Crawfordsville Weekly Journal, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 21 November 1874 — Page 7

^aturdaii dJucning Journal.

O I I

—Tiio question of a division ot the ill' FotitiUiin :ml Warren is Hir iin lieim: jiiriuteil.

A yotitig m:i!i n:uiH'fl (Jorwlno was killed wiili (i luizz kuv l'e\y,t!uy:s ago at Mornii, I Mill ton county. —.least* [. Siovetw, tlio Ilemlrick.s county rcjiroliato iin-i-.stol at Danville lor spduc.injj his adopted dati^h ter, is languishing in lilt Covington jail. —It is estimated that twenty thousand dollars' worth oi' I tun he pili-d up alonn the railroad trat in this plane, ready lor s!iio-n-:it. l.rhttitm /'atrial. -David Iruinphreys, of Ctss cniintv, jircordiii'^ 11 l!u: /V/.//v.i, sold $100 worth ol wat Tnii'lons and $700 worth of eul)hn^e of his oivn raising the past year. —The Inr-H" buyers are taking in irood horsu.s at #"jil :i pii-cn. The dread ol ihe 'ixpi-nse ol' Wiot'M'in^ senilis to in ike horses very eiie:i|) just, at present.— hiFtiyrt!! .journal.

Tile Indiana fat fzivl a-id hov have returned to Danville, having trawled over I ho north western section of the Union tliin season and throiii l#lts of the j:ra.-shopper reuion.— Union.

The Kranklort Unttner savs (eo. Iilinii hasa field tiiat has been planted in corn retnilurlv for the past thirty year:-, ami no single year has it failed to yield anaverage of. iifty. bushels, per acre. —The entire line of the. (J. & ,S. A. R. K. has been let I'roni Chicag to Delphi, and the grade in places for miles ha-' been completed and it is thought trains will run the entire route, in") miles, in !e-s than one year.

It is confidently expected that trains will De running on the new portion of the L., IJ. &ri. W. R. R. by the loth of December, which, by the way, is the :mniversiirv ol'the opening ol the Ktd River railroad to this city. h'yani'porl Journal. —The Loiian-iport •/mtrnnl publishes a iist of improvements made in that city during the pi-,t .v.'.ison that cost $1 000. I'., expresses the opinion that it would take a hundred thousand more to cover the total cost ol 1 uiidiiigs of all kinds erected this year. —.1. Ralph liurlon, late "I'mfcs-sor of Elocution in Indiana Asiniry University" has at last discovered his calling I'he ''I'rof." has recently connected himself'with I'akerit Fnrron'scomedy troupe and is said to be meeting with great success on the boards.—(.!nmcaxUe Manner. —The Indianapolis & St. Louis R. propose* lo transport all material for the Imrnt district, at, half rates aud the Vandalia will carry all coal, donated to the -'inierers, free. One car load of coal has already been received and distributed ou the last proposliiin. (i'rrrriow.llr Ibnirirr. —The ham of /John Houts, of Foun­| tain county, was burned on the night ol the 7th, together with SOO bushels of wheat, 'J,ooii bushels of corn, all his farming implements, four valuable horses, harness, one wagon, a reaper and mower, a steam thresher ami a lot of hav and ••traw. —The committee'of'the City Cotineil who were authorized to purchase a tire engine, have decided to buy a "Silsbv," and yesterday sent a proposition to the Silsbv Company for the purchase of one of their rotary engines. The price to be paid is not yet fixed but will probably be about six thousand dollars.— (hrencanllc li-innnr.

On Sunday morning last, Mrs. Catherine Neelv. a lady aged about sixty-five year- started on horseback to visit her sons. When opposite Mr. Abe Michael's, dog came ouL and frightened the horse by catchinir it by the tail. Mrs. X. was thrown from her seat, and had her thigh broken. She is seriously injured.—

I'ranf:fort llinnr. A. Mr. Smcaton, at Thorntown, has just been relieved-of a cataract on his eye which has prevented him from seeing for seven years. Dr. Heard successfully peiferiind the operation, and after it was over the man was very much delighted on being restored to sight. The Dr. is a successful oculist and,,a .careful operator. /•'riin!:/rl Urrycmt,.

—The Hoard of Commissioners met on 'he lith inst. for the purpose of ordering '.In tax collected, which was voted by •he people in aid ot the Anderson, Lebanon iV St. ljOui Railroad, but refused to make the order on account of there rait being a sullicicnt amount of money "Xpcnded on the work already done to eompiy with the law. It is now pretty certain the.t, the people will not have the tax to pay until the ties and iron are down and the rolling stock on the road.

Lrbauna Patriot. —As we iro to press wc learn that a fatal accident occurred at the west (Mid of die I., Pi. ,v W. Railroad bridge, at this place, ou Wednesday evening, wherein •lohn Kay. an old and respected citizen "four town, lost his life. The deceased •md thiee comrades, section hands, were returning to their homes on their hand car. and, it being dark, were run into by the gravel train at the above mentioned point, killing John Kay outright, and ^eriou.dy wounding another member of die party, whose name we were unable "am.-—t.f0''inylon Friend.

ly.I_.Y/:HS.

/.\D/.

Ivukoi.'io and Porn arc Viol It lighted with 'jja-.

1.1m-

Walnsli arlc.-ian well

cinity of Clerniantown, Wavno county. —Nearly $S,000 worth of sheep have been bought up in Lawrence county within the past two months by man.

1 he at.-on Coal ompany oilers a

sanuuine

i-2,030

'It'cp, and no water vet.

I wii

feci

spencer county larinr-r* made

it.dlons of s-ir^hntn moJa^-s Lite 111 «-as.n.

I'he Knight -ville miners held another

nut-*- mr-eiiiiL' nil Tti'Mlay, and decided to

l'i work ai the old prices

A Davtoii linn roceiHly pur.-hased

'I it ol i1- ii:ru Ic.ii ill the *i-

1 secure -L -.-it in the In- 'V™'

Mrs Koehler, wife of Leonard Koeh-

barn of Joseph Hardy, of Pendleton, jority, 17,252. Madison county, was destroyed bv fire,

harness, etc. William McDolc. tried and cotivicted at the last term of the Circuit Court tit Lawrenceburg, for the murder of the Bradley family, made a confession before his removal to the State Prison, to Josiah Campbell, foreman of the jury which tried him, Dr. Gatch, and several otherssnyinj that he murdered the family, but was so drunk that he did not know what he was doing at the time, lie said that he had 110 ill feelinir toward the murcred

Mrs. Billistcr Has the Ileins.

)0rk

"i Vivnr,. ,• -r by the watch. Messrs. Kingan scruples, he, would have been less of U..Ji\ori,e took 5-1,0 in from erre fc Co., the proprietors, have the largest Haute for a single night's performance pork factory in the world, and pay out while Janauschek played to a Miiall

m:r

house. I transaction of their business. (I got ri.n \v.t ..(• (y d-

reward of S.-iiiO for the arrest and convic- jdrcd hogs are slaughtered daily, at an tion of the parties who -e.t fire to the expense of' .-i2",000 for live :-tock, iabor, (iartsherrie coal shaft, near Kni-ht-viile,

neighbor at Loogootec, in June, 187:', has tered in this one establishment alone been acquitted. McCarty is l'.\ years I -•^"i-'on, and the number will probaoia and his victim was 78. Their great' & !e somewhat increased this year. 7 I his immense business has all been built age had somewhat to do with acquittal,

and fifty. —A boy by the name of KeH'ett. living near Staunton, (.'lay county, found a package ol powder last Friday, and threw it into the was hurue afterwards. —A long and fierce quarrel about a Methodist church known as the Salem Church, neir In wood, Marshall county, has been terminated by some of the zealoils partisans, who burned it to ashes last Saturday niligt. —William Kudifer was married in Terre Haute, on Thursday, previous to leaving for a ten years residence tit. Jellersonville. Minnie Shalcr was tlio bride, whose residence, by her own statement, is wherever her hat is oil". They are a I biid lot.

Dr. H. J. Rice, the defeated candidate for Conerressin theTcrre Haute Dis-

llp

—The. oldest man in Harrison county I firm have occasion to handle so much livt four miles front Corydoti. ile is jn°ney in the regular transaction of their ninctv-six years old, has eleven children, they have a hoiking house ,* *. '. .... in New \ork devoted to their own peculs the grandlather ol fifty-six and Lhe I nisiry sittuir*". great grandfather of over three, hundred

.h.,i,

®7 000,000 annually in the regular

l0se

figures from headquarters and.know

whHl am Fifteen hun

sail iw

., '"K done by a patent process which enahlcs the proprietors to ship their pork I he iHhinpM o( 1 111 i11ir and U» ioroign rotihirirs in the best possible hay from the Kankakee Valley is carried shape. Whole lloors of an immense building are d.n-oted to the slaughtt-ring proce-s, others to the curing, and others still to the storing ot pork in freezing cold apartments, where the coldest of cold air is manufactured to order. I '.vent through the immense establi.-h-

Oli (|tli'.i: i'.\teiisively Ii costs per ton to lay it down in the markc', where it sells for $10 per ton. flic Vinc'cnnes Tinim jiropounds the following mysterious conundrum "if it costs .? 1,000 to diana Legislature dinary man make at a day —Lewis and Clark, the two men arrested charged with Lying Gardner to the railroad track near Henryville, have been indicted by the (Jraud .Itiry of Clark county for murder in the first degree.

fr°!V

\01

eonard Koch- !ile, }ViW

about four miles west of Columbus, com mitted suicide on Tuesday last, in a fit ol insanity she threw herself into a well. —Dennis McCarty, wli« killed his old

within seven or eight years, and the

ent fr Ule

lS'J uiajoniy ... ....

—The Bowling Green HwbJ "«ays most unwelcome visitor has put in an appearance tit Mrxzil. lie claims to be the heir and owner of the land upon which the Clay fair grounds are situated, and proposes to at once push his case to I a successful iinalitv—of which In

,. 'l-'ioin the Indianapolis Nows.J l.v.'-hsiys Mrs. Billiter to her husb.'iml on a little country jaunt: "You're the worst driver I ever saw. There you go right over that stump! A child could do better than you. Look out, chug into that. muddy rut, and the slop splattered all possible for ninety-nine out of a hundred over my dress. I can do better than merchant.-*, traders or manufacturers to that. Give me the straps to pull him pay all their debtsat once, if called upon 1 with." And she took the "straps" "and i.kIo ».» i..i,:,... .t,. I pulled the horse about and ran into a fence and broke the carriage," continues

the chronicle. There is a big difference in driving and seeiug somebody else drive. Almo.it anybody who has only one side to watch can see places where the driver could have missed a jolt or a splash, or took a long stretch of turf instead of a long wallowing puddle, but when it comes to watching both sides I and dividing the dry of one with the slop of the ot her, and taking a rut to escape a slump, and generally getting tit the niefns between extremes, the case is changed. Now our brethren ot the

Democracy nre exactly in the case of .Mrs. Billiter. They hav been watching the liepublican driver for about fourteen vears, when lie had the worst road to travel that the public carriage has 1 ever icon or will see, and they have been noisy enough with exclamations of alarm or dircc)ion. Now they have got '.ho "strings" themselves, or at le^st sonio power of nulling them, and we shall sec what they will make of the work when they've got something more to watch than the troubles on their own side of the coach. There will go more 1 to the job than gripping the reins and '. yelping "ljo lang," a good deal more.

ri.lih f'°r."!S l!lbor,\

or

in which was burned up six he'ad of ™n.' "enderson, ^l,-

1

Cli.WVKOKDSVILLK SATURDAY' JiVKNI XU JOUKNAL.

Largest l'ork House lit the World. 11tidinnnpnlis i'iir. Spririjjfic-Id (Muss.) Knion.l Why, just think of it. Indianapolis „L Ohio k|ls "Me

"u"-. the cur-

:ll"l

me, scented the sanguinary battle as far oil' as I could, and listened to the unearthly sounds of the dying squealers as they were soused into hot water, cleaned from tip to tin of every hair and bristle, hung up, quartered and handsomely dissected into mince meat even before

scar.ci!l.v

!ln

lho

.. i- I- \t \i if been taken out of their tails. It. I reputability of the age, antagonizing it ler, residing on the farm of .Mr. M. olf \VHS

Attorneys Fees imil t7ie Collection of! T." ,7!

stove. In the explosion he J1'1^ t1 '"l*v deel.triii} \oid all notes con- Governor Bartlev.<p></p>s&xss.

will do at its next session,

usery. A note is placed in the attorney's hands for collection, it is but for a small amoiuit, say £00, if he collects the money without suit his fee will not exceed .5. ile takes the matter to court.

no

Oflicial I omit.

A uditor of State—James A. Wild-

Henderson majority, lo 4011

horses, about ninety acres ol wheat which For Treasurar of State---Joliii B. Glowas slacked in and around the barn, to-j ver, 164.971 B. 0. Shaw, 181,I80 tether with farming implements, wagons, Shaw's majority, 10,40!i.

For Attorney General—J. C. Denny, lGG.loo C. A. Buskirk, 178,-SS!) Buskirk's majority, 12,734.

For Superintendent of Public Instruction—J. M. Bloss, 1(54,952 J. H. Smart, 181,081 Smart's majority, 16,129.

For Judge of Supreme Court—Andrew L. Osb.-rn, 173,224 H. P. Bitldle, 1 «»S,089 Bitldle'smajority,25,-lO1).

From the above exhibit it will be seen thai on the liepublican ticket Judge Osborn run 7,009 ahead of thi next best man, Juduc Denny, iuid S,322 ahead ol the Secretary of State.

ilisks Must lie Taken.

The Indianapolis Nrws says it is not

to do so. Businass is done by taking the risk of averages, and business men know that demands for all their indebtedness are not likely to be made at any one time. Against the effects of abnormal convulsions, such as produced by panics, but little precaution can be taken. A man making plans in health, seldom allows a sudden and severe sickness to enter as a disturbing element into his calculations. If business was constantly done in the fear of a panic or a diseased condition, it would become very lank, just the business of an individual would if he was always expecting to be at death's door the next hour and had not time to expend his energy in good work.

A Specimen Mouarch of the Forest. |Krom the iuu.te Xcws.[ Joshua Truitt has at his mill near the depot, some specimens of the largest poplar trees that any country can produce. There are six cuts of twelve feet each, averageing four feet and a half in diameter. It was sixty-three inches across the butt, and three feet and nine inches across the top of the upper cut. It cost $70 before an ax touched it. It was found on the old Chas. McCowan farm, south of town. Who can beat it

Ken. Itiitlcr.

I'-falh1-. C.tr. of Chioni-o Tnlmni*.] Now that Hen. i'utler is down at lasf,

factory which manufac- it may be said of him that, if lie had, tli res a huge hog into placid pork in two been more considerate, to say nothin" of

incarnate Yankee than he has been. Na ture never produced, since James the First, such a whimsical and brutal itermeddler. He has seldom been equaled for ability after his kin .1—a sort of polit-1 ical pugilism, backed by method, and memory, and ready faculties, and also by fair fidelity after he has made friendship, excepting with persons qualified to educe his cmulousncss. Vanity ot taient is his weakness. He leaves behind him a public rather than much personal I hate, and his agility and coarse humor have always softened the feelings of the

crowd toward him. The la-t acts of his Congressional career were most damaging of all—his fraternization with spies and shadows, and strong disposition toward imperial blackmailing. No public man

with pant- can fool with informers habitually and

a loons rol.cd up like a regular butel-er be safe. In this city, a voting man of

ic, how much wilt an or- boy, I looked at the gory scenes before reputable birth and former good esteem

putable birth and former good esteem is now on trial in the Criminal Court for a burglary, committed how, or why, or' whence, is still a tangle, but, whatever the measure ot his guilt may be, if any,! his enforced familiarv with detectives, as County Attorney, led the way Butler I was thugged all round. He undertook to conduct a campaign against all the

kinks a again*!, au uie

exhibition worth looking at once, above, while the secret service pierced it

but once was enough for nil time, and below. now as I look back at the scenes of this It is probable that he will live in I morning, I can say in all candor, "No Washington City hereafte", as lie owns sausages in mine." Four hundred and thirty-two thousand hogs were slaugh-

•.*.-«.«piercctl

considerable property here, and there is a natural law and lobby business always floating around Government which will compensate him better than Roston or Lowell practice. His new house on Capitol Hill, the very next of all dwellings to the Capitol and Court of Claims, is nearly finished—a granite edifice with stone bays and stone porch, uniform with two adjoining houses, which he has let to the United States Coast Survey

f»r the snug income of $G,000 a year.

5foUs omces there, and build up a practice, ua Kn.mi tiirt'i.o^nnspori Ht u-.] |-^core.s of retired public men have done a S a One thing we hope the Legislature Walker, Fred. Stanton, R. M. Corwine, ami tllat is Generals Denver and Crittenden and

... ,i ii- him, but his little home constituency tilid prepare the papers, make his proof without a threat. He retired from and ta -e Ins judgment does not require Rome victorious, like Coriolanus but the halt an hour time and the court allows' him a fee of $15, three times theamount he would have received if collection had been made without suit. It is a direct biibc to attorneys to encourage litigation jt may be, and doubtless is true that all attorneys would not.'bring these suituntil alter idlbrts had been made toavoid litigation, but these, many of them do.

len:li

irsi

at' ni°ieties Si,"lno,ns' a"d

I torney fees are allowed iliem. lie must: nointments. third term and Butlerism.

pay his own lawyer. Why shoul I not But it is a rebuke only. It is not a! A the money lender be left in the same final judgment. Profiling by it, the Re- ,,, condition? These notes are but a publican party can regain its old power moans of extort i«n, and demands legisla- and ascendency. The masses of tile pention.to suppress them. pie have no more confidence in the Democratic party than they have had for the last ten years: That party has not vir- I

The Secretary of State, on Saturday t"e enough in it to survive success. is very I'tst,'finished looting the election returns, is for the Republican party itself to say with the ro!lowing result: whether itwill again take the scepter of ,1 For Secretary ol State—W. W.Currv, I power which the Democracy will lay

—On last Friday night, the fine lame ltjll!)()2 J. E. Nell", 1S2,151 NclY's mil-! down. For ourselves we believe it will be the stronger for this reverse. In our judgment it will enter the next Presidential contest stronger and more united than it! lias been since 1872.

4

The Independents received the following vote: J. C. Stout, for Secretary, 16,2 3 C. J. Bowles, same, 2,287 T. J. Truscott, tor Autlitor, 18,993 M. S. Bennett, for Treasurer. 19,0-17 W. A. lVelle, for Attorney General, 1S,':1S A. H. Graham, for Superintendent of Public Instruction, 18,8t)6.

«"d keep!

He is rich, but not. I

gives discipline

and happiness. It works like an old style press, two intricate and loud and self-shattering, for its simple purpose. All the Government couid not overturn

people who had received him a stranger, I struck him down in autumn.

"Kvf'll

A* v.hfis limn h\- his«»v,n nlms AU'1 hi^c1uirity slain/*

Only a llelitike.

fKi.•:11 the Cini'inmiti i-ii/.-'tti-.j

Thc true theory ol law is to discourage we have sustained, let no one give it tinlitigation, but these attorney fee notes due magnitude. He who concludes from have the other tendency. It makes the it that the Republican party lists been de-

... debtor pay heavily in the way of costs, cisively and finally overthrown sees but t.nct, is consilium: with the party mana- the merchant is compelled to resort to a short way into the fu'.ure, knows but gers in regard to the question of contest-, the courts to collect his accounts for little of the temper of the times. A reins the seat of CJen." M. C. Hunter, who £""ds, or the poor man to secure pay-' buke of credit mobilier, salary grabbing, was elected on the Republican ticket by

While not under estimating the defeat

^liopl.erds' au-

llow Not to Keep Warm. [From Science of lionlth.]

One way not to keep warm, is to drink freely of hot drinks to keep the pores of ihe skin closed to cat more than can be digested to sit over a hot air furnace to lace tightly wear tight garters, tight shoes, tight gloves, and bundle up with "heaps" of warm clothing wear mutilers around the neck, and avoid a breath of cool fresh air take wine or bitters before meals, and pills to aid digestion at ter eating. Do this daily, a month or more, and you will be as tender as a tropical house plant, and will take "dreadful colds" on the slightest exposure. Hot drinks just before going out! are especially' favorable to induce chills and this is about the way many arc now trying to cheat nature and to prolong a miserable existence.

A Costly Law Suit. 1 From the Marion Chroniel.

A

,1

There is a case now in our courts in which a man appealed from an assessment of $12 for aid in the construction of a ditch, and the court costsalonc are now over ?600. To say that the case has st the parties and witnesses of which there were over eighty) #3,000 in time and money, is putting it at a low cstimate.

Fair «ues«.

[From the St. liOui« (llobp. I

A number of the Democratic journals 1 arc guessing at "'the first act of Radical legislation to be repealed by the Democratic Congress." At a guess wo would say it would be the act forbidding the sale of intoxicating liquors in the capitol building.

Some of the Republican State papers are demanding that the Governor salary be reduced. This is all stuff. Eight thousand dollars a year is none too much for the Governor. That is what has been given for nearly two years and it was Governor Baker's suggestion when retiring, that the salary be fixed at that figure. If a Republican Governor was getting the money, these papers would doubtless consider it all right.~Indian-, apoli* News.

On? of the speakent at a Democratic ratification meeting in llurlingtnn, Inst, week, inveighed fiercely against the "Mobile Creditcr,"

A Colony ol' Poles

Describing a colony of Poles at Laporte, Indiana, a eorrespo ident says: 'The new Polish arrival has an unpleasant cringing way of doffing his hat that makes yon think of monarchy. The men shake hands when they meet," and salute each other with a kiss and tliev bless each other in thenaineof the Mother of All Sorrows, at parting. A few of them, if the very iuiutesvnco of truth were known, doiiottliat this is the best country. lliey st(i any ticket that happens to fall into their hands, and they do it with an unconcern which can only come from an unequivocal incomprehension of its meaning. When they enter a grocery they call for what they want ami pay lotit without questioning the price. They buy the best sugar, the be eoll'i-e, the best alcohol, and bow to t!i sili-su'an on leaving the room. They take to the woods, on first com in-/ to Ao^rie.-i, as naturally as babies take the meases, or inuskrats to the water."

Soon the. fan will cease to dantrle at the .-ide of the perambnl icing female, and a pair of uin shoes will take its place.— Iiullait'i/xjUit

That may be where Indianapolis belles dangle their gum shoes, but out this wav they put their dainty loots tootsies in the gums. —Cambriilt/r (.'if T'-ibunr.

For ten consecutive years Gen. S| inner, in his annual reports to Congress, earnestly urged that the women employed in tl.e departments be paid like men

Yale College has ntiw 1,031 students. '-H these 10o tire in the theological department, 5o in the law department, 50 i» the medical department, and 82f in the department of philosophy.

GIFT ENTERPR'SE.

'H.

NTEfPRISE

tJi~tniniitoil in tin (.-ouiitry

$100,000

In Valnable OiiYw To ho distributed in

r. j. siivra's ISth SEMF-AXNITAI,

GIFT ENTERPRISE,

To lie (IriiWN .ICoiKlny, Oi,l. la, LS7J. Oiip liniml Cnpiuil

lnr.(. ol

$10,000 I N OOII

rin

W.ftoo risr sxi'A'nn l-'IVK I'KIZKS Sl.miO I-'IVK 1'1'lZlvS $snn TKN P1JIZK.S $]in 5 Two f:iiiiily.-:i!-rin-.-s iin.l niMt.-hol hor,..s. witli silver moiiiiti'.l h:o.-ii^ss, worth 81,5110 e.-h-ii Two lmj jiiH, horti-s, worth SiMMinmrli. noli"" inni.'l i-o.^cHooil pianos, worih S-'iRiiriii'li I en fiirnily scwinj miiehines, worth Jlllii .--ti'li liitm liohl mikI Silvor L,.Vor Huntui^ Wnti-hiw 'tin

1

5

1

Hill worth Irom S'JU to f:«l(i pricti. ioUl Oliiiins. Silvi-rn-arr, .lowi-irv Ac AiN

It

Ak.-iiIm uhiiIikI to s«ll tickets, lo whom I'rcmiuinji will l- pnil. Sinylo i.-U.-ts, $2 Six Tu:k.-ts «ln Twelve ickct* T\v»»nty- Kivo

CiriMiiars*inlainin^ full list ot pn/'.* ,j0. scnpiion of the? innnnor of drrtwir»«, nnJ otlicr inlortnHiton in o^:»ri to tli#- manner «f Dj^h ibntion, will he sont to :inv one ordering th'-in All letters irillst lio athliesseil to

MA"5 h-

Fifth and Last Concert

IX A ID O

Pubiic Library of Kentucky

The Fifth ftift Concert Is the Inst whieh will ever be aiven under this charter iind bv the present man,i^ement. Tlmt it will positively mid tmo'itn vocally take plm-e announce.I on

Monday, 30tli November,! ThtiL the tmiMc \ill bo Uu» ImW t!u» country :ilJVmls, and that 20,000 CANII lilFTS

AGGREGATING

#2,500,000.00

Will ho distributed by lotninun^ tho holders. LIST OF GIFTS. One Grand Cash Gift One Grand Cnsh Gift One Grand Cash Gift One Grand Canh Gift Om Grand Cash Gift

j,

Cn«h Gifts, 8-n,tK)» eneli. 10 Cash Gifts, 14,000 mujli. IS Cash Gifts, •J" Cush Gifts, •J". Cash Gifts, :«i Ca«h Gifts, •Ml ('i*rsh Gifts, 100 Cash Gifts, 'JJO Cash Gifts, iiflo Cash Gifts, 19,000 Cash Gifts,

SPECIAL NOTICES

|lheM»4 Wonderful lliwoven orthe J»ili Cculiiry. !!!. N. D. IIOWC'S

Aiinfrican JIHIt Cure For Consumption

n!

|.|

Uhost nnil Ian,cs. Tli.- »nlv' m-li.-inr tWaim.I mi th« wnil.l, A snJjst!tut.- ft• i- o.1 Liver Oil. I'cniiiincnily ciir.-s Astlii.-i., llromjliitis, li,Rjioent J. ijflu SHMt-s. Loss or

Slmrtr.c'.ss of Brrcith, CHUrili, Croui.. Co'.mlis, Cold-, etc., in few .liv?, |j|:0 majir. I'l-n-i- tl p.-i- hotti-. Also. iojj-h. mi. s. i. iiov

IM!,U"S

Vn wZ

G8ESMCKS

^NE. Hox sr.,

-,s,

Arabian Tonic IHoori lnrifici%" Wlimh ilitl'ors tVom nil iu],in- pi-e|i o-mioiis in tie immrdhii.. m-:,on npon tli- tn,.r, Ki.lnevs nn.i 'I. ll is purely rcsctiible, cji-iuisox tlio system ofiill nnpiintips. Im-ftls rislit snn.-ir, ill, 7,"1

rmleia

at

I|,I w. I-othSt. CFMtlNNATI O

ID.A.-Z- FIXED I AND A

FI I.L MIAWIXG ASSI HK1)

.Monday, 30tli November, 1874.

LAST CHANCE I FOR A* EASY FORTUNE. A postponemfnt of t.ho Fifth Convert ol the 1'nl.lie Lihrmy of Kuntuey lies hoPii so yi'iicri'llv 11 ntu-1 patdl, iiiul is so manifestly lor the interest of nil eont-erneit. that it must meet the approval of nil. Tim .lay is now absolutely lived, mm there will lie 110 variaiion from the programme now im-iionni-eil. A Hiitlieiont number ot tii-kvts had lieen fold to have enabled u.h to have had a laix-e drawing on the :tlt of July, but a -horl postponement was considered preferable to a partial drawing l.et it In borne in mind that

S^iO.n'iO JCO/MK)

lotl.dOff HO,(KM)

emth..

r»,(XK) each..

'.,ooo Mnoh... •J.01K) oacli....

lUU.IHItl 40,000 lOO.lXK) 100,00(1 120,(MH) .i0,(Mhi M0,000

1,WX)

:m oach ion osi*!i •r»0 ouch....

Grand Total, 20,000 Gifts, all Cash ?i,.V)0,000 I'KH'E OF TIC'KK'lfi. Whole TicUew $50.00 Hslv'fs 25 (Ki Tenth, or each eoupon 3 00 11 Whole Tickets for ."00 00 22J5 Tickets lor 1,'JOO

Persona wishing to invest should order nromptly, either of the home ofll'-e or our local usents. "Liberal commissions will bf alloued to sctis. factory agents.

Circulars contain ug full jiartiuulars furnished on application. TH08. C. BRAMLETTE,

As itt i»nt Mimier,

I'nbli'! Ml r:'iy nuiblin^, I.ouisiille, Kv.

s'roiuiou-

(iiistipnlion .in.I

ri-amritos t!i(' tmw i-ls. For nirvoii« 'leliitilv, !o" vitiility.in M. -ry .lisOM^ nn. l.roli.-n lo« con--I'luiions I i-li-illfii^u tlx- lath oMiidn to pro•liiop osoriMl. Kvt-rv iM.t'lo H-..rtl| :"ts wri-li: in I'l iri-?I ji,-r lioitlc. Al-o, mt. s. •». iiowi

'liicuiN aai LITER PILLS. Uhj.v demise tho liver nnrl stomru-h th.Mon-I*. iv. r*mov»' ronstton, cf.nr iin no oiilonwl i»V.ri any othor mjurion- in^nvheni, m-t upon (hewo m-Hiw uiti.om, proiii.-fii£c imin (M weakness. I'ri.-.c jmm- U\. 0.»n«umptivr« ^hoiihl |„vo

of

(?cr(Hin

j!

n'mv.' loi-.lii-tiios. js"M liv a. \v Mini"orl, i. .«ol- iiirontf.--Ci.-.Hfor.hvill,-. I.i.l

Mi. .S. 1. Ill lU'B, Proprietor. I'll "iiuiiim., .\,nv Von ..

Mr"-ism

C"r'1f"r 'i'jii''wiiiK

Nail/

RAILROAD.

1

in accordance with the services rendered, Spinner is as gallant as he is honest.

STEEL RAIL

D0UHLK TIMCK".

Baltimore & Ohio R. R.

The 1 'irei-t Slim l.me n-.,,,

IM LW iTI OIC (OLIiMltl S

HAST!

SAVIXU h7 TO III. Mil ES v,ra.„.:

on6 Trsl

A-ivanro a

IVEW YORK. fcaviny .*«• miles nml nrrivinu *. to7 hours inn.i: v.-uiei' «t

HA I .TIMORE, I--, mills uinl -nrivnif

:o 7 ],oura

hl

V.'ilico

mix

was

ro\

H»»ac]nni

^IIII.AlJELril IX "lie t! .Ill tli..

.,111 -u--t.

MA«\IFIt!KXT I) COACHKK

AM) ITUF^JIAN PAI.ACE

,{ A

WTIVO UOOM unO WI,T:KPijif CAISW

Are um on this loute between St. Louis, Cini-in: ii^ui. olinnl,(is. Baltimore and Wiishinsrtonoitv,

AV1 T11OIT-r I A :.

i0u~,lv

«',|U

IJ'"°

',Vv(

011

II

1-i .w.ii'l rV"" ",yoi''

Splt'tnli'l Iron Khij-

f!rs ,u

I t-rkorsbitrg or Uellaire

il"

""inibiiH tranVcre.

Va.-i Ottii-es in the Sont Tll«s. K. NIIAIiP.

I.. Haltimore, M,l. t.en, I ieliet Afient. P.altimore, Mil.

AGENTS wanted"

I I If II

iI wan fnira) Tni e'li^' t?Jvsl'„n i".-^

0VPr.^tlie

oIw.'hi

country to sell our Kin

Jj-p ee! l- jif-nii-mj chromos. Crayon Drawl ings, lllmmnations, Photographs, rte.. etc "°w,|,lll,lls 1,thetinest assortment over plimo.l belore the pul.iie, and our i.nt-es *re -mirke.t

"S competition. No on«

siibsi rities for premium-givin!,' paper in ordrti ),et a picture alter seemjr oiii iii.-tures an. wo,,k1 ^. n1.1' Tr- ',,:,vir"""?• o|i» 1 have made canvassine for book« ip rs, eU' tiler tiusiness for years, and thev

•0 work'ivir ii'J 'T11

nln! ,T""'h

1,11 ls

V,

WI

,noro

m»»-.

than nt niiythinu else. Our nriep's

are mi low that all enn afford to purchase, and everv hoi'i V" «t Hlmo" 1. .? 1' 1 '"."itinners do ns well as a^ent s, ILi' 1" cxiiei ieiice, for our be .iitifnl To' rW ||,r"','s appreciated nil. to .K, lar^e sales everywhere nil an ri-ent hn«

r""' from house to house.

Doll tlimU foi work elsewhere until you hav* seen what frr.-at inducements we oiler you t.. make money We have not space to explain nl' he.re, but send Uj your address ami we will send full particulars, Iree, by mail. Don't del-y if yon vnnt prot,tab work for your leisure honrs, 0 «r your whole time. Now is tl-e ,'avorable tim.-

WV" business. Our pictures are the tine.st and moft plensin^j in this country, mid niv en.ior?M I'V all the leading papers, indu-liii-1'.. .? '«'lioi annot «ive the hii'entiresitteiuion nun work tip thtur owj. !,':L 1

an :i

iuiinisoine Mini withou

eu»r bom* iiwpy Irom homo ov«»r ni^ht. Let nl! W ihon't'.'i'ii.il employment.. without 1 sklng enpital, send us their addresH aoni.eand learn nil about the business for themselves. Address GEOHt.E KTIXSON" .t CO It--Publishers. 1'ortb.nd. Main.?

C,FT

A"'

CONCERT.

No Further Postponement

—OK Tin:

SECOND AND LAST

GRAND GIFT CONCERT

IN AID OK TUFI

3Iasouic Relief Association

OF XORFOLH.

Thursday, 19th November

nder authority or the Virginia Legislature (net passed Mar. 8, js7:t.)

50,000 TICKETS—S,000 CASH GIFTS.

^250,000.00

TO BK GIVEN AWAY.

One Grand Cash Gift of.... One Grand Ciish Gift of.... One Grand Gift of.... One Grand Cash Gift of.... OiieGrand Cash Gift of.... One Grand Cash Gift of... One Grand Cash Gift of... l." Cash Gifts of $1,000'eno'h.l tis Cash Gilts of .rtK) each..

W Cash Gifts of 7S Cflsli Gifts oj 2.VICash.Gifts of .17^ Ca«h Gifts of fi.oUO Cash tiifts of

8:io,ocx iw.oott 20,000 10,000 6,(X* 2,COO

lf,(KK' 14,000 10,7fi0 11,850 125,000 28,IKK' 60,t)0.-

H.'iO each I.r0 each 100 each !io each 10 finch

0,0"0 Cash.Prizes, tiggresatinj $250,OOCPrice or TickeM. .110 OOiQuarter 6f00|fcileven tlckots... 100 Ot'

Wholetickota Half tickcts

NO INDIVIDUAL BENEFITS. ThisConGertitHtrietly for Maaonic hurposes. and will be conducted with tfie.same liberality, honesty and fnlruesfl which characterized the brat enterprise. J011M L. ROPER, Pres.

For tiekets and idrculars Riving full information addresH HENRY V. MOURE, 8m'v

Norfolkj S'a.

ki npoxnihm: a«estn wasted. •WlVlU