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DAILY EVENING BULLETIN. WEDNESDAY, EVE., JULY 19, 1882. ii i i i in bosser & McCarthy, PUBLISHERS AND PROPRIETORS. ADVERTISING RATES. c 3 3 g 2 2 3 5 n m Space. " c. a. 5" & 3 5 rc en a: ic One Inch 50 M) 70 80 00 1.C0 Two inches....... 70 83 1.00 l.lo 1.30 1.45 Three Inches W) 1.10 1.30 1.50 1.70 1.90 Four inches 1.20 1.45 1.70 1.05 2.20 2.45 Half col,, I.8U 2.20 2.60 3.00 3 40 3.S0 One col 3.00 3.50 4.00 4,50 5.00 5.50 Local notices ten cents a line: subsequent insertions five cents a line. Wants, three lines, ten cents, subsequent insertions live cents. Special rates where advertisers use both the dally and weekly. One inch In the Daily Bullktxx for one year costs 53, and for six months but 53. A iot of wearied business men, Have got it in their pate, They'll lengthen out their time of lite By shutting up at eight. So round the town a paper goes, And when its signed, then maybe, They'll scoot for home and settle down, To Jackstruwswith the baby. The Kentucky Central Railroad received two new engines from the east Saturday. The Odd Fellows' library on Tuesday, received a full set of HarperTs Magazine, neatlv bound. Mr. W. H. Means has sold his thoroughbred stallion War Dance, to Mr. Moses Daulton, for a good price. We are requested to say that there will be no service at the Third street Presbyterian Church this evening, on acount of the repairs in progress. Messrs. Amos Means & Son, of Lewis county, bought a few days ago of Thurman Pollock, the fine saddle and harness horse Diamond, valued at $1,200. The names of the democrats, if any there are, who intend to proscribe Dennis Fitzgerald, ou account of his race and religion, will furnish interesting reading. The East End Reed and Cornet Band have ordered handsome uniforms from Messrs. Pettibone & Co., the military clothiers, afr Cincinnati. They are to be made up immediately. There will be picnic at Britain's grove Lawrence Creek, on Saturday, the 29th inst., for the purpose of raising money to rebuild the school house lately destroyed by a cyclone. Everybody is invited to be present. The funeral sermon for Mrs. Mary McDonald will be preached at Salem M. E. Church, next Sunday, July 23rd at 10 o'clock, a. rn., by Rev. H. C. Northcott. Mrs. McDonald, usually known as "Aunt Polly," was near ninety years of age when she died and joined the M. E. Church in her eleventh year. There will be a basket meeting on Thursday and Friday, July 27th and 28th at McKibben's School House, Bracken, county, Ky., by Rev. H.C. Northcott,pastor assisted by Rev. E. L. Sanders of Mays ville, Ky. Services begin on Thursday at 10 o'clock a. m., on Friday, at 9 o'clock a. m. All are invited. The crop outlook is thus given by the Louisyille. Commpjcial : The grain markets are weaker, as is usually the case when stocks aro booming. The iact of it is, the crops la this country were never more promising that! now, and then the prospect lor a heavy fall and winter business is bettering dally. The only crop the most persistent bear can point to as In the least discouraging la corn aud the shortage in the sections where the cop was injured by the heay &'ns is likely t be more than overcome by the heavy production of the more favored tflstr'o s. Recent Deaths. Wo are called upon this morning to record the deaths of several valued citizens of this city and neighborhood. Mrs. John Ryder died at her home in East Maysville, on Monday. She was a good woman and will be lamented by many friends. The funeral took place on Tuesday. Mr. Tim. Hierley died at' nine o'clock this morning, after an illness of about three weeks, in the fifty-fifth year of his age. He was born in Cork, Ireland, and came to this country about thirty years ago. He was an honest man and a good and useful citizen. The funeral will take place Friday morning at nine o'clock, from St. Patrick's Church, under the auspices of St. Patrick's Benevolent Society, of which he was a member, Mrs. Miles Wilson, a lady much beloved in the neighborhood where she lived, died oir Tuesday morning at her home near Germantown, at the age of about fifty-three years. No death in the community for years has caused such profound regret. Mrs. David Clark, an old citizen of Maysville, and who left many friends in this community, died at Aberdeen, on Tuesday morning. PERSONALS. Points About People Here and Elsewhere. Mr. Wm. Cole is at home again after a short visit to friends in central Ohio. Mrs. J. T. Strode and Master Hall Strode are visiting friends in Clarke county. Mr. and Mrs. R. D. Stockton left Tuesday night for Cincinnati, on their way home to Georgetown, Ky. Mrs. Harry Darnell, of Dayton, Ky., left for home, Thursday, after a visit of two weeks to her mother, Mrs. Hugh Gilmore. Mr. A. N. Winn, of New Hampshire, an experienced manufacturer of cotton goods has accepted the position of assistant superintendent of the mills in this city. Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Vanden, of Cincinnati, were in Maysville, Tuesday, on their way to the Blue Lick Springs, where they will stay for ten days or two weeks. Mr. Charles Herbst, of Macon, Georgia, formerly, of Maysville, will be here this week, on his way to the Blue Licks, to attend the reunion of the First Kentucky Confederate Brigade. His old friends will bE pleased to meet him. Testimonial. Maysviille, July 17, 1882. Prof. C. J. Hall, Maysville, Ky. Dear Sir: You having been the tutor of our children for the past two years, we take pleasure in recommending you as a competent and thorough teacher; and those who desire an education will study their interest by attending your school. Your friends. J. James Wood, Andrew T. Cox, G. A. McCarthy, A. R. Glascock, A. J. Egnew, L. Foster, J. G. Hickman, D. Hechinger, C. H. White, J. W. Watson, H. C. Barklev, F. S. Owens, T. M. Green. B. A. Wallingford, City Statistics. The following items are taken from the books of the City Assessor for the present year: Real and personal property of whites ?2,10l.7G0 Real aud personal property of blacks 30,050 White tithes 1,000 Colored tithes 3t7 Dogs belonging to whites 41 Dogs belonging to blacks i 5 Hogs belonging to whites i t 82 Hogs belonging to blacks . .?.....;.... 10 Batches , 1 ip Cameo OilTaintiug This new and beautiful art will bo taught in this city by Mr. vv. 11. wease, an ex perienced artist'hliaa rooraeattl?e ieppeiriHouse. JTermsCO scholar. Don't fail to see samples on exhibition. In Time of Peace Prepare Tor War. Mosquito bars ready made, very cheap at jyl9d2v Hunt & Doyle's. The weather permitting wheat threshing will be finished in this county next week. The crop is a very fine one. The Latest "News." 1,000 yards of Lawns at 5 cents a yard. 2,000 yards best Calicoes at 5 cents a yard, 100 pair Seamless Socks at 5 cents a pair. Yard wide Bleached Cottons, worth 10 cents, selling at 7 cents. J. W. Sparks, jylodlw 24 Market street. The following paper is in circulation in this citv, and has alreadv been signed bv several firms. The example, it is thought, will be followed by other branches of business : Agreement between the dry goods merchants of Maysville, reg tlattng the hours Jor closing their respective stores, each day: We, the undersigned dry goods merchauts of the city ot Maysville, hereby agree to close our respective business houses a follows: Summer season,' from April 1st to October 1st at 8 p. m. Winter season, from October 1st to April 1st at 7 p. m, Saturdays excepted. Doors must be closed at the hour above specified, and no customers admitted thereafter, but customers already in the store may be waited upon. This agreement shall be binding only when signed by all the dry goods merchants of Maysville, and shall take effect August l, 1832. Maysville, Ky., July 17, 182. ABERDEEN ITEMS. Blackberries are plenty. Another wedding In town soon, John M. HJ11, is on the sick list. Mr. T. F, Ellis and B. Newton, were in West Union, Sunday. Charlie Goetlger, of Cincinnati, is visiting the family of Mr. A. Sorries of this place. The steamer W. P. Thompson took on a large shipment of tobacco from this place Tuesday evening. The slnglns at the M. E. Church, Sunday night was excellent. Mr. Frank Ellis presided at the organ iu his usual gracetul manner. Mrs. David Clark died at six o'clock, Tuesday morning. She was an old and respected citizen, and leaves a large number of friends to mourn her departure. Miss Cora Marsh, of Maysville, spent Satur day and Sunday with the Misses Wilson of this place. Mrs. Samuel B. Stevens and family of Mays ville, are the guests of her mother, Mrs. Harding, of this place. m Down They Go. Meaning the prices of job printing. The following low rates will hereafter rule at the Bulletin- Job Printing Rooms. They are the lowest ever offered in this city by any printing establishment. The reduction does not mean careless printing and inferior stock, but on the contrary first-class press-work and composition and the best quality of paper: Bill Heads per ream $3 00 Two Reams 0 00 Letter Heads per renin 4 50 Packet Note Heads per ream 3 OO Commercial Note Heads per ream 2 73 Envelopes per thousand fc 00 Visiting CArcU liy - 23c And other printing at proportionately low prices. A cotton shed owned by Lenoir Bros., at Lenoir's Station, Tenn., burned Sunday night. Loss, $6,000. A free fight occurred at a negro church testival at Richmond, Friday night and two men were fatally stabbed. Out With Our Indiana Cousins. Indianapolis, Ind , July 10, 1882. Editor Bulletin: The merited attractions of this metropolis excel all accounts given. To see is to believe and people will not believe until they see. Then come and see Indianapolis as it is Our cousin's home is our subject. Fred Rand formerly lived in Owingsville, Bath county, Ky., and migrated to Indianapolis in 1855. the year we were admitted to the bar in Maysville, when Judge Duvall was presiding. Judge Rand soon rose in the legal profession and is Judge of the Super-Court. His courtesies to us while in this city were continued during our stay. The first call we made wat on Oscar Hord, Ex-Attorney General of Indiana, a son of the late Frank T. Hord, and an associate ot Governor Hendricks. We have from our boyhood felt akin to the Hords, parents and children, living in friendship for the past forty years. General Hord tendered us every hospitality his eminent means and large facilities offered. Gov. Hendricks, who drives a splendid team, called to pay his respects. He no doubt had heard we corresponded for the Bulletin. The center of attracio land b a ted pride of alllndianians is the magnificent Court House. It has been our province to visit all the principal cities in this great country, East and West, North and South, including the Canadas and we admit the Indianapolis Court House excels everything constructed by the genius and art of man. Its stupendous dimensions, towering high above all other structures, the blending of the rich marble, wonderful stairways, i's spicio is courts and marble galleries, strike one as suggestive of oriental splendors. And now thes ambitious hoos'ers aro erecting a State House to excel th s pile of unequaled art. If we live we shall go to see it. Time is up and we must our face3 homeward. Indiana and Indianians have overwhelmed us with their enviable possessions and captured us with the magnificence of their homes as well as by the liberal and unlimited hospitalities extended to Colvin Bill. David Cook was lynched for attempted rape near Charleston, S. C. Thomas Scott, aged seventy-seven years, committed suicide at Troy, 0. The Hillsdales were refused -in entry in the Kensington amateur regatta. J. M. Gregory's warehouse b'irned at " Brooklyn, Iiid. Loss, $3,0J0; partially insured. MARRIED. July IS, ISS2, at the residence o' Kv. Father J.B, GIorleux..Miss MAGGIE SWiFT.or this city, to Mr. JOH.N B. LLOYD, of Lexington, Ky. In Memoriam. Died in Maysville, Kentucky, to day the loth Inst.. Hal Gray of that city. At my dNtant home and ere his mortal remains have been consigned to the tomb thl sad intelligence lias reached me. So swift yet agaiu, and again, has been my fate to be shocked and stunned and pluuged In grief by the speedluess of these remorseless shatts. They come tempered by no trentleness, have no mercy, stride without warning. The aged, the young, the gay, the unbound in the wilds of happiness and happiest moments, here have pause. The light ot memories Is present, it contrasts the dead with impartial and sacred truth, It but portrays the life that was, its Judgment is Just its decisior, final. I came within the circle of his home atiu immediate in the sphere of his home and his associations and wherever known In every feature and outline oi his gentle moln and mat nsrto attest that he never left a string in a human heart save when ho ceased to live. A FuiENn New Orleans, July loth 1SS2. &Pkn 91 pe day at home. Bamples worth 4JIU y3 & free, address Stinson it Co, portlaud, Maine. mur24iy UNEQUALED FETE! A brilliant MOONLIGlHT FETE, which will eclipae ail others will be given at the- SCHOOL GROUNDS, in East Maysville, on SATURDAY EK JULY 22, t by the EAST END REED and CORNET BAND. Waxed Stage for Dane ing. A superior String Bnd;wiU be in attendance. Refreshments of all kinds on the Grounds. J T 2L C ROBERT DAWSON, R, KEN STICKLEY, R. L. DAWSON; THOMAS BOYCE, jl8,5t EDWARD HUTCHESON. I