4
PORTLAND DAILY PRESS. ESTABLISHED JUKE 23, 1862—YOL. 19. PORTLAND, SATPUD AT MORNING, APRIL 8, 1882.__ ENTERTAINMENTS NEW PORTLAND JTIIEATRE. Frank Curtis .Proprietor & Manager. Positively Last Entertainment TO-NIGHT, TO-NIGHT. House Packed to the Doors. The acknowledged Success of the Season. RENTZ-SANTgEY Sovelty & Burlesque Company. First production of tho mirth-provoking Burloequo MASH-SOT! must Laugh. You can’t help it. Secure jour seats at the B<>x Office. apSdlt X. -A.. XX- A. 19th ANNUAL BALL, OF THE Irish American Relief Association, AT CITY HALL. Easter Monday Night, April 10th. Grand Co. cortfor one Ik ur by « 1* A 'V 1> I.E tt’S BANP, commencing at 8.30 o'clock. Clothing ckecked free. Mfeic 'or dancing by €H*KIOLEKN QLA«>BIIJ.K KANO. Refiradimeut* o' first c are quality for rale in Re- ception Hall by Mrs. Ulmer. .... TICKETS, admitting Gent and two I.adiok, $1 .to Ladiee' ticket, 25 cento. ■_ --- ap4dlw GrRYlSTD TRIP TO LEWISTON, MONDAY, APRIL 10th, BY THE Portland Montgomery Guards. Exhibition Drill and Ball. TIIKETI for the round trip including ad- mission $1.50. Tickets for sale at P. J. McCal- lam’s furnishing goods store, GOD Congress street. ap4____dlw THEBE WILL BE AW EASTER SALE OF 'Aprons & Fancy Articles At the f»«. EuUe’a Church Boom, on Con- grrm Wired, Monday and Tuesday, April 10th & 11th. Sp8 __ GRAND CONCERT —.AT CITY HYLL, Tuesday Evening, April II FOK THE BENEFIT OF THE MAINE GENERAL HOSPITAL, at which the following artiste have generously to!- unteered: 91I8S ANWIE LOUISE CAR Y, MISS RUTH LONG, contralto, THE C EC ILIA CLUB, IHf WEBER CLIC, and tve celebrated TEMPLE (QUARTETTE OF BOSTON, MB. HAKVEY MFHKAY, Accompanist THKFTS $1.00. Sold at Stochbr dge’ Musitr Store hursday morning, Mart h 3‘ tli, at.» o’clock. > umbers given out at 7. Otly six tickets •old to one person at the opening sale. mar 2D__d™_._ CITY 1IALL, Fast hay Afternoon and Evening, apisie I *«•*, BOSTON ENGLISH OPERA CO. jn (Gilbert and Sullivan's .Esthetic Opera, PATIENCE ! With Full Orchestra anil Clioru*. Tice's at Stockbridge’s Music st re V o nlay morning. Ain ii 3d. Reserved sea * »f> an GO terns. Admission 25 ceDts. jMutia* e -Reserved seats -G and- 3a co ts, Liiu- fare to Matinee on Maine Central. Grand Trunk and Portland & Rochester R. R. mnoldtd NEW PORTLAND THEATRE. Frank Curtis.Proprietor and Manager AFTERNOON AND EVENING, BENEFIT OF mss Leila Farrell, on which oocasion will be pres nted THE MASCOT with the following cast of characters: BETTINA_Mina LEILA EjIBBELL Lorenzo. Chas. Green; Fiammetta, Annie Libby; Pepno (ihas. Cram: Fredrick, Annie Rogers; Rocco, Lonise Wells; Parafonte, Geo. Clark; Matteo, Ed. Bibber; Luigi, Miss Eva Bartlett; Paolo, Miss Cora ^ Woodman; Francesca, Miss Eunice Hunter. Sale of seats. Monday, April 10th. ap7dtd 61 Fifth Grand Assembly BY THE CUMBERLAND ROWING ASSOCIATION, Army and Navy Hall, THURSDAY Evening, April 15th, OTnxic by (ItUDI.ER Admission 60 cents. ai)4dli»* Gilbert’s Assembly Thursday Evening. Tickets, admitting Gent with L’dies, 50 cents. aP4 dtf EASTER CMS r Just received, a large and elegant assorti <int of PRANG’S and I u PORT- ED EASTER CARDS. CALL FRANK B. CLARK, 515 Congress Street. mar!) dlm 100 CARRIAGES, NEW AND ►EUOJV'D HAND, Phaetons,Open & Top Buggies, CONCORD, GROCERY AND EXPRESS WAGONS, MAINE STATE PRISON. mh27_d CLOTHES^RINCERS. Prices reduced on “UNIVERSAL,” -NOVELTY” AND “EUREKA.” KENDALL & WHITN EY Portland, April l»t. i*P3<m EDUCATIONAL FRANKLIN FAMILY SCHOOL, TOP8HAH, mi. ffIKKM begins April Util. Location delightful, I Instruction ample, thorough anti practical, with good home influences. D. L. SMITH, Principal, marll__eodlm instruction in English and Class- ical Studies. Given to private pupils by the subscriber. J. W. COLCORD, 143 Pearl Street. Iau24 dtt NEW SPRING SACKS, Dolmans, TALMAS and Ulsters. In tlie above goods we are now prepared to show as tine a line of styles as can be found in the city. Also a nice assortment of Cloaking Material of all kinds with Trimmings to match. New SPRING HOSIERY in great variety for Ladies, Gents and Children, BUTTONS. We have just opened as Sne a line of new Buttons to match all shades of Dress Goods and Cloak- ings as has ever be; u offered in The city. We have just received a large assortment of made up Lace Goods for the neck in bow and choice styles As we have a very low rent the expense of running onr store is very sni'd 1 and we can afford to sell any of cur gooes at LOWER PRICES than those doing business under a larger expense. Onr no te is “QUICK NALLS AND SHALL PROFITS.” Learn our prices ai d you will see that we mean what we say. Good Goods and Low Prim, STUDLEY, M Middle Sired. apG _ THE LARGEST STOCK OF BABY CMIAl.ES To he found in Mew England, comprising the Mew Sleeping Coach, the Whitney Manufactur- ing co,, and other first class makes. C. DAY, JR., & CO., No. 187 Middle Street- apS t'1 w CALL and SEE Decker Bros Pianos. 7 indorsed by ANNIE LOUISE CARY. Also a choice stock of first-class PIANOS AND ORGANS. 3 Free Street Mock, PORTLAND. sep29 EASIER CARDS AT BAILEY & NOYES’, Exchange Street, mh28 PORTLAND. dSw WHEMLOCK BOARDS FOR SAFE. 800,000 ft. dry Hemlock Boards, Beady for immediate delivery. address, i> u. JORDAN, Alfred, Maine. feb26 dtf MISCELLANEOUS ARTIST PHOTOC HER, OPPOSITE FALMOUTH HOTEL. Fine Portrait Work a Specialty Especial Facilities for Eife Size Crayons. Aioai —TO PLEASE. jly7eodtf More than One Million Copies Sold! EVERYBODY WANTS IT. Everybody Needs It. 258th Edition. (New.) Revised and Enlarged. or Self-Preservation. A Great Medical Treatise on Manhood; the ( aoM and Cure of Exhausted Vitality. Nervous and Physical llebi»;*»,,iil*o on the Untold Miseries arisingfromthc f *^oi Ma- ture Year*. 300 paigett. Royul o ’>• linest steel engravings. 125 invaluable Prescription*, for all acute aud chronic diseases. KfRlftllf TUVOf i E1 Bound in beautiful French Muslin, embossed, f^11 gilt, I tiNuW llllwfeLnP«,iceo«ly l ^byWaiL New Edition.) *v <f ILllOTtW SAMPLE 6 CENTS. SEN» NOW. The Science of Life, or Sel -Preservation, is the most extraordinary work on rnjaioiogy ever puoubuea. There is nothing whatever that the married or single of either sex can either require or wish t > know, but what is fully explained fn short the book is invaluable to all who wish for good health.—Toronto Globe. The book for young and middle aged men to read just now is the Science of Life, or Self-Preservation. It is worth many times its weight in gold. -Medical Times. oaQ The author of the Science ot Life is a noble bene-actor. He reaches the very roots and vitals of disease and is enabled to apply thorough remedies. The book already is read upon both continents by millions.— L The Gold7 ami Jewelled Medal awarded the author of the Science of Life was fairly won and worthily bestowed.—Massachusetts Ploughman. ... _ .... Thousands of extracts similar to the above could be taken from the leading journals—literary, political, religous an 1 scientific—throughout the land. ... _ The book is guaranteed to be a better medical work, in every sense, than can be obtained elsewhere for double the price, or the money will be refunded in every instance Thfliinau<u of Copies are *entby mail, securely scaled and pout.paid, to all parts ©I tue world, every month, upon receipt of price, $!■£&. Address PEABODY MEDI' AL INSTITUTE or W. H. PAEKEB, M. D. 4 Bulfluclt Sit., Boston, mass. N. E.—Tlic author may be consulted on all disease, requiring skill and experience. Nov22eodtangl TIB NEW ENGLAND CAILNET ORGANS Are the MOST PERFECT as well as the MOST POPULAR INSTRUMENTS IN USE. Let all who wish to be convinced of this TRY their SUPERIOR TOM m ElM MU1M, then EXAMINE THEIR ELEGANT DESIGNS, And an ORDER will INVARIABLY be the result. ^^'Instruments to rent and sold on instalments. ^^Illustrated Catalogue Mailed tree on application. NEW ENGLAND ORGAN CO. No. 5 Free St. Block, * Portland. Me. mar7 ** eod3mo8 NEW DEPARTURE IN CARPETS. Our first invoice of Carpetiugs having met with such a speedy sale we have added a large variety of NEW ami DESIRABLE patterss, and are now prepared to show a flue Hue of the same in all grades from the Cheapest to the Best. We are Determined to give the people of Portland, a substantial beneflt in the line of Carpets, and we therefore MAKE THE STATEMENT that yon can save from 1C to 20 per cent, by buying of us. It will be for your interest to examine our Carpets and learn our prices before purchasing elsewhere. NO OLD GOODS. Our goods are all NEW and STRICTLY FIRST-CLASS in every re-pect. Rem- nants suitable for Mats, etc , at two thirds regular price. Give us a call. No trouble to show our goods. GEO. A. GAY & CO., 499 Congress Street, - Corner off Brown. mill 2 8 T.Th&Stf _go Bmog KENDALL & WHITNEY, mwihiti nn-a-r, A Denier* ill Timolhy, C’lover Flax* filun If ^ |SMk gariau, Millet, Red Top, Blue Grass, nmii VB 0Bl .DM l.nun RriM, Orchard Rrast., 1^# JLnl 9 Garden, Flower, Bird Meed*, Ac. Market Hall, Market Square, Portland, Me. feb25 9 dtr O pening OF ANNUAL SPRING EXHIBITION DCRIN’G- WEEK COMMENCING APRIL 3, OF Elegant Family and Pleasure Carriages and Road Wagons of latest designs and uuequaled finish, to which the inqi ciion of the riding public is respectfully so- licited, ZENAS THOMPSON, 32 & 38 Union Street, ap!5 PORTLAND, ME. dlw MILLINERY SALE M. E. & C. A. 1IAZEN, Would call tho atteutiou of the Ladies of Portland to their CLOSING OUT SALE At cost for the eutire season, of MILLINERY GOODS, CoBsisting of Hats, Ribbons, Flowers, Laces, &c. 591 CONGRESS STREET, Up Stairs. _____ ap3eod2wis JUST ARHIVED 1OO0 BIHHII.S SCOTCH Champion Potatoes, 1000 Bl'MIlEI.B IRISH Shamrock Potatoes, Good for Seed Potatoes, for sale by M-AJRTI W. BEST, mli30(l2ff »*19 Free Street, Portland, Me. COPARTNERSHIP. CO-PARTNERSHIP. GEORGE H. FLETCHER is this day admitted to onr tirm. FLETCHER A CO. Portland, April 1st, 1882. ap3dlw Benson s -AWARDED- Capcine Porous -MEDALS.- Plaster. TheBestJCno^Remed^fbr Backache or Lame Back. Rheumatism or Lame Joints. Cramps or Sprains. Nouralsia or Kidney Diseases. Lumbago, Severe Aches or Pains Female Weakness. Arc Superior to all other Floaters. Are Superior to Fade. Are Superior to Liniments. Are Superior to Ointments or Salves. Are superior to Electricity or galvanism They Act Immediately. They Strengthen. They Soethe. They Relieve Pain at Once. They Positively Cure. sag | saw| sa as Benson’sCapcinePorousPlas* jj illlTiiIN ters hav«been imitsted. Do UH V I lulls not allow your druggist to palm off some other plaster having a similar eonnding name. See that the word is spelled C-A-P-C-I-N E. Price 26 cts. SmUag,Lfdlim» ork- ASSl^dL»N PLASTER". ang31 S.W&wly AN INTERESTING ACCOUNT! Stone iu the Bladder Kxpelled by tiling Dr. Kennedy’* Favorite Remedy.” Mr. S. W. Hicks, of Pleasant Valley, Dutchess Co., N. Y., the son of Mr. E. S. flicks, whose name may have appeared iu this journal in connection with an article similar to this, was, like his father, afflicted with Stone in the Bladder, only that his case was more serious than his father’s. On the appearance of the disease the father advised the son to write to Dr. David Kennedy, of Rondout, N. Y., who, he said, would tell him what to do. Dr. Kennedy replied, suggesting the use of “Kennedy’s Favorite Remedy,” which had worked so success- fully iu the father’s case. Mr. Hicks, who had been assured by the local physicians that they could do nothing more for him, tried “Favorite Remedy” at a venture. After two weeks’ use of it he passed a stone % of an inch long and of the thickness of a pipe-stem. Since then ho has had no symptoms of the return of the troublo. Here is a sick man healed. What better results could have been ex- pected? What greater beuefit could medical science confer? The end was gained; that is surely enough. Dr. Kennedy assures the public, by a reputation which he canuot afford to forfeit or imperil, that the “Favorite Remedy” does invigorate the Blood, cure* Liver, Kidney and Bladder complaints, as well as all those diseases and weaknesses peculiar to females. “Dr. Kennedy’s Favorite Remedy” for sale by all druggists. mch25 STTh&wlm astoriA Old Dr. Ditcher's remedy for Children’s Complaints. 'Especially adapted to children." Dr. Alex. Robertson, 1057 8d Av., N. Y- 'Pleasant, Harmless and Wonder/idly Efficacious." Dr. A. J. Crcen, Royerton, Ind. /prescribe it as sup i ) any known remedy." Dr. II. A. Archer,i : Portland Av., Brooklyn. Castoria is not narcotic. Mothers, Nurses and Doctors ngree that for Sour-Stomach, Flatulency. Diarrhoea, and Constipation, nothing is so prompt as old Dr. Pitoher’s Castoria, By assimilating the food, Castoria gives robust health and nat* oral sleep. The Great Healing Remedy. An infallible care for Rheumatism, Sci- atica, Neuralgia, Wounds, Burns, Sprains, Stiff Joints, Spavin, and Lameness from any cause. P.T.Barnum, the great Showman, says “Among my vast troupe of Equestrians, Team- sters, Ilorses, Camels, and Elephants, some sro always strained, bruised, or wounded. My Sur- geons and Yeterinaries all say, that for casual- itics to mea and animals, nothing is sc efficacious as Centaur Liniment.” 433 Fifth Av., New York, May 8th, 1875. fob'.! 8 ,lTuT&Seow&weowly9 For a quarter of a century or more Hostetter’s Stomach bitters hsg been the reigning specific for indig&tion, dyspepsia, fever and ague a loss of physical stamina, liver complaint and other disor- ders and has been mo t empha icaUy indorsed by medical men as a health and strength restorative. It counteracts a tendency to premature decay, and sustains and comforts the aged and infirm. For sale by all Druggists and Dealers generally. ftpl _ T.ThS&wlm iichingpii.es Symptoms are moisture, stinging, itching, worse at night; seems as if pin-worms woro crawling about the rectum; the pri vate parts are often affected. Afl a pleasant, economical and positive cure, Swathe’s Ointment is superior to any article in the market. Sold by druggists, or send 60 cts. in 3-ct Stamps. 3 Boxes, 31.26. Address, Da. 8 wayne & Son, Phlla., Pa. Jani8 d&wly3 THIC PRESS. SATURDAY MORNING, APRIL S. We do not read anonymous letters and oommnn- eations. Tlie name and addrese of the writ are in all cases Indispensable, not necessarily for nbllca- tlon but as a guaranty of good faith. We oannot undertake to return or preterm com- munications that are not used. Evkkv regular attache of the Pkkhs is furnished with a Card certificate signed by Stanley Pullen, Editor, All railway, steamboat and hotel managers will confer a favor upon ns by demanding credentials of every person claiming to represent our Journal. STATE OF MAINE. BY THE GOVERNOR. A. [PROCLAMATION. In accordance with a pious and time-henored oustom, come down to us from the Pilgrim Fathers, and found so suitable to our love anti veneration, I, Harris M. Planted. Governor, by and with the ad- vice and consent of the Council, do hereby appoint and set apart Thursday, the thirteenth day of April, next, as a day of humiliation, f sting and prayer. And I do recommend to the Christian people of our State to keep this their annual fast; refrain from labor, business, amusements, and in tbeir homes and houses of public worship, humble themselves before Him whose mercy endureth forever; sup- plicating His favor upon themselvefi, the State and nation; confessing their sins and seeking forgive- ness of the same, in humility of spirit, “ft we con- fess our sit s, He is faithlul and just to forgive us our sins and to cleanse us from all unrigbteous- nesi^.,, Given at the Council Chamber at Augusta this tbirty-iirst day of March, in the year of our Lord one thousand eight hundred and eighty-two, and of the Independence of the United States of America the one hundred and sixth. Habbis M. Plaistkd. By the Governor. Joseph O. Smith, Secretary of State. As a Vestal Virgin. It is difficult to kill a Democratic leader— so that ho will stay dead—,as the Democrat- ic party has often found to its sorrow. That political organization has been engaged busily for many years now in attempting to rid itself of men who have led it to defeat, or who because of their incompetency or unpopularity, or other “outs,” were consid- ered unfit to run a political race. So these men have been politically slaughtered, wakes have been held over them, and they have been buried deep under ground. Grass has sprouted and flourished over the mounds, and other signs of decomposition have made themselves manifest. But the official period of mourning has not long ex- pired before the corpses burst the cerements of the grave, walk among living men, pre- sent themselves at Demoei atic leasts, and demand a nomination for something. The latest who has resurrected himself is Samuel J. Tilden, buried at Cincinnati in 1880. He rises to express his kindly approv- al of Thomas Jefferson, and to modestly intimate that he is willing to become Jeffer- son’s successor. This he does in a letter to the New Haven Democrats, tactfully pre- ferring letter-writing to an appearance be- fore them while the smell of the soil still clings to his shroud. He warns 'them in a voice that is anything but ghostly that this government i3 changing into “an elective despotism” (whatever that is) and “med- dling in everything belonging to the Statej or to individuals —doubtless referring to Income tax suits and the like. He ex- presses his conviction of the necessity of keeping alive “the glimmering spark of vir- tue and public honor,” and intimates that he is the fellow best fitted by nature and training to take charge of that job. From all this it plainly appears that Mr. Tildeu has crawled out of the grave and into the light of publicity; that during his interment he has been transformed into something rich and strange, making his ap- pearance this time in the role of a vestal virgin, and that the Democratic party isn't rid of him, as it fondly hoped. Those who were thinking things have changed .since Sammy died are rudely roused from their unsubstantial dream. Mr. Tildeu is the livest man in the party. Some interesting statistics of the vast coal industries of Pennsylvania for 1881 are just issued from the office of the Secretary of In- ternal Affairs. In the anthracite regions 319 collieries have been in operation, employing 75,169 hands and turning out 27,929,128 tons at a cost of $29,454,781 in wages, or $1.06.55 per ton. There were 382 bituminous collier- ies in operation during the year, which pro- duced 15,692,923 tons of bituminous coal, at a cost in wages of $14,540,057, an average of half a mill over 92 cents per ton. In the an- thracite collieries the employes worked on the average a trifle over 275 days during the year and produced 373.14 tons each, earning on the average $397.58 in wages, or a frac- tion more than $1.44 for each working day. In the bituminous mines the workmen had an average of 217 days’ work during the year and produced 442.37 tons each, earning an average total of $407.20, or a little over $1.87 for each working day. As a large propor* tion of the employes are “helpers,” or boys under age, who are under age, who are paid small wages, the actual earnings of adult miners are of course considerably in excess of the average shown by the statistical re- turns. _ The first victory recorded for the Repub- licans occurred in September, 1855, in the State election of Vermont, which was gained by a fusion with the Whigs in the election of Gov. Royce by a large majority, but at the election on the same month in Maine the new party sustained a defeat. In October, 1855, in Ohio, Salmon P. Chase was elected Governor by 15,220 plurality over William Medill, Democrat, Chase receiving the sup- port of both tUe Republican and American parties. Twenty-nine Republicans and six Democrats were elected to the Ohio Senate, and eighty Republicans and thirty-one Dem- ocrats to the House. Monsignoii CArEi., whose first appear- ance was made among the dukes and duch- esses of Disraeli's “Lothair,” is now discov- ered in Koine hig with the fate of the future of the British relations with the Vatican. If Koman gossip can be believed he is to take up the taugled web of Pontifical diplomacy and rehabilitate the friendly mission of the Papacy to the Court of the infidel. If any prelate in the Curia; is capable of this deli- cate business, the astute propagandist of the English aristocracy may be trusted to bring it about—for his endowments are the high- est expression of Italian diplomacy and Eng- lish breeding. Washington special’s description of Van Wyck's speech: Shortly after 2 this afternooD the Senate was startled by a wild, inhuman cry, and there followed a medley of piercing shrieks and howls of a variety never before heard in the Senate. The spectators who were at first appalled by the noise, soon learned that there was no real danger. The cause of the uproar was the earnest effort of “the wild man from Nebraska,” as Senator Van Wyck is playfully called by his associ- ates, to convey to the Senate the idea that he was opposed to the Tariff Commission bill. The Supreme Court of the United States upholds the right of the State of Texas to tax telegraph messages within its own lim- its, but denies its right to tax messages which originate or go outside the State, as that belongs to inter-State commerce, and denies also the right of the State to tax mes- j sages sent by agents of the government as an unconstitutional interference witli the execution of the government’s powers. Texas has taxed all messages one cent each. The Baltimore Medical and Surgical So- ciety have refused to admit a' colored physi- cian to membership. The rejected candi- date is Dr. Whitfield Winsey, a graduate of the Harvard Medical School. Several phy- sicians testified that Dr. Winsey was aa in- telligent and experienced surgeon and phy- sician, and a doctor who had been in the rebel army declared that his politics would never interfere with his recognition of sci- entific merits in a colored man. Twenty- five ballots were cast, and seven negative votes (five causing a rejection) were given. The new five cent postage stamp, which will probably be hereafter known as “the Garfield stamp,” will be issued by the post office department and placed on sale at alp post offices throughout the country on the 10th inst. Mrs. Garfield was consulted con- cerning every detail, and the portrait, is be- lieved to be the best extant of the late Pres- ident. Mu. Tn.DEN wrote a long letter to the New Haven Democrats who celebrated Jef- ferson’s birthday, but Gen. Hancock's letter was “short and merely formal.” Perhaps Gen. Hancock considers Jefferson’s birth “a local issue The petition for the pardon of Sergeant Mason, prepared by the Garfield club of New York, is over a mile in length, and con- tains over 350,000 names. Stxxv thousand bushels of seeds were dis- tributed last week among the sufferers by the forest fires in Michigan. (Interview in Providence Journal.] A Lion-Tamer’s Experience. First Entrance Into a Lion’s Cage- Breaking In a Ferocious Throe-Year Old. _ “While with Robinson's circus,” said Mr. Neylan, “I became acquainted with Bill Rey- nolds the well known lion performer, and be- came a favorite with him. He was growing old and was taken ill quits frequently, thereby necessitating the withdrawal of ,that feature in the entertainment. I was in the habit of play*, ing with the lions outside the cage, and one day I asked Archie McCarty, the boss canvass- man, who had charge of the cage, if he would let me go inside. He laughed at me, and in- sinuated that I would back out mighty quick. I looked about for a cowhide, and being un- able to find one, substituted a broom liaudle and started in. Thero wero two lions in the cage, and a tiger, the famous lion, Old Prince, the pet lioness, Jennie, aud£a beautiful tiger of maguilicent proportions. Old Prince was a stubborn, bull-headed creature, and meant mis- chief every time. 1 was about sixteen yoars of age at tbi3 time, and was in good physical cen- ditiou. The moment I entered the animals re- garded mo as an intruder, and Old Prince com- menced to assume a war-like deportment. I belabored him vigorously with the broom handle, mantaming my self-possession and nerve, and ere I left the cage ho was humbly submissive, and, with the other animals, would promptly do my bidding. I informed the manager that I had found a substitute for Reynolds, and would produce him that night. The cage was drawu into the ring, and at the appointed time I appeared, greatly to the sur- prise and bewildorment of the manager. As I started toward the cage ho shouted: “Como away, you iooi, you a got oaten up. sir. weut on with the performance, aud the ani- mals behaved beautifully. At anothor time Robinson bad a young lion, three years of age, of great strength and ferocious disposition. I determined to break him, ami selecting an empty cage with two partitions, I had it drawn into the woods one Sunday, and had a terrible encounter with him for thre< hours. The eu- raged beast refused to obey the lasb, at.d it be- came necessary to use hot irons instead of raw- hide. After ho had been subdued I petted him fora time and furnished him with asnbstan- tial meal, aud we became the best of friends. All the clothing I wore at the close of the en- counter was a pair of stockings and a waist- band to my shirt. I subsequently broke an- other pair for Robinson, and bad a tongb tassel with them, but nothing in comparison with the throe years old. Mr. Xe\!.in was asked if he had ever found Uinrseli pi extreme peril. “Well, yes," replied .Ur Nevlau. “1 was placed once in a most unuomfot table situation Jennie, the pet lioness, was with young, ami one day 1 had occasion to enter her cage to repair it. The sound of the hammer employed in driving nails appeared to frignten her, and suddenly she fastened her teeth upon the calf of my leg. I had the presence of mind to let her alone, although she was tearing my flesh terribly, and seizing my hammer I watched my opportunity, when she had caught my wrist between her teeth, and thrust the handle down her throat, choking off her hold. Then she sought to leap upon me, and stripped me of my clothing, beside leaving the bloody imprint of her claws upon my back. The blows of the hammer did not seem to have any effect, and at an opportune moment, one of the keepers, seeing my predicament, Beized an iron bar and belabored her vigorously, while I kept accom- paniment with my hammer. We conquered her at last, aud X left the cage to dress my- self and my wounds. She never distnrbed me again, and was alwavs gentle and tractable. Once, previous to this, Jennie knocked me down, and Old Prince evidently intended to make a meal of me, but my good fortune and courage did not desert me, and I whipped them both into subjectiou with my cowhide. “The best time to begin to break lions,” said Mr. Neylan, “is when they are cabs of eight to ten months growth. My practice was to devote an hour a day in training, al« ays exercising them on empty stomachs and feeding them im- mediately afterward; if the animal is tractable and submissive he should be treated kindly, but if he is inclined to be stubborn and ugly, then you must obtain the mastery by a vigor- ous use of the cowhide. They are inclined tc be treacherous even when the most frolicsome and gentle, and it can be shown that the ma- jority of lion performers who have been killed, have" allowed too much liberty to their pets. The objective point of the cowhide is the face and eye, to blind and confnse them, and they smart and are forced into retirement by a vig- orous flagellation. It mast Hot be thought for an instant that one can loek them steadily iu the eye, and thus disarm them. The lion does become somewhat blinded by a steady gaze, but the moment he lowers his head and gives it an ominous shake, then look for danger, and the more promptly the lash is applied the bet- ter. The tiger is more treacherously iuclined than the lion, and more difficulty is exper- ienced iu their training Ihave trained Asiatic, African and Mexican lions, aud some of them have developed remarkable power of intelli- gence and sagacity. Rosecrans and Garfield. The Washington correspondent of the demo- cratic Louisville Courier-Journal, an intimate friend aud warm admiror of Garfield, iu refer- siug to the malignity of the foes of the dead President in publishing his letters sines his death, aud the Rosecrans letter iu particular, says: “How easy it is to distort the meaning, the motives, of lettors twenty years old. For ray part, 1 don’t know ’Rosey,’ as they call him, aud perhaps for that reason I don’t like him. 1 think his appointment to the head of the democratic congressional committee was a fol- ly oloselv hordoring on an outrage, and cliarac- eristic of the idiots who represent the demo- cratic party, perennially, in Congress. The beauty of it is that few of them survive from one Congress to another to tell the tale. But this, apart, the effort to foist Gen. Rosecrans’ war record upon the democratic party, aud to elevate him in consequence as a democratic nominee for President—aud ovur the prostrate and degraded form of the dead Garfield, is the most unchivalrio and the stupedist political maueuvre 1 ever heard of. X remember very well when the Ohio democrats nominated kirn for governor, a> u got for their pains an insult. If anybody is to be taken from the Pacific coast (much as I deprecate the idea of admitting po- litical possibilities into the judiciary) I am for Judge Field, a great man and a good man, not for Geu. Rosecrans, whom I associate aad con- found with Bragg, as a hero of lost opportuni- ties, lacking the sympathies of civil life and identification with the instincts of the people.” Magazine Notices. The numbers of The Living Age for -March 31st aud April 8th contain Sir Charles Lyell, Quarterly; Monkeys, aud The Vistas of the Past in the Moon and the Earth, Contempora. ry; Miss Ferrier's Novels, and The Yellowstone Geysers, Nineteenth Century; How Gilbert Sherrard Fated in the Flood, and The Poetry of Dante Gabriel Rossetti, Fraser; Destruction of Egyptian Monuments, Blackwood; Jane Austin. Temple Bar; March iu the Country, Saturday Review; Ou the Whale Fishery of the Basque Provinces of Spain, and American Ants, Nature; A Famous Quaker School, All the Year Round; with instalments of The Freres aud Robin, aud the usu .1 amount of po- etry. Recent Publications. Popular Astronomy. I5y Simon Newcomb, LL. D. (New York: Harpers). In the present edition of this valuable and deservedly popular work, the author has added chapters concern- ing the transit of Venus, some cometary dis- coveries and other notes, so that the reader may bo possessed of the latest facts and theories concerning the heavenly bodies as viewed from the earth, Thus the fourth edition Improves upon the third, which, however, had received such additions beyond the subject matter of the second as science, up to Its date, had af- forded. Professor Newcomb writes in a digni- fied style, a happy medium between the read- ing-made-easy and the over-technical. He se- lects with great judgment the portions of bis subject which will instruct and please the pop- ular mind—that is to say, the intelligent body of readers, not specialists in science, but desir- ing sound, clear and sufficiently minute ac- quaintance with the course and progress of modern knowledge. The history and philoso- phy of Astronomy are fully treated, while its technical side is made less prominent, and a glossary is added to explain the terms which might not otherwise be understood. Ancient Astronomy, the System according to Coperni- cus, Gravitation, Practical Astronomy, the So- lar System and Stellar Universe are heads an der which are grouped interesting and fully il- lustrated chapters. Science and Culture. By Thomas Henry Huxley, LL. D., F. R. S. (New York: D. Ap- pleton & Co). A volume made up o( thirteen essays, written during the past seven yean by Professor Huxley, delivered before various so- cieties and clnbs, and which afterwards ap- peared in magazines and reviews. The range of their topics js that in which Professor Hux- ley is at home and effective, and the large alien tele of readers that he is sure of addressing with each fresh volume, will welcome the present collection of essays. The Brain and Its Functions. By J. Luys, Physician to the Hospice de la Salpetri£ro (New York: D. Appleton & Co.; Portland: Hoyt, Fogg & Donham). This volume of the Scientific Series treats of the anatomy ef the brain, the sensibilities and propertisa of the nerves and of cerebral processes and phe- nomena. It is especially salted to scientists, bat the general reader will find the work clear in style and containing passages of interesting notes upon mental conditions. Physical Education. By Felix L. Oswald, M. D. (New York: D. Appleton Sc Co.; Port- land: Hoyt, Fogg & Donham). This Tolnma contains some good suggestions as to iresh alr> exercise, etc., but is vsry greatly discounted by its excited and unbalanced style and its crotch- ety theories; and it lacks the moderate and ja- dicious tone which science and observation would give to the remarks of a reliable and sound practitioner. Money-Makiog for Ladies. By Ella Rod- man Church (New York: Harpers). A very readable and attractive little volume, giving hints as to various ways in which ladies may wort and increase their limited incomes with- out entering the ranks of professional workers. It frequently happens that boms duties or oth- er reasons may prevent a woman from giving *ke time needed for steady w ork at a profession or trade, or for leaving her house for tlio dura- tion of business boars. It is for the benefit of suck partially employed womea that Mrs. Church writes this friendly little book, and points out various suitable occupations in a practical and eminently pleasant manner. It is full of good suggestions, and will win for tha author thanks and liking of many women who will profit by its hints. a TbeRose. ByH. B. Eilwanger (New York: Dodd, Mead & Co ). This tistsfa! volume is written in tlio interests of rose cultivators, by a practical florist. It gives plain and careful directions as to soil, planting aud pruning of rose bashes, the insects and dis -ases that at- tack t Item, and the choice of varieties as re- gards beauty of (lower, hardiness, etc.,conclud- ing with a full descriptivecatalogneo.’ varieties This volume will he found indispensable to professional or amateur rosarians. Eunice Lrtbrop, Spinster (New York: G. P. Putnam’s Sons: Portland: Loriug, Short & Harmon), is a remarkably bright, piquant and readable story. It is said to be written by Mrs. Annette Lucille Noble, whose former novel, Uncle Jack's Executors, was so deservedly a favorite. The same unforced liveliness, grace and distinctness are to be found in the author's newer story; and, except for the episode of the murder trial, which is a sensational element rather out of the line of the quiet brightueee of the rest of the novel—readers will enjoy the somewhat rare pleasure of a story almost with- out incident, aud with no attempt at over- subtie characterizations, ivut foil of healthy ‘and natural life. A Tallahassee Girl (Boston: J. R. Osgood & Co.; Portland: Loring, Short & Harmoa). This addition to the Round Robin Seriee amouuts to little as a story, but will serve very pleasantly as a guidebook to Florida. As to the fiction, it has an inexperienced air and is rather vaguely outlined, but its pictures of Southern landscape are good, and novel-read- ers can pass an hour or two agreeably enough in following tho fortunes of the Tallahassee Girl. Esau Runswick. By Katharine S. Maoquoli (New York: Putnam's; Portland: Loring, Short & Harmon). A finely touched story of quiet English life, written in Mrs. Macqooid’s sympathetic and practised style. It is e novel worth reading once and again. Her Picture. (Boston: Roberts Brothers; Portland: Loring. Short & Harmon). A re- ally bewitching novel of Continental sooiety, not thoroughly good form, but at once dashing and innocent. The compliments which the hero and contrc-Kiro offer to the heroine are more direct than ingenious; the heroine has no ambitious of the toilette beyond a dress by M. Worth; the novel falls short of being a tine flower of fiction, bat is of the very pretti- est of muslin roses of the Parisian milliner. It is full of life and charm, and is by far the most eutertaining novel yet published in the popular series to which it belongs. Books Received. Money Fluking for lialiei. By F.!!i Rodman Church. Cloth, 221 pp. New York: Harper * Pro thorn. Portland: Loring, Short A Harmon. Prudence. A Story of .Esthetic London. By Lucy C. Lillie. Illustrated by Ueo. Du Mauxier Cloth. 177 pp. hew York: Harper & Brothers. Portlai d: Loring, Short A Harinou. Abbott’s Young Christian. A Memorial Edi- tion, with a sketch of the author, by oue of his sons. Illustrated. Cl th,402 pp. New York: Harper Brothers. Portland: Loring, Short A Harmon. Popular Astronomy. By Simon Newcomb, LL. D„ Superintendent Amerloau Nautical Alman- ac, formerly Professor at the U. S. Naval Observa tory. With 112 Engravings and five Maps of the Stars, Fourth edition revised. Cloth, 671 pp. New York: Harper A Brothers. Portland: Lor lug. Short & Harmon. The Constitutional History of England, from «70O la ISOO. By Charles Duke Yonge. M. A., Regius Professor of Modern History, Queen’s College, Belfast, and Author of "the His- tory of the British Navy," "the Life of| Marie Antoinette,” etc. Cloth, 454 pp. New York: Harper & Brothers. Portland. Loring, Short A Harmon. A Treatise on Ihe Kese. By U. B. Ellwanger, Mount Hope Nurseries, Rochester, N. Y. Cloth, 293 pp., S1.25. New York: Dodd, Mead A Co., Portland: Loring, Short & Harmon. Till Death III Do Pari. A Novel. By Mrs. •John Kent Spender,author of “Godwyn's Ordeal,” etc. Paper, 62 pp., 29 cts. Kerf York: .Harper A Brothers. Memories of Old Ft lends, being Extracts trom the Journals and Letters of Caroline Fox. Edited by Horace N. Pym. Paper, 71 pp., 20 cents. New York: Harper & Brothers. Portland: Lor ing, Short A Harmon. Beggar .fly Neighbor. A Novel. By E. D. Gerald. Paper, 84 pp., 20 cents. New York: Harper & Brothers. Portland: Loring, Short A Harmon. The Fixed Period. A Novel. By Anthony Trollope. Paper, 31 pp., 15 cents. New York:

PORTLAND DAILY PRESS. · 2020. 8. 6. · PORTLAND DAILY PRESS. ESTABLISHED JUKE 23, 1862—YOL.19. PORTLAND, SATPUD AT MORNING, APRIL 8, 1882.__ ENTERTAINMENTS NEW PORTLAND JTIIEATRE

  • Upload
    others

  • View
    1

  • Download
    0

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: PORTLAND DAILY PRESS. · 2020. 8. 6. · PORTLAND DAILY PRESS. ESTABLISHED JUKE 23, 1862—YOL.19. PORTLAND, SATPUD AT MORNING, APRIL 8, 1882.__ ENTERTAINMENTS NEW PORTLAND JTIIEATRE

PORTLAND DAILY PRESS. ESTABLISHED JUKE 23, 1862—YOL. 19. PORTLAND, SATPUD AT MORNING, APRIL 8, 1882.__ ENTERTAINMENTS

NEW PORTLAND JTIIEATRE. Frank Curtis .Proprietor & Manager.

Positively Last Entertainment

TO-NIGHT, TO-NIGHT. House Packed to the Doors.

The acknowledged Success of the Season.

RENTZ-SANTgEY

Sovelty & Burlesque Company. First production of tho mirth-provoking Burloequo

MASH-SOT! must Laugh. You can’t help it.

Secure jour seats at the B<>x Office. apSdlt

X. -A.. XX- A.

19th ANNUAL BALL, — OF THE —

Irish American Relief Association, AT

CITY HALL. Easter Monday Night, April 10th.

Grand Co. cortfor one Ik ur by « 1* A 'V 1> I.E tt’S

BANP, commencing at 8.30 o'clock. Clothing ckecked free. Mfeic 'or dancing by €H*KIOLEKN QLA«>BIIJ.K KANO.

Refiradimeut* o' first c are quality for rale in Re-

ception Hall by Mrs. Ulmer. ....

TICKETS, admitting Gent and two I.adiok, $1 .to Ladiee' ticket, 25 cento. ■_

--- ap4dlw

GrRYlSTD TRIP TO

LEWISTON, MONDAY, APRIL 10th,

BY THE

Portland Montgomery Guards.

Exhibition Drill and Ball. TIIKETI for the round trip including ad-

mission $1.50. Tickets for sale at P. J. McCal- lam’s furnishing goods store, GOD Congress street.

ap4____dlw THEBE WILL BE AW

EASTER SALE — OF —

'Aprons & Fancy Articles At the f»«. EuUe’a Church Boom, on Con-

grrm Wired,

Monday and Tuesday, April 10th & 11th. Sp8 __

GRAND CONCERT —.AT —

CITY HYLL, Tuesday Evening, April II

FOK THE BENEFIT OF THE

MAINE GENERAL HOSPITAL, at which the following artiste have generously to!-

unteered:

91I8S ANWIE LOUISE

CAR Y, MISS RUTH LONG, contralto,

THE C EC ILIA CLUB, IHf WEBER CLIC, and tve celebrated

TEMPLE (QUARTETTE OF BOSTON, MB. HAKVEY MFHKAY, Accompanist

THKFTS $1.00. Sold at Stochbr dge’ Musitr Store hursday morning, Mart h 3‘ tli, at.»

o’clock. > umbers given out at 7. Otly six tickets

•old to one person at the opening sale. mar 2D__d™_._ CITY 1IALL,

Fast hay Afternoon and Evening, apisie I *«•*,

BOSTON ENGLISH OPERA CO. jn (Gilbert and Sullivan's .Esthetic Opera,

PATIENCE ! With Full Orchestra anil Clioru*.

Tice's at Stockbridge’s Music st re V o nlay morning. Ain ii 3d. Reserved sea * »f> an GO terns.

Admission 25 ceDts. jMutia* e -Reserved seats -G and- 3a co ts, Liiu-

fare to Matinee on Maine Central. Grand Trunk and Portland & Rochester R. R. mnoldtd

NEW PORTLAND THEATRE. Frank Curtis.Proprietor and Manager

AFTERNOON AND EVENING,

BENEFIT — OF —

mss Leila Farrell, on which oocasion will be pres nted

THE MASCOT with the following cast of characters:

BETTINA_Mina LEILA EjIBBELL Lorenzo. Chas. Green; Fiammetta, Annie Libby; Pepno (ihas. Cram: Fredrick, Annie Rogers; Rocco, Lonise Wells; Parafonte, Geo. Clark; Matteo, Ed.

Bibber; Luigi, Miss Eva Bartlett; Paolo, Miss Cora ^ Woodman; Francesca, Miss Eunice Hunter.

Sale of seats. Monday, April 10th. ap7dtd

61

Fifth Grand Assembly BY THE

CUMBERLAND ROWING ASSOCIATION, Army and Navy Hall,

THURSDAY Evening, April 15th, OTnxic by (ItUDI.ER

Admission 60 cents. ai)4dli»*

Gilbert’s Assembly Thursday Evening.

Tickets, admitting Gent with L’dies, 50 cents.

aP4 dtf

EASTER CMS r Just received, a large and

elegant assorti <int of PRANG’S and I u PORT-

ED EASTER CARDS.

CALL

FRANK B. CLARK, 515 Congress Street.

mar!) dlm

100 CARRIAGES, NEW AND ►EUOJV'D HAND,

Phaetons,Open & Top Buggies, CONCORD, GROCERY AND EXPRESS

WAGONS,

MAINE STATE PRISON. mh27_d

CLOTHES^RINCERS. Prices reduced on

“UNIVERSAL,” -NOVELTY” AND “EUREKA.”

KENDALL & WHITN EY Portland, April l»t. i*P3<m

EDUCATIONAL FRANKLIN FAMILY SCHOOL,

TOP8HAH, mi. ffIKKM begins April Util. Location delightful, I Instruction ample, thorough anti practical, with

good home influences. D. L. SMITH, Principal, marll__eodlm

instruction in English and Class- ical Studies.

Given to private pupils by the subscriber.

J. W. COLCORD, 143 Pearl Street.

Iau24 dtt

NEW

SPRING

SACKS,

Dolmans, TALMAS

and Ulsters.

In tlie above goods we are now

prepared to show as tine a line of styles as can be found in the city. Also a nice assortment of

Cloaking Material of all kinds with Trimmings to

match. New

SPRING HOSIERY in great variety for Ladies, Gents

and Children,

BUTTONS. We have just opened as Sne a

line of new Buttons to match all shades of Dress Goods and Cloak- ings as has ever be; u offered in The city.

We have just received a large assortment of made up

Lace Goods for the neck in bow and choice styles

As we have a very low rent the expense of running onr store is

very sni'd 1 and we can afford to sell any of cur gooes at

LOWER PRICES

than those doing business under a larger expense. Onr no te is “QUICK NALLS AND SHALL PROFITS.”

Learn our prices ai d you will see that we mean what we say.

Good Goods and Low Prim,

STUDLEY, M Middle Sired.

apG _

THE LARGEST STOCK OF

BABY CMIAl.ES To he found in Mew England, comprising the Mew Sleeping Coach, the Whitney Manufactur- ing co,, and other first class makes.

C. DAY, JR., & CO., No. 187 Middle Street- apS t'1 w

CALL and SEE Decker Bros Pianos. 7

indorsed by ANNIE LOUISE CARY. Also a choice stock of first-class

PIANOS AND ORGANS.

3 Free Street Mock, PORTLAND. sep29

EASIER CARDS AT

BAILEY & NOYES’, Exchange Street,

mh28 PORTLAND. dSw

WHEMLOCK BOARDS FOR SAFE.

800,000 ft. dry Hemlock Boards, Beady for immediate delivery.

address,

i> u. JORDAN, Alfred, Maine. feb26 dtf

MISCELLANEOUS

ARTIST PHOTOC HER, OPPOSITE FALMOUTH HOTEL.

Fine Portrait Work a Specialty Especial Facilities for Eife Size Crayons.

Aioai —TO PLEASE. jly7eodtf

More than One Million Copies Sold! EVERYBODY WANTS IT. Everybody Needs It.

258th Edition. (New.) Revised and Enlarged. or Self-Preservation. A Great Medical Treatise on Manhood; the ( aoM and Cure of Exhausted Vitality. Nervous and Physical llebi»;*»,,iil*o on

the Untold Miseries arisingfromthc f *^oi Ma- ture Year*. 300 paigett. Royul o ’>• linest steel engravings. 125 invaluable Prescription*, for all acute aud chronic diseases.

KfRlftllf TUVOf i E1 Bound in beautiful French Muslin, embossed, f^11 gilt, I tiNuW llllwfeLnP«,iceo«ly l ^byWaiL New Edition.) *v <f

ILllOTtW SAMPLE 6 CENTS. SEN» NOW. The Science of Life, or Sel -Preservation, is the most extraordinary work on rnjaioiogy ever puoubuea.

There is nothing whatever that the married or single of either sex can either require or wish t > know, but

what is fully explained fn short the book is invaluable to all who wish for good health.—Toronto Globe. The book for young and middle aged men to read just now is the Science of Life, or Self-Preservation. It

is worth many times its weight in gold. -Medical Times. oaQ

The author of the Science ot Life is a noble bene-actor. He reaches the very roots and vitals of disease and is enabled to apply thorough remedies. The book already is read upon both continents by millions.— L

The Gold7 ami Jewelled Medal awarded the author of the Science of Life was fairly won and worthily bestowed.—Massachusetts Ploughman. ... _ ....

Thousands of extracts similar to the above could be taken from the leading journals—literary, political, religous an 1 scientific—throughout the land. ... _

The book is guaranteed to be a better medical work, in every sense, than can be obtained elsewhere for

double the price, or the money will be refunded in every instance Thfliinau<u of Copies are *entby mail, securely scaled and pout.paid, to all parts ©I tue

world, every month, upon receipt of price, $!■£&.

Address PEABODY MEDI' AL INSTITUTE or W. H. PAEKEB, M. D. 4 Bulfluclt Sit., Boston, mass.

N. E.—Tlic author may be consulted on all disease, requiring skill and experience. Nov22eodtangl

TIB NEW ENGLAND CAILNET ORGANS Are the MOST PERFECT as well as the MOST POPULAR

INSTRUMENTS IN USE.

Let all who wish to be convinced of this TRY their

SUPERIOR TOM m ElM MU1M, then EXAMINE THEIR ELEGANT DESIGNS,

And an ORDER will INVARIABLY be the result. ^^'Instruments to rent and sold on instalments. ^^Illustrated Catalogue Mailed tree on application.

NEW ENGLAND ORGAN CO. No. 5 Free St. Block, * Portland. Me.

mar7 ** eod3mo8

NEW DEPARTURE IN CARPETS. Our first invoice of Carpetiugs having met with such a speedy sale we have

added a large variety of NEW ami DESIRABLE patterss, and are now prepared to show a flue Hue of the same in all grades from the Cheapest to the Best.

We are Determined to give the people of Portland, a substantial beneflt in the line of Carpets, and we therefore MAKE THE STATEMENT that yon can save from 1C to 20 per cent, by buying of us. It will be for your interest to examine our

Carpets and learn our prices before purchasing elsewhere.

NO OLD GOODS. Our goods are all NEW and STRICTLY FIRST-CLASS in every re-pect. Rem-

nants suitable for Mats, etc , at two thirds regular price. Give us a call. No trouble to show our goods.

GEO. A. GAY & CO., 499 Congress Street, - Corner off Brown.

mill 2 8 T.Th&Stf

_go Bmog

KENDALL & WHITNEY, mwihiti nn-a-r, A Denier* ill Timolhy, C’lover Flax* filun

If ̂ |SMk ▼ gariau, Millet, Red Top, Blue Grass, nmii VB 0Bl .DM ▼ l.nun RriM, Orchard Rrast., 1^# JLnl 9 Garden, Flower, Bird Meed*, Ac.

Market Hall, Market Square, Portland, Me. feb25 9 dtr

O pening — OF —

ANNUAL SPRING EXHIBITION DCRIN’G-

WEEK COMMENCING APRIL 3, — OF —

Elegant Family and Pleasure Carriages and Road Wagons

of latest designs and uuequaled finish, to which the inqi ciion of the riding public is respectfully so-

licited,

ZENAS THOMPSON, 32 & 38 Union Street,

ap!5 PORTLAND, ME. dlw

MILLINERY SALE M. E. & C. A. 1IAZEN,

Would call tho atteutiou of the Ladies of Portland to their

CLOSING OUT SALE At cost for the eutire season, of

MILLINERY GOODS, CoBsisting of

Hats, Ribbons, Flowers, Laces, &c.

591 CONGRESS STREET, Up Stairs.

_____ ap3eod2wis

JUST ARHIVED 1OO0 BIHHII.S SCOTCH

Champion Potatoes, 1000 Bl'MIlEI.B IRISH

Shamrock Potatoes, Good for Seed Potatoes, for sale by M-AJRTI W. BEST,

mli30(l2ff »*19 Free Street, Portland, Me.

COPARTNERSHIP.

CO-PARTNERSHIP. GEORGE H. FLETCHER is this day admitted to

onr tirm. FLETCHER A CO. Portland, April 1st, 1882. ap3dlw

Benson s -AWARDED-

Capcine Porous

-MEDALS.-

Plaster. TheBestJCno^Remed^fbr

Backache or Lame Back. Rheumatism or Lame Joints. Cramps or Sprains. Nouralsia or Kidney Diseases. Lumbago, Severe Aches or Pains Female Weakness.

Arc Superior to all other Floaters. Are Superior to Fade. Are Superior to Liniments. Are Superior to Ointments or Salves. Are superior to Electricity or galvanism They Act Immediately. They Strengthen. They Soethe. They Relieve Pain at Once. They Positively Cure.

sag | saw| sa as Benson’sCapcinePorousPlas* jj illlTiiIN ters hav«been imitsted. Do UH V I lulls not allow your druggist to

palm off some other plaster having a similar eonnding name. See that the word is spelled C-A-P-C-I-N E. Price 26 cts.

SmUag,Lfdlim» ork-

ASSl^dL»N PLASTER". ang31 S.W&wly

AN INTERESTING ACCOUNT! Stone iu the Bladder Kxpelled by tiling

Dr. Kennedy’* Favorite Remedy.” Mr. S. W. Hicks, of Pleasant Valley, Dutchess

Co., N. Y., the son of Mr. E. S. flicks, whose name

may have appeared iu this journal in connection with an article similar to this, was, like his father, afflicted with Stone in the Bladder, only that his case was more serious than his father’s. On the appearance of the disease the father advised the son to write to Dr. David Kennedy, of Rondout, N. Y., who, he said, would tell him what to do. Dr.

Kennedy replied, suggesting the use of “Kennedy’s Favorite Remedy,” which had worked so success-

fully iu the father’s case. Mr. Hicks, who had been assured by the local physicians that they could do

nothing more for him, tried “Favorite Remedy” at

a venture. After two weeks’ use of it he passed a

stone % of an inch long and of the thickness of a

pipe-stem. Since then ho has had no symptoms of the return of the troublo. Here is a sick man

healed. What better results could have been ex-

pected? What greater beuefit could medical science confer? The end was gained; that is surely enough. Dr. Kennedy assures the public, by a reputation which he canuot afford to forfeit or imperil, that the “Favorite Remedy” does invigorate the Blood, cure* Liver, Kidney and Bladder complaints, as

well as all those diseases and weaknesses peculiar to females. “Dr. Kennedy’s Favorite Remedy” for sale by all druggists.

mch25 STTh&wlm

astoriA Old Dr. Ditcher's remedy for

Children’s Complaints. 'Especially adapted to children."

Dr. Alex. Robertson, 1057 8d Av., N. Y-

'Pleasant, Harmless and Wonder/idly Efficacious." Dr. A. J. Crcen, Royerton, Ind.

/prescribe it as sup i ) any known remedy." Dr. II. A. Archer,i : Portland Av., Brooklyn.

Castoria is not narcotic. Mothers, Nurses and Doctors ngree that for Sour-Stomach, Flatulency. Diarrhoea, and Constipation, nothing is so prompt as old Dr. Pitoher’s Castoria, By assimilating the food, Castoria gives robust health and nat* oral sleep.

The Great Healing Remedy. An infallible care for Rheumatism, Sci-

atica, Neuralgia, Wounds, Burns, Sprains, Stiff Joints, Spavin, and Lameness from any cause.

P.T.Barnum, the great Showman, says “Among my vast troupe of Equestrians, Team- sters, Ilorses, Camels, and Elephants, some sro

always strained, bruised, or wounded. My Sur- geons and Yeterinaries all say, that for casual- itics to mea and animals, nothing is sc efficacious as Centaur Liniment.”

433 Fifth Av., New York, May 8th, 1875.

fob'.! 8 ,lTuT&Seow&weowly9

For a quarter of a century or more Hostetter’s Stomach bitters hsg been the reigning specific for indig&tion, dyspepsia, fever and ague a loss of physical stamina, liver complaint and other disor- ders and has been mo t empha icaUy indorsed by medical men as a health and strength restorative. It counteracts a tendency to premature decay, and sustains and comforts the aged and infirm.

For sale by all Druggists and Dealers generally.

ftpl _

T.ThS&wlm

iichingpii.es Symptoms are moisture, stinging, itching, worse at

night; seems as if pin-worms woro crawling about the rectum; the pri vate parts are often affected. Afl a

pleasant, economical and positive cure, Swathe’s Ointment is superior to any article in the market. Sold by druggists, or send 60 cts. in 3-ct Stamps. 3 Boxes, 31.26. Address, Da. 8 wayne & Son, Phlla., Pa.

Jani8 d&wly3

THIC PRESS.

SATURDAY MORNING, APRIL S.

We do not read anonymous letters and oommnn-

eations. Tlie name and addrese of the writ are in all cases Indispensable, not necessarily for nbllca- tlon but as a guaranty of good faith.

We oannot undertake to return or preterm com- munications that are not used.

Evkkv regular attache of the Pkkhs is furnished with a Card certificate signed by Stanley Pullen, Editor, All railway, steamboat and hotel managers will confer a favor upon ns by demanding credentials of every person claiming to represent our Journal.

STATE OF MAINE.

BY THE GOVERNOR.

A. [PROCLAMATION.

In accordance with a pious and time-henored oustom, come down to us from the Pilgrim Fathers, and found so suitable to our love anti veneration, I, Harris M. Planted. Governor, by and with the ad- vice and consent of the Council, do hereby appoint and set apart Thursday, the thirteenth day of April, next, as a day of humiliation, f sting and prayer. And I do recommend to the Christian people of our

State to keep this their annual fast; refrain from labor, business, amusements, and in tbeir homes and houses of public worship, humble themselves before Him whose mercy endureth forever; sup- plicating His favor upon themselvefi, the State and nation; confessing their sins and seeking forgive- ness of the same, in humility of spirit, “ft we con- fess our sit s, He is faithlul and just to forgive us our sins and to cleanse us from all unrigbteous- nesi^.,,

Given at the Council Chamber at Augusta this tbirty-iirst day of March, in the year of our Lord one thousand eight hundred and

eighty-two, and of the Independence of the United States of America the one hundred and sixth.

Habbis M. Plaistkd. By the Governor.

Joseph O. Smith, Secretary of State.

As a Vestal Virgin. It is difficult to kill a Democratic leader—

so that ho will stay dead—,as the Democrat- ic party has often found to its sorrow.

That political organization has been engaged busily for many years now in attempting to

rid itself of men who have led it to defeat, or who because of their incompetency or

unpopularity, or other “outs,” were consid- ered unfit to run a political race. So these men have been politically slaughtered, wakes have been held over them, and they have been buried deep under ground. Grass has sprouted and flourished over the

mounds, and other signs of decomposition have made themselves manifest. But the

official period of mourning has not long ex-

pired before the corpses burst the cerements of the grave, walk among living men, pre- sent themselves at Demoei atic leasts, and demand a nomination for something.

The latest who has resurrected himself is

Samuel J. Tilden, buried at Cincinnati in

1880. He rises to express his kindly approv- al of Thomas Jefferson, and to modestly intimate that he is willing to become Jeffer- son’s successor. This he does in a letter to

the New Haven Democrats, tactfully pre- ferring letter-writing to an appearance be-

fore them while the smell of the soil still clings to his shroud. He warns 'them in a

voice that is anything but ghostly that this

government i3 changing into “an elective

despotism” (whatever that is) and “med-

dling in everything belonging to the Statej or to individuals —doubtless referring to

Income tax suits and the like. He ex-

presses his conviction of the necessity of

keeping alive “the glimmering spark of vir-

tue and public honor,” and intimates that

he is the fellow best fitted by nature and training to take charge of that job.

From all this it plainly appears that Mr.

Tildeu has crawled out of the grave and into the light of publicity; that during his

interment he has been transformed into

something rich and strange, making his ap-

pearance this time in the role of a vestal

virgin, and that the Democratic party isn't

rid of him, as it fondly hoped. Those who

were thinking things have changed .since

Sammy died are rudely roused from their

unsubstantial dream. Mr. Tildeu is the livest man in the party.

Some interesting statistics of the vast coal industries of Pennsylvania for 1881 are just issued from the office of the Secretary of In- ternal Affairs. In the anthracite regions 319 collieries have been in operation, employing 75,169 hands and turning out 27,929,128 tons

at a cost of $29,454,781 in wages, or $1.06.55 per ton. There were 382 bituminous collier- ies in operation during the year, which pro- duced 15,692,923 tons of bituminous coal, at

a cost in wages of $14,540,057, an average of half a mill over 92 cents per ton. In the an-

thracite collieries the employes worked on

the average a trifle over 275 days during the

year and produced 373.14 tons each, earning on the average $397.58 in wages, or a frac-

tion more than $1.44 for each working day. In the bituminous mines the workmen had an average of 217 days’ work during the year and produced 442.37 tons each, earning an

average total of $407.20, or a little over $1.87 for each working day. As a large propor* tion of the employes are “helpers,” or boys under age, who are under age, who are paid small wages, the actual earnings of adult miners are of course considerably in excess

of the average shown by the statistical re-

turns. _

The first victory recorded for the Repub- licans occurred in September, 1855, in the State election of Vermont, which was gained by a fusion with the Whigs in the election of Gov. Royce by a large majority, but at the election on the same month in Maine the new party sustained a defeat. In October, 1855, in Ohio, Salmon P. Chase was elected Governor by 15,220 plurality over William Medill, Democrat, Chase receiving the sup- port of both tUe Republican and American

parties. Twenty-nine Republicans and six

Democrats were elected to the Ohio Senate, and eighty Republicans and thirty-one Dem-

ocrats to the House.

Monsignoii CArEi., whose first appear- ance was made among the dukes and duch- esses of Disraeli's “Lothair,” is now discov- ered in Koine hig with the fate of the future of the British relations with the Vatican. If

Koman gossip can be believed he is to take

up the taugled web of Pontifical diplomacy and rehabilitate the friendly mission of the

Papacy to the Court of the infidel. If any

prelate in the Curia; is capable of this deli-

cate business, the astute propagandist of the

English aristocracy may be trusted to bring it about—for his endowments are the high- est expression of Italian diplomacy and Eng- lish breeding.

Washington special’s description of Van Wyck's speech: Shortly after 2 this afternooD

the Senate was startled by a wild, inhuman cry, and there followed a medley of piercing shrieks and howls of a variety never before heard in the Senate. The spectators who were at first appalled by the noise, soon

learned that there was no real danger. The cause of the uproar was the earnest effort of “the wild man from Nebraska,” as Senator Van Wyck is playfully called by his associ- ates, to convey to the Senate the idea that he

was opposed to the Tariff Commission bill.

The Supreme Court of the United States upholds the right of the State of Texas to

tax telegraph messages within its own lim-

its, but denies its right to tax messages which originate or go outside the State, as

that belongs to inter-State commerce, and denies also the right of the State to tax mes-

j sages sent by agents of the government as

an unconstitutional interference witli the

execution of the government’s powers. Texas has taxed all messages one cent each.

The Baltimore Medical and Surgical So-

ciety have refused to admit a' colored physi- cian to membership. The rejected candi- date is Dr. Whitfield Winsey, a graduate of the Harvard Medical School. Several phy- sicians testified that Dr. Winsey was aa in-

telligent and experienced surgeon and phy- sician, and a doctor who had been in the rebel army declared that his politics would never interfere with his recognition of sci- entific merits in a colored man. Twenty- five ballots were cast, and seven negative votes (five causing a rejection) were given.

The new five cent postage stamp, which will probably be hereafter known as “the Garfield stamp,” will be issued by the post office department and placed on sale at alp post offices throughout the country on the 10th inst. Mrs. Garfield was consulted con-

cerning every detail, and the portrait, is be- lieved to be the best extant of the late Pres-

ident.

Mu. Tn.DEN wrote a long letter to the New Haven Democrats who celebrated Jef- ferson’s birthday, but Gen. Hancock's letter

was “short and merely formal.” Perhaps Gen. Hancock considers Jefferson’s birth “a local issue ”

The petition for the pardon of Sergeant Mason, prepared by the Garfield club of New York, is over a mile in length, and con-

tains over 350,000 names.

Stxxv thousand bushels of seeds were dis- tributed last week among the sufferers by the forest fires in Michigan.

(Interview in Providence Journal.] A Lion-Tamer’s Experience.

First Entrance Into a Lion’s Cage- Breaking In a Ferocious Throe-Year Old.

_

“While with Robinson's circus,” said Mr.

Neylan, “I became acquainted with Bill Rey- nolds the well known lion performer, and be- came a favorite with him. He was growing old and was taken ill quits frequently, thereby necessitating the withdrawal of ,that feature in the entertainment. I was in the habit of play*, ing with the lions outside the cage, and one

day I asked Archie McCarty, the boss canvass-

man, who had charge of the cage, if he would let me go inside. He laughed at me, and in- sinuated that I would back out mighty quick. I looked about for a cowhide, and being un-

able to find one, substituted a broom liaudle and started in. Thero wero two lions in the

cage, and a tiger, the famous lion, Old Prince, the pet lioness, Jennie, aud£a beautiful tiger of maguilicent proportions. Old Prince was a

stubborn, bull-headed creature, and meant mis- chief every time. 1 was about sixteen yoars of

age at tbi3 time, and was in good physical cen-

ditiou. The moment I entered the animals re-

garded mo as an intruder, and Old Prince com-

menced to assume a war-like deportment. I belabored him vigorously with the broom

handle, mantaming my self-possession and

nerve, and ere I left the cage ho was humbly submissive, and, with the other animals, would

promptly do my bidding. I informed the

manager that I had found a substitute for

Reynolds, and would produce him that night. The cage was drawu into the ring, and at the

appointed time I appeared, greatly to the sur-

prise and bewildorment of the manager. As I started toward the cage ho shouted: “Como

away, you iooi, you a got oaten up. sir.

weut on with the performance, aud the ani- mals behaved beautifully. At anothor time Robinson bad a young lion, three years of age, of great strength and ferocious disposition. I determined to break him, ami selecting an

empty cage with two partitions, I had it drawn into the woods one Sunday, and had a terrible encounter with him for thre< hours. The eu-

raged beast refused to obey the lasb, at.d it be- came necessary to use hot irons instead of raw-

hide. After ho had been subdued I petted him fora time and furnished him with asnbstan- tial meal, aud we became the best of friends. All the clothing I wore at the close of the en- counter was a pair of stockings and a waist- band to my shirt. I subsequently broke an-

other pair for Robinson, and bad a tongb tassel with them, but nothing in comparison with the throe years old.

Mr. Xe\!.in was asked if he had ever found Uinrseli pi extreme peril.

“Well, yes," replied .Ur Nevlau. “1 was

placed once in a most unuomfot table situation Jennie, the pet lioness, was with young, ami one day 1 had occasion to enter her cage to

repair it. The sound of the hammer employed in driving nails appeared to frignten her, and suddenly she fastened her teeth upon the calf of my leg. I had the presence of mind to let her alone, although she was tearing my flesh terribly, and seizing my hammer I watched my opportunity, when she had caught my wrist between her teeth, and thrust the handle down her throat, choking off her hold. Then she sought to leap upon me, and stripped me of my clothing, beside leaving the bloody imprint of her claws upon my back. The blows of the hammer did not seem to have any effect, and at an opportune moment, one of the keepers, seeing my predicament, Beized an iron bar and belabored her vigorously, while I kept accom- paniment with my hammer. We conquered her at last, aud X left the cage to dress my- self and my wounds. She never distnrbed me

again, and was alwavs gentle and tractable. Once, previous to this, Jennie knocked me

down, and Old Prince evidently intended to make a meal of me, but my good fortune and courage did not desert me, and I whipped them both into subjectiou with my cowhide.

“The best time to begin to break lions,” said Mr. Neylan, “is when they are cabs of eight to ten months growth. My practice was to devote an hour a day in training, al« ays exercising them on empty stomachs and feeding them im- mediately afterward; if the animal is tractable and submissive he should be treated kindly, but if he is inclined to be stubborn and ugly, then you must obtain the mastery by a vigor- ous use of the cowhide. They are inclined tc be treacherous even when the most frolicsome and gentle, and it can be shown that the ma-

jority of lion performers who have been killed, have" allowed too much liberty to their pets. The objective point of the cowhide is the face and eye, to blind and confnse them, and they smart and are forced into retirement by a vig- orous flagellation. It mast Hot be thought for an instant that one can loek them steadily iu the eye, and thus disarm them. The lion does become somewhat blinded by a steady gaze, but the moment he lowers his head and gives it an ominous shake, then look for danger, and the more promptly the lash is applied the bet- ter. The tiger is more treacherously iuclined than the lion, and more difficulty is exper- ienced iu their training Ihave trained Asiatic, African and Mexican lions, aud some of them have developed remarkable power of intelli- gence and sagacity.

Rosecrans and Garfield. The Washington correspondent of the demo-

cratic Louisville Courier-Journal, an intimate friend aud warm admiror of Garfield, iu refer-

siug to the malignity of the foes of the dead President in publishing his letters sines his

death, aud the Rosecrans letter iu particular, says:

“How easy it is to distort the meaning, the motives, of lettors twenty years old. For ray part, 1 don’t know ’Rosey,’ as they call him, aud perhaps for that reason I don’t like him. 1 think his appointment to the head of the democratic congressional committee was a fol- ly oloselv hordoring on an outrage, and cliarac- eristic of the idiots who represent the demo- cratic party, perennially, in Congress. The beauty of it is that few of them survive from one Congress to another to tell the tale. But this, apart, the effort to foist Gen. Rosecrans’ war record upon the democratic party, aud to elevate him in consequence as a democratic nominee for President—aud ovur the prostrate and degraded form of the dead Garfield, is the most unchivalrio and the stupedist political maueuvre 1 ever heard of. X remember very well when the Ohio democrats nominated kirn for governor, a> u got for their pains an insult. If anybody is to be taken from the Pacific coast (much as I deprecate the idea of admitting po- litical possibilities into the judiciary) I am for Judge Field, a great man and a good man, not for Geu. Rosecrans, whom I associate aad con-

found with Bragg, as a hero of lost opportuni- ties, lacking the sympathies of civil life and identification with the instincts of the people.”

Magazine Notices.

The numbers of The Living Age for -March

31st aud April 8th contain Sir Charles Lyell, Quarterly; Monkeys, aud The Vistas of the

Past in the Moon and the Earth, Contempora. ry; Miss Ferrier's Novels, and The Yellowstone

Geysers, Nineteenth Century; How Gilbert

Sherrard Fated in the Flood, and The Poetry of Dante Gabriel Rossetti, Fraser; Destruction

of Egyptian Monuments, Blackwood; Jane

Austin. Temple Bar; March iu the Country, Saturday Review; Ou the Whale Fishery of

the Basque Provinces of Spain, and American

Ants, Nature; A Famous Quaker School, All

the Year Round; with instalments of The Freres aud Robin, aud the usu .1 amount of po- etry.

Recent Publications.

Popular Astronomy. I5y Simon Newcomb, LL. D. (New York: Harpers). In the present edition of this valuable and deservedly popular work, the author has added chapters concern-

ing the transit of Venus, some cometary dis- coveries and other notes, so that the reader

may bo possessed of the latest facts and theories

concerning the heavenly bodies as viewed from the earth, Thus the fourth edition Improves upon the third, which, however, had received such additions beyond the subject matter of the second as science, up to Its date, had af- forded. Professor Newcomb writes in a digni- fied style, a happy medium between the read-

ing-made-easy and the over-technical. He se-

lects with great judgment the portions of bis

subject which will instruct and please the pop- ular mind—that is to say, the intelligent body of readers, not specialists in science, but desir-

ing sound, clear and sufficiently minute ac-

quaintance with the course and progress of modern knowledge. The history and philoso- phy of Astronomy are fully treated, while its technical side is made less prominent, and a

glossary is added to explain the terms which

might not otherwise be understood. Ancient

Astronomy, the System according to Coperni- cus, Gravitation, Practical Astronomy, the So-

lar System and Stellar Universe are heads an

der which are grouped interesting and fully il- lustrated chapters.

Science and Culture. By Thomas Henry Huxley, LL. D., F. R. S. (New York: D. Ap- pleton & Co). A volume made up o( thirteen

essays, written during the past seven yean by Professor Huxley, delivered before various so-

cieties and clnbs, and which afterwards ap- peared in magazines and reviews. The range of their topics js that in which Professor Hux-

ley is at home and effective, and the large alien tele of readers that he is sure of addressing with each fresh volume, will welcome the present collection of essays.

The Brain and Its Functions. By J. Luys, Physician to the Hospice de la Salpetri£ro (New York: D. Appleton & Co.; Portland: Hoyt, Fogg & Donham). This volume of the Scientific Series treats of the anatomy ef the brain, the sensibilities and propertisa of the nerves and of cerebral processes and phe- nomena. It is especially salted to scientists, bat the general reader will find the work clear in style and containing passages of interesting notes upon mental conditions.

Physical Education. By Felix L. Oswald, M. D. (New York: D. Appleton Sc Co.; Port- land: Hoyt, Fogg & Donham). This Tolnma contains some good suggestions as to iresh alr> exercise, etc., but is vsry greatly discounted by its excited and unbalanced style and its crotch-

ety theories; and it lacks the moderate and ja- dicious tone which science and observation would give to the remarks of a reliable and sound practitioner.

Money-Makiog for Ladies. By Ella Rod- man Church (New York: Harpers). A very readable and attractive little volume, giving hints as to various ways in which ladies may wort and increase their limited incomes with- out entering the ranks of professional workers. It frequently happens that boms duties or oth- er reasons may prevent a woman from giving *ke time needed for steady w ork at a profession or trade, or for leaving her house for tlio dura- tion of business boars. It is for the benefit of suck partially employed womea that Mrs. Church writes this friendly little book, and points out various suitable occupations in a

practical and eminently pleasant manner. It is full of good suggestions, and will win for tha author thanks and liking of many women who will profit by its hints.

a

TbeRose. ByH. B. Eilwanger (New York:

Dodd, Mead & Co ). This tistsfa! volume is written in tlio interests of rose cultivators, by a practical florist. It gives plain and careful directions as to soil, planting aud pruning of rose bashes, the insects and dis -ases that at-

tack t Item, and the choice of varieties as re-

gards beauty of (lower, hardiness, etc.,conclud- ing with a full descriptivecatalogneo.’ varieties This volume will he found indispensable to

professional or amateur rosarians.

Eunice Lrtbrop, Spinster (New York: G. P. Putnam’s Sons: Portland: Loriug, Short &

Harmon), is a remarkably bright, piquant and readable story. It is said to be written by Mrs. Annette Lucille Noble, whose former novel, Uncle Jack's Executors, was so deservedly a

favorite. The same unforced liveliness, grace and distinctness are to be found in the author's newer story; and, except for the episode of the murder trial, which is a sensational element rather out of the line of the quiet brightueee of the rest of the novel—readers will enjoy the somewhat rare pleasure of a story almost with- out incident, aud with no attempt at over-

subtie characterizations, ivut foil of healthy ‘and natural life.

A Tallahassee Girl (Boston: J. R. Osgood & Co.; Portland: Loring, Short & Harmoa). This addition to the Round Robin Seriee amouuts to little as a story, but will serve very pleasantly as a guidebook to Florida. As to

the fiction, it has an inexperienced air and is rather vaguely outlined, but its pictures of Southern landscape are good, and novel-read- ers can pass an hour or two agreeably enough in following tho fortunes of the Tallahassee Girl.

Esau Runswick. By Katharine S. Maoquoli (New York: Putnam's; Portland: Loring, Short & Harmon). A finely touched story of

quiet English life, written in Mrs. Macqooid’s sympathetic and practised style. It is e novel worth reading once and again.

Her Picture. (Boston: Roberts Brothers; Portland: Loring. Short & Harmon). A re-

ally bewitching novel of Continental sooiety, not thoroughly good form, but at once dashing and innocent. The compliments which the hero and contrc-Kiro offer to the heroine are

more direct than ingenious; the heroine has no

ambitious of the toilette beyond a dress by M. Worth; the novel falls short of being a

tine flower of fiction, bat is of the very pretti- est of muslin roses of the Parisian milliner. It is full of life and charm, and is by far the most eutertaining novel yet published in the

popular series to which it belongs.

Books Received. Money Fluking for lialiei. By F.!!i Rodman

Church. Cloth, 221 pp. New York: Harper * Pro thorn. Portland: Loring, Short A Harmon.

Prudence. A Story of .Esthetic London. By Lucy C. Lillie. Illustrated by Ueo. Du Mauxier

Cloth. 177 pp. hew York: Harper & Brothers. Portlai d: Loring, Short A Harinou.

Abbott’s Young Christian. A Memorial Edi-

tion, with a sketch of the author, by oue of his

sons. Illustrated. Cl th,402 pp. New York: Harper <£ Brothers. Portland: Loring, Short A Harmon.

Popular Astronomy. By Simon Newcomb, LL. D„ Superintendent Amerloau Nautical Alman-

ac, formerly Professor at the U. S. Naval Observa tory. With 112 Engravings and five Maps of the Stars, Fourth edition revised. Cloth, 671 pp. New York: Harper A Brothers. Portland: Lor lug. Short & Harmon.

The Constitutional History of England, from «70O la ISOO. By Charles Duke Yonge. M. A., Regius Professor of Modern History, Queen’s College, Belfast, and Author of "the His-

tory of the British Navy," "the Life of| Marie

Antoinette,” etc. Cloth, 454 pp. New York:

Harper & Brothers. Portland. Loring, Short A Harmon.

A Treatise on Ihe Kese. By U. B. Ellwanger, Mount Hope Nurseries, Rochester, N. Y. Cloth, 293 pp., S1.25. New York: Dodd, Mead A Co., Portland: Loring, Short & Harmon.

Till Death III Do Pari. A Novel. By Mrs. •John Kent Spender,author of “Godwyn's Ordeal,” etc. Paper, 62 pp., 29 cts. Kerf York: .Harper A Brothers.

Memories of Old Ft lends, being Extracts trom the Journals and Letters of Caroline Fox. Edited by Horace N. Pym. Paper, 71 pp., 20 cents.

New York: Harper & Brothers. Portland: Lor

ing, Short A Harmon.

Beggar .fly Neighbor. A Novel. By E. D. Gerald. Paper, 84 pp., 20 cents. New York:

Harper & Brothers. Portland: Loring, Short A

Harmon. The Fixed Period. A Novel. By Anthony

Trollope. Paper, 31 pp., 15 cents. New York:

Page 2: PORTLAND DAILY PRESS. · 2020. 8. 6. · PORTLAND DAILY PRESS. ESTABLISHED JUKE 23, 1862—YOL.19. PORTLAND, SATPUD AT MORNING, APRIL 8, 1882.__ ENTERTAINMENTS NEW PORTLAND JTIIEATRE

SATURDAY MORJflKG, APRIL S.

Harper & Brothers. Portland: Loring, Short & Harmon.

Her Picture. No Name Series. Clotli, 428 pp.,

$1. Boston: Roberts Brothers. Portland: Lor-

ing, Short & Harmorif The Social Law of Labor. By William B.

Weeden. Cloth, 308 pp., $1.50. Boston: Rob- erts Brothers. Portland: Loring, Short & Har-

mon.

Comparative Edition of the New Teeta-

mmt. Cloth, 690 pp. Philadelphia: Porter & Coates.

Count Sylviue. A Romance. From the German

of Georg Horn, by M. J. Salford. Cloth, 463 pp. New York: George YY. Harlan.

The Bhymaler. A Guide to English Versifica- tion. By the late Tom Hood. Edited by Authur Penn. Cloth, 208 pp. New York: D. Appleton & Co. Portland :-Hoyt: Eogg & Donham.

History .f France. By Charlotte M. Yonge. Cloth, 122 pp. New York: D. Appleton & Co.

* Portland: Hoyt, Fogg & Donham.

Physical Education; or the Health Laws

of Nature. By Felix I.. Oswald, M. D. Cloth, 267 pp. SI. New York: D. Appleton & Co. Portland: Hoyt, Fogg & Donham.

Science and Culmre, and Othtr Essayt. By Thomas Henry Huxley. Cloth, 367 pp., 81.60. New York: D. Appleton & Co. Portland: Hoyt, Fogg & Donham.

The Brain and II. Functioua. By J. Buys. Y'ol. XXXIX. International Scientifio Series.

Cloth, Illustrated, 327 pp., $1.50. New York:

D. AppletonA Co. Arthur Bonnicantle. An American Novel. By

J. G. Holland. Cloth, 422 pp., SI.25. New York: Charles Scribner’s Sons. Portland: Loring, Short & Harmon.

The Bay-Path. A Tale of New England Col- onial Life. By J. G. Holland, Cloth, 408 pp., $1.25. New York: Charles Scribner’s Sons, Portland: Loring, short & Harmon,

Struck by a Train. Last evening about 11.30 o'clock a man nam-

ed Warren Brown was found lying upon the

Eastern railroad track a few yards east of Cape Elizabeth depot. Ho was taken to the Maine

General Hospital where it was found ho had

sustained a compound fracture of the arm,

also a severe scalp wound about seven inches

in length. It is supposed the man was struck

by the Pullman coming east.

METEOROLOGICAL. indications foe the next twenty-four

HOURS.

War Dep’t Office Chief Signal Officer, Washington, D. C.,

April 8, 1 A. M. For New England,

Fair weather, northerly shifting to easterly winds, higher barometer and lower temper- ature. ^

BY TELEGRAPH. MAINE.

TERRIBLE DEATH.

A Man Caught in a Fly Wheel and Ter- ribly Mangled.

Pittsfield, April'.7.—Thursday afternoon, Mr. Charles Morrill of this place while sawing wood by horse power was caught in a fly wheel

and severely mangled, breaking his left leg in

two places, and nearly severing it from his bo-

dy. He lived only a few hoars.

MASSACHUSETTS.

A Father Kills His Son. So. Framingham, April 7.—Patriek Skolley

of Hopkinton this morning murdered his 16

year old son with au axe. The murderer was

brought here this forenoon and arraigned in the District Court on the charge of murdering his son. He promptly pleaded guilty to the charge and freely expressed his sorrow. The justice gave him an opportunity to change his plea, but he did not do it. He was taken to the House of Correction without bail to await further trial.

A Murder in Self Defense. Boston, April 7.—James Ross, a seaman on

schooner John Bird of Rockland, Maine, who has been on trial in the United States district court for manslaughter in killing a shipmate, George Dickson in Cienfuegus was acquitted this afternoon on grounds of self defense.

NEW YORK.

Another Objection to Dakota. Nkw York, April 7.—The State Executive

Committee of the Woman Suffrage party last night instructed its chairman to memoralize Congress in behalf of the party against the ad- mission of Dakota with its women disfranchised and calling on the New York Senators and Representators to oppose that State’s Admis- sion unless suffrage is secured its women.

XLVIIth Congress-lst Session.

HOUSE. Washington, April 7.

Mr. Ellis of La., preseuted a memorial of the mayor and several commercial bodies of New Orleans, praying for congressional action on the Mississippi levee bill. Referred.

On motion of Mr. Randall of Peonsylvania, a bill was passed, relieving from the ebarge of desertion soldiers in the volunteer service during the late war, on proof that they served faithfully until the expiration of their term of enlistment, or until May 1, 1805, but who failed to be mustered „out and receive honora- ble discharge.

Mr. Blackburn of Kentucky, offered a reso-

lution directing the committee on expenditures in the War Department to inquire if any abuses exist or have existed in adjudication of claims in the Quartermaster General’s, Com- missary General’s and Third Auditor’s offices, and report their findings, together with such recommendation as it may deem proper in the settlement of such claims.

Mr. Robeson of New Jersey, offered as a

substitute a similar resolution, but with a pre- amble reciting that it had been asserted on the floor of the House by a member that he had evidence iu bis possession which showed that certain clerks of the government had acted fraudulently and corruptly.

Mr. Robeson advocated his substitute, de- claring that be was not willing to order an in- vestigation on mere idle rumors, but after de- bate, he modified his preamble so as to read, “Whereas, it has been publicly declared by a

member of this House, on this floor, that there are reasonable grounds to believe,” etc. This was accepted by Mr. Blackburn, as an amend- ment to his resolution, which was thereon adopted.

The House, at 2,05, went into committee of the whole on the tariff commission bill.

Mr. Haskell advocated the passage of the bill, and made an exhaustive argument in sup- port of the protective system.

The committee, at 4 30, rose, and the House took a recess until 7.30, tne evening session be- ing for consideration of pdnsion hills.

But a few members were present when the House met at 7.30. After passing 17 pension bills the House, at 9.40, adjourned.

POLITICAL.

Oregon Democrats Denounce the Presi- dent’s Veto—Their State Ticket.

Saw Fbancisco, April 7 —The Oregon Dem- ocratic Convention adopted resolutions to da; demanding legislative regulation of railroads; tariff reform; attributing the assassination of President Garfield to the Repnblicau spoils system; denouncing polygamy; favoring re-

peal of navigation laws; and demanding that the congressional delegation do its utmost to seoure an appropriation for Oregon river and harbor improvements The resolution on the Chinese question is as follows:

That the President’s veto of the Chinese immigra- tion bill is a public misfortune. It sets a degrading mark of competitio wiih coolies from China upon the labor and workingmen of America; it treats with contemptuous derision the unanimous protests and appeals of the entire Pacific coast. On behalf of the people of Oregon we disapprove and con- demn it, and declare It to be the duty of every citi- zen regardless of party to express his disapproval with Us vote as well as with his voice.”

The ticket complete is as follows: Secretary of 8tate, J. K. Weathersford; Treasurer, H. Abraham; Superintendent of Instruction, W. H Worthington: State Printer, Wilbur Cor- nell; Supreme Judge, Edward Shattuck.

THE SALEM FIRE.

Caused by the Explosion of au Oil Can, Boston, April 7.—The fire in the Eastern

railroad depot at Salem, Mass., was got under control at 4 a. m., bat not nntil it had destroy- ed the entire wood work of the building, in-

cluding the offices, waiting room, telegraph offices and baggage rooms with baggage. The cause of the tire is supposed to have been the explosion of a can of oil nnder the stairs in the baggage room. The loss will be fully 5560,- 000; insurance not given.

A Garfield Five Dollar Note. Washington, April 7.—The comptroller of

the currency has with the approval of the Secretary of the Treasury decided to issue five dollar national baDk notes upon a new plate, the principal features which will be au en-

graved head of the late President Garfield with portions of the note and particularly in the border so identity of the note may be easily ascertained.

__

Failures for the Week. NrwYork, April 7.- -The failures for seven

days as reported to R. G. Dun & Co., number 127, of which the Eastern states tarnish 18.

THE PERUVIAN COMPANY.

Shipherd and the Foreign Affairs Committee.

BITTER FEELING MANIFESTED TO-

WARD GEN. HURLBUT.

Washington, April 7.—Mr. Shipherd was

promptly in attendance at the rooms of the Foicign Affairs Committee, at 2 o’clock, ac-

companied, as usual, by his wife. Mr. Rice asked him. “Was it not the iutou-

tion of your clients to offer the Presidency of the Peruvian Company to Gen. Grant?”

Shipherd replied that it had been, but fear- ing from Grant’s letter to Senator Jones there might not be perfect harmony between Gen. Grant and President Garfield, it was not deemed advisable to adhere to their original in- tention.

Q.—Senator Conkling was one of your coun-

sel? A.—Not at that time, but afterwards. Q.— Aud your relations with Grant after-

wards became more harmonious? A.—Afterwards, we had conferences with

him. Q.—The prospectus you sent to the Presi-

dent did you send to any members of Congress? A.—My impression is that the copies sent to

members of Congress were chiefly sent to Sen- ators.

Being turtner pressed on mis point, anu at

first declining to give names, lie finally men-

tioned Hewitt of New York. Hewitt sent him a very courteous, verbal response, by a young man wlio took the papers to him, and to the best of his recollection that was the totality of all the negotiations he had with any member of the House of Representatives.

Quoting part of witness’s testimony on

Wednesday, Mr. Rice asked him whether he bad any other reasons than those then stated, for believing in advance what he aliirrjjed he d d b ; e re of Gen. Hurlbut?

\\ ituesa—I have Gen. Hurlbut’s letters, and some correspondence that is closely affiliated with them. Witness thereupon produced sev-

eral letters from Mr. Hurlbut, which were read. Two of these, dated Belvidere, 111., urge Ship- herd to obtain from the department official in- structions for his (Hurlbut’s) guidance, as

without these he cannot act. The others, dat- ed at Lima, urge that legal evidence in sup- port of the Peruvian company's claims, be for- warded to him, as otherwise he can take no

steps. In the last lettor, dated Lima, Nov. 23, 18S1

Hurlbut notifies Shipherd he will hold no fur- ther correspondence with him. He says, “You have failed wholly to furnish me with any proof, although requested, and have re-

peatedly written that instructions were sent or

to be sent, which I have never received. The t«ne of your letters is disagreeable, and I do not wish further communication.” Five of witness’ own letters to Mr. Hurlbut were then produced by him and read. One, of Oct. 19th, mentions documents that are enclosed and speaks of letters that were delivered through “Hon. Geo. S. Boutwell, the compa- ny’s attorney at Washington,” and says, “I have just returned from Washington, whither I went to show the Secretary your letter to me of Sept 12th, and take his advice upon it. He agrees with me in the confident belief you have somehow widely misapprehended funda- mentally material facts and issues, and will join me in the endeavor to set you right. I will endeavor to contribute something towards the result for transmission by next steamer. In the meantime I beg to remind yourself what you seem to have so far totally forgotten, that your first and most important official duty ex

virtute offici, is not to help Peru, but to look out tor American interests. I do not, for a

moment, hesitate to use this frankness in speaking as I do for a citizen to a citizen. The extraordinary attitude you have thought fit to take in judgment of my associates, warrants

unqualified frankness and I rely upon your good sense not to mistake frankness for rude- ness.” The next letter is dated Nov. 7th and says: “I was In Washington several days last w eek and improved the opportunity to get the views of friends there including the Secretary of State. All approved the precise position taken. An American protectorate was direct- ly discussed and received with general favor. If Calderon should directly apply for it I think Congress would approve the application, but only on the ground that the large private American interests there need protection. It could not be popularized on any other footing, and Calderon should base his application directly and chiefly on this ground if he makes one.

Id reply to questions Sbipheru said Scott Lord and ex-Senator Eaton were the only two of at least half dozen equally intelligent gen- tlementwho expressed to him their indepen- dent judgment or correspondence which coin- cided with his own. Shipherd continued: During the summer we found opportunity to communicate directly with Calderon, Presi- dent of Peru. It was by correspondence ad- dressed to Arizola who stood very near to Calderon. I enclosed the correspondence to Gen. Hurlbut with a request to have it de- livered presuming on his courtesy. The letter was written by a gentleman who was here as an official representative of Peru, and as a

matter of fact he was addressing his own

chief in the interest of Peru exclusively and suggesting how Peru might avail herself of this promise oi an opportunity to get out from under the power of Chili. That was the nature of the correspondence I entrusted to the minister, and I placed before him in a

separate communication substantially the whole letter so that he might see what the business was. Mr. Hurlbut replied saying, “I have received sealed letter and documents and the letter has been delivered.” I shall produce before the committee a letter from Arizola to his correspondent deploring the fact that the documents were not delivered with the letter because the letter without docu- ments was unintelligible. That was the first fact which attracted my attention but it seem- ed to me infinitely significant.

I stated the facts to Mr. Lord, who was fa- miliar with the correspondence that had been sent, and I gave him Hurlbut’s letter to read without comments. He read it, handed it back to me and with a voice trembling with emotion said, "Hurlbut is a double dammed, deeply dyed villain. That is my opinion in the premises.” He went on to say, “There is no conceivable reason why Gen. Hurlbut should have separated these documents from this letter unless he intends to get in between you and Calderon and to prevent your dealing with him.” Ex-Senator Eaton was consulted and the facts laid before him and he gave sub- stantially the same opinion and in very strong terms. At least four other gentlemen equally intelligent and capable of forming independ- ent opinions expressed the same opinion (that Hurlbut was certainly inserting himself be- tween me and Calderon with an intention of defeating negotiations and preventing our

dealings with him.) Mr. Bice—Have you stated what those docu-

ments were? Witness—My recollection is they were our

prospectus copy of “Truth demonstrated” and probably copies of our proposed agreement with Peru and of a plan for a sinking fnnd and other features of correspondence which ran

through all Hurlbut’s letters that there was an

utter inability of Hurlbut to find anything in this case. He examined our case here but sug- gested no difficulty or objection whatever until after he got down on the ground. His very first letter from there indicates he could see nothing in the case at all. He repeatedly sug-

fested we should. send somebody down there. 'his was what amazed and confunded my

clients and my counsel. Hurlbut is the only lawyer who has seen any difficulty in finding a

case, and at the same time he was ready on cer- tain conditions to help push it forward. One condition wasj that an order |must come from Washington, and the other was that he must have somebody there to co-operate with him. Each of these suggestions by itself is one of the most proper and innocent things but taken in connection with two facts—first, that he in serts himself absolutely between us and Pres- ident Calderon in order to attempt to defeat our trade with the Peruvian government; and second, that be was not able to find anything in the case after he got there, while in May he had found it perfect and i|i June found no fault with it—these facts I say made a pro- found impression on my mind and on that of every gentleman associated with me and with whom I consulted in the matter. There is another point. When Secretary Blaine sent me his letter of December lid and I then for the first time was made aware that somebody in our about the state Department proiesseo to be Bbocked by a letter of Jane 2d which I sent to Hurl hurt, the question arose if Hurlbut understood that let- ter to be a suggestion of improper overture to him. It is incredible he not only should have retained it in silence through all these months but that he should have continued the correspondence with me in which no allusion or suggestion is made that anything Improper has been done by me. That was the third point that impressed itself deeply on our minds and the impression in my mind was this—eith- er Mr. Hurlbut is net actiug in good faith in professing now to think this is a corrupt over-

ture, or hoped when we sent a man to Lima he might be sent there with instructions enabling him to give tne effect of corruptly to that pro- position. We seemed shut up to those two al- ternatives.

Shiplierd submitted a letter which he wrote to Walker Blaine last August, asking him to interest himself in the affairs of the Peruvian company. To this letter he never received a

direct reply, but Senator Blair told him a few days after the letter was sent that the Secreta- ry had expressed a wish that no farther corres-

pondence on the subject be addreBsed to his as-

sistants in the department. Adjourned. _

A Blind Man Steals $100,000. Chicago, April 7.—A La Salle dispatch

Bays that F. Slaikhers of Pittsburg, Pa., was robbed of a satchel claimed to contain $100,- 000 in mining stock last night on an eastern bound passenger train on the Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific railroad, by a blind man

whose name is said to be Davis and who got off the train at this point, Maikhers discover- ed his loss at Ottawa and returned to La Salle. Davis was arrested with the securities in a

basket, while he with a boy who accompanied him was engaged in burning them in a stove,

$10,000 were destroyed in this way.

An Aged Official Dead. Charlotteville, Va., April 7.—William

Wertenbaker, who was appointed by Thomas Jefferson as Secretary of the Faculty and Li- brarian of the University of Virginia in 1826, and who has filled that office ever since, died last night at his residence, aged 86.

Frederic Drake, a celebrated German sculp- tor, is dead.

INFAMOUS ATTEMPT

To Blackmail Hon. Charles Fran-

cis Adams of Boston.

THE CRIMINAL IN COURT-DETAILS OF THE AFFAIR.

Boston, April 7—J. S. Morrison, arrested Wednesday night for obtaining checks to the value of 820,000 from the Honorable Charles Francis Adams, was arraigned in the Boston municipal court this afternoon and in default of 826,000 was jailed to await action of the grand jury. The real name of the prisoner is James Fitzgerald alias the “Kid,** and but little is known of him by the Boston officers, except he has the reputation of a professional banco ^

John L. Norton, wanted for complicity in the Adams swindle was in Taunton this morn-

ing. Having left Mansfield just before the de- tectives arrived. He drew from the Bristol county savings bank 8600 deposited there in his own name, and it is thought he has gone to

New York. The money recived on the 817,- 600 check which Mr. Adams was induced to sign has been refunded by Mr. Fernald.

A cunningly devised attempt to extort mon-

ey from the Hon. Charles Francis Adams, and blackmail his family, resulted in tbe arrest of the principal rascal concerned in it on the ten o’clock night train te New York on Wednes- day night. The facts are 4s follows: It has been quite generally known that for two years past Mr. Adams, who is now seventy-six years old, has been in failing health. He has of late withdrawn entirely from active and social life, and his memory has become so impaired that, while he can talk quite well of occurences long passed, |he retains little and confused recol- lections of anything recent. As he is a man of perfect routine of life, his family have put off having him attended by any one in the streets fearing that a consciousness of it on his part would agitate and disturb him, and so hasten his decline. He is very generally known, aud no accident had ever happened to him. Appat* ently a gang of operators, who make a business of preying on elderly persons, somehow became more or less cognizant of these facts, and work- ed him for plunder. The first intimation Mr. Adams’s family had of what bad taken place came through the Merchants Bank, at which Mr. Adams i3 the oldest depositor. On Friday last a notice came to Mr. C. H. Richard- son, Mr. Adams’s clerk, at his office, No. 28 Court street, that Mr. Adams's account at the bank was overdrawn. As it happened, the bal- ance on deposit at the bank at that time was

unusually large, amounting to about $18,000, the notice theteof occasioned great surprise aud upon inquiry ij was found that on Wednesday, March 29, a check for $17,500, regularly signed and endorsed by Mr. Adams, but filled in by- another hand had been deposited for collection by another depositor in the Merchants Bank, and the amount had in due course been trans- ferred from Mr. Adams’s account to that of the othet depositor. The check on which this transfer was made proved to be one in every way calculated to excite suspicion. It was not one of Mr. Adams’s usual checks, nor was it filled in by him, while the figures at the top in which the amount was expressed were heavily aud clumsily painted over in a way suggestive of “raising.” Inquiry was then made of the person who deposited this oheck. He stated that it had been brought to him for collection by a party whose name he gave, but of whom he professed to know nothing. He further said that the snspicous appearance of the check had attracted his notice, but that after some hesitation he had deposited it, telling the party that he must not draw against it until the fol- lowing Monday, by jwhich time it would cer- tainly be known if everything was all right. Ab the $17,500 paid on the unknown check was still in the Merchants Bank to the account to which it had been transferred, that account was at once trusteed, aud the whole matter put in the hands of Detective Heath for investiga- tion. When the check was shown to Mr. Adams, he had no recollection of ever having seen it or signed it: nor was he able to recall any transaction with which at was connected, His memory was a complete blank on the sub- ject. He pronounced it a forgery. The law partner of the persont h rough whom tbe check was deposited next called at Mr Adams’s office and informed Mr. Adams’s sons and their coun- sel, Mr. Richard Olney, that the check repre- senetd a sum of money lost by Mr. Adams in a

gaming transaction. It was intimated that tbe party taking the check from Mr. Adams was

perfectly willing to come forward if guaranteed against immediate arrest and tell the whole story. He was accordingly sent for, and appear- ed at Mr. Olney’s office ar four o’clock Monday afternoon last.

ane interview wmcn now toon piece was

most extraordinary. The parties called them- selves J. S. Morrison and J. F. Norton, the latter having a desk or office at 1 Pemberton Square. They made no pretence at conceal- ment, counting implicitly, as the principal, Morrison, frankly said, on the belief that Mr. Adams and bis family would rather pay almost any sum of money than allow the story to get publicity, he proceeded to give his account of what bad taken place. Acknowledging him- self to be a professional banco player, as it is called, he said Mr. Adams had been spotted as

a good subject for plunder. He (Morrison) had then joined him on the street, near his house, as he was leaving his house to tak-< a walk, on

Tuesday, March 28th, at about 11 a. m., pre- tending to be a sou of an old political friend of Mr. Adams’. Making himself extremely po- lite, he bad asked permission to accompany him on his walk, and had, by degrees, beguiled him to a place on Boylston street, where his gang operated. On one pretence or another, he had then induced Mr. Adams to enter the house and a room in which the game of banco was then going on. While there, he said, Mr. Adams appeared to be confused, and not to know what was being done; but he was finally induced to sign and indorse three checks—one for $17,500, one for $1,6C0, and a third for $250,—the largest one only of which had been presented. Morrison frankly said that he didn't think Mr. Adams knew at all what he was about; that he (Morrison) had pretended all through to be his friend, and that finally he had left the house and walked home with him, quieting his agitation, and tolling him that the thing would be all right, and leaving him at his own door. A confederate had then watched and seen Mr. Adams presently come out of the house, accompanied by two ladies, enter a

carriage, apparently quite serene, and go off to drive. It was concluded, therefore, that he had made up his mind to let the checks be paid, that the game had succeeded, and the plunder was safe. The man then went on in perfect confidence to describe how he had done this repeatedly before, expressing a perfect willingness to be brought face to face with Mr. Adams, and his confidence that he would never deny the story or disavow his signature. Norton, it was professed, had not been present in the banco room. He had simply advanced Morrison money on the check. His only in- terest was to get that money back. At the same time he made no pretence of not being a confederate in the banco business, and the two with an effrontery which was absolutely astonishing, referred to their numerous trans- actions in the kind of "papers,’’ as they called it, giving even the names of victims, and describing how, after a sufficient amount of struggling, they always submitted and paid up. Finally they intimated their perfect faith that Mr. Adams’ family would submit and pay up in this case. They would never allow such a scandal'to be made public. Af- ter an hour’s conversation the fellows with- drew. The next day, on a promise that they should be returned they sent in to Mr. Olney sor examination the two outstanding checks for $1600 and $250. which also proved to be signed and endorsed by Mr. Adams and filled up in another hand. They were, however, quite regular in appearanoe and if presented first would undoubtedly have been paid before detection. Fortunately, the conspirators in their over-confidence tr.ed the largest amount.

Meanwhile, neither Mr. Olney nor those about Mr. Adams were able to get from him any corroberation of the conspirators’ story. His memory was a blank. He could not re- member where he had been at the time fixed, or separate the occurrences of that day from those of any other. Neither on that" day in question nor the succeeding days, until the ad- pearancc of the check, had there been any- thing in his manner indicative of agitation or

that something unusual had occurred. He was placid and serene as usual Finally, how- ever, on Tuesday last, the member of bis fam- ny most. accustumea to me worauig oi ms mind, touched the right chord. The result was the gradual eliciting of a narrative con- fused and disconnected, it is true, but still cor

responding in so many particulars with the story told by Morrison as to leave no reasona- ble doubt that he had been the victim of a

fraud substantially suclt as Morrison had de- scribed. He could be in no way induced to ad- mit however, that he had signed any checks.

The substantial facts of tbe case being thus ascertaiued, it was felt by Mr. Adams aud his sons that but one course was open to them; that however painful and distressing the publicity of such a matter, there was a duty to the pub- lic which they had no right to leave undis- charged. The rascals must be prosecuted to the extent of the law. Accordingly on Tues- day, tbe day after tbe interview with the two conspirators at Mr. Oluey’s office, the matter was quietly laid before District-Attorney Stov- ens, aud through him on Wednesday btought to tbe notice of the grand jury. It was not in- tended to arrest tbe men until Friday or Satur- day, and meanwhile they were watched by de- tectives. In spite of his bold exterior, Morrison had, however, taken tbe alarm. Accompanied by a woman he went to the Boston and Albany station on Wednesday, after a long interview with his counsel, and took the ten o’clock New York train, parting with the woman in the sta- tion. The detective allowed him to take his seat and Btart,arresting him between the depot and the "know-nothing” stops at the Provi- dence crossing, when he was taken from the train aud locked up. So quietly was the thing done that no rumor of it got abroad.

It is needless to add that Mr. Adams’s Family having advisedly adopted their course, propose to follow it out to the extremity of tbe law. They believe they have as yet laid hold of but two of a large and hitherto successful gang of the worst kind of operators. They will be like- ly to spare no efforts to ferret out the reBt of them. Least of all will auy fear of scaudal or publicity deter them from so doing.

Base Ball. At Boston—Bostons 17, Dartmouths 3. The

fielding of Dartmouth was very fine, Matthews pitched for the Bostons.

It was officially announced last night that the lower Pacific Mill, at Lawrence, Mass., would be opened Monday for all operatives who desire to return at reduced wages.

WESTERN WINDS-

Kansas and Michigan Visited by a Cyclone.

DWELLINGS DEMOLISHED AND A

NUMBER OF PERSONS KILLED.

Topeka, Kao., April 7.—A cyclone which started near Raymond, Rice county, last night moved northerly and prostrated telegraph poles when it crossod the Sante Fe railroad tracks. John Wilson’s house was blown down, Mrs. Wilson killed and Mrs Parker la- tally injured. Several large and strongly built houses were demolished in the neighbor- hood. Proceeding northward the storm struck the town of Cha e, demolishing 20 out of 26 buildings there and throwing cars from the track. Mr. Road, a hotel keeper, was killed and his wife fatally injnred. Another woman and a child were also killed. All the inhabit- ants of Chase were more or less injured, bat few escaping without a hurt of some kind. The people are living iu box cars, and many families are in a aestitnte condition.

A small cyclone passed through the eastern part of Rice county, but it did hut little dam- age. It was accompanied by a water spout, pouring a deluge of water.in some places and drowning everything loose in other parts. The wind sacked all of the water out of the wells. As the clouds approached Chase it was in the shape of a funnel, whirling and twisting with fearful velocity.

East Saginaw, Mich., Sept. 7.—A terrible hurricane passed near Highland Station, on the Flint and Pere Marquette road south of Holly, eaily yesterday evening. The extent of damage done is not yet known, as the tele- egraph line was blown down. The dwelling of Mr. Crandall was blown down. Mr. Cran- dall and one child were killed and his daughter severely injured. Mrs. Taylor of Poutiac was also killed, and several other persons more or less injured. The hurricane covered an area less than half a mile, but it is reported to have leveled everything in its path.

Chicago, April 7.—A terrifio tornado swept through the township of Ivalamo, Mich., last night, doing immense damage. Several lives are reported lost and many injured. Later particulars of the Oakland county storm say Lafayette Randall, his sister and little boy and Mrs. Henry Tyler were killed. A sister of Horace Sherman of Kalomn was killed and the whole family were carried fifty rods, thrown into a swamp and badly braised.

THE NEXT HORROR.

Another Mississippi Steamer BIowd Up.

SEVERAL LIVES LOST-HEART-REND- ING SCENES WITNESSED.

La Ckosse, Wig., April 7.—Early this morn- ing the boiler of steamer Bella Mac exploded near Brownsville a few miles below this city. The explosion completely wreoked the upper works of the steamer causing a loss of life and fearful injury to many of her officers and crew. The crew consisted of 17 ineu including officers. Of these five are missing, one dead and three probably fatally injured. The re- mainder were more or less hurt. The injured were brought to this city and are being oared for. After the accident all was dark and cries of the men for help from on board and in the water were heart-rending. Tne Bella Mao was a comparatively new boat, this being ber third year of service and she has been consider- ed perfectly sale. She is owned in this city and valued at §8000. The cause of the disaster cannot be learned. The second engineer says the boiler had plenty of water and at the time of the explosion he was carrying about 135 ponnds of steam.

LAWLESS DEEDS.

Desperate Acts of a Party of Horse Thieves.

Exeteb N. H., April 7.—John Gibbs Ep- ping heard parties in his barn last night, about 10 o’clock, and going out found his horse har- nessed and standing near the gate. He called out, when some person shot him through the arm with a pistol. Mrs. Gibbs came out and picked him up, when she was shot at but not hit. The parties escaped. The doctor thinks Gibbs arm will have to be amputated.

An Outrager Lynched. Charleston, Va., April 7.—A mob of 60

men last night, captured steamer Bailie Freeze at Raymond City, went to Winfield, took a

negro named Joseph Smith out of jail and aud hanged him to a tree early this morning. He bad committed an outrage two weeks ago, on the wife of a section hand oa the Chesa- peake & Ohio railroad.

MINOR TELEGRAMS. Good Friday was observed in New York

yesterday by services in the Catholic and Episcopal churches, and business was almost suspended.

The Arlington House at Strawberry Hill, Nantasket Beach, was burned yesterday by an incendiary. Loss $6000; partially insured.

A prize fight between James McMaims of Boston and John Files of New York, took place yesterday near Chicago. Three rounds were fought, and the latter was badly pun- ished, bat lie claimed the fight on account of a foal.

Gen. Burt, formerly postmaster at Boston, is suffering at Saratoga, N. Y., from a stroke of paralysis.

Wm. H. Winans, city treasnrer of Newark, N. J., was arrested last night for forgery. Expert Folden found yesterday a city warrant raised from $165 to $2165, which had been paid by check to Winau's order.

A torpedo exploded at Toulon, France, yes- terday. Three sailors were killed and eight others seriously wounded.

General Jack Wharton of New Orloana, United States Marshal, died suddenly in Sur- veyor Pinchbeck’s office last evening of apo- plexy.

____________

R&ANG3AL AND COMMERCIAL

Portland Daily Wholesale market. PORTLAND. April 7.

The market to-day Is unchanged and business very light on account of the wet weather. Seeds are

lirin here, but at Chicago Timothy has advanced 10c; we quote Clover at 8%@10.Vfcc, Bed Top at

[email protected] Va and Herds Grass [email protected]; Alsike Clover 16@18c, according to quality. Sugar is held tirm at lOVfec for granulated and 9%c Extra C.

The following are to-day’s quotation# of Flour. Grain, Provisions. &c.

Flosr. 'Superline. 4 76®6 50 Extra Spring..6 75(®6 26 XX 3pring....7 0dg7 60 Patent Spring

Wheats.8 60@9 25 iOiehig&n Wiu-

ter best. 7 00^7 25 Common

Vdctiigan....6 75@7 00 8t. Louis Win

ter fair .. 7 25®7 50 Winter good. 7 50 a7 75 Winter best. 7 75@8 00

Produce. Sweet potatoes5 26@5 60 Turkeys. 15&18 Chickens. @ Fowl. ... 18a20 Eggs. 38®19 ajions.fJ bbl. 2 75@3 00

Cmbemes, ^ bbl Maine 9 00® 10 00

Cape Co<1.12 00@15 00 Muyar.

Granulated.lO1,* Extra 0.. 9Vs

Fruit Musc’tl Raisius2 76@3 50 London LayersS lOigtS 15 Valencia ilVs® l2Vfc Turkish Prunes. 7 Mi®!8<i French Prunes.l2Vs(gl4

iJtibnge* Paiermos l^bs 4 50® 5 00 Medina,$>box.4 60®5 00 Valencia ase $ @$ Extra largo 8

L.rtnons. VJesstna.3 60@4 60 ->Hiertno§.3 00§4 0< >

Malaga.2 75@3 00 Nuts.

Peanuts— Wilmington.l 75®2 26 Virginia—2 25® 2 60 Tennessee... 1 80@2 00

Cast ana t> lb. y@lOo Walnuts 12V«@14o Filberts 12Va«14c Pecan ** 13 iglBo

Urain. H. M, old Corn,

oar lot* 90@ Now Corn,

car lots, 88(389 Oats, 11 60 Yacked Bran 00(328 00

Mid*.. 28 00 Cotton Seed,car lot 30 00

I bag lot* 34 00 Corn,bag lot*.. 92

I Meal, .. 88 Oat*, .. 66 Bran, .. 30 00 M,os, .. 32 (Hi Rye, .. 13t

Provision*. Meaa Reel .11 00*11 60

Ex Mess ..12 26(312 60 Plate.14 60^14 76 Ex Plato..l6'00@16 26

Pork- Backs.. ..22 00@22 60 Clear.. .21 00(321 60 Mess.19 00(319 60

Hams.12*12% Round Hogs.... @9

Care. Tub.^lfc ...12 @12% TIBI08B, H) p.u%@12 Pall. 12%*13

Kean* Pea. ...3 76@3 80 Medium* ... 3 65@3 76 Yellow Eye* .3 10@3 26

Hatter. Creamery. ... 33@36 Gilt Edge V otmont33@36 Choice 22*28 Good. 20*22 Store.16@17

Cheese. daine.12%@14% /erroont_12%@14% X y Factory. 12%@14% Skims. 7%@ 8

Apple*. Per bbl.2 25@3 26 Cookmg.2 60@3 00 Evaporated.14@16 Dried Western....«%ffi7

do Eastern.... 6b4ffl7 I rtiawM.

Early Rose, F bush:- Houlton. 1 00@1 06 Maine Central. .1 0021 06 Grand Trunk.1 0021 06

Prolific*. Eastern ........ ... @86 Burbanks.@86

Grand Trunk— .. @85 •rackson* and White Brooks....76280 Scotch.. 76@80c

The above prices are for car Lots of Potatoes; small cts about 6c higher.

Fresh Beef Market.

Corrected for the Press daily by Wheeler, Swift & Co., Commission Merchants in Chicago DreFsed Beef, Franklin Wharf: Sides.9M*@10Vi Hinds.12 @14 Fores.7 @8 Rattles. 6 ra 7 Backs.8y?®9ya Rounds. 9%@10 Rumps..14 @16ya Loins.16 @19 Rumr Loins.I4nfc@17

Foreign Imports. HAVANA. Bark Storjoh *nn—474 hhds and 600

bags sugar to Phinney & .Jackson. BEAR RIVER.NS. Schr Argo-60 cds wood, 4

bbls potatoes, 2 do turnips, 2 ao apples, 34 boxes herring to order.

Foreign Exports. HAVANA. Schr Elva E PettengUl—4100 shook?

and beads.

Receipts of Maine Central. Portland, April 6.

For Port!and, oars 46 uiieoellaneou*merchandise* Cor counseling rosds 81 ears miscellaneous me1* ouandise.

Rally Domestic Receipts. By water oonreyanoe—1000 bush Oornmeal to G

W. Tru« A do.

Boston Produce Market. Boston, April 7.

The following were to-day’s quotations of Butter. Cheese, Eggs and Potatoes:

Butter is firm and prices well sustained; fresh made Western creameries have been at 42@46c; choice n w Northern dairy at 38@ »2c; fresh made Western ladle packed at 35 38c lb.

Cheese is Arm at 13H@14c for choice; 11@ 12^c for fair and good; and 6@10c for common.

Eggs in demand at 19@20c dozen lor Western, Canada, Northern and Eastern.

Potatoes—There is a steady demand and tirrn; we

quote Aroostook and Maine Central Kose at 1 05@ 1 16; Northern Kose at 1 00@1 10; Jacksons 76(§J 85c; ProliAcs and Peerless 1 00@l 10c;Seedlings at 90@96c; English and Scotch at 70@75c.

Chicago Lire Stock Market.

(By Telegraph.) Chicago, April 7.—Cattle—Receipts 4,600 head:

6fS10 higher; exports at 7 00,g7 50; shipping 5 26 @0 20.

bogs—Receipts 17,000 head; shipments 8300 head; market is 6@1<* higher; light at 6 60,^8 90; mixed packing at 6 40 g,6 90; heavy at 6 95@7 40.

Receipts--'7,300 bbls Hour, 7,000 bush r/n->a

49 COO tmsb corn 69,000 bush o .ts, 600 bnsb rye, 11,000 bash barley.

^hipmentE-7.000 bbls Aour, 6.000 bush wheat, 249,000 bush corn, 64,000 bush oata, 1000 gbush rre 21.000 bush barley.

MABBIABBM.

In BuckAeld, March 23, Chas. V. Knight of East Rumford and Miss Sadie F. Edgeeomb of Turqer Centre.

In Rumford, Feb. 16. Geo. E. Blanchard of Rum- ford and Miss Alma S. Philbuck of Roxbury.

In Rumford, March 30. A. T. Powers and Miss Rose B. Stearns, both of Hanover.

DEATHS.

In Bethel. March 30. Mrs. Phebe Kimball. wisdmv of the late Aaron Kimball of North Bridgtou, aged 91 years 10 mouths. •

In North Limington, March 25tht Dea. Ezekiel Small, aged 76 years 3 months.

In Warren, March 27, Studley Blsbee, aged 86 years 8 mouths.

In Bristol, March 24, Clarence E. Hatch, aged 25 years 1 month.

NAH.INC DAfHOV STEAMSHIPS. FR< >M FOR

Alps.New York..Kingston.Apl 7 Ballio.New York..Liverpool.Apl 8

Oltyof Berlin.New York.. Liverpool... .Apl 8 Helveti i. .New Y ork.. Liverpool... .A pi 8

Newport.New York..Havana.Apl 8 Circassia.New York..Glasgow.Apl 8

Aooapnlco.New York.-Panama.Apl 10

Abyssinia.New York..Liverpool....Apl 11 Partbis..New York..Liverpool... Apl 12 Brooklyn.Portland... Liverpool.... A pi 18 Circassian.Boston.Liverpool ....Apl 13

Lessing .New York. .Hamburg-Apl 13

Cityof Brussels, ..New ifork..Liverpool... Apl 13 Furnessia...NewYork. .Glasgow.Apl 15 Prussian.Boston.Glasgow.Apl 16 Atlas.Boston.Liverpool-Apl 16

Saratoga.New York Havana.Apl 15 St Germain .New York. .Havre.Apl 19

Scythia..New York..Liverpool... .Apl 19

City of Para.New York..Aspinwall....Apl 20 Sarmatian.Portland.. ..Liverpool.Apl 20 Parisian.Boston.Liverpool —Apl 27 Oolon.New York..Aspinwall....Apl 29

MIN1AT0KE ARMANAC.APRIL 8. Sun rife*.b zo Ann 6 35 1

ttign w&ujr, U m).- Moon rises. 11.50

MiABUNE NEWS.

PORT OF PORTLAND.

FRIDAY, April 7. Arrived.

Steamer City of Portland, Larcom, St John, NB, via Castport for Boston.

Sch Cyrus Chamberlain, Hart, Rondout—cement to C W Belknap & Son.

Sch Argo. (Br) Parker, Bear River, NS-wood for

Sch Geo W Cushing. Cushing, La Have, NS, with 30,000 lbs tish.

_ x

Soh Robt Woodruff, Lewis, Wiscasset for Glou- cester.

Sch Hudson. Coleu an. Calais for Boston. Sch Vulcan, Bartlett, Pembroke foi Boston. Sch Lizzie Brewster, Smith, Jonesboro for Now

York. Sch Agricola. Whitmore. Ellsworth for Boston. Schs M C Sproul. Sprout, and S Sawyer, Bryant,

Newcastle foa Boston. Cleared*

Sch Elva E Pettingill, York, Havana-Nutter, Kimball & Co.

Sch C J Willard Wallace^ Philadclplna-E G Willard. A

Sch Grace Cushing, Mosher, New York—Canton Steam Mill Co.

Sch Bramhall, Hamilton. New York—Berlin Mills Sch Laura A Jones, Stevens, New York—R Wil-

liams. _

Sch E G Willard, Adams, Rockland, to load for New York—J Nickerson & Co.

...

Sch Sarah Bruen. Plummer, Kennebec, to load for New York-Ryan & Kelsey.

Seh Mary Lymburner, Bowkcr, Kennebec, to load for New York—.J B Dodge.

Sch Lucy M Collins, Bartlett, Bangor—OrlaDdo Nickerson.

Scb Exact, Kimball, North Bootbbay.—N Blake. Sch Mary Elizabeth, Dunton, Bootbbay — D

Choate.

The new sebr Uranus, which was launched 4th inst from the yard of Geo Rnssell, East Deerlng. has commenced to take in a cargo for Cuba and will be off to sea in a few days. The next vessel to come

out of master Russell’* yard, is a tbr-e masted schr of 260 tons, for H M Sargent, and others of Port- land. to be command by capt McLearn, and will be launched in about three weeks ; to be followed bix weeks later by a ba-quentine of 600 tons for J S Winslow & Co. and others, of Portland, to be com-

manded by Capt Price F Tucker. The keel for a

barquentine of 660 tons has been placed on the

ways vacated by the Uranus, for Capt McPadden of Lubec and J S Winslow & Co, and others, to be oft next summer. A three masted schr of 250 tons is

to be commenced when Capt McLeam's vessel comes

oft’, for H M Sargent and others of Poitland, to be commanded by Capt Pinkham of Harpswell.

FROM MER0HANT8’ EXCHANGE.

Ar at Cardenas 30th, sch Maggie Dalling, Dalling, Philadelphia

Ar at Cardiff 6th inst, barque Adolph Engler. Mer- riniau. Dunkirk.

Sid 6th, ship Ivanhoe, Herriman, Rio Janeiro. Sid fm Liverpool 4th inst, barque John Gill, Mc-

Intyre, Portland; 6th, ship Andrew Johnson, Craw-

ford, San Francisco. Sid fm Antwerp 6th inst, ship Raphael, Sherman,

New York.

MEMORANDA. Brig Eugenie, Roberts. 33 days from Cape de

Verds for Boston, was boarded 6th inst. five miles off Life Station No 5, with loss of both masts; she was working under jury masts and heading tot Dela- ware Breakwater.

FISHERMEN. Ar at Newport 6th iDSt, sebs Robt Byron. Cole,

and Venilia, Cole. Portland, bound south; Eastern

Queen, Dyer, Gloucester, do de, (and Bid 6tb.) Sid 5th. sebs Kate McClintock, Sawyer, and Au-

gusta E Herrick. Herrick, south. Ar at New York 6th, sch Kate McClintock, Saw-

yer, Portland, bound south.

DOMESTIC POUia*.

WILMINGTON, CAL—Sid 29th, ship Queens- town. Collins. San Francisco.

KEY WEST—Ar 6th, sch San Juan, Dodge, New York.

Sid Mch 24. sch Fannie L Child, Hart, Pensacola. ST AUGUSTINE—Cld 6th, soh Nellie Grant, Jor-

dan, New York. JACKSONVILLE—Ar 3d, sch Eugene, Gott, Now

Y<Ar-3d, sch Lackawana, Closson, New York; EL Leonard, Macomber, Boston.

Cld 3d, sch Fannies A Milliktn, P.oberts, for Ntw

^BRUNSWICK—Ar 5th, brig Morancy. Wooster, Boston. _

DARIEN—Ar 5th, sch James Young, Young' Boston.

BUCKSVILLE—Ar 2d,soli John Douglas, Parker, Point a Pitre.

..

Sid 3d. sch Kit Carson, Harding. Philadelphia. WILMINGTON, NO-Ar 4th, sch Allle Burnham,

Baxter, Rondout. RICHMOND—Cld 6th, sch Chas II Morse, Cash,

Providence. BALTIMORE—Cld 6th, brig Josefa, Davis, for

Matanzas. PHILADELPHIA—Ar 5th, sch Hattie N Gove,

Turner, Harmon's Harbor. Cld 6th. brig Olarabello, Cogeios, Trinidad; scb

Robie L Foster, Hart, Pensacola. NEWCASTLE, DEL—Passed down 6th Inst, scb

Aliena, for Havana. Sid fm Delaware Breakwater 6th. ship Sea King,

grom Philadelphia) for San Francisco; schs A O roes, and Sedonia. Returned, schs Georgie D Load, J D Ingraham,

and Mary Augusta. NEW YORK—Ar 6th, baraue Isaac L Skolfleld.

Bishop. Calcutta 104 days; schs Grace Bradley, Hupper. Cardenas; Charlie Hanley, Thorndike, and Commerce, Dunn, Rockland; Win Thomas, Woos-

ter, New London; Aimeda Wiley, Wiley, for New Haven. __ _

Cld 6th,brlg F I Merriman, Nickerson, for Ceara; sob J P Wyman, Uran, Jacksonville.

FALL RIVER—Sid 6th, sch Maud Mallocb, Wil- bur, New York. _

PROVIDENCE—Sid 6th. sobs Searsville, Hart, and senator, Bonsey, New York; Mary Eliza. Tre- worgy, do.

WIOKFORD-Sld 5th, seb Star, Bray, New York. NEWPORT—Sid 6th, schs Pushaw, Wall, (from

Amboy) for Boston; Helen Thompson, Stevens, (fm Rondout) for do.

NAKKaGANSET- Ar Ctli schs Harbinger, Went- worth, and Elizabeth D’Hart. Low, New York for Boston; Savannah, Atwood, do for Cambridge: Wm Lee, Boothbay for Philadelphia; Speedwell, Rock- land for New York.

VlNEYAltl) HAVEN—Ar 5th, schs Royal Oak, and Brave Bcunett, Philadelphia for Boston; G M Porter, Pe th Amboy for Boston; Lizzie B McNich- ols, Fanning, do for Portland; Lake, New York for Dennis; .lulv Fourth. Hoboken for Bangor; Sammy Ford, do for Pembroke; Annie Gus, Calais for New Haven.

In port, schs Yreka, Royal Oak, L B McNichols, Lake. Sammy Ford, G M Porter, Brave, and July Fourth.

EDGARTOWN—Ar 4th, sch Mosos Eddy, Simou- ton. New York for Gardiner.

Ar 5th. sch Charlie & Willie, Wood, James River for Waldoboro.

HYANNIS—Sid 6th, soh WmC Pendleton, Web- ber. Bootbhav,

BOSTON—Ar 6th, barque Sarah, Hale. Fayal; scb Red Rover. Lockhart, Weehawken.

Ar 7th, schs Sea Qaeen, Bunker, Calais; Hary E Gage, Smith, and Eastern Light, Kelley, Macbias; Hannah Grant, Strout, do; Mary F Cushman, Pat- ten. Ellsworth; Fillmore. Adams, Wiscasset.

Cld 7th, sobs W H Bailey, Bailey, for Charleston; Helen J Holwav, Thompson. Macbias.

LYNN—Ar 6th, sch Andrew Peters, Bickford, South Amboy; Frank Norton, Bird, Philadelphia.

DANVEItS-Ar 2d, sch Oregon, Brookings, Perth Ambov.

PORTSMOUTH- Below 7th, schs Elizabeth Lee, Addison for New York; Cynosure, Camden for Bos-

ton; Uncle Sam, Rockland for do; Hyena, do for Fall River; Granville, Rockland 'or Boston; Katie Mitchell, Bath for New York; R D Rhode Rock-

port for Boston; Edward Frank, Bristol for Boston; Fred Gray, Portland for New York; Sarah Hotch- kiss, Belfast for Boston; C II Spoil'ord, and H Cur- tis, Calais for do; Yankee Maid, Rockland for do; Chase, do for New York; Maria Louise, Wiscasset for BoBton.

FOREIGN FORTH. Ar at Sydney. NSW, Mcli 22, ship City of Brook-

lyn, Paterson, Burrard inlet. Ar at Hong Kong Feb 23, barque Grace Deering,

Salvage, Newcastle. Sldfm Pillau Mch 20, barque Pudel, Parlow, for

Portland. Ar at Sierra Leone Mch 8tb, brig Lucy W Snow.

Hall, Boston At Departure Bay Mch 25, ship St Lucie, Rivers,

for Wilmington, Cal, ldg. At Liverpool Mch 25. ship Carrie Clark, Storer,

San Francisoo; Craigallim, (name changed from Marcia Greenleaf.) for New York.

Ar at Cardenas Mch 26th. brig John T Ives, Mc- Kenzie, Portland.

Sid Mch 80, brig C 0 Robinson, Forbes, Delaware Breakwater; 81st, barque Jcsie Mildred, Ginn, do; brig Gipsy Queen, Chandler, do; sch J H Converse, Leighton, do.

In port Mcli 31. trigs AtlAs. Gray, for North of Hatteras; Geo E Dale. Fierce, do.

Ar at Havana Mch 29, brig Stockton, Allen, from j Portland* 1 In port 1st Inst, brig M E Leighton. Leighton, for I North ol Hatteras; sons S M bird, Merrill, and N J

Dinsmoro, Parker, for Delaware Breakwater. Ar at Matanzas Mch 31, brig Arcot, Cates, Annap-

olis, NS, via St John, NB. Sid Mch 25, brig Ellen H Monroe, Adams, for

New York. In port Mch 30, barque Matthew Baird, Pray, for

North of Hatteras ; Minnie Hunter. Laithwaite, for avana and New York; schs Louisa A Orr, Orr; S P Fhurlow, Tabbutt. and May McFarland, Mont-

gomery, for North of Hatteras; Geo K Hatch, do. Cld at St John, NB, 5th inst, schs La Lolta, Whit-

moie, Baltimore; 6th, Jennie M Carter, Eaton, and

Olive, Frye, New York; Anna Frye, Bryant, do.

APOKEN. March 31. lat 31 38, Ion 71 14. brig Nellie Ware,

Paterson, from Apalachicola for Guadaloupe. April 1, lat 40 40, Ion 69 20, barque Daring, from

Portland for Havana. April 2, oil Carysfort Light, sell Ella M Watts,

from Pensacola for Portland. April 4, lat 34 44, Ion 63 43, brig Daisy Boynton,

from Montevideo for New York.

FINANCIAL. _

WALL STREET OPERATIONS. The old established Banking House of

JOHN A. DODGE & CO., No. 12 Wall Street, New York,

Buy and sell all active stocks on three to five per cent, margin. They send FREE their

‘‘WEEKLY FINANCIAL REPORT,” Showing how large profits can be made on Invest-

ments of $ IQ to $ 1 ,«OQ.feb!8 eodlyr

^Investments” Evansville, Indiana.6s Androscoggin & Kennebec 1st Mortgage..6s Leeds & Farmington 1st viort.. 6s Portland & Ogd- nsburg 1st Mort.6s Northern Pacific 1st Mort.6s New York & New England 1st Mort.6s Railroad Equipment Co .6s Maine Central R. R Co. Consol.7s

Stocks bought and sold at New York, Philadel- phia and Boston Stock Exchanges. Members of Boston Stock Exchange.

Woodbury & Moulton Cor. Middle & Exchange Sts.,

dec31 eodtf

Portland Water Co., 1st Mort. 6s Cincinnati,.bs Cincinnati,.- 6* Cook County 7a Evansville Ind.,.7s Chicago, -.------7s Maine Central R. R. Consol, 7s Portland & Ogdensburg R. R. 1st Mort., 6s Eastern Car Trust, Gs U. S, 4 per ct. Bonds, Registered and Coupon,

-aroR sale by-

SWAN & BARRETT, 186 Middle St., Portland, Me.

U. S. Called Bonds cashed. mcli7 eodtf

Portland Safe Deposit Co., Chartered ia 1875 by the Leginlatare of

MD&iue for the SAFE KEEPING of VALUABLES, and the RENTAL

of SAFES in its FIRE and BURGLAR PROOF

VAULTS.

Directors. John Mussey, Francis K. Swan, William E. Gould, William G. Davis, II. ». Libby, Jacob McLellan, Philip H. Brown, Edward A. Noyes, H. M. Payson, W. H. Moulton, William Sweat, L. D. M Sweat all of Portland.

Abner Coburn, Skowhegan, Anson P. Morrill, Au- gusta, Joseph Dane, Kennebunk.

Rental of Safes in Vault, $10 to $75 per year. Special depos ts at moderate rates.

For circulars or information, address WILLI AMI SWEAT, Scc’y and Treaa.,

87 Exchange Street, Portland, Me. mar30 eodly

MUNICIPAL -AND

Railway Bonds BOUGHT AND SOLD.

STO O KS bought or carried on margin.

Daily telegraphic quotations from New York Stock Exchange.

SAMUEL HANSON, 194 Middle Street.

octs eorttl

BANKING HOUSE

Henry Clews & Co., 18 NEW STREET, NEW YORK.

(NEXT DOOR TO THE STOCK EXCHANGE.)

Stocks and Bonds bought and sold only on com-

mission for cash or on mtrgfn. Deposits received. 4 per cent, allowed on all daily balances. Members of N. T. Stock Exchange and the Chicago Boar-l of Trade. Private wire to Chicago. jan31eodtf

April Investments. City of Chicago, 7’s

“ Cleveland • 7’s “ St. Louis • • 6’s

County of St. Lonis 6’s City of Fort Wayne, Indiana, 5 1-2’s

“ Akron, Ohio, 5’s Portland Wutcr Company 6’s Akron, Ohio 6’s Maine Central R. R. 7’s Portland & Ogdensburg R. R ) 6’s New York & New England R. R. 6’s Sontliern Pacific R- R. 6’s (Payable In Gold Coin. Secured by Laud Grant and

Sinking Kund.)

Bank Stocks Wanted. II. 1. PAYSOV & CO.

32 Exchange Street, ap3 PORTLAND. eodtf

OSCAR WILDE A prominent New York

Artist photographed a short time ago Mr. Os^ar Wilde, the .Esthetic apostle, in many positions which are very characteristic, as

being explanatory of the doctrines of this new dis- ciple. Among many of the compositions which were

emblematic, were some, with the dim and shadowy patterns of sunflowers and lilies on the walls, and used as acce sories in the interi- ors, and when exterior compositions were used, then the artist was equally happy in their arrangement The proof of the negatives gave Mr. Wilde the greatest satisfaction, as does the ^Esthetic and other poses of Hearn the popular photo- grapher of the State of Maine, whose new and ele- gant studio is located in How’s Block, 514 Congress Street in this city.

feb'iO codtf

JUST RECEIVED. A large lot of very choice

designs for

STAMPING, AX

MISS FAIRWEATHER’S, AO. 8 ELDI STREET.

mh30 dtf

8. R. A1EES, Advertising Agent,

TUEIflONT ST., BOUTON. Contract, for Advertisements In Newspai>ers In all

cities and towns of the United States and the BritishProvinces.

SPECIAL NOTICES.

Special Conclave of St. Al- ban Commandery, K. T.

Members of St. Alban Commandery will report at

their Armory in full uniform, Saturday, April 8, at

one o’clock p. ni., sharp, for tho purpose of attend-

ing the funeral ceremonies of our late companion Sir Warren Phillips.

Tho funeral services will be hold iu Masonic Hall. Should the weather prove unfavorable the duties

will be Asylum Work. Sir Knights of other Commanderies are cordially

invited to join our ranks. Per Order of the E. Commander.

FRANKLIN SAWYER, Roc. ap8 snJt

GRAND LODGE OF MAINE.

A special session of the Grand Lodge will be held at Tyrian Hall, on Saturday, April 8th, at half-past one o’clock p. m., to attend the funeral services of our late brother Warren Pi.Ill 1 j,s. The Craft are

invited to attend. Officers of Masonic Bodies of the various grades

are requested to bo present, clothed with the insig' nia pertaining to their several offices.

Per order, IRA BERRY, G. Secretary. April 7, 1882. apSsnlt

NOT1CJE.

Members of Ancient Landmark Lodge are hereby requested to meet at Masonic Ball, Satarday, April 8th, at 1 o’clock p. m,, for the purpose of attending the funeral services of our late Brother Warren Phillips. Members of Portland and Atlantic Lodges are cordially invited to attend.

ap8snlt E. S. R1DLON, W. M.

WALL PAPERS. SPBIM OPENING.

All grades of goods

AT LOW PRICES.

LOW, SHORT & HARM mar28 sneod2m

HOSIERY. We are now pre-

pared to show a yery fine line of Cotton, Lisle, and Silk Hosiery for Ladies, Misses and Children.

__k & Bancroft, 492 & 494 Congresa St. mar29 sntf

ELEGANT

SPIG STYLE GOODS Just Received by

Kohling, at No. 89 Exchange St.

IMPORTED CLOTHS To be found at No Other Establish-

meat in this city.

Spring and Samir Suitings, The Noblest Ever Exhibited.

PANT ALOONINGS Of Exquisite Patterns and Splendid

quality,

Light Overcoatings, Excelling all others in Tcxtnrc and

Finish.

HAIR LINE CLOTHS, Something Entirely New for Dress Suits.

The Richest Goods Ever Displayed in this city.

PLEASE CALL AND EXAMINE.

KOH NG, No. 83 Exchange Street.

mar25 sneod2 mos

Cure Your Corns' by esma

SOHIjOTTERBECK’S

Corn, Wart & Bunion Solvent. Entirely harmless; is not a cans tic. It removes Corns, Warts, Bunions and Callouf

without leaving a blemish. Brush for applying in each bottle.

isrvj curb rs g uarantbbd.^m Price 23 cent*. For mile by ail Druggiiiu.

Try it and yoa will be convinced lifce thousands who have used it and now testify to its value.

A «h for Nc blotter beck** Com and W»r* Solvent nod lo!o* no other.

nov23 endtf

TURNER BROS. have now open and ready for inspection

Ladies’, lisses’anESCliiltfren’s

GARMENTS, Consisting of

Jackets, Dolmans, Talmas; Visiles,

Fichus, Ulsters, &c. IN

LACE, SILK RHADAMES,

Satin Brocade and Cloth Materials.

Prices from $3.00 to $60.00,

New Styles beingjConstantly Received. Also a New Stock of Laces, Dress

Trimmings, Buttons and Hosiery in all the New and Desirable Styles.

TURNER BROS. 488 and 400 Congress Street.

ap4 sndtf

SPECIAL NOTICES

Special Notice. Wo would call special attention to the A*»c«i»-

Qrt’ I'Xolic , which appears in our columns to-day with reference to Taxes, that all persons interested may comply with the tenor of such notice, particu- larly the last clause with reference to the U. S.

Government Bonds, and Deposits in Savings Banks, and thus rave hard thoughts and poseibly hard

words, when too late. inar31dtapl6en

OPENING -OF-

lilllES’UI) HISSES’

GARMENTS — ON —

Thursday, April 6. *_

We shall exhibit a great variety of Styles in Black Cloth, Satin de Lyon. Kha- danies and Silk Doluians, Talmas and Mantles, Light Cloth Jackets, Dolmans and Ulsters, and the most com-

plete line of

Children’s Garments we have ever shown.

492 & 494 Congress St. ap3 dtf

EXTRA BARGAINS

BUCK SILKS -AT—

$1.00 and $1.25. These are by fur the Best Silks

for the price we ever offered. We also offer this week, a JOB

LAT of HID CLOVES, two but- ton, in Spring Shades, and oil Per- fect, at 35 cfs., well wot 111 64 els.

CORSETS. Before purchasing please ex-

amine our Triple Buck Corset. It is one of the best now in (he mar- ket. It affords both protection, and SUPPORT TO TUB BACK.

Wre are sole agents for the “Celebrated Harper’s Bazar Patterns.”

Geo. A. Gay & Co. Cor. Congress & Brown Sts.

mchl4 eodtl

EASTER GOODS We are now showing an

elegant assortment of choice novelties for Eas- ter Offerings which cannot be found elsewhere in the state.

Onr Cards are from the best English, German and American makes and very reasonable in prices.

Owen, Moore & Co, ap4 dot

CALL & TUTTLE, FASHIONABLE

Tailors & Importers, Arc now exhibiting their

SPRING GOODS —FOB--

GENTLEMEN and LADIES’ WEAR.

DRESS SETTS A SPECIALTY.

LADIES’ GARMENTS MADE TO OKDEK.

453 Washington St., Boston. inch 11 deod lm

INTERESTING to those in wont of

BOOTS and SHOES. In order to reduce onr Stock to make

room for Goods of our onn manufacture.

We offer at COST for the NEXT THIR- TY DAYS our entire stock of Ladies*, Gents’, Boys’, Misses’, aud Children’s Boots and Shoes. This is a rare oppor- tunity as our Stock is large, and consists of goods from line hand sewed to com- mon medium grades. Ito not fail to rail aud examine our goods before buying elsewhere.

WHITNEY GAITER SHOE CO., Cor. Union St., Under Falmouth Hotel

janl J dtf

NEW YORK —A3JD—

NEW ENGLAND 1st Mortgage

6 cent. BONDS Due 1905.

This security is a first mortgage upon this road and its properties.

FOB SALE «1

AMERICAN LOAN & TRUST CO.^ 55 C0NGRES8 STREET,

Ainimou. Building, Bo-i.n mai-20 ,U2t

Page 3: PORTLAND DAILY PRESS. · 2020. 8. 6. · PORTLAND DAILY PRESS. ESTABLISHED JUKE 23, 1862—YOL.19. PORTLAND, SATPUD AT MORNING, APRIL 8, 1882.__ ENTERTAINMENTS NEW PORTLAND JTIIEATRE

THE PBES8. SATURDAY MORNING, APRIL 8.

CITYAND VICINITY.

SY.VT ADVERTISEMENT-: TO-DAY.

ENTERTAINMENTS. Portland Theatre—Rents-Stanley.

SPECIAL NOTICES. St. Alban Commandary. Grand Lodge of Maine. Notice.

MISCELLANEOUS NOTICES. Coe—4. Men and Ladies’ Wanted.

NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. Patriarchial Temple—Adjourned Meeting. Portland Laborers’ Onion—Nntice. Wanted—G. W. Davenport. Canvassers—Glenn Brothers & Ely. Portland, Bangor & Machias Steamboat Co. Easter Sale—St. Luke’s Church. Pony Wanted—James P. Baxter. New Maple Sugar K. Y. Barber &Son. Notice—Chase. Leavitt & Co. Notice to Laborers. Footwear—Brown. Wanted-R. H. Curran & C#. New StyleB—Coe. Easter Hats—Merry. Caution—J. Jewell.

__

Coe is sole agent for Knox Hats of New

Yrork. _

“You may break, you may shatter the vase if you will.

But the scent of the roses will cling round it

still,” was written in a spirit prophetic of J. & E. Atkinson’s Extract ot White Roses.

Apr8 S&W

Men and Lidioi Wanted. See Curran’s Adr.

The Best are the Cheapest. Do not poison yourself by the ueo of low-

priced mixtures, but call for Toilet Waters, Powders, Cosmetics, &c., made by J. & E. At-

kinson, London. aprl-sw

Coe has the best $1.00 Hat.

Dr. O. Fitzgerald. the man who makes so many wonderful cures

will visit Portland, Falmouth hotel, Saturday the 8tb, for one day only, and will examine all who may call on him/rce of charge.

apr5 _

dlt

Trunks and Bags low. Coe, the Hatter.

How Now? What la It? The great system renovator is Burdock

Blood Bitters. Try it and be convinced. Price 81.00; trial size 10 cents. ap3dlw

Buy your hat to-day of Coe, the Hatter.

Treat Your Teeth rather than have them pulled. Let your den- tist save all he can. You desire to have trou-

ble, because you have not used SOZODONT. When properly fixed, then rub on the SOZO- DONT, and keep them all right for time to

come. ap3eod&wlw Forty Years’ Experience of an Old Nurse.

MRS. WINSLOW'S SOOTHING SYRUP is the prescription of one of the best female phy- sicians and nurses iu the United States, and has been used for forty years with never failing success by millions of mothers for their chil- dren. It relieves the child from pain, cures

dysentery and diarrhoea, griping in the bowels, aDd wind-colic. By giving hoalth to the child it rests the mother. Price Twenty-five Cents a bottle. dec3S,M&W&wlv49

It gives me pleasure to say that Adamson’s Botanic Balsam cured me of a severe cold to

which I have been subject, especially during the winter months, and I have, in many in-

stances, recommended it to my friends, and all have been benefitted by its use. We think it has no equal as a cough mixture.

U. L. PETTENGILL, No. 10 State street, Boston,

ap^-mw&s&wlw

Superior Court. BEFORE JUDGE BONNEY.

Friday. -Sarah P. Colesou vs. Augustus Kenni- son Assumpsit upon an account annexed to recover

a balance due of $29.28 alleged to be due for bor- rowed money and labor as h /use-keeper.

Defendant denies that he ever borrowed a dollar from plaintiff, and as for the labor, claims that plaintiff was at work for one Bayes with whom he, defendant, hoarded, and that he never employed or

agreed to a pay plaintiff any wages. Verdict for the defendant. J. ,T. Perry for plff. T. C. Cobb for deft.

Municipal Court. BEFORE JUDGE KNIGHT.

Thursday—Dennis Hartnett. Intoxication. Fined

$5 and costs. Richard O’Brion. Fined $3 and costs. Paid. James Charlton. Habitual truant. Reform School

duri-g miuority. Sentence suspended during good behavior.

Jaino Cady. SiDgle sale. Fined $30 and costs.

ijuJteRyan. Search and seizure. Fined $109 and costs. Appealed.

Brief Jottings. Snow and rain yesterday. Mercury 32° at

sunrise, 38° at noon, 3s° at sunset; wind south-

southwest. One session of schools yesterday. Samuel Teague is rebuilding the west side of

Franklin wharf. Estimates are being made for the building

of the new Grand Trunk elevator wharf. Officer Merrill, on complaint of Mr. Curran,

arrested a woman named Cady on suspicion of

having stolen $25 from him last night.ji Maine Lodge of Odd Fellows will give a so-

ciable Monday evening in their hall for lodge members and their wives or lady friends.

We have received from W. A. Greenough, 31 Milk street, Boston, the Boston business di"

rectory for 1882, a volume of over 600 pages clearly printed on good paper.

Kev. Dr. MoKeown, of Chestnut Street Church of this city, will preach at the School

Street Methodist Church, Gorham, to-morrow

morning and afternoon, in exchange with Kev.

Mr. Corey. Good Friday was most solemnly kept by the

Episcopal and Catholic churches yesterday. To-day is Holy Saturday, and to-morrow, in

all the churches, Easter glories will mark the Kesurrection.

Master Walter N. Adams of Cape Elizabeth made the Pbess counting room fragant yes- terday by sending in a fine bunch of mayflow- ere prettily arranged with green leaves and

things. At the New Jerusalem Church to-morrow

the Holy Communion will be administered at

the conclusion of the morning service. The

Sabbath school holds a celebration in the af-

ternoon. _

Personal. Miss Aunie Cary is expected here to-day to

pass Sunday. Gov. Long, of Massachusetts, was in the

eity Thursday,on a brief visit to family friends. Hon. J. W. Wakefield of Bath, C. A. Bou-

telle of Bangor, and J. H. Manley of Augusta of the Republican State Executive Committee, | are at the Falmouth Hotel.

The body of the late Warren Phillips will

arrive from Yarmouth to-day, on the noon

train. It will be taken to the Masonic Hall, where the funeral services will bo held at 2

o’clock, under the auspices of the Grand

Lodge. The First Parish choir will furnish

music. After the services the remains will .be escorted to Evergret.-n Cemetery by St. Alban

Commandery. The Senate committee has recommended

that a peaeion be given to Sarah C. Golderman

the widow of Augustus Golderman of Mechan-

ic Falls, Me., who was captain of company C, 17th regiment, Maine volunteers, and who was

wounded in the knee at the battle of Cbancel-

lorsville. The pain from this wound finally affected his sanity, and he committed suicide

by hanging, but it could not bo Bhown that the

death from this cause was the direct result of the wound. So his widow petitioned Congress, and will probably be placed on the pension roll._

The Uartleia ( amuy. "The Garfield Family” is the title of a pic-

ture representing the late President Garfield

grouped with his mother, wife and children,on the evening before he left Mentor for Washing- ton. The picture is pleasing,—soft and deli-

cate in general effect, and firm in line,—and the portraits age of marked merit. It is some-

thing desirable to have, and will doubtless

grace the walls of many a New England home. The height of the theme and the very general and affectionate interest felt in it, commend the subject to the engraver, and he seems to

have lavished loving care upon it. The work

is issued by the long established firm of K. H

Curran & Co., Pemberton Square, Boston.

First Untversalist Church.

The First Universalist Sunday School un-

animously re-elected the following officers:

■Superintendent—Freedom Nash. "Assistant Supeiintendent—Philip F. Tur-

^Secretary and Treasurer—Charles H. Kim- ball.

Librarian—W. M. Sargent. Assistant Librarians—C. Eugene Walker,

Fred W. Hamilton, Harlan P. Ayer. Pianist—Addie E. Small.

THE FIRST PARISH

Original Hymn by Rev. Dr. Hill.

A communion service aopropriate to Fast

Day was held at the First Parish church last

evening. There was no address. The order of

sorvices was as follows: Music:

’■The Lord is in His holy temple. Reading from Old TeBtament.

Hymn 244. Heading from New Testament.

Original Hymn. The exalted Son of God, this day;

Endured the cross for mo; Thro’ death’s deep shadows held His way

That death might conquered be.

Beset with horrows was the road; Unfaltering He passed on;

With weakness bore the heavy load And thus the victoryjwon.

Already at the victor’s feet The tyrant, Sin, lay slain

Death’s death the triumph made complete: No enemies remain.

Oh! sinful man, for thee He fought, He conquered both for thee;

It was His sufferings that brought Pardon, and set thee free.

The hymn was sung to the tune of “Bur-

ford” by Spohr. Prayer.

Partaking of the Communion. Hvnin.

Benediction.

Easter Music.

The following is an additional list of East-

er music to be sung in Portland churches

to-morrow; STA X IS SllU-H-i.

Morning Service, 10.30 o’clock. Easter hymn.G. W. Marston Anth**m. Barnaby Response. Selected Trio—On thee each living soul awaits.Haydn

C. M. Marston,organist. IMMACULATE CONCEPTION.

Morning Service. Processional for organ.Haydn Kyrie, from, mass in Bft.Schubert

Credlf* } from St' CeciUa.Gounod Base d’ies.LambiMotte Sane t us Schubert

Agnusde?118’ jfroin St* Cecilia.Gounod March for’organ .Bartholdy

Vesper Service. March in C for organ. Clark Deus iu adjutorium,) Dixit, 1 Conlitebor, i-.G regonan Beatus, I Laudatopueri, J ....

H®c dies. Lambillotte Magnificat. Mozart Interlude for organ.Schubert Regina coeli. .Werner Salutaris Schubert Tantum ergo. Haydn March in Bft for organ.Cjark

I. P. Wenzel, organist and musical director. NEW JERUSALEM.

Anthem—Christ the Lord ’8 risen to-day.. .Andrews Chant O give thanks unto the Lord .Gome Responsive service -The resurrection. Chan'—The kingdoms of this world are become

our Lord’s and his Christ’s. The dominum.Small Hymn—Angels roll the rock away.German

Miss Fannie E. Jordan, organist. HIGH STREET.

Anthem—God has appointed a day.Tours Gloria. 12th mass .Mozart East* r hmn..Dudley Buck

Mi93 Mary O’Brion, organist. ST. PAUL’S.

Morning Service. Anthem in G. Glorias. Stanton Te deura in Bft.Gerrish Jubilate in Eft.Robyn Hymn (No. 98).Hymual Kyrie in C .|.Gilbert Gloria tibi, in Bft.Barnes Hymn (No. 10*).H\mnal Sanctum .. Hymnal Hymn (No. 207).Hymnal Gloria in excelsis. Nunc dimittis.—.

Afternoon Service. Glorias Stanton Cantate Benedic anima mea. in Aft.Emerson Hymns (Nos. 77 and 103). Hymnal

W. W. Root, organist. ^WILLISTON CHURCH.

Organ voluntary. Easter anthem...Mozart Hymn. Easter carol. Kotzschmar Hymn Te deum in Eft. Lloyd Postlude.Mendelssohn

Mr. Harvey Murry, organist. PLYMOUTH CHURCH.

There will be an Easte rSuuday school con-

cert at Plymouth Church at 7 o’clock. The

following is the music: Anthem—'Thou art our Father.Hummel S« »lo—Palm branches. ... Fame Carol—Shine, O snn, in splendor bright. Duet—i praised the Lord.Smart Carol—Let the merry church bells ring. Quartette—Hail the day that saw Him rise ..

W. H. Monks Hymn—The Lord is risen.

CASCO STREET

Easter Sunday will be observed at the Casco r

Street F B. Church at 3 p. m. Rev. J. M- Lowden will preach an appropriate sermon.

There will be singing by a select choir. The church will be decorated. Illustrated lecture in the evening at 7 p. m.

CONGRESS STREET M. E. CHURCH.

There will be an Easter service to-morrow

evening. Sermon appropriate to the occasion

by the pastor, Rev. Mr. Lindsay, with selected music.

_

East Portland Improvement Society. At the last meeting of the above society,

held at Peaks Island Thursday, April Gth, the

proceedings were opened with a selection play- ed by the island band. Prayer was offered by Eev. T. P. Adams. Choice entertainment waB

afforded by Mr. Geo. Batty of Portland in his various musical specialties. A lengthy and

exceedingly interesting paper was read by F. G. Eich, Esq., representing the transient or

“cottage” circle of island society; Mr. Bich’s

paper was directed more especialy toward moral and social improvement, as he preferred to leave the more material and physical aspects of the question in the hands of the island peo- ple.

The corresponding secretary was called upon to report progress in the matter of securing proposals for supplying the shade trees wanted by the society; on complying he stated the of- fer of Mr. Elijah Varney of Windham was

deemed most suitable of the many reported, and the society by a practically unanimous voto accepted the same. Mr. Varney by this action of the society has secured a contract of con-

siderable importance, and as an immediate re-

sult the summer visitor will find this season

something like a thousand shade trees growing where none were before. Mr. Sanford address- ed the meeting on (lie subject of placing the house-lots which are for sale in the hands of some individual who could and would attend to the matter, and from the tenor of the re-

marks following we infer that the intending purchaser will shortly be able to find a list of such lots with the requisite information ip re-

gard to them at some central and convenient

place—probably at the island post office. The Eev. T. P. Adams expr- ssed great regret

at his enforced leaving of the place; he has been at Peaks Island for the .last three years, and the rales of the M. E. Conference forbid a

longer Btay. Mr. Adams stated that during bis connection with the ministry he had lived in all or nearly all parts of the State of Maine but bad never left a village or town with such reluctauce as in the present instance—a fact which spepks well for Peaks Island and wel [ for the reverend gentleman also. Mr. Adan s

was assured that the regret was mutual, aud that the society was losing a valued minister.

Eemarks on this and other subjects were

made by a number of gentlemen present, a

paper was circulated in connection with the tree business, the band played a rousing march and the meeting adjourned for two weeks.

Balls. The Easter season will be inaugurated by a

grand ball, given by the I. A. R. A. at City Hall on Monday evening next. The associa- tion is celebrated for the popularity of its Easter festivals, and this will prove no excep- tion to the rule. Chandler’s Quadrille Band will provide the music and excellent refresh- ments will be provided in Reception Hall.

Prominent among the gentlemen well known in military circles who will attend the exhibi- tion by the Montgomery Guards in Lewiston, Monday evening, will be Inspector General J. J. Lynch, Col. George F. McQuillan, Major Hill, of Gen. Chamberlain’s staff, Adjutant Swett and the line officers of the First Regi- ment. It is the earnest desire of the company that the line officers of this city will attend in uniform in order to take part in the military pageant at the hail.

Art. Among the pictures of A. T. Bricher and

D. Jerome Elwell, now on exhibition at Doll & Richards’, Boston, we notice (of the former collection) -‘On the Balcony, Cape Elizabeth,” “A Still Morning, Portland;” “Lone Rocks, Cape Elizabeth;” “Sea Gull Rocks, Portland:” "Cape Elizabeth Cliffs;” “A Hot Morning, Portland;” "A Good Surf, Capo Elizabeth.” "Capo Elizabeth Lights;” “Lion Rock, Port- land;” “Near Cape Cottage;” "Entrance to Portland Harbor.” There are but a few painted in this vicinity. Mr. Elwell’s are on Venetian and Dutch subjects.

SPLENDID 8T00K.

A Portland Man’s Great Stock Farm.

One of tho best known and most successful firms of importers and breeders of stock in

this country is that of George E. Brown & Co., of Aurora, 111., and a visit to their stock farm, just outside the western limits of that city, will well repay any admirer of noble horses

and fine cattle, whether novice or expert. The

Aurora Beacon says the firm is composed of

Messrs. George E. Brown, resident here, and

C. A. Brown of Portland, Me., a prominent manufacturer of wood pulp paper stock. Mr.

George E. Brown, the active partner, was the

pioneer in importing Holstein cattle to the

West, and has made a specialty of tho business for tho past ten years. It having been deter- mined that thelieadquartorsof the firm should be in the West, he removed from Massachu- setts in 1875, bringing their cattle and horses With him, and located at Elgin; but their stock proved immensely popular, and their business so increased as to soon outgrow their

accommodations, and in casting about for more room it became apparent that Aurora offered better facilities than any other point, while at the same time being easy of access by rail from every direction. They leased Geo. Sheldon’s large farm, just beyond the city limits on the Galena road, only about a mile from the depot, and took possession three

years ago. I Quite extensive improvements were made at that time, but so fast has their business increased that each year they have been compelled to extend their facilities by the erection of new buUdings, and they are

now putting up two new barns, CO and 80 feet

respectively, which will afford them a total

length of 41U feet or oarns. rue ausuiuie

necessity for more room raised the question of

purchasing suitable territory; consequently the brother, Mr. C. A. Brown, came West a

little while ago, and together they looked over

several large farms in this vicinity, but those considered most desirable for their purpose wet e not for sale, and we imagine the project was abandoned for the present, as they have

since commenced the two new barns above mentioned.

In the way of cattle the firm confine them- selves to Holsteins. Mr. Geo. E. Brown visits Europe every summer and maxes his*

selections from the famous herds of the

Netherlands; pure, registered animals. They are large, finely formed, gentle, tractable, hardy, and give an enormous yield of rich

milk for the dairy. At all fairs and stock

shows G- E. Brown & Co.’s stock have taken

all the honors. Th eir sales of calves amounted to over 86,000 in 1881, of 8225, each for calves from eight to fourteen months old. Both as

milk and beef these Holsteins are unrivalled. Their imported Cleveland Bay and English

draft horses are splendid animals. The latter are large, heavy, with great depth of chest, massive shoulders, firm, hard, smooth legs with well defined joints, gentle in disposition, graceful and easy of movement. The Cleve- land Bays are a large elegant horse, standing 16 1-4 to 16 1-2 hands, weighing 1,350 to 1,500 pounds, with fine head, full, bright eye, long arch neck, oblique shoulders, deep chest, short back, long quarters, strong clean legs and feet, and flowing manes and tails.

M'USIC AND THE DRAMA.

RENTZ-SANTLEY.

Mr. Leavitt’s novelty and burlesque com-

pany filled Portland Theatre with one of the

largest, and certainly the most demonstrative, audiences of the season last night. If shouts of

laughter and thunders of applause are a criterion of pleasure then that audience was thoroughly pleased. It was a very good, clean entertain-

ment; all the actors good and some excellent. Manchester and Jennings are very amusing song and dance artists; Miss Lizzie Daly a

capital clog dancer; Miss Lottie Elliott im- mense in her skipping rope business; the Etz-

eltine Sisters fair club swingers; Dolph Levino a second Regamey in the excellence of his charcoal sketches of prominent men—last night he presented Garfield, Washington, Guiteau and Hancock—and tbb other perform- ers are entitled to a word. The evening’s amusemeut closed with a funny burlesque “Haze-L-Kirk.” To-night the “Mash-Got” will be substituted for “Haze-L-Kirk.”

MOTES.

Tlie list of talent engaged for the Cary con-

cert is large; Mias Cary, Miss ILong, the Tem- ple Quartette of Boston, Cecilia and Weber Clubs of Portland, with Harvey Murry accom-

panist. Stockbridge has a few tickets. “The Mascotte” will be produced Fast af-

ternoon and evening at Portland Theatre by Miss Leila Farrell’s company, the “Legion of Honor” party having cancelled their engage- ments. The sale of seats will commence Mon- day next.

The tickets are selling well at Stcckbridge’s for the performances of‘’Patience” to bo giv- en at City Hall on Fast afternoon and evening by the Boston English Opera Company.

“61-65” will prove one of the most interest- ing and dramatic productions the Bosworth Post have ever put on the boards.

Miss Cary is quite ill in New York, with a sore throat, and cannot sing in the “Passion Music,” which is to be given by the Handel and Haydn Society on Friday. The contralto solos will be taken by Miss Mathiide Phillips aDd Miss Edith Abell, both of whom have made successful appearances in this work.

The Boston Post says: “Miss {Nellie McHen- ry is one of the kind whose spirits seem never

to be exhausted. She's just full of dash and go, and her liveliness and Nat Saulsbury’s drollery make a very jolly lot of fun at the Globe.” _

Visiting Grand Army Boys. Last evening, at 7.30 p m., a special train

over the Maine Central, arrived in this city from Lewiston, bringing, as guests of Bos- wortb Post, G. A. R., a large delegation from Burnside Post of Auburn and Custer Post of

Lewiston, in all about 75 comrades. The visit- ors were received by a special committee from Boswouh Post, and escorted, to the music of drum and fife, to Grand Army Hall. The offi- cers of the visiting poBts present on this occa-

sion were, from Burnside Post, Commander Thomas Tyrie, Junior Vice Corntneuder J. E.

Ashe, Officer of the Day G. D. Barnum, Chap- lain George Lothrop, Sergeant Major C. Camp- bell; from Custer Post, Adjutant C. H. Gardi- ner aud Officer of the Day G. W. Leathers,

inspector General of the Department of Maine E. M. Shaw of Lisbon, with Aide-de-Camp J. M. Sherman of Lewiston, were guests of Burn- side Post.

Immediately after arrival at the hall, tlie work of the evoning—mustering in recruits— was performed by Bosworth Post, to the great interest and pleasure of the visitors. At its

conclusion, brief addresses of pleasure at their

reception aud the work they had witnessed, were made by Gen. Shaw, Commander Tyrie, Little—the postmaster of Auburn—Chandler aud others of the guests, and responded to by Post Commander Gao. H Abbott, on behalf of Bosworth Post.

The party then adjourned to the banquet hall, where a camp-fire was lighted, an excel- lent collation served, and at 11 p. m. the boys returned home by a special train, apparently much pleased with their reception.

Mr. Payson Tucker, courteous, as he always is, placed special trains at the disposition of the visitors.

Possibly Fatal Accident.

About 0 p. m. yesterday as Mr. George Shackford was driving homo on his jigger when near the Maine Central crossing at the West End church, a number of boys jumped on the jigger for a ride. A few moments

after a team belonging to Mr. Whitney came

galloping past without a driver and Mr. Shack- ford’s horses sprang to one side throwing one

of the hoys named Dennis Donovan off the

jigger. One of the wheels ran over him in-

flicting two serious scalp wounds and fracturing the skull so badly that nine pieces of bone were extracted and sixteen stitches taken in the scalp. The little fellow—only seven years of age—was picked up by letter carrier E. H. Marriner, and Mr. Shackford carried him to

his homo near by. They boy also had one side and leg badly bruised. The doctors thought he would probably succumb to his injuries.

The Cary Concert-

Mr. Editor:—It is pleasant to recaLLJn an-

ticipation of Miss Cary’s concert for thS bene- fit of the Maine General Hospital, the former concerts given by that accomplished lady in aid of the same charity, in the earlier days of its establishment. And it is peculiarly gratify- ing that a singer of MiBS Cary’s world-wide reputation, to whom all nations have done

honor, should turn to her own home in saying farewell to her public life, and that what we understand is to be her last appearance on the concert stage should be among us and in aid of the same beneficent institution to whioh she formerly contributed so largely of her time and her talents. The approaohing con- cert will have a triple interest to our people, as

being an occasion of high musical enjoyment, a publio farewell to our gifted songstress, and the expression of her benevolence towards a

noble institution of charity. Z.

MAINE MILITIA.

ADJUTANT GENERAL BEAL'S REPORT

Criticism of Portland Companies.

The annual report of Adjutant General Beal to the Governor has just been published. He

reports that the enrolled militia consisting of

all able-bodied male citizens between the ages of 18 and 45 numbers 97,320, a gain of 17,932 over the last enrollment, made in 1873. No

change has been made in the organization of

the volunteer militia, and it consists of 71 offl-

and 913 enlisted men. The organization of the

reserve militia, with a few exceptions is the

same and comprises 58 officers and 606 enlisted men, making a total force of 129 officers and 1519 men.

The total expenses of the militia for the past year were $15,896.

A schedule is given of the number of men

liable to military service in each town. Fol-

lowing is Cumberland county. Baldwin. 210 New Gloucester.... 220 Bridetou. 440 North Yarmouth,... 123 Brunswick'. 708 OtiaflehL. 113 Cape Elizabeth,. 8b4 Portland.4,372 Cumberland. 180 Raymond. 1»“

Deering 700 Sc.rhoro,. 30o

Falmouth. 232 Sebago,.... ,. 12o

Gorham.601 Westbrook,. 563

Harpswell. 319 Yaimouth,.3^2 Harrison,.177 13 092 Naples, 161 13,032

The total number enn lied Jin the State is

97,320. INSPECTOR GENERAL » I'lUTlClMft*

Inspector General Lynch reports that ho in-

spected, the Portland Mechanic Blues Junel, the Light Infantry June 2, and the Montgom- ery Guards June 3. The drilling of these com-

panies.is criticised, as well as the Brown Light Artillery as follows:

PORTLAND LIGHT INFANTRY.

luspector received on time. First Sergeant called roll without piece, the company with

bayonets fixed. Steadiness of men excellent. One man without gloves. Pieces, clothing and equipments in good condition. Butts of pieces protruded. Sizing poor. Set-up good. In

opening ranks, men did not turn head and eyes to right, and the Lieutenants placed them* selves too far from the right and left of the front rank. Officers did not address each oth- er bv military titles. Discipline good. Salute

fair,"and generally recognized. Time in man- ; ual poor and men unsteady. At fix and unfix

bayonets, meu looked toward scabbarcs. Lar-

ry arms in three motions from order. 1 ositiou of pieces not vertical in many of the move-

ments. Shoulders drooped at support. Load-

ing and firing poor. “Backward in hue, march.” “Right by flank, maren. Com-

pany right wheel, march.” Duriug the ob-

liques tnc fours did not preserve their parallel- ism. Officers halted before turning. Guides

stepped backward duriug the wheel. Right by fcwoSj march—roar rank did not close to facing distance at first command. Forming single rank from double, company marked time.

Guide too far from head of column. “Aim, rear rank did not move feet. “Right forward fours right, march,” the right guard placed himself in front of the left file of the right four at the first command. Company slow to dress. Iu fixing and unfixing bayonets from carry, pieces were carried to left side with right hand “Charge bayonets,” executed by company in two motions. “Right forward fours right, march,” right four aid not shorten step. “For- ward” after wheeling by fours. At parade rest, bodies turned partly arond. “Halt, without preuaratory command. Side step at right shouldei'.|Line poorly formed by column.

This company has a pleasantly located ar-

mory, fitted up in neat style, and well ar-

ranged for the security of property. The con-

duct of the men was admirable, both in and out of ranks, showing perfect discipline, while their steadiness during the long and trying in- spection of fifty minutes, was not excelled by that of any company in the State. Not a man

was observed to move. The compauy should spend more timo in drill. The books are neat-

ly kept. Time occupied in inspection and drill, two hours and twenty minutes..

PORTLAND MECHANIC CLUES.

Inspector received on time. Sergeant called roll without niece, and out of place; reported poorly to captain. Com-

pany poorly sized. A few men failed to come to order after roll-call. Coats unbutton- ed. Men turned partly around and dropped hands at fix and unfix bayonets. Butts not on

a line. Back of hands to front. Some men

without collars. Shoes unclean. Talking in ranks, and leaving without permission. Men

unsteady. Lieutenant wore hat on side of head. Watch chains exposed on clothing. Set-up poor. Books not sufficiently neat. Con- dition of armory, excellent. “Side step iu doable time; men stepped off before the com-

mand march. Extra step in halt. Guides, acting as pivots, backed into lino on the wheel. Obliquing poor, and men lost distance. After halting at au oblique, a few men did not

face to froftt. “Back step” executed in com-

mon time. “Halt,” without preparatory com-

mand. One command given by an officer with sword in scabbard. “Loft dress” giveu after

“right dress,” before the command front. Salutes by Lieutenants, poor Feet sufiled on

floor. First Lieutenant held head down while marching. “Forward” given in wheeling by fours. “By the right flank, march;” com-

mand of execution given as left foot struck ihe floor. Very heavy stamp at mark time. “Column, forward.” “On the right into line.” Distances in column of twos, poor.

Uoiamn 10 me rigat. jjiuo puiuij from column. Pivots bad. At “company, halt,” several partially baited at tho prepara- tory command. Carry from au order in three motions. Present very heavy. At support, shoulder and left hands dropped. At trail, pieces almost paralled to floor. Stacks well made, but meu did not take position of soldier.. At “Take, arms,” many pieces not brought to

the order. No loading and tiring, for want of

practice. Manual door. The armory of this company is one of the

finest in the State, and perhaps for neatness

cannot be excelled. The drill hall is used in common with Co. “A,” and is large and airy aud well adapted to the execution of all move-

ments. The books were not sufficiently neat, having the appearance of carelessness on the

part of the clerk. The property is well cared for. The inspection and drill were not such as the time bestowed by the officers and men

would warrant, many of the men being care-

less and slow to execute the commauds, while the discipline of the company could have been better. I was pleased with the material com-

posing this command, the officers being well instructed; but improvement cau be brought about only by persistent labor.

Time occupied in inspection and drill, two

hours and twenty minutes. MONTGOMERY GUARDS.

Inspector received one-half hour after time. Roll properly called. Inspection ceremonies excellent. Men very steady. Set up and j sizing good. Clothing well fitting. Arms and | equipments in good condition. Two men

without collar. Two men talked in ranks. ! Books verv neat aud properly kept. Dis- cipline good. Feet shuffled in backward march. Distances in column of fours sometimes in- creased. “Mark time, march,” from a halt. In wheeling, guides acted as pivots, and back- ed into line, the marching fiank quickening the step. Halt too heavy. “To the rear, march,” guide omitted. “Forward” after wheeling by fours. In forming line from column of fours, file closers passed around flanks of company. “Halt” without prepara- tory command. At the completion of tho wheel.the line was broken into column of fours before “forward march,” was given. “Right wheel, march” from “backward march.” Salutes very good. “Left oblique, march,' while company was at right oblique. Too much distauce in column of twos. Corporal saluted by touching his cap while at a carry. “Company, halt,” one pieco brought to carry be Tore halting, aud oue -man moved after com-

pletion of the movement. First Lieutenant Hold head down while passing around the flank. In reverse arms, three pieces raised too high. Men moved head at right shoulder. Manual good; loadiDg aud firing excellent.

The armory of this company is centrally looatod, and well arranged and adapted to the

security of property. There are two rooms.

One contains convenient closets in which the uniforms are stored. The other, which is de- voted to meetings and company business, is

ta-tlly fitted up and carpeted. Over these rooms is the drill hall, largo and well lighted. The books are excellently kept, aud may do

taken as models of neatness and clerkship. The arms and uniform- are in good condition.

The formation and dismissal of the company were excellent, the men being quick to exe-

cute commauds. Time occupied in inspection and drill, two hours and thirty minutes.

BROWN LIGHT ARTILLERY.

Inspector received one hall hour after time.

Inspection ceremonies lairly performed. Sec- ond Lieutenant, during inspection, faced com-

pany, then to front, taking position of parade rest. Company well sized. Set-up very good. Material excellent. Clothing neat and well

fitting. Arms and equipments in good condi- tion. Butts protruded. Men steady. A few without collars and gloves. Discipline good. Armory in good order. Books well kept. Car- ry in three motions from order. Fix and un-

fix bayonets fairly done. Charge bayonets in

two motions. No practice in loading and fir- ing. Manual fair, considering the company has had but little experience, and spends more

time at artillery drill, in which is shown more

proficiency. Pivots careless. “Right forward, fours right, march,” right four did not take short step. “Mark time,.inarch,” from a halt. In wheeling, some men did not turn head and

eyes towards marching flank. Feet shuflied on floor. Files not covered. Forming line from column, fonrs gained distance, and lines were broken. Many movements not practiced. ^Considering that this platoon lias not boen long organized, and is required to become pro- ficient in both the infantry and artillery branches of the service, the inspection and drill were very creditable. The discipline was good, the material excellent, the officers were well versed in military matters and able to instruct those under them. The armory

hardly serves the double purpose of artillery drill and storing property. In infantry drill the platoon uses the hall of Co. “E.” The arms, equipments and clothing were in good condition, and the books very well kept.

Time occupied iu inspection and drill, one

hour and thirty minutes.

The Blddeford public library has over 3,000 volumes. Fifty volumo3 were added last year. There are 150 regular subscribers. Mrs. Leo.

Sweetser is librarian.

SCHOOL VACATION.

The Liat Lengthening by Hundreds.

The undersigned wish to have their names added to the list of petitioners for a longer summer vacation of the schools, presented to the City Council the 3d inst: John C small, E G Woodford, John E Palmer, Geo F Thoits, A Ingram, G W Johnson, Howard Gould, H Armstrong, E H Williams. Henry Woodside,

A B Lane. James Miller. WC Clark, H N. Haley, Dennis Tobin, I H Parsons, John S Fogg,

C P French, L F Flagg, Fred A Turner, Edgar Orr, John C Preston, Alfred Webster,

B F Whitehouse, Mrs N A Hersom,

A c Niles, L D Strout, M Hanlon, C 0 Tolman, Geo R Simpson, J J Pooler, Robert Kilfeder, Jas H Skauks, Adelaide H Elder, P M Brigham, Frank Byram,

The 53 names given below are those of men

employed at the Portland Company—parents whsoe children attend the public schools: George F Morse, A M. Millett, Geo W Beals, William G Mills, Martin II Sargent, C F. Gould. James H Kennedy, Edward J Weeks, John D. Snowman, Frank B Snowman, Isaac L. Knight, Charles F. Mantine, Charles W StruUt, Daniel F Stone, Harry Haves, LeroyHTobie, Joseph Baldwin, Horace M Pratt. L GRnruiv H. W Pierce,

W H Rolllnpon, Andrew M Whitehouse,

[ Elias B Allen, Charles Trott, Ihomas Burgess, P Maloney, Moncton H Cox. W E Column, Charles E Babbitt, R. G. Barbour, Alfred Tuckwel), Sumner Barber, Thomas W Flaherty, A N Watson, Frank W Canales, D W Bussell, Dani 1 Goodhue, L C Norton, J Wheeler, H M Smith, C M Smith, E J Hawkes, George F Sawyer, C P Byrd. Robert Murray, N S Haseltine, Robert Y Smith, Fred P Nesiuyth, Martin Lydon,

Abel Bowie.

Bowdoin College. Brunswick, April 7.

Seldom does a larger and more appreciative audience assemble at Lemont Hall than the one of last evening. The occasion being the Senior and Junior exhibition of the classes, ’82 and ’83. The parts were all well written and rendered. If any criticism should be

made, it would be of the slight hesitancy on

the part of some of the Seniors, which, no

doubt, was due to the short time given them to prepare their parts. The following was the

programme: Music.

Salutatory Oration in Latin, C. H. Gilman, Portland

Freedom of Opinion.. ..W. O. Plimpton, Litchfield Washington and Bonaparte—Oi igtaal Version from Chateaubriand.*E. A. Packard, Auburn

Our Inheritance.C. E. Stinchtield, Brunswick Music,

Are Men Gaining the Master over Things? W. A. Moody, Kennebunkport

Protection the Means, Free Trade the End, W. E. Mason, North Conway, N. H.

Cotta, the Consul, to the People—Original Version from Sallust.»N. B. K. Pettingill, Augt sta

The Huguenots.W. W. Curtis, Freeport Vlbius Virins to the Capuaus—Original Version

from Livy.*H.A. Bascorn, Portland Monopoly —.J. F. Libby, Locke’s Mills Socrates’Last Words to his Juoges—Original Ver-

sion from Plato.tE. F. Holden, East otisflell New England’s Influence,

M. H. Goodwin, Gorham Music.

•-Juniors. t—Excused. We should do an injustice did we not

take this opportunity to express our appre- ciation of the musical part of the programme, which was furnished by Grimmer’s eight. The music was in every way satisfactory, in fact, far exceeded oar expectations, the general ex-

pression being that in no previous exhibition has music of such rare excellence been furnish- ed. The following pieces were rendered. Overture—Romantique.Keler Bela Polka—Canary—Piccolo Solo .Beed Medley—Bowdoin. Grimmer Galop—All for Joy.Fahrbaeh

The usual term “Gorman" took place after the exhibition and was greatly enjoyed by all who participated.

The winter term elosed to-day, and we now have an opportunity of enjoying a vacation of ten days.

The Democratic War Horses.

Thirteen couutics were represented at the

meeting of the Democratic State committee at the Augusta house Thursday evening. Among the war horses in attendance were E. Stone, Biddeford; Edmund Wilson, Tbomaston; L.

H. Murch, Belfast; John B. Redman, Ells-

worth; John M. Adams, Portland; Chas. H.

Chase, Portland; S. Clifford Belcher, Farm-

ington; Dana Goff, Auburn; Henry Farring- ton, Gardiner; F. B. Torrey, Bath; B. B.

Haskell, Waldoboro; J. H. Martin, Camden; J. J. Purlin, North Anson. The manipulators of the wires were in a less buoyaut mood than on their previous visit to this city in Februa-

ry. The spring elections evidently had had a

somewhat depressing effect on the spirits of the unterrified, although members of the com- mittee reported the outlook bright in certain sections of the State. Quite a protracted dis- cussion aroso over the matter of holding the State convention. The claims of Bangor, Au- gusta and Lswiston were canvassed. It was

decided to hold the convention in Lewiston on

Juno 27th, instead of in Augusta, as in case of an extra session of the Legislature there would not be suitable hotel accommodations in this city at the time. The “call” for the convention was discussed, and it was resolved to fire the democratic heart with this eflusion. The com- mittee were divided on the expediency of hold- ing a special session of the Legislature.—Ken- nebec Journal.

STATE NEWS.

ANDROSCOGGIN COUNTY.

The Auburn shoo shipments show a slight falling off this woek, being 2,027 cases, against 2,20(5 cases last week. There is nothing new in the trade.

AROOSTOOK COUNTY.

The following prises were paid per barrel for potatoes last week, at Fort Fairfield: Rose, from $2.30 to $2.40; Prolifics, $1.75 to $1.80; Brooks, $1.30.

The Pioneer says the total amount of duties collected in the Aroostook district during the past twelve months is $51,467.98. For fees, fines, penalties and forfeitures, $5,132.40 net. Total amount collected, $56,600.38. The cost of collecting, including salaries, rents, lights and fuel was 111, per cent.

HANCOCK COUNTY.

A ten-year old sou of Mr. Charles Webb of Oceanville broke his hip while wrestling with another lad a few days ago. Fears are felt that the injury may result in permanent lameness.

KENNEBEC COUNTY

The 24th annual session of tho Grand Lodge of Maine, I. O. of G. T„ will bo held at Au- gusta, in Meonian Hall, on Wednesday and Thursday, April 12th and 13th, commencing Wednesday morning at 10.30 o'clock. Half fare will be given on the railroads.

SAGADAHOC COUNTY.

Mr. Jame9 A. Winslow of Bath lost a valua- ble horse recently by lockjaw, produced by a

severe attack of pink-eye. WASHINGTON COUNTY.

The Calais Times says the Maine Veteran Association of Massachusetts, 100 in number, will visit the St. Croix in August. They will be accompanied by a band of 25 pieces. Mr. J. L Thompson, of the Frontier Steamboat Company, has been requested, during the past week, to make rates for their travel on the river boat.

Wednesday, while a young son of Capt. H. F Porter of Pembroke, was playing in a truck wagon, where two horses were being “baited,” one of them suddenly sprang forwurd, biting the little fellow’s cheek and making an ugly wound just above the jaw, on the left side. The teeth of the horse tore several places some one inch and a half in lrngth.

Charles Knowles, at Addison, son of the late Augustus Knowles, is 15 years old and weighs 250 pounds.

YORK COUNTY.

Biddeford and Saco will make 4,000,000 bricks this season.

A stock company has been formed in Saco to manufacture boot heels.

IN GENERAL.

The past season 1,500,000 tons of ice wore se-

cured in Maine. Warren A. Murch, late assistant keeper o*

Mooseapeck light, has been appointed keeper of Narroguagus light, in place of Ambrose Wallace, resigned. John W. Guptill has been appointed to the vacancy at Mooseapeck. Howard P. Robbins, late second assistant

keeper of Mt. Desert Rock light, has been ap- pointed keeper of Blue Hill Bay light, in

place of Adelbert G. Webster, promoted and transferred. Thomas R. Milan has been ap- pointed to fill the vacancy at Mt. Desert rock.

PILES! PILES! PILES! A Sure Cure Found at Last! No

One Need Suffer! A sure euro for Blind Bleeding, Itching and

Ulcerated Piles has been discovered by Dr. William, (an Indian romedy,) called Dr. William s Indian Ointment. A single bo* has cured the worst chronic cases of 20 or 30 yoars standing. No one

need sutler five minutes after applying this wonder- ful soothing medicine. Lotions, instruments and electuarios do more harm than good. William s

Ointment absorbs the tumors, allays the intense

itching, (particularly at night after getting warm in

bed,) ucts as a poultice, gives instant and painless relief, and is prepared only for Plies, itching of the private partB. and nothing else.

Bead what the Hon. J. M. Cofflnberry, of Cleve- land says about Dr. William’s Indian Pile Ointment: “I have used scons of pilo cares, and it aff rds mo pleasure to say that I have never found

anything which gave such immediate and perma- nent relief as Dr. William’s Indian Ointment.”

For sale by W. F. PHILUPI! Ac CO.

Wholesale Agent., Portland, Maine. mar30 Th&M&wly

NEW ADVERTISEMENTS

$1.00 to $3.00.

EASTER HATS

EASTER HATS $2.00 $2 50, $3.00.

•88C53VEETHIIVG KTEW !

SOMETHING NEW !

•• SPECIAL AGEAT

DUNLAP & CO.’S 'Celebrated Stiff Hat,

OF NEW YORK. $1, $2 and. $3.

SPECIAL KSOX

SILK HAT $3.50

and exchange. Entire new stock.

$1.50, $2.00 and $2.50.

EASTER GLOVES EASTER GLOVES $2.00, $2.50 and $3.00.

All Colors, All Shades, All Sizes.

75 Cents to $1.75.

SPECIAL ATTRACTIONS FOR THE WEEK.

MERRY, THE HATTER, 237 MIDDLE STREET, SIGN OF THE GOLD HAT.

ap8 “

NEW STYLES

IN SOFT AND

STIFF HATS

TO-DAY. We have received to-day the

very latest Soft and Stiff Hats in Black, Brown, Cinnamon, Blue aud Green, and will sell them 20 per cent, less than others.

KNOX HATS.

E. W. Knox, of New York, has appointed ns as Sole Agents for the sale of his celebrated Hats in Portland.

TRUNKS AND

BAGS. Our Stock is large and prices

are low.

GLOVES We have a large assortment of

Spring Shades in Dog Skin, Buck, Goat and Castor.

SILK HATS.

We have the Young Gents and Old Gents, and exchange for

COE, THE

HATTER 197 Middle Street. ap8oorttf

Patriarchal Temple NO. 1. P. C.

An adjourned meeting of the Patri- archs or Portlaud is hereby called at Encampment Hall MONDAY, April 10th, at 7.30 P. M. Till- meeting is called in the Interest of TEMPLE NO. 1, P. C., to be organized WEDNESDAY EVE- NING, April 12th, and all R. P. D. Patriarchs are requested to lie present.

PER ORDER CHAIRMAN. apS d2t

Portland Laborers’ Be- nevolent Union.

After the First of May the wages of Coal Team-tors and Yardmen shall be Eleven Dollars per week.

P. J. HIHOINS, President pro tern. orortland, April 7, 1882. ap8d3t

NEW MAPLE SUGAR made by Geo. Beede, Sandwich, N. H.(

FOB MALE BY

R. Y. BARBER & SON, 13 EXCHANGE STREET,

ap8 PORTLAND, HIE. dlw

Notice.

ALl. persons are hereby cautioned against hai" boring or trusting any of the crew o£ the Nor-

wegian bark “Storjohams,” Ellingsen. master, from Havaua, as no bills of their contracting will be paid by captain or consignees.

ap8d3t* Oil ASK, LEAVITT & CO.

PONY WANTED. MUST be without tricks aud perfectly safe for

small children. Apply to apSdlw JAMES V. BAX I Elt.

Caution.

ALL persons are hereby can'toned against loan- ing F. H. Jewell any money on icy^ovoost.

Portland, April 7,1882. apr8d3t*

FOOTWEAR ! LADIES’ Front Lace Boots, now and stylish. All widths,

sizes and half sizes.

8«Ku ill. Ladies’ Front Lace Boots. Ladies’ CloihTop Button. Ladies’ Oil Goat Button. Ladies’ French Kid Button. Ladies’ and Misses* White Kid Slippers. Ladies’ Faney Slippers. Ladies’ Newport Ties. Ladies’ Newport Button.

BOYD’S Fine New York Boots for Ladies’ wear, in all the

leading styles.

Woodinansee & Garside’s Fine New York Boots for Ladies’ wear, all widths,

sizes and half sizes.

Ladies’ Fine New York Goods a specialty.

GENTLEMEN’S Boots and Sh^es in all the leading styles. Goods sent by.mail, postage prepaid.

SIGN Or THE GOLD BOOT.

I

Portland, Bangor & Machias STEAMBOAT CO.

Spring Arrangement. Comnieudog April lltb, 1882.

The Steamer LEWISTON m CHARLES PEERING. Mas

ter, will leave Railroad Wharf 1 Portland, every Friday

evening, at 11.15 o’clock, oron the arrival of Pullman train from Boston, fot Itocklnod, CJaa-

tine, Deer Isle, Nedgwicl*. So. West Har- bor, Bar Harbor (Mt. Desert), itlillbridge, Jonesport and TOarhiasporf-

Also leave Portland every Tuesday Eve- ning same time for Ulillbridgc, touching at in- termediate Landings.

Returning, leaves Mackiasport. evorv j day ftloruiug, at 4.30 o’clock, and Millbridge ,

every ITIonday and Thnrmay at 8A. M., touching at intermediate landings, arriving in Port- land same evening, connecting with Pullroai Night Train for Bostou.

Ine Lewiston connects at Rockland with Boston & Baugor steamers for Bangor and River Landings every Saturday morning.

GEORGE L. DaV, General Ticket Agent. E. CUSHING, General Manager. Portland, April 8.1882. dtf

WANTEB-niN AND LADIES, In their own Towns, to sell—not the old—but our

New “Garfied and Family.” just finished—8 in

group—Five Retail Prices, $1 to $10. The only one, authentic aud creditable; by eminent Artists, as-

sisted by aids and suggestions from Mrs. Garfield. Time past for Biographies and Portraits but a great sale just begun for this charming Historic Work. No Group ever ‘'published under directions of Mrs.

Garfield,” as is so absurdly advertised. Don’t be deceived. “Proof positive.” “Crucial test,” and

Samples in case, sent postage free, without pay, to those who desire to soil the best. R. H. CURRAN & CO., Sole Publishers, 12 Pemberton Square, Boston. ap8dlt*

CANVASSERS WANTED to sell Nursery Stock. Any ac-

tire intcllificot muia ciiH‘umed. Lib- eral salaries to successful men. For terms, address GLENN BROTHERS & ELY, 18 Pemberton square. Boston, Mass. ap8dS&W&w4wlo

Notice to Laborers.

THIS is to give notice to all laborers that at a

meeting of the Port and Laborers’ Benevolent Union, held Friday Evening, the following resolu- tion was adop ed:

“No member of this Union shall work for Mr. Shanahan or John Feeny for two months coming uuder penalty of expulsion.”

p. J HIGGINS, President pro tern.

Portland, April 7, 18834. ap8d3t

Wanted.

A SMALL printing press. Give kind, slzj and

price, and address G. W. DAVENPORT, 181 Middle St.ap8d3t»

^ATTRACTION S At tho store of

C. E, BEAN, 549 Congress Street.

NEW

“ESTHETIC” CRETONNES.! Now Blank French Lace Buntings.

New Fine Black Fieuch Oshmeves. New All Wool Spring Dress Gooils. New Half-wool Spring Dress Goods,12V:i toSOo

New Spring Skirts and Skirling. New Dress Prints and Cambrics.

New Dress Buttons. New Laces and Collars.

New Three Button Kid Gloves. New Balbriggau Liose.

New Spring Gloves. New Sp mii-h Tics.

Now White Goods. New White Aprons.

New Damask Towels. New Quilts, &c., &c., &c.

re^Oiir '•••to ‘‘Quick Hale* and Hmoll

Profit*. ap6eod2w

EASTER CARDS,

Easter Cards, Easter Cards, EASTER CARDS.

HOYT, FOGG k DONHi'S, No. 191 Middle Street.

A CHOICE VARIETY, PRICES SATISFACTORV. ap7

1 d3t

AUCTION SALES.

Horse anti Carriage Mart, Saturday, April 8th, at 10.30 A. M.,

One Cow. One Jump Seat Carriage. One 2d hand Top Buggy. S x New Harnesses.

F. O. BAILEY & t’O.. Aflictisaetr*. ap6 dJt

AT AUCTION. tin Tuesday, April II, 1982,

At 10 ^o’clock A. M„ at my Sale Stabler, Ne. 81 Franklin Street. 1 shall sell about 40 horsee.

Have been used by Lumbermen, are young and practica ly sound. Ameng them are many pairs of good horses, well adapted to general business. They are a muoh better class of horses than is us-

ually used in lumbering business; weigh from 10 t* 14 hundred; same horses were sold iast fall at from $126 to $2t>0. Were shipped to me on commission, and must be sold without reserve as I have no room

for them. RUFUS BA\D

F. O. BAILEY A CO., Auctioneers. ap6 d6t

F. O. BAIUJEY & CO*, Auctioneers and Commission Merchants

SalnrMm 19 Eicha.|e Ml.

F. O. BAILEY, 0. W. ALLS*.

Regular sale of Furniture and General Mor****!*- dise every Saturday, commencing at 10 o’oloef a.

m. Consignments solicited. oetSdtf

CHILDREN’S

Clothing! Without making any

special opening we shall offer during the present week

isr&rvsr

GARMENTS, Suits and Kilts,

FOR

Misses and Children. Many of onr styles are

exclusive and will no donht sell quickly.

All invited to examine.

Owen, Moore & Co. marSO dtf

Spring Styles. Having greatly Increased our futilities

for doing business we are prepared to show all the leadinir styles in fine

BOOTS aud SHOES. Ladies’ French Mat. Kid top, low

vainp, quarter over a'nd box toe. Nobby. Lu ies’ Donga Kid Button.

Cnracoa “ “

« « « ft $200. “ American Kid “ 1.50. .. tt tt ft 1.25.

Gents’ Hand and Ma- chine Sewed Goods.

Manufactured by Walker, Strong & Carroll, Boston.

Hart’s Hand Sewed Goods. Gents’ Enamel, Cloth Top Oxfords.

Call ami be Convinced.

WYER GREENE & CO., 480 Congress St.

Opposite Preble House,

WVEIt GREENE, J. E. GREENE HP 4 deodtf

EASTER CARDS — AT —

Stockbridge’s Music Store. Birthday Cards. IOOO Fancy

Cards marked down.

Odd Cards 5 cts a dozen.

NO. 156 EXCHANGE ST., NEAR CITT HALL.

ranraa <M

Page 4: PORTLAND DAILY PRESS. · 2020. 8. 6. · PORTLAND DAILY PRESS. ESTABLISHED JUKE 23, 1862—YOL.19. PORTLAND, SATPUD AT MORNING, APRIL 8, 1882.__ ENTERTAINMENTS NEW PORTLAND JTIIEATRE

Wit and Wisdom-

A man traveling in New Hampshire and

seeing a laborer at work in a field said, rather

pityingly to him: “Vou must have a hard

time of it, this land is so rooky and barrou?” And the laborer replied: “Yes, stranger, it is poor land. Bnt don’t think I’m so poor as I seem, I don't own any of It.’’

The best Fashions in the world are the “Do-

mestic.” Gall 12 Elm street.

“Where do people go who deceive their fel-

low men?” inquired a Sunday school teacher.

“Sometimes to Canada, but mostly they goes to Europe,” was the reply of a youngster whoso nuole had recently been a trusted officer in a

local bank.—The Hour.

From Emporium. Geo. Dodge, Sr., a well known citizen of

Emporium, writes that one of his men (Sam Lewis) whilst working in the woods, so severe-

ly sprained his ankle that lie could scarcely get home, but after one or two applicatiens of

Thomas’ Electric Oil, ho was able to go to

work next day. _

Ella Wheeler warbles, “The year has but

one Juue, dear friend; the year has hut one

June." Yon are right, Ell; the year has but one June. At least, that Is all we can find in the almanac. But sometimes we are almost willing to swear that it has two Januaries with a month between them.—Norristown Herald.

“Elixir of Life Boot” is an infallible remedy for Kidney and Liver Complaints. One trial proves it. It is a purely vegetable com-

pound and perfectly safe.

A farmer living in Arcade, N. Y., not hav-

ing washed himself for forty years, the Board of Health claimed it was time to take the mat- ter in hand aud served a notice on him to abate the nuisance. If the farmer stands on the right given by forty years’ undisputed passes- sion of allodial and alluvial lands, what will tbe authorities do about it?—Pittsburg Tele-

graphy Congress Yeast Powder contains no alum,

ammonia, terra alba, or any other injurious ingredient, but is. made from absolutely pure Cream Tartar. It has the largest sale of any

baking powder in Portland.

Sunday Services. Abyssinian Church.—Preaching service at 3 p.

u. Sunday school at 4*4 p. m. Evening meeting at 7.

Betual Church.—Services a. iu.,3 and TYa p. m.: also Tuesday and Friday ^veniugB at 7Ya p. in. All from sea and laud are Invited. Seats free. Beading rooms open to Seamen every day regular.

Bradley Church. Sunday March 19. There will be a Sunday School at 10.3u a. m., Preach- ing at 3 p. m.

Cate Elizabeth Depot M. E. Church.—Sab- bath School at Turner’s Island at 10 o’clock aud preaching at 11 o’clock. Sabbath School on Brown’s Hill at lVa and preaching at 2Ya, Prayer meetings at both places at 7 Sabbath evenings, on Wednesdav evening on the Hill Class meetings at both places onFrid *y evenings. Com- munion Service an the Hill the first Sabbath of each month. R*v. M. 0. Pendexter, preacher in charge

Chestnut St. M. E. Church, Rev. Andrew McKeown. D. D., pastor. Residence, 219 Cumber land street; Preaching at 10Ya a. m. 3 p. m. by Rev. A. J. Corey of Gerham. The choir will sing Easter musio.

Church of the Messiah. Bev. C. A. Hayden, pastor. Easter service at 3 p. m. Sunday school ooncert in the evening.

Church of Christ, Cor. May an i Danforth sts Servioes every Lord’s day at lOYa a- m., 3 p. m. and 7 p. m.; Sunday school at 12 m.: Prayer meeting Tuesday and Friday evening at 7Ya p. m.

Casco Street CnuRCH. Rev. J. M Lowden, pas- tor. Preaching service at 3 p. m. Sunday school at 1% p. m. Illustrated Lecture at 7. p. m. by the pastor.

CONGRESS St. M. E. Church—Rev. G. D. Lind- say, pastor; Residence No. <»2 Melbourne Street. Preaching at lOYa a. m. and 3 p. m.: Sunday School at lYa p. m. Prayer meeting at 7 p. m. All are invited.

First Baj»tist Church, Congress St., opposite Lincoln Park.—Rev. T. D. Anderson, Jr., pastor. 8unday School at 1.46 p. m. Preaching at 3. Prayer meeting at ? p. m. and Tuesday and Friday renlngs at 7.30.

Free Street B aptist Church—Rev. Jas. Me- Whinnie, pastor. Morning Service at 10Ya a. m. Sabbath school at 12 m. Easter Sun .ay school concert at 7 p. m.

First Universaxist Church, Congress Square Services at lOVa a. m. Sunday schoolat 3 p. m; Sunday school concert at 7 p. m.

Fit ST Parish Church—Rev. Thomas Hill, D. 1). Morning services at 10% o’clock; Evening services at 7.

Ferrv Village M. E. Church.—Rev. True Whittier, pastor. Sabbath school at 10.30 a. m; Preaching service at 2 p. m; Prayer meeting at 7 p. m.

First Lutheran Church, (Scandinavian,) Elm St.—Rev K. G. Faegre. pastor. Regular service at 10.30 a. m. Sabbath school commences at 12.15.

High St Church—Rev. W. H. Fenn, pastor Preaching service at 10% a. m.; Sunday School at 12 m.; Sunday School Easter Concert at 7 p. m.

Knightville M. E. Church, Rev. Parker Jaques, pastor. Preaching at 2% p. m. Sunday school at 8% p. m. Prayer meetings Sunday and Wednesday evenings at 7%. Class meeting Friday •veiling at 7Vs.

New Jerusalem Church, New High Street.— Rev. J. K. 6myth, pastor. Easter Services at 10% a. m., with sermon by the Pastor. Holy Communion, at 12.15 p. m. Sabbath School oelebration at 3.30 p. m. Religious meeting Tuesday at 7.30 p. m

North Congregational Church, Cape Eliza- beth, Rev. E. A. Harlow, pastor. Preaching at 2 Vs p m. Sabbath school immediately after the preach- ing service. Prayer meeting at 7% p. m.

Plymouth Church, (Congregational.)—Rev Dwight M. Seward D. D., pastor. Preaching by the pastor at 10.30 a. m. and 7 p. m. Sunday School Concert at 7 o’clock.

Pine St. M. E. Church, Rev. D. W. LeLackeur, pastor; Preaching at 10% a. m. and 3 p. m..

by Rev. Calwb Feullsr of Hallowell. Sabbath School at 1 % p. m. Prayer meeting 6 & 7.

Park 8t. Church. Rev. W. R. Alger, nil1 preach upon the following subjects Morning— “The Immortality of the Soul.”—an Easter sermon.

Evening—“The true relati-n between Siu and Death.”

Pebble Chapel. Sunday, April 9th. Sunday School at 2p. m; Union service at First Parish at 3. Temperance mefting at 7. Free to all.

» Second Advent Church, Union Hall, Free Street, Elder F. Burr, pastor. Services at 10.30 a. m. and 7 p. m., Sunday school at 12 m.

8boond Congregational Church, Congress St. oor. Pearl. Rev. C. A. Dickinson, pastor Preaching Sunday 8ebool at 1% p. m. Social religious meet- ings, Sunday, Tuesday and Friday evenings. All are welcome.

St. Lawrence St. Church.—Rev. A. H. Wright pastor. Easter service at 10% a. m; Sermon by the pastor. An Easter Sunday School concert at 7 p. m. Young People’s meeting Thursday evening at 7% o’clock.

Stevens Plains Universalist Church. Rev. C. A. Hayden pastor—Special services on Sunday. The church will be decorated as usual, ad the ser- vices will be made appropriate to Easter.

State Street Congregational Church. Rev. J. P. Gulliver, D. D. will preach at 10% a, m. and 7 p. m. Sunday School at 3 o’clock.

St. Stephen’s Church.—Rev. Asa Dalton, Ree. tor. Services at 10% a. m. and 3 p. m. Sunday school at 2 p. m.

Sons of Temperance Hall. Spiritual meeting 2.30 p. m. Subject chosen by the audience.

West Congregational Church. Sunday Sebool at 11 a m. Preaching by Rev. J. C. Hol- brook D. D. at 3 p. m. and 7 p. m.

Williston Church, Congregational, corner Thomas and Carroll Streets.—Rev. Frank B. Clark pastor. Preaching at 10.30 a. m. Sabbath •ehool at 8 p. m. Sunday school Easter Concert at 7 p. m.

wy^dford’s Cong. Church. Rev. S. W. Adriance. pastor. Services at 10 30 a. m. and 7 p- m. Preaching by the pastor. Special Easter con- cert in the even ng.

Woodford’s, M. E. Church; E. S. Stackpole pas- ter. Preaching at 2Va P- m in tlie vestry of the sew church; Sunday School immediately after. Prayer meeting at 7 o’clock. All are cordially in- vited. Seats free.

West Eno M. E. Church. Rev. Parker Jaques pastor. Preaching at 10.30 a. m. Sunday School immediately after. Prayer meeting on Sunday evening at 7.30; on Tuesday evening gt 7.45. Class meeting on Friday evening.

Young Men’s Christian Association, Con" press Street, corner Elm.—Meetings at 0 a. m. and 7 p. m., also on Wednesday and Saturday at 7Va p. m.

The People’s Spiritual Meeting, Mercantile Hall Farrington Block Congress St. Mrs. Clara A. Field of Boston, will lecture at 2.30 and 7.30 p. m. Tests and descriptions given after evening lecture.

wedding William S. Lowell, Z CARD PLATE ENGRAVER Visiting

Cards. Stationer.

Engraved Cards and Invitations j for Weddings and Recep-

tions a Specialty. <

513 CONGRESS STREET. BMhll dtf

GRATEFUL—COMFORTING.

EPPS’S COCOA BREAKFAST.

"By a thorough knowledge of the natural laws which govern the operations of digestion and nutrition, and by a careful application of the fine properties of well selected Cocoa, Mr. Epps has pro vlded our breakfast tables with a delicately flavored beverage which may save us many heavy doctors’ bills. It is by the judicious use of such articles of diet that a constitution may be gradually built up nntU strong enough to resist every tendency to disease. Hundreds of subtle maladies are floating around us ready to attack wherever t*»ere is a weak point. We may escape many a fatal shaft by keep- ing ourselves well fortified with pure blood and a

properly nourished frame."—Civil Service Gazette. Made simply with boiling water or milk, bold in

tins only (^fc-fb and ft), labeled.

jrAmEU EPPS ft CO., Homoeopathic Cheaahts, London, England.

nov 2 9 Tu,S&wlyr49

NOTICE.

ALL persons are hereby cautioned against har- boring or trusting any of the crew of the

Austrian Bark "Bolivar," Cosulich master, from Xyer«, as no bills o» their contracting will be paid by captain or consignees.

ap7d3t* CHAS. LEAVITT & CO.

Notes from Alaska. To the Editor of the Prets; I have received a letter from a friend iq Sit-

ka, Alaska, and I thought some of slie items would be interesting to the publio. He writes, Oct. 5, 1881:

He says, “I planted a garden a month late, but as the season has been unusually fine it

turned out better than I expected. We raised

nice potatoes, cabbages, cauliflower, lettnce, radishes, beets, turnips and green peas. The

peas came from the Agricultural Department at Washington. They were a dwarf pea, grow ing about thirty inches high. They began to Dlossom when that hoight but kept on growing and are growing still, although they were blown down when they were some eight or

uioo feet high. We have so rnach rain and the days are so long in the summer that any- thing that will grow, grows very luxuriantly.

Before Sitka was turned over to the Untied States three thousand Russians lived here, and there were some twelve or fourteen hundred Indians. But all the Russians were offered a

tree passage to Russia, and the larger part of the better class left. Now we have about three hundred Russians and fifty or sixty whites of different nationalities, not counting the men on the United States steamer, Wacbusetts.

Gold was discovered at a place called Takoo about two hundred miles north of here, last Fall, and nearly all the whites rushed in there this Spring. Where a year ago there was

nothing but a fotest there is now a town of three hundred inhabitants and by next Fall there may be as many thousand.

The honses of Sitka are built of logs, same of them squared and then cased with two-inch planks. Some of them are very large. Our house is ninety by forty feet and two and one- half stories high. The castle and guard house are much larger.

The business of the Russians is salmon fish- ing until they get enongh to buy hoochinoo, a

vne kind oi liquor made from molasses, dis- tilled in kerosene nans. Their onetom is to

keep dead drunk jnst as long as the hoochinoo- tasui.

As to marriage relation, mere is none, aueir

religion is that of the Greek church. It is a

standing joke that the Priest has the best whis- key, and I have heard them laugh at the ne

cessity of carrying him home from a “drunk” on a shutter. As to the Indians, their contact with the whites has as usual been a bad thing for them. They have dwindled from 1400 to about 800. A white man first taught them how to make boochinoo, which has been a

great curse to them. They are divided into different families and if one kills another pur- posely or by accident one of the other family must be killed, or compensation made in blankots as agreed upon. A few months ago the Sitkas imprisoned a Chilcat for threatening the life of a Sitka. He hung himself during the night. In a couple of months three Chil- cat chiefs came with a force and demanded two hundred blankets or the life of a Sitka Indian. After a long wan-wan—talk—they settled the matter for seventy blankets.

Up at Takoo, two little Indian boys were

playing with hatchets and one of them acci- dentally cut the other’s toe off. They came to the officer there to settle it. He asked them what they wanted. The father of the untoed boy said he thought it would be fair to cut the other boy’s toe off in the same place. The offi- cer would not allow this, therefore the toe was

paid for with twenty-seven yards of calico. Iu case of a murder they would rather kill one of the murderer’s friends than the murderer, for they say he has to die anyway, so that it is no

Eunishment to kill him, but if they kill on® of is friends they make him feel sorry as long as

he lives. Josbfh Kytb.

Dr. B. F. Budisill of Forsyth, Ga., while

rolling tempins, bowled himself over and broke his leg. The fact that the ball took down every pin didn’t quite Batisfy him swith the result.—Boston Post.

"Pa,” asked little Johnny, “what does the teacher mean by saying that I must have in- herited my bad temper?” “She meant, John- ny, that you are your mother’s own boy.”— Boston Transcr pt.

Qitieura THE GREAT SKIN CURE. Itching and Scaly Diseases, Hu-

mors of the Scalp and Skin Permanently

Cured. RINGWORM.

Geo. W. Brown. 48 Marshall St., Providence, B. I. cured by Cuticura Resolvent (blood purifier) and Cuticura and Cuticura S ap (the great skin cures) of a Ringworm Humor got at the barber’s, which spread all over his cars, neck and faoe, and for six years resisted sll kinds of treatment.

SKIN HUMOR. F. H. Drake, Esq., agent for Harpei^ & Bros,

Detroit, Mich., gives an asloniBhiug account of his ease (eczema rod nt) which had been treated by a

consultation of physicians without benefit, and which speedily yielded to the Cuticura Resolvent (blood purifier) internally and Cutlcura and Cutl- cura Soap (the great skin cures) externally. SCAJL.D HEAD.

H. A. Raymond, Auditor F. W., J. & S. B. R., Jackson, Mich., was cured of Scald Head of nine

years duration by the Cuticuqa Remedies.

ECZEMA. Hon. Wra. Taylor, Boston, Mass., permanently

cured cf a humor of the face and scalp (eazema) that bad been treated unsuccessfully tor twelve years by many of Boston’s best physicians and most noied specialists, as well as European author- ities.

MILK CRUST. Mrs. Bowers, 143 Clinton St., Cincinnati, speaks

of her sister’s child, who was ented of milk crust which resisted all remedies for two years. Now a

fine heatthv boy, with a beautiful head of hair.

FALLING* BAIR. Frank A. Bean, Steam Fire Engine 6. Boston, was

cured of Alopech or falling of the hair, by the CuJcura Re-olvent (blood purifier) internally and Cutlcura ai d Cutlcura Soap (the great skin cures) externally, which completely restored his hair when all said.ho would lose it.___ TREATMENT.

The Cuticura treatment consists in the internal use of the Cuticura Resolvent, the new bleod puri- fier, and the external nse of Cuticura and Cuticura Soap, the great skin cures.

CUTICURA Remedies are for sale by all drugg'sts. Price of

Cuticura, a Medicinal Jelly, small boxes, 60c; large boxes, 81. Cuticura Resolvent, the New B ood Purifier, *1 per bottle. Cuticura SoAp, (the queen of medicinal and toilet Swaps), 25c.; Cuticura Medicinal Shaving Soap, 16c.,

Principal depot, WEEKS & POTTER, Boston, Mass.

Fer ministers nod Public Speakers. Rev. Dr. Wiggin says: “One of the best remedies

for Catarrh, nay tbe'best reme iy we have found in a lifetime of suffering, Is Sanford’s Radical Cure. It is not unpleasant to take through the nostrils, and there comes with each bottle a small j inhaler for use in inhalation. It clears the head and throat so thoroughly that, taken each morning on arising, there are no unpleasant secretions and no disagreeable hawking during the entire day* but an unprecedei ted clearness of the voice and respir- atory organs.”

Sales Coticura Soap, 1880, 450,000 cakes.

I One Collins’ Voltaic Klec tric Plaster costing 25

■HjrirMV,.cents, is far superior to every VOLTAIC E£|EIICTK!0( ther electrical appliance be-

fore the public, ineyinstant- •kASTly relieve Dyspepsia, Liver

Complaint, Malaria. Fever and Ague and Kidney and Urinary Difficulties, and may be worn over the pit of the stomach, over the kidneys or any affected part. Price 25 cents. Sold everywhere.

apr5 W,S&w2w

MALT BITTERS MALT, HOPS, QUININE BARK, Et8.

A Blood Food for

Delicate women, nursins mothers, Sickly Children, the A’okd, Convales-

cent, Overworked, Careworn, Emaciated, Nervous and Sleepless. 60 Tir e's Horo Senriahlns tiian Ear Malt T'iauor, while

free from its Ujorlooa propertlei.

mch22 2aw&wcow—13

Lawn Dressing. Messrs. C. W. Belknap & Son

Manufacture and keep constantly on hand a Lawn Dressing which is second to none in she wo Id; every article of which It is composed is food for

grass. It also eOectnally drive* earth worms from she lawns, and Ilk wise kills moss, which is often so

troublesome in old lawns. After applying stable manures to lawn als:> Superphosphates and many other lawn dressings now in use, it is a le g time before he children can be allowed to play on them on account of the offensive odor. Not so with the

composition which we oiler to the public, for there Is nothing of which it is composod to prevent cbil dren using the lawn as a play ground at any and all tinne.

Jj3p—Try it and you will use no other. Fat up in bags of 10, 25, 50 and 100 pounds. B3^I>irectionB in each bag. It may alee be found at Messrs. Kendall & Whit-

ney’s. Market Square. W. C. Sawyer & Co.’s, No. 7 Preble street, Geo. Blanchard & Brothers, No. 46 Union Street, and A. A. Mitchell’s, corner High and Commercial Street.

C. W. BELKNAP & SON, 142 & 144 Commercial Street,

POBT1.AND, me. mh20 dtt

NOTICE. On and after May 1st,the Wages

or Coal Teamster* and Yard Men will he Eleven Dollars per Week.

apO d3t

MISCELLANEOUS

POWDER Absolutely Pure.

This powder never varies. A marvel of purity, strength and wholesomenees. More economical than the ordinary kinds, and canno' be sold In com-

petition with the multitude of low test, short weight, alum or phosphate powders.

Sold only in cans. Koval Uakino Powiikb Co. New York._fe*»'8<i&wly

A Never-Failing Cure for Burns, Scalds, Braises, Cuts, Sores, etc. After forty years- of trial, Perry

Davis’ Pain Killer stands unrivaled. It is safe I It acts immediately 1 It never foils 1 Editor of the St. John (N. B.) News, says:

In flesh wounds, aches, pains, sores, etc., It Is the most effectual remedy wo know of. No family should bo without a hottle ol It for a single hour.

From the Cincinnati Dispatch: We have seen Its magic effects, and know

It to bo a good article. From 1.8. Potter, 0. S. Consul at Crefeld,

Khenlsh Prussia: After long years of use, I am satisfied It

Is positively efficient as a healing remedy for wounds, bruises, and sprains.

W. W. Sharper, Valdosta, Oa., says: It Is a panacea for all bruises and burns.

From R. W. Adams, Saco, He.: It gave me Immediate relief.

R. Lewis says: Inlorty years’ use It never has failed me.

W. W. Lnm, NlcholvlUe, N. Yj, says: I use your Pain Kiu.eb frequently. It

relieves pain and soreness, and heals wounds like magic.

J. W. Dee Bays: For scalds and bums It has no equal.

PERRY DAVIS’ PAIN KELLER Is not a new untried remedy. For forty years it lias been in constant use; and those who have used it the longest are tie best friends.

Its success Is entirely becauseof its merit. Since the Pain Killer was Crstintroduced, hundreds #f new medicines have come and gone, while to-day this medicine is more

extensively used and more highly valued than ever bffore. Every family should have a bottle ready for use. Much pain and heavy doctors’ bills may often be saved by prompt application of the Pain Killer. Unlike most medicines, it is perfectly safe even in the hand s

of a child. Try it once thoroughly, and it will prove its value. Your druggist has it at 25c., 50c. and *1.00 per bottle.

PERRY DAVIS & SON, Proprietors, Providence, R. I.

euo&wly

IPARKER’S HAIR BALSAM. I ms eiegam dressing

is preferred by those

I who have used it, to any similar article, on ac-

count of its superior cleanliness and purity. It contains materials only that are beneficial to the scalp and hair and always

I Restores the Youthful Color to Grey or Faoed Hair | Parker's Hair Balsam is finely perfumed and is I warranted to prevent falling of the hair and to re- I move dandruff anditching. Hiscox & Co., N.Y. I

60c. and $1 sixes, at dealers In drugs and medicines, |J

PARKER’S

GINGER TONIC A Superlative Health and Strength Restorer. If you are a mechanic or farmer, worn out with

overwork, or a mother run down by family or house- hold duties try Parker’s Ginger Tonic.

#

If you are a lawyer, minister or business man ex-

hausted by mental strain or anxious cares, do not lake intoxicatin g stimulants, but use Parker's Ginger Tonic

If you have Consumption, Dyspepsia, Kheuma- ism, Kidney Complaints, or any disorder of the lungs, stomach, bowels, blood or nerves. Packer's Ginger Tonic will cure you. It is the Greatest Blood Purifier And the Best and Surest Cough Cure Ever Used.

If you are wasting away from age, dissipation or

any disease or weakness and require a stimulant take Gingei Tonic at once; it will invigorate and build you up from the first dose but will never intoxicate. It has saved hundreds of lives; it may save yours.

j CAUTION!—Refuse oil substitutes. Parker** Ginger Tonic is j composed of the best remedial agents in the world, and is entirely j different from preparations of ginger alone. Send for circular to

Hiscox & Co., N. Y. 60c. & #1 sixes, at dealers in drugs. GREAT SAVING BUYING DOLLAR SIZE.

jan24__eod&wly

Cantatas! Operettas! Now wind up the musical season with the per-

formance of one of our popular Cantatas Specimen copies promptly mailed for the price here mentioned (3 4 Cl) JOSEPH’S BONDAGE (*1.00). oAlrKHili RUTH AND NAOMI ($1.00),

BKLSHAZZER ($1.00), PRODIGAL SON (75cts.), or the easy DAMEL(60 cts.), or ESTHER (60 cts.

CrCITl ID Bennett’S MAYQUEEN ($1), OXiLL liAK. Boot’s HAYMAKER’S, ($1),

or NEW FLOWER QUEEN (76 cents). ADI?!? 17TIT 4 ft BARBER OF {BATH UrXiliJ’j 1 IAO. (60 cts.), PALOMITA

($1.26,) ROBINSONDALE (60 cts.), SLEEPING UUEEN (SO ct*), OUPS AND SAUCERS (26 Cts. DIAMOND CUT DIAMOND ($1.00).

FOR THE YOUNG. SSf1' CULPRIT FAY ($1.00), DRESS REHEARSAL (60 cents), Gl ARDIAN ANGEL (60 cents) HOME IN FAIRY LAND (00 cents), LESSON IN CHARI I Y (SO cents), LIT ILK BO-PEEP (hO) cents), QUARREL AMONG FLOWERS (36 cents), SPRING HOLIDAY (00 cts.), THREE LITTLE KITTENS (50 cts.), TWIN SISTER* (6‘1 cents).

LIGHT OPERAS. SOTS**# cts.). TRIAL BY JURYJ60 cents), BILLEE TAY- LOR (50 cents), LITTLE DUKE ($1.00), PINA- FORE (50 cents), PIRATES ($1.00.

OLIVER D1TS0N & CO., Boston mch25 ST&Th&wtf

a oahp. F. O. THOMES

Would return his thunks for the liberal patronage received during bis short stay in Portland; and being obliged to leave for the West for a short time will leave his business with £. Dana, Jr.- 598 Con- gross St., who is one of the oldest Drug- gists lu the city, and whose experience in fitting of Trusses is second to none in the city, will «c a sure guaranty of fair and honorable dealing, and will In-

sure a large share of patronage. While absent, Mr. Dana will apply them and guarantee to hold all eases treated by him or refund the money.

F. 0. THOMES. Portland, April 4,1882._ap-Id2w FIRST ARRIVAIa

— OF —

NEW CROP BARBADOES

MOLASSES. 981 PUNS. ) Now Iitndiiig nl CJen- 94 TIERCES,' n»l Whw(, e* Scbr. 10 BBLH). ) “4libra.”

GEO. S. HUNT & CO., Ill Commercial Street.

mh30 “u

S. H. LARMINIE, A. W. JORDAN, Chicago. Portland,{Me

S. H. LARMINIE & CO., Commisiiou Merchuut*.

Grain, Seeds, Provisions, 157 Commercial St., Portland, Me.

CHICAGO OFFICE, 122 La Salle 8t

Futures bought and Bold on C cago Market on

M-rglns. Correspondence Incite mardatl

WANTS.

Wanted.

FOR the season at Old Orchard, a faithful, effic- ient girl, for general house work in a small

family. References required. Apply 88 Park St., City. _

aprTdtf

WASTED.

IN a family where there are several servants, a re-

liable woman to assist in housekeeping end sew- ing. Address J. P. BAXTER, 61 Deoiing St.

aprS _dlw Salesman Wanted.

An Experienced Salesman wanted to sell Groc. criEB a til Flour. References required.

E. C. IMiBSKV A C». ap5 __

8tf

jA. OAR33-

IAM desirous of associating, with me as Agent for this city, a thoroughly live, energetic gentle-

man, possessed of go d busi ess qualifications and integrity, and with whom l am able to make a very satisfactory arrangement. 1 a so desire agents at several promi ent places throughout the State (pre- vious knowledge of the busin-ss not necessary), and also a “Special Agent” to travel, who is not to “h-gh toned” to w rk for business. I do not wish too em-

ploy any “office manager,” or any one to sit in an of- fice while other men no the work. Our city agency has been very satisfactorily filled for ‘lie past four months by Mr. W. A. Morris who retires from it to enter upon business in a distant State. Address,

J. F. FERRIS, iTfanager Agencies. Union Mrtual Lifeln-

turauce Company* ap4 PORTLAND NI-tlNTE. dlw

Joiners Wanted. ON Steamer City of Richmond. Railroad Wharf.

ap4 dtf

Wanted.

A FEW good agent- to Introduce the Household and Farmer's Cyclopedia through every town

in Cumberland Coumy. Such a work has long been needed by every farmer, and an extensive sale is fully insured by the spontaneous demand. Apply «t once to JOHN RUSSELL, General Agent, Office ! 176 Middle street, Portland. ap3.ilw*

Farmer Wanted*

TO CARRY on a small farm. Wife must be a

good butter maker. Address A. B., box 1983. mar 18 dtf ~

TO LET.

FARM TO |LET. MACKEY’S ISLAND, Portland Harbor, for a

term of years. For particulars apply to the undersigned at the Preble House between lOand 11 o’clock A. M., Saturday 8th Inst,, or by letter.

ap7d2t WILLIAM M. CUSHING.

TO LET.

ROOMS furnished and unfurnished, 19 FKEE STREET, opposite Blanchard House.

ap7 dlw

i O Let.

UPPER STORY of building oorner of High and Commercial Sts. A desirable place for light

manufacturing business. Power turnished if want- d. A. A. MITCHELL. March 17, 1882.

mar 18 dim*

REAL ESTATE.

FOR SALE.

IVi Story Rouse and Ell, containing 6 finished rooms, one unfinished room, with stable connec-

ted with ell, 2 acres cf excellent garden land, besied a number of acres of flats, water front; about 70 fruit trees in bearing; situated on the County road, leading from Ituightville to Turner’s Island in Cape Elizabeth, Va mile from Portland Bridge. For further particulars, apply to John Wat- son, near the premi-es or N. S. GARDINER, R. E. Agent, 93 Exchange St, City. apr7dlm

FARM FOR *AI*E.

rpHE Farm belonging to the late D. O. Small, very ft pleasantly located on road leading from South

Windham to Windham Hill, one mile from Gambo P. O. R. R. Station, will be sold at a bargain. Small p-yment required, balance can stand with mortgage on time. Said farm contains about 90 acres land, divided into Wood, Timber, Pastujing aDd Mowing lands; th* buildings are a good two story house with ell, wotxi and carriage house with large barn, all in

good condition. Will be sold with farm, a good stock of Farming Tools. For further particulars, inquire of JOHN M. ALLEN, Saccarappa, Me.

aprl d&wtf

Farm For Sale.

THE Staples place, very pleasantly located, cn

the New Gloucester road, in the town of North Yarmouth, will be so.d at a bargain for cash. It contains about 100 acres ot good land, divided into

wood, pasture and mowing lands, with an orchard. The buildings are a good two story house with an

ell, and a barn. The buildirgs and pasture are ►up- plied with never failing water. It is distant from the depot, church and school house about one mile, and f rom ibe store and‘Post Office about one half mile. This place will be offered at tie lowest fig- ures to p irties d siring to purchase. For informa- tion inquire of G. M. SLIDERS, 93 Exchange Street, Portland, or of JOHN S. BARSTOW, near

the place. mh29eod&wtf

House For Sale!

IN the pleasantest locality in the city. 9 finished rooms, bath room and cellar. House in perfect

repair, with moderu improvements, new furnace, hot water, heating apparatus &c. Address

marSldtf _A B., Press office.

For .Sale—Farm in CSorliam.

THE James Phinney farm, near Gorham village, is ffered at a barg iiu. Ii cob aius neany one

hundred acres of laud, with house and two barns. Has a valuable orchard, and wood and timber on iT. The pla«e is very conveniently situated in reference to i-hurcht 8, schools, post office, K. R. station, tele- graph and telephone lines. Good markets near, at Gorh«m,Saccarappa and Cumberland Mills villages. Apply to JOHN A. WATER VtAN.

Gorham, April 3, 1882. _ap4dlw£w2w!4 FAliUI FOR SALE.

TflHE undersigned offers his farm for sale, pleas- J. autly situated in Deering on the Gray road,

about 4V2 miles or thirty minutes ride from Port- land. The luim is supposed to contain about one

hundred acrefr. The buildings consist of a good farm- house, three barns, one stable, a new hen h jusw

and yard, hogpens and sheds. Cuts about fifty : >n of bay and has a good pasture. A fine orchard new-, ly grafted. The s il is loam with clay bottom, and the farm is In a very high state of cult yation. it aLo has a valuable lot of pine timber on it, which w ill be reserved if desired by the purchaser. Terms of payment made easy. Apply to EL BRIDGE GER- RY JOHN C. GERRY, 167 High St.

Portland, March 14th, 1882. marl5 d&wtfll

Farm for Sale. IN Cape Elizabeth, on the Hanuaford road, V*

mile from the town house, consisting of twenty- five acres of land, good buildings, well watered and cuts from twenty to twenty-five tons hay, and under a good state of eultivation. Euquire on the premis- es. HIRAM LIBBY.

mar25 d3w«

FARM FOR SAFE. have a farm situated in the n of Yarmouth, on the Free- Read—about V2 mile from the

s containing 66 acres of land, 1 divided into Ullage. Pasture 2 acres of Marsh, 1 here is a

young and thrifty orchard upon the place contain- ing 110 trees, just beginning to bear. Good build- ings, with a never failing supply of water. Good soil, easily worked, free from rocks, splendidly lo- cated and handy to a good market. This is one of the best farms in the Town and very desirable to any one wishing a farm. I will sell or exchange for real estate situated in Portland on favorable terms. If not sold.on or before April 9th, I will be prepared to “Lease” for a term of years. Reason for selling—I have other business and cannot attend to it. For terms Ac., address or apply toW. H. GREEN, No. 34 Emery St., Portland Me.

February 20th, 1882. feb21 dtf

FOR SALE

FOR SAFE.

THE SCYTHE SHOP AT Taftsville, Vt., now occupied by the Emer-

son Edge Tool Co. Possession given Sept. 1st, 1382. For particulars address A. G. DEWEF, Quecheo. Vermont. ap3dlm

Corn Packers !

SCREW PRESSES and Dies for the manufacture of Corn Cans for sale. Enquire of

mh20dtf BURNHAM & MORRIFF.

FOR SALE.

ALL the fixtures and good will of a first-class restaurant, located in business part of the citv.

For particulars, call on J. BREWER, «Jr., No. 491/a Exchange street, city. mnr21dtf

HUS1NE8S DIRECTORY Book Binders.

«.«. A. QPIftCV, itoom 11, Ptimrrr Kxcbnnfr Wo. Ilf Exchange Hired.

Pattern and Model Maker. 1. B1ROIR, 33 (Iran Si., Portland

Mo.

ELEGANT

TABLE UIPS With Beautful Pottery Centre*.

Limoges, Longwy,

Japanese, Sarreguemines

Satsuma, Kioto, &c. Fitted complete with the

I English Duplex, Oxford f and Harrnrd Burners.

For Sale Wholesale ami Retail.

C. E. JOSE & CO. oelO_dtf

DU F. II. K£ItISojv

ocn

» ha* opened an office In Portland and can bo found

No. 276 Middle St., ; over Edward* ft Walker’* ^Hardware store, from -April btk to dllk.

dtf

INSURANCE

WHY YOU SHOULD INSURE -IS THE-

UNION MUTUAL LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY

OP POBTLAIVD, MAUVE.

IT IS AN OLD COMPANY, having been eatab- le hed over thirty years. I r HAS PASSED THROUGH EVERY GREAT

PANIC since its organization, paying every honest loss without dispute or delay.

IT IS A POPULAR COMPANY, having gained an established character for liberality by many years of fair dealing with its policy-holders.

IT HAS THE ENDORSEMENT of the highest in surancH authorities and the most prominent busi- ness and professional men all over the country, and for all these reasons is entitled to your considera- tion and respect.

IT IS A PURHLY MUTUAL COMPANY, having no stockholders to take the lion’s share of the pro- fits. Mutual companies Dever fail.

IT HAS OVER THIRTEEN THOUSAND POLI CIE* in force, and is therefore 6ure of a fair aver

age mortality, and cannot be seriously affected by epfdemfcs. IT IS A HOME COMPANY.

INCONTESTIBLE POLICIES! All policie issued after Nov. 16,1881 are incontestible after three years from the date of the policies for any cause except fraud or mistateraent of age.

ITS DEFINITE CONTRACT POLICY provides for every contingency which can occur during its continuance, and is so simple and clear that even a

child can understand it.

ITS MAINE LAW EXTENSION is the most iust and perfect plan for protecting the interest of the policy-holder ever devised.

ACCELERATED ENDOWMENTS! Whenever the reserve upon the policy and the dividend addi- tions thereto, amount to the sum insured, the poli- cy becomes payable at once as a matured endow- ment.

PROMPT PAYMENT OF DEATH LOSSES. OUR ESTABLISHED RULE is to pay ur death

claims promptly upon their approval by the loss committee, without waiting the customary ninety days-and Without rebate of interest! JOB E. DCfflT., Frt.i.lr.it.

DANIEL SHARP Vioe President, HENRY D. SMITH, Secretary, NICHOLAS DeGRoOT, ABristant Secretary, THOMAS A. FOSTER, Medical Director.

MAINE STATE AGENCY, J. F. Ferris, Manager.

W. A. MORRIS, Agent for Portland. dec3 oo dtf

CITY ADVERTISEMENTS

REMOVAL OF CITY OFFAL.

SEALED BIDS will he received by the City Clerk until April 15jU, for the removal of City flal.

Removal to be made not less than three times a

week. A bond will he required. The city reserves the right to roiect any bid.

Per order COMMITTEE ON HEALTH. April 5; 1882.

__

ap6 dlw

CITY OF PORTLAND.

Assessors^ Notice. THE Assessors of the City of Portland hereby

give notice to all persons liable to taxation in said city that they will b» in session every

secular day from the first to the fifteenth day of April next, inclusive, at their room in City Hall, from ten to twelve o’clock in the forenoon, and from three to five o’clock in the afternoon, for the purpose of receiving lists of the polls and estates taxable in said city.

And all such persons are hereby notified to make and bring to said Assessors true and per- fect lists of all their polls and estates, real and personal, or held by them as guardian, executor, administrator, trustee, or otherwise, on the first day of April, 1882, aud be prepared to make oath to the truth of the same.

And when estates of persons deceased have been divided during the past vear, or have changed hands from any cause, the executor, administrator, or other person interested, is hereby warned to give notice of such change, and in default of such notice will be held under the law to pay the tax assessed, although such estate has been whollv distributed and p»id over.

Ana anv person who neglects to comply with this notice will be doomed to a tax according to the laws of the State, and be barred of the right to make application to the County Commissioners for any abatement of his taxes, unless he shows that ho was unable to offer such lists within the time hereby appointed.

Hf^rn no case where the Assessors have been put to the disagreeable necessity of making a doom will the possession of Government bonds or deposits in the Savings Banks be allowed as a

plea in mitigation of such doom. Stephen Marsh, ) Cyrus K. Ladd, J Assessors. George C. Burgess, )

Blank schedules will be furnished at the room of the Assessors.

mar31 dtApr!6

BUSINESS CARDS.

WM. M. MARKS, Book, Carl, ami Jon Prinier

P -intars’ Kxcliajige,

111 Exchange St., Portland, Me. Pine Job Priniii&is a specialty.

Orders oy mnil or Id person promptly attained id

pAriknlar intension paid to if k and Pamphlet PrioMos'

mThSufuJ

JgltST A: MOUTON, F U E8CO PAINTERS,

t‘J Jiiu k.l Square. ft*ortltslsd.

irriim and satle'aotiot gnp-nuiteed. Jc2dly

:-X& *, JL&ijSiiiL. i a

STEPHEN BERRY, fob an(t ffl'u/rde'b) No. 37 Plum Street.

Extracts from Brief Testimonials -FOR-

MA-TSTN’S

REACTIONARY HEALTH -LIFT fiom prominent Professional Men.

Caroline B.Winslow, HI. Tf>., Washington, D. C.

With three months* use of the Reactionary Lifter, I am a physically regenerated woman. Its effect has been magical. I esteem it a blessing which can

not be over-estimated.

Clayton Keith, HI. ■>., St. Louis.

It hardens the muscles, steadies the nerves, and tones up the whole physical system, thus enabling It to resist disease.

Ilosatio <»ousez, HI. D., New York.

I am fully oatiefled with your machine ami its ef- fects.

Robert Hamilton, HI. H., Saratoga Springs.

It is entirely satisfactory to me, and possesses all the merits claimed for it.

David |Voo«ter, HI. D., San Frar. cisco.

I dor ot hesitate to unqu*Iiflc Hy commend the Reactionary Lifter to all pe s >ns suffering fro u dys- peptic or rheumatic affections, and to every person of sedentary employments.

Oliver Wendell Holmes, HI. D., Harvard University.

It furnishes a concentrated form of exerc ise ubic I nave found salutary, agreeable and exhi araiing The particular apparatus you use, ‘’The Reactionary Lifter,’’ is a most ingenious, convenient, compact, and serviceable arrangement.

R. C. HI of fat, HI. D., Brooklyn.

It is the mo*t perfect compendium of exercise iw- airiDablo. Lt ispartioulaily adapted to ladies suff- ering from uterine and kindred veaknesse?.

liawMoa A. liVUK, HI. IK, Buffalo.

1 was astonished at the wonderful potency of cum-

ulative exercise in reaching and relieving chronic Infirmities of long standing, It has been a new rev-

elation to me ana other medical friends. C. Peckham Pitch, HI. D.,

New York. It is almost indispensable for the maintenance of

health: it develops the entire muscular structure, and imparts tone and vitality to the whole orgamtm

HEALTH LIFT ROOMS 201 MIDDLE STREET.

novb___dtf

Cures Rheumatism, Lumbago; Lame Back, Sprains and Bruises, Asthma, Catarrh, Coughs, Colds, Sore Throat, Diphtheria, Bums, Frost Bite6, Tooth, Ear, and Headache, and all pains and aches.

The best Internal and external remedy In the world. Every bottle guaranteed. f

g Price, 60 cents and '1.00. ^ FOSTER, MILBUItf & Prop’rs, I

BUPFALC Y.. U. S..^

w. F. PHILLIPS & CO., Wh esale Ag sag uThJkS

! _ RAILROADS._ Grand Trunk Railway of Canada.

chasgFof time.

Oi*V and after iUONDAV, OCT. 17th, 1881, train* will run a* folio#*:

DAPARTVRFS: For Auburn and Lewivton, 7.10 a. m.,

12.36 and 6.16 p.m. For Gorham, 7.80 a. in., 1. 80 and 6.15 p. in. For Ciorham, 4.00 p. m., (mixed.) For IVloKtreal €|uebee and Chicago, 1. 30

p. m. ARRIVALS.

From l.ewiaton aud Auburn, 8.80 a. m 12.30. 3,16 aud ti.00 p. m.

From Ciorhnm, 8.30, 9.40 a. m., and 12.30 p. m,

Front Chicago, MontrtiO and uebcc. 12.80 p. m.

PASSENGER OFFICES 74 EXCHANGE STREET

-AND-

DEPOT AT FOOT AF INDIA ST.

Tickets Sold at Rednced Rates f To Canada, Detroit, Chicawo,Mill waakte

Cincinnati, 8t. LouT,OmRba, Nugin- aw, Si. Paul, 8nlt Labe City,

Denver, Nan Franciiico, and all points In the

Northwest, West aud Southwest. JOSEPH HICKSON, (teror&I

W.J.8PICEB Snportntendent, _____

0Ctl7dtf

Rumford Falls & BncMeld JLa Itrfc K a 0

___ Leave Canton for Portland and :" Lewiston, 4.00 and 9.20 a. m.

Leave Portland for Canton, at 1.30 —" Leave Lewiston at 1.57 p. in.

Stage connections with Byron. Mexico, Dixzield, Peru, Livermore, West Sumner and Turner.

OTIS HAYFOKD Supt. "Portland, Dec., 6th, 1881. dec3 dtf

MINE CENT L RAILROAD. On and alter Iflsnday, Dec. 5th, Passenger

Trains will run as follows. Leave Portland for Nt. John, Halifax and the Provinces, and all stations on E. A N. A. Hail way, 12.55, and 111.15 p m,; 8t. Andrews, at. ®te-

Shen, Fredericton Aroostook C'onnty, loosebead Lake, and all stations on B. A

Piscataquis H- R., 111.16 p. m., (or 12.55 p. m., noon, and remain lb Bangor over night); for Bangor, Bucksport, Dexter. Belfast and Hkowhegan, 12.45 p. m., 12.65 p. m.,$11.15 p. m. Waterville, 7.00 a. m. 12.45 p. m., 12.65 p. m., 11.16 p. m and 6.15 p. m. Saturdays only, Augusta, Hallowell, Gardiner, Rich- mond,and Brunswick 7.00 a. in., 12.65 p. m., 5.15 p. m., til.16 p. m.; Bath, 7.00 a. m. 12.65 p. m., 6.16 p. m. and 11.15 p. m. on Saturdays only; Rockland, and Knox A Lincoln B. K., 7.00 a. m., 12.65 p. m.: Auburn and Lewiston, 12.45 p. m., 5,05 p. m. Lewiston via Brunswick 7.00 a. m., tll.16 p. m.; Farmington, Phillips, Ranceley Lake, ZTlonmoMth, Winthrop, Keadfleld, West Waterville and North Anson. 12.45 p. m., Farmington vie Brunswick, 7.00 A. m.

LEAVE FOR PORTLAND and BOSTON, From Halifax, 8.15 a. m,f 2.45 p. m., St. John, 8.15 a. in., 9.00 p. m.; Houlton, 9.00 a.m.; St. Stephen, 9.46 a. m.: ixucksport, 6.30 a. m., 5. p. m,; Bangor, 7.16 a. m., 17.46

8.m.; Dexter, 7.05 a. m.,4.40 p. m.; Belfast, .35 a. m., 2.50 p. m.; Show began, 8 20 a. m.,

2.40 p. in.: Waterville, 9.22 a.m. 1.55, flO.OO p. m.; and p.10 a. m (Mondays only) Augusta, 6.00 a.m 10.10 a. m., 2.45 p. m., tl0,6o p. in.; Gardiner, 6.17 a. m., 10.27 a. m., 3.07 p. m., fll.14 p. m Bath, 6.o6 a. m., 11.16 a. m., 4.10 p. m., Brunswick, 7.26 a. m., 11.48 a. m., 4.35 p. in., tl2.35 a. m., (night.) Rockland, 8.20 a. m., 1.36 p. m. Lewiston, 7.20 a.m., 11.28 a.m,, 4.16 p. m. Phillips, 6.40 a.m.

Farmington, 8.20 a. m.; Winthrop 10.25 a. m. being due In Portland as follows: The morning trains from Augusta and Bath, 8.36 a. m. Lewiston, 8.40. The day traire from Bangor, and ai] intermediate stations and connecting roads at 1.00 and 1.05 p. m. The afternoon trains from Waterville, Augusta, Bath, Lock land and Lewiston at 5.40 p. m. T*he Nigh* Pnllma* Express troin at 1.50 a. m.

t Sleeping Cars attached, run daily, Sundays in- cluded, between Boston and Maine Central R. R, only.

t Runs through to Bangor every morning, and Skow- hegaa Sdnday Morning, but not Monday. Does not run to Dexter, Belfast or Bucksport, Sunday morning. Limited Tickets first and second class far

4', John and Halifax on sale at reduced rates.

PAYSON TUCKER, Snp’t. Portland, Dec. 6th, 1881. dec2dtf

Portland and W orcester Line. PORTLAND & ROCHESTER R. R.

WINTER IBRANUEHENT. On and after ?londay, Dec. 5,

1881, Passenger Trains will leave Portland at 7.30 a. in., and 1.05 p. m., arriving at Worcester

at 2.16 p, m. and 7.30 p. m. Returning leave Union Depot, Worcester, at 7.30 a, m. and 11.16 a.

m., arriving at Portland at 1.26 p. m. and 5.45 p. VD. (for Clinton, Ayer June., Fitchburg,

Nashua. Cowell, Windham, and Ep« piug at 7.30 n. m. and I 05 p. m.

For Uanchesier; Concord and points North, at 1.05 p. m.

For Rorheitcr, Springvufe, Alfred, Wat- erboro and Nrco Rirer.7.SO a. m., 1.05 p. us., and (mixed) at G.3C p. ns. Returning feavo Rochester at (mixed) 6.46 a. m. 11.24 a. m., and 3.35 p. m., arriving at Portland (mixed- 9.35 a. m., 1.25 p. m. and 6.45 p. m.

For Gorham, Saccarappa. Cumberland iHillM, Westbrook and Woodford V. at 7.30 a. m., 1.05, G.JO and (mixed) *0,30 p* to.

The 1.05 p» m. siain from Portland connects at June, with flooNiAr Tunnel Route for

) West, and at Cuiou Depot, Worcester, for t p York via Norwich Uuf and all rail, i^pringAeld, also With N. A N. E. H

a- (“Steamer Maryland itoate”) for Philadel-

Skia Haltinaore, Wdnhington, and the outfit and with Eomtou A Albany B. B. for

the Went. Close connections made at Westbi’ook Junc-

tion with through trains of Me. Central R. R., and at GrandTronk Transfer. Portland, with through trains of Grand Trunk R. K.

Through tickets to all points South and West, at Depot office? and at flollms A Adams’ No. 22 Ex change Street

* Does not stop at Woodford’s. J W. PETERS, Gen. Ticks,, Agent.

GEO. P. WE T, *upt.decadtf

Bound Brook Route. -BETWEEN-

New York, Trenton & Philadelphia. STATION IN NEVfflffi

.host Central Station in Philadelphia Philadelphia & Readmit II. ft. NINTH ANB CBEGN ITREETI,

AND THIRD AND BERKS 8Tb.

Express Trains. Double Track, Stone Balias So .ure in bay ticket* (at apy railroad or «twuc

boat oinoe In New England) ris

BOCK© SHOOK HHJTE.

FAHE, New Tork ha PbllAdim. { S"cu™iVn,

IfKW kXOLAtO AGENCY, 919 Washington Street, Boston.

H. P. BALDWIN, rah2SASf Oen. Prss. Aeons C. R. R. of N. J.

Eastern Railroad. Winter Arrangement will go into effect

— ON —

MONDAY, DECEMBER 5th, 1881

Train** leave Portland* At 4 a. in. Dally (Right Pullman) for Saco,

Biddeford, Kennebunk, Kittery, Portsroomi Newburypori, 8*ftu>, Lvnn and Heston, arriving at (*.30a. m. A special Sleep»ng Oar will b* read? for occupancy in Portland station, at F.OO j. tr>. and is attached to this train for Boston, (Sunday uights this car will not be ready untill 11 P. ID.

At N 45 a. ui. for Cape i'lizabeth, Scarboro, Saco, Biddeford, Ke* nebunk Wells, North and South Berwick, Conway Junction, connecting for all stations on Conwav Division. Kittery, Portsmouth, Newbnryport, Salem. Gloucester, kockport Lynn, Chelsea and Boston, arriving at 1.16 p ra.

At I.IO p. in. for Cape Elizabeth, scarboro, Saco, Bi- deford, Kennebunk, Wells, North and South Berwick, Kittery, Portsmouth, Newburyport. Salem. Gloucester, Rockport, Lynn, Chelsea and Boston, arriving at 6.10 p m. connecting witb Sound and Rail Lines for all Southern And West- orn points.

Traim leave Benton.

At N.JIO a. in. and arrive In Portland at 12 30 p. m. At 12.30. p. m. and arrive in Portland at 6.00 p.’m. At 7.00 p. m. (daily), and arrive m Portland at 11.00 p. m.

Pulfman Parlor Cant. On trains leaving Boston, at 8.30 a. in. 12.30 and

7.00 p. m. and trains leaving Portland, 8.46 a.

ra. and 1.10 p. m. (Through Pullman Sleeping Cars on trains leaving Boston at 7.00 p. m. and Portland at 2.00 a. m). Through ticket" to all points West one

Nous* may be bad of J. M. French, Ticket Master. Eastern Railroad Depot and at Union Ticket Office 40 Exchange street.

Pullman Oar Ticket* tor Seats attd Depot Ticket Office.

LKOIUS TUTTUS, General Pataenger and ''--act Agent

HANBiMtN, Matter Tnuapcrtatlon ^

irg CHANGE OF TIME.

On and after Monday, December 5lh, 1881, Until further notice passenger trains

will run as follows:

LEAVING PORTLAND 81.45 a. m.—For all stations, through to Bur-

lington, Nwanton, Montreal aud Ogden"- burg.

4.45 p. m.—For Fabyai/s and Intermediate sta tions.

ARRIVING AT PORTLAND 11 -OO a. m.—From Fab van’s and Bartlett. 0.00 p. t*». From Burlington and awantoa.

J. HAMILTON. Sup’t. Portland, Dec. 3, 1881. decBdtl

RAILROADS.

BOSTON k MAINE RAILROAD SBRING ARRANGEMENT.

Oil and after Monday. April ;j, 18-4, Passenger Trains will LEAVE P RTLAKU FOR BOmTON at 8.46 a. m. 1.10

(Express.) and 3.30 p. ia., arriving ai Boston at 1.16, 5.10, and 8.00 p. m. Returning, loavs Boa ton at 8.30 a. m. (Express), 12.30, 8.30 p. m., arriving at Portland at 12.30. 5.00, and 8.00 p. m. Portland for Scarborough Reach nud F*?ae Faint. at 8.45 a. m. 3.30 and 6.30 p. m. (See Note.) For Old Orchard Beach, 8aco, lliddi'tord and Keaocbnnk, at 8.45 a. m. 1.10,3.80 and 6.30 p.m. For Wei Is, at 8.45 a. in. and 3.30 p. in. (See note.) For North Ber- wick, Nairn on Falls. real Falls, Dover, Exeter,KlavcrhiU, Lawrence and i-.owe.il, at 8.45 a. m.. 1.10 and 3.30 p. n. For New Market, at 8.4f» a. in. and 3.30 p. in. For Rochester, and Farmington, N. H.,at8.4D a. m.. 1.10 and 3.30 p. m. For Alloa Ray, at 8.46 a. m. and 3.30 p. m. For Manchester and Cemcrd,N. II., (via Lawrence.) at 8.46 a. m.; (via New Market Junction) at 3.30 p. m. Morning Train will leave Keaocbnnk for Portlnno at 7 25.

%ST' NOT FI—1The 1.10 p. m. train from Port- land will not stop at Scarbrough Beach, Pine Point or Weils, except to take passengers for Boston.

Parlor Ora on trains leaving Boston, at 8.30 a. m. 12.30 p. m. and Portland at 8.46 a. m. and l.io p. in.

Parlor Car Meals secured in advance ai

Depot Ticket Office. gyThe 1.10 p. m. train from Portland connects

with Mound Liar Mceamcrs for New York and all rail lines fer the West. The 3.30 p. m. train connects with all Rail l.ince for New York and the Mouth und West.

MCND 4 Y TKAINM Leave Portland for Koston and Way Stations at 1.00 p. m. RoMc-u for Portland at 6.00 p. m.

Trains on Boston 6l Maine rood oonncct with oil steamer;* rrunlng between Portland and Bangor. Rockland, Mt. Desert, Macblas, Eastport, Calais, St. John and Halifax. Also connect with Grand Trank trains at Grand Trank Station, and Maine Central and Portland & Ogdembnrg trains at Transfer Sta- tion.

All trams stop at Exeter ten misatos for relraai; menta. First class Dining Rooms at Portland, Transfer Station, Exotor, .Lawrence and Boston.

THROUGH TICKETS to all points West and Soctn x»*ay be had of in. fa. W illiams, Ticket kgent, Boston & Maine Depot, and at Unien ticket Oflce, 40 Exchange St.

JA3, T. Fir: BER, Goa. Bap*. 8. H. STEVENS, G*r>. A*er*. Portion*. dec2 dtf

WOLFE’S

SCHNAPPS.

As a general beverage and necessary

corrective of water rendered impure by vegetable decomposition or other causes,

as Limestone, Sulphate of Copper &c, the

Aromatic Schnapps is superior to every

other alcoholic preparation. A public trial of over SO years duration in ever,

section of our country of Udolpbo Wolfe’s

Schnapps, its unsolicited endorsement by the medics) faculty and a sale our<juaIed

by any other alcoholic 'distillation bare

insured for it the reputation of salubrity claimed for it. For saie by all Druggists and Sroeer*.

....

18 "EATER STREET,

4g?W YORK. 41*

ELIXIR -OF-

LIFE ROOT! TOE BANNER

KIMEY REMEDY! A Positive Cure for Kid-

ney & Live Complaints and all Diseasesarising therefrom such as

Dropsy, travel, Diabetes, I till animat ion of the Bladder, Brick Dust Deposit,

Rheumatism, Dyspepsia, Female Complaints, ami all Diseases

of the Urinary Organs. A DruggiMt has Sold over 1,000 Bottle*

Rockland, Me., April 25,1881. I have sold over one thousand bottles of Elixir of

Life Root, and have never found a case whore it failed to give satisfaction.

WM. H. KITTREDGE.

Nearly Dead and One Bottle Cured Him Westfield, Mass., March 28,1 1.

J. W. Kittbedgk, Agent Elixir of Life Root Dear Sir—Having suffered intensely for four years

with disease of the Kidneys, after naving during that time tried various medicines without obtain- ing relief, I was induced to try a bottle of your ELfXEROF LIFE ROOT, and it affords me pleasure to say that one bottle of it completely cured me. I recommend it as the only valuable and certain cure for kidney troubles I have ever seen I would add that before taking your medicine I had become so weak that I was about to give up work. Hoping that others who have suffered like myself may be o fortunate as to try your valuable medicine.

Truly yours, T. F. McMAIN.

Am a 8PBVNG TONIC AND APPETIZ- ER IT HAH NO EQUAL.

ONE DOLLAR A BOTTLE.

Elixir of Life Root Company, J. W. KITTKBDCE, Agrnt.

ROtKLiND, IBA1NV. BP*ALL DRUGGISTS SELL IT,_^j

Je eodAwly22

GRAY’S SPECIFIC MEDICINE.

TRADE MARK

BEFORE TARIM.

The Great Eng- lish Remedy. An unfailing cure for Seminal Weakness. Im potency, and all Diseases that follow as a sequence of Self- Abuse; as Loss of Memory, Universal Lassitude, Pain in the Back, Dimness d£ Vision, Premature Did Age, and many other Diseases that lead to Insanity or Consumption and a Premature Grave.

TRADE MARK

AFTER TAKina. |3p*FuIl particulars in our pamphlet, which wo desire to

sew a free by mail to every one. The Specific Medicine is Bold by all druggists at $1 per package, or six packages for *5 or will be Bent free by mail on receipt of the money, by addressing

THB GRAY MEDICINE CO., No. 108 Main Street, Bctfalo, N. Y.

K|p*Sold ih Portland, by Fed. A. Turner, 221 Congress St, anoxbimj V Stone, cor. Congress and Oreen Sts.

aug'/vnil yr _ __

CATARRH. Elys’ Cream Halm Effectually cleanses the nasal passages of Catarrhal virus, caus- ing healthy secretions, allays inflammation, protects the membrane from additional colds, completely heals the sore* and restores the sense of taste and smell ;beneticial results are realized by a few applications. A thor- ough treatment will cure Catarrh, Hay Fe- ver, &c. Unequaled fo colds in the head. Agreeable to use. Ap-

HAY fever. into the nostrils. t)n j receipt of 50c will mail a package. For sale in Port land by wholesale and retail druggists

ELYS* CREAM BALM CO., Owego, N. Y. nov24 __d&w ly48

SIIOUT THE GLAD TIDINGS.

RUPTURES CAS BE CURED, as hundreds can testify that are wearing tho new

appliance now being introduced by Mr. Thornes. He h*8 liberty to refer to Dr. Small, and other load ing physiciars and to

D. M. Philbrook. who was under Dr. Sherman Treat two years and got no help;

John Merry, at Hastiug’s Piano Rooms. A. Thorpe, at John Crockett’s: Sam’l Patterson, Real Estate Agent; Freeman Paino, Standish; Charles Boynton, Limeriok. And one hundred others that arc now using them, jflii. TU oHIB* will make a specialty of treat-

ing ladies, who arc afflicted, at their homes till he leaves for tho West, by their leaving their orders at his OFFICE :—CHIVED STATES HOTEL,

till the middle of April._marfl-eodlm Imported

WINES & LIQUORS «( all bind., in (he

ORIGINAL PACKAGES, —FOB SAL* BY —

R. STANLEY & SON, importers, 1W4FORE ST., POBTIAHIDMK

.STEAMERS.

General ten Steamer

PASSAGE TICKE1 OFFICE. Passage Tickets, Cabin, Second Cabin, and

Steerage, outward and prepaid, with choice of the fastest, largest and best lines and steamers, cross-

ing on the lane routes free from ice and icebergs, viz: the White Star, Anchor, Cunard, 8ta»e, Na- tional, American, Ked Star, Hamburg American, North German Lloyd, British or Italian linen, to and from all ports in Ireland, Scotiaud, England, Franco, Holland, Belgium, Germany, Norway, Denmark, Sweden, Russia, Spain and Italy at lowest rates of passage, viz: Cabin, $50 to $ 100. Second Cabin, $40 to $00, according to berth and steamers. Steerage $26 to $32. according to#

sto mer and port. Return tickets \tj low. M<erlini{ and t onuncuitd exchange in

sums to suit. Also agent Morris European and American Express for packages and fre ght to all parts of the gl'be. Also agent for the celebrated Acidia Coal by the cargo. Apply to

J. I.. rilUIEH, Agent, No. Exchange Street.

mchlG _

dtf

ftaine Steam ship Company. tie ml-Weekly Line to Sew York.

Steamers Fleanora and Franconia •

Will until further notice leave Franklin Wharf. Foniand, every HONDAY and THURSDAY, at 9 £.M., and leave Ptei 37, East River, New York, every MONI*a* Y v«d THLTtSDA Y, at 4 P. M

These steam er* *re fitted ay with fine accommoda- tions for yaaaengerg, making tbir a very conveniemft and comfortable route for traveler* betwee* New York and Maine During the summer month* theta steamer* will touch at Vineyard HaveD on their oas-

eage to and from New York. Passage Including State Room, 95, meals extra Goods destined beyond Portland or New York forwarded to destination at oaca. For further information apply to

HENRY FOX, General Agent. PortlAnd. J. F. AMES. Ag’t, Pie' 38 E. R. New York.

Tickets ann State Rooms cxs» oe obtained at 8k Cxcnange Street Frori Deo. 1 to May 1, no pas- senger* will be taken by this line iecMtr

Baltimore, Norfolk & Washington

Steamship Line, will sail one of their Brat-claw

steamships JOHN HOPKINS. WM OxaNK. WV. LAWRENCE, I). II. MILLER, AUJEGHANiY, BERKSHIRE.

every WEDNESDAY and SATURDAY, at 3 o’clock, P. M., from Central Wharf, Boston,

direct to Norfolk and Baltimore. Freight forwarded from Norfolk to all part* of

VIRGINIA, TENNESSEE, CAROLINAS, GEORGIA, FLORIDA, ALABAMA, LOUISIANA, MISSISSIPPI, and ARKANSAS,

By Va.,Tenn A tin. Air Line Bills of La- ding given by C. P. Gaither, Agent, No. 240 Wash- ington st. •

By Atlantic Coast Line and Hfaboard Air Line. Bills of Lading given by Waldo A. Pearce, Agent, No. 228 Washington et.

By Inland A Seaboard ioaaliny Co. and Potomac H. H. Co. to Washington, D. O., and Alexandria Bills of lading given at the wharf.

TICKE'IN to Baltimore and Norfolk, and Through T it:bet* to all parts of the South and Southwest, for sale at the Wharf, and 240 and 300 Washington St. Fare to Norfolk or Baltimore $9 00 first class; $7.00 second class, including meals and berths.

f£. HAlflPMON, Gen. Agent, 53 Central Wharf, fioKion DOvS-dtf

INTERNATIONAL STEAMSHIP CO.

l'.uxfport, ifle., Calais, NIC.. St. John, N. B«, HulitBX, N. S.,

Charlottetown, P. E, I.

WUNTF.K ABBAAGEnENTS.

TWO TI1IPS PBB WEEK.

ON AN!* AtTEB fit ON. lUTk » DAY.NOV. 98th. Nif.n .□TT*’’ era of (hi. 1.inr will

-~T Leave Knilread Wharf, foot of State street, even Monday, and Tburl; lay, at 6 o. u.. for Eastport and

St. John, with connections for Calais, Robbinston, 8 Andrews, Pembroke, Houlton, Woodstock, oranii Menan, Oigby, Annapolis, V arm oath, Windsor, Halifax, Monoton, Newcastle, Amherst, Pictou, Shediao, Batburat, Dalh.nsle, Char- lottetown, Fort Fairfield, Grand Falls, and other stations on the New Brunswick and Canada, Inter- colonial, Windsor, and Annapolis, Western Coon- ties, and Prinoo Edward Island Rail Roads, and Stage Routes.

23*r*Freigbt received up to 4 p. m. and any In- formation regarding the same may be had at the office of the Freight Agent, Railroad Wharf.

For Circulars, with Excursion Routes, Tickets, Slate Rooms and further information apply at Company’s Office- 40 Exchange St., T. C. HER- SEW President, and Manager nov24dtf

9 ■

Cook’d Grand Excursion* leave New York, April 27th, June 8th and July 1st, 1882. Full particular* in special Pamphlet, sent free on op- plication. Passage tickets by all Atlantic steamers. Special facilities for securing good berths. Tourist tickets for individual travelers in Europe, by all routes at reduced rates.

Cook’d Excursionist, with Maps, by mail 10 cents. THOS. CoOK & SON, 2ill Broadway, X. Y. i)7 Washing-on Street, Boston, Mass. C. A. BARATTONI, Manager. feb4eod4m

JBoston i>TD—

PHILADELPHIA Somnsibip Lint.

f<«TM each Port Srery WoduewJay *»4 Satsrdaj.

Hf© Wharfage. a Frorc Long Wharf rf_*#ton, 8 ».

:r. Fron- ri-ne 3 .-£*■** Wa*ri /?& [¥£ : Phil&JelpMa, at U a. m

l ;v,<njr%nc« one-halt the rate*! dBanMBCH^* sailing vessel.

Freight for the Weei by the Penn. R.R., and Souu by ronaecting lilies .forwarded free of commission PatxaMC f^ighs DoSIart fiotiud TH* *lfi

ifeals and RooS included. For Freight or Passage apply to

£. U. *A71I» «©N, Agent, AeSlt IP l-s«v Wfcdrf Bait*!

PACIFIC MAiL 8. 8. CO FOR CALIFORNIA,

JAPAN, CHINA,

Sandwich Island., New Zealand and Australia.

Too now an splendid steamers .nil from New fork on the 10th, 20th and 30tb of each month carrying passengers and freight for San Francisco .8 below. S. S. City of Para, April 20 I 8.8. Colon,.. .April 29 8. 8 Acapulco, for isthmus of Panama only

April 10. For freight or passage ates and the fullest ltfw

•nation, apply to the General Eastern Agents, C. I,. BARTLETT & CO.,

f 13 Stale Street, cei. Bread St., Beaten. or to yT. D. UTTLK A GO.,

)e8Sdt.r 81 Exchange 3t.. Portlacd.

Steamers! FARE $1.00.

Thw .avorite 8 team or* Forwt City and John Brooks will alternately leave FRANKLIN WHARF Portland, at 7 o'clock p. m. and INDIA WHARF, Boston, at 7 o’clock p. m. (Sundays excepted).

Passengers by this line are reminded that they se- cure a comfortable night’s rest and avoid the expense and inconvenience of arriving in Boston la'ce at night

gar* Tickets and Staterooms for tale at D. e. YOUNG’S, 272 Middle Street.

Through Tickets to Now York, via the varioua Rail and Sound Lines for sale.

Freight taken as usual. J. B. < 0¥liE, Jr., General Agent.

dtf

“CLYDE'S"' iH’IsiBadeigiSmt. & Sew

Knarlantf STEAMSH1I LINE

FROM BOSTON It. ouncetion with OLD ( OJ.«N¥ BAIL

ROAD.

Freight received and for.varded daily to FALL RIVER there connecting with vhe Clydr •Steain- •m, mailing every WEDNESDAY and SATURDAY direct to

PMI adelpLia. Connecting there with •’lyile Stems Line* to Charleston, ». C., Washington, V. C., ud * nu Wotei Lines v

Through ltatcs anil Bills Lading given from any point in New England to Philadelphia.

For Bates and Information apply to It. D. C. HI * U. Agent.

15 State Street, Boston, Mass feb20d ____

DOMINION LINE.

I The steamer* of this Line will

run during the winter season

fortnightly hut ween this port and Liverpool. The vessels are Cl) de

bui t. ful powered and have superior accommoda- tion for caoin and steerage passengers Prepaid tickets are issued at reduced rates to those desirous of bringing out their friends. Dates of sailing from Portland to Liverpool. TORONTO,tCftpt. Gibson.19th March ONTARIO, Capt Williams.30th March. BROOKLYN, Capt. Lindall.13th April. DOMINION. 27th April.

AATE8 OF PASSAGE. Cab’n. $60.00 Gold. Cabin return.... .$90.00 Gold.

For passage. &c„ apply to DAVID TORRANCE & CO., General Agents, Grand Trunk Freight Ofll ccs, feot of India street. deed dtmayl

—«—

NERVOUS DEBILITY.

A Cure Guaranteed. Dr. K. C. West’s Nerve aed Bbai.v Treat-

ment: a specific for Hysteria, Dissiness, Convtri-

sious, Nervous Headache, Mental Depression, Law# of Memory. Spermatorrhoea, Impotency, Involunta-

ry Emissions. Premature Old Age, caused bv over-

ertion, self-abuso, or over-indulgence which leads

to misery, decay and death. One ox will cure

recent cai-es Each box contains one onth s treat-

meat. Doe dollar a b x, or six box. for are dol-

lars; sent by mall prepaid on recelp. of prle«. Tb«

proprietors, John C. West & Co., gu\ran>eeali tK'ie. to oure any ease. With each order reo«lT.d for

six boxes, aecom auied aitb Are .“iifJjJJ® P”* > prletors will send the purchaser their written guar, antee to return the money If the treatment does not effect a cure. Guarantees Issued through H. H. HAY & CO., Druggists, only agents n Portland, Me., at Junction Middle and Free Sts.

uovlb ^ dAwlydfl