Bloomington Progress, Volume 17, Number 40, Bloomington, Monroe County, 5 December 1883 — Page 4

NEWS CONDENSED, Telegraphic summary.

Klein's collar shop and Cleminshaw's bottling house at Troy, N. Y., was burned, causing a loss of $55,000. Gov. Butler is highly indignant because the Supreme court of Massachusetts answered in the affirmative his question whether or not a woman ia a person, under the statute. A. B. Johnson, who recently killed himself in Utica, appropriated $300,000 belonging to the MacDonnell estate, of which he had control. Mrs. MacDonnell is a sister of the dead defaulter. James Ruddy and has wife, son and a lady visitor were murdered a Laconia, N. H., and the house was set on fire. Thomas Salmon is suspected of the crime, and lies in jail. Phoebe Jane Pauline was assaulted and then murdered about 100 yards from her mother's cottage, near Orange, N.J. The crop of black tea is reported short at New York, and prices are hardening. The eentennial anniversary of the evacuation of New York by the British was celebrated in a spirited manner in that city Business was almost entirely suspended and the metropolis was crowded with visitors. Artillery and steam-whistles made a fearful din at sunrise. President Arthur and twelve Governors headed the procession, which required over two hours to pass the city hall. Several hundred steamboats, forming in divisions, made the circuit of New York and Brooklyn. A statue of George Washington, standing on the spot where he was sworn in as first President, was unveiled in the afternoon, George William Curtis delivering the oration....\ The Chamber of Commerce gave a banquet in the evening at Delmonico's, President Arthur and other notable gentlemen being guests.

Fred Jenkler, the oldest jeweler in Dubuque, wish his two sons. Em II and Frederick, and Dick Hartig-, a printer, were chowued in the Mississippi river, a few miles below Dubuque. They were out duck-shooting sad a storm came up, which uptet their boat. The Jackson (Mich.) massacre was tottowatf by a grotesque episode. A crackbrained fellow, arriving in Jackson from Chicago, announced Oat ha could discover the murderer, and carried out a programme which included a special train and the arrest In another town of an innocent man. The usual mob gathered, a'aiting the arrival of the falsely-accused man, but a hoatir of rain abated the popular fury aad an easily-proven alibi cot the victim free. !rao "detective " was wen eaged and is alleged to have teen himself out of 'ail but a Jew days. At Eaton, Ind.. Bal Scott stabbed to death hit wife and child and then killed himsclf with morphine. Scott deserted k;s wife anne time ago, and her refusal to live with him after his return caused the tragedy. A strange youth examined a revolver ia a hard ware store at Parsons, Kan., and requeatrid that it be loaded. When it was aaaded to him, he blew out his brains in a swmattegv . AlDartford, Wis., lira. Ellen Long confessed that she murdered the Whttteraore boy oa Oct. H. She killed him in her house, threw the corpse in an old well, bat subsequently removed it to the river where it

the world at large, the great man rode to the

depot and walked out cm the platform only to

find that the train had been gone just eight

minutes and twelve seconds.

President Arthur appointed Surgeon Bohert Murray, now on duty at Governor's island, to be Surgeon General. Tho new chief is said to be a Democrat. Dr. Baxter, tho Chief Medical Purveyor, with the rank of

Colonel, whose Srst commission is dated 1841,

expected to set the place, and was highly recommended. His frlenls consider ho has

been "Jumped.' Sergt. Mason, who was sent to prison for an attempt to kill Gulteau, has been pardoned by President Arthur. Lawrence Weldon, of Bloomington, I1L, has been appointed Judge of the Court of Claims at Washington, to succeed J. C. Bancroft Davis. Titz John Porter," says a Washington telegram, "has wtitten here that he will be in the fleM In person after the holidays. The bill for his relief will be presented early ia the session and a formidable effort made to pass it." Bills to place Gens. Grant, Fremont and Pteascntoa on the retired list will also ba introduced.

POLITICAL.

George L. Ruffin (colored) has been confirmed as Justice of the Cbarlestown (Mass) District court. Hon. W. M. Springer, of Illinois, announces himself a candidate for Speaker of the House of Representatives, and claims three votes from his State.

Sojourner Troth, the eokfed lecturer, died at Battle Creek, Mich,, at the ace of 1S7 years. She gained faer freedom in 1828, under the Basancdpatioa act of Kew York, and for years she has spoken to the pubUe on liberty, temperance, and woman suffrage. At Sooth Chicago, Hi, John Schmidt, m German butcher, walked unto his wife, who was standing op a street corner, drew his revolver without a word of warning: and shot Mrs. Schmidt, and thee himself. He died without speaking a word. The two had not been living together, and Jealousy is supposed to have been the cause for the terrible tragedy. Mrs. Schmidt is in a critical condition, with but small-hope of recovery. The female base-ball eJnb which has beea exhibiting in the larger cities was atiauded at St. Lents, last week. Their trunks were held by the Indianapolis road for exsaeas charges; a hotel-keeper attached certain property, and the manager applied to the Mayor for passes to New York, which

A Grand Trunk passenger train jumaedtha track eight miles east of Chicago, hilling the oondoctor and a brakemaa, and badly rkakauj up aad tnlmr snasjr of the passengers. Thomas A. Doyle, who for fourteen years was Mayor of Providence, B. 1 .has been called back to the poaitioa in order to

i a rekm of progress.

The postoffice at Pottsrille, Pa., was entered by burglars, who blew' open the Bate aad obtained SMO. Thousands of acre of forest trees

were destroyed by the recent gale on the New

pshffcs aad Maine border. Wood-chop-i auh suffer severely this rats by the

At Northfield, Vt, three people lost their lives because the driver, who was old enough to have known better, thought he could head off an approaching express train and get across the track first. At Philadelphia a trnmSy of three lost their Uvea in the same war, and on account of the same pig. beadednessoa the part of the maa who bandied the rehm. In both cases tho bodies or ' the victims were shockingly mangled. The receipts of the Irving party at Hew York for the engagement of four Weeks were in excess of 915,000. Andy Taylor, the fast of a gang of baadtta, was privately banged .at Louden, Term. After the noose had been adjusted he expressed a desire to drink the Sheriff's blood. He bad already slain two Bberiffa, and numerous other fellow-beings. Two days previous to his execution, while on a train going from Loudon to KooxvlHe, he came near making a corpse of 8boriff Poute. Be stole a revolver from a guard and placed the muzzle within a few inches of the Steer's head, bat mistook the weapon for a self-cocker, and was knocked down before be could raise the hammer. ' An aged couple named Xing, living on a farm- near Hickman. Kyn were killed with guns aad knives, aad the bouse was robbed of tt, 800. Lewis List and Lewis F. List, father aad ana, of Wilmington, Del., have been sentenced to be hanged and imprisonment for life, resnestivc-ir, for the killing of George B. Taylor. A Little Bock dispatch says the trial ia Howard cwnty. Ark., bt ths colored rbters ludlc'.ed for murdering Wyatt several months ago has just ended. Three of them have beea sentenced to be hi.eged and twentyaloe to terms of imprisonment ranging from ave to eighteen years. Loom Houston (eoiored) was hanged by a mob at Birmingham, Ala., for aeeaultioj S btgb'y-reepectaMe white ludy. -

Joseph H. Blaekpan, Superintendent of Foreign Mails, died last week at Washington! ' Attorney General Brewster issued an opiaioa that the United States Government was so hwtitutioa too dignlOed to tan moo the change to the standard of time. Congress alone must decide. After delivering himself of tab proclamation, which put the amertawnt at WnaWngton Jil behind.

MISCELLANEOUS. It is believed at the Mexican capital that the men who robbed the train near Laredo were an organized band from the United States. The earnings of the Union Pacific railroad correspondingly decreased $176,239 in September, and 960,000 in October. In the first week of November the earnings in creased about 970,000. This has been the greatest year known in the sheep and cattle export trade of Canada, the sheep shipments alone being 80 per cent, in excess of any other year. Bradstreet reports 228 business failures in the United States for the week ending Nov. 21, an increase of twenty-eight over the previous week, and flfty-seven more

than the corresponding period last year.

There were twenty deaths from yellow fever at Havana last week. A dozen railway magnates, including Huntington, Dillon, Strong, Keep and Mitchell, have Incorporated at Albany, N. Y., an association to collect and distribute information to promote the stability of securities. It win operate in Great Britain and throughout the American continent. The steamer Eclipse, bound from Algoma to Port Sarnla, Canada, probably

gone down with all on board, ss three oodles with marked life-preservers washed ashore at Wiarton, Ontario The clearing-house exchanges last week $980,781,968 were $118,114,881 less than the preceding week, and when compared with the corresponding period in 1688 show a reduction of 37.7 per cent. A convention has been called to meet in Washington Feb. S, 1884, to o-nsidor the various plans for the improvement of the Mississippi river and Its tributaries. The call is made by the Improvement committee, and is addressed to the people of the Mississippi Valley and all others Interested in the project. Business failures : Henry Streicher, Jewelry, Chicago, liabilities 980,000; Uuneman atKonp, general store, Brainerd, Minn., liabilities 9150,000; the United States Clothing Store, Milwaukee, liabilities 940,000; M. Hohenfela, clothing, Free port. 111., liabilities 918,000; John A. Kohner, notions, Cincinnati, liabilities 930,000; P. Bass, general storo, G ladings, Tex., labilities 940,000; Williams Fisher, agricultural implements; Mineral Point, Wis., liabilities 815,000; W. Watt, boots and slices, Lima, Ohio, liabilities, !40,000: Merrill ft 'Houston, iron manufacturers, Beknt, Wis.; Briggs Brothers, woolen manufacturers. North Adams, Mass. ; Lowe & Kirk, iron founders, Chattanooga, Tenn., UabiU. ties, 950,000; Bo ax de Fralasaint, banker, Marseille, France, liabilities, 93,600,000; J. C. Bronsky, general store, Chippewa Palls, Wis., liabilities, SIS, 000; J. Joachlnsthal ft Co., mfllinery, Detroit, Mich., liabilities, 9S8,006; Dobie A Co., ship-builders, Glasgow, Scotland, liabilities, heavy. A midnight fire broke oat in a block of frame buildings at Albany, Wis., and before the flames were checked the entire business portion of the town was destroyed, entailing a loss of fully 9100,000. Edward Dodge was instantly killed, as the result of a powder explosion, and several were fatally and others seriously injured. The weather was intensely cold and the refugees suffered greatly. Other Ores are reported as follows: Evans' glass factory, Pittsburgh, loss 975,000; Leah's wheel-rim and binding factory, Warsaw, Ind., loss 975,000; four stores at Kerens, Tex., loss 913,000; the Campbell hotel, Hepaull, Ont., loss 980,000; a huge portion, of the town of Port Perry, Ont., loss 9150,000; Wood's hotel, Wenona, III., loss 910,000; State Normal University, Carbondolo, 111., 9800,000; ofBee f the Bonner, Hastings, Minn., loss 910,000: Jacobs store, Navasota, Tex., kras 943,080; eleven stores at Wellington, Kan., loss 9S5.000; several Stores at Troupe, Tex., loss 930,000; the Lyman-Eliel Drug company's store, Minneapolis, Minn., toss 9100,00; a number of stores at Waverly, Tenn., loss 900,080; several business houses at Rat Portage, Canada, loss 980,000; the Gilman Terra Cotat-Works, Eldora, Iowa, 915,000; several stores and shops at Leadvillo, Colo., loss (37,000; four business houses at Amherst, Masa toss $20,000; vfour stores at Hillsboro, Tex., loss 918.000; eleven business houses at Monroe, Wis., loss SCO, 000. Sergt. Mason has entered into a theatrical engagement, and will make the ereuit of the dime museums of the country, H. H. Allingham, a telegraph operator at Port Worth, Tex., and Miss Minnie Odeil, employed in the Western Union office at St. John, Now Brunswick, hare for about eighteen months, beea uslnj the wires con siderably in making each other's acquaintance. Lately an exchange of pictures took place, and scon afterward a proposal of mar. riage was sent and accepted over the wires. They met for the first time in a Chicago hotel one morning last week, and Rev. Mr. Barrows made them one.

FOREIGN.

The Trustees of the Exhibition hall, at Cork, refused to permit Parnell to speak therein to his eonrtituents. Is the Parliamentary contest for the city of Limerick MncMahon, the Farnellite candidate, had a majority over Spaight, Conservative, of 488 votes. ' Marquis Tseng has informed Earl Granville, British Fr reign Secretary, that war between China and France Is certain. A wt U-known Socialist, named Wolff Jms been arrested by the London police, who made a raid upon his lodgings and found two infernal machines of sufficient power to demolish any building. Each machine was provided with ten pounds of exploslvo materia and time-fuses. The Marquis Tseng has notified Ear Granville that Chinese troops are being hur ried to Tonquin and that China will oppose the French by force of asms if they attack Bac-Ninh or Hemghoa. In the meantime the Maroon continues his negotiations with M, Ferry. Pari Granville has informed the French Ambassador at Lord m that, in vies of the present crisis, the English Government now desires to try mediation between France and China on a basis which would give China the north bank of the Kod river and France the south bank. China fiwiUIng to accept this settlement.

The Chinese troops attacked tho French in Tonquin on tho 17th ult, and were

repulsed. The fight lasted seven hours.

Lord Ovcrstone, who died last week in England, left .'0,000,000 to bis only

daughter, the wife of Col. Lloyd Lindsay. A military re-view, with 15,000 men

hi line, was held in Madrid, in houor of the

German Crown Prince.

Telegrams from Egypt indicate that the neo-a of El Mabdi's great victory has spread throughout tho whole of Asia with the astounding rapidity which is characteristic

in Eastern countries. Preparations for an immodlato rising are already completed on the part of tho Moslem populations In Arabia. A (ignal of assent from Mcoca, the sacred city, indicating its acceptance of tho claims put forth by the False Prophot is all that is now necessary to cause the Inauguration of a holy war. Juan Ynlera, an author, has been appointed Spanish Minister at Washington. The Parnellite members of Parliament have determined to demand a pledge from the Government to inoludo Ireland in the Franchise bill. If the Government refuses to mako that pledge tho ParneUites will Join with the Tories in opposing the bill at every stage. A London dispatch says that indications multiply that tho Government Is convinced that war between France and China is inevitable. By the failure of Dobie & Co., Glasgow shipbuilders, 1,200 moo have been rendered idle. The French Cabinet Council has rescinded the decree forbidding tho importation of American pork. The Dutch bark Judith was wrecked on the Norwegian coast, and fourteen persons perished. Twelve passengers and four seamen wont down with the schooner Buso in the Gulf of Mexi-o.

XJkTER MEWS ITEafS. Ex-Senator Blaine is out in a public letter, in which he unfolds a scheme of allied Federal or State taxation, which ho claims ho has long reflected upon, and the objections to which he is now fully prepared to hoar. Mr. Blalno declares that both Protectionists and Free Traders in great numbers now desire the abolition of the entire internal systom of Federal taxation. He believes that there will at once be an allianoe of legislators in Congress who hold entirely opposite views on the subject of protection, but who will work together for free whisky, tobacco and other things which now afford internal revenue to tho Government. But Mr. Blaine Is

oppose! to free whisky. Ho believes such

tax should always exist, to bo collosled by tbo nation and given to tho Stttcs in the proportion of their population that is, Illinois would pay the most and Now York

would get the most. Tho gist of

Mr. Blaine's plan is, first, to find

that the nation can spare $88,000,000 of tax on whlfky; then to pay this sum to the

States, and thereby lift that amount of tithes

from farms, homesteads and shops, Mr.

Blalno has figured the plan out and appends

a table, two items of which show that under

his apportionment of the 980,000,000 Illinois would get 95,385,000 and New York 98,893,-

000. 8uch Is a brief sketch of the leading

features ot Mr. Blaine's scheme. The Windsorformerly the Stadt

theater, in the Bowery, Now York, was destroyed by fire, together with the block In which it was situated, and buildings in tbo rear, lhc fire broke out attPt the audience quitted tho house, so there were no accidents. Tho total loss will approximate 9500,000. A damage of 950,CO0 was incurred by flames in the Hotel Clifton, at Boston, Stlckney's shoe

factory at Groveland, Mass., was destroyed by fire. The greater portion of the town of

Ocala, Fla., was burned, causing a loss of 9100,000. Simpson's woolen mills, at Salonvllle, Mass., worth 9300,000, wore reduced to ashes. Other losses by fire: The Dcrwtcrat office and Davidson's furniture store, La Salle, 111., loss $30,000; thirty-odd stores at St. Paris, Ohio, loss 9140,000; an elevator

at Leavenworth, Kan., loss 965,000;

the Time- building and four business houses

at San Angela, Tex., loss, 945,000; tho Law

rence hotel, at Cape Vincent, N. V., loss, 975-

000; Gray's cotton warehouse, Baltimore, Md,, loss, 995,000; Meyer Brothers' drug store, Kansas City, Mo., toes, 91T5.000; a ho

tel and other bnildinga, at Cortland, N. Y loss, 940,000.

While attending Thanksgiving ser

vices at the Methodist Episcopal church at Dixon, III., James L. Camp died-of apoploxy.

As the Rev. Warren H. Cudworth was

leading In piayer at a union service of

Thanksgiving in Bcston he was seized

with apoplexy and fell, dead In the pulpit. Charles Nickleson, well known to horse-breeders throughout the country.

died at Jackson, Mich. Other deaths chron

icled arc those of Hon. William L. Greenly, of

Adrian, Mich.; ox-Gov. William E. Stevenson, of Virginia; Lieut. Col. George B. Carsc, U. S. A., retired; and Prof. Samuel K. Hosbour, A.

M., of IndlanapollB, Ind., who celebrated his

golden wedding in 1876.

War between France and China is

not now a sure thing.

Nordenskiold is planning an expedi

tion to the South Pole In 1885.

The Parnell fond amounts to30,-

435, of which 25,820 was subscribed in Ireland.

Four rascals agreed to blow up the

German Embassy at London. Then each of the four went to the police and "Informed," laying claim to a reward. Wolf, the rogue who got caught first at this game, sets up the plea o" a conspiracy against him.

Under a decision of Lord High Chancellor Selborne, declaring that Minister l ow-

ell could not ho'.d tho Rectorship of St

Andrew's, Mr. Lowell has resigned, and an

other election will be held.

TEE MABKET. VF.W YORK.

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THE COMING ISSUE Senator Muliono's Address to 'the Fublic on Virginia Politics.

Che Results of the Recent ElectionHow They Were Brought About.

i War of Races Inaugurated, and the Old Shotgun Polioy Renewed.

Senator Mahonp addresses a letter to tho 8eadju8tcr party of Virginia, In which ho turns up tho results of the last election and ovlows tho history of the party of which ho the acknowlodxed leader. Ho recites tho jonditlon in which tho peoplo of Virginia ttood at tho time tho Hoailjiioicr party came nto powor, the status of the State dobt. the unbarrassnieut of the people in tho way of axation, tho absence of schools and the violation of the laws, and says that the rightng of these wrongs, tho correction of these :vils and resistance to tho old Bourbon ntoloranoc, made a new party In Virginia lecessary. A OI.ANCK AT THIS BECOllD. This party in 1881 carried tho State by a najority of 12,000, despite the grossest misrepresentation and the disqualification of u japltatlon tax. For two years this State adninistration has been in power and ass been truo to Its pledges: the Slate debt has been settled without a taint of repudiation, and the Stato and the people aved from liability for 813.000,000 of falsely nested principal and 335,000,000 or interest. When the Bourbons left the treasury there s-as $23,000 therein, with a Iloatlng dobt of nearly $3,000,000, of which $l,CO0,000 was duo the public schools. Tho Iteadjustors, after two years of control, hare extinguished tbo Seating debt with tho exception of $715,000, ind now havo a million and a half in the trcasuiy. Tho cost or maintaining the Stato Sovernincnt has been reduced 80 per cent,, Mid tho burdens ot the people havo been lightened by the reduction of the rate of taxation from 60 to 40 ir cent. Keiorms havo been made in the various branches of tho Stato Government; the whipping-post has been abolished; the capitation tax, which prcvomed the exercise of the right of suffrage by noor neanlc. has been re

moved, and ths laws of tho State have been

administered without discrimination. THE PUBLIC SCllOOIJS. In the matter of nubile education tho fol

lowing staloment exhibits facts which in all time to como will rc'Icer honor on the Headjuster party, and, what is tt 11 better, will advance tho Stato in the general enlightenment which makes civilization iiosriblo: Comparing 179 with 1871 tho Flinders, by their unfriendly legislation and administration, reduced tho number of public schools from 3,0(7, of which 709 were colored, to 8,481, of which but 89 wore colored. They re

duced tho pupils from 131,088, of whom 3V

9 to we e colored, to 103,07!, or whom Dut 5,208 were colored. They reduced the teachers from 3,034, of whom 501 were colored, to 2.-

501, of whom but 94 were colored. They reduced tbo expenditures from $587,473 for tho year to $611,902. Now, compare tho Hen (1 jus tor ru'o of last year with the last year of Ilorbon rule, and

tne dooks snow tno Keadiusrers nuvo in

creased the number of to'.iools from 2,491 to 6,587; tho number of colored schools from 89 to 850; the pupils from 108,0 T4 to 357,369: the colored pupils from 8,0i to 4,538: the teachers from 2,501 tt 4,538; the colored teachers from i to 814. The expenditures, from $ J 1,902, were increased to $1,157,142.

The establishment of the first atato Normal

school for colored teachers in the United

States is another milestone planted by our party on the road of progress.

xno rauwaw mileage in Virginia uaa

been increased 43 mir cent.: tho in

crease in freight carriage has been 82

per cent. : the Increase in the number or pas

sengers carried 78 par cent , and the gross

earnings of the railroads in the State have increased 88 per oent. withlnthe hist two years.

This has been secured. Senator Mahone claims, by a liberal and honest policy of administration and by the encouragement of commerce in the State.

Ho then passes on to the recent outbreak

between tho races, and says that when tho Bourbon convention assembled at - Lynchburg, In July last, tho adoption of tho color line was openly favored, and that such a plank would be introduced into the platform seemed probable until the last moment. The Chairman of the convention addressed himself to the white people of Virginia, and the newspapers recommended tho platform adopted as a white man's platform. They made tho race issue the only one of the campaign, and brought to tho support of the Democnttio party all the white liepubli-

eans who were prejudiced against negro ad

vancement, in September the leading ed

itor of the Bourbon party announced that the

uemocratic plan ot campaign was "to ouy all the voters they could and bully the re

mainder." This plan was carried out.

As one of the prominent sneakers ex

plained, "By ths gods, this is a white man's

country, and white men shall rule or the rivers will run blood." Everything was done

to arouse and inUame race prejudice, and It became necessary, as the excitement grew Intense to carry out what had been intended

and intimidate the blacks.

The Senator then says: Arms began to pour into the south side re

gions, the supply of small arms in our larger

cities was exhausted, and the demand ex

tended as rar as lialumore. until one uemo

cratic headquarters within twenty miles of

Richmond had forty stands or muskets and the Danville region was a walking arsenal. The cry that "white men should rule or die," the announcement that a war of races was upon us, swelled in volume and ferocity. Threats of the lives of our leaders became more common than any other argument. Murder in cold blood began in Madison county. Days bolero it was repeated In Danville, rumors of tho shipment of arms filled the air, and, during the fair week at Richmond long before any outbreak oc

curredthe knowing ones were heard to

whisper and mysteriously predict what might be expected at the proper time.

in due time it came. ith wnat premedi

tation and design it came, 1st any impartial man who rood tho Bourbon press and heard

the preparations made lor It judge tor Himself. Who provoked it? Who perpetrated it? Let tho Bourbon journals themselves testify. With what purpose it was perpetrated let the thousands of false circulars turning It to political account, spread broadcast by the Bourbons almost before It occurred, and the effect they produced, speak as no argument can The massacre in Danville Is dignified by Bourbonlsm with the nameof riot. The facts, as gathered from all sources, are that upon Saturday evening preceding the election, just after the Danri le negroes hod received their weekly pay and were buying their Sunday supplies in a crowded market-place, a white man appeared, bad an altercation with a negro and whipped him. Tho fight was ended, and no other negroes camo to the rescue of the punished man. But the programme was interrupted by this circumstance. An armed gathering of the best people " of the "best and bravest " was conveniently near, and in a moment a murderous throng poured out of the building where they wore assembled, opening a murderous fire upon the unarmed, defenseless, and flying negroes. How many were killed no one knows, and no one will probably learn the truth, for the rendition of things still In Danville Is such that the truth cannot be learned. That they were shot in the backs like dogs while running away; that no pistol shot was fired by a blaek man; that no white man was injured, save by his own friends; that for days the poor victims were found dead in alleys, in warehouses, and under houses, liko poisoned rats that had crawled away to die; that the negroes tied to tho wood, to the State of North Carolina, to the four winds of heaven; those lire a few of the facts of this bloody, wbolenalo murder, which was telegraphed far and mar by Bourbons as an insolont uprising of the blacks against tho w hites. Simultaneously with theee occurrences the crack of tho Bourbon weapon engaged In political murder resounded, and the Bourbon knife Hunk deep in the counties of Charles City, Halifax, Hanover, Floyd, Augusta, Lee and elsewhere, mingling with Sabbath day sympathies from tho Bourbon capital, and the ratio cry was shouted with brutal ferocity intense enough to make Virginia tho rival of any Southern State In hor record of bloodshed and lawlessness. These, fellow-oitl'.cns, wore the moans resorted to. The effects wero all that the bulldozers could havo hoped for. Murders, deliberately planned and executed with remorseless malignity, wero presented to the remote and ignorant whites of tho valley and southwest as the unavoidable selfdefonse of these wolves against thoir lamb assailants. Without the means of informing themselves of tho bareness of these falsehoods, thousands of our party, deluded and deceived, yielded to an impulse of generosity so foully played upon, and In the region where these felonies wore permitted, tho muidcrcrs themselves paraded the streots, armed to the toeth, undo.- the pretense of preserving order, until,' In tbe city of Danville, where Cameron received n 1884 votes numbering 780, and Who in lfS received 841 votes, snd whore 1,39 Headjuster votes wore enrolled, but twonty-six votes wore cast for the coalition candidate, whose life was threatened, and whose coffin It Is said had been actually made and paid for by the party of honor and intelligence. In tho counties of Halifax and Charlotte, adjacent to Pittsylvania, the policy of purchase as well as rioting prevailed, and while tho methods wore a little less violent, they were none tho less corrupt. Thus It was that Halifax, with a colored voting population of .8,811, against 3,054 whites, after glvlug John S. Wise 548 majority in 1882, gave the Bourbons 250 majority In 1883. And Charlotte, with a black voting population of 2,055, &Ad white population of 1,898, after giving .'fcn S. Wise 782 majority In 1882, gave a Uourfton majority of 800 In 1883. That those majorities were honest no saue uiau will imagine- Hew

they wore brought about will In due time be mado nppHront, The above arc only samples of the methods resorted to by the Bourbons. Bribery and corruption appear to have been tho ordor of proccodiupg generally throughout tbe State. In the history of politics tu this State tho recent campaign is, thank God, without precedent, and to tho forbearance and longsutrcring of the Kcodjustors to this alone Is due the fact that this Stato is not now bathed In blood. In summing up tho results of tho campaign. Senator Mahone says: That the reliction will come, and that swiftly and completely, is not a matter of dotlbt. It is true that llourbonism has gained a triumph upon a campaign of falsehood and deception, by appeals to p.tpslon and by a barbarous resolve to shed as much innocent blood as was necessary to its success. It is truo that by

1 air means and by loui it has proaured a temporary majority. And yet It Is equally true that the majdrity of our people are conservative at heart aud abhor fakehood and violonc In conclusion ho siysl Tho scope or the Headjuster party has enlarged with Its age and growth. It originated In an issue local, and to some extent Improper. With time, and the changing issues wliioh time brings, tt has widened its sph 'ie, and while lis original object has become 'ess prominent, issues of nationa ism, or human rights, of liberty, of peace, or manhood, of republican government, havo been forced upon It by tho flerco onslaught of Bourbonlsm, until these issues are broad enough to I c national, and it has the sympathy of every man In tho nution who loves liberty and abhors the proscription and bigotry of caste, class and race prejudice which is tho life of BourbonHm. For myself, as your Chairman from theoutf ot of this struggle, I have conceived that the true duty imposed upon mo by tho spirit of our party was to wage undying war upon Bourbonlsm; not only as It opposed the debt settlement; not only as it Is the enemy of education; not only as It Is imbecile, heartless and wasteful in administration: not only as It Is the enemy of fiee en ne; but as it is the enemy of that tri e Democracy which means that the bumble and weak shall partlciwUe in and bo protected by the administration of the government as welt as tho powerful and sir mg. In tho effort to perpetuate caste, olass, and race rule by crushing out by force, fraud, or otherwise, the weak and unprotected in this State, the Bourl otts have uwdo a gulf between themselves and the Beadjuster party whkh shall yawn forever, for they cannot bridge it, and we will not. Let the fight proceed. If wo arc to be In tho minority in tho future, it is a minority struggling for principles as strong snd holy as when they were backod by a majority. The manhood which sustains them In defeat proves a sincerity and devotion which in due time must and will be crowned with triumph. But whether future triumphs come or not

the blessings we hare secured for Virginia are fixed and indestructible. Our enemies stand before us. We know that tfcoy are our foes and the fees of the Commonwealth: that they have in the past paralyzed her energies, robbed her treasury, defrauded and dwarfed hor free schools, strangled her suffrago, brought national bate upon her, adhered to no principle, and made terms with any renegade or prostitute who wculd aid them. And that they have at lasl triumphed by murder aud bloodshed that have disgraced the State. We know that wo have asked for and given no quarter in tho past, that we will accept none, and promise none now. We anon- that with Bourbonlsm before us we have an enemy to fight, powerful and dangerous to tho interests of the State. Wo know that, masquerading in the stolen livery of Democracy, It Is no true representative of Democracy, either In principle or personnel, and I believe the Headjuster party will, when It next meets in council, unite cordially and thoroughly with our friends, State and national, and make common cause with them against tho Bourbons, their aiders, counsellors and abettors, State and national, by whatsoever name they mav be desiguated. I repeat, therefore, that the struggle against Bourbonlsm is to be renewed forthwith, and to tho death, and, as your Chairman, I call upon every loyal Beadjuster in Virginia to rally to the standard and reform to fight a new battle against their old Bourbon foe in the national campaign of 1884. Hearing in mind the old watchword of a free ballot and a fair count, we ha ve a right to demand and expect support from the State, and if need be from the Federal Government, In behalf of the rights of man, guaranteed by both Governments, and put at stake to procure the ascendenoy of an unscrupulous party that sticks at nothing to acquire power. William Mahomx, Chairman, PuTEnSBuna, Nov. 14, 1883.

Homes in Washington. There appears to be ao much fatality about building houses in Washington, especially adapted to entertaining, that it ought to cause a superstitious feeling among those who contemplate doing so. Building a fine house here, which evinced a rapid accumulation of wealth, largely contributed to the defeat of Mr. Robeson in New Jersey. Mr. Windom experienced the same fate in Minnesota from the same cause, and both Senators Pendleton, Cameron and Blaine appear to have been injured in their respective States by building homes in Washington. The inference to be drawn is that men are envious and do not like to sea one another progressing too rapidly or comfortably in life. Mr. Seward once gave the following piece of advice to a gentleman who was just stepping ont of office here, and who proposed to settle in Washington and practice law. Said Mr. Seward: "Don't do it, unless you are willing to become a nobody. Never give up your citizenship in your State, especially as yon cannot acquire it in Washington. It is right that there should be no citizenship here, for the Government pays half the expense of the city and district, and local government wonld make the system complex and unsatisfactory,and,' as there is no citizenship in the District, every man can retain the privilege of voting in his State." Cor. Courier-

Journal.

That Big Thing in Lire, Comparison. A man don't know how he is getting along unless he compares himself with his neighbors. Comparison is a big thing iu this life. If Mr. Lowry hasn't got any better crop than I have, I am content, for Mr. Lowry is a good farmer. Sometimes I tep around his fields and look over the fence, and, if his cotton is low and thin, and his corn pretty much all nubbins, I can't to save my Ufo feel bad about it. I wish I could, and I reckon I conld if my own

crop wasn't so much like his. Human

nature is powerful mean aoout tue like of that. They say that a woman is right well satisfied with her new dress and new bonnet until her neighbor comes to meeting with a little finer one, but I reckon that is a mistake. I read not long ago about a Boston lady taking arsenic because she saw her neighbor at a party with a new set of diamond ear-rings. She was about to die when they told her that the ear-rings were hired from a jewelry storo, and then she got well. It takes a power of grace to make a man rejoice over his neighbor's prosperity. Bill Arp, in Atlanta Constitution.

Plantation Philosophy. A bald head ain't al'era de signob sense. De turnip ain't so sound airier yer cut off de greens. I has know'd tender-hearted men dat would stan' and lissen to a tale of distress an' cry, but at the same time da hil a mighty tight grip on a dime. I owed a man oncv an' when I spoke ter him about it he said, "don't think ob that, fur it's all rite," but I noticed dat airier I quit thinkin' about it, he tuck it up an' thought about it till it worried me powerful. Ef a man thinks dat ho's done suthin' funny, an' yer laugh, it ploasos him mightily, but ef yer laugh at him fur iloin suthin' what ain't funny he doan like it All through life a man want's his Irons ter look at his own an' not da own pleasure. De pusson what is only smart in one thing may make a big success ob hiase'f, but he oughten'ter think hard ob people case da gets tired ob him, for wo think more ob de mockin' bird, not becase he can sing better den any udder bird, but becase he's got so many different songs. -rn-onoto Traveler, TrtB onoe famous tribe of Cherokee Indians is now reduced to about 1,000 persons, and they suffer a steady decrease, which will extinguish them by the m.ddlo of the next century.

A DREADFUL DEED.

Three People Murdered and an Attempt If "-de to Born Their Bodies. A Fourth Victim, Badly Wounded, Escapes by Feigning Death.

A quadruple murder of the most atro

cious description occurred the other day in the village of Laconia, N. H. The victims were James Buddy, a carpenter, 40 years old, his little son, Lawrence, and a female visitor. The victims wore either beheaded or mutilated in an unexampled manner, and the house was set on fire. Mrs. Buddy escaped from the building in a dying condition and will not survive. Dispatches from Laconia furnish tho following particulars of the dreadful deed: Tho Buddy family osoupled a little cottage on the outskirts of the town. It was about 4 o'clock when a woman's piercing screams startled the quiet neighborhood. Mr. O. Ti. Andrew was first to reach the house. As ho ran to tho building a woman, wounded and bleeding, plunsred through a window and fell upon the ground at blB feet. It was Mrs. Buddy. "I am all out to pieces! For God's sake, take mo soinewHore 1" she piteously cried. Mr. Andrews carried her to the nearest house, and, returning, found smoke pouring from the windows. The firemen and police were quickly c.illcd, and other neighbors camo to t o rescue. Breaking into the dwelling they found one of tho most frightful scenes ou record. Two beds wore blazing In adjoining rooms, tho smell of keroseno telling plainly enough tbe cause of tho flerco flames. Tho tiro was soon extinguished, and then It was seen that human bodies mutilated and charred occupied the beds. The bodies of Mr. Buddy and his infant son lay in one room, and In the next was tho body of a woman. Mr. Buddy lay upon his back. His head had been partially covered by a terrible blow, evidently from an ax. Upon his body wero other horrlolo wounds. Tho boy, only a year old, had been beheaded by two blows of the same weapon. The body in tho next room was that of Mrs. Ford. Salmon's former landlady. It was also frightfully mutilated. An attempt had been made to pack the remains in a trunk which stood near by. To facilitate this fiendish disposition of the body, the legs had been chopped off nt tho knees. The head and br.dy were so badly burned that the original Injuries could scarcely bo determined. Further search revealed in the corner of tho room a earpenter's broad-ax, which belonged to tho murdered man. It was

covered with blood and hair, and told Its own story. Mrs. Buddy was at once visited. She was Unconscious, and for some time it was impossible to obtain any clew to the horror, but by great effort the physicians succeeded in restoring the dying woman so that she was able to spook a few words at a time. In the course of a few hours a state, meet was obtained, which apparently fastens the crime on Salmon. She said that that be camo to the house with a trunk Saturday afternoon, and asked to stop over night. The Buddys, knowin? him somewhat, made no objection, especially since he said that bis wife was out of town. Ho brought a pall with him. After the evening had been rassed in ordinary conversation, the trunk was carried up Into the baok room. Salmon caying that 1 o would explain about it In the morning, and then they retired. Salmon at his own request occupying the back room, and the Kuddys tbe front room. About midnight Saliron was hoard walkinr about, and Mr. l.U'ldy went to his room. As ho did not reti r:i, tho wifo sot up and looked in. Both men were sitting on the bed talking, and there w as an ax there. Later she heard them go into the kitchen. A little while after, hearing something fall, she 1 an to the kitchen and saw her husband Just drawing his last breath. Salmon attacked her with the ax, .cutting off her left hand at the first blow, land then burying the helve in her shoulder, felling herto tho floor. Justthen tbo little boy oried out, and the murdurcr rushed in to wulet him. Said tho mother: UI heard the blow which fell on him." Mrs. Buddy lay still on tho floor, feigning death, whilo Salmon routed oil which he hod brought with him over her and tho others. As soon as he ignited it he lied from the house. She then mode her escapo. Investigation develops the fact that Mrs. Ford bad been killed at her own house, p leked in tho trunk, and taken over to the Buddy house, and leads to the belief that Salmon endeavored to get Ruddy's help in disposing of It, and when refused killed him in order to prevent his secret becoming known. Salmon, who Is 93 years old and a cook by trade, was arrested In Plymouth during tho afternoon. He told a story hvhich. if Mrs. Buddy had died, might have cleared him, but he had blood-stains on his clothing, and appeared very nervous. He is safe in jail. James Ford was also arrested on suspicion of complicity In his wife's murder, but popular feeling acquits him.

SAYDiG MAST LIVES.

Efficient Work of the Ufa-Saving Service During the Year. The annual report of General' Superintendent Kimball, of tho Life-Saving service, shows lot stations In operation, of which 119 are on tho Atlantic, thirty-seven on the lakes, sevon on tho Pacific and one at the falls of the Ohio at Louisville, Ky. The results of all the disasters within the scope of the service for the past fiscal year are summarized as follows: Total number of disasters, 481; total value of property involved, $7,)S,T20; total value of property saved. 85,071,708; total value of property lost, S 1,5; 1,020; total number of persons involved, 4,038; total number of persons eaved, 4,017; total number of per sons lost, 10. Tho disasters of tbo post year exceeded thore of tho previous year by seventy-one, but tho amount of property lost was considerably lesj. S nee the introduction of the systom in 1871, 18.334 lives have been Dived and property to the value ot $33,737,083 recovered. Superintendent Kimball attributes much o' tho high efficiency of the service io its utter exemption from political intlucnces, and states that tho statute enacted In tssa, declaring it non-political, has made it an easy task for him to conduct lifesaving affairs with sole reference to the public good. - , BAD INDIANS.

A War of Extermination to he Waged Against the Apaches. Telegram from Chihuahua, Mexico. All frontiersmen of the mountain country of Arizona aud Now Mexioo who have a grievance against tbe Apaches and other Indians are welcomed by Gov. Louis Tetrazai to join the Indian annihilation army which Is preparing to sweep the Sierra Mad res from tho Peons Atlas mining-camp, directly west of this city, north to Arix-jna and Mexico. Ail Amert. cans who can reach here armed can share la tbe si oils of scalps at 250 each, and in all captured animals, supplies and ammunition. Tho country to be traversed comprises the bonanza quartz mineral belt of our continent. If Gen. Crook watches well the borders he will havo the desperado Apache tribes of the Sierra Madras in his grip within ninety days.

SMALL TALK.

Tijebe are 00,000 gypsies in Hungary. Mexican manufacturers are making paper from the fibers of the cactus. Three thousand Americans and 18,000 English arc now living in Paris. New York's epicurean Journal, the Gastronomer, has starved to death. Keifeh claims to be the father of tbo Presidential boom for Gen. Sherman. "Libertv" street. In MiUcdgovillc, Oa,, leads from the penitentiary to tho cometory. Fxfty million envelopes wero printed in Hartford, Ct., for the Government last month. KiRKPATiticK Rock uin Is the gentle nanto of tho "champion long-distance runner of Colorado." Is Mc.ic (hero are 100 Prosbytorlan congregations, ton native iirouolKn uud two schools. Gekai.ii Mahsev, the Eiullsh lecturer, finds grout troublo in getting used to this beastly climate, don't you know. Tiff. ladles' billiard parlor In tho prluclpal hotel iu I.us Vegas, N. M., is in tho cupola; the gentlemen's is in tbo basemont. A Uowkhv lodging-house offers a lodging, smoking tobacco, soap, towels and the use of tbe tooth brush for 10 cents a night. In one district Iti Yucatan, In a fortnight, there wero killed 30,000 pounds of grasshoppers and over 11,000 pounds of locusts. Newuehn, Tonn., bus a law that imposes a fine of not less than nor more than $00 ou any person who goes Into a saloon on Sunday. Tnu Cleveland Ifmiltl declares that, with Mr. Arthur as tbo Providential cnmliduto, the voto of Ohio civunol bo counted on for tho liepi.b'tctiu ticket In 1884. "Wk have Wllkle Collins for plots, Mr. Illuok for hUiitt-ts, Mr. Howells and Mr. James for nnrlvft't'1 pilule s In miniature, nil Oulda for tcnout nt, but," nays the London Timet, '-we bavo-uot a uoiollst equul tollu.so of tbe da) of Thackeray and George Eliot,"

u' mm im a ajra i . . ,

niiwi rm i n 1 r L. , sj

. iff. v '-al

MTHEETERS & SHO

North Side of the Square, East of Fto2ce.

Wholewctta and RetoUl XeUcras in. BUILDERS' AKD BtACKaJVlliw

County Headquarters for THE BEST PINE AND POPLAR SHINGLES HQ UTII, DOORS. SASH, BLINDS, GLASS, MOULDINGS, LOCKS, HINGES, FAILS AND CCHEUO, The Early BreJ COOKING STORES AND THE GRAND OLIVER CHILLED PLOT7 ARE AMONG OUR SPECIALTIES. aSTCiel Owr Prtecs.W

ELEGANT HEW DRUG STORE

Is in the North Room of the New Block,,

And is Worth a, Vllt -to Olwcrvis its CTetttiM

Kvprv article kent in a first class

Store can be found at Bowiiinn's.

BLOOMINGTON BAR.

BUSKIRK $ D UNC A N, Attorneys, Office in the National Bank corner, upstuirs. Will practice in all courts of toe State. Special attention given to Probate business, and to collection and prompt remit. Unco of all claims. LOUDEN Jf- MIEBS, Attorneys. Offiee over First National Bank. AH business of a legal nature given careful attention in all courts. Real estate Titles carefully examined by aid of Louden's Abstract. A specialty made of the collection and remittance of claims of all kinds. FRIEDLEV, PEARSON $ FRIEDLEV, Attorneys, Office over McUaHa's Store. Settlement of estates a specialty., Collections promptly remitted. CapLG.W. Fried ley or Judge Pearson will be in attendance at each term of circuit court. HirULKY PITMAN, Attorneys, will

iVJ. practice in the various courts. Espe

cial attention given to collections, ana to probate business. Office, Foe's comer, opposite tho Progress Office. ROGERS 4 BENLBF, Attorneys and Collectors. Office In Mayor's Office building. Special attention given to settling decedents' estates, and to all kinds of probate business. Also, abstracting. EAST & EAST, Atlcrnevs, at Law, Bloominirton, Ind. Office, in Waldron's Block, north side square. Probate business and collections given prompt attenion. "Will practice in courts of all adjoining counties. Business solicited. JAMES F. MORGAN, Attorney. Office, Bee Hive Block, up-stnirs. To tho probate and collection business he will rivA eoecial and particular atten

tion. Business, attended to in courts of

surrounding counties. WILLIAMS MILLS N Attorneys, Office Ave doors south of Hunter's corner, up-stairs. So a general collection and probate business. Will practice in courts of adjoining counties. (1 R. WORRALL, Attorney. Office J t in New Block, up-stairs, over McCallft & Co.'s. Will practice in all the courts. Special attention given to Pension Claims and probate business. EA. FVLK. Attorney. Office in Al- . ten 4- McNary't new block, up-stairs over corner room. Special attention will be given to probate business, and to the prompt collection of claims. JOHN GRAHAM, attorney; real estate and insurance agent, abstracter of titles, and claim collector. Office upstairs, over corner room in tho Allen $ SleNary Block. Business solicited.

Blacksmith Shop WAGON BUILDING WORKS, And General Repair S X I O JE . West of tbe Old Iemer Mill. Wc make a specialty of HORSESHOEING. A largo and convenient Wagon Yard is attached to tbe Shops, with a plentiful supply of good stock water. lVnn anri Rnfrviea camfullv renaired

or built of the best materials. .

Examino our' Premium Wagons. n 11-81 G1LMORE BROTHERS.

CALL Oil Q

LEW. E. ANDEBS0N,

Wholesale and Retail Dealer in Hooka, Cards and Noveltlea,

iLIO'

Cigar and News Stand, Cor. College Ave. and 4th St., (One Block South 1st National Bank,) BXOOJ1INGTON, IND. jr, b. Any Book or Periodical published furnished at Publisher's price.

PENSIONS. Honl Estnto .fffency, AND NOTARY PUBLIC. Farms and Town Property bought and sold. Money loaned on Real Estate at 6 percent. Five years' successful experience in obtaining Pensions. Can hurry your claim through; blanks always on hand. Blanks for conveyancing, all kinds. Deeds and mortgages, and all writing, promptly and correctly executed. Good Piro Insurance, cheap. Business solicited. Call and see mo No ohargo for consultation or advice. O. R. WORRALL, Attorney, west side square, over McCalla's.

PRINTING! THE PROCRE8S Job Printing- Office ! Ith .' Tnr, AVtr ir?, and mttlntv A" JToteriat of oil kinils, in rreprwl to do Printing In a stile nuial to tho oent fa tbe' country. Particular tttsutiou paid to v COMMERCIAL PftlNTINO, Including Bill Hernia, IUn.l BiUa, Letter Beads, Note Head, ClrcnUn, Cianls, PMtani, ko. Fin printing iie.ialty. Orders from a distance will nceiva prompt attention. ORCHARB l "HOUSE ! S. M. Orchurd & Son PROPRIETORS. '

Opposite the Depot, Bloomlagtoa, Ind.

tW A'o Pain$ mil b jrti ft atcummotlati tat trmting puWi'e.

OHIO ft PIBSICOIrfT BAIIiWAT. p

4 Solid Daily Trains (each way) tat CINCINNA TI AND St. LOUO. " ' 3 Solid Daily Trains (each wy)6fsV CINCINNA TI AND LOUIS VILta.f r 2 Solid Daily Trains (each way) bet was ' S3". LOUIS AN.D L0UI8VILLB. NO Chance of Cars ter AlTY Clam af Paraeagei;, ' Firat Class, Second Clov, owl EmijrmU'; Ptuaengcru, alt carried ot Fmft Xhmrtm' Trains, consisting of Palace Steeping Cars, , elegant Pmrlor Coaches ami tomJoTsUcx: Day Coaches, all running TltsOQ&W ' WITHOUT CHANGE. Only 10 Houra Tic Between iXncinnali end St. Louis,' er. 'St Louis and Louisville. ' . ''!: v But Four Hour tsWBeheeen Cincinnati and LotussUU. Tbe Ohio a, Mlaalwslapl mVwmr ris the only Lint, between - St. Xtouta and CSaeiama.ti' Under one management, running-aB it trains through "SOLID," and in eo quenco is the only recognised f rat etas; route between those cities, its Easy Grades, Its Splendid lfetit Power, Steel Jtailf, Straight Track, and Solid Road Bed Enable the O. & H. to make , faster ., age time than any other Western Road. STAsk for Tickets via O. M. IVy.'Hr !

ifor sale by Agents of connecting ltaea

Jtast, West, Bonn ana Botitft, , W. W. PEA BODY, GenH Sot. W. B. SHATTtTO, Oen P. Agt, CINCINNATI, OHIO?

GREAT THROUGH LINE. Louisville, n. A. A C aUuTttajr "Menon Bont Affords the Best, Cheapest, OiotceM, Dtreot, XeIimliptt'Route to all paru of the Greafc ?s . and North West, tha S$fe'MMN south wrjZZjA-:&

Bloomington ' 11.69 pas Chicago 9.00 pas SOUTH. Lounmu, mail.

Bloominzton 4.51 pm At

Louisville 9.10 pm MO nam, Two daily through Express tnuaa7 with out change, connecting closely wit, the Cit through lines out ef Chicago aad isvUle, giving only OKIE CHANG1 of cars to ell the principal towns aad eh ies in the northwest and lit the south waV Unexcelled traveling acccmasodsftioas. No re check tug of Ihggege. JfotMayhl connections. Less changes of cats tput by any other route. . Sell throueh tickets to alt parts of the country. .Cbeck'fcagsage through to destination. Time cards, railroad maps,rtaa, routes, through ticket and; sksagk baggage checks, obtained only Of .- . CARTER rBRMCJ, . Station Ticket Agent, Btoonsiegtoe, Itd, Hubkat Keixab, OJL, LoaTiUe;.y

ErsH"i

w-mr -sr wri'Er-air .i

AMD PRACTICAL

pared for dwelling houses and mMkf. L.;m:.. n. ..n,?i.. llrt,HJIn-;,.in

at the time specifiod. .

- : : .... UVEEY and MIA ITASLfi. '

THJS undersiguea taste pleasure in cau ing attention to tbe fact t&at taey have The Latest Styles at sfagglis ; and ftarriamta. and mod. ataadv hotsasrCssV-

single and double driving. We sr Ve. ' fared to furnish Carriages for Weddikts, unerals and Parties, aad switt team $r Commercial Traveler. Fartner' IsansB .

AT.

fed cheaply.

WORLSYAltA'

Resident Donticta

Hip

GRAiri,

Office in the Hew Block, OD-stalrs, over

Cole' Book Store. All work warranted. '

-- w unAHuab m a m -

ML I Hili as sims '""jsPsLV 1 ;,

'a. at wiii)Hi awaas awy, neei i w iii i m .

m a - . - "iTT rwa lt a tt-' a ,

aflslAealM far AisMlM ftaaa, aaa a QjaaVatfMarj : ' -''

W Get Barrtaa IS AT "

Furniture In iown, n e pfffOi ter price than any 'mJpl and see us in our new wm, witt owftea goods, and leers Wiprk befef M

ly. eriKooui on vret crw. fssn is

uan aavti arjr