Terre Haute Weekly Gazette, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 3 October 1878 — Page 3

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THE BIRTHPLACE OP BU8N8. Though Scotland boasts a thousand names Of pa tr'.o., king and peer The noblest, grandest of tbe a all

Waa loved and cradled here. Here lived the gentle peasant-prince, The loving cotter-king, Oorapared with whom the (greatest lord

Is but a titled thing. Tis but a cot roofed in with straw, A hovel made of clay One door shuts out the snow and storm,

One window greets the day And yet I etan 1 within this room And tooM all thrones in scorn, For here, beneath this lowly thatch,

Lord's sweetest bard was bern.

Within this hallowed hut I feel Like one who clasps a shrine, When tbe giad lips at last have touched

The something deemed divine And here the world through all the years, As long as day returns, The tribute of ita love and tears

Will pay to Robert Burns. —Robert Ingersoil. August 10,1878.

A~MONG THE MOUNTAINS THE FAR WEST.

330

OF

VARIOUS M-ATTERS OF INTEREST IN AND ABOUT DENVER. Froui an Occasional (Correspondent.

Colorado Springs, Sept.

28.

The title of "Saratoga of the West" is claimed for Colorado Springs and Manilou, which, though three miles apart, are considered in the same cataeory. The mineral springs are the attraction at Manitou—the name given to a few hotels and cottages located around the springs and at the foot of Pike'% Peak— but the railway station is at the town of Colorado Springs, a really beautiful place, with* about

4,000

in­

habitants. Between the two, tourists perambulate, according to taste, communication being by a line of buses and stages, or by private conveyance. Many spend several weeks here— especially the fashionably inclined, as there is more of the ways and manners of a fashionable resort than at Denver, or anywhere else in Colorado. At the Manitou Hotel the ladies "dress" for dinner as elaborately ab at Cape May or Long Branch. The Spring waters are strongly charged with carbonic acid and contain carbonates of soda, lime, and tnagnesia in various proportions. Broad claims are made for the medicinal properties of these waters, the opinions of professors of chemistry being quoted to the effect that they excel the "Ems'1 and the "Spa," two of the most famous groupes in Europe. The elevation of this locality is higher than that of Denver, or a little over

6,700

feet. There

are splendid drives in all directions, and within a radius of seven or eight miles are numerous attractions

4and

points of

special interest, including the Garden ot the Gods, Glen Eyrie, Ute Pass and Monument Park. The formations from which the latter takes its name are among the greatest curiosities to be seen in Colorado. Pen cannot well describe them. They consist of a series of curiously shaped monuments which have been formed from sand-stone rock solely by the action of the weather, a thin strata of iron on the top having protected these particular pieces and preserved them. No accurate estimate can be made of the hundreds of years this work of the elements has been in progress. There are perhaps a hundred of the peculiar formations of different sizes and shapea, some of which are really fantastic. The Garden of the Gods is also a remarkable freak of nature, partaking somewhat more of the grand and imposing. It is a secluded spot, hemmed in by great rocks stood up on end. They are some of the more marked of the numerous evidences on every hand here of a grand upheaval some time in the past. Imagine tremendous flat rocks, large enough to cover a quarter of an acre of ground, standing up on edge,

feet high, and you will have

so ne idea of what forms the chief wonder of this garden. So much time had been consumed in our wanderings that our party were obliged to abandon the trip to the San Juan mining country, much to our. regret. Mining being the leading interest here, we were naturally desirous of visiting the most extensive region yet discovered. But the trip involves some staging and a good deal of time. Next year the Denver and Rio Grand Rail way will be completed far enough to sini plifv matters very mu«h in this respect. All" the excitement in mining matters is just now concentrated in what was formerly known as California Gulch, now Leadville. Some exceedingly rich lodes have been found there within a few ihonths past, and, as usual, the miners and prospectors make a rush for the spot. A town of

6,000

people has came

tip in a night, as it were, where a year ago there was scarcely a shanty. And such a town. It is said here to be the liveliest camp yet known in Colorado, and so I should think it might be. It has its Theatre Cotnique, and dance houses, and gambling hells without number. All sorts of games of chance or hazard are openly played night and day, Sundays included. The place lies right over the main range of mountains about 150 miles from here and some

200

from

Denver. There is a stage road and a tegular line from the latter place, and aWo a road from the springs. Most of the supplies are taken over by the road from here, and the long lines of freight

tons to a trip over these mountains, and by a most abominably bad road. The teamsters area rough"set, but they appear to enjoy their work, with all its liardshiDS, and at the end of a month generally spend nearly the entire proceeds in gambling. That is one of the great draw-backs of this country—the class of men they get here. Many who come are of the worthless tramp class, too lazy, or too "delicate" to perform veal labor, and if finally driven to it they do r.ot become valuable thrifty workers, but squander what they earn in dissipation., There is a demand everywhere for good men who are not afraid to work, and such can do well. In Leadville common laborers get $3 per day, and skilled labor is prooortionately high. Carpenters command per day. How extensive the mines at Leadville will prove to be_cannot be told, but there is

every indication that they will hold out well* The ores are corbonates, differing from those about Georgetown, in that (hey are decomposed, and therefore more easily taken out. Early next year there will be two railroads to Leadville, the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fee branch, via., the Arkansas valley and the Denver and South Park, from Denver.

Next to mining, the largest interest in Colorado is 6tock raising. There is some attention to general agricultural products in certain localities, and quite a large crop of excellent wheat has been raised this year—over

150,000

bushels in ex­

cess of the amount required for home consumption—but grazing has been found to be caiser and more profitable. It is a fact beyond doubt, that a man possessing knowledge of the business can double any amount of capital he puts into it in four years. All of the stock men who have been in the business any length of time re are immensely rich. The climate is so mild that stock run out all winter without feeding and come out pretty well in the spring. It is astonishing! how fat they will become roaming over these broad plains which look so barren. The short grass appears to be thin and worthless, bnt as a matter of fact, appearances are very deceiving in this ca9e. This "buffalo grasb is about four times as nutricious as the best Timothy, There are some very large cattle owners in Colorado. The late John Iliff, who died about a year ago had at the time of his death nearly 100,000 head, on his range extending along the Plate river to Julesburg on the Union Pacific road Mr. Farmer one of the owners of the Denver Daily Democrat, has about

35,000

on his range a few

miles from Denver, and there are others whjo have from

10,000

to

60,000

2,000

19

head.

This is also a fine sheep country, the dry climate rendering them free from such ills as scab foot, rot, etc. Cattle and sheep men do not get along well together, however, as cattle will not graze where sheep are, and sheep will soon destroy a grazing ground'. On this account there has been a grgat deal of trouble between them in the past, whole herds of 6heep having been poisoned in a night, resulting in quarrels by which several live9 have been lost. Small sheep herds are to be seen in many portions of the State, but the ranges of the big herds commence about Colorado Springs, thence south into New Mexico. Colorado ships a vast amount of wool to the East every year. There are a great many Mexicans in Southern Colorado engaged in sheep-raising, some of whom have from

to

5,000

cents and

20

The press of Colorado, considering the population and all circumstances, is extraordinarily good. There are about fifty newspapers in the State, and some of them are equal to the best to be found in older and more thickly settled localities. Denver alone has a dozen, four of which are dailies—and good ones, too, Politics here are what may be termed on the "red-hoc"' order just now. Patterson and Bel ford are pitted against each other again for Congress, and are making a joint canvass. They "chow" each other up terribly, and "what is left after each encounter is pretty effectually mangled in the newspapers next day. Until this year the Republicans have" had a decided advantage in the matter ot organs, but last spring, Loveland, the Democratic candidate for Governor, bought the Rocky Mountain News, the oldest and best paper in the State, and changed its politics, so that now that part of the contest which is fought on paper is more evenly balanctd.

There is a great deal to be seen in this wo tiderful country, which we have not 6een for want of time nor have I found time or space to detail all our really enjoyable explorations. Another and more extended trip is necessary to learn all about the country, and see all its sights. The Irishman who sent a brick to his friend as a sample of his new dwelling, was not farther out of the way than he who thinks to reproduce the magnificence of Colorado scenery upon paper. The grandest and most exciting railroad ride I ever took in mr life is that through La Veta pass over Dufnp moun-

a description of the scenery. It is almost worth a trip all the way from Washington, and no tourist here should miss it. And with all the other pleasures of a Colorado tour is the fine healths giving air. There is an impressionabroad that it never rains out here but this is a great mistake. For a strictly dry country 1 think it contrives to sprinkle pretty often. While we were in the mountains it rained every afternoon, and one day we saw a lively sno.v storm almost within a stone's throw of us. In and about Denver it has rained frequently during August and the early part of September. 1

X,, PHONO, Vi 5

1

THE return of Messrs. W. D. James and J. R. Moore has reinforced Centenary Sunday school with teachers. Mr. Moore will resume his position as chorister*

ALEXANDRE DUMAS' HOME.

THtt HIS

FRENCH WRITER AMONG BOOKS AND PICTURES. From the London World, of Aug. 28. The most successful author in Paris lives in one of its best-appointed houses. The Avenue de Villier6 is in the line of boulevards just within the fortifications, and far away from all noises, except perhaps, those of the engines of the circular railway. But all liberties are restrained in France, even liberty of creating a nuisance, and drivers of trains at Neuilly have to scream as gently as a sucking dove by comparison with those at Camden Town. The house in the Avenue de Villier8 is just such a one as Thackeray might haye chosen if he had settled in the foreign capital he seems to have loved so well. Its red brick, faced with white stone at the angles, gives it an old world look, though, like most of the dwellings in the quarter, it was built but yeiterday. It is well fenced in from the curious, and its door is only to be reached through the garden—a rare security for privacy in this city of portes cocheres open to all the world. Another circumstance, perhaps almost equally rare, is that Dumas has it all to himself, so that he is never disturbed, as are so many of the wealthiest people in Paris, by the vagaries of another free and independent tenant overhead.

It is something more than a house it is a gallery of art. It is filled with paintings, statuary, engravings, from hali to garret—furnished with them in a word. There are pictures in every vestibule a few mere purchases, you would say, and they must be hung outside for sheer want of space within. The dining-room walls are covered with them, and so are those of the drawing-room* they run all up the staircase, rather, one would suppose, for mere btorage than for show, for here their effect is altogether distorted by the l'ght from the stained-glass windows. And they are all good ones— gems

5•

head. The

Mexican 6heep shear about four pounds of wool per annum. Wool this year is low, being worth about 13 cents at the railroad. The last five or six years a number of Americans have started into the sheep business with Mexican bheep, and imported bucks, and to-day there are large herds of high graded sheep in the country, shearing six and eight pounds of wool per annum, and the wool is worth

cei.ts, while the

ordinary wool brings only twelve. El Moro is the principal wool shipping point in the state, being the terminus of the Rio Grade road. All wv-i from Colorado ana New Mexico is brought here to market, or for shipment east. There*area great many Mexicans in Southern Colorado, and the Spanish language is an almost necessary accomplishment for residents. They look much like tolerably civilized Indiansj and live mostly in little mud huts built into the side of a hill. The little Mexican pony, or Burro, is a useful institution all over the mountains here. The little fellows "pack" pretty large loads sometimes, and seem to take things very philosophically. Its pretty hard to kill one of them they say. People here tell some rather marvelous stories about how they sometimes fall in making dangerous ascents. If he must fall, poor little Jack will put his head between his fore legs and go tumbling down over the rocks, bringing up at the bottom unhurt.

whn

of Fortuny, Corot, Reg-

nault, Morot, Troyon—in watercolor or in oil. If the author were a Manchester merchant he could not have made a more profitable investment, for they are works whose value must increase in an enormons ratio with time. His library is a small one—a mere book case, in fact, and only the mightiest penmen. Shakspeare, Homer, Dante, Moliere, Montaigne, find a place on its shelves. One book, the bible, is read more than all the rest by the author of the Dame aux Camelias and the Demi Monde. It is constantly in his writings, and, what is of far more significance as an evidence of the sincereity of his appreciation, in his talk and it is not too much to say that many Frenchmen derive their sole Knowledge of its texts from his works. They are a tolerent people, and apparently they don't mind a little of that sort of thing in its place—namely, in play. The collection has its stamp of individuality in its works of science. The writers on physiology for instance, are far more numerous than these in any other branch. Critics

f«.lulC COI WOriCS

of art with a purpose would be astonished to hear that the most popular dramatist in France is at this very moment writing a piece designed to exhibit the action of the law of natural selection in morals. A play on natural selection that 6hall run about as long as the "Colleen Bawn" is a mighty undertaking and yet Dumas will accomplish it, for he has done the like before. It is characteristic of his genius he apprehends as a philosopher, and then calls in the other half of himself, the dramatist, to trick out his thoughts for the popular mind. His conception is, in the first instance, a problem in morals he broods upon it till he has produced not a treatise, but actuation, and his audiences are surprised into laughter or tears without once suspecting that they have before them merely the cunningly-disguised major apd nnnor of a proposition in the severest of all the arts.

The 100m in which he works is the house in miniature, a perfect nest of bric-a-brac. Here is a cabinet of oak (like most Frenchmen he can not abide maho^tny) filled with rare china there a picture or a terra-cotta group. Some of the statuary is too large for mere chamber decoration. In the house in which he formerly lived he used to work in the shadow of a composition by Franceschi, which dwarfed him and every object in the place and even in this one he has contrived to find a corner for a large figure, in terra cotta, Of Fame, inscribing on her scroll the name of the soldier arti6t Regnault, killed in the last war. The large table in the middle is seen at a glance to belong to a methodical craftsman. It is a piece of furniture contrived of a triple debt to pay—a writing desk, a pigeon-holed bureau, and row of drawers in one. He has himself published a description of it in a letter addressed to a friend. "It is stored," he says, "with paper of every form, and of varied tints, which I spread in profusion about me to give me the. taste for work for, as I take it, nothing is more appetising to a writer than fine paper. It is the kitten's saucer of milk it is irresistible

Below are my letters. I keep every one I receive there are some that are thirty years old. And how many dead ones already! They are in an immense receptacle with partitions, which I call the Colnmon Grave. Don't be astonished if I should one day publish a book With that title. When I have thought out a play, I take twenty sheets of paper for each act but the last, and away I go. As I near the twentieth, I begin to think it is time to finish the act. The last act is limited to seventeen sheets it ought to be shorter than the rest I have fixed the quantity of matter by long experience the public won't digest more." In the smaller as in the larger surroundings, he shows himself fullv sensible of the influence of association his paper-weights are models in bronac or marble of the hands of his friends—it need not be said that his choice is rigorously confined to one sex Every hand is a souvenir, and one of beculiar beauty is that, and a mystery as well, for all but the owner of the model. "Imagine," he says, "that in 1843, on the 13th day of April—" and here the history breaks off. A fine crayon portrait that he used to have constantly before him is that of the Jeannine ofLesIdees de Madame Aubray he has lived all his works.

Like most Frenchmen, he gets his day'8 task done in the morning in order

J* _• '. 2 ..'!s\' Hi

«-,.^SA Y,j i£ .vR. LiMii"

to have his evening free for society. His methods of diversion have sometimes been extraordinary. When the China knife-throwers came to Paris some years ago, he ubed occasionally to imitate their performance as a sort of private exercise in gymnastics for the relief of body and mind. He inquired such facility that he had some difficulty in dissuading Mme. Dumas from becoming his target. George Sand heard of his skill, and as if to show that in this, as in other things, she was not to be beaten by a man, she was soon to work with the knives, day by day, with* the milliner's dummy for a mark, and with a success proportioned to her exertions. The favorite relaxation of his maturer years is the tidying up of his own room. When his ideas are not so clear as he could wish, off goes his coat, and for a day or two he combines the functions of Molly and a turniture porter in his own person, until, as the trainers might say, he feels himself fit for dramatic philosophy once more. His father was not without his misgivings in regard to/ this Jpassion for order, this power of occassional atten tion to material details. "He will never succeed in literature," he murmured "he has twelve pairs of boots—all in lin« The son, for his part, knew how to repay and some of the brightest specimens of the current coin of Parisian wit were made hy his brain in friendly contests provoked by his sire's complaints. In these their relationship seemed to be reversed the elder man figured as he manuvais sujet, the younger as the monitor and guide. "My father is a big baby that I had when I was a very little one," Alexandre used to say.

His conversation combines matter and manner in the happiest way. You would hardly require to be aware of his high repute "to perceive that you are in the presence of a profound thinker, who is also a writer for the stage. He, has one of the rarest gifts—that of making a monologue interesting. His topic is a thesis but you never suspect as much until you find that the final epigram is also a logical conclusion. He personifies his argument, develops it by dialogue between imaginary characters, and the rapt listener seems to be under the spell of scenic representation. His eyes, somewhat a fleur-de-tete like those of Chief Justice Cockburn—himself half a Frenchman, would, however, -always serve to distinguish him from the common run as one of the few keen observers of their kind. When he is animated they light up the whole face, and then, unfortunately, he looks too much like a genius to be for a moment mistaken for a perfect man of the world. ,« ,4

A POOR TOWN FOR BUSINESS. He was a red-eyed, wild-eyed man from the head waters of Sage Run, and looked as if he had not been in town *ince oil was discovered. His rust pants were several inches too short for him, and he carried half a dozen coon skins in his hand.

At the post office corner he meta South SWe ladvjin'J K-

The lady screamed again. "Now what's the matter with Hanner?" remarked the rtd nosed man, as the lady disappeared in the doorway of a house opposite.

A moment later the man veered into the bank and threw the hides down at the cashier's window. "Got some A. No. 1 coon skins here that I'll sell cheap. Not a scratch of tooth on any of 'em. Ketched every one of em' in a box trap." "We have no use for them," said the president, politely, as he cast an oblique glance at the goods. "They'll make you a nice ve6t," said the red nosed man. "Two hides ll make you a vest and one'll make a cap that'll wear you as long as you live." "My dear sir," said the president, somewhat confused, "we don't want hides here. Take them somewhere else, please." "Mebbe your wife would like a set of furs, and these is "No, no, no," replied the banker impatiently "take the things away they are offensive."

What's that?" 6aid the red nosed man sharplv. "Take the blamed things out of this, exclaimed the exasperated banker "they smell like a slaughter house." "I'll tike a dollar for the lot." "The people next door buy coon skins" said the cashier, "take them in there, take them down town take them over the river take them—" "Gimme fifty cents tor the lot," persisted the red nosed man. "If you don't get out of this I'Ukick your head off!" yelled the infuriated president. "I'll take thirty cents for six," said the red nose man. "D'ye say the word?" and he dangled the bunch by the tails.

The president started for the outside, the man with the skins started for the sidewalk, and, having reached it, he paused and said: "And this is the boasted Oil City, is it? Great Godfrew! If seal-skin and sable were selling for a cent a car-load the hull town could'nt buy the sand-pa-pered end of a rat'a tail."

Nothing can exceed the intense affec tion which a girl ladles out to her father for a day or two before the time when she's going to ask for a new dress —{Fulton Timts.

A woman can no more help wanting to know what is inside of a trunk that's locked than she can refrain from trying on a new hat whenever she se^ pne. —[Fulton Times. 7.

If a mother at Lafayette. Ind., spanks her baby, "in a rude,'insolent or angry manner," she is liablf to prosecution for assault and battery. So a town court has decided.

The cooler weather makes oyster eating not only pleasant but healthy. Eat the best JOHNSON'S is the place to get the choicest and nicest at fair rates. Main street, south side, between Sixth and Seventh.

T-.jh'r* .*"£• 'hfy y, "V £$r»* 'V t.- ,», •.t--1 fv vt *?•," «,•'"*

THE TERRE HAUTE WEEKLY GAZETTE. awwKwagiW'Biiwi'jiig rn'mmu^m^s^/trnm^^siism iwswig"

1--,J

ing the bunch ofhides before her face said .... Can't I sell you something nice to make a set of furs out of

The lady screamed and shot across to the other side of the street. Does any of your neighbors waiit to buy anything of the kina ^yeueu .the red nosed man.

8-^'Absolutely

Whenever the above symptoms are found to exist,

A E A N E E

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lualed-

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Blood i» the giinrmtci

nflienlth. Read: It cured my »on of ScroTLtilo."—/. JT. Bnokt, PainuviUt, O. "It cured. Fm. Child of ErpiptlM."—Jfr«. K. inert,

Pa.

Pnn II. R. E. SELLERS fc COj,

Prop't, filttburgli, P». Btld bf DruggitU and Country Ston

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FEVEMGUE

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Sick Headache

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For

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to IIS a day can be made by

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ThU is the simplest microscope ever lavented, and will accomplish anything obtained by a $23 Microscope, and is free from inclined lenses or glasses. Address

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Consumers should bear in mind that the incomparable "Royal" la now the only BaklnS Ponder in tbe market made from pare Qrape Cream Tartar, imported exclusively for thia powd'-r, direcf from the wine-growing district of France. An old experienced housekeeper writes that althcngh she has to par a few pennies mora tor the "Royal," nds that it goes so nach farther, and works so mucn better, that it's economy to use it. Another says she uses the powder In pudding, cakes, and all sorts of pastrv, wholly without eggs. An old ladv from Ohio writes that it makes the only biscuit her dyspeptlo husband can eat. Thla Is becaase the best and most wholesome materials are used. Approved by the New York Board of Health, and by such eminent chemutsas D«\ MOTT, New Yo'k l)r. HAYKS. Boston Prof. GENTIi, Philadelphia, etc. Sold in tin cans only, by grocers.

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WORM SPECIFIC OR

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"X -s'Sisfcvj, 't1

SYMPTOMS OF WORMS,

THE

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5

DR. C. McLANE'S VERMIFUQ?: will certainly effect a cure. ii IT DOES NOT CONTAIN MERCURY in any form it is an innocent preparation, not capable of doing the slightest'".^ injury to the most tender infant.

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.Bad Taste

In tbe Month, Coated Tongne, Pain in the Side, Ac. They regulate tbe Bowels and prevent Constipation and Plies. The smallOnly one pill a dose. fe. Price 35 canta.

est and easiest to take. 40 In a vial. Purely Vegeubi Sold by all Druggists.

.'V.'t,

ffJ

ih rit

r._

of RQ

I* Gcodi and Clrcn'v o'lmportent information by expraM. Co.. vltetloa. foe aad BftUbi* K«troiJ« r1H«. $1 a Box.

'-4fc

THIS NEW

ELASTIC TRUSS?

Has Pad differing from all others, a cap-ehape, with. sel&Adjnstlag Ball* la center, adapts Itself to all of the body, nrblls the

OPIUM

at

hi the

IfSSESIAUthei

the Hernia held secnrelj dar and night, nad a radical

earn

eer- -r

tain. HIs eaiy, durable and chcap. Kent by Disll. Circulars EgglestoR Truss Co., Chicago, III.,

a*4 Vor»fcla« tioMteartd

Opium Katfng. to W. B. 8qnlr% Werthlagfc-n. flrstss Co-1ml.

Stfcmrtlea «f TouogMenJes»

NERVOUS DEBILITY,

Vttelltr.prwnatan w«akne*l, mmtteo 'efmlnl and booy. dl.orders

brain and nervosa aystea, and ailserlea r«*

«r«'BAfr8 upicirrc^rhM flaMse, tw* far 9S. Sold by drtiuista. Circular with atfl FERUWIENB edfw Ba. SMB.S#awleFer

B. P.

C. C. PBOCTOR & CO., «79 Broadway, New York.

8k. ChNage, IU.

Wall Street Specplation. Tbe reliable bouse or Alexander frothing' bam 4 Co.. No Wall street, Hew Yore, pnblifh a handsome eight page weekly pa-per.-called the Weekly Financial Beporfc which ttaoy send free to any address, in addition to a large number of editorial* on ftnancialand business topics, it contains yery full aud acurate report of the sales and standing of every bond, steck and security dealt in at the Stoek Exchange* Messrs. Frothingham A Co., are extensive brokers, of large experience and tried integrity. In addition to their stock brokerage business

igit

advice is valuable, and by following it many have made fortunea^-|New York Metropolis.

Private

Slight or Recent Caaes cureable within 30 days, for FLO. Haahssi SpeediReatored without medicine. Write or call at the Old Estabis he W medical lastitate 966 Vine St, CIKCIN-

Diseases

NATI, OHIO. Advice Free and Confidential.

Fine Plants for Fairs.

CRITCHELL, Carthage. 0

Has for tale a large assortment of Palms Protons." Fancy Caladiums, Tree FernB, Ferns in'Vaiietv Ficus in Variety, Cissas Discolor, Ac. These plants have been grown tor Exhibition and are in trood order. Prices reasonable. Addms as above.