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Mrning Star and Catholic Mesener. tatW o3tL3naV, 5trNiDýAB4IZ74ý lt1 lets. PERB MEAUQUETE. sLv .r ad s m sequw sn. t 9, salges7a s tagusns* w r, ! , With mere tham sombeandt shyasmyd e e a alisar *mJl' se ddeaa wn* bleh setteis ith6 .. .".e. +;, rai wett· cwal'ashiteinth 'the :slr ,y+! J Ui ,l+ hsralug Greenf fame,. nr . n - g, I 7th breachisas hle' coming time, to hear thy mach.; ~A'Lw with all the msddenlng wine ¢'' Which tites in thi vet el yofuth, Drunk with the splendot of the lee Orani dreams, then hldest for the truth. Ob. matchless spleddor of the dye I .re yet we have unleerned oar dreams; How, ram the sueset side of life, Tse radianoe of thea gleams I I sees thee standing now amid The fragrance of those early hopes, Why, yet, from thy deep eyes, are hid Life's saddened western elopes. And thon 1 watch thee, while the thought Of duty slowly ills thy seol, Till, by degrees, thy life is brought 'NTenth its divine patrol, And elowly, adly, e by me, Thy#Pmm, thy hopes before it fall. Til the eqs thought-wrk t be bdnea pr Qe4 q 4tau.-i s.1alL Acras the asm it *eesb thy feet, Ae est'he trackles western wild, Whear the rpdh savage, stern aud aeet, Lists to thq words, as mild And gentlbt, thou dest speak; Whild ethersperish lquick as thought, They seemst read, thosuh poor sad weak, S The kmeassa theou best brought. Around Superter' pictured rocks They gather, Ilstening to thy words, While far away the battle'e shooks Seem to recede, and chords Of tenderer feeling softly stir Within each dull and savage heart ; Christ's name upon the page they blur With tears from founts which rarely start. In lodges of each warlike race I see thee welcomed with great cheer, And emany a stern and sombre face Lights up to ee thee near. Through dales of rivers bread and deep, Wisconsin and the turbid Fox, Fearless and strong, I n thee leap, Adown each bed of rocks. BeesIde thee stands a trusted friend, The stern brave, red with war-paint stain,, While on each side widely extend The savage, unknown lands. Portage, and marsb, and sandy bar Impede thy course and hide their track, Butenward led, as by a star. Thou never lookest hack. Safely throuugh Mississippi's waves. They lead thee on thy goodly quest, Dottaing the shore along with graves Of bravest and of best. O, journey grand, on unknown trail, Amid anew werld's darksome shades, Tait new quest for she $oly Grail, Glows like the old crusadels! Now, by Lake Huron's stony shore, They point as to a lonel grave; nRudely the inland sea dotq roar. Wildly the pine trees wave, I - And jagged rocks aung everydhere. Hear sesat and sombre eate of mess; No vine, no dowse is swying there, Npeght saves a meesgown cross, Yet more than saealptred menamet, Or lower.strewn grave in Pere L Chaise, Is that low mound where he, content To rest so, shines adown the ways Of this dnll age, and shows us so, A mans to dill our lengaing eyes, Whereuin with saintly radiance glow The beauties of self-saqrifie. The Two Temples. Letters recently received at the State Department, giving account of discoveries made in Jerusalem, by the English party working under the direction of those who control the "Palestine exploration fund,' are of much interest. Excavations have noew been in progress for nearly three 1 years. In spite of the obstacles thrown in the way by the ignorance, stupidity and I cunning of the Orientals; in spite of perils I front falling stones and poisonous air, free- s sing waters and suffrocating heat; In spite 1 of the superstitions of Turkish dignitaries, i the results thaus far reached are mostsatisfa- a tory. In fact, topographical controversies t centuries old have been settled by poel tive discoveries. As an example of the Mos lem stupidity which the explorers had to a eneonater, take the objections of the Palha s of Jerasples, a well educasted military a man, not wanting in brains. He assured h Captain Warren that it was unnees to d dig about thehfoly City to settle arobh og- Y i bal 4pbe. Mohammedan traditfiobs Were i allU sa cient, he said. Sakhvm, the sacred b rook, lay on the top leaves of a palm tree, a from the rqots of which sprang all rivers. To E pry into aqD matters, he thought, was o s#re preearkor of dire calamity. The ex. a cavations proceeded nevertheless. a Jeresaleiam Is built on a fidge of roOk d. which Is the badkboee of Palestine. It is cl approashedono l by tough moanuaim roede, a Tihe position has great natural strength. It "i is at the present time surrounded by a mae- 'i sie, well bullt 'wal. Five of the city w gatasare open, Ave dloted. All are anoient. Upon Ms. Morisb there is a large open hpaoe, studded with eypress and Olive and saurounded with, perhaps, the* B; 4st masopry in the world. ,zt the oen- th f this area rises Sakhara, tbhe mosque qe wf& its smfaseIoglyr beautifl dome. This be WOu Cbtletians call the "'ioly' sanctu- pt ~ki~ Within the same area once itood a bqbie'TheTeimple of Solomon sibd that or erot*a by Herod. M traoes disappeared y q mmand te sset posilions eeapFed nj bthq har for years bon Lertely co- fo teatod points In regard to the topography .p of Jerusalem. Was Solomon's Temple qe coextebsite with the sanctuary? Was is je eopfined to a eqeare of 600 feet in the south- mI west cornert Or was it placed elsewhere 4 in what is now the great open apace? g These questions excavation only can an swer, It is certain that stoo bacuca built in by Rerod stood on the souther Iban this we do not yet know. Father Ryan will lecture this (n So· ing, at 74 o'clook, in St. Patrick's ject, " The Great Men of the South.5 slon, ifty cents. r. 3leqrapbisal-ngkt av. Dr. Doyle. B bvajf oatile pt tbhe life L 41ýº{,or ..A` 14 ·PW and saruated prelate, o NW la oberisbedae one., the ht lksbiaes of. the Irish Chuh, andse .who 5 steiateipoeasywIth Asebbiehep ughes, both whose majestic. iatlltets, S, .mdeideir usst ireaelhAcess. aWe bel A. If ,.ths lpý ýs ýoatad of 1785 the 54iW~frpiitih',ýdl I)8j ' w' be. son`'of Sames Doyle:b. '1i&pedebl ihrmer, nts) the town of. Netw Dcsb"onogity: Wexfor4, * rod was bhorn- t tbetaatgma.etf 1.. .At the age 9 d" elpv th teary he wit hn9s e4 the nmos terrifi doings of the frst lplPrro, thin of 178 he lived within Vi~w oif Vinegaeftil, whihb, i sueoces ba& crovrned the efforts of the Irish in the unequal cod test, would ha.vtrbeeeme as great an object. of historical interest as Banker Hil is at the presentday, In his boyhood he felt that he had a vo cation for the Church, and received his c'a siealeducation in an Augustinlan men eatery, and he pursued his snbseqqeot arademlcal and classical coaurse in the Uni versity of Coimbra, Portugal. He was distinguished even in his yeuthful days for intellectaal tastes and for a remarkable aptitude for study and learning. The even tenor of his collegiate life was interrupted by the invasiano of Pertugal by the Frenob, He shouldered hit muasket to repel, in con jnnotion with Welliogton and the allies, the invaders of the, country of his tempo tary sojourn. "I was," sys Dr. Doyle, "a ders of nondescript with the rank of captai, And as inaterpreter between the English and rPotongam 5~eeres a I wa, present at the battle of Caldfa, Relies and VIm iero* I was greatly exposed to the fare o the enemy, as I was obliged to keep going to and fro with orders and dispatches to the Portuguese General." He brought up Gen eral Anstruther's division, then returning from Sweden, within a eomparatively short distance of Vimiero. They were in time to take their position in the field, and con tributed to the success of that great day. But if young Doyle put on the soldier, he did not put off the saint. "Before and during the bloody engagements," he says, at BRolica, where the French lost fifteen hundred men, "I was intrenched behind a strong wind-mill, ball-proof, employed in giving spiritual assistance to a nunm ber of soldiers, who, knowing that I was in priest's orders, sought my aid." In 1808 he returned to Iteland, and was chosen professor of rhetorio in Carlow Col lege, and, a short time after, was promoted to the chair of theology, which onerous and arduous duties he discharged with exem plary zeal. He was chosen bishop in 1819, at an age but little over thirty years. After his elevation to the epiacopacy his letters over the signature of "'J. K. L." (James of Kildare and Leighlin) began to appear, which, by their style, force and reasoning, startled the public mind, and impressed weightily the literary as well as the po litical circles of the day, and were as much looked for by the reading public as were' the writings of Janinus in his time. No political writings have appeared since which could compare with Dr. Doyle's in ability, force of argument or lucid exposi tions of his snbject. Strength and decisive ness were the great characteristics of Dr. Doyle's mind. These lie manifested even at an early age-first;h, when he was in im- i minent danger of bbing'bahot near one of ( the battlefields of '986 sad aubdeqpently in Portugal, whea,he donpedthe military to tame. They were still more manifest in a the ItHouse of Lords and Commopus, where 4 he stood undauntedly beforp the leading i ten of the Undited Kingdom, asi witnes s on Irish questions, when several able men 1 were overpowered by the ordeal. HBi ee tertained nor moral ,fe nor trembling be- a fore leading Englishmen-on the entrary, i he was resolute sad collected amid a host 1 of importunatle and insolent qnestioners I who were directly opposed to him. He differed with O'Connell on very im- a portant questions, and ene in partiacular. 1 that of thip Irish poor laws, which Lord t John Russell, in later years, used.with yen s geance for the destrucation of Irish life in E doleing out unwholesome and insuffoicient ' sfood TbeEnglieh Government frequently made I overtures of patronage for his friends, i which he spurned with indignation-assert. v ing that "gifts corrupt the heart, abase the o amind and pervert the conscience." "My ti kidgdom," he replied, "is not of this world ; a I have no link to bind me to it." Dr. I Doyle's charity was unbounded, and his a self-abnegation proverbial. A zealous pre late and a patriot, he performed much labor C in a few years, and died, in what is gener- a ally termed the prime of life, at the age of al forty-eight years, on the 15th June, 13. p G PtaucaLr Muixrzwxoaz. - The well- se known capitalist and miping speaulator, ti Alviess Hayward, has dispensed his Chbrit- di ant charlties on a scaile complensurate with fto his great *e lth 'and truly philanthroplic s dispositon; He has gtean away no less a of sam than twenty thousead dollars to char' pe itable institations, and ave thousand of It ta has been donate4 to the. Catholic Orphan- of age. or this magpficent liberality Mr. to Hyward will receive the warmest Miks t44 of all classes of his fellow-citizens, who th will oheernilly acknowledge that, with him he at all events, the possesslon of great wdalth at does not harden the heart against the at clime of the poor and friendless. Mr. Ru Hayward evidently believes that not in we Ubonsnazsa alone are good investments to iAn be found, ald he does not forget that be tic who giveth tothe poor Jendeth to the Lord. in -Baa Freeciseo Guardian. B; CoAnuxPrtOir OF SPIrTS IN GR iT i BirrAnq.-The consomption of spirits In (B the United! Kingdom in the frst three th quarters of the year 1874 appears to havei "u been greater than in the corresponding ble period of last year, but the inrease is ann much lese than that whioh 1878 showed aln over its predeceseor. In the Arat three we quarters of 1874 duty was paid on 11,717,- wa 8850 llous of homse-made spirits, entered Jam for consumption as beverage in England, ano an increase of 688,122 gallons over the col quantity in the corresponding period of cot 1873; in Scotland, 4,877,752 gallons, an tiff increase of 169,072 gallons; in Ireland, Gei 4,384,669 gallons, a decrease of 131,140 Mc gallons. Therefore, for the United King- yea dom the quantity of 30,980,271 gallons, an gin increase of 726,051 gallons over the quan- als S*. the corresponding period of last wh .7 . e foreign sad colonial spirits (not tha "cu tor mixed) entered for consump- ant j¶~ieas - the nine months amounted to to. -..0 os f gallous, an increase of 134,- pre arouser the quantity in the cor- sIea te eostributWtOd of lsat year. ant The ear atshieslsq, Isa if. pi.T.-Ustteiseriusw - -» to, Our Mast Holy Father. Pope Pius I., he ha4,isfWeds wq we, rs lea e , / the , eria op t eab5tiotOd, o' ti, eerPea esarSWA. This: yes is ts 'aw l' al- tuuimsaasae, fop,Iti, aceordlvega i presesip-' tie w om fe . oi hst ld Wýfact6~y coedittoflbfthe ' 'efat CRstia'thts ' wo ld beweo dbli dei of beadtes o. thiJubiis. We presuome that, It sO) tfu satwtisiptf avowji of $piltrlme r4, tlui tiiE rnil T iy Its eoucx ,the Ju- ice' dt '(R4 IV 1tbiesboshof If of''ts gran he dear and solemnity. But there appearsisa ic- be no reason why the-visit to the tomb or of the Aposesl sbei dispeassd with, the ed. whole Church of God should not blase with id- an eathuhigsa of dervor ed penitence sunoh att as has been evoked by a. Jubilee . since at Bonifake VIII. ushered in the fourteenth centlry with the fibrat. We have much to do 'o- penance for; we have also much for whichb hi4 a Jubilee of Joy is demanded. We are a persecuted everywhere, but is there a weak at spot in any part of the Charch t Many of ai- our bishopa are in prison, so even is the 'as Pontiff in bhis own Eternal City-the CLty 'or of the Jubilee-bus have we not this to ale console as : that his days have been pro en longed as it were by miracle, and that he ed stil lives to guide us bythe voice of Peter, bh. spoken through tbhe month of Plo Has a he not, too, demonstrated over and over as, again that even if kinogs are not with us, lo- thea Holy Ghost remains with the Church "a during all time t lu, While ths universal pilgrimages of the ad old days to Rome are perhaps not possible, at during this Jabilee, we desire to remind s- Catholisaof the eateedingly great bentfls o which resulted from the American Pilgrim og age of last yepr. :Tbere would be a ape he cmal appropriateneas in undertaking thid n- year each andthef pious jotirley. We og trust that the - Catholic Union, or somre art other responsible organisation will under no take such a holy enterprise. n y. The Tomb of the BlMessed Virgin. ad On quittibg Jerusnealem by St. Stephen's 'a, gate on the east side of the city, one do an soends through a ravine into the depths of ad the valley of Josaphat, having to the right ed and left the Mussulman cemetery. After n- passilng the bed of the torrent Cedroa, as which is always dry, you perceive to your left the facade of the Church of the As as sumption, which is built at the foot of the ,i- Mount of Olives and at some little distance ad from the grotto where our Lord sweat 3d blood on the eve of his passion. Forty n- eight steps which the feet of thousands 9, have nearly worn away, conduct to a vast or and dark chamber, cat out of the solid rs rock. The tomb of the Holy Virgin is of hewn out of the living rock and like that of ir, her divine Son, is covered with white mar g, ble, so that pilgrims may not commit any ed acts of vandalism by carrying off fragments o- thereof. One may repeat of this tomb what as Chateaubriand said about the Holy Sep as ulchre, that "It will have nothing to yield to. upon Judgment day," for tradition says ce that' the body of Mary was assumed into in Heaven ýtieo days after her death.. St. ii- helena bnlltkere a nobleghurch in bpnor e- o our Laily, but theouildera, following the 'r. bad exinpre of the architects of the Holy an Sepulchre; dlhtted the todLB fIdi the rock, o- learving only justbthe bloek o whblch was of the tombiteslf,' intact. The walls of the In church have all. been all ats out of the a- solid mountalin, and it l 14ag "bt damp in and dark. This churco contas te tomb to of HIelfsThda, wilb of BsidwiA II. bad ig raotherof Baldwin IV, laings of Jerusaloba.. as This princses ondncoted the affairs of in the kiopdom -fi'o, thl yr as regent. - Her tot o $ thte t an entealag the: a- sacred edificeq, and it -rerted that$be r, iaults below contain side the tombs of St. at Joachim, St. Ante 'tad St. J h. ub. is this is protaby n rset tibnaund edo the wellkneown fact tha tshe Jews asually c- chose one brial place for all the mem r. bers of their family. Aronulph, who visited d the tomb in the seventh century, mentions a a church above ground, probab built by n St. Helena. It was round like the London it "Temple." in the year 1100, Godfrey de Bonillon established here a convent of o Benedictines, but in 1263 Queen Joan of' i, Naples signed a treaty with the BSultan whereby the church passed into the charge a of the Franciscans. o the seventeenth can y tury the Greek schismatics obtained pos Ssession of it; but in 1666, Count La Haye,t French Ambassador to the Sublime Porte sa caused the Franciscans to be restored as I nguardIans of the sanctuary. In 1757, the r Count de Vergennes obtained from Turkey a farman whereby the rights of the Francis f cans were clearly defined, and since that period, as at the Holy Sepulchre, the Greeks and Latins 'have shared this sacred spot between them. Some an- r thors seem to think that the Holy Virgin died at Ephoseasbt this opinion is only founded on ,a cbaee phrase Inserted in a synodial letter addressed by the Fathers of the Council, 4. I. 471, tothe clergy and - people of thh cly' of Ephesus which con i tains this uufiisieg-phrase :-"The heresy , of the Nestorisans was condemned in the . town where John the 4Aeologian, and Mary thae Mothr .Q God'-But the Fathers.. of a the Council did not say that Mary died et here, but seem only to have wished to -call 9 attention to the great reseleet paid to her L at Ephesns as is eastly proved by Father eg Russelli, a monk of the Holy Land in bit A work '"Op the dpgmatic deioltion of the l asumptipn of Mary Most Holy." Tradi- L don assutes us' that qhe dled at Jerusalem in the Ceinacdluhi on Mont'Zion aned not at Ephesns. Dionyatis the Aredpaglte, a oontemporary of the Virgln thus ezpresses himself in the book of "Divine name" 51 (Book I, Chap. III.1 in speaking to Timeo thy on the subject of the death of Mary. , "You remember that when we were assem bled near our pontifls (the disciples,) a and Alled with the Holy Ghoest, and with many of oar holy brethrea . we reverenced that holy body whioh was the asylum .of the Author of life James, the bronter.-cotain of the Lor - and Peter the great 9rae nt and prlncioal column of the thhofogy wre with us. ta contemplating this holy body all the pon tiffs praised the goodness of the Lord sad Mi Gerotide morrethan all the rest." Slant * Moiton of Sardia, who wrote towards the year170, saysin his book De Irsites Vir. sq gini. that the Iother of God died in Jero- - salem. Polycratus, Bishop of Ephesus, who lived in tbh third century, afirms also that the Blessed Virgin died at Jerusalem and Javenal, bishop of the city, in reply to a letter addressed him by the Em press Pulcheria on the sabject of the tomb answered that Princess ths: We have an anieent sad very true tradition that Mary *d 4oidield is Jsessale.,aod was buried In te Valley of Joeapbihsrad tlpt all the sphtti were arsreulo l gathered tdgether aesat her btdeatbL bal sa, eummone fea f e al e peatms af the ___l~ -4ý eA purpoe", yr: were egory of TTours sbiol ath been. AeMt an a61 Tr b J N thrJ: h l b rle s ~over her wherher of Onleton Ctie built a d. qb P s 'tim weadn4ed Uat Jesealem and thJese "tgib-5 -uscsuffs34b new. ism, p b e w h 'ant enrMta G wae men ue ase o a Ihi cond As am of Mary:Ib'A Usayst "IWe od to abl othat the Holy Virgin was berie 4a te vato 3Ief .an at wheere her. tomb en-w ledher. wrbh ori., at the Coonl o Clettfont Ai. OD. n O h-esys: prS. Maty the Vrln diet at Jerus lem esad ia there uried. Tohe, end.ien Greek meoeloed thus speaks of the death and Assumptio of Mary: "It pleased God to call Mayu His mother to himself, He lsent her an angoel to rannounce toher, her death. ThIs news Oiled her with Joy. She ascended' the Mounta of Olives and there prayed after rwhich she returned to her house and pre pared for her send. Her Son appeared to her. Afterwards a rumbling sound like thunder was heard and all the dApostles were athebred together havrlong beessn brought to her bed side by angels. Having blessed them Mary expired. They then bsioed her and three days afterwards God raised her body and took her to himself," AMother menology states that" the aostles saw her rise up Ito Heaven" and that "her tomb was Oiled with 'roses." The-day of the defto of ofr Lady is believed to. have been August th5, he day on wblich the Church oolnmezorateshgr glorious Asesuamp Mtioua The origin of this feast dates baclk se tsr as the fourth century. we e- MISCELLANEOUS ADVERTIEaENTS. MURPHY'S HOTEL, Not. 98 and 100 St. Charles Street, i's *. KENNEDY ! I. LARKIN.......Proprietors. e The Hotel baving received a thorough renovation of from top to bottom, the proprietrs would respectfully lit inform their frleads and the publiUo (reident and tro. er steant) that they are now ready to accommodate them D, with Board and Purnished Rooms. tr The BAR, stocked with choice liquors. and the a. BOWLING ALLEY attached, will afford pleasure ad he comfort to all who may call on Ce ja3 Sm KENNEDY A LABKIN. at * CITY AND COUNTRY MERCHANTS, as Id ALL WHO NEED TO REPLENISH THEIR STOBES of OR OFFICES r. ly wrra at BLANK BOOKS AND STATIONERY, VF Are respeqtfally requested to call upon to JMES A. GRESrIAM, oo kseIgr and Statiopar 92.............Cainp reet.... ....92 e And epamionebl very somplege steoke. d Napd times aa overtaken every man lis rh.s, I.. sad it behooves, every one to eeontmae, sad save Ia f OfoICE bTA'tIONkIRY, In Blank Books especiallUy, Swhich have been high elaes the war. pp MedIam LEDGERS, JOWENALS and DAY BOOKS eati So. per quit Demys Mat se. sad sf. per quine .; Cap rom aee, to s5e.per ruie. t. kse waag Ntuk Nesks or St6e eery will de e weil to emia saegam etsek. 7 JAMES A. 03MSEANr, 1. deslm OsCampetreet. Q SOLYLAlA, r Engraver and Printer, n 18............St. Charles street............18 SAll kindsI angrlg done In the beet tyle. Ball f committes intvited to look at the latest t lee of ordes ofDancig and German favors received from I Berlin sod Paris, uhea the moot fastidious mind csa Sbe stiftied. nos ¶.n GEORGE A. SCHUMACHER,. ,C HURCH ORGAN MA NUFACTURR$ B S10-12........N. High 8treet.........10-12 ORGANS BUILT OP AM Y IZ STYLE AND I DIMENS~IONS And Warranted for FIve Years. !I olevmea, Organiuts sod 'Church Committees ewe se~eoe ikly lavised tosases. PLase sad Upeealess. TUNGO s REPAIRING dnse oshort seioe aq resonable keras. Addres OeO A. SCEUmACaE . A--8 . Blsh strgheet,C Beltme ad for Cleoguse. nee am WAITERS' NBK SCLE PIANOS (8SUARE eAtha the bee geae . enave s dsad Vs ibreuh the WAPFER' OONOBRPO ORGANS saic be msrud to iee or eemalthey d Icr eosl ti. The Concerto6 Stop to as mtation o the luAeL is OngS fOra; alec, to le t greet buý . AtANTe WANTED in cwry O~o It the a.B A derofdki ouitoTechcrs. Ministers. Cbomuhes, Schools, BLodges, NBO,'atf O llOa, ON 491 Broadway. New York. P.O. Box 255?. E4 AONG OF GRACE AND GLORY. D The ayery e b ndoy mscool aong Beook. BW. F.i tathe illan s ie . VAIL. la P aes. IN sdid HyErm. ciS Mwue r Teeded Pse., Aueror B tredsg. Praim isn TSers o ero per dosn I per Io. A : S Aiesem Opy, l pOperevr, c . Eaileagoar t re NIX NEW If ONGS, is pempAne, No. 8bt ae *reetapsie, Ocani or Aaslt sqsiarea um oe cf Oes ed O y." Pise. s s apss su el8. a Apsilea eels 74s sy prItO. m~~eceILasrm Oegj ve the A e uery Seg a -e mIle OA. setssm . E .beresadws~. New o . ..n e. ss~. A CARD. a The undersigned toformus his friends and the pub L. that he will give lesenas Is VOCAL aOd INSTEP MENTAL MUSIC at his redsnes or at the residese ef pupils. Terms moderate. - H. A. BLAKE. Orgaiste St. Mieheli's Church. Residenos, No. 8? B e stret. eppeelt Asanaclatles Square. mylot Is, to to BOOTH, Alt ER k CO., !O POstSae, Buffa , N.Y. A' Specimess sent Us applicaties. eels 7ily HOR a FURNIUSUU GOODLS N]o1rIa zzT*AOsEsMARY. Hqu5 U3N1B1u1e whWelYSUant . C, WSH rAR,., . c , Q sawb.. *nGoVaD n Me sla@.s .M.. 29 Camp and 112 Common Skeet,, uuwosarau r with the bec..e..e fairtts m ew end . tA , mo nSad. we .shal taPe huueO.sss N SITS, tintsOL alU a sad UNDIAL DOOU ý ý in .S N ODS ew I. esd n hoSslh aenwmuatss whec oe.'.les *petees AS LOW AS LOW>1T. r Notee What a Little Moneey Will Bay. Aa eýt Wblin 6e. DIU13 BuT. 1 eee In pise ..s sr.................... $1340 leelt.b.. * as amane Plates. * ilesPlabs all Usee Paes p 9la Y ~goodtes ad IT. a Cups asd Samer. a 1. DlansrColn oar ..p sad U 1 en Dthe SN? (Telars D aalrs t t - n . SSouthwest W. .I D D CO., · .oGb 11o5 sr it--d . ..:. 5I f Thos price. onteplte ta ood, and ar eC all werrstud roeulse sod petere o. Agete foe the Cle R ated OLANOUAHD CHURNS, AndI the Largsdt Dealeres in Housekeeping Novelties I In the Southwest. NW. C. SEPARD & CO., No 49 Camp street and 119 Cosmou street, lCARPE MAND OIL-CLOT WARE.HOUSE. Just racelred, lte patterns of O A R P TS, Io VELVET. B.U.SCLS. THRRH.PLT and INGRAIN. CoENICUP. WINDOW SHADES, LACE CURTAINS, ICANTON MATTIN(GS and OIL.CLOTH. ef Isteet etgle at ELL1I & CO.'s, 1611 ..............Canal Street.............18 .eat 74 i" GROCFRS-COMMISSI1ON MERCHAlrTS. N. conery. K. Coarr 3' E. CONiRY SoN. WHQOLEBALB GROCERS, . towmaisioiu Merchants and Dealers in Westn Produce. OORNER OF CANAL AND DELTA " gT1 aoe 74 ly mw oar.anas. I . L4W.ER, GENERAL , EMLSSIOBI 5MCHART, 25. tO7,1, .} a Kh ral4a PNoW ),vgrA .. ., voawmzEAOw A Good auply of tha i amlusealwys on WrORN. RAOONr LAI3D.1W CORNf 6AT5 W'A REV CON AL. Cash Advanced on All Coeasments (coO powrithhl,. Shipments Advanced On. e B bsued Ila My Ope PoUcy. Personal Attention Devet*ed All Blsieso Natrmated to My Care. PROMPT IN ALL TIGMOL In the exsOutlon of your conmatds. Is the ashaow. I .g soe of es.tpt ad advise of sl of your sossl maot, sad 1 remltting aes prooeed aoompaatso with soont solos. All order for Westero or BSathers Ped.es Aled promptly at the lowest marh) rae. aIstsgaoto allways uarted o osmlslo. ohge forau tLag Orders for goods which I may have oen hand foll emlslon shao foer soiing anlt mgnaeoa. Uomelgnmsmta and Cee,7are rsepocif.U letd slOdi CARRIAGE MAKERS. JOSIEPR 80HWARTZ, nmroaa Ua SOALiae Is Carriage, Wagon oand Cart aterlas, Ul~ingn 3rs. bIr Mabld. IWheL, Dqw " map' edlees il 12 wa..y Bag PAI ST AWS T osmra s. aý7~m SPATUET WERL stva'rssmass war., Carriage and Wagon Maker and BRepairer, SALEB ROOM. 2O. 74 CABOXDZLET ST., reery-Nel. s Crreal Stra4 ams 74 it maw oSatnm. J THOMSON * BRoe., Carriage and Spring Wagon Elkers, 68 and 70...... Rampart Street .68 and 70 Between Cemmea sad efattw, Reeote4 Bplgbin Pramlnmunhatte Wase or 1t71, Ig and 18731or best .ily Whbaea.4Vtinteh Opea and Top Bggice, Ber Wagna, onecar Wagon, upres Wages. *to. Uales ptreaiO weeks., aid empetnla iee bet the bee cachanle. we em preparv mask. 8.41 or repair Cirrlagee, Rugglie, Ss".e ringoa'eea iof refer tomany businese min i tci ci t onala etic.e i ear maInataere. All work guaranteed. i74 LIy W. F. CLARK, (sUccesson so A. sess,) 134 sand IS6..... Rampart 8treet.....134 and 136 beweas . Tleesao mad as. Peter, saw oat aam. - Manufacturer ef all kild. of - Carriages, Barouohes, Buggles, Expree Wagons, PaItform sad Eiiipti Sprieg Wagoes, SSWING NACglNR WAGONO , arc. resoraed the FIRST PReIUMT at the rEaaias a iasle at If" fr theg beeat Viieeia bell aly where .____ COLUMBIA HOTEL, COLUMBIA. SOUTH CAROLINA. This Hotel was built and establiebed Immeudiatly after the war, and cUnl retalaa lie repatasie tar Iti large aid airy ale eof rom wtb all dera Lr - Mats. Th Dilarrooms on rth S r, TceI Botunda, Barbersho sad BRillard-room attachetd"aa aid bells, threeobut te heuse. TabIncemed to nea. in the Stat, Tha ouee Is situated on Maca atreet, ia th. eagai, of the belew ppat of the eity. The Seotor Partner. Mr. WA[. (IORMAN, with tweaty yea,,' experiene st the Charleeten Hotel, Rat. tern btmef that e able to give entire atalafasts to ta meast fseildtlu er Tecena-Three Vielarelia per Day. T soli an OAMN tCoAlN . rogCPRepricies WETERII PROCE I, UuS3i NI J, T. WamIPOm f CaO, GWIN, OOm1N5ALZ & D NAT, 3'Ia) MOATT - HAY, GRAIN, CINMt4L PWDR, Weetewa Prod... OoeahaB. u 9S and 30...... Poydzaa Ikess....p..US 60* ~aCm. I NlaM JOHN EUNDRUION, WHOLESALE LIQUOR D3AL, 85 end 87....TohooplSgni 6U G"...5 a"W Cem.,~ l .1Lbar ~a saw ama. - . Miamah.t 1 of PALMS OR v 3ENago WERIKI, AL0OOELU, aaypm a6a Emg.sa r. a . ILa.6~.j WHO SAl.R 6ROCRR2i OOMMISSION MsZRA3CHT. AND USA= 66 No. 25 Daetar 8we" (lae. Old L.a.)o,., Omwr Cauasombwa UaS.. jIIn74 /y - w.ou.a~a M. W. rr.~- -~~-- X. A. WTlao NOW YNry. br oI.r HOYT & WILCOX, WlloLK*AL D3&zam IN NORTHERN AND WESTERN PR(ODW3 Butter and Cheese a Speolalty, 82...... Tohoopitoula. Stra.... .0 Corns. LafawJralMrt. mj194 74 17 s3w OaLsaazu S ERIIAL AblVKEIUaiu.we MEDICALADVARTITSIIEEUT3 MILYfD A~s>"'7ll 'mm Ows suns. =TA, r.Npraeo.A * 111. ...,4 n "mo = monto of the Stosomb,. &rrt a whir. ý Ui.el De mncb's,4dke~l pomtol. h,$IO many years h.ve oioa'tbem to be lb. miaw tusk md beet O sit tbe Vilsote dieeteb /r tgo guM. yM7 ,.41i 41. bicot od.741" .oL mtt*d / ,cotorqMlo *. A4Py"s.o u04eef eqet .J, ,A& ANTXDOTE TO C#148 t SS tv C° uriaou~rslo s~oi or *kb d>BrslLb ; ONE '0WI O TH LED AR ~ sls C"W1EIf 'TAW I O Tlo ~ LIi x. srxLlRnUprS L gpDSW " TIOX0am UDNAWSM U fi 3w5.In . r! T T .D~ Oe T f 148N a . r., ~BACK AtkI LQ3SIg' A 9L T .ap om.B7GTb... jo ms>< ..+a. bE-ii. -t7 bu... Ito siebi 1 beooa dpessod atll ad d!! reee wb If op ~th.ocutsest. wuld loco eserhd Dse~~ msue hosset too escss klf 700 mTOS I £1L3 LUNG 34III AM ...r dleee...d. A N TINGUISHZD CLEGYMAK Nof Pew Yoh ptr 0m0 It the boat. l I wit tizy. sods co. so h.ls 110s t toeb S" .t p twll tt. attest Tew ih. . N3R TRADE KIII £3 3 THE BEST TONIC 3rAT83 IN THE MO= SAbLES LARGER* TEA" EVR. "csft mbalo of " boe$ ahisk ýlot per.tt SARR&CENIA ROOT. ~, Ddltghtfly 7. doal. lI IS. rseerl~b.db zeo4 dlug Ubdtom pdb bet=.t lavI a Sold by FEEDERZIII SON 47TN fA7 SCHMIDT t ENIGLER. ,.1lyt sod by oil dseore.».a Ossaw.Oomey.yqr uOLo PEI H . HELL & 00., Jewelsrs and Gold P nEakuiw, Tm amn G9U DSAD LOVES! P L" tr.. repujated S.it M. Wu*.bin a .mimep 5q.mI. 86........._..84 Chide 8b'st......... aIn 24 llJ Osum. 1mruWIm A, J. A. KZRNAN T0oS. WN1T& PRAOTIOAL CILDIe.S 106 Coetomboa.. utrmt, new R y.i, SSW @RLEAin. Lashtng 03mmd Pst P.w F. ?, a tam. late emS ta1 e m .e Ore.in m .t m) Ol P~tl~gp ressmk r.Used .1 vatzhb~d. Hailing a bemle... S.alw..... as -- in )eur. t ti d), be M a"" 61,1 . to tiynMea, me eaL l 3m they mmuin m qmmb that~ror~ l~ uwh. hu ~s~.h h~ i. .hmm. $bar wrrt b" lte~wf.. to Ltr t d e. X. a.-Tfe as ...e~e ti. a lu i. sr~Yo~~ ~ci p j ezsemhL.