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I EVENING & BULLETIN. C(l)4 " HEW TO THE LINE, LET THE CHIPS FALL WHERE THEY MAY." VOLUME 1, M AYSYILLE, FRIDAY EVENING, MARCH 24-, 1882. NUMBER IDS. Kentucky Central R. R. THE MOST DEH1RABLE R0V1 E TO CINCINNATI. OJSLY LIKE R UXltJA'U FREE PAELOR CARS. BETWEEN LEXINGTON AND CINCINNATI 4 Time table iu etleet March 31, IbSl. Leave Lexington 7:JS0 n. m. Leave Maysville a. in. Leave Paris tWO a. in. Leave Cynlhiana 8:o5 a. in. Leave Falmouth 10:u0 a. in. Air. Cincinnati 11:45a. in. Leave Lexington !:& p. in. Arrive Maysville b:15 . in. Free Parlor Car leave Lexington at. Free Parlor Car leave Cincinnati at, mLi 2:15 p.m. 12:30 p.m. 3:05 p. m. 3:40 p. in. 1:30 p. m. 0:30 p. in. .2:15 p. in. .2:00 p. in. Close connection made in Ciuclnnatf tor all points North, East and West. Special rates to emigrants. Ask the agent at the above named places lor a time folder of" Hlue Grass Route." Hound trip tickets from Maysville and Lexington to Cincinnati sold at leduced lates'. For rates on household goods and Western tickets addi ess W. C. SADDLEli, Agt., Maysville, Ky. C. L.BROWN. GenM Pass, and Freight Agt. Coviugtoii) Flcmingsburg and Pound CSap uaili:as. Connecting with Trains on JC. C. R. R. Leave Fi.kminsrtik for Johnson Station: 5:4u u. in. Cincinnati Express. i):lh a. m Maysville Accommodation. 3:25 p. m. Lexington. 7:02 p. m. Maysville Express. Leave Johnson Station lor Flcmingsburg on the arrival of Trains on the K. C. K. R.: 6:23 a. in. 4:00 p. m. 0:48 a. m. V:37 p. in. Vnuceburg, MnyKVtlln and Cincinnati Packet. W. P. THOMPSON tf. L. ItuDUKK, Capt. Moss Taylok, Purser. H. Rbdden and A. O. Moksk. Clerks. Leaves ancouurg buiutays, Tuesdays and Thurtdays. Leaver Cincinnati Mondays. Wednesdays and Fridays. For freight or pas-sage apply on board. Vnnccburi?, Iloim, Concord. ManchcN. tcr and Jlaysvillc Daily Pncltt, IIANDV Bkuck RKi)DKN,Capt. R. L. Bhuoe, Clerk. Leves Vanceburg dally at ft n'nlni'k it. in. for MhvkvUIr. 'Leaves Maysville at 1:8)) p. in Goes to Ripley Mondays. Wednesday's and Friday. Connects at Manchester with stage1 for West Un.on. For freight or passage apply on board. For Rfnloy, Dover, Jlffrprinsport, 'hilo, Foster, Moscow, Xcw fiticluiiond and Cincinnati. DIOItXINf; ill AIL E. S. MoitGAN, Master F. A. Bkyson and Roiiy McCain, Cleiks. - Leaving Maysville at 11:30 I a. in. Arriving at Cincinnati at o p. m. UJ'PHIt OHIO. Cincinnati, Wheeling and Pittsburg. DAILY 5 P. M., PACKET LINE. J.N. Williamson, Sup't, Ofiice 4 Pub. Lan'g. Monday SCOTIA F. Maratta. Tuesday St. LAWRENCE -Win. List, Wed'y KAT IE STOCKDA LE.-Calhoon. Thursday HUDSON San ford. Friday ANDER-C. Muhleman. Sat'y EMMA Knowles. Freight received on 's wliarfboat, foot Main St.. at all hours. .J. Shearer PKQaWSHaJ & Co..Roase & Mosset, Agents. Cincinnati, Portsmouth, Hit; Sandy A-Pomeroy Packet Company. John Kyle, Pres. H. E. Gkkknk, Sec. L. Glknn, Treas. W. P. Walkku, Jr., Agent. C. and O. R. R. Packet fok Huntington. 4 P. For Pomeroy and All Way Lnndlugs. OHIO Mondays. Thuisdays, u P. M. TELEGRAPH Tupsdays. Fildays, 5 P. M. POTOMAC Wednesdays, Saturdays, 5 P. M. Portsmouth, all Mail and Way Landings. BONANZA. Tues'ys, Thurs'ys. Hatur'ys, 12 M. Maysville, All Mail and Way Landings. MORNING MAIL Daily. Leave Cincinnati 7 A. M. Maysviile. 3 P. M. Freight received on wharf-boat, toot of Broadway. C. M. HOLLO WAY, dent. NEW7 f I R. 1ML I YAGO & BEASLY, Manufacturers of First Class Carriages & Buggies of the latest style and best workmanship, (all of the latest Btyle Side Bar Springs). Also, Spring "Wagons. Repairing done with dispatch. Wall Street, next door to Pearck Bkos. Jan. 30 1879. HASVIM.K, KT. J. T. CASSIDY. P. M. YOUNG CaSSIDY&YOUNC, Wholesale and Retail Or ft. O CIS E R. 53, Produce and Commission Merchants,19 Market Street, (B. F. Thomas & Co.'s old stand.) Maysville, Ky. Dealeis in all kinds of Field and Garden Seeds, Flour, Fruits, Potatoes, Bacon and Lard, pure Liquors of all kind, Canned Goods a specialty. Highest market price paid eltliei In cash or trade for all kinds of Country Piodnce. Consignments solicited. f23Iy JOSEPH F. BRODRIGK TIig largest and most elegant assortment of all grades of Carpets, Lace Curtains and UPHOLSTERING GOODS Is constantly to be found at our extensive warerooms. Special attention paid k to non-resident buyers. Geo. F. Otte fc Co., ? MAYSV8LLE, KY. Fire5 Life and Marine. 1c "c I c lie wc ADDCTQ MY GRANDFATHER'S MILL. BY MHS. METTIE J. Jl KOY,FOUMEKLY OK D3VKP, KY. My Grandfather's mill, At the foot of the-hill. Has stood for many a year, And ground out the corn, At evening and morn, For people who lived far and near. 'Twas a wonder to me, In my childhood, to see ' The ponderous structure so high, When I climbed to the top, With asklp and a hop. I thought I was " most to the sky." Full many a day, I've spent there, at play: And down by the window I'd kneel; With eyes shining bright, I'd watch with delight, The water pourover the wheel. The meal and the flour Came down in a shower, As pure as the snow, and as white; The wheels' busy whirr Kept the miller astir, From morning till late in the night. And when it grew late. He'd open the flood gate, And the water would dance on its way; It had worked with a will, In turning the mill, And now it was ready for play. Twas a beautiful sight, . In the clear moonlight, To see the miniature fall, The water went dashing, And flashing and splashing, Then flowed by the old garden wall Many years hae now paased, Since the wheel turned its last, And Grandfather's gone to ills rest; But the sturdy old mill Is standing there still, In mosses and spider-webs dressed. The race is now dry ; The water-wheel high Is broken and gone to decay; The hopper is bare; I can not find there The scales .were we used to welsh. The mill has looked down, Without e'er a frown, On four generations below, Since it was first planned By grand father's hand, Near three hcore and ten years ago. Fond memories still Cling round the old mil). From the roof to the foundation stone ; Though useless ajid old, No stranger so bold As to touch e'en the moss on Its gown. (xiiitenn Weakening. Chicago Tribune. Guite.au, according to Deputy Warden Ross, who has charge of him is weakening. Warden Ross, being asked how his prisoner was, said : "Guiteau is not so well as he has been. lie weakened a great deal last week." "From what cause?" "It wiTs the interview in some Chicago newspaper in which Scoville said he was willing Guiteau should be sacrificed if thereby public attention would be called to the necessity for reform in the law relating to insane criminals." "Guiteau now reminds me," said his Warden, "of the story connected with the hanging of Modoc Captain Jack. As the noose was about to be put about his neck Capt. Jack said : 'Don't hang me. Hang Scar-faced Cliarlev.' That is just the way with Guiteau. lie has no objection to legislation on the subject of insanity, but he does not want to be hung at any rate, not as an example of the defioiences of the law. He is quite willing that Scoville or anybody else shall be hung. Indeed, he said so the other day. In a paroxysm of fear he cried out to one of the guards, 'Why don't they hang Scoville and let me go ? I am a high-toned gentleman, and he is only a real-estate lawyer. The country can spare him better than it can spare me!"' "This interview," continued Ross,' throw Guiteau into a fever, and he has had the sulks ever since. He is well. His appetite, which has always been very great, has entirely failed him within the past week. There was a curious incident the other day at the jail. A man came to visit him who said he had traveled all the way from Tennessee just to. take a look at him, and the tramp said : ' started with out a cent, I beat the railroad for the passage, and I have not a cent now.' Guiteau was greatly interested in the tramp's storv. His experience in beating a railroad company seemed to recall pleasant memories to Guiteau, and when the tramp left Gniteau did not ask him to buy a photograph or an autograph, butgave him a half dollar, and said that he hoped that would help to get a good square meal. This is the first Visitor Guiteau has had who was not invited to purchase something." " Do you think Guiteau will break down onliis way to the scaffold V" his keeper was asked. "I think that he will break drown then, and before that time. He is breaking down now. My impression is that, as soon as the court in banc decides against him, he will break down entirely, and I think he will probably die of inanition before the day set for his execution arrives." The Coining Republican War. Philadelphia Times. There are two great lions in the Stalwart path the dead Garfield and the living Blaine. The memory of Garlic 11 could be successfully clouded with the party organs and party machinery, but Blaine is a Stalwart foe before whom the bravest Starlwarts cower, and he is wily as he is brave and powerful. He dines with Arthur and Arthur dines with him, but neither is deceived by the other. Both know that soon, at the latest, they must lock horns for a struggle from which both cannot emerge with political life, and Arthur, with all his patronage and organs, and machinery, trembles when he contemplates the conflict. It is Blaine that Arthur fears, and it is the fear of Blaine that mikes the hitherto bold and confessedly sagacious Arthur take his steps with a degree of caution that is freely condemned as cowardice. Blaine has no lines of retreat in his strategy. He can not force the battle, for it must come from Arthur, but when it does come, as it must, he will welcome it. He is ready row; he has been ready since the dav Garfield died, and he will patientlv await the Stalwart assault that must come in time and that may come any day, and when it does come, Blaine will be to Arthur's administration what Clay was to Tyler's; what Douglas was to Buchanan's, and what Stevens was to Johnson's. It may or may not make Blaine President, but it will leave Arthur's administration a hopeless wreck. Blaine is the confessed representative of the policy of the late President Garfield and the issue as accepted by the Nation is a direct issue between a better Republican rule and a combination of spoilsmen. Such an issue, with Blaine's matchless ability and magnetism to, inspire the popular side can mean but one" result the overthrow of Arthur and the mastery of Blaine. Balancing the Books. At the end of last year, when an Ohio bank cashier could not make his books balance, the president sat down with him and said : " Mr. Symonds, it is evident that you have made a clerical error somewhere." " But I have verified my figures over and over again," protested the cashier. "Just so, but yet you have overlooked the error. According to your hooks this bank is $700 22 short?" " Yes, sir." "According to my private memoranda you are a $400 trotting horse and a $300 diamond pin ahead, while the rats probably ate up the 22 cents. Please correct the error and furnisti a clean balance sheet." Mr. Symonds isn't a bank cashier any more, iiis health was so bad that he had to have outdoor employment. An Austin boy came from school very much excited, and told his father that ho believed all human beings were descended from apes, which made the old man so mad that he replied angrily: ".That may be the case with you, but it ain't with me ; I can tell you that, now:"