Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 19, Number 15, Jasper, Dubois County, 13 April 1877 — Page 2

A BALLAD OF TIIK rXKNOK FLKKT.

A sc, wfch Seie wiy4i SsJled Item tsw ytt t sweet, AM Mm Admiral's display! TMitiM): "ta awMfcweet." Per wisAiakrl PAKVIMa M4 swat, by euttsaad orw, 9 Mite wfUi Are m4 Mc( 0r MifN Tewa, Thee were rumors In Mm street, m tew house there wm fear t the cowta of Dm , Ab4 Use dagr hovering Br; iKl While tKHM aKMtfc to AMHItfe Sma4 Mm MiMiifi e( Mesny, I mm4 M Mm OM south, SeytaghussMy: "Letus jrayl Lard I we wmM ro advise; Jt K in thy PrerfckMe A use post rttW Te arlve Mm Krseeh Seet Heaee, A ad leaHer K fsr ad wide, Or : li W Mm w. . We feHiki lie satisfied , And TMe the rVkj- be." wm Mm prayer I made, rr y sl wm all e iasae ; As4 ern m 1 grayed The MwfriK tew peet eaM. 31 eease wit a mighty power, Sfcaatftg Mm windows awl wails, AM.toilMx Mm bell J Mm tower, jtH Wile at tttaerale. 4l HUmiU MUblABlV Unsheathed its t&miwt tword. .lad 1 cried: "Smk1 stilt, awl see Tfc m1 vKtiaa of the Lord I" he heavens were black wiMt okwd, The wu white witft halt, A 4 ever asore ree ami lend lew the October gale. The eet It overtook, Aad tlx broad Mile in the van like Mm teste ot Cushaa shook, Or Mm eartalM ot MM iaa. JSewa oa Mm reetiftg decks Crashed Mm o'enrMluiair seae ; Ah, Beverwere tfeere.wreciisj Se pitiful m these.! i itea potter's vessel broke The great ehins of the line ; Thy were earned away m a smoke, Or task like kad in the briae. Lerd t before Miy pat They vaaished aad ceased to be, WbB thou dki'et walk ia wrath Kith thiae fcorfrs through the real Longfttlme, fa April Atlantic. HE COJiTINEXFS BACK-BOaXE. 3a the preeent fearful stagnation of Mmh of nearly every kind, it is picas 4 to tsrm to a field whose production m stinmlated to an indefinite extent wfefeeut eadsBEdriag the remaining vast mm! eosplex interest of the country. Fee many years there has been no time wWa 9ch vast amounts of capital have ha locked up for want of profitable piplojaent as now. H x waialy from the development of Ike enormous mineral wealth of our entry that we must look for the retan of the prosperous times of the ait. Of all the sections of our favored offer such indications of present x&4 promises of future development ae the Centennial State of Colorado the Sanitarium of the invalid the stu ate of the artist the Mecca of the tewriet ami the El Dorado of the for heater. Her resources are lncal Her 40,000 square miles 0 lefty mountains gorged with almost aX kaown metals bare liardlv been scratched over, so to speak, by the prossector despite the fact that scores of aafiikMM have been taken from this vast rterehonoo of thi nation's wealth. JOCTHWBSTKKX COLORADO. 'Theeeeviction has been rabidly gain iag groBBd both in this country and in Ea-rupe, by reason of the astonishing silver dieooveriee of '74, '75 and '76, wt Soethweetern Colorado is destined to he the bullionproducing center of te oeatineBt, if not the world. Ho where eWe has been found such enormawl valuable lodes of the precious etak, many of which pay from the very bicom roctc, as in the now world faaaotis Saa Juan couatry. Miners from all sections of this and ether leads, lured thither by ta es of febaloas wealth, are lost in amazement at each almost unbelievable stories of the precious metaU as confronts their caaa ia the rich mountain districts of ihe marvellous region. Truly this is the leftansa Age, and each year but eeeanas tne belief 01 the early pros pectors of the San Juan region that taa richest casket in Nature's treasure cheat had at last been unlocked. At Faebk) we reach the present terin i aiuuuvU AUQ& Hull Fe Kailroad, the most direct !. A.k:. a' 1. 1 frocn the Missouri River to the Jean, forty miles still further p the Denver and Rio Grande Jaarrow gaae) we reach the delightful fcHe town of Canyon City, at the mouth cf the werM-renowned Grand Canyon of we ATiaosas one 01 tne most stupen w on ine continent, uere car railroad journey terminates and our '-1 - ' yt!i f hw gate 01 ine !an .man country, and were eaon uay tne magnificentlyuoaeora eoacnes ana rrev i oanow sanaerson soutn Overland Stage Compaav convev pacteagers to all points in the mining rrgwaetH new Mexico, itolling rapidly hat confortably along, through mcuiiMMa pastes, across table-lands, through 4ilee savagely grand, up over mountain raagee and down into fertile valkjs, an ever-varying and most sublime panorama we reach at last the Uneeaapabgre District, where the cloudpierwaf summits of the lofty Uncompahgre Range the highest of the Keeicys-riee to nearly 16,000 feet above Here Nature revels in her grand and awJnl wsjesty. In this savage and pMareeqae region are found the rich hhms of the Saa Juan, and It is toward this see tkm that the public attention ha bee so largely directed of late in tcaceijceBoe of its unprecedented rich lihcr ffeposits. IK8RAMAX PARK. . lrhapg m special dteoovery has tvtatetl more excitement and de-j

veloped more astonUking rssultethan the opeaiag of that remarkable silver haein in the Uaccmpafcgre Kaage known as Iagraaam l'ark Bamedfrow itedisoovrrer, or rather frctn the dteooverer ef the way inio it. Km since 1873 the greedy e)ec of prospectors looked over into a swell basin in the San Miguel Mountains a spur of the Unoompahgre and they triad to enter it, but its precipitous interior seemed to defy their efforts. The course of the great lodes of that region seemed to justify the idea that they headed at or near this basin inthe mountains. Its form is eliptioal, a singular amphitheater as it were, about two miles in diameter its lowest point being 2,500 feet below the tops of the mountains surrounding it and about 10,000 feet above the sea. It is situated about ten miles west of Silverton and fifteen miles southwest of Ouray the county seat of San Juan County. A stream which heads in the Park empties in the San Miguel River over the western edge of divide in enormous falls which are exceedingly picturesque. It was along the course of this stream that an entrance into this graut silver basin was at last discovered. In April of 1876 B. II. Baylee, Esq., the most prominent furniture dealer in Denver, dispatched Mr.W. II. Richards, a thorough and reliable prospector, well known in Denver mining circles, to prospect in tho Uncompahgre district. Mr. Richards reached Ouray in May, after a month's tedious journey through tho deep snow of the mountains. His first exploit was to locate the now famous bullion lodo, on the side of Mt. Hayden, four miles from Ouray. This lodo is G feet wido, being nearly all rich pay oro between the walls. Col. Goes, of Denver, brou ht home a pound sample of tho ore, which is now on exhibition, at the mint in that city, and has caused quite a sensation in mining circles. Alter doing his "chaffee" work on this lodo, and sighing for other rich strikes, Mr. Richards worked along to the southwest, where he was finally joined by Mr. J. C. Ingraham, who had atlast found away into the mysterious basin to which I have before alluded as Ingraham Park. Together they entered the basin, where apparently no human foot had ever trod. As may be supposed their movements were carefully concealed, that they might prospect fully without interruption. The general appearance of the park seemed to be that of great blow-outs" of mineral, and fully sustained the theories formerly held regarding this basin as being the fountain-head of the great nssure-veins

which are found in this region. Somo of the lodes project several feet out of the country rock and are distinguishable for a mile distant looking like enormous walls. In spite of all their precautions they were traced by two Californians, a few weeks later. They followed them by moans of a peculiarity in the heels of Ingraham's boots. Once in the park they found chances to locate" to their heart's content. MINERAL WEALTH. The surface lodes of this basin ap pear to have a M. w. and 5s. K. direc tion, and are in some cases of enormous width, the general character of the ore oeuig argentuerous galena ana gray copper, generally nigh grade ores, averaging irom iw to sou ounces per ton. ine li. n. uayies mine has a crevice 40 feet wide, cut by numerous "pay streaks" of from 5 to 15 inches in width and assaying from 380 to 470 ounces to tne ton. I he Ingraham has a well du lined crevice CO feet wide, and the aver age taken from a large number of as says gave 800 ounces to the ton. The San Miguel lies just on the summit of the divide which forms the western edge of the basin. The ore from this mine is of the same character as the Ingraham. The gangue rock taken from the crevice is literally black with native silver. There has been no assay made as yet of this mine, but it is be lieved to be of extraordinary richness. In a 15-foot vein is found a pay-streak of 5 feet in width. The Galena shows large cubes of galena, carrying heavy amounts of brittle and antiraonial sil ver exposed to view on the blossom rock.'' The crevice is about 25 feet in width and a tunnel which Mr. Richards ran into the mountain side intersecting it showed that the orevlce widened as it descended. An old prospector named Wilder. who was "staked" bv a Pittsburgh Company, looated some extremely rich mines in this park. Among his best selections mav be mentioned the Cham bers and the San Miguel Chief an ex tension of the Is. II. Bayles. xuo crevice ot uie oan fliiguc; unier is 76 feet wide, cut bv a laree number 01 pay streaics. The ore is gray coo per aud galena carrying brittle silver, estimated from various essays at over 600 ounces per ton. The Chambers is about 50 feet wide, and tho oreot about the same character as the San Miguel Chief. Just south of this mine is tho Crescent, having a 30-foot crevice, car rying large amount of fine galona.rich in silver, and assaying about 880 ounces. The Gundecker, an extension of the Crescent, shows some very rich ore in a 27-foot crevice. The Broken Hatchet lode averages 100 feet in width, and carries large numbers of nav streaks from 7 to 20 inches wide. The Triple lode, the N. W. extension of the San Miguel, showed on the completion of tne assessment work, a crevice of fi feet wide of aolid galena, assaying 280 ounces per ton. The Union, looated bv the Burns boys of Burns'a Gulch, near nowardsville, is a remarkably promising mine. The Ansburv is in reclitv an extension of the B. H. Baylee, though a

wile and a half away. It kt looking well and promises Aaely. Spaoc forbids my mentioning all the valuable mines in thisrioh "silver nest," but the Washington Have, the Santa Maria, the Gerftrnde, the Victor Hago.the fasear, the Brown Diamond, the King Bee, and others, upon which work will 00mmenoed early this spring, have large and well-denned crevices, and give evidences of being enormously rioh in silver-bearing galena and gray copper, while some of their pay-streaks are black with native silver. Two very rich "free gold" leads were located by two young men whose names I did not learn, Mr. C. II. Carpenter the well-known operator of Silverton, purchased both of the leads before assessment work had been completed. Mr. Carpenter has had assays and mills run from these mines which are as high as $5 per potgud. Mr. Carpenter is making extensive preparations to develop his valuable property this year. It is supposed that this is a portion of the gold belt that forms the rioh placer deposits on the San Miguel River, a few miles below tho Park. All the lodes in this incomparably rich basin which have any surface indications were covered with locations before tho advent of tho fall snows, and the fortunate owners are to be congratulated on tholr good fortune in securing such bonazas. Ingraham Park is adjacent to tho rich mining districts of Eureka and Animas, and is in tho Uncompahgre District. This silver basin, will, it is believed, exceed in richness any group of silver mines yet discovered in tho San Juan. No section of tho San Juan in my estimation offers such unparalleled inducements to capitalists as Ingraham Park the fountain-head of the great silver lodes, which are phenomenal even in the rich mineral region surrounding it. Some of the mines in tho park aro owned by men of little or no means, who are also interested in mines in other sections, From such partios I have learned mines can be purchased in whole or in part at a very modest price and at a tithe of their probable worth the partios needing money badly. There Is some talk of constructing a wagon road over the divide and down to the low mesas along tho Hivor San Miguel, where are found unequalod sites for smelting and concentration works. Such works are greatly needed to develop theenocmous mineral wealth of this rogion, and they could not fail, if judiciously run, to pay a heavy percentage on the cost of construction and operation. THE SAN JUAN COUNTUY. This rogion is on the Pacific slopo of that enormous group of mountains constituting the San Juan Country, and hence has a much milder climate than the sectioa 50 or 75 miles to the eastward, when it is extremely rigorous, and when snow-storms occur in August. 'Where mining must be carried on at an elevation of 10,000 to 12,000 feet the question of climate is & highly important one. Below the Park some 5,000 feet, on the sunny mews of tne San Miguel Valley, Uourish abundance of rich and nutritious grasses, affording subsistence second to nothing on the continent for

stock of all kinds. The rich loamy soil of the valleys under the genial rays of tne sun 01 tne raciuc slope makes agri culture both pleasant and profitable. Wild fruits and berries are found in rank profusion, and the fertile soil is susceptible of almost any degree of cultivation. There is no finer spot for tne miner, tne stock-man, or tne farmer. Abundance of rain falls in this region, and it is no doubt destined, at no distant day, to be the center of a dense population when its mining, agricultural and stock capabilities become better known. From the summit of the divide, looking westward from Ingraham Park, a scene of most enchanting sublimity presents itself. From this elevation, nearly 14,000 feet above the sea, the extreme rarity of the atmosphere allows one to see almost incredible distances. Five thousand feet below you, fading gradually into plateau and plain, on the foot hills of the San Miguel Mountains. Almost uader your feet i the great American Amphitheater, so named by Prof. Hayden. It is a deep basin, some miles across, with almost perpendicular sides 2,000 feet in depth. It is absolutely inaccessible, and one of the many extraordinary sights to be seen in this region. From your lofty pinnacle you can look across th.i reservation of the peaceful Ute, across the vast plains of the Colorado, and in imagination you can see the frightful Canyon of the Colorado, 5,000 feet deep. one of the wonders of the world.through which this strange river cleaves its way to the Gulf. Far, far awav to the west- ' ard,dim and blue in the distance, loom tho peaks of the Wahsatch Range. 250 miles from Utah. To the northward, eastward and southward an unvarying panorama of gorge, fastnoss and mountain presents Itself. Ice-can-ped peaks pierce the bkv in all directions, for heio is the very backbone of J tUn AnM.lMn. 'I'l. ..!..... !.. I T wu uuiiuiiuiiii. a iiu viuw is siunumious, almost appalling, when viewed for the iirstllme, and it is said to be the grandest on tho continent. It seems as though Nature had here exhausted her self, for about you are almost inoxhaugtible forests of spruce and pine, clear aud sparkling streams fed by the eternal snows of these mountains, teeming with speckled trout, and giving an unlimited wator-power mineral wealth in untold sums only awaiting the energy and genius of man to utilize it. Hie region has the skies of Itaiv. if not its climate; the scenery of the Him alayan, and tno wealth of the Orient, and one mav successfullv challenge the world for its counterpart. as eany as the season permits I shall

return to Ingraham Park, and will keep you fully advised regarding the developments in that quarter. I shall have some information to give you later ia the season regarding the wonderfully riok gold dlstioverme on the Saa Miguel River, Jfotion Commercial JhtUttin.

Nip HHdTuuk. We thought, from the way he oamo into the office and slammed his oane down on the table ami took the bwt chair ami spat on the stove and suid, " Well, Cully, how does the old thing work?" that lie was a oirous agent, but his card showed him to be a modest, un pretending advertising agent of a Wisconsin paper. Ho had just come from Chicago, he said. We said " Ah?" not because there was any particular, orig' inal brilliancy in tho remark, but be cause that is what we generally say, with a rising accent on tho final syllable, when a man tells us he has beun to Chicago. " Ye," ho said, ho had been to Chicago. 41 Had we a man up there?" "No," we hadn't. "Well," he said, " don't send 0110 thero. Just a waste of time. I've been there nearly threo weeks and I just club myself every timo I think what a fool 1 whs to throw away so much time that I might havo put in somewhore else to advantage." "Didn't he do any thing in Chicago P" wo aakod, rather timidly, for we began to see that we were in tho presence of a Mastor Min 1. "Naw-w-w!" ho snarled in a most contemptuous tone; "hardly mado expenses; didil!t pay salary. There threo weeks and only come away with $3,760 worth of ads. All cash, of course, and that makes it a little hotter, but didn't pay for all that timo. How much Chicago advertising are you carrying!" VVo couldn't tell him, indeed, without consulting the business manager, but we were confident that the Jfawk' eye had, at insitlo figures, at least three or four dollars' worth of live Chicago advertisements. We began to think what a jewel this man must bo on tho business stall' of a daily paper. Was he going to St. Louis? we asked. lie burst into a snort of derisivo laughter, for all tho world liko tho opposition benches in Congress. "Been there," ho said, "and ain't f;oing back until times pick up a little. )oauest place you ever struck in your life. Nothing doing. Just nothing. Why, I was thorn ten days, ten whole long tlays, as I'm a truthful man, and only got let me see I'll give you the figures " and ho pullod out his notebook and rati over tho leaves and down long columns of figures "yes sir, I was in St. Louis tea days to an hour, and only got $4,227.60, and $1,890.75 I havo to take in trade, and only $2,130 cash-in-advance ads. Don't you send a man 1 to St. Louis if you don't want to pay J his fare homo." ' Which way was he going from Bur lington? wo asked, deeply impressed. Oh, out along the lino of the li. it M.," he said, "out to Omaha, and maybe out to Lincoln and up to l)es Moines." "Now, don't go there," we bogged him; "don't go out. that way at all. It won't pay you; we know this country, and we know you won't make a cent on that trip." "Why not!" ho asked, defiantly, and in a rather incredulous tono of countenance. "Because," we said, "the Hawk-eye had a man out all through that country one day last week. It may appear incredible, but, sir, that man wft9 gono fifteen minutes, and came back with only $72,000 cash ads, a couplo of national banks, six Nebraska farms, a Kansas cattle ranch, and the Iowa State Treasury, and the Captain discharged him for not leaking his wages. It's as But he was gone, and we heard him down stairs, asking the business manager if he thought it was necessary to import a thoroughbred liar to edit his paper. JIawk-eyc. n In a German newspa per the following singular announcement (the translation being literal) of death recently appeared : " Death Notice. It has pleased Almighty God our beloved husband, father, grandfather, brother and father-in-law, the illustrious Count Moriz zu Bentheim-Toklenberg- Rheda, Commander and Knight of high orders, on the 27th of this month, at 4 o'clock in the afternoon, in his 80th year, to summon into eternity. For silent sympathy begging, wo this mournful intelligence to all relatives and friends send. Signed The Bereaved Onos." " You keep talking about corners on wheat," said a Chicago lady the other day to her husband, who is a speculator on 'Change. "Yes, and what of it?" asked ho. "Why," oiserved she, earnestly, "I always! thought wheat was a small, smooth, oval-shaped grain, with no corners on it." Then that big bruto of a man, instead of explaining to his innocent little wife, laid back in his chair; and haha'd and he-ho'd and ho-ho'd until his vest buttons dropped oil. -A monument has been erected to tho momory of MM. Sivol and Croce Spinelli at Paris. Those gentlemdn were aeronauts, nnd in April, 1875, ascended to the height of 26,000 feet, when they were suffocated by the rarifled air. A French boarding-school for girls is mentioned, whore a prize is oflored for the best mender of d clothing, in addition to those for get oral exollence in siudioA. This is tho liist caso of the kind chronicled.

TrsasplaatlM; Hair. A valuable dlsoovery has been made by those " who have no hair on the top of the head, the place wliere the hair ought to grow." A Frenchman his found out that human hair oan be transplanted, and bald-headed men oan become reasonably hirsute by tho process. A man with a thick head of hair and a slim purse oan furnish a bald-doaded man with a heavy purse a fine toupee at comparatively small expense. Tho hair is carefully drawn out, and tho bulb at tho ond of each hair is adroitly implanted into tho scalp, whoro it takes root. It requires moro skill than landscape gardening.

Tho long-promised work, "Tho Prince of Wales' Tour in India," by Dr. W. H. Russell, written undor tho sanction of his Royal Highness, is now in tho binder's hands. Tho book is illustrated by Mr. Sydney I. Hall, who accompanied tho Prince. It will con. tain 30 full-pago, and more than 10 smaller wood engravings. A "Wet A ef Wttt'M.Mg: to CoiiHtfrlVltcr! The wldu-spiYHd fainoof Iloiteitor'n Stomach Hitters ohusc a utct-ilty on our purl to remind, from timet to time, whom It mav conccrn, of tho fact that Imitating nUI nrtk-!t i a puniKliahle otloiixc, and we now give tins word of CMitfoii, tltnt wo will most assuredly have all thosu person ciisrm,a'd in rc-tlllliii; our second-hand bottles, selling by tlicgallon or barrel, or In any manner whatsoever palmlug otf on tho public a Npurious article pur portinj' to be our preparation, punished to the full extent of the law. Wo never (all to convict, as the Saw Orleans and St. Louis Court HeeorUs fullv alHrm. Penalty fur counterfeiting, or dealing in counterfeit trade-mark goods, as set forth In a law re cently parsed by Congress "Flue not ex. ceedlng b,U')U, or ltnprhioumciit not more than two years, or both such fluu and imprisonment." NOTtCR TO DAUtKS AND POKCHASnit?. HoatOUur's Pitterd nr, vmlcr nut rtr. t'tuntinet,tt iW in Mk, but alwats in hotti.M, with a finely engraved U. 8. Ittertial Kevenuo (eiveelal proprietary) Sump cover, inu the eork of each bottle, fastened to both hides o( the neck of smile. All Hl tcr.t nor. , poring to be Hosteller's, without tlilt stump, are counterfeit. IIOSTKTTEK & SillTH. ntUburgh, Mar. 28, 1877. "Tho Axe of Kchoh. The boy that went to the mill on horseback, carrying the grlut in one end of the hag and actjjie In tho other, when reproved by the miller, and told to divide the crM, replied that his father and grandfather h,id carried it that way, and he, being no better than they, should continue to do, in they did. Similar, or equally as absurd, reaon are ac. counted as sultlcleut by some to warrant them in IndUcrltnlnatety condemning Dr. Pierce's Family Medicines, even though thero Is overwhelming proof that tlicy possess tho merit claimed for them. For many years tho Golden Medical Discovery has been recognized as the leading liver and blood medicine In the market. Each year has brought an increase In Its sale, and It Is no used throughout the civilized world. Thousands of unsolicited testimonials are on It lo In the Doctor's oltice, attesting Its efficacy In over, coming aggravated cough, coliU, throat And lung affections, also scrofula, tumors, ulcers and skin diseases. Are you suffering with some chronic malady? If so, mid you wish to employ medicines that aro scientifically prepared; that are refined and purified by tho chemical process employed in their manufacture; that are positive In their action and specific to the various forms of disease for the cure of which they are recommended, use Dr. Pierce's Family Medicines Full pattlculars In Pierce's Memorandum Book, kept for free distribution by all druggists CATARRH. S!atemnt of 0. J. Goldrick, Esq., Editor RockyMountain Herald, Denver, Colorado, showing the Prevalence of Catarrh and the Popularity of Sanford'a Radical Cure for Catarrh. KTsrrntMfmtof tea adults tn this whole r rIoti of eonntrr affilclrd wltU Catarrh. It seems to li cllmttletflr epl(llo at la Oils atms)lre. lr. Smith tells R tattths three doxrn bnttlesof Itssjctl. Cu wrrt Iraatedlittelrsolri, and Ihst lie liail forty orders for mors within (h lut tare wteks, bat bid none Iters ta supply from." Ths Mr. Bmtth referred to Is of te firm of Smith Dolt, faraltmro (testers, Denver. Waen ta Boston aboat a year ago tie purchased eleTen bottles of' Catarrh Remedr, and one of SAsross'a Radical Ct-sa, the Utter st the earnest reuses of a personal acqualatsaes. Us had seea tho first aimed rcraedj-, bnthsdaotliesrdof tha Utter. Bfcsrtly after Ids srrival la Dearer vs recti? aa order for a dozen of thaRADtCALCcsi.and sooaanot!ir!tl; the ptcaslar iatelllseace that Mr. Smith was care. The prcvaleae of th disease, coasted with the recommendsvtloae of Mr. Bmtth, see created a lively demand, and wtthoat advertising Mrlr tBre hsdred betttcs were seat oat. This ia a strtkls- Hlestratloa of wh&t )e freutattr done far this reaiedy as a return for relief froai long- and yaiafalsntartaf. JCaea psclcae ceatalne Br. n ford's Tnmmrcd Inhaling Tube, TmiI full Mlreejlope for Its m fa all rases. Price. I1.S9. For ssle t7 at wheleesle dretall druglKK,UBeralAxeB a Wholesale Drmreuti, Hotten. LAME ED BACK. LM ami PaJflfu! lack. Twelve Days In Hospital. ne of yourCoixuis Voltajo 1 i.Asritns. jijr 1 was so laiae suit pslnrnl that I could not SrUedityof any kind, and wm placed I IV',? ) li ftir twelve UtjVwItlioHt ftue. 1 V?5VALTUrt slnn of the sunreort to tiy the Cot-MSS "T1" r?ewemllnafwl entirely re lvel of pain ni'l able to tirinl i v Jf M amnowtliorotiahWwHI. I(;olderthes4Biiiy v,ontterrat. lteepectntlly yours, AtKXAKTiRU JAMRSOV. Co. 1, 1st Artillery, l ort Warren. Soars, Mays, W?"All BOIXO WONDERS." waal. aad those yon sent last are sit sol J, waTurOena ws'tliree Macm m toon s 1 1 yH W t tms. Money, eaelo'l herewith. I wast thcat toworrow night, If possible, la haste, Tears, T. V, IMUMEBt r. M. Ko. Fayette, Ms., May 1, 1178. Mrg