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Western Reserve C HRONIOLE. Volume 57 jSTo. .Warren, Ohio. October, 30, LS72. Whole USTo. 292G BUSINESS DIRECTORY. UESERTT CHROXrCXE WESTEU every Wednesday morning. arren S M. In Empire Block, Market (Utbzkx. Editor and Proprietor. TIBLS AXO TESTAMENTS at the riaditaiettof publishing them, for sale bVthe TauMBUt.i.Oo. Biblb Kociett, at a 1 it. depositories throughout the county. AU the at vie and prices published by the American Bible Society, kept constantly on "hand. Central Depository at Hapeood Brown's. Market st., (south side of Court L'oasesauare) Warren. O. (July S. 1872. lyr. "PiR- - l'OT, Physician and Surgeon, 1 J Office and residence a few rods South oTthe Atlantic A Great Western Depot, where he can be consulted professionally. Warren. O. April 19 1S71-- LYSAX, Dentist Office over AT..C. Chryst Ca'i new meat market. P. HUSTEB, Attorney at GEORGE in Vanliorder Block, Market St.. Warren. Ohio. Feb. 23. ln-- GILLMER, Attorney at Law, TI. Notary Public, xewton Falls. O. .Nov. 8, lt.71, 1 yr. Tk VII T SJ A WnoiT nf T,W H will practice in the Supreme, District, and clal attention to loctlD, MjltotJ Home- steads, under the late law. Hon. Probate Judge, corner of tourt F. H. Trew, aid First streets. JuueS.187.Mf. D. GIBKOSS, Dentists, teeth DR. without poln; upper or low-e- r sets of teet hfor 12,uu. Office oyer T. J. Mo-La-in A Son'. Bank, Main bt. Warren. Ohio. Jan. S. 1871).. a t. nrrciir. J. HABMOIf. r AKMOS & XETCALF, Physicians, c.w.ik(HMnn Hiirh Street at tetand formerly occupied by Dr. Karmon JOH BCTCHTKS. W. T. SPKAB. FTCTCHIXS SPEAR, Attorneys at rt Law. Office In First National Bank Building, 2d .tory, front -- ooms Wren O. Jan. o, 1870-l- BRISCOE, Physician JU. Office at Residence, north aide of Market Street, two doors east of Kim. Par- ticular attention paid to Chronic diseases. Jan. 5. ISTii-ly- r. 1. R. BRACKEN, Jt. D. t E. BUSSELI., M. D. BltACKEX, & RUSSELL, DRS. Physicians and Surgeons.omce ko. 20 Market St., (up stairs). All calls at office attended to at all hours, day or night. Dr. B. will give attention to the treatment of all chronic diseases and can- cer Residence corner Liberty and V ash-to- n Avenue. Warren. O. aug. 2l,ltiJ. F. A. BIERCE, Homcepathlc BR. and Surgeon. Office in Sutlifl's fa ign suecu J.K. XELSOS, Physician and DR. office east of First Nat. Bank. Oilice hour, rrom 7 to 10 o'clock, a. m., and St08p.n1. Jan. JJ"1 "1TASHISGT0' HYDE, AUorney at y Law and Notary Puhlic Office in the Chronicle Building, over Gates Del-ln- 's Store. July 10, 1S72-oi- TlR. F. MYERS, Physician and Sur-IJgeo- n. Office 3d door north of National House. Entrance off Liberty street. Office hours, from 10 to 12, a. m and 1 to 8 P. m. Residence, corner f High andCliestnut streets. Nov. 27, ltt.7-l- y I. TArTBOT. THAD. ACKI-- Y. & ACKLEY, Successors to VAUTR0T 4 Co Dealers In Watches, Jewelry and Dianiouda. Market Street, axr ren. Ohio. Jan a. 1S7U R. W. KATLIl F. H. H. MOMS. k MOSES, Attorneys and RATLIFF at Law. Office over the Ex- change Bank of FreNcan A Hunt, on Market St. Warren Ohio. iJan-- f 1 S. COTTDEBT, Attorney at Law, J .Office corner of MlUandMainSt.,Nilea. Ohio. ioculS l71-t- t TVT R. TYLER, Manufacturer and i Dealer Rloee, Pistols, Cutlery Fishing Tackle. Gun Materials, Sporting Apparatus, Sewing Machines, c, N o. 8, Mar- ket St, Warren. Ouio. iJ. IsTu-t- r.E .BCTCHISS, 6. K. TCTTLX, J. M.8TCIL TUTTLE & STCLL, HCTCHISS, Law, office over Smith l uiuer s Store, comer of Main and Market Streets. Warren. Ohio. Wan. 10. Isr.i-t- L W. K. POKTtE. W. . POKTBK. & Tf. F. PORTER, Dealers WX. school and Miscellaneous Books, Stationary, Wall Papers, Periodicals, Pam- phlets and Magazines, at the New York Book Store, Main street. Warren, Ohio. S. BOBBINS, Newton Falls, .Notary Public nov 1, lS71-ly- r GEO. B. KESSEDY, Fire and Life Agent, Warren, Ohio. ocU 4, 1871-ly- i. W. S. HAU, J. XACKKT. TTALL & XACXEY, Manufacturers I I of Harness and dealers In Saddlery hardware, Trunks, Valises, Traveling Bags, Whips, Horse Blankets, Saddles and Fancy Saddlery, No. 8, Market Street, Wai. en. O. Jan. 6. 17U- - WHITTLESEY ADAMS, Fire and Agent, Warren, Ohio. Merchandize and other property Insured in the best Companies, on favorable terms; Farm property. Isolated Dwellings, and their urniture Insured for one, three and five years. Office in McCombs and Smith's block. CC Mc5UTT, House, Sign, and Painter, Grainer, Ac, .King's New Block. Main St., Warren, Ohio. May ldi 16T1-- U "I X. DAYfSOX, Mayor of the City I of Warren, Civil Jurisdiction same as Justice of the Peace for the city, and crimi- nal jurisdiction throughout city and county. Also agent for Cleveland Cement Sewer aud drain Pipe of all sizes. (Jan 3. 1871. TREX.E!f & GOIST'S X. L. C. R. JL Carriage Works, Warren, Ohio, manu- facturers of Carriages. Buggies, Wagons, Sleighs, and specialties. All orders from any part of the countr p; omptly at tended to. Painting, Trimming and Repairing done to order on the shortest notice. South of Canal. (Jan &. 1&72. ADOLFHXS GR.ETER, Dealer in of all descriptions, viz: Pianos, Organs, Melodeons, Violins, GuitanAccordeoiis,Claronetts, Flutes, Fifes, Drums, Piano-spread- s, Piano-stool- s, Sheet-musi- c, Music-book- s, Violin strings. Guitar Strings, c, &c Store Id Webb b Bijck, over Porter's Book Store. tJan.6 1670. B. H. WiLKf K, W. B. LESLIE, B. L. WALKEK. WALKER, LESLIE & CO., Hill, Ohio. Dealers in Government Securities, Foreign and Domes-ti- c Kxchange. Collections made. Interest allowed on Special Deposits. (jan. ACADEMIC Institute. HARTFORD A. B., Principal, ith an emcient corps of assistants. Two courses of study. Normal and Classical. Fall Term begins August 2uth. For circulars addres J. G. IBWIN. Sec". Oct2o ISTl-l- Hartford.TrumbullCoO. TYTARREJf TEMPLE SO. 29 f Hoi'or and Temperance, meets at cor- ner Main and Market Sis..in this city, every Friday night. All desirous of aiding in pro- moting the temperance cause, which is the cause of God and humanity, are invited to attend with us. Social Temple meets every Tuesday eve- ning. JOHN LAPHAM, W.C.T. D. M. LAZAKUS. W. R. Jan 10, l72-l- y MR. A. P. MISER, Contractor of ronte No. 8189. runnlngdaily rrom uusiavn. to Burg Hill via Kinsman, wishes to give notice to the public that he has pro- vided himself with a pleasant ridingcoach, and is now prepared to carry passengersand baggage to all points on the route. Aug. ESTATE of William D. Morris, undersigned have been duly appointed and qualified as Executors on the estate of William D. Morris, dee d, late of Trumbull Co, Ohio. MARY A. MORRIS. ZALMON MORRIS. Greene. Oct, 9, lS72-- 3' OF FURS. MANUFACTURER In Nov..a choice f and Hons, which will be disposed of as heretofore, at manu- facturers prices. Old styles Mink, Sable and Fitch, made over, after the latest fashions. Work expressed irom a distance will meet Withprouiptattentiou. g M CARTER North Avenue, Warren, Ohio. Sept. 18. lt72-3m- a Charles Masters, dee'd. I7STATEcf have been duly ap-.t- and oualihed as Executois ou the estate of Charles Masters, dee'd, late of lrumu "' ENOCH H. MASTF.RRS, JAMES S. MASTERS. Warren. Oct. 16,I87Zf t. J. HOLLIDAY. L B. XACKKT. I. B. FATKB. VIENNA SAVINGS BANK. H0LLID1Y. MACKEY & CO., Ohio, dealers In Exchange aua Drafts on Europe. Collections made. Interest allowed on special deposits. Sept. Wabben, Sept. 2, 1872. ALiTjISOBT DRUG STORE, JUST RECEIVED, A LARGE fj BIOCK OI - TT LC fCJ s5 "BET ft All of the best patterns, and every sire from Infant to Adult. Alaigestoi-i- t of SHOULDER BRACES, For Ladles and Gents. Female Supporters MA1TS0VS FEMALE SYRIXGE, with Irrigator. Speculum Syringe, and a va- riety of other kinds. Also a large assort- ment of Toilet Articles, vis: Hair Brushes, Rubber Combs, Ivory Combs, Florence Mirrors, 4c A large invoice of 13. AZIN'S Celebrated Perfumery, We pay special attention to filling Phuti-eia- n t PreDriptiont. and can sell Physicians medicine, ascheap as they can buy them in Cleveland or Meadville. GIVE US A CALL. Sept. WM". HAPGOOD. EXAMINATIONS OF there will be an examination 01 teachers at the High School building in Warren, on the first Saturday of every month during the year, excepting that during the months of April and Sep- tember, there will be an examination on each succeeding Saturday, as follow.: First Saturday, Payne's Corners; second, Johnston; third, Bristol; fourth. Warren. Notice is hereby given of the adoption of the following rule. which will bestrictly adhered to: "All certificates hereafter granted by this Board, shall be dated on the day of examination, except that in special cases for good reason, certificates may be dated back, bat in no case beyond Uie date of the previous examination,.' By order of the Board, GEO. P. HUNTER. Clerk Warren. O. Feb. 7 l7S-ly- r. CITY MEAT EIARKET HE undersigned would res- pectfully announce to the citi zens of Warren and the vicinity that be has opened a Meat Market on Lib- erty Street, opposite K. K. Wisell's Carriage Factory, where he intends to keep eo nstanl-;o- hand, all kinds of fresh meats, and 01 as good quality as the country will afford. I have employed theservices of a good butch- er who has had long experience In the busi- ness, and who will always be on hand to at- tend to the wants of all customers. All or- ders left for meuts In the evening will be romptlv attended to. If desired can be de- livered at their residences, or kept In re- frigerator till called on. nne 2S. KS70--U LEMUEL DBA T I. B. WORSWTCK. K. LEWIS. SEXB FOB PBICK LIST. WORSWIOK & LEWIS, CLEVELAND BRSS FIFE WORKS, Cor. Xerwia an Crater fcts, Clerelaad. 0, Manufacturers of and Dealer, in KronjW run pijye. Iron FiUingt and Bran Goods, for Steam, Vt ater. Gas and OiL Cameron steam and .Eureka Hand Pumps. All kinds of Steam and Gas ntting tools constantly on hand. (July 24, 1872-ly- DESIRABLE HOUSE AVERY FOR SALr On Baretta SU, Warren, known as the Fearns property. House new, large and conveni- ent; excellent cellar, two good barns, and other out buildings all in good repair. W ill be sold on easy lermis. Call at tue office of Ratlin" Moses, Market St., or at the store of F earns A Gray. Main St. I apr. 10-t-f. EXCHANGE BANE FREEMAN & HUNT, . ' WARREX, OHIO DEALERS IU (.old, Rilifr, Csstera Exchange, Cacsrreat Bsak Eotes, sad all Uads of GOVERNMENT BONDS Interest Allowed on time Deposits. Collections and all business connected with Banking promptly attended to. REVENUE STAMPS FOR SALE March L. 1871. THE UNDERSIGNED, for Taylor, Day tt Co.. of a, N. Y., are furnishing at Manufac- turers' prices, those cheap, durable, light and beaulilul Taylor A Day carriages. Open and top carriages on hand at their salesroom at the Center of Greene. Call and examine before purchasing elsewhere. Oct 2, lS7i m. B. W. CRANE fc SOX. TOTICE. J. The state of Ohio, Trumbull Co. in the Court of Common Pleas. Samuel W.Jenkins, vs The Erie Railway Company. The said Erie Railway Co.. defemlant.ls notified that the said plalntin" has filed in said Court, bis petition against delendant, asking lor a judgment against it for (ouoo 00. for dairages sustained by him while a passenger upon the Atlantic A Great Western Railway, then run and oper- ated by defendant, and caused by the neg- ligence of defendant and its employes and servants, and that an order of attachment has been issued in said cause. Said petition mutt be answered by the 14th of Dec. 1S72, and said cause will be for trial at the next term ol said Court. KUTCUINS, TUTTLE 4 STULL. Oct. 2. Ie72-- PltfTs Atty'e. SALE OF REAL GUARDIAN'S of sn order of the Probate Court 01 Trumbull county, Ohio, I will otter for sale, at public auction, on Saturday the 9th day of Nov., A. D. 1S72, be- tween the hours of one and four o'clock, p. m.. upon the premises, the following descri- bed ral estate, situate in the county of Trumbull, state of Ohio, and known as part of Lot No. 8. in the township of Braceville, bounded by the north aud south center road on the wf st; by land of Frederick G. Tafl's heirs and N. O. Humphrey on the south; on the east by S. P. Ingraham, and by land of AretusSlow and the Cleveland A Maho- ning Railroad on the north. Containing about 41 acres of land, be the same more or less. Terms of Sale. One-thi- rd !n hand, one-thir- d in one year; one-thir- d In two years from the day of sale, with Interest; the payments to be secured by mortgage upon the premises sold. GEORGE E. ROPER. Guardian of John Croy. Braceville. Oct. 9. Ib72-- 4t LEGAL NOTICE. Court of Trumbull County, buueof Ohio. Painesviile 4 Youngstown Kail Road Co. vs. Warren Iddlngs, Henry A. Iddings, William T. Iddings. Elizabeth Iddings, May Iddings. Forrest Iddings. F rank ladings, et. at. Henry A. Iddings, who is supposed to reside in the Slate 01 Nebraska, William T. Iddings whose residence is unknown, Kliza-bet- h Iddings, May Iddings, Forrest iddings, and Frank Iddings who reside in Mercer County, in tne Slate of Peuna.. will take notice, that the above named Painesviile A Youug-ttow- Railroad Company, on the 18th day 01 October, A. D. 1S72, filed their peti- tion in the Probate Court of said county, praying for the proper proceedings to con- demn and appropriate certain lands, of which Orlando Morgan holds the title and possession, as Trustee, and in which defen- dants have an Interest situate in Lot No. .31, in the township of Howiand, In said county, for the purpose of right of way in the. construction of their rail road.- - The quantity of land sought to be appropriated in this preceding being one aud acres, and is lully described In said peti- tion. Said petition will be for hearing on the Sth day of Dec 1S72. at 10 o'clock, a. m., at which time you are notified to appear and defend in said action or judgment will be taken as prayed for in said petition. TAYLOR A JONES, Attv's For Painesviile Youngstown R. R, Co. Oct 23, lS72-- C. n.DAULISQ. I P. Gil PER DARLING & GILDER, DEALKUd IS ANTHRACITE, CAXXfcL. 101 (JHIOCJIIEST, . CBI BCH HILL, HISKBAL B1DCE Coal and Slack. Delivered to any part of the city at the lowest current rates. Office on west side or Main St.; Sd door north of Mahoning Depot. Also Agents for the TALMAVU. ata i firn iu a Terms Cash on Delivery. Feb 21. ls72. REDUCTION IS PASSAGE RATES ! A NCHOR LINE STEAMERS. Y Sail every Wednesday and tinturday. Passengers booked toand irom any Kailway statlon or seaport lo Great Britain, Ireland, Norway, Sweden, Denmark, Gt rmany, France, Holland, Belgium, and the United Slates, Cabin fare from NEW YORK to LONDON, LIVERPOOL, GLASGOW and DEKRY by Wednesday's Steamers tCO. By Saturday's Steamers ia and t. EXCURSION TICKETS, $120. INTERMEDIATE, 3S; STEERAGE, all payable In Currency. Part ies sending for their friends In the Old Country can purchase tickets at lowest rates. For further particulars apply to the Agents. HENDERSON BRiTHEKS,7 Bow ling Green, N. lortoT. J. McLAOiNus Warren O, (Jan S, lS72-l- y $30,000.00 IN PREMIUMS! Are offered to Agents for procuring Clubs for the C.VC.V.VJ II WEKKLT GAZETTE. T IX U Cr S- - ZETTE Isa thirty-si- x column paper, and contain, thirty-fou- r columns of reading matter. It Is devoted to Sews, Mterstsre. Politics, Asrlcslrors, Cost-tre- e, snd sll othrr rahji-e- or in. tf rest to the people, ia nn ncrlcnltnrAl nnner the Weeklu Ga zette can not be surpassed. Thousands of farmers and Housekeepers coniriouieii 10 this department during the past year. The Gazette Is the Leading Republi- can Newspaper of the West. And has the largest circulation of any Re- publican paper we3t of the mountains. A GENTS WASTED EVER YWHERE Send for Premium List, etc toCrs. Gazette Co Cincinnati. O. loci za. dino. LIVERY Boarding and Sale Stable. undersigned having purchased THE interest of Peter Folk in the new sta- ble at the rear of the National House, are prepared to accommodate theirpalrons with new equipages, of all varieties, single and double, all of the newest stvlesand nninish. ij KT" CS T3 M&- - Is all In good condition, and will be let at reasonable rates. Hearse and carriages fur- nished for funerals. The best of care given to boarding stock. BARTfi.TT A HERZOG. May 24. ll-- " SPECIAL MASTER COMMIS- SIONER'S SALE. The State of Ohio, Trumbull County, ss. John M. Stall, ) In Trumbull vs. VCommon Pleas. B. F. Parks, et. al. ) r v virtue ,111 " . of the Court of Common Pleas of Trumbul1 Co Ohio, in the above named case, to me directed aud delivered, I have levied upon and shall expose to public sale.on the premi-se- n, on Saturday, Sot. 16th, A. D. 1S72, at oneo'clock, p. m., of said day. the follow- ing described real estate, together with all fixtures connected with said premises, to- wn: Situate in the township of Warren, county of Trumbull, ard Ohio, end known as being part of Lot No. 28 in the original snrvev of said township, bounded as follows: Commencing al a point on the south side of Water St., at the north-we- corner of lands owned by Mrs. Shoenherger, thence running southerly along west line 3" ltP east two hundred and twenty three (223) feet to a stake, and suiue; thence north-westerl- y one hundred and nflv-sev- en feet (157) to a stake; thence nnnh iUL nnfl hundred and slxty-sevt- n (R-7- feet to a stake and stone set at the son th side of said Water St.; thence east along the south side of Water St. one hundred aud for- - a nan (iwy leeu Appraised at $ , Terms Cash. shove mentioned time and place, I shall sell the following described personal pnperty. t: OneEngineand connections, one Bfiler, Shalting and Pul- leys, cutting Press, shape's Engine two Tapping Lathes, Counter Shalt, Pulleys At six I'uLLinff Heads, one Cutting Head. one Trimming Lathe, one Pointing Lathe, one Wash, one Grindstone, Shafts and Pul leys, and Frame. Tools, Dies anu l aps, one Platform 4r4Lle RelLimr. two Heading Ma- - chi nes. Forge for heading. F"an Pulleys and Pipes, Rolling Boxies,naiiing. runejs. lerms Cash. G. W. DICKINSON, Special Master Commissioner. Sheriff. Office. Warren. 0 Oct. 10. 1872-- St SHERIFF'S SALE. Trumbull Conuty, ss. Dai ius Baldwin, 1 In Trumbull Com-v- s. mon Pleas. Ansora Hayes, et. aL ) Ttv virtue of an order of sale Issued ont of the Court of Common Pleas, of Trumbull i I il.ii. in'h,hiinnfllllMlnuw tnnA directed and delivered. I have levied upon and ahull expose to public sale, at Che door of tha Court House In the city of Warren, Ohio, on Saturday, Soiember 16th, A. D. 1872, at ten o'clock a. m. of said day, the follow ing real estate: situate in tne townsuip 01 Fowler, county of Trumbull, aud State of Ohio, and bounded as follown, to-w- Known as part of lot No. fifty-si- x (56) in said townshlo' on the west by the west line of ssid township; on the north by the east and west road, known as the Mud Street Road ; on the east by lands of Orville Hayden, and on the south by lands of said Orville Hay den, containing uiirty-seve- n acres ui lauu, more or less. Appraised at t . Terms tasn. G. W. DICKINSON, Sheriff. By 8. F. Bartlett, Deputy. Sheriff's Office. Warren. O. Oct. 16 lS72-5- t SALE in Partition. SHERIFF'S Trumbull County, as. Frederick F. King, ) Iu Trumbull Com- - vs. mon Pleas. Albert N. King. et. alj T.v virtue of an order of sale In Partition Issued out of the court of Common Pleas ol Trumbull Co., Ohio, In the above named case, to me directed and delivered, I shall expose to public sale at the door of the Court House in the city of Warren, O.. on Saturday, 5ot. 16th, A. D. 1S72, at ten o'clock. A. M. of said day, the fol- lowing described lands and tenements, situ- ate in tuecounty of Trumbull. and state of Ohio, being part of original Lot No. 21, iu the Township of Howiand, and now within the corporate limits of the city of W arret., Trumbull county, Ohio, bounded on the north by Market St., on the east by lands set off to Joseph King, bat In luct owned by Rebecca K.lng; soutu oy lanus ueiougiug to the estate of Samuel Chesuey. dee'd, aud ou the west bv Chestnut St.: subject to dower estate of Rebecca King in part of said land, t: Beginning at the south-we- st corner of said lands, thence east along the north line of lauds of Samuel Chesuey, at his de- cease, twelve rods; thence north parallel with Chestnut St., nine rous ; tuence west parallel with the south line twelve rods to the east line of Chestnut St.: thence south on Chestnut SU, nine rods to place of be- ginning. Appraised at $ . Terms Cash. ... , ' Till riVUdV GhaHIT Sheriffs Office. Warren. 0 OcU Hi. Is725t SHERIFF'S SALE Trumbull County, as. M. Grogan 4 Co. ) In Trumbull vs. VCommon Pleas. Geo. Rudge.Adm'r et. al.) nr virtue of an order of sale Issued out ol the Court of Common pleas of Trum bull Co., Ohio, tn the above nameu case, tome directed and delivered. I have levied nimii ahall oner at Dublie sale at the door of the Court House in the city of War ren, Ohio, on Saturday, oveniber 16, A. D. 1S72, at 11 o'clock, a. m. of said day, the following real eBtate, situate in the county of Trum- bull and state of Ohio, to-w- Lot No. AS, in Henry Burnett's addition to the village of Niles, Trumbull county, Ohio, which said lot is bounded and d em Titled as follows: East by the Hunter farm (so called) west by Clover St., south by lands of Henry Burnett; north by Lot No. o7 In said Burnett addi- tion; said lot being fifty feet front ou Clover street, and extending back about one hun- dred and thirteen feet. Appraised at t . Terms, Cash G. W. DICKINSON, Sheriff. Sheriff's Office, Warren, O., Oct, 16, U72-5-t LEGAL L. NOTICE, Willis. Jr., whose residence is unknown. Is hereby notified, that Allen Waldorf, of the county of Trumbull, and Stale of Ohio, did, on the 21st day of June, 1872, filehis petition In the Court of Com- mon Pleas, for the county and State afore- said, against the said Charles L. Willis. Jr.. setting forth that tbesaid Willis I. indebted to him upon a"promlssory note given by said Willis to one James Haney. which the said Waldorf was compelled to pay, and did pay a. surety on said note, and that said Willis is indebted to him thereon In the snm of JiHi.oo and interest from the th day of April 1x72. Plaintiff prays for Judgment against defendant in suid action, and has issued out of said Court sn order of attachment in said action, on which the interest in certain lands in Brookfield of the said Willis, have been aitached. The said Willis is therefore required to appear and answer said peti- tion on or before the 16th day of November, A. D. 1872. TAYLOR A JONRS. Oct. 16, 1872-6- L Atty's for Waldorf. THE CHRONICLE. THE LESSONS OF CAMPAIGN [From the Nation, Oct. 17] We presume the most ardent pro- moter of the revolution" aclmils ty this time that it has been iudi finitely X'ostponed or, in other words, that "the Greeley movement" has virtually come to an end. The bawling and vituperation of the cam- paign will doubtie be carrieil on a fortninht longer by the more zealous and irrepressible of the disciples, but they all know perfectly well that the game is up, and that tne iage win nave to remain in the private elation in which he has won the admiration of so many honest people, and in which he has rendered his country so much real service. It is, therefore, we presume, not a bit too soon to ask the various 'independent journalists,' "thoughtful Democrats," and "Chris- tian politicians" who have been "working'.' for Greeley, to tit dowu for a few minutes for sober, tirofi table thought, though it may be bitter re- flection. The first thinp; that must strike them as singular and disheartening in the present situation is t'.iat now that the (jreiley movement has come to an end, it leaves absolutely nothing behind it. With the disappearance of the candidate the whole organiza- tion vanishes into thin air. Net an idea, principle, doctrine, maxim, or hope docs it drop in the political arena. What we tee, after the com- batants have retired, is simply seveial hundred vards of blacksuard newspa per articles, and the prostrate forms of several seriously jiijureu iioiiiiuiuiis who will probably not be fit for duty for several months, and some of whom we sincerely respect and tried iu vain to keep out of this wretched scrimmage. This is of course, however, as every one now sees and as every one might months aero have foreseen, the natur al consequence of the conversion of the reform movement into a mere personal assault on General Grant. Mr. Sehurz never said a truer thing in his life than when he warned the Cincinnati Convention that if it took up the cry, 'Anything to beat Grant,' it were better it had never met. In doing so It lost atone blow the sup- port of a large portion of those silent but sympathetic spectators through- out the country who were looking eagerly to it fo'r something in the na- ture of a political revolution. But even if it be admitted that all the charges Messrs. Sumner and Sehurz have made against- Grant were true, and that it was desirable to replace him by somebody else, and that a campaign having for its object his ex- pulsion from the Presidential chair, and nothing else, was legitimate, the first condition of success iu such a campaign was the selection of a can- didate who would bear scrutiny from all s'des, and bear it well, and whom the Democrats might have rallied to without patent baseness and trickery or. their part, and without time-servin- g or tergiversation on his. As there has to be a President, it wa clear enough that people would not turu Grant out without a very careful con- sideration of what they were to putiu his place, in other words, there was no use in Sumner's or Schurz's or Trumbull's going about the country denouncing Grant simply. These denunciations by themselves pro- duced little or no impression. Few if any would form any judgment on them until they heard what hau to be said about the man who it was proposed should succeed Grant: for the faults of one candidate and the merits of the other form in the voter's mind one idea, complex it raav be. but still one. To abuse Grant, tiieie- - fore, and keep silent about Greeley, as many Liberal orators did, was political absurdity of ibe first order. To win in a personal encounter, not only Bas your antagonist to be a fee- ble man, but you have to te a strong- er man than he. hat was most injurious to Mr. Greeley was, however, not Mr. Gree- ley's own record, bad as that was in many places, but his alliance with the Democracy. If it be asked why Democratic support should have proved more injurious to him than to anv other possible or probable Liberal candidate Mr. Adams, for instance the answer is very simple. Mr. Greeley's whole career down to 1871 was of a kind that made any reconcil- iation or common action between him and the Democrats impossible without such a serious modification of opinions on his part as would shake all confi- dence either in his honesty or his sagacity; and, for the purposes of the Presidency, it made little dmer- - ence in the popular eye whether he was a knave or a rooi. lie may nave been right in his language or opin- ions during the last twenty years, but, if he was, his sudden change on re- ceiving his nomination was sure to destroy confidence in his virtue; if he was not right, his failure to find it out till this late period was fatal to his reputation for wisdom. More- over, he was one of the few men whom the Democrats could not take up without exciting disgust. Their transaction with Greeley was not one that could be hidden from the public gaze. Everybody saw the whole of it, and it was marked throughout by the suppression or repudiation of everything which served the Demo- cratic organization as a reason for ex- isting. What it had to surrender, in order to take Greeley, left no excuse for its maintenance except naked greed for office. The country would not swallow such a combinati-m- There were men in the Republican ranks, or possessing Republican sym- pathies, whose general ideas on the subject of reconstruction, taxation, State rights and general governmen- tal policy, made it possible for the Democrats to support them without any other abandonment of principle than what hard facts had made plain- ly necessary; but Greeley was not one of. these men. and the Cincinnati Convention refused to nominate any of them. Moreover, the attempt to make Greeley the apostle of reconciliation was not only a failure, but the most ludicrous failure of all. Reconcilia- tion is a process partly mental and partly moral. Enemies are recon- ciled by the mutual determination to forget past differences, and by the springing up of a mutual liking. Iu the absence of these facts there is no reconciliation. Whenever they ex- ist between the North aud the South, the North and the South will be rec- onciled, no matter who is President ; as long as they do not exist, they will not be reconciled, no matter who is President. To talk of reconciliation through the election of a particular man, without reference to the state of puhlic sentiment, is absurd. Indeed, the oddest thing in the Greeley can- vass was the determination of many of his newspapers to treat everybody who denied his fitness for the Presi- dency as a fosterer of discord ; that is, they would only hear of one mode of reconciling North and South, and this was by making President a man whom three-fourt- hs of the voters be- lieved, on various grounds, to be unfit for the position, and who Lad played a larger part than any one living in precipitating the conflict which made reconciliation necessary. nt Mahan's sermons, showing Greeleyism to be a sort of double-extrac- t of Christianity, were perhaps as odd freaks as were ever perpetrated in the name of religion. "We want you to be good friends," said the Greeley apostles, "evermore; but we insist that the only way to become good friends is to stand on your heads for five minutes ; anybody who says you can be reconciled in any other way than this is a man of blood." The last point in the lesson which our Grecleyite friends may learn from the campaign is perhaps the most and important one of all. FroGta'ule the American people.though an enthusiastic people, are a business neonle that is, in spite of their great toleration of mere talkers, they have a strong liking and admiration for doers, or men who have displayed capacity In the conduct of imnortaut afl'tirs. The Cincinnati Greelevites underrated the weight of this particu-Isrit- v enormously, and are now suf fering for it ; but when they began of late to ridicule Grant Tor not making speeches, they showed that they had not then found out what was the matter with them. The truth Is, that a man who has won battles may re- main silent till the end of his life without losing the popular confidence. General Grant has successfully trans- acted some of the most important business which falls to the lot of man business which e7ery one feels in his heart tasks human powers to their utmost capacity. To shake the hold which this eives him on the popular mind, you have not only to prove his shortcomings, but to put against him another man who also has displayed talent Tor great affairs, or, at all event, talent of the kind which produces tangible and striking results. Instead of this, the Greeleyites put up a man who had never displayed any capaci- ty for affairs, and never figured in any great transaction, and who had wou his influence and reputation ny mere preaching without responsibili- ty, and without exposure to any tests or checks beyond those created by newspaper "sales" and "subscrip- tions." No doubt it is a great thing to have established the New York Tribune; but you cannot get people to believe that it is an exploit indica- tive of fitness for any other business in life, or put the man who performs it on a level with a great commander or great financier. Of course, too, whatever absurdity In Mr. Greeley's nomination was created by his per- sonal character and antecedents was aggravated by the attempt to get op a "singing campaign" iu his honor. No man can be sung into the Presi- dency who has not some trace of the hero in his composition. He must in some wav strike the imagination. The Greeley candidate was nothing if not ludicrous. His Dest friends smiled when they spoke of him. His odd clothes, odd gait, edd expressions and bad manners might have stimulated enthusiasm if tbey had belonged to one who had turned the tide of battle on famous fields, or directed the for- tunes of a great campaign, or shaped and embodied in legislation great lines of policy. But in this case there was nothing behind them in the way of achievement but a mound of slip- shod and abusive "editorials," and a few hasty, crude books on subjects he had only half mastered. The cam- paign w'ill now pass into history as the most comical and yet the most instructive episode in American poli- tics. A GREELEY CABINET. [From the Chicago Evening Post] It is ou some accounts to be re- gretted that Mr. Greeley will not be elected presidentof the United States. Mr. Gieeley is an editor. Mr. Gratz Brown is an editor. Doubtless the cabinet would be largely composed of editors. Mr. Greeley is indebted for the organization of the party which supports him to three distinguished, or rather famous editors, without whose help the movement which re- sulted iu his nomination could have reached no formidable proportions. These three editors, in the order of their standing and ability, are Theo- dore Tilton, of the Golden Age, Murat Halsted, of the Cincinnati Commercial, and Horace White, of the Chicago Tribune. Mr. Greeley could in no event overlook the claims of these gentlemen, and these gentle- men would probably not allow him to overlook them if he would. Of course neither of them would accept any less diguifitd position than that of mem- ber of the cabinet, and as, by so dis- posing of them, the shrieks of locality would be nicely accommodated, mem- bers of the cabinet they would doubt- less all three be, Mr. Tilton, who is understood to entertain similar views to Mr. Greeley on certain financial qestions, and is equally crochety and hair-brain- ed on most other subjects, would doubtless be appointed secre- tary of the treasury. Mr. Murut Halsted, who has, to begin with, a very warlike nature, and who allows no man to knock a chipofThis shoulder with impunity, aud who served with credit at the rear of the German army all through the great Franco Prussian coutest, would of course be booked for the secretary of war, and Dr. White, who is distinguished for his devotion to letters, and is familiar with all foreign tongues, including Norwegian, Russian and the original Irish, would be duly ensconced in the honored bureau of state. There would still remain two editors to be provided for, to wit: Carl Sehurz aud Gov. Bross. The former would doubtless be sent to France, aud the latter to England. To the accomplishment of this felicitous arrangement the democracy might interpose objections. But these ought to be easily satisfied. There would still remain two cabinet officers for the northern democracy, and two for the rebel democracy, besides the position which the elder Blair occu- pied iu the private office or back chamber of Andy Johnson, of confi- dential adviser to the President. This would doubtless be accorded by com- mon consent to JelTerson Davis. The others would probably be filled by Seymour and Blair from the North, and by Hunter aud Breckenridge from the South. What would become of a country chiefly niauaged by editors, we are a little anxious to know. What soft of a happy family they would make iu cabinet council we are almost dying to see. We fear there might not be absolute harmony upon every ques- tion aud upon all occasions. Were the subject of the taritf to come before the body for discussion, for Instance. Dr. White might hazard the sugges- tion that a system of protective duties was simply a system of legal- ized robbery; aud H. 0. might reply in his geutle and genial way that the doctor was a liar and a villain : and the doctor would be altogether likely to come back at his assailant with the rejoinder that he was an inspired harlequin and an educated idiot. Whereupon a resort to blows would only be prevented by the intervention of Warrior Halsted and the final indignant withdrawal of H. G. from the consultation, with the parting iujunction to the whole counsel of his editorial brethren to "go West, and be d-- d." But we will not enlarge upon the happy consequences of so felicitous a result. The prospects of its being carried out are not flattering. The people have first to be consulted; and as the people have somehow imbibtd an old fashioned notion that editors are impractical zealots, with more brains than sense, and more preach- ing than principle, they will doubtless postpone for the present the realiza- tion of theirambition, and the country will iu some incomprehensible way lie compelled to niase shift without tiem. Little Boy 'Boyou the drug man?' Druegist "Yes, sonny; what can I do for you?" Little Boy "Dad has got 'em again I His boots is full of 'em, and he's a howling like thunder, and mother sent me over to get suth-i- a' for him quick." Druggist "What does he want?" Little Boy "Don't know, but he's yellin' for anything to beat Grant." A NEW BATH CURE. Dr. Sapp's New Electro-Therm- al bath Cure--- A Model Establishment. An institution, the need of which has long been felt in Cleveland, has at last been established, namely, ft bath cure, complete in every respect, and which will doubtless prove a bles- sing to our community. Dr. L. W. Sapp, the well-know- n and popular physician, is the man to whom l leve land owes the establishment of this institution, which in the future is to he one of ereat benefit to our beau a ful city. Well persons and also in valids may well rejoice, for hpre is a remedy for almost ail human ailments and a benefit alike to the sick and well. For the past month the building No. 74 Ontario street bas been the scene of busy preparations. All classes of mechanics nave oeen busily engaged in tearing down partitions, removing, cleansing and putting things in shape for the great transformation. The house has been refitted, painted, pre- pared and everything done to make the building comfortable and elegant in all its appointments. It is need- less to say that so far as the conveni- ences for baths are concerned, all the most approved appliances have been brought into requisition, and a visit to the cure will convince any one that Dr. Sapp understands what he is do- ing and intends to make his new en- terprise a success in every respect. Yesterdiiy aflernonn our reporter visi- ted the scene of operations, and altho' workmen were engaged in putting on the finishing touches, yet all was in apple pie order, and the appearance of things denoted that no pains or expense was being spared to render the cure a model in its way. THE ARRANGEMENT OF THE CURE. On entering the d xir, the visitor is ushered into a spacious reception room or office, where the patrons of the in- stitution are received and their wants attended to. The room is handsome ly furnished and carpeted, and is a sample of what will be round in oth er parts of the building. Adjoining this reception room are two electro thermal catn rooms, intended especi- ally for the accommodation of ladies. The rooms are carpeted ai.d the electro-t- hermal bath tubs are new and constructed upon the newest and most approved pattern. Connected with these rooms is a vapor and shower bath.al-- o for ladies, soarraneed that a person can take both an electro thermal ana vapor natn witnoui De-i- nut to any inconvenience. In the rear of these bath rooms is the ladies' dressing room, neatly furnished and designed for the comfort of the patrons of the establishment. Ascending to the second floor, the visitor finds himself ushered into an elegant front room, which is Dr. Sapp'a private consultation room, and which is furnished in the same sump- tuous style as the rooms below. On this floor are two large electro ther- mal bath rooms for gentlemen, a va por bath and a gentlemen's cressing room, arrangea ana lurnisnea in the same manner as the rooms on the first floor. There is also an Ingenious ar- rangement for sulphur and mercurial baths, on this floor, which are recom- mended by the medical profession as particularly efficacious in eruptive diseases. The third floor is devoted to ordi- nary bath rooms, where anyone can be accommodated with a hot or cold bath, as may be desired. It is well known that the bath rooms in hotels and barber shops are not kept in such a state ol comfort and cleanliness as could be desired, but these, we are as- sured by the courteous doctor, will be kept so neat and clean that the most fastidious person cannot find fault. THE BATHS. As stated above, this establishment will be known as Dr. Sapo's Electro-Therm- al Bath Cure. The different kinds of baths that can be had here are as follows : Electro-Therma- l, Va por, Medicated apor, Sulphur, Mer- curial and Iron. The species of dis- ease which these baths are designed to cure are of the nervous order, and comprise paralysis, neuralgia, rheu- matism, scrofula, general debility, diseasesofthe heart and lungs.catarrh, bronchitis, liver, spleen and kidney complaints. In all cases, these baths have proved themselves all that they are represented to be, and all sufferers from any of the above named diseases would do well to visit Dr. Sapp, .and put themselves under bis care, to be treated in the bath cure. The electro-therm- al bath, besides being efficacious in various diseases, is a delightful, refreshing bath for per- sons in perfect health. The bath tub is so arranged that the electricity can be applied to any part of the body, or all parts, and flows through the limbs and body in an uninterrupted current, creating an extremely agreeable sen-catio- n. THE ATTENDANTS. Experienced attendants are em- ployed on each floor of the house, and patients will be kindly cared lor and skillfully treated.- - The remainder of the block, consisting of four spacious houses, will be furnished for the ac- commodation of who may wish to lodge in close proximity to the Cure, aud St. Clair Place, immedi- ately adjoining, isa convenient place for obtaining meals. The houses are beatsd with steam throughout, and as before stated, are furnished in a luxu- rious aud comfortable style. REMARKS. Dr. Sapp will give his patients at the Cure, the benefit of his extensive medical experience and will person- ally supervise theadministeringof the various baths. The Doctor's skill in bis profession is too well known to need comment here. We would say however, that his enterprise in estab- lishing this Bath Cure should be ap- - as it doubtless will, and the firecialed, which he deserves should be extended. No expense bas been spared to make this a perfect establishment. It is at the same time elegant, neat and com- fortable, perfect iu all its appoint- ments, aud above all in a location of prominence, easy of access, and the rates for treatment will be so reasona- ble as to be within the reach of all. We would advise all sufferers to call at 74 Ontario Street aud inspect Dr. Sapp's new establishment and satisfy themselves that what we have said is not exaggerated. We believe and trust it will be a success, and depend upon the liberality of our citizens to make it so. J. V. Mathivet, the well-know- n plumber aud steam fitter, bas bad charge of the steam apparatus and plumbing, which is a guarantee that every convenience in this line has been supplied. A few finishing touches yet remain to be given, winch will necessarily delay the opening of the Cure until Tuesday or Wednesday of the coming week. After that date, the Doctor will be pleased to receive bis friends and patients in bis new quarters, aud we believe that all will be astonished at the change that has been made in the appearance of the building. Call and see the Doctor on Tuesday next. A wholesale liquor firm in Paterson, N. J., were surprised the other morn-in- z at the abseuce of a revenue stamp just affixed to a barrel of whisky by the Assistant Assessor, ana as tney could not sell the liquor without the stamp and the stamp could not be duplicated, they were in an awkward fix. Suddeuly they remembered that a Dutchman had been seen sitting on the barrel immediately after the stamp was pasted on, and on finding that gentleman and looking under the tail of his coat, the mystery was solved. After some trouble the stamp was transferred from the innocent German to the barrel, and the excite- ment subsided. PARTISAN MALIGNITY. GRANT BEFORE THE REBELLION. Twelve years ago, of all tne men in the nation, of respectable qualifica- tions and position, there was not oue, perhaD?, who seemed less likely to become President of these United States than Ulysses S. Grant. En- gaged in a vocation without the eclat attending the "learned professions." ho was quietly ' gliding down the stream of life, obscure, unambitious, filling no ollice, aspiring to none, holding no intercourse with men in high stations, and even unacquainted with the Congressional Representa- tive of his own distiict. So he might have lived, and so he might have died, had not the clarion of war called all patriots to arms. With devoted alacrity he obeyed the summons, and at once gavu all bis powers and all his exertions to the sacred cause of freedom. GRANT'S MILITARY CAREER. . Commencing his new military career in a humble capacity, his rare ability was soon recognized, and he constantly rose from a lower rank to a higher till he was the Commanding General of all the forces of the United States. In every position he was found to be fully adequate to fill it, and his eminent fitness appeared wherever he was placed. He, who until the breaking out of the great rebellion, never commanded more than a company, showed himself master of the management, evolut- ions, aod direction of hundreds of thousands of soldiers. Through him, victory perched upon our banners, and a glorious success was obtained for free institutions and an undivided country. It is no flattery to place Grant's military genius beside that of Frederick the Great or Napoleon. He is beyond question to be ranked among the most able as well as the most illustrious Generals now in the world. GRANT'S CHARACTER. His countrymen, grateful for his distinguished services, and sensible of his eminent capacity, called him to occupy the highest position man can attain. As President of this great Republic, he has shown that there, as in all the humbler positions he has occupied, he was " the right man in the right place." One of his peculiar traits is, that wherever he has been, he confined himself to his legitimate duties, executing them strictly and faithfully, and never producing com- plications, or exciting by trenching on the responsibilities belonging to others. It was enough for him to know his own duty, and to do it. This was his duty as Cap- tain, Colonel and General, and it has been, and will be, as President While be shrinks from any ostenta- tious exercise of authority, yet, where his duty demands it, he acts with a discretion and firmness that are irre- sistible. This trait bas distinguished him, and renders him the very man with whom to entrust the execution of the will of an intelligent and free people desirous of efficiency and liberty. He has ever conducted him- self with amenity toward all classes, and borne all his many honors with an inherent modesty which bas never for a moment been obscured, dazzled or intoxicated. CALUMNIES AGAINST GRANT. Yet this man, whom it might be supposed would be un assailed, has been, and is, the target for the foul and acrimonious abueof disappointed offlce-steker- s, and sympathisers with " the lost cause." The Democratic press has teemed with a virulence not merely political, but personal and calumnious to a degree amounting to outrage. Not only has he himself been pursued in this shameless manner, but the sanctities of his family have been invaded, his parents, and those of his wife, his relatives, and his friends have been subjected to the same detraction. The vampires of calumny have held high earnival.but never has President Grant condescended to give the least notice to the vile falseholds concocted against him; sensible that they are as impotent as they are venomous. But if Grant is subject to this vitu- peration, scandal and misrepresenta- tion, so were the greatest and most revered of our former Presidents. Washington, Jefferson, and Madison were more reviled and abused than Grant, aud preservcred the same silence respecting the slanderers, and felt for them the same contempt. Well has Avon's great master of human nature said : "No might nor greatness In mortality Can eeusure 'scape: back wounding cal- umny The whitest virtue strikes t what King so strong Can tie the gall up in the slanderous tongue? GO WEST. Strange things happen in ten years. Fortunes are made and lost, while one goes up, he who was up findB the level. We are led to these remarks by the following reminiscences : Ten years ago we knew a man who was a poor utility actor, doing his biz for only nine dollars a week in one of the eastern theatres. He worked hard, but couldn't get ahead, aud he became discouraged about things aud couldn't eat much, and his friends got worried about him. One day, while reading the Tribune, this poor young man saw one of Horace Gree- ley's articles advising young people to " go west, where fortunes awaited them." The poor player rolled this bit of advice over in his mind, like it was a delicious morsel, and hepawued all his clothes and stage jewelry and scraped together barely enough, to take him to the rich lands of the west as a sort of steerage passenger. That was ten years ago, you will remember, during which time 'we iost track of that young man, and imagined that he had committed suicide, or died one of those unnatural deaths which are so common out there. Judge of our surprise when, on last Saturday, the bronzed leacures oi our long-aosen- t friend greeted us in our sanctum, and the hard hand of the returned one clasped ours In true western fashion , the once poor player sat down and recounted to us the perils and dangers be had passed through in his wild western life, and, in a voice, tremu lous with emotion, be concluded his touching narrative by asking if we could lend him a quarter.' We were never so taken down In our lire be- fore, and like our returned friend, we don't have the same faith in the teeming lands of the west, as we once had. Extracts from the papers of rejected school ma'ams in Ohio. "The rood is first masticated, and then passes through the phalanx:" "respiration is the sweatiug of the body ;" "the chest is formed of two bones, the ster num and spinal cord, "emphasis is placing more distress on some words.' The correct thing cow for lady promenaders is to carry oue arm bent at the elbow, the hand sticking straight forward and allowed to bob up and down like a dislocated pump handle. The latest Chicago nomination is "John Jones lor county commission- er." It is believed he Is sufficiently numerous to elect himself. He will be inaugurated by companies, and the duties of the office in weekly squads. n-- V".. . V-,- l- 7. iitrnnl it f Cn in- - 4 11 c u - j mcrce warns bankers that no thick- ness of iron or stone will keep a burglar out of a vault if he can only-hir- the room next door. A MURDER RECORD. The New York Herald says that it may well be said that murder is a common crime in that city, and adds: It comes like an epidemic, bringing a series of bloody deeds and deaths. Sometimes the deed is done in open day, a.zain at night, and at times it is the climax of a long and intricate plot that baffles all elucidation. In tracinir the causes of this greatest of crimes the records show that rum and women wield the pistol and knife in most instances. Very seldom d we hear of a murder for mere robbery. Drunkenness and jealousy seem to be the great propelling forces to the gal- lows. Yet not alwavs to the gallows, for the process that leads thereto is and the courts are cautious. But whether the law seizes the crim- inal rightly or wrongly, the victim is he;e still and the murder is done. We have had within a year such a record of murders that, doubtless, the public has forgotten most of them. Who knows how many murders are committed in our midst that the world never hears of? Would it be rash to sav that the poor, lifeless corpse that is'keDt from rotting by the dripping of the water upon it on a slab iu tne .Morgue is always -- acciueniany drowned." or that it is a case of "sui- cide '." . There are dark nights on the wharves, and the noise from the splash of a drunken man or woman does not reach where relief comes from. There are dark nights, too.out in the river, and neither the cry for help nor the wail of the victim can reach tne shore. "An unknown man" often, it is to be feared, means "There is a brother murdered in the river." With these cases, however, the Morgue, and not the Tombs, is con- cerned. Through the kindness of the Warden a reporter was recently ena- bled to ascertain the number of pris- oners in the Tombs who are now awaiting their trial for murder. The total is twenty-two- . In some of the cases there were circumstances sur- rounding them sufficient to make men's blood run cold. The principal figure, however, among this crowd of men charged with murder is Stokes,whoshotFisk. He bears his position much less fret- fully now than he used to bear it. His great confidence In an acquittal by a jury having been destroyed, he began to recognize with better sense the perilous position in which he was placed, anil he is now become tolera- bly reconciled to the tortures and pri- vations of prison experience. His health is not failing, and he, too, is hopeful. In fact, the reporter was In- formed that there was not a poor wretch in the Tombs from whose sin- ful breast Heaven has yet taken the poor consolation of a little hope for the future. TAKE ANOTHER HAT. [From the Zanesville Courier 14th] The party lines are pretty closely drawn in some parts of Muskingum county. Theie are some places where the Democrats can't go Greeley and the Republicans refuse to desert Grant. To illustrate the feeling, we give the following, which was told us by an and a "devout" man. Not long since a church or- ganization of the county held a series of meetings, and as is customary on such occasions, collections for sundry purposes were ordered. Now it so happened that a devout man a dea- con whose behind na.oe begins with S, has gone over to Greeley, and he was called upon by the officiating minister to pass the hat. This was ou Saturday. The congregation was large and a "fat take" was expected by the worthy man who occupied the pulpit Bro. S. responded to the call. He took up his "Dolly Varden," spread a large bandanna over it and then started. The first seat was filled with stauuch old farmers, and S. ex- pected them to shell out liberally. He knew their pocket books were plethoric and their hearts full of good. Their contributious would sink the handkerchief to the bottom of the hat, he felt sure. But alas! Not a man contributed. Bro. S. drew a sigh and went on, but with no better success from the occupauts ef the sec- ond seat. The third panned out as the first two had doue, and so did the fourth. In short, Bro. S. went the "grand rounds" and returned to the stand on which he placed the hat as empty as when he started. A sigh of relief escaped him as lie took his seat. The minister, however, was deter- mined not to be out-don- e, and the next day he asked S. to go the "rounds" again. Slowly the devout supporter of H. G. arose, going through the preliminaries the same as ou the day before. He took up the same hat, spread over it the same handkerchief and slowly passed it before the occupants of the first seat No contributions. He passed on to the second. Result, ditto. He ar- rived at the third seat and was slowly passing the hat under the eyes of the occupauts, when he was arrested by the voice of the minister calling out : "Bro. B.!" Bro. S. turned. "Pass the handkerchief alone, Bro. S. ; or go with your open bands, or take another hat.orfAcre is nobody in this congregation that will drop one cent in the thing you are carrying nowV The effect cau be better imagined than described. Another hat was substituted for S's. Greeley "plug" and the congregation shelled out au amount which astonished the whole congregation. Greeley bat may be a good thing to cover a sorehead with, but "shoo fly don't bother me" when a contribution Is wanted. THE CALIFORNIA CHINESE. How John Spends His Sunday. It is a custom among Chinese house servants, says the San Francisco Bui-teti-n, to stipulate with their employ- ers for a portion of Sunday, on which day they visit their couutrymen in the Chinese quarter, talk over news from home, have their heads shaved, go through with their genuflections aud salaams iu joss houses, smoke opium, &c, tc, some of them closing up the day's performances by getting rid of their week's wages In Chinese gambling houses, which are so thickly located aloug Dupont street The sidewalks swarm with these gregar- ious beings, whose nature is to hud- dle in flocks on the surface and bur- row in bauds beneath. Their dens are hives of industry on week days and rooms reeking with smoke on Sundays. A visitor who ventures inside bas to step over the prostrate bodies of opium smokers, aud feels his way through clouds of moke, meautime holding his nose against a sickening stench of fetid breath, de- caying fish, in short a conglomeration of odors nowhere to be fouud outside ofa cellar reekiug with the fumes of a crowd of Chinese. For the sake of the delectable pleasures to be found in such places, John frequently refu- ses to take good situations iu the country ; like Bridget he must be in town, where he can at least once a wt ek see his "cousins." The Chinese have hosts of relatives, uncles aud cousins especially the latter are counted by the score. They regard as cousins those several removes fur- ther off than a white man thinks it worth his while to inquire. These "cousins' are generally friends, all belonging to the same commercial compaey, aud when they meet on Sundav the jabbering is energetic be- yond description. All day, and late into the night, John keeps up his rounds of visit among bis cousins, but manages to be on hand Monday morning, ready for his work, which he generally performs cheefully aud with fidelity. Humor and Sarcasm. It Is not everybody who kncwi where to ioke, or when, or bow ; and whoever is iznorant of these condi- tion? had better hot joke at all. A gentleman - tvto VJ lwj llUlllUt ousatthe expense of people with whom .. f,A in nl;l.., . . onKuLiy acquainted, in fact it is neither good manners nor wise policy to joke at anybody's expense ; that is to say, to make any- body uncomfortable merely to raie a lauL'h. Old JF. inn V li n vuj rli.nt.llr.'n the subject of many a gibe on aceount of his humped back, tells the whole storv in his fahln of "Tlio v.nr-- a the Frogs." What was jolly "for the youngsters was ueam to the croakere. A iest mav cut rlppnor th-i- n Some men are so constituted t!:at they can not take even a friendly joke in good part, and instead of re- - payniigiii in me same iigui coin, win requite it with contumely and innllllL off hanfa, An a f - , I c for he will brood over your bandiuaire . ., - -r i iiK aner you uave iorgotten it, ami it is not Tirudnnt tn innne oriTr nno'a enmity for the sake of uttering a smart double entendre or a tart re- partee. Ridicule, at best, is a perilous WPATlon- - n r i rp hnw.nai- - ... 1. ... ln eled at social follies and po'litical evi!3 uui oruy legitimate, out commend- able. Te abuses than were ever abolished by iorce or logic. Treat the Cows Kindly. There ar too many who exhibit roughness tf treatment toward the cow; and yet no domestic animals are more sensi- tive or more quickly feel theunkind-nes- s shown them. They can be made docile and mild in thier dispositions, or timid and wild, just in accordance with the treatment they receive from thdr herder and milker; and it is a well established fact that a cow will transmit her disposition to her pro- geny. A rough, quick tempered per- son should never be employed as a milker; and one who will, on any pretence whatever kick or strike a cow, should be kicked in return, from the barnyard into the street,, and never be allowed to return. Gentle- ness will increase the quantity of milk, as has been shown by a change of a cruel and irascible milker to one who practiced kind and gentle treat- ment. It is an injury to cows to be driven faster than an easy walk, to and from their pastures. To be ur- ged on by thoughtless boys and thee perhaps on horseback, is to produce a fever ond heating of the blood which is sure to dry up or lessen the flow of of milk. Cows should al way 3 he made as comfortable as possible, summer and winter, it pay3 to do it. In the November number of the Atlantic, Professor John Fiske has a paper on "The Primeval Ghost World.'-- ' It will be in the vein of the series he published in the same magazine last year, in which he traced back so many myths to their origin in the unending change on the earth 's surface from light to darkness and back again. Iuthecomiu'g essay be gives a curious explanation of the su- perstition so common (especially in England) that it is unlucky to kill a robin. Long ago it was believed that the death of a robin boded some ca- lamity. Still earlier, the calamity was specified ; it was death. Going back a few generations more, we rind that this death was always caused by lightning. Then we come to the generation that reverenced the robin as the bird of Thor, God of lightning. Finally, at the time when the mind in its infancy personified every force especialy a destructive one we learn that the lightning itself is a red bird that drops from its beak a worm that shatters even the rocks on which it chances to fall. So it seems that the English peasant woman, warning her child not to kill the robin, is but giving the nineteenth century ver- sion of a heathen mythe, born per- haps, ages before Christ was. Friz Hard. Ben Davis isa goodly soul, a sound temperance man, always setting a good example so far as out- siders cam see. But his "time" came a short time since. He had employed a carpeuter to make some alterations in his parlor. In repairing the corner near the fireplace it was found neces- sary to remove the wainscoting.when lo ! a discovery was made that aston- ished every body a brace of decanters, a tumbler and a pitcier were cosily reposing there, as if they bad staid there from tba beginning. The Deacon was summoned, and as he beheld the bottles, he exclaimed : 'Well, I deolare! that is curious sure euoucrh. It must be that old Bains left them when he went out of this 'ere house thirty years ago." " Per- haps he did," returned the carpenter, "but, Deacon, the ice in the pitcher must have been friz mighty hard to stay all that time." A good, convenient and very effec- tual remedy for the sting of wasps, bees, etc., is simply to hold any hollow key over the place stung, press it hard into the flesh a minute or so, and when taken off the poison will tie on the surface of the flesh and do no harm. A thimble with a tight top will do, but not so well. Strange Freak of Lightning. A young lady, while standinsr in a window In Morgantown, Butler county, Ky., received a slight shock from a flash of lightning. On her recovery, it wa3 fouud that an atlan-th- us tree, standing near the window, had been accurately photographed by the electric flash upon iier breasi. This reminds a friend that in his youth be was the object of photo- graphy. He bad told bis father that lie was "a demented old jackass." This playful remark enraged the un- reasonable father, and he interviewed his son. When the interview was over the son felt that he had been struck by lightning, and that a photo- graph of a man's hand was distinctly visible but not where could he see the picture. Lightning is guilty of strange freaks sometimes. Goldsmith Maid, the famous trot- ting mare, is said to be stolen proper- ty, and a lawsuit for - her recovery is impending. It is said that about five years ago the stables of a great Ken- tucky stock raiser were burned down, and a very promising young mare sto- len, aud the groom who had charge of her has just seen the celebrated Maid, aud is ready to take oath that she is the stolen animal. Twenty-fiv- e o thirty years ago Rev. Charles O. Finney, now Presi dent of Oberlin College, was carrying on a series of revival meetings in eastern city, Boston, we think. One day a gentleman called to see blm os business. Mr. s uauguur, perhaps five years old, answered his ring. "Is your father in?" asked the stranger. "No," replied the de- mure maiden, "but walk In, poor dy ing sinner! jAOther can pray tor you." Tlmw tall nt.nn f . man in DovleS- - iA.n Va .,-- hn.r.1 thai: a-i-- water could be purified with lime, so he emptied a bushel and a half into his well, and leic oussiui anu uopyj. turned out that, oecauso vi mo the season, there was only 3 feet of water in the well, and ever since his experiment he has been sel- ling a good article of whitewash to bis neighbors at two buckets for a cent, aud walked a mile and a half to tiie creek for drinking water for nia ,iiv ir has doubts now about lime being a good purifier.

chroniclingamerica.loc.gov · Western Reserve CHRONIOLE. Volume 57 jSTo. .Warren, Ohio. October, 30, LS72. Whole USTo. 292G BUSINESS DIRECTORY. UESERTT CHROXrCXE WESTEU every Wednesday

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Western Reserve CHRONIOLE.Volume 57 jSTo. .Warren, Ohio. October, 30, LS72. Whole USTo. 292G

BUSINESS DIRECTORY.

UESERTT CHROXrCXEWESTEU every Wednesday morning.

arren S M.In Empire Block, Market(Utbzkx. Editor and Proprietor.

TIBLS AXO TESTAMENTS at theriaditaiettof publishing them, for sale

bVthe TauMBUt.i.Oo. Biblb Kociett, at a 1

it. depositories throughout the county. AUthe at vie and prices published by theAmerican Bible Society, kept constantly on"hand. Central Depository at HapeoodBrown's. Market st., (south side of CourtL'oasesauare) Warren. O. (July S. 1872. lyr.

"PiR- - l'OT, Physician and Surgeon,1 J Office and residence a few rods South

oTthe Atlantic A Great Western Depot,where he can be consulted professionally.

Warren. O. April 19 1S71--

LYSAX, Dentist Office overAT..C. Chryst Ca'i new meat market.

P. HUSTEB, Attorney atGEORGE in Vanliorder Block, MarketSt.. Warren. Ohio. Feb. 23. ln--

GILLMER, Attorney at Law,TI. Notary Public, xewton Falls. O.

.Nov. 8, lt.71, 1 yr.

Tk VII T SJ A WnoiT nf T,WHwill practice in the Supreme, District, and

clal attention to loctlD, MjltotJ Home-

steads, under the late law. Hon.Probate Judge, corner of tourtF. H. Trew,

aid First streets. JuueS.187.Mf.

D. GIBKOSS, Dentists, teethDR. without poln; upper or low-e- r

sets of teet hfor 12,uu. Office oyer T. J. Mo-La-in

A Son'. Bank, Main bt. Warren. Ohio.Jan. S. 1871)..

a t. nrrciir.J. HABMOIf.r AKMOS & XETCALF, Physicians,

c.w.ik(HMnn Hiirh Street attetand formerly occupied by Dr. Karmon

JOH BCTCHTKS. W. T. SPKAB.

FTCTCHIXS SPEAR, Attorneys atrt Law. Office In First National Bank

Building, 2d .tory, front --ooms Wren O.

Jan. o, 1870-l-

BRISCOE, PhysicianJU. Office at Residence, north aide ofMarket Street, two doors east of Kim. Par-

ticular attention paid to Chronic diseases.Jan. 5. ISTii-ly- r.

1. R. BRACKEN, Jt. D. t E. BUSSELI., M. D.

BltACKEX, & RUSSELL,DRS. Physicians and Surgeons.omceko. 20 Market St., (up stairs). All calls

at office attended to at all hours, day ornight. Dr. B. will give attention to thetreatment of all chronic diseases and can-

cer Residence corner Liberty and V ash-to- n

Avenue. Warren. O. aug. 2l,ltiJ.

F. A. BIERCE, HomcepathlcBR. and Surgeon. Office in Sutlifl's

fa ign suecu

J.K. XELSOS, Physician andDR. office east of First Nat. Bank.Oilice hour, rrom 7 to 10 o'clock, a. m., andSt08p.n1. Jan. JJ"1

"1TASHISGT0' HYDE, AUorney aty Law and Notary Puhlic Office in

the Chronicle Building, over Gates Del-ln- 's

Store. July 10, 1S72-oi-

TlR. F. MYERS, Physician and Sur-IJgeo- n.

Office 3d door north of NationalHouse. Entrance off Liberty street. Officehours, from 10 to 12, a. m and 1 to 8 P.m. Residence, corner f High andCliestnutstreets. Nov. 27, ltt.7-l- y

I. TArTBOT. THAD. ACKI-- Y.

& ACKLEY, Successors toVAUTR0T 4 Co Dealers In Watches,Jewelry and Dianiouda. Market Street, axrren. Ohio. Jan a. 1S7U

R. W. KATLIl F. H. H. MOMS.

k MOSES, Attorneys andRATLIFF at Law. Office over the Ex-change Bank of FreNcan A Hunt, on MarketSt. Warren Ohio. iJan-- f

1 S. COTTDEBT, Attorney at Law,J .Office corner of MlUandMainSt.,Nilea.

Ohio. ioculS l71-t-t

TVT R. TYLER, Manufacturer andi Dealer Rloee, Pistols, CutleryFishing Tackle. Gun Materials, SportingApparatus, Sewing Machines, c, N o. 8, Mar-

ket St, Warren. Ouio. iJ. IsTu-t-

r.E .BCTCHISS, 6. K. TCTTLX, J. M.8TCILTUTTLE & STCLL,HCTCHISS, Law, office over Smith

l uiuer s Store, comer of Main and MarketStreets. Warren. Ohio. Wan. 10. Isr.i-t- L

W. K. POKTtE. W. . POKTBK.

& Tf. F. PORTER, DealersWX.school and Miscellaneous Books,Stationary, Wall Papers, Periodicals, Pam-phlets and Magazines, at the New York BookStore, Main street. Warren, Ohio.

S. BOBBINS, Newton Falls,.Notary Public nov 1, lS71-ly- r

GEO. B. KESSEDY, Fire and LifeAgent, Warren, Ohio.

ocU 4, 1871-ly- i.

W. S. HAU, J. XACKKT.

TTALL & XACXEY, ManufacturersI I of Harness and dealers In Saddlery

hardware, Trunks, Valises, Traveling Bags,Whips, Horse Blankets, Saddles and FancySaddlery, No. 8, Market Street, Wai. en. O.

Jan. 6. 17U- -

WHITTLESEY ADAMS, Fire andAgent, Warren, Ohio.

Merchandize and other property Insured inthe best Companies, on favorable terms;Farm property. Isolated Dwellings, and theirurniture Insured for one, three and five

years. Office in McCombs and Smith's block.

CC Mc5UTT, House, Sign, andPainter, Grainer, Ac,

.King's New Block. Main St., Warren, Ohio.May ldi 16T1-- U

"I X. DAYfSOX, Mayor of the CityI of Warren, Civil Jurisdiction same asJustice of the Peace for the city, and crimi-nal jurisdiction throughout city and county.Also agent for Cleveland Cement Sewer auddrain Pipe of all sizes. (Jan 3. 1871.

TREX.E!f & GOIST'S X. L. C. R.JL Carriage Works, Warren, Ohio, manu-facturers of Carriages. Buggies, Wagons,Sleighs, and specialties. All orders fromany part of the countr p; omptly at tendedto. Painting, Trimming and Repairing doneto order on the shortest notice. South ofCanal. (Jan &. 1&72.

ADOLFHXS GR.ETER, Dealer inof all descriptions,

viz: Pianos, Organs, Melodeons, Violins,GuitanAccordeoiis,Claronetts, Flutes, Fifes,Drums, Piano-spread- s, Piano-stool- s, Sheet-musi- c,

Music-book- s, Violin strings. GuitarStrings, c, &c Store Id Webb b Bijck, overPorter's Book Store. tJan.6 1670.

B. H. WiLKf K, W. B. LESLIE, B. L. WALKEK.

WALKER, LESLIE & CO.,Hill, Ohio. Dealers in

Government Securities, Foreign and Domes-ti- c

Kxchange. Collections made. Interestallowed on Special Deposits. (jan.

ACADEMIC Institute.HARTFORD A. B., Principal, ith anemcient corps of assistants. Two courses ofstudy. Normal and Classical. Fall Termbegins August 2uth. For circulars addres

J. G. IBWIN. Sec".Oct2o ISTl-l- Hartford.TrumbullCoO.

TYTARREJf TEMPLE SO. 29f Hoi'or and Temperance, meets at cor-

ner Main and Market Sis..in this city, everyFriday night. All desirous of aiding in pro-moting the temperance cause, which is thecause of God and humanity, are invited toattend with us.

Social Temple meets every Tuesday eve-ning. JOHN LAPHAM, W.C.T.

D. M. LAZAKUS. W. R.Jan 10, l72-l- y

MR. A. P. MISER, Contractor ofronte No. 8189. runnlngdaily rrom

uusiavn. to Burg Hill via Kinsman, wishesto give notice to the public that he has pro-vided himself with a pleasant ridingcoach,and is now prepared to carry passengersandbaggage to all points on the route.

Aug.

ESTATE of William D. Morris,undersigned have been duly

appointed and qualified as Executors on theestate of William D. Morris, dee d, late ofTrumbull Co, Ohio.

MARY A. MORRIS.ZALMON MORRIS.

Greene. Oct, 9, lS72-- 3'

OF FURS.MANUFACTURER In Nov..a choice

f and Hons, whichwill be disposed of as heretofore, at manu-facturers prices. Old styles Mink, Sable andFitch, made over, after the latest fashions.Work expressed irom a distance will meetWithprouiptattentiou. g M CARTER

North Avenue, Warren, Ohio.Sept. 18. lt72-3m- a

Charles Masters, dee'd.I7STATEcf have been duly ap-.t-

and oualihed as Executois ou theestate of Charles Masters, dee'd, late oflrumu "' ENOCH H. MASTF.RRS,

JAMES S. MASTERS.Warren. Oct. 16,I87Zf

t. J. HOLLIDAY. L B. XACKKT. I. B. FATKB.

VIENNA SAVINGS BANK.

H0LLID1Y. MACKEY & CO.,Ohio, dealers In Exchange

aua Drafts on Europe. Collections made.Interest allowed on special deposits.

Sept.

Wabben, Sept. 2, 1872.

ALiTjISOBT

DRUG STORE,JUST RECEIVED, A LARGEfj BIOCK OI -

TT LC fCJ s5 "BET ftAll of the best patterns, and every sire from

Infant to Adult. Alaigestoi-i- t of

SHOULDER BRACES,For Ladles and Gents.

Female Supporters

MA1TS0VS FEMALE SYRIXGE,

with Irrigator. Speculum Syringe, and a va-

riety of other kinds. Also a large assort-

ment of

Toilet Articles,vis: Hair Brushes, Rubber Combs, Ivory

Combs, Florence Mirrors, 4c A largeinvoice of

13. AZIN'SCelebrated Perfumery,We pay special attention to filling Phuti-eia- n

t PreDriptiont. and can sell Physiciansmedicine, ascheap as they can buy them in

Cleveland or Meadville.

GIVE US A CALL.

Sept. WM". HAPGOOD.

EXAMINATIONS OFthere will be an

examination 01 teachers at the High Schoolbuilding in Warren, on the first Saturday ofevery month during the year, exceptingthat during the months of April and Sep-tember, there will be an examination oneach succeeding Saturday, as follow.:First Saturday, Payne's Corners; second,Johnston; third, Bristol; fourth. Warren.Notice is hereby given of the adoption of thefollowing rule.which will bestrictly adheredto: "All certificates hereafter granted bythis Board, shall be dated on the day ofexamination, except that in special casesfor good reason, certificates may be datedback, bat in no case beyond Uie date of theprevious examination,.'

By order of the Board,GEO. P. HUNTER. Clerk

Warren. O. Feb. 7 l7S-ly- r.

CITY MEAT EIARKETHE undersigned would res-pectfully announce to the citi

zens of Warren and the vicinitythat be has opened a Meat Market on Lib-erty Street, opposite K. K. Wisell's CarriageFactory, where he intends to keep eo nstanl-;o-

hand, all kinds of fresh meats, and 01

as good quality as the country will afford.I have employed theservices of a good butch-er who has had long experience In the busi-ness, and who will always be on hand to at-tend to the wants of all customers. All or-ders left for meuts In the evening will be

romptlv attended to. If desired can be de-livered at their residences, or kept In re-frigerator till called on.

nne 2S. KS70--U LEMUEL DBA T

I. B. WORSWTCK. K. LEWIS.

SEXB FOB PBICK LIST.

WORSWIOK & LEWIS,CLEVELAND BRSS FIFE WORKS,

Cor. Xerwia an Crater fcts, Clerelaad. 0,Manufacturers of and Dealer, in KronjW

run pijye. Iron FiUingt and Bran Goods, forSteam, Vt ater. Gas and OiL Cameron steamand .Eureka Hand Pumps. All kinds ofSteam and Gas ntting tools constantly onhand. (July 24, 1872-ly-

DESIRABLE HOUSEAVERY FOR SALr On Baretta SU,

Warren, known as the Fearnsproperty. House new, large and conveni-ent; excellent cellar, two good barns, andother out buildings all in good repair. W illbe sold on easy lermis. Call at tue office ofRatlin" Moses, Market St., or at the storeof F earns A Gray. Main St. I apr. 10-t-f.

EXCHANGE BANEFREEMAN & HUNT, .

' WARREX, OHIODEALERS IU

(.old, Rilifr, Csstera Exchange, Cacsrreat BsakEotes, sad all Uads of

GOVERNMENT BONDSInterest Allowed on time Deposits.

Collections and all business connected withBanking promptly attended to.

REVENUE STAMPS FOR SALEMarch L. 1871.

THE UNDERSIGNED,for Taylor, Day tt Co.. of a,

N. Y., are furnishing at Manufac-turers' prices, those cheap, durable, lightand beaulilul Taylor A Day carriages.

Open and top carriages on hand at theirsalesroom at the Center of Greene. Call andexamine before purchasing elsewhere.

Oct 2, lS7i m. B. W. CRANE fc SOX.

TOTICE.J. The state of Ohio, Trumbull Co.

in the Court of Common Pleas.Samuel W.Jenkins, vs The Erie RailwayCompany. The said Erie Railway Co..defemlant.ls notified that the said plalntin"has filed in said Court, bis petition againstdelendant, asking lor a judgment against itfor (ouoo 00. for dairages sustained by himwhile a passenger upon the Atlantic AGreat Western Railway, then run and oper-ated by defendant, and caused by the neg-ligence of defendant and its employes andservants, and that an order of attachmenthas been issued in said cause. Said petitionmutt be answered by the 14th of Dec. 1S72,

and said cause will be for trial at the nextterm ol said Court.

KUTCUINS, TUTTLE 4 STULL.Oct. 2. Ie72-- PltfTs Atty'e.

SALE OF REALGUARDIAN'S of sn order ofthe Probate Court 01 Trumbull county, Ohio,I will otter for sale, at public auction, onSaturday the 9th day of Nov., A. D. 1S72, be-tween the hours of one and four o'clock, p.m.. upon the premises, the following descri-bed ral estate, situate in the county ofTrumbull, state of Ohio, and known as partof Lot No. 8. in the township of Braceville,bounded by the north aud south center roadon the wfst; by land of Frederick G. Tafl'sheirs and N. O. Humphrey on the south; onthe east by S. P. Ingraham, and by land ofAretusSlow and the Cleveland A Maho-ning Railroad on the north. Containingabout 41 acres of land, be the same more orless.

Terms of Sale. One-thi- rd !n hand, one-thir- d

in one year; one-thir- d In two yearsfrom the day of sale, with Interest; thepayments to be secured by mortgage uponthe premises sold.

GEORGE E. ROPER.Guardian of John Croy.

Braceville. Oct. 9. Ib72-- 4t

LEGAL NOTICE.Court of Trumbull County,

buueof Ohio.Painesviile 4 Youngstown Kail Road Co.

vs. Warren Iddlngs, Henry A. Iddings,William T. Iddings. Elizabeth Iddings, MayIddings. Forrest Iddings. F rank ladings, et.at. Henry A. Iddings, who is supposed toreside in the Slate 01 Nebraska, William T.Iddings whose residence is unknown, Kliza-bet-h

Iddings, May Iddings, Forrest iddings,and Frank Iddings who reside in MercerCounty, in tne Slate of Peuna.. will takenotice, that the above named Painesviile AYouug-ttow- Railroad Company, on the 18thday 01 October, A. D. 1S72, filed their peti-tion in the Probate Court of said county,praying for the proper proceedings to con-demn and appropriate certain lands, ofwhich Orlando Morgan holds the title andpossession, as Trustee, and in which defen-dants have an Interest situate in Lot No.

.31, in the township of Howiand, In saidcounty, for the purpose of right of way inthe. construction of their rail road.- - Thequantity of land sought to be appropriatedin this preceding being one audacres, and is lully described In said peti-tion.

Said petition will be for hearing on theSth day of Dec 1S72. at 10 o'clock, a. m., atwhich time you are notified to appear anddefend in said action or judgment will betaken as prayed for in said petition.

TAYLOR A JONES, Attv'sFor Painesviile Youngstown R. R, Co.

Oct 23, lS72--

C. n.DAULISQ. I P. Gil PER

DARLING & GILDER,DEALKUd IS

ANTHRACITE, CAXXfcL. 101 (JHIOCJIIEST, .

CBI BCH HILL, HISKBAL B1DCE

Coal and Slack. Delivered to any part ofthe city at the lowest current rates.

Office on west side or Main St.; Sd doornorth of Mahoning Depot. Also Agents forthe TALMAVU. ata i firn iu

a Terms Cash on Delivery.Feb 21. ls72.

REDUCTION IS PASSAGE RATES !

A NCHOR LINE STEAMERS.Y Sail every Wednesday and tinturday.

Passengers booked toand irom any Kailwaystatlon or seaport lo Great Britain, Ireland,Norway, Sweden, Denmark, Gt rmany,France, Holland, Belgium, and the UnitedSlates,

Cabin fare from NEW YORK to LONDON,LIVERPOOL, GLASGOW and DEKRY byWednesday's Steamers tCO. By Saturday'sSteamers ia and t.

EXCURSION TICKETS, $120.

INTERMEDIATE, 3S; STEERAGE,all payable In Currency.

Part ies sending for their friends In the OldCountry can purchase tickets at lowestrates. For further particulars apply to theAgents. HENDERSON BRiTHEKS,7 Bowling Green, N. lortoT. J. McLAOiNus

Warren O, (Jan S, lS72-l- y

$30,000.00IN PREMIUMS!

Are offered to Agents for procuring Clubsfor the C.VC.V.VJ II WEKKLT

GAZETTE.

T IX U Cr S-- ZETTEIsa thirty-si- x column paper, and contain,

thirty-fou- r columns of reading matter.It Is devoted to

Sews, Mterstsre. Politics, Asrlcslrors, Cost-tre- e,

snd sll othrr rahji-e- or in.tf rest to the people,

ia nn ncrlcnltnrAl nnner the Weeklu Gazette can not be surpassed. Thousands offarmers and Housekeepers coniriouieii 10this department during the past year.

The Gazette Is the Leading Republi-

can Newspaper of the West.And has the largest circulation of any Re-publican paper we3t of the mountains.

A GENTS WASTED EVER YWHERESend for Premium List, etc toCrs. GazetteCo Cincinnati. O. loci za. dino.

LIVERYBoarding and Sale Stable.

undersigned having purchasedTHEinterest of Peter Folk in the new sta-ble at the rear of the National House, areprepared to accommodate theirpalrons withnew equipages, of all varieties, single anddouble, all of the newest stvlesand nninish.

ij KT" CS T3 M&- -

Is all In good condition, and will be let atreasonable rates. Hearse and carriages fur-nished for funerals. The best of care givento boarding stock. BARTfi.TT A HERZOG.

May 24. ll--"

SPECIAL MASTER COMMIS-SIONER'S SALE.The State of Ohio, Trumbull County, ss.

John M. Stall, ) In Trumbullvs. VCommon Pleas.

B. F. Parks, et. al. )r v virtue ,111 " .

of the Court of Common Pleas of Trumbul1Co Ohio, in the above named case, to medirected aud delivered, I have levied uponand shall expose to public sale.on the premi-se- n,

onSaturday, Sot. 16th, A. D. 1S72,

at oneo'clock, p. m., of said day. the follow-ing described real estate, together with allfixtures connected with said premises, to-

wn: Situate in the township of Warren,county of Trumbull, ard Ohio, endknown as being part of Lot No. 28 in theoriginal snrvev of said township, boundedas follows: Commencing al a point on thesouth side of Water St., at the north-we-

corner of lands owned by Mrs. Shoenherger,thence running southerly along

west line 3" ltP east two hundredand twenty three (223) feet to a stake, andsuiue; thence north-westerl- y one hundredand nflv-sev- en feet (157) to a stake; thencennnh iUL nnfl hundred and slxty-sevt- n

(R-7- feet to a stake and stone set at the son thside of said Water St.; thence east along thesouth side of Water St. one hundred aud for--

a nan (iwy leeuAppraised at $ , Terms Cash.

shove mentioned time andplace, I shall sell the following describedpersonal pnperty. t: OneEngineandconnections, one Bfiler, Shalting and Pul-leys, cutting Press, shape's Enginetwo Tapping Lathes, Counter Shalt, PulleysAt six I'uLLinff Heads, one Cutting Head.one Trimming Lathe, one Pointing Lathe,one Wash, one Grindstone, Shafts and Pulleys, and Frame. Tools, Dies anu l aps, onePlatform 4r4Lle RelLimr. two Heading Ma- -chi nes. Forge for heading. F"an Pulleys andPipes, Rolling Boxies,naiiing. runejs.

lerms Cash. G. W. DICKINSON,Special Master Commissioner.

Sheriff. Office. Warren. 0 Oct. 10. 1872-- St

SHERIFF'S SALE.Trumbull Conuty, ss.

Dai ius Baldwin, 1 In Trumbull Com-v- s.

mon Pleas.Ansora Hayes, et. aL )Ttv virtue of an order of sale Issued ont of

the Court of Common Pleas, of Trumbulli I il.ii. in'h,hiinnfllllMlnuw tnnAdirected and delivered. I have levied uponand ahull expose to public sale, at Che doorof tha Court House In the city of Warren,Ohio, onSaturday, Soiember 16th, A. D. 1872,at ten o'clock a. m. of said day, the following real estate: situate in tne townsuip 01Fowler, county of Trumbull, aud State ofOhio, and bounded as follown, to-w-

Known as part of lot No. fifty-si- x (56) in saidtownshlo' on the west by the west line ofssid township; on the north by the east andwest road, known as the Mud Street Road ;

on the east by lands of Orville Hayden, andon the south by lands of said Orville Hayden, containing uiirty-seve- n acres ui lauu,more or less.

Appraised at t . Terms tasn.G. W. DICKINSON, Sheriff.

By 8. F. Bartlett, Deputy.Sheriff's Office. Warren. O. Oct. 16 lS72-5- t

SALE in Partition.SHERIFF'S Trumbull County, as.Frederick F. King, ) Iu Trumbull Com- -

vs. mon Pleas.Albert N. King. et. alj

T.v virtue of an order of sale In PartitionIssued out of the court of Common Pleas olTrumbull Co., Ohio, In the above namedcase, to me directed and delivered, I shallexpose to public sale at the door of theCourt House in the city of Warren, O.. on

Saturday, 5ot. 16th, A. D. 1S72,at ten o'clock. A. M. of said day, the fol-

lowing described lands and tenements, situ-ate in tuecounty of Trumbull. and state ofOhio, being part of original Lot No. 21, iuthe Township of Howiand, and now withinthe corporate limits of the city of W arret.,Trumbull county, Ohio, bounded on thenorth by Market St., on the east by landsset off to Joseph King, bat In luct owned byRebecca K.lng; soutu oy lanus ueiougiug tothe estate of Samuel Chesuey. dee'd, aud outhe west bv Chestnut St.: subject to dowerestate of Rebecca King in part of said land,

t: Beginning at the south-we- st cornerof said lands, thence east along the northline of lauds of Samuel Chesuey, at his de-cease, twelve rods; thence north parallelwith Chestnut St., nine rous ; tuence westparallel with the south line twelve rods tothe east line of Chestnut St.: thence southon Chestnut SU, nine rods to place of be-

ginning. Appraised at $ . Terms Cash...., ' Till riVUdV GhaHITSheriffs Office. Warren. 0 OcU Hi. Is725t

SHERIFF'S SALETrumbull County, as.

M. Grogan 4 Co. ) In Trumbullvs. VCommon Pleas.

Geo. Rudge.Adm'r et. al.)nr virtue of an order of sale Issued out

ol the Court of Common pleas of Trumbull Co., Ohio, tn the above nameu case,tome directed and delivered. I have leviednimii ahall oner at Dublie sale at thedoor of the Court House in the city of Warren, Ohio, onSaturday, oveniber 16, A. D. 1S72,at 11 o'clock, a. m. of said day, the followingreal eBtate, situate in the county of Trum-bull and state of Ohio, to-w- Lot No. AS,

in Henry Burnett's addition to the villageof Niles, Trumbull county, Ohio, which saidlot is bounded and dem Titled as follows:East by the Hunter farm (so called) west byClover St., south by lands of Henry Burnett;north by Lot No. o7 In said Burnett addi-tion; said lot being fifty feet front ou Cloverstreet, and extending back about one hun-dred and thirteen feet.

Appraised at t . Terms, CashG. W. DICKINSON, Sheriff.

Sheriff's Office, Warren, O., Oct, 16, U72-5-t

LEGAL L.NOTICE,

Willis. Jr., whose residenceis unknown. Is hereby notified, that AllenWaldorf, of the county of Trumbull, andStale of Ohio, did, on the 21st day of June,1872, filehis petition In the Court of Com-mon Pleas, for the county and State afore-said, against the said Charles L. Willis. Jr..setting forth that tbesaid Willis I. indebtedto him upon a"promlssory note given by saidWillis to one James Haney. which the saidWaldorf was compelled to pay, and did paya. surety on said note, and that said Willisis indebted to him thereon In the snm ofJiHi.oo and interest from the th day of April1x72. Plaintiff prays for Judgment againstdefendant in suid action, and has issuedout of said Court sn order of attachment insaid action, on which the interest in certainlands in Brookfield of the said Willis, havebeen aitached. The said Willis is thereforerequired to appear and answer said peti-tion on or before the 16th day of November,A. D. 1872. TAYLOR A JONRS.

Oct. 16, 1872-6- L Atty's for Waldorf.

THE CHRONICLE.

THE LESSONS OF CAMPAIGN[From the Nation, Oct. 17]

We presume the most ardent pro-moter of the revolution"aclmils ty this time that it has beeniudi finitely X'ostponed or, in otherwords, that "the Greeley movement"has virtually come to an end. Thebawling and vituperation of the cam-paign will doubtie be carrieil on afortninht longer by the more zealousand irrepressible of the disciples, butthey all know perfectly well that thegame is up, and that tne iage winnave to remain in the private elationin which he has won the admirationof so many honest people, and inwhich he has rendered his country somuch real service. It is, therefore,we presume, not a bit too soon to askthe various 'independent journalists,'"thoughtful Democrats," and "Chris-tian politicians" who have been"working'.' for Greeley, to tit dowufor a few minutes for sober, tirofi tablethought, though it may be bitter re-

flection.The first thinp; that must strike

them as singular and disheartening inthe present situation is t'.iat now thatthe (jreiley movement has come toan end, it leaves absolutely nothingbehind it. With the disappearanceof the candidate the whole organiza-tion vanishes into thin air. Net anidea, principle, doctrine, maxim, orhope docs it drop in the politicalarena. What we tee, after the com-batants have retired, is simply seveialhundred vards of blacksuard newspaper articles, and the prostrate forms ofseveral seriously jiijureu iioiiiiuiuiiswho will probably not be fit for dutyfor several months, and some ofwhom we sincerely respect and triediu vain to keep out of this wretchedscrimmage.

This is of course, however, as everyone now sees and as every one mightmonths aero have foreseen, the natural consequence of the conversion ofthe reform movement into a merepersonal assault on General Grant.Mr. Sehurz never said a truer thingin his life than when he warned theCincinnati Convention that if it tookup the cry, 'Anything to beat Grant,'it were better it had never met. Indoing so It lost atone blow the sup-port of a large portion of those silentbut sympathetic spectators through-out the country who were lookingeagerly to it fo'r something in the na-ture of a political revolution. Buteven if it be admitted that all thecharges Messrs. Sumner and Sehurzhave made against- Grant were true,and that it was desirable to replacehim by somebody else, and that acampaign having for its object his ex-

pulsion from the Presidential chair,and nothing else, was legitimate, thefirst condition of success iu such acampaign was the selection of a can-didate who would bear scrutiny fromall s'des, and bear it well, and whomthe Democrats might have rallied towithout patent baseness and trickeryor. their part, and without time-servin- g

or tergiversation on his. As therehas to be a President, it wa clearenough that people would not turuGrant out without a very careful con-sideration of what they were to putiuhis place, in other words, there wasno use in Sumner's or Schurz's orTrumbull's going about the countrydenouncing Grant simply. Thesedenunciations by themselves pro-duced little or no impression. Fewif any would form any judgment onthem until they heard what hau tobe said about the man who it wasproposed should succeed Grant: forthe faults of one candidate and themerits of the other form in the voter'smind one idea, complex it raav be.but still one. To abuse Grant, tiieie- -

fore, and keep silent about Greeley,as many Liberal orators did, waspolitical absurdity of ibe first order.To win in a personal encounter, notonly Bas your antagonist to be a fee-ble man, but you have to te a strong-er man than he.

hat was most injurious to Mr.Greeley was, however, not Mr. Gree-ley's own record, bad as that was inmany places, but his alliance withthe Democracy. If it be asked whyDemocratic support should haveproved more injurious to him than toanv other possible or probable Liberalcandidate Mr. Adams, for instance

the answer is very simple. Mr.Greeley's whole career down to 1871was of a kind that made any reconcil-iation or common action between himand the Democrats impossible withoutsuch a serious modification ofopinionson his part as would shake all confi-dence either in his honesty or hissagacity; and, for the purposes ofthe Presidency, it made little dmer- -ence in the popular eye whether hewas a knave or a rooi. lie may navebeen right in his language or opin-ions during the last twenty years, but,if he was, his sudden change on re-ceiving his nomination was sure todestroy confidence in his virtue; ifhe was not right, his failure to find itout till this late period was fatal tohis reputation for wisdom. More-over, he was one of the few menwhom the Democrats could not takeup without exciting disgust. Theirtransaction with Greeley was not onethat could be hidden from the publicgaze. Everybody saw the whole ofit, and it was marked throughout bythe suppression or repudiation ofeverything which served the Demo-cratic organization as a reason for ex-isting. What it had to surrender, inorder to take Greeley, left no excusefor its maintenance except nakedgreed for office. The country wouldnot swallow such a combinati-m-There were men in the Republicanranks, or possessing Republican sym-pathies, whose general ideas on thesubject of reconstruction, taxation,State rights and general governmen-tal policy, made it possible for theDemocrats to support them withoutany other abandonment of principlethan what hard facts had made plain-ly necessary; but Greeley was not oneof. these men. and the CincinnatiConvention refused to nominate anyof them.

Moreover, the attempt to makeGreeley the apostle of reconciliationwas not only a failure, but the mostludicrous failure of all. Reconcilia-tion is a process partly mental andpartly moral. Enemies are recon-ciled by the mutual determination toforget past differences, and by thespringing up of a mutual liking. Iuthe absence of these facts there is noreconciliation. Whenever they ex-ist between the North aud the South,the North and the South will be rec-onciled, no matter who is President ;as long as they do not exist, they willnot be reconciled, no matter who isPresident. To talk of reconciliationthrough the election of a particularman, without reference to the state ofpuhlic sentiment, is absurd. Indeed,the oddest thing in the Greeley can-vass was the determination of manyof his newspapers to treat everybodywho denied his fitness for the Presi-dency as a fosterer of discord ; that is,they would only hear of one mode ofreconciling North and South, andthis was by making President a manwhom three-fourt- hs of the voters be-

lieved, on various grounds, to be unfitfor the position, and who Lad playeda larger part than any one living inprecipitating the conflict which madereconciliation necessary. nt

Mahan's sermons, showingGreeleyism to be a sort of double-extrac- t

of Christianity, were perhaps asodd freaks as were ever perpetratedin the name of religion. "We wantyou to be good friends," said theGreeley apostles, "evermore; but weinsist that the only way to becomegood friends is to stand on your headsfor five minutes ; anybody who saysyou can be reconciled in any otherway than this is a man of blood."

The last point in the lesson whichour Grecleyite friends may learn fromthe campaign is perhaps the most

and important one of all.FroGta'ulethe American people.thoughan enthusiastic people, are a businessneonle that is, in spite of their greattoleration of mere talkers, they havea strong liking and admiration fordoers, or men who have displayedcapacity In the conduct of imnortautafl'tirs. The Cincinnati Greelevitesunderrated the weight of this particu-Isrit- v

enormously, and are now suffering for it ; but when they began oflate to ridicule Grant Tor not makingspeeches, they showed that they hadnot then found out what was thematter with them. The truth Is, thata man who has won battles may re-

main silent till the end of his lifewithout losing the popular confidence.General Grant has successfully trans-acted some of the most importantbusiness which falls to the lot of man

business which e7ery one feels inhis heart tasks human powers to theirutmost capacity. To shake the holdwhich this eives him on the popularmind, you have not only to prove hisshortcomings, but to put against himanother man who also has displayedtalent Tor great affairs, or, at all event,talent of the kind which producestangible and striking results. Insteadof this, the Greeleyites put up a manwho had never displayed any capaci-ty for affairs, and never figured inany great transaction, and who hadwou his influence and reputation nymere preaching without responsibili-ty, and without exposure to any testsor checks beyond those created bynewspaper "sales" and "subscrip-tions." No doubt it is a great thingto have established the New YorkTribune; but you cannot get peopleto believe that it is an exploit indica-tive of fitness for any other businessin life, or put the man who performsit on a level with a great commanderor great financier. Of course, too,whatever absurdity In Mr. Greeley'snomination was created by his per-sonal character and antecedents wasaggravated by the attempt to get op a"singing campaign" iu his honor.No man can be sung into the Presi-dency who has not some trace of thehero in his composition. He must insome wav strike the imagination.The Greeley candidate was nothing ifnot ludicrous. His Dest friends smiledwhen they spoke of him. His oddclothes, odd gait, edd expressions andbad manners might have stimulatedenthusiasm if tbey had belonged toone who had turned the tide of battleon famous fields, or directed the for-

tunes of a great campaign, or shapedand embodied in legislation greatlines of policy. But in this case therewas nothing behind them in the wayof achievement but a mound of slip-shod and abusive "editorials," and afew hasty, crude books on subjects hehad only half mastered. The cam-paign w'ill now pass into history asthe most comical and yet the mostinstructive episode in American poli-tics.

A GREELEY CABINET.

[From the Chicago Evening Post]

It is ou some accounts to be re-

gretted that Mr. Greeley will not beelected presidentof the United States.Mr. Gieeley is an editor. Mr. GratzBrown is an editor. Doubtless thecabinet would be largely composed ofeditors. Mr. Greeley is indebted forthe organization of the party whichsupports him to three distinguished,or rather famous editors, withoutwhose help the movement which re-

sulted iu his nomination could havereached no formidable proportions.These three editors, in the order oftheir standing and ability, are Theo-dore Tilton, of the Golden Age,Murat Halsted, of the CincinnatiCommercial, and Horace White, ofthe Chicago Tribune. Mr. Greeleycould in no event overlook the claimsof these gentlemen, and these gentle-men would probably not allow him tooverlook them if he would. Of courseneither of them would accept any lessdiguifitd position than that of mem-ber of the cabinet, and as, by so dis-posing of them, the shrieks of localitywould be nicely accommodated, mem-bers of the cabinet they would doubt-less all three be, Mr. Tilton, who isunderstood to entertain similar viewsto Mr. Greeley on certain financialqestions, and is equally crochety andhair-brain- ed on most other subjects,would doubtless be appointed secre-tary of the treasury. Mr. MurutHalsted, who has, to begin with, avery warlike nature, and who allowsno man to knock a chipofThis shoulderwith impunity, aud who served withcredit at the rear of the German armyall through the great Franco Prussiancoutest, would of course be bookedfor the secretary of war, and Dr.White, who is distinguished for hisdevotion to letters, and is familiarwith all foreign tongues, includingNorwegian, Russian and the originalIrish, would be duly ensconced inthe honored bureau of state. Therewould still remain two editors to beprovided for, to wit: Carl Sehurzaud Gov. Bross. The former woulddoubtless be sent to France, aud thelatter to England.

To the accomplishment of thisfelicitous arrangement the democracymight interpose objections. But theseought to be easily satisfied. Therewould still remain two cabinet officersfor the northern democracy, and twofor the rebel democracy, besides theposition which the elder Blair occu-pied iu the private office or backchamber of Andy Johnson, of confi-dential adviser to the President. Thiswould doubtless be accorded by com-mon consent to JelTerson Davis. Theothers would probably be filled bySeymour and Blair from the North,and by Hunter aud Breckenridgefrom the South.

What would become of a countrychiefly niauaged by editors, we are alittle anxious to know. What soft ofa happy family they would make iucabinet council we are almost dyingto see. We fear there might not beabsolute harmony upon every ques-tion aud upon all occasions. Werethe subject of the taritf to come beforethe body for discussion, for Instance.Dr. White might hazard the sugges-tion that a system of protectiveduties was simply a system of legal-ized robbery; aud H. 0. might replyin his geutle and genial way that thedoctor was a liar and a villain : andthe doctor would be altogether likelyto come back at his assailant with therejoinder that he was an inspiredharlequin and an educated idiot.Whereupon a resort to blows wouldonly be prevented by the interventionof Warrior Halsted and the finalindignant withdrawal of H. G. fromthe consultation, with the partingiujunction to the whole counsel of hiseditorial brethren to "go West, andbe d-- d."

But we will not enlarge upon thehappy consequences of so felicitous aresult. The prospects of its beingcarried out are not flattering. Thepeople have first to be consulted; andas the people have somehow imbibtdan old fashioned notion that editorsare impractical zealots, with morebrains than sense, and more preach-ing than principle, they will doubtlesspostpone for the present the realiza-tion of theirambition, and the countrywill iu some incomprehensible waylie compelled to niase shift withouttiem.

Little Boy 'Boyou the drug man?'Druegist "Yes, sonny; what can Ido for you?" Little Boy "Dad hasgot 'em again I His boots is full of'em, and he's a howling like thunder,and mother sent me over to get suth-i- a'

for him quick." Druggist "Whatdoes he want?" Little Boy "Don'tknow, but he's yellin' for anything tobeat Grant."

A NEW BATH CURE.

Dr. Sapp's New Electro-Therm- al bathCure--- A Model Establishment.An institution, the need of which

has long been felt in Cleveland, hasat last been established, namely, ftbath cure, complete in every respect,and which will doubtless prove a bles-sing to our community. Dr. L. W.Sapp, the well-know- n and popularphysician, is the man to whom l leveland owes the establishment of thisinstitution, which in the future is tohe one of ereat benefit to our beau aful city. Well persons and also invalids may well rejoice, for hpre is aremedy for almost ail human ailmentsand a benefit alike to the sick andwell.

For the past month the building No.74 Ontario street bas been the scene ofbusy preparations. All classes ofmechanics nave oeen busily engagedin tearing down partitions, removing,cleansing and putting things in shapefor the great transformation. Thehouse has been refitted, painted, pre-pared and everything done to makethe building comfortable and elegantin all its appointments. It is need-less to say that so far as the conveni-ences for baths are concerned, all themost approved appliances have beenbrought into requisition, and a visitto the cure will convince any one thatDr. Sapp understands what he is do-

ing and intends to make his new en-

terprise a success in every respect.Yesterdiiy aflernonn our reporter visi-ted the scene of operations, and altho'workmen were engaged in putting onthe finishing touches, yet all was inapple pie order, and the appearanceof things denoted that no pains orexpense was being spared to renderthe cure a model in its way.

THE ARRANGEMENT OF THE CURE.On entering the d xir, the visitor is

ushered into a spacious reception roomor office, where the patrons of the in-

stitution are received and their wantsattended to. The room is handsomely furnished and carpeted, and is asample of what will be round in other parts of the building. Adjoiningthis reception room are two electrothermal catn rooms, intended especi-ally for the accommodation of ladies.The rooms are carpeted ai.d the electro-t-

hermal bath tubs are new andconstructed upon the newest andmost approved pattern. Connectedwith these rooms is a vapor andshower bath.al-- o for ladies, soarraneedthat a person can take both an electrothermal ana vapor natn witnoui De-i-

nut to any inconvenience. In therear of these bath rooms is the ladies'dressing room, neatly furnished anddesigned for the comfort of the patronsof the establishment.

Ascending to the second floor, thevisitor finds himself ushered into anelegant front room, which is Dr.Sapp'a private consultation room, andwhich is furnished in the same sump-tuous style as the rooms below. Onthis floor are two large electro ther-mal bath rooms for gentlemen, a vapor bath and a gentlemen's cressingroom, arrangea ana lurnisnea in thesame manner as the rooms on the firstfloor. There is also an Ingenious ar-rangement for sulphur and mercurialbaths, on this floor, which are recom-mended by the medical profession asparticularly efficacious in eruptivediseases.

The third floor is devoted to ordi-nary bath rooms, where anyone canbe accommodated with a hot or coldbath, as may be desired. It is wellknown that the bath rooms in hotelsand barber shops are not kept in sucha state ol comfort and cleanliness ascould be desired, but these, we are as-

sured by the courteous doctor, will bekept so neat and clean that the mostfastidious person cannot find fault.

THE BATHS.As stated above, this establishment

will be known as Dr. Sapo's Electro-Therm- al

Bath Cure. The differentkinds of baths that can be had hereare as follows : Electro-Therma- l, Vapor, Medicated apor, Sulphur, Mer-curial and Iron. The species of dis-ease which these baths are designedto cure are of the nervous order, andcomprise paralysis, neuralgia, rheu-matism, scrofula, general debility,diseasesofthe heart and lungs.catarrh,bronchitis, liver, spleen and kidneycomplaints. In all cases, these bathshave proved themselves all that theyare represented to be, and all sufferersfrom any of the above named diseaseswould do well to visit Dr. Sapp, .andput themselves under bis care, to betreated in the bath cure.

The electro-therm- al bath, besidesbeing efficacious in various diseases, isa delightful, refreshing bath for per-sons in perfect health. The bath tubis so arranged that the electricity canbe applied to any part of the body, orall parts, and flows through the limbsand body in an uninterrupted current,creating an extremely agreeable sen-catio- n.

THE ATTENDANTS.Experienced attendants are em-

ployed on each floor of the house, andpatients will be kindly cared lor andskillfully treated.- - The remainder ofthe block, consisting of four spacioushouses, will be furnished for the ac-

commodation of who maywish to lodge in close proximity tothe Cure, aud St. Clair Place, immedi-ately adjoining, isa convenient placefor obtaining meals. The houses arebeatsd with steam throughout, and asbefore stated, are furnished in a luxu-rious aud comfortable style.

REMARKS.

Dr. Sapp will give his patients atthe Cure, the benefit of his extensivemedical experience and will person-ally supervise theadministeringof thevarious baths. The Doctor's skill inbis profession is too well known toneed comment here. We would sayhowever, that his enterprise in estab-lishing this Bath Cure should be ap- -

as it doubtless will, and thefirecialed, which he deservesshould be extended.

No expense bas been spared to makethis a perfect establishment. It is atthe same time elegant, neat and com-fortable, perfect iu all its appoint-ments, aud above all in a location ofprominence, easy of access, and therates for treatment will be so reasona-ble as to be within the reach of all.We would advise all sufferers to callat 74 Ontario Street aud inspect Dr.Sapp's new establishment and satisfythemselves that what we have said isnot exaggerated. We believe andtrust it will be a success, and dependupon the liberality of our citizens tomake it so. J. V. Mathivet, the well-know- n

plumber aud steam fitter, basbad charge of the steam apparatusand plumbing, which is a guaranteethat every convenience in this linehas been supplied.

A few finishing touches yet remainto be given, winch will necessarilydelay the opening of the Cure untilTuesday or Wednesday of the comingweek. After that date, the Doctor willbe pleased to receive bis friends andpatients in bis new quarters, aud webelieve that all will be astonished atthe change that has been made in theappearance of the building. Call andsee the Doctor on Tuesday next.

A wholesale liquor firm in Paterson,N. J., were surprised the other morn-in- z

at the abseuce of a revenue stampjust affixed to a barrel of whisky bythe Assistant Assessor, ana as tneycould not sell the liquor without thestamp and the stamp could not beduplicated, they were in an awkwardfix. Suddeuly they remembered thata Dutchman had been seen sitting onthe barrel immediately after thestamp was pasted on, and on findingthat gentleman and looking underthe tail of his coat, the mystery wassolved. After some trouble the stampwas transferred from the innocentGerman to the barrel, and the excite-ment subsided.

PARTISAN MALIGNITY.

GRANT BEFORE THE REBELLION.Twelve years ago, of all tne men in

the nation, of respectable qualifica-tions and position, there was not oue,perhaD?, who seemed less likely tobecome President of these UnitedStates than Ulysses S. Grant. En-gaged in a vocation without the eclatattending the "learned professions."ho was quietly ' gliding down thestream of life, obscure, unambitious,filling no ollice, aspiring to none,holding no intercourse with men inhigh stations, and even unacquaintedwith the Congressional Representa-tive of his own distiict. So he mighthave lived, and so he might havedied, had not the clarion of war calledall patriots to arms. With devotedalacrity he obeyed the summons, andat once gavu all bis powers and allhis exertions to the sacred cause offreedom.

GRANT'S MILITARY CAREER.. Commencing his new militarycareer in a humble capacity, his rareability was soon recognized, and heconstantly rose from a lower rank toa higher till he was the CommandingGeneral of all the forces of the UnitedStates. In every position he wasfound to be fully adequate to fill it,and his eminent fitness appearedwherever he was placed. He, whountil the breaking out of the greatrebellion, never commanded morethan a company, showed himselfmaster of the management, evolut-ions, aod direction of hundreds ofthousands of soldiers. Through him,victory perched upon our banners,and a glorious success was obtainedfor free institutions and an undividedcountry. It is no flattery to placeGrant's military genius beside thatof Frederick the Great or Napoleon.He is beyond question to be rankedamong the most able as well as themost illustrious Generals now in theworld.

GRANT'S CHARACTER.His countrymen, grateful for his

distinguished services, and sensibleof his eminent capacity, called him tooccupy the highest position man canattain. As President of this greatRepublic, he has shown that there,as in all the humbler positions he hasoccupied, he was " the right man inthe right place." One of his peculiartraits is, that wherever he has been,he confined himself to his legitimateduties, executing them strictly andfaithfully, and never producing com-plications, or exciting bytrenching on the responsibilitiesbelonging to others. It was enoughfor him to know his own duty, andto do it. This was his duty as Cap-tain, Colonel and General, and it hasbeen, and will be, as PresidentWhile be shrinks from any ostenta-tious exercise of authority, yet, wherehis duty demands it, he acts with adiscretion and firmness that are irre-sistible. This trait bas distinguishedhim, and renders him the very manwith whom to entrust the executionof the will of an intelligent and freepeople desirous of efficiency andliberty. He has ever conducted him-self with amenity toward all classes,and borne all his many honors withan inherent modesty which bas neverfor a moment been obscured, dazzledor intoxicated.

CALUMNIES AGAINST GRANT.

Yet this man, whom it might besupposed would be un assailed, hasbeen, and is, the target for the fouland acrimonious abueof disappointedofflce-steker- s, and sympathisers with" the lost cause." The Democraticpress has teemed with a virulence notmerely political, but personal andcalumnious to a degree amounting tooutrage. Not only has he himselfbeen pursued in this shamelessmanner, but the sanctities of hisfamily have been invaded, hisparents, and those of his wife, hisrelatives, and his friends have beensubjected to the same detraction.The vampires of calumny have heldhigh earnival.but never has PresidentGrant condescended to give the leastnotice to the vile falseholds concoctedagainst him; sensible that they areas impotent as they are venomous.But if Grant is subject to this vitu-peration, scandal and misrepresenta-tion, so were the greatest and mostrevered of our former Presidents.Washington, Jefferson, and Madisonwere more reviled and abused thanGrant, aud preservcred the samesilence respecting the slanderers, andfelt for them the same contempt.Well has Avon's great master ofhuman nature said :

"No might nor greatness In mortalityCan eeusure 'scape: back wounding cal-

umnyThe whitest virtue strikes t what King so

strongCan tie the gall up in the slanderous tongue?

GO WEST.Strange things happen in ten years.

Fortunes are made and lost, whileone goes up, he who was up findB thelevel. We are led to these remarksby the following reminiscences : Tenyears ago we knew a man who was apoor utility actor, doing his biz foronly nine dollars a week in one ofthe eastern theatres. He workedhard, but couldn't get ahead, aud hebecame discouraged about things audcouldn't eat much, and his friendsgot worried about him. One day,while reading the Tribune, this pooryoung man saw one of Horace Gree-ley's articles advising young peopleto " go west, where fortunes awaitedthem." The poor player rolled thisbit of advice over in his mind, like itwas a delicious morsel, and hepawuedall his clothes and stage jewelry andscraped together barely enough, totake him to the rich lands of the westas a sort of steerage passenger. Thatwas ten years ago, you will remember,during which time 'we iost track ofthat young man, and imagined thathe had committed suicide, or died oneof those unnatural deaths which areso common out there. Judge of oursurprise when, on last Saturday, thebronzed leacures oi our long-aosen- t

friend greeted us in our sanctum, andthe hard hand of the returned oneclasped ours In true western fashion ,the once poor player sat down andrecounted to us the perils and dangersbe had passed through in his wildwestern life, and, in a voice, tremulous with emotion, be concluded histouching narrative by asking if wecould lend him a quarter.' We werenever so taken down In our lire be-fore, and like our returned friend, wedon't have the same faith in theteeming lands of the west, as we oncehad.

Extracts from the papers of rejectedschool ma'ams in Ohio. "The rood isfirst masticated, and then passesthrough the phalanx:" "respirationis the sweatiug of the body ;" "thechest is formed of two bones, the sternum and spinal cord, "emphasis isplacing more distress on some words.'

The correct thing cow forlady promenaders is to carry oue armbent at the elbow, the hand stickingstraight forward and allowed to bobup and down like a dislocated pumphandle.

The latest Chicago nomination is"John Jones lor county commission-er." It is believed he Is sufficientlynumerous to elect himself. He willbe inaugurated by companies, and

the duties of the office inweekly squads.

n-- V"... V-,- l- 7. iitrnnl it f Cn in- -4 11 c u - jmcrce warns bankers that no thick-ness of iron or stone will keep aburglar out of a vault if he can only-hir-

the room next door.

A MURDER RECORD.

The New York Herald says that itmay well be said that murder is acommon crime in that city, and adds:It comes like an epidemic, bringing aseries of bloody deeds and deaths.Sometimes the deed is done in openday, a.zain at night, and at times it isthe climax of a long and intricateplot that baffles all elucidation. Intracinir the causes of this greatest ofcrimes the records show that rum andwomen wield the pistol and knife inmost instances. Very seldom d wehear of a murder for mere robbery.Drunkenness and jealousy seem to bethe great propelling forces to the gal-

lows. Yet not alwavs to the gallows,for the process that leads thereto is

and the courts are cautious.But whether the law seizes the crim-inal rightly or wrongly, the victim ishe;e still and the murder is done.

We have had within a year such arecord of murders that, doubtless, thepublic has forgotten most of them.Who knows how many murders arecommitted in our midst that the worldnever hears of? Would it be rash tosav that the poor, lifeless corpse thatis'keDt from rotting by the drippingof the water upon it on a slab iu tne.Morgue is always --acciuenianydrowned." or that it is a case of "sui-cide '." . There are dark nights on thewharves, and the noise from thesplash of a drunken man or womandoes not reach where relief comesfrom. There are dark nights, too.outin the river, and neither the cry forhelp nor the wail of the victim canreach tne shore. "An unknown man"often, it is to be feared, means "Thereis a brother murdered in the river."

With these cases, however, theMorgue, and not the Tombs, is con-cerned. Through the kindness of theWarden a reporter was recently ena-bled to ascertain the number of pris-oners in the Tombs who are nowawaiting their trial for murder. Thetotal is twenty-two- . In some of thecases there were circumstances sur-rounding them sufficient to makemen's blood run cold.

The principal figure, however,among this crowd of men chargedwith murder is Stokes,whoshotFisk.He bears his position much less fret-fully now than he used to bear it.His great confidence In an acquittalby a jury having been destroyed, hebegan to recognize with better sensethe perilous position in which he wasplaced, anil he is now become tolera-bly reconciled to the tortures and pri-vations of prison experience. Hishealth is not failing, and he, too, ishopeful. In fact, the reporter was In-

formed that there was not a poorwretch in the Tombs from whose sin-ful breast Heaven has yet taken thepoor consolation of a little hope forthe future.

TAKE ANOTHER HAT.[From the Zanesville Courier 14th]

The party lines are pretty closelydrawn in some parts of Muskingumcounty. Theie are some places wherethe Democrats can't go Greeley andthe Republicans refuse to desertGrant. To illustrate the feeling, wegive the following, which was told usby an and a "devout"man. Not long since a church or-

ganization of the county held a seriesof meetings, and as is customary onsuch occasions, collections for sundrypurposes were ordered. Now it sohappened that a devout man a dea-con whose behind na.oe begins withS, has gone over to Greeley, and hewas called upon by the officiatingminister to pass the hat. This was ouSaturday. The congregation waslarge and a "fat take" was expectedby the worthy man who occupied thepulpit Bro. S. responded to the call.He took up his "Dolly Varden,"spread a large bandanna over it andthen started. The first seat was filledwith stauuch old farmers, and S. ex-pected them to shell out liberally.He knew their pocket books wereplethoric and their hearts full of good.Their contributious would sink thehandkerchief to the bottom of thehat, he felt sure. But alas! Nota man contributed. Bro. S. drew asigh and went on, but with no bettersuccess from the occupauts ef the sec-

ond seat. The third panned out asthe first two had doue, and so did thefourth. In short, Bro. S. went the"grand rounds" and returned to thestand on which he placed the hat asempty as when he started. A sigh ofrelief escaped him as lie took his seat.The minister, however, was deter-mined not to be out-don- e, and thenext day he asked S. to go the"rounds" again. Slowly the devoutsupporter of H. G. arose, goingthrough the preliminaries the sameas ou the day before. He took upthe same hat, spread over it the samehandkerchief and slowly passed itbefore the occupants of the first seatNo contributions. He passed on tothe second. Result, ditto. He ar-rived at the third seat and was slowlypassing the hat under the eyes of theoccupauts, when he was arrested bythe voice of the minister calling out :

"Bro. B.!"Bro. S. turned."Pass the handkerchief alone, Bro.

S. ; or go with your open bands, ortake another hat.orfAcre is nobodyin this congregation that will drop onecent in the thing you are carrying nowV

The effect cau be better imaginedthan described. Another hat wassubstituted for S's. Greeley "plug"and the congregation shelled out auamount which astonished the wholecongregation. Greeley bat may be agood thing to cover a sorehead with,but "shoo fly don't bother me" whena contribution Is wanted.

THE CALIFORNIA CHINESE.

How John Spends His Sunday.It is a custom among Chinese house

servants, says the San Francisco Bui-teti-n,

to stipulate with their employ-ers for a portion of Sunday, on whichday they visit their couutrymen inthe Chinese quarter, talk over newsfrom home, have their heads shaved,go through with their genuflectionsaud salaams iu joss houses, smokeopium, &c, tc, some of them closingup the day's performances by gettingrid of their week's wages In Chinesegambling houses, which are so thicklylocated aloug Dupont street Thesidewalks swarm with these gregar-ious beings, whose nature is to hud-dle in flocks on the surface and bur-row in bauds beneath. Their densare hives of industry on week daysand rooms reeking with smoke onSundays. A visitor who venturesinside bas to step over the prostratebodies of opium smokers, aud feelshis way through clouds of moke,meautime holding his nose against asickening stench of fetid breath, de-

caying fish, in short a conglomerationof odors nowhere to be fouud outsideofa cellar reekiug with the fumes of acrowd of Chinese. For the sake ofthe delectable pleasures to be foundin such places, John frequently refu-ses to take good situations iu thecountry ; like Bridget he must be intown, where he can at least once awt ek see his "cousins." The Chinesehave hosts of relatives, uncles audcousins especially the latter arecounted by the score. They regardas cousins those several removes fur-

ther off than a white man thinks itworth his while to inquire. These"cousins' are generally friends, allbelonging to the same commercialcompaey, aud when they meet onSundav the jabbering is energetic be-

yond description. All day, and lateinto the night, John keeps up hisrounds of visit among bis cousins,but manages to be on hand Mondaymorning, ready for his work, whichhe generally performs cheefully audwith fidelity.

Humor and Sarcasm.It Is not everybody who kncwiwhere to ioke, or when, or bow ; andwhoever is iznorant of these condi-

tion? had better hot joke at all. Agentleman - tvto VJ lwj llUlllUtousatthe expense of people withwhom.. f,A in nl;l.., . .

onKuLiy acquainted,in fact it is neither good mannersnor wise policy to joke at anybody'sexpense ; that is to say, to make any-body uncomfortable merely to raie alauL'h. Old JF. inn V li n vuj rli.nt.llr.'nthe subject of many a gibe on aceountof his humped back, tells the wholestorv in his fahln of "Tlio v.nr-- a

the Frogs." What was jolly "for theyoungsters was ueam to the croakere.A iest mav cut rlppnor th-i- n

Some men are so constituted t!:atthey can not take even a friendlyjoke in good part, and instead of re- -payniigiii in me same iigui coin, winrequite it with contumely andinnllllL off hanfa, An a f - , I cfor he will brood over your bandiuaire. .,- - r i

iiK aner you uave iorgotten it, amiit is not Tirudnnt tn innne oriTr nno'aenmity for the sake of uttering asmart double entendre or a tart re-partee. Ridicule, at best, is a perilousWPATlon- - n r i rp hnw.nai- - ... 1. ... lneled at social follies and po'litical evi!3

uui oruy legitimate, out commend-able. Te

abuses than were ever abolished byiorce or logic.

Treat the Cows Kindly. There artoo many who exhibit roughness tftreatment toward the cow; and yetno domestic animals are more sensi-tive or more quickly feel theunkind-nes-s

shown them. They can be madedocile and mild in thier dispositions,or timid and wild, just in accordancewith the treatment they receive fromthdr herder and milker; and it is awell established fact that a cow willtransmit her disposition to her pro-geny. A rough, quick tempered per-son should never be employed as amilker; and one who will, on anypretence whatever kick or strike acow, should be kicked in return, fromthe barnyard into the street,, andnever be allowed to return. Gentle-ness will increase the quantity ofmilk, as has been shown by a changeof a cruel and irascible milker to onewho practiced kind and gentle treat-ment. It is an injury to cows to bedriven faster than an easy walk, toand from their pastures. To be ur-ged on by thoughtless boys and theeperhaps on horseback, is to producea fever ond heating of the bloodwhich is sure to dry up or lessen theflow of of milk. Cows should al way 3he made as comfortable as possible,summer and winter, it pay3 to do it.

In the November number of theAtlantic, Professor John Fiske has apaper on "The Primeval GhostWorld.'-- ' It will be in the vein ofthe series he published in the samemagazine last year, in which he tracedback so many myths to their originin the unending change on the earth 'ssurface from light to darkness andback again. Iuthecomiu'g essay begives a curious explanation of the su-perstition so common (especially inEngland) that it is unlucky to kill arobin. Long ago it was believed thatthe death of a robin boded some ca-lamity. Still earlier, the calamitywas specified ; it was death. Goingback a few generations more, we rindthat this death was always caused bylightning. Then we come to thegeneration that reverenced the robinas the bird of Thor, God of lightning.

Finally, at the time when the mindin its infancy personified every force

especialy a destructive one welearn that the lightning itself is a redbird that drops from its beak a wormthat shatters even the rocks on whichit chances to fall. So it seems thatthe English peasant woman, warningher child not to kill the robin, is butgiving the nineteenth century ver-sion of a heathen mythe, born per-haps, ages before Christ was.

Friz Hard. Ben Davis isa goodlysoul, a sound temperance man, alwayssetting a good example so far as out-siders cam see. But his "time" camea short time since. He had employeda carpeuter to make some alterationsin his parlor. In repairing the cornernear the fireplace it was found neces-sary to remove the wainscoting.whenlo ! a discovery was made that aston-ished every body a brace of decanters,a tumbler and a pitcier were cosilyreposing there, as if they bad staidthere from tba beginning. TheDeacon was summoned, and as hebeheld the bottles, he exclaimed :'Well, I deolare! that is curious sure

euoucrh. It must be that old Bainsleft them when he went out of this'ere house thirty years ago." " Per-haps he did," returned the carpenter,"but, Deacon, the ice in the pitchermust have been friz mighty hard tostay all that time."

A good, convenient and very effec-tual remedy for the sting of wasps,bees, etc., is simply to hold anyhollow key over the place stung, pressit hard into the flesh a minute or so,and when taken off the poison willtie on the surface of the flesh and dono harm. A thimble with a tighttop will do, but not so well.

Strange Freak of Lightning.A young lady, while standinsr in awindow In Morgantown, Butlercounty, Ky., received a slight shockfrom a flash of lightning. On herrecovery, it wa3 fouud that an atlan-th- us

tree, standing near the window,had been accurately photographed bythe electric flash upon iier breasi.This reminds a friend that in hisyouth be was the object of photo-graphy. He bad told bis father thatlie was "a demented old jackass."This playful remark enraged the un-

reasonable father, and he interviewedhis son. When the interview wasover the son felt that he had beenstruck by lightning, and that a photo-graph of a man's hand was distinctlyvisible but not where could he seethe picture. Lightning is guilty ofstrange freaks sometimes.

Goldsmith Maid, the famous trot-ting mare, is said to be stolen proper-ty, and a lawsuit for - her recovery isimpending. It is said that about fiveyears ago the stables of a great Ken-tucky stock raiser were burned down,and a very promising young mare sto-len, aud the groom who had chargeof her has just seen the celebratedMaid, aud is ready to take oath thatshe is the stolen animal.

Twenty-fiv- e o thirty years agoRev. Charles O. Finney, now President of Oberlin College, was carryingon a series of revival meetings ineastern city, Boston, we think. Oneday a gentleman called to see blm osbusiness. Mr. s uauguur,perhaps five years old, answered hisring. "Is your father in?" askedthe stranger. "No," replied the de-

mure maiden, "but walk In, poor dying sinner! jAOther can pray toryou."

Tlmw tall nt.nn f . man in DovleS- -iA.n Va .,-- hn.r.1 thai: a-i-- watercould be purified with lime, so heemptied a bushel and a half into hiswell, and leic oussiui anu uopyj.turned out that, oecauso vi mo

the season, there was only 3feet of water in the well, and eversince his experiment he has been sel-

ling a good article of whitewash tobis neighbors at two buckets for acent, aud walked a mile and a half totiie creek for drinking water for nia

,iiv ir has doubts now aboutlime being a good purifier.