Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 7, Number 17, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 21 October 1876 — Page 4

msmmKM§mmgM

OPENED. 1

I

OUR NEW ADDITION.

CLOAK, -v f»# SHAWL, AND

Suit Department,

We take pleasure in informing our patron's that we liave added fo our already large store an addition of 50x25 feet, devo cii to the naie of Cloaks, Shawls, Suits, Furs. Silks, Velvets TelveteenH, Mourning l)r« ks (joods, l.adieV and (hildre h* rnderwear. Skirts, ctc„ •very department: of which is ft, II of desirable ami seasonable goods at

LOW PRICES.^

We have tared no expense to make this the most attrac tive Cloak Shawl and Suit Depart ment in the city. A visit of in spectionis solcted.

FINE PERFUMERY

Lubln's Rlrnmell's, Atkinson,Crown,Land borg PoUiln's and Basin a Fine I. xtraet* for the Huadkmhlel Genuiue lrniorte«l Farina and German Co locrnt*, Kiiit? Tollft awl Fancy Article*, Fin' Toilet ttoaps, ConinHIc*. Tooih. Hair, Cloth acd Null llrushes, Co tuba, Droning Cases Coloicnt* SetM, Finwit of Toilet Howdert, lnv raond, Silver aud Uolden Powders for tin Hair, and all articles wauled for the toilet

I Bt'NTIN & ARMSTKONCU DriuKlolM, or 6th nnl Main ulrpcln.

Wanted.

aU'l v.

COOl'KRH -I W ANT SI good Apply lmmodA. O. MATTOX.

W 'light barrel Coopers. Apply lmtiiedi-

WANTED-IO

4HTY--ALLclothing

WANTED—HORHIiH—A

KINDS OF and

Keeond-hnnd furnltun

utovH, for which 1 will pay c«*h. J. R. FISHER, Fourth street, third door south of Ohio. -1"11

FEW TO WIN-

'1 KIl—can give ilium stabling and good care. charges moderate. Refer by permission, Messrs. Beauchamp, Mlllerand K1. Hryunt. Enquire of or address J. V. PRKSToN.l'ostotllce Box 587.

W

antisd-all to know that the ubllshcirculation than any newspaper »d lu lie Htate, ouuido of Indiana nous. vibo It** It Is carefully and thoroughly read in tbe homes ot Its patrons, aud that It Is tlie very Inst advertising medium In Western ndlana

Wthat

ANTED EVERYBODY TO KNOW— that the Hwiss Ague Cure Is a medlnever lalls. It glv«n the best satisfacilan of any ev.-r introduced lu this laud. Try Ul It costs only 60 sen to. per bot«'" Mfihufactured only by JULES HoUKlLT, Torre Haute, hid., and entered accon:iu« loactof Congress, March 7. 1R70.

or

Sal.

poll hale-horse peu ranee—sultabl horse. Fnqulre Mall ofllce.

Foror

-A LARUE 11 LACK

Horse—stout, licalthy, and of good aptor CHrringe or draught 1'. H. WESTFALL, at dwtf

hmiB-axd rent-wmth. the rutin' Nutsory Htovk nt linlf prlcc. Home ttu- flnw-t trees ever oflered In this nmrhet, will "ell on time, and lease the ground at ft bargnliM' ncre*. lrtlnsmnll Fruits, strawberries, raspbt-rile*. blackberrU« aud popes, also 200 ix ar trees, apple, elu-rrv and pouch. 10 n-om house eloe«e to #ch'w»ls. WM.

PATKU

)H *.\LK— RANOE-

K, Nursery­

man. 21-wSw

PCH-lebrafc'd

-ONE OF VANN'S

six griddle Ilaiigtm, with

Broiler attachment, will be sold at a great bargain. W. Il.HCUDDER.

I1lOltbox

HALE—A VERY LARGE AND KUperlor FIHK PROOF HAFE with burglar Inside—suitable for a bank, or soiuily offices. Will Ik' sold atabnrgaln. MoKEEN A MINHH ALL. 28-wtf

rxR HALE-llorsE AND LOT ON Thirteenth and a hslf street, between Main and Orchard. Will sell very cheap on monthly payment*. Enquire at the northc«M corner of Thirteenth and half and Orehard sttettK. lulyl.Vtf

& 31

For Rent.

rsixRENT—Astreets.

latt

ill DWELLING HOV8E OF looms,situated on wrner Eleventh and Mulberry Htable, woodshel, well nnd cNtern. Will rent low to a good tenant. R. ZIMMERMAN, cornerHthand Chestnut streets.

DOCK B0n«M PRICK

-rafisim.

-AT THE-

WESTERN BAZAAR.

White Flannel, 14i\. 18c. and »i it. 18e., Bed Flannel, all wnol, 22 I-2c., 2oc. and 3of. Opera Flannelsall shades, 40c., 4oc. and 5c. ghlrtiog Flannel, all wool, 35c., 40r. and oOf.

DreRsFlanneK latest ghndes and

^jpatterna, 40c., 50., 60c. and 5c.

BUCK CASHMERE!

LATEKT IHI*dRTAT10M. 38 Indies wide, 75c. worth 85c 40 S5c, 40 i.«o

ii

40 1.

1.00 LUb 1.50

BLACK ALAPACA!

nil i:ii3*^brtli3fe

w.

4c. inrth Hx.

oorae. Ml*** be In uta

WESTERS BAZAAR,

THE'MAIL

A PAI

EK LOU IHK

PEOPLE.

TEKRE HAl'TE, OCT. 21, 1876.

P. S. WES IT ALL,

EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR

TWO EDITIONS

thi« Paper are published. The FIRST EDITION, Friday Evening

uu

a large'circulation the

humounding

towns, where It Is sold by newsboy* and agent*. The BBCOND EDITION, ou Saturday Evtning, goes Into the hands of nearly every reading person lu the cliy, and the farm t.rs of this Immediate vicinity. iGprry Week's Issne Is, In fact,"

TWO NEWSPAPERS,

whloh all Advertiuemenu nppear for

KK CHASHV. Thet even have mock sales in New York.

auction horse

Trn? war cloud in Europe is gathering thicker aud blacker.

Twelve thousand "centennial" tree* were planted in Boston last Spring. Thebb is one consolation. Prasiden t4al campaigns come only once in four years.

Col. R. W. Thompson has been in vited to deliver a number of speeches in New York. ______________ \y

The Centennial receipts have averaged about $25,000 a day since it was opened. That's not so bad.

Thk Centennial will come to a close on the 10th prox., two weeks from next Friday. Better be hurrying up if you want to see it.

Thk Indians have signed a treaty relinquishing the Black Uills, but it will nouonbt be just as unhealthy as* ever out there next Summer.

The latest is that the Democratic ladies of Kentucky are to present "Governor" Williams with a full suit of blue jeans for his inauguration.

And now it is the Rev. Mr. Bott, of the Twelfth Street Baptist Church, Philadelphia, who is reported to love the female part of his congregation not wisely but far too well.

Jewish I silver shekels have lately been found near Jerusalem, belonging to the time of Simon Maccabeus, B. C. 144. On one side they have the cup of manna, and on the other the budding rod of Aaron.

Gkoiioe Ripley and Charles A. Dana are reported to have cleared $80,000 each as their share of the profits on the old Appletons' Cyclopedia, and expect to get as much more from editing the new edition of the same work.

I

From appearances oth sides' hnvo boon greatly encouraged by the results of the recent elections. A cheerful disposition is a great blessing, and politicians, if they do not have it. profess to have it, which amounts to pretty much the same thing.

Martin Farquhar TuppkK, who is at present visiting this country is described a* "a short, chubby gentleman of 65 or thereabouts, dressed rather like a clergyman, with plump, ruddy face, mild eyes, a head of fine silver curls aud abundant full beard. .tWff of

The firm of Frank Sturgis fc Co Chicago, heavy dealers in tin plate, etc. and manufacturers of stamped tin waro,

failed last Saturday for upwards of

|500,000. Mr. Wm. S. Potwin, formerly of this city, was a member of the firm, the assets, it is said, will tie very small.

Thk official returns make Williams' majority over Harrison, 5,119. The Legislature will stand: Senate—Republicans, 23 Democrats, 25 Independents, a Hoose—Republicans, 58 Democrats, 45 Independents, 2—giving the Republicans a majority of two on joint ballot.

Tins first book ever printed In America, the famous Bay Psalm Book, was sold at auction in Bo ton last week, being after very spirted bidding knocked down at 91,025 to Sidney S. Ryder, a bookseller of Providence. It is bound in old calf and the priut is said to be clear and good, It is dated Cambridge 1840

In Utah the law permits a man condemned to suffer tho death penalty to choose either of throe methods of execution—hanging, beheading or the bullet. John D. Lee who was convicted and sen* tencqd to death for-complicity in tho Mountain Meadow massacre, has chosen the last. Id aa modi as shooting is usually considered the death of a soldier, is too respectable a death for an oh a monster as this John D. Lee.

Indeed

hfir»gf"g would be to jrood for bfm

Thk exposnre or several spiritual performers whl 'e

personating materiaKzetf

forms doea not disturb the Banner of Light, which says "The materialised form of the spirit mar tiie

morfe «r less

a, li/ :.V/'n/ "/'i ftu

CLO UJJX

Vapour,'* say* a1 writs! in IlUwkwood, "is the primitive form of all the visible elemonts of weather} it Is the fountain which supplies all downfalls on to earth, whatever fce the shapo they take without it there would tie no elouds, no rain, uo snow, no dew, no moisture of any kind ut all. It is. the common mother of all the eeofwet, it is the embryo of all the lorms which liquid can assume. It Is everywhere around us all life depends upon it without it neither birth norKrowth are possible without, it all England would be ruined to-night, for thero would be no more stoain." Tlifc writer goes on to show how the evaporation which sup plies vapour is a process brought about by the action of the sun, which action seetns to be exercised in a very (.HUgled and untidy fashion, and bow, under the influence of condensation, the sun made vapour which before was inviaiblo, becomes converted into a visible object called a cloud that is to say, according to the dictionary, "iuto a vis bio mass of particles of water suspended in the atmosphere."

(.

The duties of a cloud are, as we are

to a a

miinmop nnri wintAr fnrmh— til it lfi to

summer and winter form*—tint is to say with rain, sleet, snow, hail, ami fog and to preserve us from excesses of both heat and cold by shielding us fro»n tli sun's rays when tho air is too hot, or by preventing the radiation of terrestrial heat when it is too chilly. Children would, no doubt, insist on adding that an additional duty of clouds is to show us which way the wind blows. In order to accomplish these different functions, clouds adopt a

variety of densities

and shapes, and place themselves at a variety of heights, but whatever be the altititude at which they range or the specific gravity or the form which they may momentarily assume, they are always at work at their vocation, and, as long as they are required, are unceasingly engaged in making weather. Aud here we leap incidentally into the very midst of a prodigious question— the relationship between history and weather. Power, commerce, wealth the writer believes, grew up, some thou saud years ago, in certain places, and not in others, as natural results of atmospheric influences. If tbe eastern shores of tbe Mediterranean were tbe first seat of tbe world's progress, it was not because they fbrnished easy water* carriage, but because they were illumined by a sunny sky. The glories of Egypt, Greece, and Rome were, in reality, an afi-ilr of weather tbey would 'havebeen utterly impossible In Lapland. Karhak, the Acropolis, the Coliseum could never have been built amidst snow and ice. II was, most certainly elands which produced tbe deluge it was ft storm which drove inhabitants to

dense, accordingly as the apparition may b« constituted. The spirit draft upon the medium, in producing a fully materialised spirit form, to so great that the material organism of the medium btoonm attenuated often to a condition leaadease titan ethereal." The danger at seising and holding a materialised form is thuaset forth: "If the materialised spirit form, when seised, contains so large a portion of the organic structure of the medium s» to predud* its return to tbe latter promptly, or i»so far from the medium, when seised, aa to prevent each retain, the remaining por- A retail dry goods boose has diecivtion of the organism of the latter, with sred a short road to bankruptcy. It its living aoul or spirit, most reeume ita propoees to license customers to exam possession of tbe materialised spirit ine the goods on the payment of a small term, or its death would be inevitable." fee. When ladles enter tbe door they

America, and another one which protected England from tbe Amanda it waaanow which overwhelmed Napoleon in 1812 it was fog wbtoh helped Mary Stuart to escape tbe cruisers of Bii**beth, and to cross from France to Scotland it was log which enabled the Russians to get up the hillside of Inkerman. It la deads that keep the world as it Is. Politics and power are, after all, a matter of mere oondensod vapour.

it a

TERR 15 HAUTE SAi'URDAY EVEiN 1N(1 MA1L-

~t "i

But now comes in an apparently insoluble enigma a riddle which the cunningest of scientific ptjopla, it seems have hitherto been unable to solve, Clouds, as hasjust been said, aro made of water, and water is, eight hundred and sixteeu times heavier than air how then do clouds manage to get lifted up into the air, and to stop there comfortably, apparently without, an effort, and to travel thousands of miles there, at all sorts of paces, just as if it were quite natural' aud proper that they should be there? Nobody can tell us. Now really it is humiliating that at the very outset of our attempt to make their acquaintance we should encounter an obstacle qf this sort, which bars the door to all possibility of real intimacy. Of course wise people have tried to scramble over it of course there have been plenty of suggestions of the pecu liar reasons which enable clouds to defy what are supposed to be the laws of nature, to

despise

attraction,and to mock

at gravitation but notonoofthe explan ations which have been invented is considered to be sufficient tho clouds go on swimming incomprehensibly above us, in utter disdain of a number of excellent reasons why they should do nothing of the kind. If they behaved like, everything else in nature, they would never go up at a 1 but then, in that case, they would not be clouds. Some learned gentlemen have asserted that' clouds are supported by risir-g currents of hot air, which push tbem up from below, apparently just as children blow up soap-bubbles and keep them floating as long as their breath lasts others have considered that electricity, in some unknown fashion, contrives to hold them in their placcs, others, again, have urged that the water-globules of which they are formed contain obscure internal heat," which by expansion makes them lighter than the surrounding air, converts each of them in that -way into a Montgolfier balloon, and so enables them to remain suspended. We ignorant people are of course quite ready to believe any ono of these interpretations, or any other, provided only the sages will tell us which one to adopt but so long as they hold silence ou the point, all we can do is to stare inquisitively at the clouds, and say witUin oursolves, "flow on earth, now, do you manage it?"

*zi 'V1

a

yrU! beonat by 3 puge, who will «ay: you wish to buy, inadaw, or, only to shop?" If the reply la "To bny," the oustomor will be Moortad to the department she aelecta, and the article she ask* fbr will he shown her, hut nothing else. If she aayj "To shop," ghe will have to buy a tioket for eaeh member of the party, Inscribed "Good for one shopping. The nearer is entitled to turn over all the goods in the store. Not t.ansferable. Good for this day and store only." These tickets will be sold in packages at reduced rates, and arrangements will be made to accommodate people who desiro to commute by tho month, quarter or year.

You think Mr. Smarty haa only beeh married once? she knows he has been married twice and abused his first wife shamefully. She calls with Mrs. Green on a new comer and afterward informs Mrs. G. that that is entirely too fine furniture for such a looking woman. Young Mr. D. is going to bring his bride into the neighborhood. Now Mrs. Busy has never seen the lady perhaps more than once but she fully succeeds in making every one who comes in contact with her understand that she has a pouched-out mouth and such tiery red hair that she sleeps with one eye open to keep from setting the whole shebang on fire and yet for the first six months or a year, she will run her to death and then, to the infinite relief of the aforesaid red head, she drops he and casts her lines in other waters. One of her f.iends of former years who discarded her long ago on account of her very playful habits is to be married now she is beside herself to see all that is to be seen, but she is ignoiant enough to suppose they will notice her presence or absence, therefore she denies .Verself the pleasure of going and bites herself with envy when those who do go bring her word that the brido was lovely. She cannot sea how that thing ever could look lovely and if she has one grain ot sense she has acquired it very lately while the bride herself may have learned from experience that her wisest step was when she left Mrs. Busy in tbe background. Mrs. Frail is taken, suddenly ill, and she is the first to jump in, roll up his sleeves and make herself generally useful but, alas, the next day she quietly whispers to every one she meets that Mr. Frail was on the lounge dead drunk, and she always did have her opinion of tbe whole lot of them anyhow. If she reads a cutting item in the newspaper she cuts it out there is somebody it just suits, some particular one she wants it for and let her send it to whom she may, so well do they know her they could wit out any difficulty lay their hands upon her and say, Thou art the one. Certainly we expect her to deny it, and in any case the subject is dropped, even when we find out it was clipped from the paper belonging to a neighbor.

She prides herselfon being a "pump." She forgets ber friends (so called) are tbe friends of other people, and for what she will fish for weeks after others can hear without throwing out a line. There is one cl^at, of persons she speaks well of. It is the dead. Whatever they may have done In life they were driven to it. Old Mr. Sneak, poor old fellow! would never have thought of going into oid Close fist's smoke bouse to steal hams, beside numerous other things that stuck to his fingers at the same time, but for tbe cold charity of the world 1 (4 .:

Of courser the woman who talks, now and then gets taken down but instead of taking a heart lesson from it, she aits her time to stop those who were unfortunate enough to have seen her floored. Mrs. Lofty next door gives a party. Now she has sometime back discovered her neighbors' smart inclinations, and has folded her robes closely around her but Mrs. Busy iuvites some ot her dfqne and tells thsm she Intends to see the show. She proceeds to remove the Ismp into the next room. Closing the door she raises her curtain. Now about twice a year she makes up her mind to give a party herself and feasts her poor narrow soul on the delight it will afford her to omit Mrs. So and So she pictures her chagrin at the awful slight she has given ber and never thinks that the insult would come with the invitation, Wtth all these fancies gratified, that gradually corrode her pinched np soul, ber parties end

Hi me pleaaant afternoon you set yourself at your work, at peace with all tbe world, when you hear a rtutle of garments and are made to understand that you are about *to receive a call from Mrs. n. You glance hastily around to aee if thero is anythng to be snatched from the prying eyea of your nnweloonie visitor, and the frown that cornea to your fiMse can only be chased away by the utmost christian fortitude. Among other things, she wants to tell you that Ann Thompson's bean stayed until two o'clock this morning, and oh! dont yon Shi"** tbe widow Sparkle la receiving company again! and poor Sparkle not a year dead I Yon suggest perhaps It la ber brother or cousin or something of tbe sort but you need not tell her—she

£jr crcrci'can

t?

For The Saturday Evening Mail.]

TheWomanWho Talks

We have had "The Woman who Hollers," "The Woman who Knows" and now let us have The Woman who Talks. One is enough to keep a whole town in commotion. You must expect on all occasions to be contradicted in any little story you aro telling, aud if you venture the second time to even think you are right she boldly comes to tbe front with her denial accompanied with a grim smile and a nod that speak a great deal for themselves^ ,*

knows the whole family. By tbe way, cac you loan ber your basque pattern You can and aba ignorea yonr polite invitation to be seated while yon look for it, but follows you into tbe room because she fondly hopes she will find your bed tossed about or your room unswept. You grope around amongst a sea of patterns and find It, and for fear she may thina you are too muoh relieved if you promptly say here it is, you say you think that is tbe pattern you are after. Unlucky remark. She deliberately unties tbe string and flaunts before your amazed eyea little Johnnie's last pants pattern that you have searched the house over for, and which you would ralhor never have found than to have that woman stand tbere another moment but you smilingly reach and take it back. And while you look agaiu, sho spies the picture you had taken tbe year before you were married, beside a couple of old letters of Mr. Jones'. She is thunderstruck at the cuange in you in the short fepace of four years and who would believe it, to look at Jones now, that he could write such a good band.

She thanks you for the kindness you have shown ber concerning the pattern, and you fully believe you will scream right out if she don't go this instaut. Finally she does go, and you sit down to ponder on the subject of bow many kinds of people it takes to make the world.

When the coarseness and presumption of tbe woman who talks gets unbearable, and one after another of her acquaintances drops ber, she tells the last one she is gbor into death that she does not have anything more to do with the others, but fails to mention that they forget continually to recognize ber. You dare not speak of Mr. Shanks being stoop shouldered she will tell you he is as straight as you are yourself and when you say you have been introduced and held a conversation with him, her nod and grin comes to the rescue while she tolls you to Id on, she'll show him to you the next time he passes. Of course it is exasperating to the last de gree, but as she is positively irrepressible, what can you do? Nothing but follow in the wake of scores of others who have gone before and giveu her up as "a bad lot." And when some morning with nose in the air she sails proudly by without speaking, you may, if you are sensible, turn away relieved and devoutly say, thank goodness she has given me the cut direct. *5' .1

People and Things.

Tilden goes out on horseback daily. This is Sloken' last month in prison. The "hard times" cry is becoming but an echo, ,y

Shut that door, will you were you born in a saw mill *7 I Now the sausage machine works mischief with the solid sow.

Some churches aro anytbiug but "heavenly rest" for some folks. If some men would only die when there is no nae for tbeir living!

A Hartford nogro's feat is to drive a nail into wood with his forehead.,^ Six of tbe foreigners in Miss Ivellogg's new opera troupe came from New Jersey.

Prices reduced" is tho popular fiction commonly displayed in shop windows.

If a lady yawns half a dozen times in succession, young man you may get a

Theodore TSlum's sleeping car adventure has lost him one lecturing engagement and has brought him eleven new offers.

It is harder to pay an election bet than to ride through the eye of a needle on a band wagon. 4-.fc y.-

We are living in trembling expectation that some one will turn up the fact that Washington never paid bis full income tax.

Cabinets, tying poets, and "all paraphernalia for performing or exposing spirtual manifestations," are advertised by a Washington manufacturer.

The New York managers this season find the light fantastic toe pointing the way to prosperity. Tbere are splendid ballet tronpe's at Booth's, Daly's and Niblo's.

K. Davenportts ptay *'EdgarM to Barrett's "King Iiear." Thero was a time when Davenport would have smiled at the Idea of Barrett's supporting A.m.

Free Press: Six weeks from now you will are people suddenly stop and alt down on tho walk as if struck by a sud den idea, and they will have no explanations to make when they rise op.

At Washington, gray beaded old students—of anatomy—are witnessing Matt Morgan's art exhibition, speaking of which the Cbroneie says: "The grouping is fine, and the human form divine is shown in its best light. It's very wicked."

Mons. Columbier^ merchant of Paris, recently deceased, bas left .'$0,000 francs to a lady of Rouen, for having, twenty years ago, refused to raaray him, through which," says the will, I was enabled to live independently and bapily as a bachelor."

Billiard players should abandon their careless habit of wearing patches on tbeir pants. Itdetracta from tbe beauty of a duum shot, whan tbe spectators, looking at tbe player standing on one leg, with his body half way across the table, discover that his background represents a aoene in tbe harbor cf Rio Janeiro.

You would make a moat beautiful actress in tbe dratna of life." wH'spe.-ed a poetical youth to bis inamorata the other evening "indeed, 'tis so—you would be a very star." And you," murmered the falv one, and she leaned her frizzes on bis shoulder, "w-would you like to support me So he arranged it rigbt there. IIow could he help it?

Tbanlcs to sclencetth 9 baggage-smash-er haa met his match. He undertook the other day to handle one of the new vulcanized trunks in his usual playful manner, by turninc it two or three somersaults and then slinging it twenty feet, but it rebounded unhurt, struck him on tbe os frontis, and the doctor says he don't think he can got him out again inside of three months any waj*.

City and Vicinity.

GOLDEN October.

The river is rising. This is news. The blastfurnace will resume shortly. The "fantastic too" season is here. See advertisement of good crrringe or draught horse for sale.

Harp work will cure bard times but 2 what is needod first is something to cur&r. laziness.

Have you provided against the rainy days of fall? If so, whose umbrella have you taken

A

free

to all sewing school is taught

at the Y. M. C. A. rOonas in this city at 4. 2:30 every Saturdaj* afternoon.

A branch office of tho A. iV: P. telegraph line is to be established in the Terre Haute House next week. Sji

The newly elected county clerk will take possession of the office March 4th, 1877 the treasurer August 28th and the commissioners will be commissioners after next Monday. t-t

Will the Home Course of lfletSre&f so successfully inaugurated and carried through last winter, be revived? It would be woll If they could commence immediately after the November elec tions.

Mr. William Pki.lesikr is making arrangements to present Shakspeare's drama of the Merchant of Venice, at tho Opera House in this city some evening in November. Mr. P. will assumo the role of Sbylock and his accomplished wife that of Portia. Miss Rlchter will take the character of Jessiea, and the other parts will bo appropriately filled.

William Banta, a printer who for several years bad boen employed in tho Express printing office, and who was very generally loved by all who knew him, died at 7 o'clock Tuesday morning tbe 17th instant. He was a young man of excellent character and nollo impulses, and his death will long l»o rogretted. His body was followed t« tho cemotry by a large number of friends.

The three men, Gregg, Noien and French, charged with tho murder of Botts Rudenberg on the night of October 7th, had their preliminary examination before Esquiro Cookerly this week and were remanded to tho county jail to await the action of the grand jury. In announcing his decision, Esquire. Cookerly said "This is merely an examining court to find out whether it would bo a proper case or not. I think the case is one that should go before the grand Jury. Let tbem investigate. They can do it more thoroughly than this oourt can.

So far as politics are concerned I regret that it was ever mentioned In this court room. I do not know politics in the discbarge of duty, and I was surprised to hoar that the Democrats were 'clamoring for conviction and tliel^e publicans for acquittal.' I pity the man who would cover up crime such a man is not fit to live and bo protected, and especially to enjoy official position.

The next question is whether the parties should be admitted to hail. It is my opinion that that is tho jrjper way and I therefore place the bail at$5,O0O each for their appearance in tbe criminal court." (From yesterday's Dally Mall.]

Within tbe last few days it has been discovered that extensivo frauds were committed on the ballot boxes throughout this county at our fast election. Such frauds that all honest voters will be astonished when the facts are lain before them—as they will be so soon as tho full particulars can be collected ast numbers of fraudulent votes have been cast and the cvidcncc is so strong that notices of content were yesterday filed in the Clerk's office by Mr. Thomas E. Knox against his apponent, Isaiah Donhatn, Senator clect, and X. 1'ilbcck against A.

Carlton and Wm. A.Connelly, Democratic candidates for Legislature.5^

THE CHURCHKS TO-MORRO W.

Baptist Church Morning sermon, "Moral Apathy." Evening, "Lecture on Proverbs, 4th chapter. Sunday school at 930 a. m. (irove Chapel school at 2:30 p. in.

rv, n. 5:30 a. m.^*t, "OI\F and rts*i ves.'y

Centenary M. E. Church—Rev. W. A Darwood, pastor. Services at 10:30 a. and 7:15 p. m. Morning subject, Lot." Evening subject, "Duties upoimbilities ot httsoanda and wi

Christian Chapel—O. I'. Peale, pastor. Strvices at II a. tn. snd 7:30 p. m. Morning subject, "The religion of Christ essential to happiness." Lvcning subject, "A sermon for young men."

St. Stephen#—Morning praye* at 10:15 a. m. Litany, sermon and celebration of the holy communion at 11 a. m. Evening prayer and sermon at 7:30 p. m., stead of 5 o'clock in the afternoon, heretofore.

lnas

Second Presbyterian Church—Services to morrow: Preaching at 10:30 a. m, Sunday 8chool at 2:30 p. xa,. .Edward W. Abbey, pastor.