Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 14, Number 38, Jasper, Dubois County, 25 October 1872 — Page 2
4L Of iMilSttrY (fttittit VMUUU,
i :hS S,rMHABY sa Tiif EaiV Mftfttaffl Y.. ha MM w struvtive tiro, winch wept :itctl ly a Jetmmm houses, invol- -way twenty-seven of ftfff.fffff, -mg low of uwward l'lnhdelpbis over 118,00" .at the icoent election, rolled 2U.437. . votes. Hartmift's majority is Jo ,1 Morrissey lost $33.01)0 on the FWaWQ -. uiiia election. The Cubans m New York, ou the 10th int., celebrated, with much spirit, the fourth anniversary of the independence of the Island cf Cuba. I Heu. Wru. H. Seward lied at his residence in Auburn, N. Y., on tho 10th of October, aft Jt a brief iilnet. On the 5Ui of Octob-r tho horseus F.jury Basset t and Monarchist met on the Jerome lveik eourt-e. N't York, for a three mile race, and such was tho confidence in the victor of Ixuigfel MS that the hottag M Ml to one in has fanor. To the uriirise ef everybody " Mouanchist won the raoe, vd'.icii is described as hi m been one of the ixios-t Slotting contest m the history of the American turf. Oua week later the same horses met for a i ecwid trial, this time hi a four mile raoe au notwithstanding his previous defeat. IWsett was still the favorite at large odls, Ar mi ho disappointed his backers, ami sncrtsubed to the MOSfiat speed and endurance o Monarchist- Ttius the kiug of the turf in derosed almost as MM as crowned, and 3Iouarclut jmmties his name by succeeding to the equine royalty. A tire at Bangor, Me., last week, destroyed over 2OÜ.O00 worth of property. Amherst, N . H.. waa visited by a cdOd.OOO lire the other diy. scarab Payson Willis, wife of James Tsrton. the historian, otherwise known as Fanny Fern, died recently, in New York. James Sn.nildiuK- founder of the Now York Worbl. in dead. The funeral obsequies of Mr. Seward, at Auburn. N. Y, were of the most imposing character: The following prominent gentlemen acted as pall-bearers : Thurlow Weed. Ed win D. Morgan. Richard Schell. Samuel B. IluggleB, Abram Wakemau. James r.arnes. Elias V. Leavenworth. Henry Weils, tieorge Patterson. M. S. Myers. James A. Seymour, i Kichard Steel. Nelson Beardslev. Daniel Hew eon, E. T. T. Martin, John Porter, and J. EL CSbtdtO. The Saratoga County Bank, at Waterford. N. Y.. was robbed the other day Of over 83ÖO.UOO. by a gang of nine masked desperadoes. The robbers secreted themselves in the house of the ciBhier during the night, and bound and gagged the entire family, except the cashier, whom they compelled to open the vault of the bank. Hon. Justin S. Morrill has been re-elected L'nited States Senator from Vermont. James Anthony Froude. the English historian, was banqueted at New York the other day. Mr. Froude explained that the object of his visit to this country was to contribute to tue formation of public opiuion in thi- country regarding the relations between England and Ireland. Conyers, the recentlv appointed colored midshipman, is taring about as bad a lime of it at the Aunanolis Naval Academy as Cadet Smith did at West Point. On last Fnday night, when the midshipmen were in line march. ng from the lower part of the giouuds i to their quarters, an attack was made on Con vers by some score of middies, who kicked and cuflel him unceremoniously. A cadet oth.-er raabnd in with a drawn VOtd among thectjwd that had git! :ered aL ittt tho unfOftonaia cadet and stopped the attack. The President's aueutiuu ha been called to this matter, and he kas promised that ail the i parties engaged in the affair shall be dis- I missed. A uuowing match bat WW base-ball players took place at Brooklyn. . Y.. the other day. Hittie.d. of the HMMJ Club, threw the ball IM yards, 1 foot, 7 in -h"-. winning the first prize. Leonard, of the Boston Club, threw 119 yards, 1 foot, 10 inches, and H.irry Wright, of the name club, 117 yards, 1 foot. 1 inch. Ben Butler has been renominated for Con-gre.-s by the Republicans of the Sixth Massachusetts) District. The will of the lato AYilliam II . Seward in a clear, succinct document, singularly free from legal technicalities, and written entire'y in his own band. He bequeaths his late home at Auburn to bits three sons. His other property ho divides into four equal shares among his sons. Augustus, Frederick, and William, and his adopted daughter. Olive Risley Seward. Tho property amounts to about MQQ,0Q9. It In reported that James Gordon Bennett will noon commence iHi-uing a German edition or the New York Ibratd. Mr. Burroughs, a well-known New York hotel keeper, formerly proprietor of the Continental Hotel at Long Branch, and latterly of the Everett House, New York, has eloped to Europe with Ella Wesner. a malo character vocalist and variety actress. Ho leaves a wife an i family and numiroua credi-ton-to mourn his flight. Th WttL The H:..ci.holders of the now Merchant' Exchange at St. Louis, havo authorized the tama Ot ed.OOU.UOO twenty-year bonds for tho construction of 'he projected cditico. Hn, Aler. of (in, id Mound. Iowa, recentlv committed ulcide by hanging herself to a do ' knob with a bod-sheet. A petitun lor a mechanic's hen on Potter Palatr'a great throo-niillion-dollar hotel, at Chicago, bu been iil,l iu tho Muporior Court of that city by the contractor and builder of the structure. The Connecticut Mutual Lifo InwtiaM flMMlny tan a mortgage of 1.000,000 on tho property, and the plaintiff prayn that Haid company be made a party de-
feuiUut, u l tliat tlte !ut ami l.ui!iliir be soil for the avuieut of the MM of ijof.OOO
llllO til Ii '.in. Iii j The great trot hot ween (ioli' and tho California horse IV -mite. Maid, .( tin i.. i i feiH-, foi a iiue October, whi vitu w , ' ,l jf teu tlivus.mj - - - v VI .up, - Mcus ir nn.ns.0 ation. The race was WOM fcyt . he Ma(i, easily, iu three straight hwtfk T,,io, 2:H ' , fet, '2.22. The re uU & ,ori, (U(,a, . pointnient to UM r,liforiii4,,, M thev had fondly tu ped their favorite 'aorse would Went from Goldsmith 1 jyg i,er well-earned meed of queen of th 4 tttrf.' Occidout is a so m l gelding, aboi , in 5jars of age, who served Iiis time in , MMlkMl wagon, and was unknown to tjtpf. uutil pu ich a cd by exGov. L' Stanford. President of the CenÖSÜ 1' jcf, Railroad Company, and trained by Jam s. KofT, a well-known horseman. ues Oval met his frieud Michael ConI ,0.', at Grmid Tower. 111., the other day, and ua shaK ilk hands the latter hurt a boil which ! Oval had on his hand. From this trivial cause an altercation arose, which culminated in Michael receiving a death stab from the amial le James. William Chick has been sentenced to le banged, at Indianapolis, for tho murder of lus wife iu April last. Tho Directors of the Colorado Kiret railroad, in viow of the bitter hostility existing in San Francisco to railroad subsiding, have published a card withdrawing from the vote of the people of that city the proposed $10,000,000 subidy. Two-thirds of the St. Louis Ect-ning IHspatch has been sold by W. H. McHeury to D. Robert Barclay for $80,000. The Ninth. Louisville has been having a grand jollification over the opening of her new railroad to the South. The architect, contractor and builder of the structure which fell at. Louisville, the other day, and crusho i several persons to death, have been arrested and h;ld in M000 bail each. Five deaths have aheady resulted from the calamity, and others will probably die of their io juries. The building in which the IMeigh (N. C.) Seiiliuel is printed was nearly destroyed the other day, by an explosion of gunpowder, which some parties had placed under the press-room. The presses and machinery were completely demolished. Over 1.100 Germau emigrants, en routo for Texas, arrived at New Orleans in one day last week, by steamship from Hamburg. Bishop Bayley has been installed as ArchbMMf of the Diocese of Baltimore The work of building the Texas Pacific railroad is being vigorously pushed. Five hundred miles are already under contract, and a large force of laborers has been engaged. Negro labor is being maiuly employed, but Gen. Dodge has arranged for a force of 1,000 Chinese The line under contract is that part of the main stem from Marshall west to Fort Worth, and the branch north from Marshall to a point opposil. Fulton, Ark., and thence westerly to the west main stem near Fori Worth, will proceed during the winter. At Louisville, the other day. a negro named William Fery murdered his wife and mother by stabbing thom with a knife. The murderer cave himself up. and said he wanted to be hung immediately. The first frost of the season in the South occurred at Nashville, Tetin.. on the Hth of October. James Kenny, a prisoner at Nashville, has confessed to the lO0,00i) diamond robbery at New Orleans, iu which, ho says, Forrester, the alleged Nathan murderer, was his accomplice and that the steamboats Thompson Doan, Magenta and others were fired to aid ii the robbery. Kenny accuses Forrester of the Nathan murder. A letter from Parsons. Kinsas, etat that Vice-President Dennison. of tho Missouri, KaiiafcJ and Texas railroad, who has just returned from Texas, has made arrangements for the vigorous prosecution of the road southward. The great bridge across Rod rirer wili be completed by Nov. 15. The rush to Texas from the Northern .-states over this route is said to be wonderful. Large quantities of cotton are accumulating along the line of the road, awaiting shipment to the Eastern markets. The South Carolina Legislature will probably elect Congressman Elliott lo the United States Senate in place of Sawyer. Elliott is a full-blooded nogro, and was formerly a barber in Poston. F.J. Moses, regular Republican, has been elected Governor of South Carolina. Ramser, Elliott and Raincy, colored Republicans, and B. F. Perry, Democrat, are elected to Congress. Washington. It is staled in a Washington dispatch flint the PinntdMt has refused to obey the dictum of Cameron to drive John Vs. Forney out of tho Republican party, and said he looked ODM their differences as of a local nutiue. It is announce 1 that Piesident Grant, in his furthcoming message to Congress, will recommend that prompt and vi orous measures be taken to protect the citizens of the Texan border from the incursions of Mexican bandits and cattle thieves. Bids were opened at the Quartermaster General e office last week for furnishing headstones for soldiers' graves in the different national cemeteries. There were in all 171 bidders, and the bids ranged from 50 cents to i? 15 per stone. All the departments were closed and dressed in mourning on tho 11th of October, the day Of Mr. Sew aid's funeral. S ncc the adjournment of Congress the Government Printing Office has been finishing the printing ordered during the last sossion. This amounts to ft0,000oetevo and quaito volumes, ranging from Ml to 000 pages each. Of this MM M 255,000 volumes arc agricultural and Ku-Klux reports, tho latter being 13 volumes, and the printing of the census reports is also in progress. Four thousand volumes in muslin are bound daily. Three hundred compositors and 30 pressmen, and 400 females are in the
Ml
A, unit thr aggregate of all th- i tinplujrM Crtrei l.uOrt. A Übtored Undent has publisheJ a card, a t'.cing that at the law department of Howuid l uiversity, there have been niou graduated who, from their owu hps, tMalft ttal their OiMftAlM extended to the ability to lead in the Fourth S.hool Reader. Attorney General Williams emphatically denies that ho lutends to retire from the Cabinet after the Presidential election. The Ria Grande ConiuiiNtiiou MJMMnt tnat the truth of the disordor ou the Texan frontier bat not us yet beou half told, audthat Meaico is in every instance the aggressor. An officer of high standing ai Annapolis says that the story of tho maltreatment of and injustice to the colored cadet midshipman Confers is wholly false. Several naval ofttcsrs who recently arrived iu Washington from Annapolis declare that they know nothwhatever of the reported disordurs. Foreign. Two more Communists have been sentenced to death at Paris. The Abolition Society of Madrhl continue the agitatiou of the slavery question. Thev have just sent to the Cortos a petition for the uiaiiuuiisMoii of slaves in Cuba and Porto Rico. A Republican revolt of alarming proportions has broken out iu the Spanish proviueo of Coruuua. The news of the death of Mr. Seward was received in England with great surprise, no intimation of his illness having reached there. Tho daily papers of Loudon contain elaborate biographies of tho distinguished statesman. The St irn says : '"Although Mr. Seward was unpopular here, by reason of his lather perenipj tory bearing, ho leaves behind him a great example of vigor, euergy and success." Another religious row is threatened in Lis burn, belaud, and an additional military force has been sent there. It is reported that Th iers has requested Victor Emanuel to recall the Italian Minister to France, because ho is a Bonapartist. Prince Napoleon has been banished from France. The election for President of the Repubic of Mexico occurred on Saturdav, Oct. 12. There being no opposition to the present incumbent, Lerdo de Tejeda, the election passed off quietly. The London papers give the particulars of the arrest of a woman in West Auckland on a charge of wholesale poisoning. This modern Borgia is accused of naviug caused the death by poisoning, iu the course of her career, of no less than nineteen persons, including three husbands. The railway between Yokohama and Yeddo, Japan, has been formally thrown open to the public by the Mikado. Prince Frederick Henry Albert, ttio third and youngest brother of tho Emperor Wbliam of Prussia, died recently iu Berlin, at the age of 62 years. The Internationals are preparing fur a great demonstration iu Hyde Park, Loudon, on 'he 30th of November. The German army of occupation are evacuating the Department of the Upper Manie, in France. It is authoritatively announced that the Pope will remain iu Rome. Under the neT tax ievy in Cuba, a tax of j 24 is imposed upon each slave in the island, which will produce a revenue of 7,000,000. Quite a sensation has been created in Pari by the discovery that two thousand bombs had been sent to tho city with some revolutionary design. Tho bombs, or grenades, are r-iiuiiar to those that Orsini threw from a house-top at the Emperor Napoleon in ISO and the suspicion is that they are to be used for a like purpose, with Thiers substituted for Kap le ju. T!;e Republicans of the Department of the Gironde, in France, have adopted the "Amer ican system of nominating .'arm .ate-, and I roceuth held a convention to name a eandiI date for the National Assembly. This i- tho j first instance of the kind in Europe. A passenger train of ten cars on the Eastj eru railway ran off tho track near Chelmsford. England, precipitated the coaches down a I high embankment and dashed them to pieces. I Three or four passengers wero killed, and about twonty seriously injured. Tho exodus from Alsaco and Lorraine is without a parallel iu modern times. Whoie districts are already depopulated. Of the C,000 inhabitants of Otserman, an Alsatian town, at tho timo of the surrender at Sedn, only three persons remain. At Metz the able-bodied population is so reduced that only soveuteeu men subject to military duty remain, aud that whole seventcon are said to be unfit for sorvice. Eighteen thousand people left the city in the last two weeks of September. So dep sc-.ted is the hatred of German rule, and so determined aro the people to cscapo it, that in instances almost innumerable they have abandoned their homes and, wih what personal effects that could be swung on their shoulders oa a walking-stick, have set out on foot to quit tho annexed territory. The movement seems on tho increase, and unless checked will leave both provinces dosolato, to bo populated and restored to prosperity, if at all, by tho Germans themselves. A Paris Communist has surrendered himself to the authorities at Brussels, and confessed to having been an accomplice of Trauppmann, who murdered an cntiro family near Paris. For BtltiOMfst An exceedingly pretty floral curiosity may bt produced by tukiriu' I tiok if elder, boring out the pith, Illing Un CHvity with pood Mfftll, and sowing it in seeds of several Bowtrt that bloom at tho same time. The seed will soon germinate, and he plants grow Bp together, and with tlie sti.ni-. bfMehM and leaves MOJT will appear to grow from the MM! root. A max recently kicked himself from Liverpool to London, nr.le, in two days, on a vehscipide.
WILLIAM HUI SLWAHI.
Urn III Ol Ihr Fill Im III lllle!"" Tfm Ileur of hie llliica -Uriel Iii r" (illicit I Hkrirh. Hon. llUan ,r maM towM kh lasf at Ins rMtoMi m Auburn, . Y., at fifteen miou,, :ifler five o'clock, on tle VWtlftg of Thursday. Oet. 10. A jtVani furnishes the following p.tr ticulars of the sad event : " Mr. Seward having taken cold and been somewhat unwell fi r h day or two was, on the evening of Situreay, flu 5th, seized with ii severe chill, and his physician was summoned to him. He had been, during the summer, in his ordinary good health, suffering only from the inconvenience of the muscular palsy of his arms, ami had been en gaged in preparing for the press his account of his recent journey around the world. The chill was that of ordinary tertian ague, accompanied by I harassing catarrhal couth. It was followed by fever and delirium, which lasted till late in the night on Sunday, lie was up in the afternoon, took dinner and passed a cotntortafde night. On Monday, with the exception of Iiis rough and catarrh, he was comfortable, and die'ated s usual to his assistants on the completion of h s book. He piayed wbiat0 Monday evcniinr, but at 10 ;. m. h ulifhL chill occurred, followed by delirium and lever, with aggravated catarrhal disturbance of the chest, which lasted nearly all night, his physician seeing him on this MCOUOt after midnight. On Tuesday morning, after some sleep, he was a.ain better, and drove out in the af ernoon, but fever, delirium, and restlessness returned with the cough on uesdny night. On Wednesday he drove out for two hours, and dictated tO bil annum ensis as usual, though harassed all day with the cough and the catarrhal effusion in the chest. " On Wednesday evening his congh abated for a while, and there seemed a promise of a good night, but the fe ver, restlessness, and couch returned nt bed time. He was nearly sleepless until S o'clock in the morning. At 4 a. m., to relieve the tedium of lying sleepie-s, he had his son William read the NewYork Times of Wednesday morning to him. He slept after 5 pretty eil till 11 a. m. of to-day, though bis lever kept up without any real remission. At halfpast 1 he was seized with MMt difficulty In breathing, caused by a fudden catarrhal effiuion int ) the lungs, commencing with the right lung, and soon involving the left also, which occasioned his death in about two hours. He entertained no apprehension but that he should recover from the att ick of catarrhal ague till last n glit and this morning. Wnilo at Iiis age and with the condition of muscular palsy, from which he has ufl'ered ss long, the fact that the fever was increasidg upon h m, together with the catarrhal disturbance, led his physicians to apprehend a fatal result in the course of a week or more, yet no immediate fear waa felt, and his dissolution was sudden and unexpected. Mr. Seward's intellectual faculties were clear and vigorous to the last, save when disturbed bv juroxysms of fever. Ju.t after the ell'.ision from the lungs to- ay, and thin king it would rei'eve his breathing, he was. at hi-own desire, placed on a lounge and bolstered up and moved from Irs adi .ining bodfOOn into his study, where, in the midst of his books and his literary ami other papers, and surrounded by his relativej and a few friends and his devoted dopend ants, he breathed his last. For thelMt hour of his life, as the powers of nature were giving aw:.y, his condition boMmc easy, and he Bpent his tinn in afu-c-tionate leave-takings of fdativos and dependants, and finally sunk quietly to his last rest, as if going to sie-;.." William H. Seward was horn in Orange county, X. Y., May 17, 1801. Hit anonatrjr was Celtic, wolan on his father's and Irish on his mother' lido, His father wis wealthy physician, who died in 849, At !." William Henry entered Union College; at l'.f, while still a student, he visited Geornia, and taught vcliool there for six months. He then returned to New York, and was admitted to the bar in 1822. The next year he changed his re-idence to Auburn, entering a law partnership with Jade Miller, and a year later married bit partner's daughter. Miss Frances Adafine Miller. In 1821. he begM tinwar upon the ''Albany Kfgency," the leaden of the Domoeretie party. In 1828 he presided at a Young Men's Convention held in New York favoring the election of John Q. Adams to th Presidency, and in the MUM year declined a nomination for ( ongress. In 1830 he was elected to the State Senate. In lv!.'l he visited Europe, publishing a series of letters in the Albany Evemng Journal. In 1834 he was n candidate for Governor of New York, and w:is opposed and defeated by Mr. Matey, 'and in lWS was again nominated lor the same ollice, this time beating his former opponent. In 1840 lie was re-electe J Governor, and, upon retiring, in 1S4U, resumed his practice of the law. In ls44 be vigorously supported Henry Clay, and in IM.s (Jen. Tayior, for the Presidency. The Legislature of New York, chosen in IMS, elected Mr. Seward L'nited States Senator for the term boginning March 4, 1849. In 1855 he was reelected to the Senate. In the Chicago Convention of LsfiO he had been a candidate lor tiie nomination, receiving as high as 173 votes. In the composition of his Cabinet, Mr. Lincoln appointed him Secretary of State, and during the war controlled our relations with foreign Governments. Upon the death of Mr, Lincoln, in I sf,.r,, ir. Seward was continued in ollice by President Johnson, and remained Secretary Of Stale until Match 4, 1869. having heid the office continuously for eight years. Mr. Seward was an industrious wriler. His official correspondence ns Secretary of State was voluminous. His speeches
er! -fu'"''- His unolticia! ad'li t.ek numerous. He alo vr,.t hi,.,,; dnr.n (Juiiuv A lams, ami another of De Witt ClintM. Alter bis retirement fron oihee be mads royaM hiik.u, ih' wuud, returning in 1871. In 144. vate liie he waa an ex-ni laiy senile, man. Kind and gMMOQI by nature be wm in all things opposed tooj i , sions or injustice. ( in rent Items. im. a is out of lebt. Tut l'nited States hns f, iron-cu ( Vessrls. Theke are only three giraflee in thil country. HrETs weigh IS pound- in the B , Hirer Valley. An S.i-yearold North Carolinian c. . longer the St.de to a foot rave. A vamiure bat, UMMlring IS inehe from tin to tip, was lately caught in Napa, Cal. . Fi vi: hundred coolies, ritb 9704)00 nj their own favincs have returned '.: ,
the v e.-t Indies to their home China. in Tu use of iteSUB power on the A marie and 'In . cake f'anal is neat suooess. More than 90,000 reeaeJi bare pasted through the canal. Tie Bureau of statistics baa lost published its fourth annual list of American vessels, which shows ?,n incre over l!.'.K)i craft of all classes during .. fiscal year ending last June. The total value of real and sstfsoual property in the county of Milwaukee, according to the assessment rolls .. completed; is 58tS0Sl29S.40. Of lb amount tlie city is assessed (46,572,G40. A chain elevator at VaUejo, California, '2'i feet high, and contain:::.8,000 tOM of grain, fell with a m crash the other day. it was built bf Chios go BOMpMjr as an experiment, in 1869) and was th unit stiucture of tlie kind in the Pacific States. The total loss, grain and ek-vator, was ifJT'l.OOO. Boston's oldest and most noted ooffi saloon Haven' colfee r"om on Schot street which wa Established in 1 ;?. has just been closed, after having furnished for thirty-live years ti,- best fee in the city. The old fashi : . and low-etodded rooms of the ream bare been the rendezvous o! thous:i of celebrities during ,the lust generation. The Chicairo Newspaper I'nien A Prosperons Institution. A correspondent write :.s follows from Chicago i At the time of the great fire which swept over Chicago one year ago. . i. i i educed the fair projiortions of the. Western metropolis to a rams of rubbish and ashes, the CniOAM New-i" i?. Union were preparing to move into their new t milling, on thr Sooth Si They had just fitted up, r-.t large pt-n-e, an elegant and corumodiouin a marble palace fronting the old Custom-House, on Monroe :-treet. ssd snother week would hare found Iben located there ; and, of coui-e, all th 1: machinery, presses and material, MO stitnting one of the mo't per foot printing establishments in Um Western country, would have born destroyed by that terrible storm of Same ah swept unre-istingly and unpityn - .- orer the doomed ity. Fortunately the building which I occupied iu the West l'.v.-ion. SI I which they weie alsiut to excJuusg mote oomoaodioua quartets on the." ou Side, wss beyond the reacii of the I fiend. It w:. the- only printing ofli of any magnitude tint m ipod the most universal wreck mi l ruin, course the concern was not ol su!:' Mpaoitj to undertake the bereu 1 task of printing all the nua.erou- ii papers iu the ctty. But it cettairJy i d all that possibly could hl dOM HB the circumstance in lending ah hand to its stricken coniempovari- -proprietors generously threw its dooropen and lent the us ol its presse , to four of thi large ilailies. The first ) i tt (an edition of the turning Pott) print I after the lire, was issued troni the i of the KawSTAMU Unmn on Mondaj afternoon, the 10th of October, Kwhile the flimoi vCeris even yet ragingi and before ihe extent of the awful chunity had become generally known and lor several weeks thereafter the numerous prOSSOS qf the ertal lishnu . i were taxed to their lulle; capacity, running night and dav, hi printing large edilions of the Daifu Ecenipj P ' Wy Raovbliatn (now Inur-Oeean), 1" fltoMl ttituna and Itaily DWtaSi PM serving their own juitrons a u-uai. Immediately altar the smoke ol great conUagration had cleaicd SMJ the proprietors Of the Union garp or deft for the recensti notion of their ne building, into which, as before MM tinned, they were on the eve of MM" ing at the tuneof Ita Mtmc tlon Meanwhile they have continued to OOCUp their old quarters in the We-t Division until within a few day- although sorely cramped for room. I 'n the anniversary of the destruction i Chfc they moved into their new structure,;-' 114 East Monroe street, where they N now located. Tho ollice of the OtK Xew si'ai f.r DltoWf as now arrange a model establishment. Wo haee beM i. nd seen, and know whereof wo IM and we feel sure wo do not exaggersl one jot or tittle when wo as-rt tint ' is one of ÜM most perfectly fitted up and bet arranged jirinling cflices ol kind in the country. A Yovno man in town, who is en : ling with his first mutache. propf s to iiame it after two leading base bah clubs, because there are nii.e on s suie-
