thunder : , lery north of No. 2 house; but, through 1 engineer m one of our large mai

pleasure of my alliance was solicited by |

two individuals, whoso birth, educa-! i u m v a n d t h e m a i l i a ^ 8 eyes flash-tion and position in life, might have e d w - t h additional lustre. secured for them a hand, in a necuuia-: . . j k D C W ( " b e B a i d t proudly brushing rv point of view, ^ far uiore desirable , the long black locks from his high, thun mine. Herbert Stanley was a broad forehead, " I knew your womau's young man, handsome, rich, accom- j i j e a r t could not a second time with-

shell and colors from our Revolution-} way, is one of the most curious facts, ary war, and specimens of the uniforms I The health of the Emperor is excellent,

" " and he is growing very stout. The Empress will shortly make a visit to Spain to see her mother.

A Widower of Three Months Elopes with a Young Sistcr ln-Lair

F r o m tho Sou th Bend ( Ind . ) Regis te r .

About three months ago a man nam-" ' as an

manufac-n d l L e f b r i S i ' a T n o " ' p a r t i o ^ j T ^ I o 7 m T b u t thev ' the" effort, ot the flremen a ^ . e d b y j t u & g c . f c b l i . l m . , * . lo8t b i . . i f .

age creej: ing t «P can creep ^ ^ ^ find me a ; the olhcers and men of the post and a [with that dread disease consumption. ^ t l i n e 0 £ j i e r d e a ^ ] i e WftH board-

ing on Michigan street ; but a boarding house is a poor place to grieve over thoso whom death has snatched away,

pusscHsiug in his personal appearance, ; j n f n ]ieart of woman as slvly and cannot capture u j c . iuc» m u uuu 1 * 1 1 r i but he stood weU iu Ins profession and 8 l l b t l l l8 i u t h e d a V B o f Carly child-1 cold and stiff corpse. My spirit will ! T h T e n a i t H I ? 1 1 6 0 ^ had acquired some propertv, and es- h 0 0 ( i - : bave gone to the eternal world to enjoy ! Captain Haycock and Lieutenant Har-tablished for himself one of the finest <« Herbert I will as I said be the i * t s c e l e s t i a l g l o r i e s w i t h y o u m y b e a u t i - 1 . ^ e y were savetl. I n e roof of and most unexceptionable characters, 1, . ^ r b e r t , 1 wiu, as i said, be t h 0

: ^ b r i d e - B this building was raised and many aud to him my heart inclined. bride of veur future life, i h e unseen j ^ n d ; a i n t h e 8 a m e fiendish openings were made by shot, shell and and Humphrey was decplv afflicted.

Wo were married, and I returned with 1 J o y 8 " f t h e e t e r n a U orid we wdl share | ! , raLfi through the bouse, and the musket bails, and several of the heavy having lost two wives within a year. . . 1 . . ^ homo in G - . B n t bn^e ever leaves her , S T e e l b l a T of ! P^ders were broken in two by the ex- so, at his earnest request, ho was al-

conjugal happiness, f a ^ o r s home mthou t making prepara-1 8 ^ ^ p l o 8 i o I 1 one of them being split for lowed to transfer his quarters to the lis to the lot of mor- A c«dd tremor run over uie, b u t c o u r - 1 ^ y or fifty feet. The concussion ^ residence of h i s l a t e s t wife's mother.

age did not forsake me. With hcrcu-1 ^ 8 c f ) c o f " l 6 ™ ^ " P P e r P ' ^ o u of the Third ward, lean strength and energy I seized the l fnghtful , a n d m nearly eyery bmldiug fhere are or rather there were when mud man's ami. and averted the d e a d - - i n tbe grounds panes of glass were ho went there, two daughters of the

»» V. i litbl A IV. « ty , •

him to his pleasant homo iu G—. j ^ Twelve years of cc ' such as seldom fulls iu vm- 1UU in U1U1- , . 11 1 i 1 3 .il 1 tals. had passed over our heads, and P^co of my ear jdy husband without two little ones hud been given to us. to m a l : i n « preparations: without making unite our hearts more closely, and t o 8 0 1 ™ ' f ' T h f . ' T b f ^ T ^ i

•sh jov and sunlight into our comfort and happiness. I will pre bring fresh j o y — happy, cheerful home. I t was on an August afternoon, unusually warm aud sultry, that I was sitting by the open window of my little parlor, busily ply-ing my noodle. My children were away passing tho day with a friend, aud Mr. Morgan was at his olfice. He had in-formed me in tho moruing that import-ant business called him to New York, and that it was his intention to leave ou the evening boat, and my fingers wore fiying to get the last stitches set in some clothes he was to take with Lim.

I had been sittiug some time wholly engaged iu my work, when I heard the creaking of the front door upon its hinges, slowly opened and closed aga in ; then stealthy steps in the hall fell distinctly upon my ear. I caught a glimpse of a shadow ou the floor. Hastily throwing aside my sewing,- I arose to ascertain by whom and for what I was thus unexpectedly visit-ed, but before I had time to advance a

mad man's arm, and averted the dead l yb low: then with the agility of a panther, I sprang through the open window, and rushed at lightning speed around tho house.

prepare a dinner, to bo ready against his re. turn, and for the little ones God has given me. While I am iu the flesh I must be faithful to the vows made in the flesh. We will refresh our bodies before starting upon our long journey. I t shall be our marriage feast; you shall be tho bridegroom aud ho hon-ored guest. My liusbana will be there to see the happy change I have made." . . ,

Thus I ran on, betraviug neither by ! ^ 1m ' e w n 8 knocked out

look or act the mental terror of mv 1 8 t r 0 I lf>. r o P e w a s .

broken, while in some doors were family, ono about nineteen and tho oth-

and woman wore husband and wife, re-plied, "Because hud often heard the lady blow the gentleman up." Tho evi-dence was held to be conclusive.

A GENTLEMAN one day indiscreet ly asked a lady how old slie was. " L e t mo see. I was eighteen when I was married, and my husband was thir ty; now he is twice thirty, that is sixty ; so of course 1 am twice eighteen, that is thirty-six."

A siNaxNO-MAsTER, while teaching his pupils, was visited by a brother of the tuneful art. The visitor observing that the chorister pitched the tune vo-cally, said, "Sir, don't you use a pipe ? " " No," replied Semibreve, with admira-ble gravity, " I chew."

A SCHOOL committee in a frontier district are reported to have summed up their opinion of an examination wliich they had attended by making to the pupils this address: "You've spoiled well, and you've ciphered good, but you hain't sot still."

" How easy these cars ride?" observed a rural traveller on the New York and New Haven road; " what kind of springs do they use? " "Saratoga Springs," replied his facetious compan-ion. " I have heard of them," re-joined the rural traveller, in a giatified manner.

T H E following telegraphic corre-spondence is a model of orevity nnd po in t : " Oil Regions, June 15th,' 1871. —To Miss Laura : will yon go to the strawberry festival with me to-night? Please answer quick. Yours, Herb." " J u n e 15th, 1871.—To Herb : Yes. Harness up your mules; I am fixing my curls. Laura."

T H I S is a rural New York item: A tin peddler who evidently bears a charmed life, fell thirty feet with his horse and wagon through a bridge, and wasn't hurt a bit. His load of old iron and potash kettles didn't even break the springs, and the yellow dog under the wagon never lost step during the performance.

"Mother , " said a little shaver, the other day, " I know what I could do if I was at sea and tho men were all starv-ing, and they should draw lots to see who should be killed and eaten, and it should be me—I'd jump into the wa-ter." " B u t , " said his mother, " t h e y would fish you up." " N o , they wouldn't," said he, " I wouldn't bite.^

F R E N C H gentleman, taking leave of English lady—"Well, Madame, adieu ! As to tho conduct of England toward

blown off their hinges and heavy furni-; er sixteen, ture upset. A piece of scantling, sup-1 months posed to be from the magazine, was 1 one, but

He had not been there two us, I fear we shall retain—pardon me

Taken completely by surprise, aud : blown a distance of WO or MO yards , and lectured bflwildfired bv mv unexuected flicht a m l fell outside the enclosure. The I disregard of h u late wife's memory. Herbert Stanlev stood for a moment e u t i r e a c t n a l l o B 8 w i , l n o t c x , , e e ( l !*10<V ' Not in the least diseomfitted, he began

I b & u ^ ^ u e . 0 K . ' ' l ? / * r . v i i U ? » t t . . o t i r t o t h . r o . „ B e r d . U B b . next he found himself rudely assailed of the museum, ^ I ter, but so slyly a. bv half a flozpn men The unliftod 1 111 t , , e I 1 0 " 8 6 occupied by Sergeant Ruspicion.

• 0 j bis hand • a ' Cameron, about one hundred yards Two Sundays ago Humphrey's thrown dPTtrmislv uorth of the magazine, a bed in which mother-in-law and her husband, who is

always l>o made. We long ago had a belief that you were a nation of sol-diers." .

A H E A D E R sends us the following spec-imen of homo wi t : "Mamma," said a youthful scion of our family, recenily, " you know what ale X means don't you ? " " Why, yes child, it means ale

# - . 1>. ft . . mt .m and shou lders a n d drawn i t w 0 chi ldren were asleep, was over- s t ep - fa the r to t h e girls, got ready to go over h i s a r m s

cometerv.

and take of them un affectionate fare-wall."

" S o we wi l l ! " replied Stanely, gravely. " S o we will. I t shoil be 11 marriage of Cauun Water will be turned into wine, and we will out the bread of life," and he folded me to his bosom in a rough embrace.

"Now, Herbert ," said I, after a mo-

sing moment I felt the danger was eTf r^ e^n'J l!!^pTWn

Cf i l I^ ep anm« i asreepin her house, about one hun-averted. | »cUon. My brain whirled : a him came 8 0 U t h of the magazine. A

Determined to follow up tho advan ; ) e f " r ^ hnHbanlT brick'from the building was forced di-tage I had so unexpectedly pained, 1 t o arms of my husband. arose calmlv, and with a forced smile, 1.. ^ , f t 8 t J a w o k e to consciousnees, as 8 a j d . ' j if from a dream. Life aud its bless-

.. j .„ , ,. j- ings were mine once more to enjoy, I will go now and prepare the dm-1 ^ f r o m t h e d o f H O u l j

r—our m a m ace feast. We will eat . . . .̂ i. v . . .r._

. 1 A L B E R T P I K E , the Arkansas poet, Ou returning, Humphrey; furnished the- following distich on the

step, the tall, powerful figure of a man : " < ' r - o u . r marriage feast We will eat stood in the doorway. ! f o r t h e l t tH t t , n i c W l t h 0 * r f e l l o w m o r t a l 8

One glance at the new comer's face was enough to drive all the color from my lips and cheeks, and make tho very blood freeze in my veins and my knees smite one against the other.

It was Herbert Stanley. I had not seen him since the night of his rejec-tion, twelve years before. Bnt I had heard, f rom time to time, that life had gone variously with h im; that he had met with heavey losses in business, which had brought on mental derauge-ment, aud for some months he had been regarded as hopelessly insane. He had now escaped from the asylum where he had been confined, nnd had come to pay a visit to me, the subject of his early love. His head and feet were bare. A pair of course blue pants and a plaid calico shirt were his only attire. Hiti long disheveled black hair fell far down upon his shoulders, aud m the red leather hunting belt which fauci . fully encircled his waist, a pistol and bowie knife were distinctly visible.

rectly through a window and knocked two "knobs from the posts of the bed, while a piece of glass from the windows slightly cut her on the throat,

K h e d S 7 p » ^ - o f " S k - ^

and the girl were missing, and did not return that night. The next morning he made his appearance and demanded the girl's clothes, but refused to tell where she was. The mother wotdd not give them up, and he went to his work, but was diseharged by nis employers as

obio inv omi •hontfnfno.ii h, thfi Most I children were unharmed. A bureau in j goon as they heard of his actions. The Hich for mv unexpected deliverance this room was overturned and the glass girl's parents have not yet been able to Herbert Stanlv was taken back to the ' " " ^ e d . and the door waa dnven • flnd her, though the supposition is Mvlu^from^ wdience l!^ h a ^ eecapedt • ^ the ha 1 ^ e house, they are living at White p f g ^ n , Mich.

jn-d in a tew month, alter oomplete.l ™ y ? h o ! his miserable existence. j v e g C t a b | e H ) a u d potatoes could be | T H E R E is still another woman poison-

s 1 picked up this morning without dig-1 er. She is known as Catharine Shoe-

A N E . O K L E A S B jnUge ridtog in tho | ^ • T & S . A S f i 8 ™ ta and nccomi)iished, like the rest poisoners. Her story is delight-

U L E A N S judge riding in the ' One piece ol Dnck was lorceu Iv, from a single gfanco at through the roof of a blacksmith shop ; S ^ n c e r c ance of a lady bv his side, a distance of tliree hundred yurtk. AU pre y "d ie knew her, and ventured | fhe windows were shattered, nol only o i i o p o i

cars, recently, mtnt of uncermonious hugging "now I j the countenance will go andmakoreudy for our journey ; imagined he fainw umi i [„" thig,"bnt in tho other neighboring fully brief aud piquant. "Employed tune is precious, und we will not delay ^ . ^ a y waa^le^asant.: T h e ^ . b o u s e s were lev- by a wealthy citizen, James Sharp, we

wear a v e i l C inquired the d i s p e n s e r , died nearly to tho ground and the P ^ f ^ of justice. " L e s t I attract attention." | trees near by stripped of their bark, ^ ^ n

mo having left her all his

•It is the province of gentlemen to ud their brunches broken, and their bfe property in a will he died suddenly

our happiness." And I proceeded to the dining-room, and commenced lay-ing the cloth and dishes on the table; getting necessarv preparations for a meal. I hoped bv so doing I should bo able to elude the argus eyes of my jailor, aud when a favorable moment should present itself, I would leap from the window aud make flight.

But no cat over watched for prey more closely than Herbert Stanley watched me. His eves never left me.

mire," replied the gallant man of l a w perhaps, destroyed. Fuses, cartridges. Then she married another man, " N o t when thev arc married." " B u t &o., in profusion, were scattered aU , poisoned him. Sharp's relatives I'm not." " I n d e e d ! " . " O h , no; over the ground. have her m prison.

and now

One of Ihe guards, living about a j JU1 I'm a bachelor!" The laAy quietly re-j — ^ mv escape by ' moved her veil, disclosing to tbe as- ' fourth of a mile from the scene of the ! A H A R T F O U D horso seizes rats in his

' tonished magistrate the face of his ( explosion, states that the concussion mouth when they come to his manger mother-in-luw. | was so severe as to throw him from his j to steal his oats, shakes them like

bed aud to break open tho doors of his ^ a terrier uutill satisfied they aro dead, I R R E D E E M A U L E bonds—vagabonds, i dwelling. ; and then throws thom out of the bin.

subject of the Jeff. Davis scandal: " W o aro Hones of o n o Bone. In close union on Earth; And in Sections will no'er bo divided. Our causc but sla m, to wake in a

berth.

Where tho rights of the 'lost' are de-cided."

Ax old fellow who took part in the late rebellion was one day blowing in tho village tavern to a crowd of admir-ing listeners, and boasting of his many bloodv exploits, when he was inter-rupted by the question: " I sav, old Joe, how many rebels did you kill dur-ing the war?" " How many rebels did I kill, sir; how many did I kill? Well, I don't know, just 'zactly how many; but I know this much, I killed as many of them as they did o' mo."

S O M E two weeks ago a young man of culture and good taste went to hear a well-known ranter preach. Getting disgusted before the sermon was half through, ho loft his seat and was go-ing on tip-too toward the door, when the preacuer roared out : " Young man had you rather go to hell than hear me preach?" Somewhat startled at first, the young mau faced about and with a graceful bow responded: " O u the whole, parson, I think I would."

Captured Tluunrht. A t h o u g h t c a m " to m y Bj i ln t as I lay Retwoon two Hloopi. m n l t h r o u g h t h e a l lent n i g h t It looki'd ul mo wi th Hilildon oyoa ami, br ight ; l in t , when I Rlrovo to t o u c h 11, Hod away. Anil lis ' lo mo d r e a m ; b u t ot the break of d a y L waking, naw, throi ig l i g r a y , I n m . v d n g l igh t . My last n igh t '* t h o u g h t ; b u t HH with g r e a t e r m i g h t I htrove to g r a p i t . on ly c r y i n g " S t a y ! " I t uproad ItH wlngH f o r l l ight . Then , a* a miare, I net m y cong and s n a r e d t h e lovely t h i n g . And Baid: " O, flying Ihoug l i l , i h o n art loo f a i r F o r m e to leave theo f r e e a m i w a n d e r i n g I Yet f re t not fo r t h y l l lmrty ; but where Sad goals can hea r theo be content to s i n g . "

AX t A S T E R N T O V K .

Q U I C K W O R K .

P n r t l c u l n f H o f t h e C h a n a l i i R o f t h e C i i t u g e o f t h e O h i o n i u l l l l s a l t a i p p i U n l l r i m i l — T h e W o r k A c c o m i i l l s h n i I n S c v r n I l o II 1*4.

F r o m tbo HI. Lou t s I tepubl ican .

The work of changing the gauge of tho Ohio and Mississippi Railroad from from G feet to four foot 8 inches and a half, was commenced and finished yes-terday morning. Long before the lirst

, mau received 25 cents for each hour ho worked on the road. The actual work of changing the gauge. Without incllld- 3 1 i c h l g o n C e n t r a l , G r e a t W e s t e r n a m i

ing reduction of rolling stock to suit it E r i e H n l l w a y * — N e w Y o r k — T h t

or purchases of narrow gauge stock, amountfl to about $25,000.

Tho work of reducing locomotives was oue involving considerable cost. It is done by narrowing the fire-box uuder tho boiler inches on each •side. Each boiler is an average of 40 inches iu diameter, aud tho fire-box would therefore be reduced to 25 inch-es in breadth. Tho axles are shortened

Time of College Ritees.

Tlio timo made in the College races since 18(54 has been a-< follows:

N o w , C o u r t l l u i u r — J f a w I l n v r n - f o m - }car. Aictonous Crew. lime. m r i u - r m r n t n t O h l Y « l c — I l n r l f o r d — • Ya le ' I ' j ' o i

R o c k v l l l r — B c l d l n g I t r o n . vv C o . — S n r u - ^ i ^ i V n l o ! . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

t o g a S p r l n K * . 1S60. H a r v a r d 18 :54 ' N'KW YORK, July, 1871.—Competition for the ISCC H a n a r d I S : I A

carrying of parDODgera between tho East and thi> 1H67 Vale 19:33 18(!7.... Harvard 18:13 1868 Harvard 17:48^ 1809 Harvard 111:30 1800 Harvard 18:02 1870 Yalo 20:10 187 0 Harvard 20:30 187 1 Atlanla 18:19X

THE purest aud sweetest Cod Liver

Went Ims b t c o m c PO ptrong, t h a t t h e different ra i l -

way companies spa re n o pa in s o r expense lo m a k e

t h e t r ans i t a s comfo r t ab l e a n d agreeable as poss i -

ble . Without d l n p a n g i n g any o t h e r route , I m a y

say I have f o u n d t h e r o u t e o v e r t h e Michigan O n -

7j inches at each end aud the remain- t r a l a n d t h e Grea t Wes te rn , f o r speed, saf.-ty, >

d e r of t h e m a c h i n e r y i s t h e n r e - l o c a t e d , prompt connoctlong, ix rfecUon of road-bed and > and the frame work is set in, iu the e q u i p m e n t s , cars , p t e s e n g c r a n d ea t ing houses , a t -

same proportion. The broad-gauge t en t ive c o n d u c t o r s a n d g e n U a m e n l y offloew, t h e ' •. j .F . , j HAZARD C A S W E L L ' S c u m n r p v . ' . l u c p . l b v n i a c i n s t h e b o d i e s I'loanant a n d des i rab le o n e . I t is the o n l y O u , n l l l t r l a n A Z A " D * ^ASWT-.liL s c a r s a r e r e d u c e d b y p l a c i n g t n e b o d i e s , l t h N U g . m a d e o n t h e s e a s h o r e , f r o m f r e s h

a r a Falls , wh ich can bo r e a c h e d f r o m Chicago in selected l i v e r s , by C A S W K L I I , H A Z A R D &

nineteen h o n r s . F r o m t h a t p o i n t mwo a re now t w o Co., Now York. It is absolutely jturc t h n . n g h rou tes to New Pork , Ihe Now York a n d and HWCt. Patients who have OUCO

Er ie Kallroad C o m p a n y h a v i n g e x t e n d e d t h e i r tracX taken it prefer it to all others. Phy-f r o m Buffa lo , via Niagara Fal ls , to Bimpenidon siciaus have decided it superior to auy Br idge . Thi« is a gr"»« imblio convonienoc, as t hey • 0f the other oils in market. r u n many t r a i n s a day be tween Buf fa lo and S l i spen- j

ou narrow gauge trucks aud axles.

i

College Expenses.

Au article iu the College Courant dis - , , - - i • .t , cusses tho question of the yearly ox

streak of dawn appeared in he sky, ppuditures of young men in the Amer c a r s wore in m o t i o n c o n v e y i n g m e n to jC l ln co l l eges . I t i s s t a t e d t h a t , a c c o r d - sinnllri'dge, and pasw-nger* are not nowobllgAi to I t h e i r work ou t h o r o a d , a n d a s s o o n a s i n ( , t o a n e x t e n d e d incpi i rv m a d e l a s t lie over, or miss conniptions, either at thoFaJs, ( , iuit w wu tt j i i t- t— luuui i . u i u u J I B I — , i A WANT has been fe l t ' and expressed t h e m o r n i n g l i g h t r e n d e r e d o b j e c t s vis- 8 u m m e r 0 f y o u t h s a t t e n d i n g v a r i o u s Mngew 1™ now ?fktu f ^ t tn!u7rom Lit; ' 'J pbyuicians.for a Hafo and reliable purgative; i b l e , t h e g r e a t w o r k was c o m m e n c e d . co l l eges s c a t t e r e d f r o m B o s t o n t o S t . pension Bridge or Buffalo m thlrteou and a half j ouch a want ib now supplied in Parson's I'ur

In each gang of workmen, six went L o u i ° i t w a 9 ascortaiued that sums b j ^ ^ o r k ''ov* ? h e 1 3 a ' i a ; r i " ' - . .

a h e a d of t h e p a r t } , d r a w i n g t h e o l d r f t n g i n g f r o m $ 2 2 5 t o $ 1 , 5 0 0 w e r e g i v e n , Western and New York and Erie roada, but thirty-I H K N I I Y K . B O N D , of Jefferson, .Maine, was s p i k e s o u t n e i n s i d e of t h e r a i l s . Th i s oa t h u iiniinnl I><int of ft collpffp e d n c a - two and a half hours. Thla new connecllnn is mu- cured of spitting blood. soreneBfl.and weakne«f won i lnnn b v c law-bnrR c u r v e d a t t h e ! ' l o s t o i n c o u t g e l u u c u t l ) a l l . . beneflciai to the public and tho New York and 1 of tiie stomacli, by the use of Johnson's .4uo-w a s d o n e n j c taw oa r s , c u r v e d a i t n e t l o n t t i g u r e s g e n e r a l l y i n c l u d i n g Erieiuilwad Comi«iv, as no lame a portion of ,iyne Uniw.m. " clawed end to give leverage, by traveling expenses aud clothes. For Western people p r e f e r "

which the spikes were pned out and w o m e n pursuing substantially ° ,f

, i u X r ? ' U , i e ^ the rails loosened. Six men followed the same course of education, and ad-with crowbars nnd handspikes, with

. tha t r o u t e f o r the c o m f o r t cars a n d thu unr iva l led b e a u t y

M A R K E T S .

SFW YORK with crowbars and uaudspiKes, w itu m U 9 i c and painting, the sums u th« s a m e Babel as over , t e e m i n g with life, w h o s e

which they threw iu the rails i J inches rHyen ranged from ^315 to $2,100. The pulses r each all ex t remi t i es of t h e u n i o n , i was

on each side, to a line of spikes which a n n u a j c o 8 t it is therefore estimated.

N E W Y O R K . Br.EF OATTT.E—Fair to Pr ime II 7 W '^12 W 110/iil^f.lTt?.... 5'X) 5 50

lunt More and Jimt t H e r . m e n o l of m o r i t u Prtme 4 00

tween 25 and 30 men, came n o * aud | f a c o i n p i e t e college education is for i t i r n e w 1)0- t * r -nni. i - r<»n . . 1 r • » whicn naa a i r e a a y eos i ien n u i u o n i o i uouani , a u u i

. . . . . t i » boys from $l ,o00 to $7,500, and for girls which will a b s o r b Ave o r s ix mi l l ions more b e f o r e | B l t l O U , W l t l l S p i K O S d r i v e n o n t n e o u t - f r o m 42.100 t o $10,500. T h i r t y v e a r s Its comple t ion , la p r o g r e s s i n g slowly, and will b e aa frii70rid*i..... V / . . . . . . . . . . . . 480

fastened down the rails in their new po-TIIB SEW COCET HOnSK,

h lch has a l r eady c u l t t e n mi l l i ons of dollars, a n d j

s i d e r i m o f t h e r a i l s . T o e x p e d i a t e t h o , t o t e d a c o l l e t r e e d u c a t i o n , 0 I 1 8 l n h u , ' d l n 8 " ftolomou-a temple , whi le two-x v n r k o n l v t h r e e s n i k e s w e r e t h u s g ; 1 8 9 t a l e ( l ' 11 c o u e g e e u u c a n o u t i l i r i i M o ( the a m o u n t a p p r o p r i a t e d f o r it ia s to len b y w o r k , o m y i n r e e s p m e s ^ w « . r e ^ i n u a C 0 8 j y j g u j u d g r a t e l y e c o n o m j c a l s t u d e n t thieviah officials a n d c o n t r a c t o r s .

d r i v e n f o r e a c h r a i l — o n e a t e a c h e n d F R O M ^ 1 , 0 0 0 t o $ 1 , 2 0 0 . A t t h a t p e r i o d NEW OAVES, c o s * . ,

a n d ono a t t h o midd l e . I b i s was all J j i e p r i ( . e g 0 | books , boilrd and c lo the s i Is celebrated for ita college, elm trees and pretty the fastening necessary to admit of the w ' n n t . . . . . . two-thirds of the present e l , T c l ^ b f r *

CU1CAGO.

B n v i a - C h o l c # 8?®* P r i m s . . . . .

Medium. j w STOOX CATTLE—Commoa * » »

Infer ior S M H o o a - L l » * . . 8 90 Smntr^-LlTe—Good t o C h o l c a ". . . S J J B t r m m - C h o i c # JJ Kooa—Kreah . . . j . . . „ >1 FLOCB—While Win t e r E i t r a 7 00

Spr in* totra - « W IT—Sprtaf N o . I - .

g 0 B X - N 0 . l A T a - N o . l

Messrs. J . L. Oriswold, general super ET*—No. 1 . . . . of the kudwledge needed for number of t h e m profosaow in colleges, a g o o d l y control BABMT—Ko.Si.w. Pona—Hess, Naw

TO ADVERTISERS. $100 Invested in Advertising in this List will Place your Card

Before 350,000 Readers DAILY. •i ' ;

Having secured , u n d e r special con t rac t , a large apace f o r a long t ime , lo occupy a p rominen t " pos i t ion i a each p a p e r in this l ist , we can offer t h e s a m e to adver l l sen i at exceedingly low ra les .

We w ill inser t in the annexed H k I of papers , a space of o n e inoh, dal ly, in each p a j i T . every o t h e r week , four we ks, at the low price of One H u n d r e d Dollars, (fluo) an ave rage of |3.0U p-T p.»i>er.

No adve r t i s emen l will In- received except fo r t h e en t i r e list, n o r f o r a leas Umo t h a n f o u r weeks . JW" All advo r t l s emen i s for th i s list will b - ins.Tied EVEHY O T H E R WEEK, i . e . . A L T E R N A T E

WEEKS, in the dally Issues of each paper , t h e r e b y keep ing t h e m a t t e r before tho Ropubi lcsn J l e a d e r s EVERY DAY, f o r o n e w e e k ; and Ihe Domocra t lc Reader s E V E R Y DAY t h e week fol lowing.

ILLINOIS DAILIES. Qulncy Whig and Kepnbl lcan . Rock Is land Argus . Roek I s land Union. Uloomlngton Leade r .

Dur l i ng ton Hawkeye. B ^ r l l n a t o n Aruns. Counci l It luffs T i m e s . Counci l U I U I T H Nonpa r l e l .

IlIoominKton P a n t a g r a p h . I 'eorla D e m o c r a t . I'. o n a Review. Sprlngfle ld Sta te Rnglsfer .

IOWA DAILIES . Davenp irt Democra t . Dnlnii jun Hi 'rald, Diibniji ie T l n i ' n . Dca Moines Regis te r .*

Qulncy H e r a l d , •lacksonvillf Hi-ralii. ( ialena Oazotte.

Des Mol ina SUt i ' sn ian , KiviknV CoiiMtiiullon. Keokuk r .a l . Clly. O t t u m w u Cour ie r .

Davenixirt Gazrtla.

WISCONSIN DAILIES. Milwaukee News. Milwaukee Wiscons in .

Saint P a u l P i o n e e r .

Madison Democra t . Oshkosh N o r t h w e r t e r n . Madison J o u r n a l .

Janesvl l le Gazel le . L a Oroaao J joader .

MINNESOTA Saint I 'anl P ress . Minneapo l i s T r i b u n e .

DAILIES . Winona Repnbllct tf l .

MISSOURI DAILIES. Hann iba l C o u r i e r Saint Jo seph U n i o n . Kansas City Uul lc t ln .

N E B R A S K A DAILIES. Nebraska City Press . O m a h a Bopubl lcan.

K A N S A S DAILIES . Atchison Pa t r io t . Leavenwor th Bul le t in . L a w r e n c e J o u r n a l .

COLORADO DAILIES . Denver Ci ty News. Centra l City Regis te r .

Saint J o s e p h H e r a l d . Kansas City T i m e s .

Atchison C h a m p i o n . Lawrence T r i b u n e .

D e n v e r City T r i b u n e .

Address COOK, COBURN & Newspaper Advertising- Agents, Chicago, Xll.

CO.

S p e c i a l B o t i c c s .

Galium, H u e repairer; Mr. O . C . Curry, nnnTytical cheiniBt1*. and oilier calliucs I ttmey.'"a f ew pieces were of tnpolor mer i t a n d T o n i u v i l l p P n n r i p r T u i i r i i i i l n n d r p n i v - t u t m i a i . . , 1 well s p o k e n ; most of t h e m were common-p lac . Lomsyille L.0111 ier-Jourual, ami repic 0peu to well-tramed students. I t also onongh, and several were quite anto-deiuvian. sentatives 01 the city press, lelt hast u r ( r u e j that a young mau can earn much T h e A l u m n i m e e t i n g was badly m a n a g e d , a n .

f t £ V . T . T . t o S « « - i * money 'or h i . col-track, which, they nau been imormeu j eg e expenses, as his pay for the ens- j j e n t Wooisey, a l t e r p r e s i d i n g over Yale CoUegi by telegrams received up to the time of t o m n l 7 teaching in the long winter va- t w n t y - f l v c yean. , a n d t h e g e t c h of . the uew P w i : } h o o s - U t s .

OATS

BABUIT P o n K - M e s s

S T . L O U I S .

BECT CATTLB—Choice 8 I 00 Good lo Pr ime HI® < —

1 mi (2 4 i i

to ia » U 10

i Htnrtinff w a s n e a r l y c o m n l e t e d e v e n a t ! ? ! . • ^ K4 v . . dent, N.«h p-irtei, indicating the future poiu-y ..f ST* ««'«> Bta r t iug , w a s n e a r l y c o m p i e i e u , e v e n a i c n t i o n i f l m u c h h i g h e r t h a n f o r m e r l y , ] ^ ' Them is a strife iietween old Yale mid Young, Kumu-snrinu x x 5 a )

that early hour. Ihe tram consisted <52 a month being readily o b t a i n e d in | Tale, and the Ahmmi meeting showed that at p r e s - 1 WHKAT-NO.3 RED it g; of an old, broad-gaugo locomotive and ^ - 8 where only *15 or 120 were con - 1

e n t , h e o , d f o « l r " h , v e i t - i | m tender, which had been reduced to the 8 ; j e r e j amnle compensation30 vears! HABTFOKB,cojro., . B T 5 ; V ; ( 1 S new gauge, a passenger car, and a pal- a K O T h t i condusiouH arrived at\are, i u m | u »

4

^ . t # i t A1 7 | xTv) • Hitliwr t ma *a au aMw " * ace drawing-room car. In front of the therefore, that college expenses have honsea in aome s t r ee t s b e i n g s o shaded aa to d a r k e n 1

eagiue wo. an not i n c r e ^ e J i n proportion to tl.e | | a seat m front, where Mr. Gnswold and 0£ e a r n i n g money or to the emoluments: gicUy appea rance .

his fellow passengers sat the greater r e o e j v e ( i fjom, educated labor. 1 BOCKVTLLE,

p a r t of the time during the t n p . 1 he i g [ l ix leen mllea eaat of H a r t f o r d , C o n n . , • m a n u f a c -position w a s not only delightfully cool ^ , j t a r i n g c l t y o f 5 ^ p e o ^ e , iirilh watef -worka . gu. from the breeze produced by tiie mo- Miss E. S T T A B T P R ^ P S eays of njs ^ j ^ o f S n d S ^ N D ' t t tion of the train, but it afforded an ox- vigorously— Beys and girls begin by l l t 33 feet, and covering i,5W cellent opportunity to inspect the work being astonishingly alike. Up to a cer-as the train approached and passed tain point they go hand in hand, but o v e r j t | presently they waive each other fare-

F o r t h e first two miles there were well. With three rails laid, that number having exceptions. . la ture l i fe— c

The reason passing these'twomUes, however, there save her principal intact.

Z I 4 P u , « nmning parallel with tlie rai l , on the P 0 ' " '

flcult to believe that the train had been placed in position only a few hours be-, . 1 f o r e , a n d t h a t s o m u c h w o r k c o u l d h a v e E T E R . — h c i e n c e h a s f a i l e d t o i n v e n t a n y ) ^ ^ m a r k in l e n g t h , s t r e n g t h a n d weight .

W n n o t h n r n n a h l v a c c o m u l i s h e d i n a p p a r a t u s a s s e n s i t i v e . t o a t m o s p h e r i c T h e i r m o t t o is, t h e bttt d l k U i h e cl<at>ot, a n d t h e

S a " h o r t " p - e S t a r P aa the human frame. I , i . | p u ^ c ^

At each telegraph static® on the way ' v S l l o n a S the j ^ d i s p a t c h e s w e r e r e c e i v e d s h o w i n g t h a t t i . . , . 1 . . v n e n e u c e h a s d e m o n - which aocommoda tes 2,000 at the o v w f l o w l n g sea-

' i o n , when "20,0110 hea l th a n d I ' l e a su re seeke r s c rowd th i s old wa te r ing place . I t m u s t bo a d r e a r y place

d s long t i m e t i m e lu

I _ J j a c r e s . Is t h e I m m e n s e reservo i r of mot ive power f o r t h e ma* ch t ae ry of a lxleen m a n u f a c t o r i e s g r o u p e d w i t h i n 3,000 y a r d i , whose a n n u a l p r o d u c t la 13,000,000.

BVLDDiO BBOi. AUD OO.,

have a i d e d a large a m o u n t of new m a c h i n e r y t o t h e i r s ewing silk f ac to ry h e r e , u n d e r t h e m a u a g o -m e n t of A. N. Beldlng, s o aa t o increaao IU pro-d u c t s to $500,000 a year , a n d t h e th ree mll la they con t ro l In Mansfield will p r o d u c e as m n c h m o r e , so tha t they a r e by f a r t h e l a rges t m a n u f a c t u r e r s and wholesale dea le r s of aewlng silk a n d m a c h i n e twist in t h i s c o u n t r y . T h e i r h o u e s a r e managed , at :I25 Broadwav, New York , b y M. M. Ueldlng, a n d C . D. W o o d : at TO West F o u r t h s t r e e t , Cincinnat i , b y D. W . Be ld lng : a n d at 66 a n d 6« Wabash a v e n u e , Chi-cago, by H . I I . Beldlng, W. A. S t an ton , a u d C. 11. Allen. T h e i r fa les have l a rge ly lacreased t h e past year . D u r i n g the i«««t eighUs-n m o n t h s t hey have d l s t r l bu led Ui the i r r< taU c n a t o m e r s over 3.000 of I the i r un r iva l l ed patent • i lk ca se - f o r tho d i sp lay of ) var ious colors , at a cost of $18,000. T h e y a r e now r u n n i n g a newly- Invented m a c h i n e f o r c l r a n i i i R :

1 finished silk and inak lng It perfec t ly even a u d glos- j sv . F r o m nothl i i j f . in twelve years , the.v have g r o w n :

M I L W A U K E E . BEEVEa—Choice 9 S W

Pr ime " F a i r Grades Medium

STOOE CATTLE—Common Infer ior

Hooa -L ive •.••••J.. S h m p — U T B — G o o d to Choice B n r r C K - C h o i c e Rao s—Fresh u FLOUB—White Winte r E x t r a

Spr lna Ex t r a WHEAT—hiuin*. No. I

No. S C o a n - N o . 2 O A T S - N O . S -R t r - N o . 2

fABLET—Good.... OBK-r Mesa IS 00

n ^ ^ ^ 1 1 ^ 1

1 8 4 0 — T O — 1 8 7 1 F O R T H I R T Y - O N E Y E A R S

PERRY DAVIS*

P A I N - K I L L E R I U b beon U t t « d In orery rarlffty of elluiati*, ami by nj. m o t 1 e f e i y nat ion known to Aini*rlcanf. It It t b a ol^ most conatant o t n p i n i o n i n d inonti ' i iable f r i end of the mlialoaanr *0 I iha i r a r r l e r . on and land , a n d no one thould t r a ro l on our L A K E S OK R I \ E R S W I T H O U T IT.

I'AlN-KlIiLEK was the First and is tlie Only Pennanont Pain-KelieTer.

Since the P A I N K l L L E U waa lirst Inlroi lucod, and fi ot wltti such unsurpassed sale, many Lin iment Pan-acea , and o ther remedioshaTe boon offered t o t h o pul>-lie, b u t not one of them has o»or a t t a ined tho truly 1 SVIAULESTASDISO of the P A l N . K I L L K l t .

Why is This 80? I t is becauso D A T I S ' P A I N - K I L L E R Is w h a l It claims to be—a ItelloTer of Pain.

I t s M e r i t s n r r r i m u r p i M S P d .

If you are Buffering from I N T E R N A L P A I N . Twen-ty or Th i r ty Drops In a Llt t lo W a t e r will a lmost In-stantly care you. The re l i no th ing to eiiual It . In a few momen t s It cures

HATURE'S REMEDY.

THE GREAT BLOOD PURIFIER

1 to be t h e oontroUlng s i l k - h o u s e In t h e Uiii<>u, bv chai icuged iopriHTuce 10 V>erfecf a s imulat ion of any I r(iniblnlugenleri>ris<i and per»everai ice a n d sk i l l .u lib t |

M A N AS A B A R O M E T E R AND T H E R M O M - i the In f l ex iUe r u k of n i a k l o g all t h t l r goods Iwr fec t ,

t v i t — S f M P i . o f i l i a s f a i l e d t o i n v e n t a n v S '

Tli i - ( • r e n t K q n i v a l e n t . — T h e world may b e safely halleiiged lo prodi

th ing In na ture , a s T n r r n n t ' a N r l l z r r A p e r i e n t

Is of Us original. Ihe Svl taer Spring of Oer tnanv. Tlie Aper i en t .based on a correct analysis of t h o Keil lor Water . Is even superior lo the m a n u f a c t n r o of N a t u r e herscl l , because It coiiiaius all t h e act ive medic ina l propert ies of the spring, unalloyed by any of t h e Inert anil useless part icles lound in all mineral founta ins .

C o l i c , C r a m p s , H p n s m s . n r r h c r a , J i y i

t h e

l l pa r t -Burn . Dl-f l v s c n t e r y . F l u x , W i n d i n

B o w e l s , S o u r S t o m a c h , l l y s p e p s l n , M i c k

U e R d a c h c .

sootions of t h e country where

FEVER AND AGUE

A valuable Ind ian compound , for r es to r ing t h 9 heal th , and for t h e pe rmanen t oe.ro of all d l s e a t o j

• arising f rom Impuri t ies of the blood, such a s

S c r o f u l a , S c r o f n l o n s H u m o r , C n n r n r , C i u i « | c e r o u s H u m o r , K r y s l p r l n s . C i i n U f r . S u i t

i t l i i - n n i , I ' lnipli-M n n d l l n m u r H o n i h u F n r r , U l c e r s , C o u i s h s , C n t a r r b ,

l l r o n e l i i t i s , N e n r n l a l n , K h v u -i i i n t i s i n , H n l n s In l l i e S i d e ,

O y n p o p H l a , C o n n l i i m t i o n , C n s t i T r n e n s , P l l r n ,

f l r n d n r h c . D l z z i n n w , N e r v o n s n e a s , F n i n t -u i ' s x n t t h e S t o m a r h . C 'b ins i n t l i o H a r k ,

K i d n e y C o m p l a l n i s , K e m a l % - W e a k -n e s s a n d ( • e n e r n i D e b i l i t y ,

Thla prepara t ion ia ie ieat i f lcai iy i n d chemica l ly combined , and so s trsngly concen t r a t ed f rom r o o t s he rbs and barks , t h a t Its good elfecta a re rea l i r ju l im-medla to ly a f t e r commencing to t a k e It. There Is no dlseaae of t h e h u m a n syiteoi for which t h e VEHETISB cannot be used wi th PEarF . r r s a f b t v . a s it does not con ta in any meta l l i c compound. For e rad ica t ing t h o ayatem of all ImpurlUes of t h e blood It ha s no equal . I t haa never faUed to effect a cure , g i y l n g tone, a n d s t r e n g t h to t h e system debi l i ta ted by disease. I t s w o n d e r f u l e f fec ts npon these compla in t s a r e surpr l f -Ing to all . Many have been cured by tho VEOETIS* t h a t have t r ied many o ther remedies . I t c a n weU bo ca l l ed

Preva i l , f h e r e la n o remedy held In g rea te r e s t eem. < m | f % Every hrtusn-kseiier sheuld keep ll at hand , to appl} D h U U I # on t b e first a t tack uf any Pain. I t will f i v e sa t l s fac

THE O&XIAT

P U R I F I E R . • rel ief , and aave hours of suf fe r ing . > n o t t r l d s with yourselves h j t e s t i n g u n t r i e d rem-

edies . Be sure yon call for and ge t tho g e n u i n e PAIN-K I L L E R , as many worthless nosl ruraa a re a t t e m p t e d :o be sold on t h e g r e a t r epu ta t ion of thla valuable ' med ic ine .

t V Dl rac t lon i accompany each bott le .

P r i c c 2 5 c t s . , 5 0 c t s . , a n d 8 1 p e r B o t t l e . !

J . N . H A R R I S & C O . , Cinc innat i . Ohio.

Propr le tora fo r the Southern and Wes te rn S ta te s .

M O L D B Y A L L J I K W C I N E B E A L E U S

PREP ABED UT

H . R . S T E V E N S , B 9 8 T O N . MASS.

| P r i c e 8 1 . 2 5 , Sold by all Druggists .

1,700,000 Acres in Iowa! 180.000 Acres in Nebraska ! !

T H E

R. R. LAND COMPANIES

B w o w i m i n a , I V a^^r.»%i«.-aa' i KULLKR. C h i c a g o : R I C H A R D S O N i .CO., St . I /onls ; M c l ' U L L O C l l . M c C O R D A (JO La Crosse ; N O Y E 8 B R O T H E R S . Saint Pau l .

V E O E T I N E .

Bv ita nse yon will prevent many of t h e diseases i

prevai l ing In t b e Spr ing and S u m m e r season.

T h e s e n i i l u e n r l i e l e b e l n u s e t u r e i l , you have the Hi l lzer W a t e r of Kuro|>e, purlHed and p e r f e c t e d , and probably the be«i. the most genia l c a tba r l i o and ant l-

to apt n d s long t i m e t i m e In a n d yet s o m e peop le , 1 whose chief occupat ion is f o kill t i m e , d o con t r ive j to pass t h r e e o r f o u r m o n t h s of the >e«r h e r e . A week h e r e would b e a p e n a n c e Ir r m e . B u t I hose w h o l ive a lmply to d r ee s ani l rUuw t h e m s e l v e s , | c o u n t th i s Parad ise . B.

T H E Guion Mail Line, in ordcr to I

the work wwranidly approachiuB com- t r a t e d \UT D L T W A L K E R S V I N E O A B plebon, and, when tbe tram miclied B r r r E u s i 8 the best medicine for ibis Sandoval, at 11:80, a telegram wns ie- u r p 0 S ( . a t present known. If taken ceived intimating tbat the change of » i ) r o t m i ( ) n l l K f t i u t t l the disturbing gauge was comp eted throughout t h e ) i n f l u ^ n c e o r s U l i ( i e n alternationg . f entire length of the l i n e - a d'stance of ^ a n d ^ i t w i U prevent 840 imles. Mr, Gmwohl and^ Mr. t ^ e 1 ) 0 W e l C 0 I Upi f t in t , fev ers, bilious' Smith, to whose ability and uut inug j i 8 ( ) r t i ers , rheumatic aflections, aud - — — , energy the succes^of this great iuicler- t j i r o a t l j i 8 e a 8 e 8 a r i 8 i u g from these causes, j meet the wants of summer travel, have |

reduced the fare f rom New. York to j Liverpool to if70 for outside rooms, | and $G0 for inside rooms. The testi-1 mony ol the many passengers that have j used this favorite line this summer is j in tbe highest degree complimentary, j A round trip from New York to Liver-, pool aud return, can be made for $140,

, emploved'in making a kind of pottery or $120, according to tbe location of the the gauge at curves. | • w h U H ea instead of wood, tbe 1 rooms. The steamers of this line sail

Tiie o u t s i d e m l s , o M h e carve were , m a 8 8 ^ b s c o l o r e d w i t b aniline, or fromNew York every Wednesday. Pus-

8« I u e r W a t e r of Europe , pi Ihe best eparaili

SOLD BY A L L D R U U U I S T S

taking is principally due, received tbe con^atu la t ions of friends on tbe re- M a 8 S _ A p l w t i c ^ e f t l l . cetpt of the happy tidings. ^ ^ e ( j (jY it9 inventor. Dr. Schwartz,

At Odin, 60 miles from St. Louis, a to convey 1 tbe city. lin, tbose

S M S f f i S i M s a s S i S allowed in such places to remain in the old position, and new rails were j laid for the narrow gauge. Tliis was necessitated by the lesser arc. To suit the old outer rail for the new position it would have been necessary to un-

other coloring matters. sengers can rely upon safety, speed and! comfort, the great requisites for a 1 pleasant sea voyage. Cabin plans of

i c ^ a x i

D R . W H I T T 3 E R , C 1 7 S t . t ' b a r l o s 8 1 .

I ONO ICR LOCATEH In St. Louis t han any Chron-J 1c I 'hyslci in. xi s 'lcecaafully t rea ts Simple and

Cnini>licate<l Venereal D l s e n e i aa to b r i n g p a t i e n t s f rom ever)-State. Hi-»hii«|ii-aloi porNmltli-s. al lfe-t i m e exper lensa wi'li purest d rugs p repared In t h e r«l . ibI l t . imenl .cRres eases g l r r a up by o tbera , no m a t t e r who fa i l ed ; to l l your p r l r a t e t rouble . Coa-suliat lon f ree . Send I WMtanip , lo r medica l

MASROOD, WOMANHOOD, sent by mal l , U cents • a c h . bo th for 25 ci s.. IfO pages. All tha t t h e enr ioas , doub t ln l or Inquis l t l re wUh to know abou t t h a n -aelres, marr iaco, .to. Krery young man and woman o u g h t to read it a s a warning. T h e nervous, deblll-t a lud or part ially im potent a re sclenUfically advised

u o f wluim 751. the steamers of th is line can be seen, CUT THIS OUT! or more thou one-third, have become j ^ ®n(1 . ®^ l^.r0„0 „! *** "nJ twenty-five oenutor a ticket, an^get a ministers of the go being foreign missic

together again with the hsb-plates. To 1 tice and exposition

rivet the oTXS&e o i ihe j ministers of the gospel, 75 of these I ; W . t e h . Ucwing M a d u n o , F i a n o , ends of each rail, and then fasten them i being foreign missionaries, ^ e prac- ( ^ ^ A g ^ n w , , •oin.tiiop oirain writli tho tiHli-iiliitj-ft. To t ce and exposition of the law have 1 C l i n t o n street, MU^amcee,

B i l i n u M n e i i s u i i d I n i l l K c a t l o n .

T h e s e t w o c o m p l a i n t s a re m o r e g e n e r a l at th i s

• aason of the yea r t han at a lmos t a n y o the r . T h e y

a r e c losely a k i n ; f o r b i l iousness always involves an

i m p a i r e d d iges t ion , a n d Indigostloii is necessar i ly an

a c c o m p a n i m e n t of a d i so rde red o r t o r p i d l iver.

H a p p y t h e m a n o r woman w h o can boast of a s t o m -

ach t h a t has neve r felt the h o r r o r s of dysi iepsla , aud

t o w h o m t h a t g rea t aecretivo agen t , t h e l iver , ha s

neve r given pa in or t rouble . Not o n e In a t h o u s a n d

can lav claim to en t i r e I m m u n i t y f r o m i r regu la r i ty

In t h w e o r g a n s . How, then , sha l l they be rt gu la tod T

No t b y p o w e r f u l ca thar t ics , alt . m a t e d wi th o r d i n a r y

s t imu lan t s , bnt by a medlc inu inv igoran t , l ike HOB-

- ] t e t t e r ' s S tomach Bi t te rs , which c o m b i n e In d u e p r o -

I po r t i on t h e ton ic a n d t h e a l terat ive p r i n c i p l e . Wher -

| ever the re is a c h u r c h , a schoolhouso , a n d a genera l

s to re , th i s f a m o u s m e d i c i n e may be p r o c u r e d . No

' v i l l a g e m e r c h a n t finds It p r u d e n t to b e w i t h o n l i t ,

j f o r i t is e n q u i r e d f o r every day by every class . T h e

w o r k i n g m a n b u y s It because it increasea b i s capaci ty f o r tol l , aud is fo l luued by n o reac t ion . T h e effect

i of t h e i -a lubr lous roota. herlis, etc. , of which It Is ; composed , d i f f u s e d t h r o u g h h is sys tem by t h e p u r e 1 aUuiulant w h i c h f o r m s t h e bas is of t b e Uit teni , Is

mos t h e a l t h l u l a n d inv igora t ing . T h e scholar , t h e I m e r c h a n t , a n d , in fact , aU m e n whose m l n d a o r ; bndlea, or b o t h , a re lu cons tan t exerc ise , wUI der ive

benef i t f r o m i t s use. To p e r s o n s of s e d e n t a r y hab i t s it anppl ies , in some n i f a su re , t h a t activity i u tho c i r -cu la t ion wh ich Is obta ined by physical exe r t i on , a n d

, is t h e beet known r emedy f o r consUjuit ion. Ask f o r Hos te t t e r ' s S tomach Bi t t e r s a n d d o not b e

1 coaxed In to porcbaa lug any of t h e Imi taUons a n d : f r a u d s s o m e t i m e s offered in l u s tead .

. soma ar t ic le of va lae . Hanki. Addres s

Six t ickets for 81.00. 1A CO. .

avoid tbe loss of time which such an I taken over 100 of the graduates, in-1 operation would have entailed, new strnction in otber colleges and insUtu- j rails were laid as stated. With tbe in | tions over 200, and of the 129 physi-1 On the l«t J«y of Joly. the Tiura.EB n I*-ner rail, however, it was i n d i f f e r e n t , 1 cians,more than 100 have snnived their .ciuNct COMPAKT, of Hartford, had wrlttw .nd it . « thrown into po.Hi.m the owDpreMnptioM. _ What J m . become; ^

P A C K A R D k w . . Clnoinnat l . Ohio.

i A S T E D - A ( i K N T 8 ( « 2 Q p e r d n j 0 t o M l l i h e ce lebra ted H O M E S H u T T L R S E W I N G MA-

same as the straight rail. *No trouble i of the numerous others tbe learned was ocoasioned by the flsh-plates. Thev I triennial does not disclose. yielded sufficiently to prevent tbe track | from being too rigid to move, while

E i g h t y - n l n a A c c i d e n t P o l i c i e e .

^ H I N B . Has t h e / W makes t h e •tilth" (alike on both sides.) and i s / V h t T b e bes t a a d aheapest family Sowing Machine tn the marke t . A d d g - ^ ^ ^

Boston, M a u . , PHtsl iurgh. Pa . . Ch icago . IU. Ht Louis. Mo. _

I T T A K E S eleven experienced men to | L O O K O U T FOR THE C H I L D R E N . — M a n y FOR MUM FRliT FIRM

R . H o t : & C O . , P R E S S M A K E R S . AND M A N U F A C T U R E R S O F

A L L K L V D S O F

EXTRA CAST STEEL S A W S !

Of Xowa and Nebraska,

OF F E R T H E A B O V E LANDS TO S E T T L E R S . a t S S to S I O p e r a c r e . ou l ime a ; <ix par cen t . , o r

(or cash. TUom Com|i.inie- liarp du t e ru i i n fd l.i havo thei r l ands f e t t l e d at I lie earliest possible da}-, In o r d e r lo i n c r e a t e tho businussof the i r Ra i l roads , which a i o now all completed, and the re fo re oBer t h e 11 E S T L A N D S . In t h o B E S T S T A T E S , a t t n e L O W E S T P R I C E S . W o sell

Land Explor ing Tickets , At our Offices In Cedar Rapids . Intra, and at No. 1 |j» Salle St . , Chicago. Railroad fares west of those place R E F U N D E D lo holders of exploring t i cke t s who pur • chaae 80 acres or more. Large Rednc l ion of R. R. far e lo colonies, or partlea of 25. or more. Colored M a p s , showing ail t h e lands in bo th slale>. s e a t (ur .>1 c e n t s . PamphTeta a n d County maps sem F R i i E , to all part s of t h e world. Apply to

W . \ V . W A L K K i t , Vice P r e s ' t . Cedar Rapids . Iowa.

G u i o n Mail L i n e Sai l ing f rom New York and Liverpool . a«ery V'nd .

ne sday :Queens town every Thursday. T e n llrsl-claxl S teamers . Passage, both cabin and s teerage , a i low est ra tes . For f u r t h e r par t icu la rs add res s

F.H NTCLURE&CO., Genl Western Agents, Milwaukee,

at- Agents Wanted.

time w-aa employed, in t h i u g H an s o o n a s p r o d u c e d . UIOVIUR A n e n t a l o

18^-T h r o n l y ttellaM^JHW^Pjrtribntl^u l a i h o

$35,000 in Valuable Prizes ! To b e D l s t r i b n U d Sep t ember U t h , 1871.

Cnpital Prise $8,000 in Ameriran ( i o l i i !

truck in a couple of sections wbere they wore than any other part of tbe | line.

The llrst section in which the change was a 50 mile

THE claim tliat yie maize or intuan , ^ i corn plant is indigenous to the soil of • j the New World has lately beeu c o u - 1 !f*v£,v 1 tested, and recently investiRations of |

»« r\M (X)j PleaMaton.KAD.

bus, if taken i.. season. | ^ « r " T M e S ^ t i n n a ' A d J l S J

T H E claim that ^ .e maize or Indian J V F A R W E L L 4 Co., Chicago, now * S O U T U W K S T E B N

their foreign goo<lrt brought through the ' awrenco river ami tiie lakes direct to the

Custom House, in Chicago, where, af ter set- ,

\

of giuige xsas completcd wao u oj; • • • • . v . c e r t a j n Q i i i n e B e r e t .ords are cited to tihig witii Uncle Sam for cuHtom dutioB. they section bi tween \ im. nm s aud Clay e t h cultivated in China are placed in their immense store, aud aold to

, p r i - • " o t j i . ^

driven at 9:30 A. M The best time was T h b 8 h a m I u d l u n H i u , ) l a n k e t 8 a m l

made between Last 81 Louis and Cu-, m o c c l l 8 n i s u r t . m a k l t h e i r H n n u l t ( , i u . Vinegar w,U keep pickle. Boynlle, on the straight stretch of six t l l 0 watering.place?;, with tbeirpaoks and three-quaru-rs miles across tbe , o f ^ u u ( 1 ^ u l l B t y l e 8

F a D d

bottom. 1 be change in this section, : w h i c b t l j e v 8 e l l a t t h e ^ 0 3 t o u t . in the Rlnne provinces. under the control of Mr W. W. Joues, , Vj extravagant prices. was completed in four hours. ^ J . V . F A R W E L L 4 Co., Chicago, sell ~ O u tbe whole hue there was a force of M a r k e t R b i ' O R T S from all tbe cities in everything. Thoir stock of dry poods, wool. 2,721) men employed. Ol these 3o0 E u ^ t l ^ ^ n u e to .how an were from other roads centering at St. K llUt tl ie b o i l B e ll{ j . v. Par-Louis, and HO were from Spnngnela w e j j 4 ciiicago. have largely anticipated and the southern part of Illinois. Each I tbis advance and undereell agpnU.

A

. ( ireat C h a n c e for Ageni« . -Dr t you want an tigrncfJoral or iraetliH j,* Uh aOB1DC# lo m a k t H o IO 8 2 0 per day f i l i n g our new 7 t t r and Uhitr H'lr# rfolhrt Liont 7hey la* fortirr. ile t ree . »o the re l« no r i ik . Addreaa al once

lluMon Kitrr H ire H urW.iJU J i a i a e n Lane.oor . Waler St., N. V . . o r Irt Uearborn St . , Chica-

ST., N. V.

J O I I . N A Z R O J t C O . , Agi -J i i a , M l l w n u k r e .

A T T H K LAST DAV W H A T

A B I G B L A C K C A T -alogue of cruel i le* to chi ldren many a I " ™ " ' wiU have to face . Pe rmi t t i ng d ie t and inomiuitoea lo TOUUKNT helplenH ll t t l r cnililreu whi'n yon can pro-vent it i . t-BCr.L. FIT CASOII-H wdl p ro tec t t hem

One! ^ T h W o ^ ^ - - " * !

PitrssiNo's Celebrated White Wine O E l T Z J ^ & t t ^ r ^ t e ^ C S E N D putdu. 1 1 . . . . ^ ; ^ .... Ask font. 1 — — . T '

/ H I , I ' K K l ' K ^ E R I J K A D K O K I ) A t A I ' l l l V . N e x t T e r r a b e b e n in Dlamondu , W a l c h e i . Clocka, Maier la l i . ^ n , Augum SU. A J d t e o for c i r en j a r a , t h e F

T H E r i u d e n j e s t i s g a i n i n g g r o u n d I ga t ab lUhed \tu. m Kant W a ' e r rtreeOjllwauJtee. , All BY II. J O H N S O N . Brad fo rd . M a o

a V l ^ K . I t . B . 8c < " 0 . . 43 and U Lake St . . wlioleaale — t d e a l e r i i n S l r a w O o o d a . M I I U n e r a . y r h l t e O w ' d a . H o -•leryA'loveaaud Fancy Ooodf. 53 4 t>5 Lake S t . . th lcago . f U Hu . ln r . i

, aSoaaay. Bend a t a m p 1 0 v i r - n x t n l l a l N D n o 1 - * >11 I . I . B R , m a n u f a c t u r e r of Rich Hai r Jewelnr 1 X.LCR XIOLBINO OO.. h f and U d l « * H a l r Work, W l . e o n . ' o Sl M f-

aukee, Chalna. Cha rms , Pina, R lng i , Swllchea, Curia.

I ' r in .

O A V A T I I O . I I E o r A b r o a d , new, honorab le , pleasant

Wbole n n m b e r of Ol f ta , 4.0U0. Tlcketa i t n i i i ' d t o .̂uOO,

i A « E N T K \ V A N T K » TO SIM,I, T K ' K K T S , : t o w h o m l l b e m . F r e m l u n i ^ w i l l l>v p i n d .

oinillc TIcketa 8 1 1 Six TirUcl- * 5 : T»»t lvo T l r k c l a 8 1 0 t T w r a t j - l l v e T i c k i t . . W ' O ,

Circular* eon ta ln lng a full Hat of p n e e - n. >l< < r i p . t ion ol tbo manne r ol drawing, and (>tlier ni r a t lun In r e f e r euco t o t h e Dlatr lbui lon, will be r any o n e o rder ing them. All o r d e r . niu«t '«• addri^jfd tw O r n c E , L . D . s I N E , Itu.x s o ,

1 U 1 \ V . A t h N t . C l n c i n n n i l , O .

R U P T U R E Kelirved and cured by Dr.Shcnii«ti -» P a t e n t A p p l i a n c e a a d Compound . Ofllcu BW Br 'Hi!way, N. > . , >eiid U o . for book with photographic liki ncaa of caaea b e f r r u • nd Alter cur0, with Hrnr> ^ rtl K«««chc>r • lei »er> aqA iHit ini t . Be wan- of i rnvel inn fn;p<i«tor».«b pre tend to have been aMit taot t uf Dr . S in UM .\S.

HUH, dreBH poods, nutione, tioBtery, «VC,, it acknowledged, by all who know about Bucb Huttere. lo be the largenl and host ever put together in oue place.

Chicago. III.

Sent o n tr ial . __Nn waukee. Chain*. C h a r m i . n n a , Blnga, .IWIICBO»,VWII», ^ i r t t -oiasa Pianoi . Sent o n tr ial . .>f Hralda.Wlga. 6rdert bf mall receive •pecla laUont lon. k . ,1,. U . S . P I A N O C O frii BMway.N V

MA R I N E B O I I . E R W O R K S , l < » | U u » i r a t e d Book of W o n d e r a . " Sent f ree . Lake atreet, i I Addreae B. FOX i CO., 3© Canal St . . New York.

A P P L E P A R E R , C O R E R & 8 L I C E R

DO E S I T A U . A T O N C E , W A R R A N T K U Sat iafac toi r . Sold by dea le r* . Pr ice . Also

iho " U n i o n " Apple Parer .whlch " p a r e * all t h e l ime . ' Pr ice f l SO M a * by D. H. W H I T T E M O R E . W o r c e e e r , Maaa.

M. N. r . , Augaat 8 ,1871. 3iu. 31.

Page 5: LOWELL WEEKLYlowellledger.kdl.org/Lowell Weekly Journal/1871/08... · Ri»er. The beet stock Manuhetarad, and first class workmen employed. Grand Rapids Business Di-rectory, Perry

J. D. STEARNS, MANUKACTURER OK

m i OP illij KINDS. P a r t i c u l a r a t t e n t i o n p a i d t o S a w i n g |

B i l l L u m b e r -

C1AN fnrnlth nnv li-n.-m up tn thirty f.»t. Tlimo j wi'liln.- l" huilil will flnd il to llicir Intcrwl 1"

j-lvo mv n call, n ' I can ^Ivc them nnyllilni; they mint in the u«r of flnvluinlicr. I tUoh ivo . - i largo

: iount ol OLKAK S l f K K . ihe ubo tc will hesolUcheiip In,- 1:1 «h.

.1. 1>. STKAIIN?, C mon. S n i j n u . Mich.

X J O - W E X j X J

CIGAR MAN'FACTORY AND TOBACCO STORE.

T AM NOW MANTKACUTUN'C FROM 111E I lie»t nf klofk ihe fnllowlnc litnnilf ol CignTB:—

'•Hair* Pride nf ihr M'- fl," "J.emnit't OKU," nurf "Sure Thin/.'.'' The aluivenre my favorite bmnds. Cheaper Cigaia manufactured.

Tobaccos. IMpfi', ami Nnokcr'a article* generalir, will always l>o fiiund at my store. Cull before pur-cLasinp elsewhere.

W. H.HALL. Ixwcll, July ITlIi 1871. 3yl

MBS. ALLENTS Hair R e s t o r e r & Zylobalsamum Are co uniformly grateful and benefi-dfll, tot they are with jufltice called the nnt 'W Btrengthenersof the human Ijair. They arc two entirely separate and dietinct pwparationB, not tn be used together at ono time. IHrs. Alleif^ H a i r R e a r e r Never fails to satisfy thf most refined and cultivated. A guara.nt

i0® Eo e 8 ^

every bottle, that it will quic^JJ^8 1 0?0

gray or white hair to ita origina* fid beauty, gloss and color; after' l^a

nee a few times the hair will grow thicker and stronger. I t will stop its falling and induce a healthy and luxu-riant growth. It is an exquisite hair dreeeing, agreeable, harmleM and healthy. Entirely different from most other preparations for the hair, its com-position and ingredients are nourishing, giving life and vigor to tho Roots.

Mrs. Allen'" Zy lobalsamom i. Xhij Qxqnisite preparation u free from any sediment, and is a toilet treasure. The urgent want of a simple Hair Dressing, for the youth of both •exes, first induced tho manufacture ofthe Zylobalsamum, and the s ^ e of it is perfectly immense, not only in this country, but in Europe.

E X T R A C T S FROM A F E W L E T T E R S .

" T o n r ZylobalNimntn is uaed b y e v e r y mem-ber , yotmff and old, of oo r family , a n d w o con-eider i t mvnloable . Should a n y g r a y ha i r* appea r , w o shall t r y you r H a i r Restorer , w h i c h w e h e a r Terr h i i fh l r apoken of . "

S i '(K V

ait-i, fcVXK

V.WW V s \ \ \ \ V , Www;

" F a t h e r a n d t n o i W use yon r H a i r Res tore r , a a d a r e del ighted w i t h it. I t soon restored the i r e r t y loeke tv the i r youthfn l color, b a t daagh le ra t n d son still find in tbo JSylobalwunum a l l their ba i r r equ i res . " - .

From the Principal of oneof our l»rpet imolt Seminar itt; " \ ou r Zyloba l samnM nf t i b e e n used f o r m a n y years b y mysel f a n d family , a n d ia lbe favor i te among ou r y o u n g ladiea."

Sflld by all Druggists. Wholesale P^pot, B. VAN DUZES & CO., 35 Barclay Bi

40 Park Place. Hew-York.

BA.ItBETT>8

HAIR RESTORATIVE.

v * " o 0 rr KMoxrjf ^

THAT A

^ S I L V E R M E D A L V W a s a w a r d e d t o

Barrett'! Hair Woradre A

LA Sept, ISM, O v e r a l l c o m p e t i t o r s . ^ 7 *

I t a m e r i t s h a v i n g b e e n t h o r o u g h l y l e a t e d a n d »

f o u n d t o b e t h e d L %

. . h m of i l l

I t p roduces b u t o n e d i s t i n c t s h a d e , whi le . o t a e n l a a v e t h e h a i r . i n m a n y var ied colors.

J 5 a . - w b c n o the rs fai l to ro-, p roduce a sinRlo ha i r .

a c t c r t o p o r d r y t h e h a i r , b u t leoves I t t ne i s t a n d glos iy .

L a d i M f i n d i t s u p e r i o r t o a n y o the r as a Toi le t

T b e ingTedlents used in t h i s P r e p a r a t i o n a r e t h o v r r y p e s t t n a t can bo f o u n d , a n d are aa h a r m -lest m w a t e r .

LOBD, 8 K I T B 4 CO., Proprietors , C H I C A G O , I L I A

GRAND RAPIDS.

Avery& Huggins M A N U F A C T U R E l i S O F i D E A L E I I S I N

' WINDOW and DOOR FRAMES, PLAIN OR FANCY, CHECKED CU COMMON,

G T J S T O I M ; Z P L . A . I t T I I N Q -

H A T C H I N G , R E - S A W I N G .

S £ » e i L S A W l K 6 , Shapinj, TONING, & R I R S A W i N G ,

D O N E O N S H O U T N ( » T ! t ' K

ATE8Y S HBSSINS. Factory East Side Klai River. Loucii. liirh

JOB W O R K

N E A T L Y E X E C U T E D

o

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8 x g o o

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td . w s b> a H I >

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CD CD

D-

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Q o P 0 3 r t P P e t

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X > H O z

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m w j -

The sys tem needs renora t i ag and s t rengthening . New Ti^or m u s t be infused In t h e d iges t i re organs . The Stimulat ing, Kegulatlng and Tonic proper t ies of Dr. Crook 's Wine of Tar will give a vigorous vitality t o the«e organ*. T h e y m u s t t ry It. T h e y trill soon feel its influence, a n a m u s t persevere a n -lil tho c u r e IN complete . Keep ing the Stomach

O

a >

1 "

At this Office

r r a )

and Bowels ia n vigornns condi t ion with Dr. Crook's Wine of Tnr In the best defense afftunst all d iseases . While Br. Crook ' s Wine of Ta r if the best r e m e d y for all d isessen of the T h r o a t nnd Lungs , it Is not prepared excrusively for s u c h diseases. T h e rich medicinnl qual i t ies of Tar it contains would alone excite a regula t ing and s t rengthen ing action on the S tomach and Bowels, l>ut there nre V p x d n b l o l i i K r e d i e a t s o f un-doubted T o n l r viilne combined wilh It, which emise it to i i n l l d u p t h o w e a k a n d d o -b l l l l n t r d , r n p i d l . v r o M t o r o c x b a u s t e d N t r r n i c l h . c leanse the - ' o m a c h , relax tho liver. cnn 'M' t l x * f o w l l o d i w * t . and make p u r s hlood, r<'iiinvlne l)/«|>en>iii, Jauudice , Indiges-tion RIUI k i r d r e d coim liiinls T r y one bottle. A m U f o r l > r . t ' r n o l i ' H M i n e o f T n r . Dn-prinoiiilcl p'iriies lu*'- copied nttt-r the name and -(.vieof Jir. Crook'i* W.ne of Tar, a s near m they '»red without i u f r i n ^ i n c n t . It is Dr. C r o o k ' s Wiiieot T:ir thnl har> uiade ihe many wonderful •ureo, and hr. Crook's Wine of T a r is the r emedy ouneed , nnd not the untried r emed ie s made only i sf>II and palm oft ont l ieui i»u.<ipcet ingforarem-ly of meri t . frW that every i .- i t lo yon p u r -

i.iise has t h e follnwinc word" <-.11 ihe ht.imp. in i te let t 'Tf : "Dr. C r o o k ' . ' ^ me of Tnr." " U . S .

•lermd Revenue, Kn'irc. n • ' • Crook A Co.,' ' oi'I) "••i-h are genuine. Hoi'1 by d ruggMf

• ^ T A G O N & C A R R I A G E S H O P

BILLS & GEILL P H O P U I E T O U S .

W A G O N S A N D C A K R I A ( J K S .

M A N r K A C T U K K l ) A N I »

A. S P E C I A L I T Y , , Having had considerable e.iperienre In tholiusiness , , , , , wo hope to fully meet the want* of t ho tu rmingcon i - I R E P A I H E D T O O l l D K H I N D l -u u n i t y , au would ri'?iiectfiilly Invite the farnier* of I

l^>aell RU<Ivicinity, tn call and oxaimneour guodi before p u r c a s m j eluiwhere, an we nre (Ictermlnedto to k«op the

Atkins & Somerby, I Wish to inform the i r fr ieudxand tbe public general-

ly, that they Imve purcl ia iH tin- (Sid •tand oflloyce [ Nash, 0110 door eont ol the 1'ost Oltlco, nnd will ' make tlie fale of

w ,

V%2/ h i o i u m O J $ J J

Very Best Tools K A B I L I T Y ,

D I S P A T C H A N D P R I C E

the market afTordi, and will j u a r a n t e e tliat our p r l - | W I L L N O T IJ I l j O L I D O I N K ces and

C A L L A N D S E E U S N E A R

T E R M S

J O H N W I L S O N ' S B L A C K S M I T H

MGUalmu

CMsbd

cannot be b ia t by any legitimate drslcra io Wcstorn 1

MIeblgan. We wink to call particular atteation to onr '

S P L E N D I D S l ' O C K O F

P L O W S , M O W E R S & R E A P E R S ,

B U G G Y - R A K E S ,

and the famou»

G R A T T A N W A G O N .

We are al io n o f prepared to furniah a perfect

Plaster and Broad-Cast

Grain Sower, COMBINED W I T H T H B " I T H I C A W H E ^ L B A K E "

W s warrant t h i s machine to be a continuous s n d eve® distributor of PLASTER, and Is aneeaisfully used ia all kinds of m i n . Do ne t fall to call and see It work. W« eatend a cordial taviUtlon to o a r old c tu tesaet i oi O t t t t s n s n d vicinity to eall and see as , s ad we will t ry i a the f u t u r e a* i a t h e past, t o a u k e bealaess tr tnsaotioni a mutua l benefi t ,

Plow Points 6c Repairs

coastantly oa hand. By close a t i en t l en to bosiatse, aad lair desllnf we hope to merit and receive a s u r e ofpablic pat ronage:

ATKIKS ft80UEBBT. t o well, March 20th, 1871.

Mowers and Reapers.

FURST & BRADLEY AND

DODGE PLOWS, C U L T I V A T O R S ,

SHOVEL PLOWS, Harrows, &c.

THE BLANCHARD CHURN.

H A R D W A R E

Tin-Ware, S T O V E S .

SASH DOORS & BLINDS.

"THE OLD

OAKEN BUCKET"

S H O P .

JNO.KOPF & COi P R O P R I E X O T I S O F T H E

L O W E L L J

CHAIR FACTORY UanufacturerKul and Dealers In nil K i n d t of |

FURNITURE

T h e Druggists wrlto that " a l i who t ry It reo-o m n e n d i t - m a n y buying sovend bott les t h e seo-end t imo, and stating they • would no t be wi thout a bottlo In their h o u s e . ' , r I t cures all C « i i * h s , C o l d s a n d C h r o n l c C o n t h s . a n d IU many cures of A s t h m a a n d [ B r o n c h i U s . of long standing—when o the r remedies hav® fk i l ed -hav® caused i t to be considered a speclflo fo r t h e s e 0 0 m -

«?»•. Th^t_AU«e«U m ^ b u t a h w

S T J O H A S

Parlor and Chamber Setts, WHAT-NOTS.

MARBLE & WOOD TOP CEITER TABLES,

iininsi. m uu m mis W o r l c T a b l e s ,

CANE, FLAG, AND WOOD SEAT CHAIRS,

O O I ' F I N B . f i t ; e a t I C o t a l l l o B a r l a l O a s e s a n d

C a s k s , o o n s t a n t l y o n h a n d .

HEARSE AND SERVICES AT TNE •OST REASONABLE RATE5.

Retail rooau 2d door west of the Bank. flra«c* Mort 1 PrttmUU ,Montcalm County, op.

puiU tht Pott OJHc»,MatnSf WhoieMit room, ntmr the factory, latt af />. If M.

DT 'VTOOK'B n i n e oi i » r . T r y on® bot t le . I t l a • a f t t o t a k e a t a n * t i m o , a a d u n d e r a n y o l r e n m s t a n o o s w h a t e v e r .

P e r m i t n o o the r r e m e d y to be p a l m e d / f f o n y o u fo r D r . Crook's Wine of Tar , for It J ' I t h i s r e m e d y which It pe r fo rming th® many w t m l t r f n l en ree a n d T O O w a n t I T , and no t a a j i n i r i e d n e d i d n e with s Blmilarity of n n m e . Bold by pryjglst#, —

Manhood ihow lost.Jiow Restored. J II»t nubllshed, a DBVT edltlrn of Dr .

®fcCor.v»!MWFU.'S(:»:I.KNRATKI. EI«SAT on o j i w i t h e rndical mrr iwltbont niedlcine)of

__»J«iw8per innior r l .n-» . or S r n i ' n a l Weak-( neon, Involunimv aemiiml l.o*«i-», ImiMtlener, Mental >and I'bvM.-il Incapacity. Imp- i lnrept - t " Mntrlage. i etc ; al>o, Oonaumption. Kpil'p*)', nml F i t ? , induced ' by ss lMndi i l sme* or m t i a l i-xnavacancH.

y rii;e in a muled envrlope, only 6 cent*. The eelebrntud author , in tbi* adialrnlde etsay,

clearly deino«<»rnteii troni n thir ty vsa is ' rnrcFRsful prsctlce, that the alarminz con»«iiience> nf self abase may be radteMly curcd without tbe dangrrous uae of Internal medicine or the application of the kn i fe ; pointing out a mode of coje at once simple, certain, andeffcctaal by wblcherery "olTertr, no mat te r what bis condition may be, may cure h lmsel fchesply , pr»» va te ly ,and radically.

l y ' T b n Lrcturr ahonld hr in tbe l i n t ^ ofevsry >nth an

Railroad Dipl. KOiF, JOHN KC WM. KJRMSBy.

youth and everv man In the land. t h a t v o f i

Bent under «eal, in a sealed envelope to a iW jddreaa, )>s«(pa>ion lec . lp t of ilx cent*, or two nnati^-r •tamps. Also, Dr. Cuiverwell'ii "Marriage Oulde,'* price 25 cents. Addreir llie Publl»her»

CHA8 J . C . K M K B f t C o . ly ; Daworv, New York, I'oat OOtce Box 4,&M.

o

t r *

N.nio n n l c j i ilgtit-il i»r

a t

I F O R A N Y O F T H E A H O V E

( A L L O N

PETE, AND.GET THEM

C H E A . .

U N I O N B L O C K , LOWELL, MICE.

P J. C0PPENS,

C D P

P o l o P V O r / r i e t c r o :

C h O r i

S H E P A R D ^ 11 WAHOQ v l

g0 t« \VW»Vey o r s i imi i l a t l nc R r v p f n e o . bu t a toiourii Wilh in Iho ronch uf iUl.

-IV^cr, on/// RU CchIn n Bottle.

* f ^ W a r t i c l e h n a b o o n l h o r o u ( | h l y t e s t e d a n d ' f o u n d n s u r a s n d a p e e d y c u r e f o r t h f t f o l l o w i n g c o m ] I n i n t s :

Jtoimlirr, Ind iff est ion. Sour Stom-ach, CogflVeucss, ycrvoiiH aud Slck'Headachc, Liver Complaint, Fever&Ague, Dyspepsia, J for ins in (HtUdren, Piles, Bilious Com-plaints, Loss of Appetite, Erup-tions of the Shin, Plwptafiiii Uie Face, and all Disease# of the Blooil; also thr. best Diuretic in Use for Kidney Comjdaints, Weak Back, Pain in the Loins, Lumbago, Gravel, Jlhcumatism, Nervous Debility, %Dropscy, Cold Feet and Hands, Mental De-pression, etc, P r r ^ o n s h n v i n i i F , ; v e r n n d A g u e ,

C h i l l s , e t c . . s h o u l d f i r s t u « o

DR. SHEPARD'S A G U E P I L L S , (Price, only XO Cents per Box.)

t h e n f o l l o w w i t h t h e E i t t o r s , t o r e g u -l a t e t h e B o w e l s , c r e n t o « h o n l t y A p -p e t i t e , i t r o n i t l v n n n d i n v i c / t i ^ . ' " t h e t y s t e n j , c l e n n s e t h e B l o o d , " ^ f e r r y i n g o f f a l l i m p u r i t i e s U t i - o u g h i h o f K i d -n e y s n m l B o w e l s , l e a v i n g t h e s y s t e m n o l l i a b l e l o s e c o n d n t t n c k B .

I c a n s h f e l y F>ny t h e r e i s m o r e r e n l g e n u i n e B i t l e r a i n o n o BO C o n t s B o t t l e o f S h e p a r d ' s C o m p o u n d W n h o o B i t t e r s t h a n t h e r e i* i n a w h o l e c a s e o f a n y o t h e r I t i n d i n m a r k e t .

R e c o m m e n d e d b y a l l t h e f i r s t C l a s s P h y s i c i a n s t h r o u g h o u t t h e C i t y a n d C o u n t r y , a s t h e b e s t F a m i l y M e d i c i n e i n u s e . N o F a m i l y s h o u l d b e w i t h o u t t h e m i n t h e H o u s e , a n d t h e r e b y s a v e t i m e a n d m o n e y .

Prim, SO Cents each'.

F o r salo by Drugc i i t s a n 1 Ttcalers genera l ly .

C. N. SHEPAI^D, P r o p r i e t o r , ^

Grand Bapids, l^iirh. And by U a a t k Hunler, and Wooding <; Look, Lo-

well, Micb.