The National Banner, Volume 4, Number 25, Ligonier, Noble County, 20 October 1869 — Page 1

. THE NATIONAL BANNER, e B Bnleq Weskly by 7 L JOMN B, STOLL, LIGONIER, NOBLE COUNTY, IND. T iRI S 1 TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION : Steictly fn, BAVANCe. ..c.overereirsanisnrr: -0 $2.00 ‘lt notpaid within three monthe, ... ........ 225 | M notpaid within six months;......uiv.unin 250 Abflncand0{m.mr.i................A....';». 800 | " 89~ Any person sending a club of 20, accomps- | nied. with the cash, will be entitled to a copy of | the paper, for one year, rree of char e. = '

NATIONAL BANNER Newspa.pei', Book and Job

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POWER PRESS PRINTING OFFICE, ‘ g ) We wonld ‘respectfully inform the Merchants . and Business men generally that we are now i « prepared to do .allkinds of PLAIN & FANCY PRINTING, Inas good style and atas low rates agany pub--2 ll‘;ginz house in Northern Indlaga. Michigan South. & N. Ind’a R. R. On and after April 25, 1869, trains will leaveSta~ tions gs Tollows : " GOING EAST: 'le S rels aal + ¢ Express, ail Train. Chicago.....ovewivil. . 885 P Mi.. ... ,8:00 A M, TRIRUATE v et DAI L OP, 30 gk1)1!ihepfi............‘..1’({:0tfl_)“ ......‘.1%.-?(1)1-:‘1. ersburg. .......(d0n’tgt0p)...,...... 1% 'lv.égon!er.'F.........(.i‘g():lr_l_‘p“ 11:32 e awakn...'......... o't stop) ....... 16 PM. Brim ,e1d...........‘..‘..’:ém ?‘-) il ie e 1100 iy Kendallville . ......;+.11220 *%..000....2:20 % Arrive at T01ed0.....:.2:50 A M ~......5:06 * fod . GOIWST: o P 8 LSO ? 2887 . Muil Train: Poledo .., .ioi i i 1208 A 0 M. L. ... .10:00 A%, Kenda11vi11e,..........0:2TA M 0 00, L 2520 P, Brimtlell, . .sinii .sl BidS o S nan. LB4 ¢ WAWAKR L6l 6550 s g 2 SRR T S 1flfi0n1er..............;.4:06 W nianl G R Y Millersburg, .co.s.vonps. e KROBIBI, o 0 i R M L aBk SEIRMRRE O, 2P BOs T AeD. T Arrive at Chicago.... 9:20 * + . ~....8:35 * 'Stgeegg minutes for breakfast and supper., Express leaves daily ooth ways, Mafl ,Ttainl'malg‘,s close connection at Elkhart with traingggoing East and West. | fos Q. F.HATCH, Gen'l Supt., Chicago. 4. JOHNSON, dgens, ligonier. . . .. *oodle M. DENNY, Attorney at Law,—Alion, Nobleco., Ind- ‘ Wil give careful and prompt attention to all bflmm&vfimmamm%@efi* S————

. LUTHER H. GREEN, Attorney-at-Law & Notary Public. - LIGOCNIER,' - -~ - - INDIANA. Office on Cavin Btrcet, over Sack Bro's. Grocery, opposite Helmer House. 41-8-1 y ol W. C. DENNY, o Physician and Surgeon,—Ligonier, Ind. " Wil promptly and faithfully attend to all calls in the ‘line of his profession—day or nilght‘—iu town or any distance in the,cnuntrg. crsons wishing his serviees'at ni{;ht, will find him at his father’s residence, first' dopr east of Meagher & - Chapman's Hardware Store, where all calls, when abseut, should be left. 1-1 . WM. L. ANDREWS, ~Surgeon Dentist. U Mitchel’s Block, Kendallville, All work vunntéd.. Examinations free, 2-47 DR. E. W. KNEPPER, ficlectic Physician & Sitrdgcon,—-Ligonier. " All diseases of the Lungs and Throat successful--y treatedglylnhalauon. No charges for consultation, '« Oftice witheW, W. Skillen, €Bq. 1-8 ... DR.P. W. CRUM, . i ek 5 Physician and Surgeon, Ligonfer; = = = , Endiana, Office one door gouth of L. Low & Co’s Clothing : Storve, up st.alrg._ ! May 12th, 1862. G. W. Oarg. | W. D. RANDALL,' CARR & RANDALL, - ° . . Physicians and Surgeons, ZIGONIER; . - .- . i IND., . ‘Wil promptly attend all.calls/intrnsted to them. ©Office on 4th St;, one door east ef the NATIONAL Baxxxzg officc, : 3-43 e e EXCELSIOR LODGE, NO. 267, : : IJ OoOf O‘. I;‘., Meets at their Hall on every Satn’rdnsv evening of : .enclw%eo ! . - "A.JACKSON, X, G, M. WS S . . R. D, KERR, i Now. %th\fiflqs.—(_tf. ; Secretary. | AJCJJENNINGS, | Attorneg at Law, Insurance and Collect- ; ing Agent.—Rome City, Ind. bitsiness ‘enteuated to him promptly attended ‘{B also AGENT FOR THE gAT'POIgAL BAN- | 2aY g t - Jannary 1, 1868,

' THOMAS L. GRAGES, . Attorney ot -Law 'and Justice of the Pcace. Wil(lélve careful and promgt attention to all busness entrusted to his care. Office in ‘the building | ately-eccupied by the First National Bank of Kendaltviltey Tmda & 7A ¥ o s 5T ny22 ), & b ARI E b Y f L 5 4 ‘ | JAMES McCONNELL, W ENERAL COLLEOTING AGENI, . CONMERCIAL BROKER. REAL EATATE ; A._GENT, | SURVEYOR, QONVEY.&!GEB. 7 e B RTENNI CE BB EE : “NOTARY PUBLIC, s.igomier, Noble County, Endiana, A.SM)'-':‘ L B' ALVORD’ Attorney at Law, Claim Agent, and Nog;axi Publi?,';Albion,»Nolgle Co., Ind. “Histwess th'the Courts, /Claims of 'soldiers and heir heirs, Conveya%ab%‘ , promptly and care- * fally Mgn‘ ed to, = ACEnod fedgments, Deposi- © tions Adlflavm. teken gnd certified, - ~ 3% f‘“"‘(h"“ w 2 .’l7 &OP e ey tbis (QANTS & MILLER, " iriehl il Mechanical, Deritists, Ui e BAGONIER, - - INDEANAG . i poiral) o Jisdeladion abgar ad ferAraprepared oy % SRa A T XS to do anyth )wl :." :_ 5 ™ 3 {ntheifii;efni . 7 i ‘ B succesfal prac- . ! _,/ 4 (x.' e%\ ‘tice of jov:irflm' Pt &= - years justifigs glee fl them ‘lnsa’yitfg 5 &,s .S e ‘?fi'é&g c:g | £ ; ; ? V| give ©Ba 4! fl PR T _lsfaction to g Rs§ e RS ':'gf f:'f" tronage, B¥Dffiec. 'nmy building,’ FANNERP s in daiwid nmaed fivn Bitoi ; Frogine b T nk sixirieia e L BITTIKOFFER," | | . i;j"fi Q{».J S e DEALER ty o i Hein 1 “ WATCHES, ~CLOCKS, X 4,’ - A "",'"'", e TE gy SRR L ’,,' - JEWLRY.SILYER WARE, NOTIONS, W‘ syvery Description, AT 1 T gzxt ;fi%{:;.fi.f,"\ I .‘_‘,,',’H‘ & of work lone "@i@nomg, t noties i i ) g 2 '{.k:t»v‘:-‘z'.; frf wen's niew Brick Bldek, Kendallville, i o edioo vbt idnaltdsne i "‘“r' l\ il emounl bion niaiian oy e sbedis lars oot i i f gaai B ,~‘;:;-,:1 - SACK BROTHERS; .« Ve A Jomvady sl dp 1o Sialet davit bigs PBakers' & Girocers. ; !He fififi(m ,;Fi e Bge wisos Sictae - JuomonlATHß TS TR R MG, 1 111 “wrbsll Wreud, Pies, Cakes, &¢., e Giroos Provisiqns, Yankee : ;e ""-‘-‘?»“*"F’,” = R " JUHN . R':fs.»;s_r:m il O H of ] ' N Ve d‘r ‘ HN o A ;g‘: 0 ‘m&fi% i f ATy 1 IM, AL ,gm{ Tl My Rk "’“ Eol Nainty dgQiule tpdl Gl anh i a!"” "* /8 4 «:f iy fiflf{‘mm 1 ] ~£!id‘fi;ug;, eOR B N hnd e G i L RRN R o OLEVELAND, OHIO. A i wu&*fi*‘flv?firfl:fi«‘w@*‘w&% oS A ,"“5.”1%‘?% RPN R S it L DT ] y WWYSTR AN - inth A J@‘%flw st SRt |on Ihe 10 UL X OUsIL gnd " Xarly |ox P,, Pottavremia, . Ay 91 geun-a °6O.

Vol. 4,

~ ABEL MULLIN, Licensed Auctioneer. Residence in York township, near Port Post Office Address — WOLF LAKE, INDIANA. Will attend Jmmpuy to all calls in this line ‘of business, and endeavor to give entire satisfaction.. Charges reasonable. 14e3m ©. WOODRUFF, f B@. 8. WOODRUFY. . WOODRUFF & SON, -QC'L.EC_‘TIC PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS, * LIGONIER, - -°'- - . - INDIANA, ) i wgvxil_'l “t&’filc p{:uxn)glt‘ly g&cm; Bfi'om town and ntry. e re of Barnett & Co.— Residence north gide o?lb;,flroad. ;o 41 7 B.P. BEEBE, g’USTI?nEdv OF»« THE PEACE, onveyanc one, Notes collected promptly. ‘Office, oppos%te the g;f:er House, ovgr S::kys : 5 . . LIGONIER, - - ='. _ INDIANA. May 26th, 1869,—1y. E. RICIIMOND, Justice of the Peace & Conveyancer, ~ Cavin street, Ligonier, Indiana. S&)eclal attention given toconveyanq!ngr:nd collections, Deeds, Bonds and Mortgages drawn up and all legal business attended to promptl and dccurately. o May 26th, 1368. STRAUS BROTHERS Would resgecu'nlly announce to their customers and the public in %eneral that they continue to %hrchuae PRODUCE at the highest market Kflcee. aving- no bn(ar on .the streets, farmers having grodnce for sale will please call at our office in the 3rick Clothing Store. : Ligonier, April 29, 1869.—tf F. W. STRATUS, JACOB STRATUS, Exchange and Brokers' Office, SO T idonweß, IND. | 0L Btllj' and sell Exchange on all principal cities of the United States, and sELL Exehanfie on all princlgal cities of Europe, at the very lowest rates. They also sell passage tickets, at very loweat_éléures, to-all grincipal seaporls of Europe, 8-B2tf N. B.—The present price of passage in steerage from New Yp& to Hambnrfi, Plxmouth. London ln?d(}her_bourg has been reduced to only $BO in gold.' KELLEY HOUSKE, " Mendallville, Imd. This is a First-class House, sitnated on Main Street, in the central part of the City, making it . very.convenient for Agenu, Runners, and all other transient men visit nfi]our City, to do business without going far from the House. General Stage office for the §lorth and South.. Stabling for forty horses. Livery, and Free ’Bus. ; ’ J. B. KELLEY, Proprietor. , G. W. Greex, Clork.

BAKERY AND RESTAURANT i LLiGRY. . B. HAYNES, Opposite the Post Office; Ligonier, Ind. My Bakery will be supplied at all times with fresh Bjscuits, Bread; -7 L Pies, Cakes, ; j ; - Crackers, &e., fc., Wedding parties, pic-nice and g;rlvate parties will be furnished with anything in the pastry line, on short notice. and in the very latest style, on reasonable terms. Oysters and warm meals furnished at all hours. Charges reasonable. Farm- ‘ ers will find this a good place to satisfy the ‘“‘inner man.” & Jan’y 6, "69.~tf - ‘ . C. MISSELHORN, j MANUFAOTURER OF CHOICE SEGARS, ‘Main Street, Kendailvilie, Ind. November 6th, 1867, . : , | TGO AND SEE 1 GOTSCH& BECKMAN’s : —NEW-= i JEWELR ~ STORE, " Main Street, Kendallville, Ind. ‘ Tkey have just received the finest assortmentand Intest styles of | JEWELRY, A | SILVERWARE, | e CLOCKS, ETC., ' Also the best American Watches. Only ¢ )me and see them. i | All fine work done and satisfaction guaranteed. Shop oPposite Miller’s new block. .Kendallville, Ind., June 26th, ’67, tf. i __—__—_——————-—-————-—_—"“'—-“— 2 ELKHART BOOK BINDERY, : 0 ~ at the office of the - “'HERALD OF TRUTH,"” ELK“ART, T - - e ;xp_o‘ We take pleasure to inform-aur friends and the public in general, that we have establisheda’ _ + Book Bindery, In connection witn our Yrinting Office, and gre now prepared to'dd all kinds of Binding, .. ..such as Books, Pamphlets, Magazines, Mds’fc. promptly and i ;. onreaspnable terms. - apr. 20th, '6B.~tf. 'JOHN F. FUNK,

. 'CITY BREWERY. . KENDALLVILLE, :<=, - .= - INDIANA i SCHWARZKOPF. & AICHELE, : Would announce to the public that they bave jast ‘completed a new Brewary, for' the manufacture of Beer and Lager Beer, which they wiil sell the trade at lprlc,es reasonable and satisfactory. Our Beer will be Warranted. The highest price. for Barley. = . it 2-20-tf. ' 'HIGGINBOTHAM & SON, - P e e ey 2 : 3 o’ a‘.,'?,’»?,:\ , W gty PRt ] 1 ¥ 4 = b E "f;’l",;-,-.. is e 7 & =R " et I A LR 4 e (A y e R e RN o S e i T o N ! i adi nan oot i Thal | Watehmakers, Jewelers, 1493 gogh AND DEALERS IN i - “Watches, Clocks, lEWELRY AND FANCY GOODS. ;:W;wyamgym@mm& | .t."‘; ; Go'Ln," ‘ v I g 'I § _“:,: nf"”""‘ of the bpflkindskgptl ‘constantiyon ' %&‘n'fltfivwmmfi; cmnsmifionxfl | "‘an Mt ißkl Evind W?-' Wb s goplt ditw 2 ‘N(fiWL‘ bise tien lAEER Y! < iol Ll - I hiavemade an’'sddition: to my Restaurant of & Wt and wil -@@3’s&‘&% ter to. supply the AT et g ‘:‘;i&fi{éa;} s bhisow it 140 T, AP afiMfl SiiE : flWWgfl:lfiiflMfih — Y AND BESTAURANT, 16t hbw -lace %&! o Beavhaiiee i P TNee Fhown ToF Ofty Matkoty 00 WEDDING PARTIRS %fifltfi fidg« ‘ ly-omiamented ¢akes on short rotiee |1 s 0 Toetontiys Ulges AOO BrbacD. sk *'*?E"i% * Ligonugr, dupe fnd.4m. . E. D, (ILLER, R S SO Sl L e fi",;@qfi@ ;%j e P HACPTINT I, O ,}@'""‘J_, .‘ e :‘é.x‘z el "‘“i"?‘ 1y ', ‘i‘ . g':‘*; EP R R R G TR AR e T L g i RO

Che National Danner.

TEHE WOREKING GIRLS. ““Thirty = thousand girls in;‘Newa:.{gork, it is said work for from one dollar to three dollars a week each, and their board alone averages within twenty-five cents as mauch, They have combined in a movement for higher wages.” God ef the Free! whose judgements rest . In awful justice here below, 2 From North to South, from East to West, ' . ‘While slavery dies beneath the blow ; - Oh! sty not here, list to the cry Of piteous thousands in our land— Frail, trembling ones, who. cannot die, - . And searcely live with laboring hand. God of the feeble human frame, . And woman’s patient. suffering/soul, Oh, let not man’s heroic fame— His power to guide, defend, control, - . Btick to a selfishness so deep ;— These is & deep, (and isn’t it here ?) At which not only women weep, -But angels shed their pitying tear. | She asks for bread, for clothee, for more!. | i ¥or comfort, cultare, virtie, peace, She asks—and by the heavens so pure, ; By God’s great arm, by man’sincrease, - By all the powers above, below, Her righteous prayer, so long deferred, Shall soon be snswered ; earth shall know The -';ilndgemen(s which its crimes have stirred, { 4 Yes, patient ones, ’tis not alone, . - One form of bondage_ now that falls ; Jehovah makes thy cause hisown, And man shalltremble wheo he calis. Oh ! long account of labor crushed ! Of honest, anguished, starviog toil! . And who art thou, O, man, so fl'flshed And such a price, with such a spoil? ; Bee! rising thousands, hear their tramp, From seats of weariness and pain, From gloomy gatretts, cellars deep, ; And crowded streets—a numerous train, Who do not threaten, cannot take i “The bolder measures man;employs, Butsimply ask of him to make, e Life’s burden lighter, more its joss. 5 - And will it be despised, refused? Better than heaven’s high arching roof, Be hung with black ; all trade accursed; While guilty cities, with the proot, : fcivilized corruption, stand, As Babylon and Tyre stood.— The curse of God on all the lapd, | Where avarice and her children brood, 0, God of Justice, haste the hour, . | When Freedom’s self at last shall move — Whén man’s superior %fl't of power, ¥ 'And woman’s quivering soul of love, And hearts and hands, all&'oyous things, And myriad voices tuned anew, Combine to bless the power that brings, | Freedom to souls and bodies, teo. | From the Louisville Courier. AN ARISTOCRATIC GHOST. | The Sprit of a Lady Comes Back for a Drive,. . |

Louisville, it is now conceded, has a haunted house ;. that is to say, as much of a haunted house as can be expected in the present incredulous poohpoohing condition of the public mind as to the appearances and disappearances of unseasonable visitors from the other world. We have now-a-days a scientific explapation for everytling illusory, and shgdow-land itself might be explained away into subgtantial territory annexeri to our tremendous country, if some emphatic, mungt be-so philosopher would but undertake the job. Looking at it from these premises and in the day time, the haunted house we hear about as being located within tho corporate limits of TLouisville may yet be explained away and converted into rentable property. This house, at which we arrive by a route o circuitous, is down town.— We do not choose to give it a particular location, for we have no designs on the property, and care nothing for the sneers of the incredulous who would insinuate that because the number and strees are not mentioned the house exists only in the brain of some overworked reporter whose midnight oysters are yet in a state of non-digestive reservation. ‘The house can certainFy‘ be seen, and if the ghost is as/ certain as the house, there can be no doubt of the truth of the stories . told by house-keepers and others: in the neighborhood of the property. . 1t is alleged that there is pertajnly something wrong with thie” house, for perhaps no other building in the city, of its age, has had as many different tenants. The house is a two-story structure, and every now and then the blinds will be thrown open, curtaing will appear in the windows, and the smoke of a kitchen fire rolls out of a portly chimney. Thisis a sign that a tenant has been found. After the lapse "of a day or two, the -curtaing come down, the blinds come together with a bang, the air aboye, %he ~chimney is clear, and a big wagon full of furniture moves solemnly away from the front. Then the tenant is gone. It may be that he has not advanced rent, or it may be half a dozen other things, but he comes and goes, and others come and. io, and the haunted house remains without a tenant.

- One of the large rooms in the house is the subject of the neighborhood gos- | sip, and strange weird sights are said to have been seen in the room. Some 1 time ago, a committee - of twelve stout ‘ men, much more familiar with the ylelding qualities of beefsteak than with the gonventionalities of a spiritual society, ' were detailed to - visit the house aud occupy the haunted room until the ghost should appear. Tley went early one night; wgen a . storm washowling through the city, and when in‘the gloom and darkness each lonely street lamp seemed. a grinning death’s head or.a leering jack-"o-lant-ern. - These ghostly, flickering street lamps might well liavg';fiééh taken for the top-lights “ of strolling - corpses, come, out of the old cemeteries fg: a trapp, through, the defiér,tefi ayenues and, a peep ai the shrygging watchmen cowering for shelter ‘in the datk corners and dooryays along the route.— The portly twelve, however, could see no such sights us these, for, as they ' ‘pursued their way “to'the haunted ' house, ‘they lauphed and cracked jokes, at the expense of dt}ne g{wgt,.h ,:n,discwbtg:notiiedimha‘: A-Gismsl night wag oyer them: _Atlengt e';fi!!a&p&‘shg;gmx ‘Rfigfitmfil{f.%lfllfi and made their way t 0 a foom said fo be. the Tesort of the ghostly visltor. Moe lights* were produced, *and the room Degan to look quite' cheertuli: The little Company _ becaino convivisl &d - until Dearly 'madu%hmhmfiol good. stories | and made the building eaho with spplause and laughter, Then, all g&m,%réng XMOR 5 ”eq'&he‘g&:fi"fm[ ; I»pd ol e o Rt ok Bk 14 o aathing. more o talk -about. It was sbout time for the ghost 40 appea, ; The e m e sieis e Ao L ey taf perfectly' quiet for o few thin--1 fij et Buddenly ejuculat. : e N T ’l')7%'{:?', EEr . ‘fa “16: BDO « PP L gvfiéqfl’k‘»&?%‘”fi?‘—‘éfi;’ SRR

LIGONIER, IND., WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 20, IS6O.

[-ly clear and distinet. aboye the noise of the storm. On the instant the lights in the room sank dowwu, and a light mist filled the apartment.. Every object conld be Ristinctly seen in it, however, as the lights were not totally extinguished, and | the vapor itself did not tend to darken . theroom. . The twelve strained their eyes, ' and some of them sat open-mouthed. As the vapor appeared, the sound of carriage wheels became louder, and in & moment, | to the horror of the committee, a-carriage | iteelf, black as a hearse, came rolling in%o the widdle of the room and stopped.—— No horses were visible, but as soon as the ‘ roll of the wheels had ceased, a figure resembling that of alady, clad in white, ] suddenly appeared, and wus seen to step into the strange vehicle. Then the carriage wheeled off and was seen no more.- ' The rattle of the wheels died away in echoes, and the lights in the room shot up | again, the vapor disappearing with the apparition. Some of the twelve asserted ! that the carriage made several evolutions about the room, but the appearance and ’ disappearance scemed to have taken place |in an instant. - - . . The committee remained to see noth- | ing further, and, we believe, there ha&g ' Leen nomore similar committees. Doubt.. less their story has been very much en“larged upon, but ‘there can be no doubt ' that some very strange and prolably very ’ human hocus-pucus has been played in this house, and ‘that the cause of the mystery has not been reached. The house is' quite valuable, but no'tenant has been found who would remain in it. ' Not long since, !aborers were digging postholes on the premises, upon some ground where a stable bad formerly stood, and while at work they unearthed the re mains of ‘an infant. This wasat once connected with thfigppearance of the apparition, but no ofew was discovered by which’the dead child could be identified, and it was quietly buried again. Thus the mystery remains, and the house is still uncecupied. . . 1 ' . e — - Extinction of Slavery in Cuba. When Don Carlos de Cespedes pronounced against Spanish authority one-balf of the little army of five hun- - dred men, which whom 'he had freed on the 9th day of October, 1868, at the same time declaring 'all slaves on the ‘island free. He had been the slaves’ representative in the courts of | the Eastern Department a number of years, and was looked npon by them as their champion, = The firat act of the war was the proclamation. of freedom, the purpose being ‘to make soldiers of slaves, as well asto abolish slavery. The. frst legislative body that met passed the following decree, which in substance is couched dn the twenty-fourth article -of the ‘Cuban Constitution passed on .the 19th of Aprity b i The inctitution of slavery, which was brought to their island by Spanish deminion, should be abolished with | them. ; : fade A |

The Assembly of Representatives of the Centre in consideration: of the eternal principles of justice, and in the name of the liberty of the people which thev represent, decree: | . - 1. Slavery is foraver ahalishad

IT. At the earliest opwnortunity the owners of all whq- are slayes to-day will be properly indemnified. - 111. All who by this decree are made free should contribute with all their strength 'to the success of independence. | e

IIV. Allliberated slaves capacitated to become soldiers ecan join the ranks of the liberating army upon the same footing with ' those now.in the army,; and will have the same respect as any goldiers of liberating army, = - V. Those who prefer to remain on plantations: and assist in| cultivating the soil, aad thus relieve those who can and desire to go to the field and sustain the cause with the sacrifice of their blood, -shall forever afterwards be exempt from military service, the same as all other citizens. =~ = .- YL A apecialf regulation will be made- to arrange the details of this decree, ' i : '

. Consumption Cured Again. Galignani’'s Messenger. reports the following as the latest cure of that “incurable” disease, consumption : j “In & paper published in the Bullgiy «de Therapeutique Dr, Clersy, of Langres adverts to the therapeutic effects of arsenic in pulmonary complaints, and especially on the virtue it seems to possess: of stopping spitting of blood, a quality he has remarked several timee, and of which he quotes two instances. The firstis that of a stone mason, a man of a Hereulean frame, and 86 years of age.” Being pas: sionately -fond of fishing and shooting, e had repeatedly canght cold in the pursuit of these pleasures, and 1n the end became consumptive. He consulted Dr. Clersy in May, 1867, when be had already been suffering for upwards of a year from 'a ‘coigh, ‘accomphnied with blood stained expectorations, At times he had spit pure blood in rather 'large quantities. From the beginning he had been freated with eod liver oil, ivon, bark, and lastly, with perchloride of iron in order to stop hmmophthisis, ‘which' had become alarmingly frequent, ' i ' “This treatment -having led tono-fa-vorable result, Dr. Clersy at length daily administered six milligrams, of arseniste of soda for twenty days consecutively; then iht'er‘;%yt‘éd it to give cod:liver oil for the following sixteen days, and so on alternatily for three months, the patient taking at the same time infusions of quassia'and wine of Jesuit's bark. At ghe end of the very first week all.spitting?iiqf blood ceaged,; and by degrees all the dig,;;g;'e fxg&m Foninia prier, %sm ae appetite returned, dyspepsia. disap. peared, but there still refigggg“ géli%'xi WEARHEM 46d 8 cungh; SPlic sie pifer: nate treatment as above mmmedwia ‘aslight variation for four months more; at the end of which & complete cure was obtained, ‘and fio relapse ‘Hias been observed, since:: Th, ther iustance! was thatof s young ma ef tw W:Qm W"fi‘}fi? K&g ‘taai o e g o' produced excellent effects, bat it is uncertain whetlor tho. cure w;flf}hi e Wp‘éfi*””“” ~u MR %a 0 At o paEit é,fl%g:g. ’&i o REEEnTL s fomatEl maei T phe s s eniing _An.anprecedented freshes, oscasioned on the 3d and 4th, pre &W&M@ rough: out, all. the, New Eogland States, inof Railroad tracks, mills; factories. &c, e ‘Ems,.a,“ llions, - M : R r ] e

A FBRENILLER'S TREASURE. ~ln the wonderful duys, of “onee npon a fflmmed S Millr, . ‘he wasa very worthy Mil{er, indeed ; and had a very large family of small losy boys and girls. As you may suppose, he had to struggle with all his might and main to keep his own head and his wife's head -and his children’s respective ' hoodles above water. Clatter, clatter, hum, hum, went the mill all day long; yet when Saturday niglit came round, and the miiler took from his earnings this lit tle amount for the butcher, and this little sum for the shoemaker, there was but few if any piece to lay by for a rainy day.— In truth, the miller’s purse was considerably lower than the water in his dam.— And that is saying a great deal. V&ek after week he grew more discouraged.— Instead of the cheerful face which he was wont to show his neighbors; he turned upon them a sour and-—not to speak harsbly, but to give the miller his due—a repuisive and ill-natured visage. Time went on, and matters grew from bad to worse. 1 Ty

One winter's evening the miller sat by his scanty fire, which he hugged as if he were trying to keep the smouldering em--bers from growing cold. The rest of the family had gone to: bed. He was frowning and moping as usual.” On his breast “hung his shaggy head, and it wasin that stato of depression that it looked as if it was about to tumble from his shoulders into the ashes. Suddenly he heard the patter of a light foot step' outside the cottage. A low knock fell upon the door. : 3 “Come in,” taid the miller, in no welPOMOTONSEy . o ‘ The door sprang opén,-and in popped a fairy, a lovely, merry-eyed fairy! Of course the poor miller wasastonished and bewildered. So would you or I have Beed, - “Am I welecome, master miller 2" rang out: the sweetest little voice in the world. ~ Now, the miller'couldn’t find it in his heart to say ‘no,’ and so he brigbtened up, and in his most polite manner said: “Yes, quite welcome, thank you.” - " AAre you quite sure I am?’ questioned ithe fairy. : et o bs . “Why, yes,” quoth the miller, come closer to the fire, won't you, and takea chairy for. you must be cold roving ahout in such pinching weather as this is.” . - #oh, no,” replied the fairy, “I'm not cold, thank you, for you see, we wee folks have good warm hearts, and a warm heart goes a great way toward keeping the rest of the bodeewarm, master miller. . Be ~sides /we are always contented, no matter what® weather the seasons bring, and you know there is nothing like contentment to keep onc cheerful and happy. But you are sad and you are morose, master miller. I know the reason, @'Td I have come -to! help you.” < A : : The miller's darkling frown changed intoa glowing smile,’ * - ' “You don’t get on in the world, master miller. You are often dispouraged anddepressed by trifling. difficulties, you often neglect your wark, and then sigh and bemoan your fate, “because’ your work veglects you, . Yau have tried to make money too fast for your awn good. Now, turn over a new léaf, master miller. 1 leave you this ¢best, wherein you will find g great treasury.” . "The Miller took the chest. Tt was not a very large one, but it looked to him as .ga?.ggfilg‘f;g were barsting with goiden “New hearken to me,” said the fairy.— “You are not to open this until your family are in actual need of bread to eat.— Toil on in your mill. Be trustful and earncst. Drive away your ugly frowns, for they are exceedingly unbecoming to that manly- face of yours. Do asl bid you, on pain of my displeasure. I tell you, a fairy's displeasure. is something awfulil.o .. ' b The miller promised that hd would obey the fairy in everything. ; “Gaod niglit, Master Miller,” chirped: the fairy. i i ‘“Good night, and bless you a thousand l times,” ctiefi the miller =7O .y

“But stay,” said the fairy, as she was aoout to go, “I bhave forgotten something, I bave one ‘more injunction’ to leave you. After ten years have Emsscd away—:regol ’ lect—ten years frokn this very night, you have my full permission to'icpen the chest; that is, provided your property ‘does not force you to have resource to my treasure before.. Remember!” . The fairy smiled arohly, and raised her finger warningly; The door flew open. and away flew the fairy. The miller was the happiest man in the whole kingdom. He danced’with joy. He rouszdhis wife and his sroop of children and told them of his good fortune. He never made any more complaints when things at.the m 1l went awry:: -He carried another facoon his shoulders. .cle. worlced cheerfully. He sang -the merriest songs; ‘and. was alto gether the busiest and. happiest man- for ‘miles around. | He threw off his old habits, and became s new miller, = Of.course he thrived. Many a time he thought he would like to take a peep in the chest,. but he was an honest miller; he would have lost his nand. sooner than diSobey the good fairy. s “Ten- years came and went, and found the miller a portly man of wealth and importance, = i S . On the evening of the tenth anniversary of the fairy’s visit, he called his family around him and opened the chest. f “What do you suppose he found in it ? Diamonds? No. A R Pearls? No, v sl situblesy Nq . [ 0 e 'Gold? Na. pu ) ey _You can’t guess. Tl tell you. The chest, was;emlp,ty!, ‘But engraved on the inside. was this golden word— Contentmnt:§ fi.e EEL i oo LGt ~_This_was the, Millet’s treasure.— Qur School-Day Visitor. =~ . . - .

. The Tariff Question. : i The tariff ;uestion may be reckoned as one of the knottiest of the time, . 'ln view of the necessities of the national exchequer, it is safe to say that absolute free trade ’ is out of ‘the question, no matter what may ; be thought of a remission af duties a 8 a 0 abstraet; policy. “Indeed, no . political party -hag as yet bad the boldness to declare, for absolute free trade. . There.is, however, a-wide spread; almost uviversal feeling that there is som@thing wrong. in the .present adjustment, @»d&&i@%&. portations. Even the advoeates. of high duties will sooner or later be forced to “adopt somle “move wholésome; ‘just, ‘and “eqnal 'system of levying ‘daties for the benefit of the nation, and not of & practical interest, either of class or locality, or else abandon their: schemes altogether.— "Nor @o we suppose tlast thotse who' ‘lean towards ‘the free trade systen, are pre_patred, as’ ygte, t:‘my: that-duties; incident: ally ‘protective in ‘théir ef shoyld not; while lovied st all, bo adjusted with soms degie‘é-f of ! discrimination. 'We' fndulge ' the biope, tlieh, that while opposing theo: ‘tes dre urged By their respective adher: ents, - sufficient ‘practical : statesmanship will be found in the law making branch of government N!!fi:fi;fin?m}mfinfi‘ on eoF o bape forhe benet ziwm%h&tsmm.mwmywi; Shapping <m’ e T v 3 ’, Ril

. |/ MORMON FELICITY, How Joseph Smith was Wretehod with'one Wite, ' and how he was made Happy with Three. . - ©ur readers will remember filettcr of a corfespondent froni Salt L City, in ‘wliich" he so viridly portrayed the situation of affairs at the headquarters of Mormondom, the schism which is apparently rending the church of the Latter-Day-Saints, and the discnssion wlhich took pliice between Brigham Young and those “deluded young men,” the Smiths. A’ second account has been received from another correspondent, but “as if contains some interesting developments {not, heretofore published, we will lay them before our readers. ~ Our correspondent attended a meeting at which “the learned” Joseph Smith was the orator, and from his letter we extract the following : »

'He proceeded to.infrm the people that hq would’ not lift his hand or raise his vaice to save any member of the church frim going overboard—to eternal damnation. He argued that no member of the cchurch was justified in listening to'such abominable teachings, “for,” said he, “we ate of the right faith now.” Weknow it, and therefore there iso room for argument. We know this, T say. If we didn’t we might want to study into every new doctrine that ,comes along. But aswe know we have foynd the truth, as there can be no doubt whatever of it, we have no business listening to such trash as cortain persons ‘are trying to teach. Why, they are on the road to hell, as straight as straight can e, and if there are any of this people weak enough to beled off by them, T say let them go'and be Gamned 1" The sermon met with a very general approbation. - From first to last it was a familiar, rough talk, many parts of which being such vulgarity as would not bear to be repeated. The speaker referred to the blessings of polygamy in the following language. A | “Now I'll tell you, my friends, when I had but one wife, ‘tfi'erq was no peace, 1 was pulled here and there and everywhere, Tieouldn't say good morning to sister Ay or shake hands with Sister B, without the devil wasto pay ! Now with three wiv}es there’s peace and harmony and love, and my life is made one of continual sunshine and joy! What causes all this difference? I can tell you. My firsé wife was a bad woman, and I'm 'glad I'm rid of her! The devil wasin her, and there was no counteracting infleence, ~

. “This language will sound -strangely enough to many in the East, but it is such, as can’ be heard from almost any pulpit In the city at ‘religious’ service. On this particular occasion there was not in thie entire Qiscourse one breath, one sentence’ appalling 'to tlie finer, purer feelings of the intelligent. ‘Tt was from beginning to end, marked' by that confident assertion that carries so much weight with such an ‘audience. This is the mode of reasoning adopted by a man of unusual intelligence and decency for a Mormon. We have heard hundreds of this s wrt, :mgd no matter how clear they seem to be on everything else, they are wild in thelr logic when gpéaking an these matters.”

" The doctrines of Hyram Smith, urged - with a rare eloquence, are growing in fa vor among these people, and we donbt whether the fact and individual magnet ism of Brigham Young will avail in the protection of his tenents against the as. saults of this jearnest fanatio. With the fall of Brigham, polygamy, the very root ~of! Mormonism, will langaish, and fi“pally perish. Tt is only by’ reason of the ‘tagt that his whale personallity is merged iu;the éhqrch, that he has been enabled so long to govern with despotic power the heterogeneous mass' of human beings which ''he has’ collected' about him." No less a de.s'potl than Louis Napoleon, both, “grand: and peculiar,” camly await the inevitable approach of that day which ghall proclaim them the last of their dy-. nasties, j A proay 4 3 i *_.__‘-.__}__Ng f

: A Musical Mouse. - : From the Petérebqrg [qu] Express. ‘Shortly after retiring to bed last Sunday night, Mr. W, E. Batcher was aroused by sounds of melodious sweet. ness issuing apparently from the plastering in hig chamber. He listened in wandet and astonishment for some time, trying to think what the causeof the singing could be. . The family was called up and a light procured, but as soon._as the light was extinguished it cimmenced again, A vigarous search ‘ “of the room was made, the bird cage in the passage was examined, but the bird was silent, and after ‘i’everal ineffectnal attempts .to find the mnsician the family retired, not: to iléep, but to listen for ‘hours to such:mus’c: as they had never heard before;i Of course this was the topic of conversation.in the house the next day, and some said the house must be haunted. Monday night was but a repetition. of what happened Sunday night, only the musi¢ was louder and more swcet; and the wonder of the family increased, as they still hunted unsuccessfally: for'a” solution of the mystery. -« 'Night befure last, however, the mys. rery was golved. The nurse was sefit’ up stairs to gn‘t the children. to bed, and patting the lamp, but dimly barning; o 1 moom he was sitting' very | 3!416;% hen she heard the same won- . dartl sounds, uod loking, i.n,#i-g%g | 5“3%&?%%& ind dnging avay b the tohof bit “voice. - “:ttmfiitf%‘fa ok 1 -tfi§f§l¥s}aewu len i"t-“afiafigwfieilfifi' o room for gome time; but he at last euc- | seeded infinding - his: way ‘back to his | hole; ‘where he soon struck up another | Anne. . ::.:«,‘?i“s"f":}‘if’?_{'a:;g’ffi;v;%fiis;,;'s-~s;i-"3a>;‘: e Tuis stated that Jadge Jerry Black | intends to sue the Louisville and Nash- : PRy £ il _ o Hos stk oo 17 iy | UVANEL THR HHIGRETE WOWH MBSO | fatin fi*“?*‘”fimw

No. 25..

%1 u‘r T]?fix;{;:b::‘.kou - Mark T'wain tells the following story related by a fellow passenger, who, being bantered about, his timidity, said he had never been scared gince he had loaded an old Queen Anne’s musket for his father once, whereupon he gave SheTulienlng s - Tl T e LT ~ You gee the old man was trying to learn me to shoot blackbirds and beasts that tore up the yonng corn “d'i such things, so that I.conld be of ‘some. use about the farm, becanse 1 wasn’t big enough to do much. - My gun was a single barrelled shot gun,.and the old man carried an old Queen Anne musket that weighed a ton, made a report like a thouderclap, and kicked like a mule. The old man wanted' me to shoot the musket sometimes,’ but I was atrald. One day, though, T got her down, and so T took her to the hired man and asked him how to load her, because it was out in the field.— Hiram said : “Do yon see those marks on the stock~-an X and a V on each: side of the Queen’s Crown? Well, that means ten balls and five slugs—that’s her load.” . g

“But how much powder ?’ “Oh,” he says, it don’t matter, put in three or four handfuls, = = “So I loaded her up that way, and it was an awful charge—l had sense enough to’ see that, and started out. I leveled . her on a good many blackbirds, but- every time I went to pull the trigger I shut my eyes and winked. I was afraid ot her kick. Towards sundown I fetched it np to. the house, and there was the old man resting on the poreh.> . . _ “Been ont hunting, have ye ~“Yes, gir,” says I. i | “What did you kill > * “Didn’t kill anything—didn’t shoot her off —was afraid she wonld: kick— I knew blamed well she would.” - “Gimmie that gun!” the old man said as mad as gin. . . And he took aim at a sa ling oun the other gide of the road, an£ 1 began to drop back out of danger. : And the next moment I heard the earthquake, and seen the Queen” Aune whirling: end over end in the air, and the o-lg man spinning aronnd on one heel, with one leg ap and both hands on his'jaw, and the bark flying from that old sapling like there was a hail storm. ¢ The old man’s shoulder was set back three inches and his jaw turned black and blue, and he had to lay up for three days. Cholera or nothing else can scare me the way. I was scared that time, ’ SeEechna Rt ol

3 " Miography of an ox. | " I was born i Nebraska. 'The farmer to whom I belonged paida tax on me as a part of my income W#;ring my veal-hood. -‘He sold mé n: 1 was three years: old, and paid an income tax upon what I brought. I was nicoly fasted wmil 1 weighed nearly a ton, gy &’ Democrat on Weeping Wa- | tor, who p‘ai(l '&bo G&véthméfit cighleeu cents for the privilege of selling me to a batcher, who pays a tax for the privilege of selling meat ta the public. The butcher sold my tallow to a ¢han- ' dler, wha made me; by paying license as a manufacturer, into eandles for the f poor people, who pay a five fiér_ c_en;‘..i tax on candles to read by. My horns! and hodéfs are made into combs and! glue, and pay another tax. My hide goes to the tanner, who pays a manufacturer’s license, and is ‘made into leather, upon which ix an ad valorem tax of fipve -per cent. The tanner will sell the leatherto a wholesale “dealer, who ‘pays a mercantile license and an income tax; and he will sell it to the shoemaker, and the shoemaker will make boots for the laborer; farmer and mechanic, and charge enough for them to cover all the taxes enumera--ted, together with his own 'manufacturer’s tax. .= e R TR W Wmmepyiieran The Cost of a Ten-Kettle Distillery : .., .Selzure. . » e Gen, Gresham, newly appointed Judge of the Federal Court, has, according .to the Indianapolis Mirror, fleshed his judiciul!‘sAwor‘d.. James W_ashb‘pfh’e; of 'E()ur}- | tain county, set up a little tea pot distillery on the sly, and succeeded in running twenty gallons of the most diabolical flu--id that ever vesed ths innards of a forlorn soaker.: . Washburne's; amateur. whisky ‘was so infernally mean that he never sold ‘more/than a gallon of it, and had to drink the rest. * While on the last gallon, l and on thg verge of delirium tremens, a mousing detective officer had hirh arrested, saving. bis life/ bup casting lim into. prison in_ default of $2,500° buil, Mr, Washburne pined .in. durance. vile - fof{ three, mortal months; but ion -Monda f was taken before Judge Gresham on a writ- of ‘habeas eorpis, and- had’ his bail

' So'far a 8 we can learn the Government ‘has not : madé muck out' of ‘the transaction. The costs of 'seizire; “and paying Washißurne's' board in jail; will foot up several ‘hundred’ dollars. The tea:kettle “in which le ‘brewed liis hell broth would be extravagantly ‘over estimatéd at'a Aollar and thirky.cents,. and: the gallon of - whisky left unconsanied is-unsaleable; il ““’"“"fifl"-"‘——“*‘* ; + STORMS.IN- THE. SUN.~—Seientific ‘investigations. ‘intor, the . mysteries. of the snn’s surface has been. great. this year. A great magnetic storm i 3 pre; dicted., The ..éétéini?flgioi;lz of the sun through néw and powerful lnstraments has revealed new and ‘wonderfal ap:. ‘ pé&l‘afig}:}fi::" 33 Stg:age */Trmittense spots, millions of ‘milés i extent, are aaid 8 hvo. sppientede O of tho recently - moved -4 hundred | thousand miles ina seeond. (' We: aretold, too] that violent physica F@hm;?&i%éfé@s-‘g‘fi ing bn“’;*gbagz%netfiaf%?f “§tornis “are ;egula@g_;p&;@g@”h §, aud ocour evgry, sieten yoglt, EhRAt e Jyto 1n 15¢0. ' lis ellect upon magnetic etk gt e i {aterest by the first” scieffifie en of e Wmfim*mfifl tion and:the light of the- suwt will af! %w:g “%é&%w*’-‘wfl e RSO ORIt Ww

8 ‘ onensértion, one Thcl, | 1.50. Each subsequertinsertion, 50 cents. | Onesquarel < §5,00°8 7,00 $lO,OO "l‘hszmgaww 15,00 | Quartercolmn, 12,00+ 18,00. 2500 LHulfcolump, - 36:00--80,00 40,00 | Ome column, '* *! 000" 40,00 *' 7500 ‘Business Card, five. lines orless, 500 Local Notices fifteen centsperii.e. | . T ransient advertising musthe paid in M’fi“ RRSOS B R e s o

o | MISCELLANEOUS ITEMS. . Brigham Young s a school ff his own ;db’ildreufa—;ixty or seventy in num‘ber. ‘lt is a two-story square abode and ‘stdccoed building. © sk ..~ The. St. Paul - Ploneer thinks that not less thao one hundred and fifty thousand - bushels of apples will be gathered in Minnesota this year, . dind Lrolisto v ** % A Charleston Jady fias tiad twins with an ‘interval® of fifteen days between the two births.”. Fancy one twin fifteen days ‘older than the Dt Ner pecs 700 =9 0 G The comnnss:on/ers ot Agriculture, esti- . ‘mates_the total value of the crops of the United States, for. the: year 1869, at $l,811,668,915. g k - In the District Court of San Francisco, Judge Sawyer has decided that Chinese testimony was -admissible against white men, under the Fourteenth Amendment,

- A citizen of Limington, Me., losta gold chain_ in 18387, and supposed that it was stolen from him. A few weeks since he found it while plowing a picce of land.. _Application will be made' to the Canadian’ Parliament, at itt‘s next session, to Aincorporate a comps or the purpose of 'buu;:'t):g,u munelpfin{}u Alfi‘g Mi: riv‘er, connecting Detroit and Windsor. A suicidal mania is raging in the PrusBian prt:g_, and in a few weeks, at/ the amp. of Borna, near Leipsic, fifty-four Roldiers have put an end to theirexisgfencc. 5 HOe nol B ttans ety 5 Mr Sapez Bacon; ‘the oldest man ‘in #Vinthrop, Me., aged 92 years,’ appeared n the streets last week .with a horse 25 Jears old, a wagon 45 years old, and a harness 48 years old. el ’ . A good deacon, whose slumbers were nightly distarbed by the fluttering” of swallows in" the ‘house chimney, ‘set a bundle of straw on . fire in the fire-place, when - down came 359 swallows in the flames, and were picked up dead. The Hon. Ginery Twitchell, member of Congress from Massachusetts, a milliondire, drove a stage over his old route from ‘Woreester to' Barre, Wednesday of last week; on the same stage that he used to mount as regular driver thirty years ago. Such is life. R 3 :

The New Jersey eranberry crop this sea--0 in Ocean 'county alone is valued at 2,300,000. An acre of good cranberry d ismow estimated to be worth from 1;000 to' 2,500, ' The demand in market always in excess of the supply, o - ° _? Milton Page, of Alexandria, N. 1., has eaten 125 eggs at a sitting. e bears his yolks easily and looks on them A 8 a preventive against henpeckery, which p"toves that spite of this proclivity he is'not by any means a chicken-heatted man, There ison" exhibitios at the Indusitrial Eexhibition, 'in Buffalo, N. Y..-the largest and longest wrougit iron heam ever rolled in a single heat in this country. It is s venty fect long, twelve foet high, and weighs three hundred tons, - - It issaid that the Chiness labbrers, though they have no objection to being imported by wholesale, insist upon. being retailed if deprived of their querious appendages. And fhereby bangs a tale —to be continned. in our next. . . One ot? the incidents at. the Tair at Bridgeport,- Mass, wasan ox tace, A pair of oxen entered by Thomas' Smith walked at the rate of a mile in less than thirteen “minutes;: a?d a pair entered by Nahum Tribon within less than fourteen minutes. * BN s e

' The damage done throughout New England by the recent equinoctial storm: 113 immense. . Millions of dollars worth “icf private and public property was de “istroyed. . In Eeastern New York, Eist‘ern Pennsylvania, New Jersey, cte, the {damgge was also very great. o Ve i\rMasonic apren worn hy the father of ' Rev. C. W. Bwain at Washington's funeral; and a pair of andirons owged by Wash-ington-and: used in‘the house he had-o cupied when burned by the British, din 1814, were among “the relios exhibited at the Preble Couinty (Ohio) Fuir, last wéek. . A colored woman confined in jail. at Sayannab, Ga,,. the other. day gave.birth to twins—a son .and daughter. The daughter is as black as the ace of spades, and the son i as white as any of tlie decendants of.the Puritans wha landed at Plymoth Rock a lang timasgn = . . “The New York: Trédune of the 9th says : “It is said that during the past six wecks five hundred head of cattle which arrived 1n Jersey City from Texas, and which were afflicted with™ the Spanish fever, have been sold to:farmers throngliout the Btate at §4 a.head, and are now spreading the pestilen.e. oA : A committee in_England has reported that “woman ‘are fast being drawn into the tide'of " demoralizitivh“ and drunken: ness; ‘and: | that men go:lto:public houses more to get away. from their wives.than from any other cause,” that is, get drank “because their wives do. Buat isn't it much more probable’that the ivomen get “drunk ‘because their hnshandsodo - Any - nne whoshis one: hundred and fifty dollars to spare and 1s ata loss what to do with.it, had better .go to New ~Jersey, hire a dolored girl, tie her up by “the thumbs afi?fi’i%fit. and thrash herin the morning until ‘her back'is cat to _pieces. . One hundied and fifty dollars is the price New.. Jersey .puts upon such a luxuryired o o baad sE .sl 5 ~ Mrs. Stowe “angounces thirough ‘the Hartford Courant, thut she is:preparing a review of the whole Byron scandal; .to _which she will add scveral letters of La- : dg‘ Byron to her, attesting the sounduess of Lady Byron's mind ut the time the dis closure ‘of Lord B: .qmrgicfimfiife was communicated -to Mya Stowe ; also, ! the Jatters Jotfers fo Lady: Ryton !ta;t%g sam:;t;ma.‘ w* z—4A zau H. . Stierinan, of Net York, liakpré: ‘pared a la-i"%é “number -of 'éases; whieh he ‘will soon file in'the ‘Court 6F Claims; foF t&evawverl%;nfiefifi!t@&%@%fl&fl@a T -%0 b lgrs,’ T e.,-v.gl«l'rr:'. ¢lt p“g‘."——— : Treasury in New Yark was illegal, as the sohdions have maitber miose th ek ‘which 4 ich have b 3& issucd, infended forithe, settlement ;‘33 Of ?fl@@ * ?%g;x ). 5, AV : 101" ) [0 e Sne, ot e fs gfififl' bcco, He came to termes but while e’ Pait were returning in- the eurs -from fig&mfiwm gww fannatem Palloub of his, vest poakst 8. dithy Toll, Sl et o HOUENT v e ith nn ane mhin fri o kAt .-”‘-'{\_: