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The press and tribune. [volume] (Chicago, Ill.) 1859-1860, August 30, 1859, Image 2

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TUESDAY, AUGUST 30, 1858.
A SIGX OF THE 11HKS< v
TTc stated in our first notice of Douglas 1 es* lu
say, that the portions of it which would most th
excito the enthusiasm of his ftdbcronta in the to
free St*tf s. were t hose that approximated near- 01
©st in seuliuiont to Republicanism. An illu»* in
tratiou of the remark may be found inhiacMn- tl
ments upon the LxmstrucLion given by tbe De- ht
mocratic ivirtv to the Dred Scott decision, by T,
which i!h' obligaiiun of Congress to adopt a q
Slave oodo lor the protection of Slave property tl
in the Territories, is deduced. He roevta this it
dociri:ie by the declaration, that the Cousiitu- n
tion not guarautci; hlavery in the Territo- tl
rios: uud that as the right is not given to take n
slaves iiiio Uiem, the supposed decision of the c<
Supreme Court by which the existence of such tl
a right is recuguized, must mean something it
clso. the whole country hts \\
so it: nctwithstanding it bas been d
asserted thousands of times in Congress and n
out of Congress—in the Messages of the Presi- ft
dent of the United States—in almost every va- o
riety of ofhei;d document—in Democratic plat- b
forms—iu the entire ne;vspaper press of the I
country, and in books which have been written v
expressly upon that construction ot the decis- a
ion—by Judge Douglas him.self in his speeches c
in the Semite and on the stump, he having an- c
nouuevd iu advance that it was a subject which c
that tribunal alone could determine, and eubsc- \
qucntly having expressed his acquiescence and t
approval t.f it still ho now holds that J
the court could not have so docided, and for
the reason that the Constitution would not war- t
rant it. Thousands of times Mr. Douglas has 1
been aiked whother or not the people of Kan" f
sas, through their legislature, hud the power <
under the Constitution to exclude slavery dur- 1
ing their Territorial condition: and in every j
instance his reply was, " Thai is a judicial
question 'd-'in.ji (it? Supreme Court alone can 1
decide." Well, tht- Supreme Court has decided '
it, and now he says it was not a question for 1
it to decide —that the Constitution clearly and •
unmisukublv recognizes slavery only where it f
exists bv virtue oflocal hiw. 4
Here is a complete shifting of ground—an '
abandonment of modern Democratic platlonns '
nnd dogmxs, and the sutetiiution of good Ee» 1
publican doctrine in its stead ; and we venture (
to say, that no part of Douglas' essay will be
more heartily endorsed and eulogised by his '
adherents than this.
Again, it will be remembered that through
out the cauvass between Lincoln and Douglas, ,
the former constantly arcued that if the Con- ]
etitutiou guarantees slavery in the Territories,
it also guarantees it in the States; and that
Congress, while passing a slave code for its
protection in the Territo-ics, would also be
compelled to pass a slave code Jor its protec*
tion in the free Suites. Douglas invariably
met this argument with a sneer, evading any
direct argument in reply: but in his easay he
follows precisely the saruc liue of argument
that Mr. Lincoln did on the stump in 185 S. In
this respect he not only takes Republican
grounds, but L-* shows himself to be an out and
out Lii'Xiin man; and we arc also sure that
this of position, on the part of Douglas,
is hailed with uumhijik-d dvlight by liia ad- 1
herents.
In the Jonesboro dc-Uate. Liucoln showed
that as Douglas had accepted the Dred Scott
decision as a correct and authoritative expo
sition of the ledc-ral Constitution, he must
cither vote f.ir a shivo code or prove false to
his oath ton?uppoit the Constitution. Douglas'
reply was, that the decision bound Lincoln
quite a§ much as it Wn;nd himscll—that the
fact that L-ncobi repudiated it and lhat he
(Douglas) indorsed it made no difference as to
its binding character upon them in any vote
they might l-o called upon to give under it in
Congiess. Xow. however, Douglas, like Lin
ooln. repudiates the decision, or rather he
claims that no Midi decision could possibly
have been made, and so he feck himself free to
vote, just a* Liuenhi w -u!d were he in the Sen
ate, against a slave c jdc for the Territories.
Here Doughis isuu llepi'.'Aveaii ground again—
an out and out Liucoln man; and big adhe
rents are enthusiastic over the change in his
position. "Wh'-n even Doughis is driven by
the pressure i f piiblie opinion to adopt cardi
nal Republican principles, what should we not
l>« prepared to exjieet ? If he continues to
p-cgress as he lias done f-inee his canvass with
Liucoln, wuec next lie stumps the state we
filial! cxjK-ct him to use Lincoln's speeches in
stead of repeating his owe.
A NEW MOVEMENT IN CTA.H.
Our correspondent at Camp Floyd writes
under dale of July :»uih, euelosiug the pro
ceedings ofa ma-B cjuvention held at Fairfield,
Cedar County, Uuoj Territory, on the 2!id tilt..
presided over by the lion. Andrew Humph
reys, at wnieh an Ai ■;>i:i:sa: was prepared and
adopted, t » xiii; I'Kui'M; or the U.vitkd
Static. It pets forth with the declaration
that, that they (the Gentiles of Utah) have no
ilifcpositlou to interfere with the constitutional
r«gnis of »tjiy reiigiout; se.t, Jewiah, Pagan,
Monnon or Christian, but thatßrigham Young
aud his fuUowcrfS have established in Utah, a
union ol Church and State, acknowledging an
ecclesiastical head whose will is higher than
public law or private conscience, aud whose
mandate is sullicieni justilication for crimes of
every grade. That by Legislative enactment
the (mints have established ferry and bridge J
mouopolies all ov<>r the Territory, in the hands j
cf hierarchy whose tolls are oppressive to the I
people mid a great injury to the prosperity of
the community. That they coafisc-ite to the ■
church, all e?tra\s fjimd within the Territory,
and caeheut the jnoperty of deceased persons
to the same oiimiverous teceptacle. Tnaitliey
have assumed to apjirojiriate the timber, grass,
water and water ]»r;v l'*gus of the Territory to
the use and henclit of church digni
taries. Tu::t tiiev have invested tbe church
with corporate powers, dangerous to the liber
ties o! the inhabitants. That tbey have im
prisoned American for no other reason
than ilia: they refused to participate in their
uncivilized '• domestic institutions.'' That they
arc existing now as much in doliance of the
Constitution aad government of the United
States us when t':ey declared their indepen.
dcnce of the 1. tilled States, levied a military
Chest and forillied Echo.Canon. That tliey
haw murdered and rubUod whole trains of em
igrants, not sparing even defeuceless women
and children. That they have adopted a re
volting oriental practice lor the purj>oso of Re
curing male servants in their harems without
endangering the purity (!) of their households.
- That they have in numberless ways violated
the organic act of the Territory. That they
have stolen large amounts of property since
their pretended treaty of peace with the Uni
ted States.—aud much more to this purport.
In view of this suite of facts the Convention
resolve that a union of Church and State, mak
ing the latter >ul»&orvieut to the former, is
wholly incornpatiole with Republican institu
tion*. nnd tiiey call upon Congress to meet tba
rtijuircn cut ofrl.o Constitution which guaran
t-»es a Republican form of Government to all
communities within its jurisdiction. The just
ness of the demand cannot fail to impress eve
ry r.-flect;ng mind in the country, and we look
to Congress to take th<» Mormon question as
H t%rth by the Fairiield j>etitioners into se
rious consideration, jf deemed necessary let
the Hon«r of Representatives send a commis
6'on of inquiry to Utah. n« wns done in the
case of Kansas, and art firmly upon whatever
facts may be thus elicited.
TEE AVI'HOR OF THE PttKamv
KLAVEKY aCIlATIO?.
The editor of the 7Vm« nivs that, if noop
jMSit;on had been made in Congress to the vi
olation of the M.ssouri Compromise, there
would have Ik-ju no agitation of the slavery
question. Tuls profound observation eclipses
tho sa e observations of Dogberry. it
eay« that if Cha*e, Seward, "Wade
Hil»- aud Suuioer had not draim
ii:» an addtvsa to the people of the United
lul.irmi'ug tho;n of th? pTi>-slaveiT
h A. Doughs, Dave, Atchi
aoo and Robert Toombs tbaro would have
bean do agitation or excitement. But sup
pose tfa* Nebraska bill had contained no pro*
viakxi annulling the clause in the* UisaoUri
Act of 1820 which forbid Slurery north 0f36.30,
would Chase, Seward, WkAe, Hale or Sumnei
havo issued any manifesto to the people of f
the United States? vm first, the bill i
to swindle slavery into TTiin— and Rsbraskfc
or the *' manifesto" stposing and denounc
ing tl»e plot? "Which should be blamed,
tho incendiary who seta fire to a man's 5
house, or tho inmates who give tho alarm? L
The Times insists tbat all tbe excitement and t
agitation in the community would be caused by
those who cried lire, and rallied the neighbors >
in vain efforts to quench it Had the inmates 1
remained quiet, or merely stepped across j
tho street, thero would have been
no noise and conftision, and the inoendiaries
could have robbed the premises and carried off t
the plunder in peace and safety. And just so
in the plot to introduce slavery North of 3C.30,
where for 25 years it had been forbid
den by law. Thero would have been
no excitement II no body had opposed the
scheme. No excitement would have grown
out of the Dred Soott decision if no body ■
had taken issue with its atrocious dicta.
If a slave code passes Congress no agitation
will follow, if tbe people of the North tamely !
acquiesce. No cxcitemeat-will follow the re
opening of tho Airican Slave Trade, if those
opposed only keep quiet. It is resistance to
<pjgressiony that always produces agitation and
popular excitement But wbich is to blame,
those who aggress or those who resist? Tho
Tunes says it is the latter.
lowa and Minnesota were carved out of
the territory in which slavery was prohibited
by the compromise of 1820. Then Con
gress gTantod them territorial governments
or charters, no excitement or agitation,
followed. No "abolition manifestos'' were
issued. And if Kansas and Nebraska
had been organized by charters like
tho3o granted to lowa and Minnesota, there
never would liave been an angry word uttered
in Congress; no manifesto by Chase, Sumner,
Hale, Seward, or "Wade would have ever is
sued. It was the wicked, treacherous plot of
S. A. Douglas to re-open Vie African slave
trade in Kansas and Xthraska that caused the
excitement all over the land. Douglas is the
man who broke the Baltimore treaty of peace
of 1852, and revived the Slavery agitation.
What folly for the Times to deny this historical
fa.-t
The "Fane?" lb the North-TTeH.
Our Western exchanges are just now replete
with the doings of the " fancy." liorso thieves,
burglars, confidence men, blacklegs, forger*,
"prigs," and "pals" seem to be getting their
hands iu, preparatory to the great National
Fair, which will doubtless call them to this city
to hold a carnival, a couple of weeks hence,
even as tbe carcass gathers the young eagles to
gether. We copy a few cases which have passed
under our notice in looking at our morning's
mail.
The Jonesboro Gaz<ti« says it is customary
in that locality now-a days, when neighbor meets
neighbor, to ask the question " v. ho wus robbed
la>t night." The OazetU notices the robbery of
tbe railroad ticket office at that place, tbe burg
lary of t' e bouse of a widow lady, ditto of
another house wbich was entered at noonday
and robb"d of sllO in money, and tbe arrest of
a pair of horse thieves and counterfeiters at the
toivuof Anna. The Ga:tt(e concludes : "It is
very evident that we are now surrounded by an
organized band of desperate men, who perfectly
understand each other."
The Lane (Ogle Co.) Ltadir has been on the
track ofa gang of horse thieves for tn-o or three
weeks. A sufficient number of the scoundrel*
are now behind iron bars to evolve the fact that
there is an organized band of thieves ranging
the country from Madison, Wis., to Gale.shurg,
I'i iDcetoo, or perhaps Springfield in this State.
Among other, things tbey have invented an
alphabet for their owu use, which has been de
ciphered as follows:
"l'or A the character I is used; for B tbe letter
L. reversed; for C, the character O ; for D. the
letter L; for li, the letter O ; for F, a character
like the one used for A, inclined forward; tor
G. the fipure 4 : lor 11, a character resembling a
script capital T ; for 1, the letter i; for J, itie
figure 6; for K, tbe letter h; lor L, a
character reaembling a lower case script I; for
M, u perpeudiculur mark with two horizontal
short marks attached to the left; lbr X, a per
pendicular mark with one horizonal muik ut
; Uiehed to the centre towards the Jett; fur U, the
letter O; for I', the hgure ]; for K, the ielter 1';
for S, the letter T ; for L T , a character like the
letter A with the cro>s erased ; for Y, a charac
ter like a script b, tbe curve crowing and re
cros-ing the vertical line; for W, miuic cLarac
> ler as the V with a horizontal line attached to
i tho top towards the right; for X, the character
c 1 ; for V, the letter Y,"
The Ltadtr says tbat their headquarters arc
supposed to be bock of Mineral Point, Wis.
The Bureau Couuty Kepnl<Ucau chronicles the
arrest of a confidence man calling himself Cook,
who hired a horse at Princeton to go to l>ixon»
i intending to return the next day, (Friday.) On
Friday he telegraphed back stating that he
, should not return until Saturday. The owner
, of the horse suspecting that all was not right
went immediately to Dixon, and found him and
j the horse at the best hotel. He seemed to be
surprised, but gave a full explanation, which
appeared all right, and promised to pay well
for trouble and use of horse ; but instead of
doing so made bis escape from the hotel. The
ciiirens and officers were aroused, made fearch, j
> cud found him in a corn field, about 3 o'clock :
? Sunday afternoon. The hiring dodge seems to
1 be the favorite scheme of tbe "fancy" for getting
1 other people's horses into their general s'.able
a at Mineral Point, or wherever it may be.
0 The Springfield lndtptndtut gives the/«'«/'■*
optrandi of one John Adams, a noted dealer in
horseflesh, as follows:
"He gets the names of the most prominent
c farmers in some county, and then goes to a live*
g rv, to hire a horse to go and look at certain
farms. He represents tiini>elf as afurmerwbo
c has sold out iu home particular locality, o« ing
)f to th>i prevalence of bilhous di>easca. lie hires
Q the best two horse team he can get, und returns
ut night—pays for the team —thinks he will
", nnd look at Mr. So-and-so's farm to-morrow.
g On the second night he returns as before, if lie
thinks it advisable, he takes a team for a third
7 day. Next time he snys he heard ol the turm
got Col. So-and sn, or E.-quire So and-.»p, m d
thinks he would like to see them before lie pur
■° chuses—says hemavnot be back till to inor
i- row night. On the lost trip he "scoots," there
h by getting three days start of suspicion."
The Cincinnati £nquinr, noticiug the arrest
of a brace of thieves near Louisville, gives the
1 following copy of an oath found on the person
n of one of them, D. A. Rousb by name:
y name of all bis hosts of angels aud ministers,
wiiom I invoke to bear record of my words; in
' e the name ol bim below whom we fear, and whom
d we hate, I swear.
" I swear that from this moment to the end of
mv life I devote myself, without uny reserve, to
y tbe fancy reform; that I will never leave it with
out the permission of tbe Captain j tbat in >ick
ncss or in health, in adversity or in prosperity,
** 1 will ucver leuve, quit or resign without the
a consent of my Capuiu, 1 will obey my Captain,
even unto death, in all transactions; I will be
bound by the laws be has established aud with
the regulations he has made; and I invoke
these powers in the event of my faiiine to
fullfil this, my oath, to ahowcr down all the
l. ills to which humaa nature is susceptible;
may all maladies In which lingering wretch
es who crave to die atiU exist, be my fate;
■J may my days be restless, toy nights* fcloep
x leas, the pains and agonies of hell coud
me on to desperation, my limbs wither
J * from my body, mv body pirahzed wi:h sick
ness, my breath t .inted, my eyeballs sightless,
my »oul damned, if I fail'in'anything I have
,u sworn ; but all I implore that power 10 »howcr
k- upon me ten thousand times the miseries that
j g mortals eve" imagined, if I, bv word, thought,
deed or design, betray one of my brethren or
J- captain, or rai>e my band or voice to witness
is against him in a court or justice, may mv
tongue rot from its root to the lip, and leave nfc
a \ a speechless liar if lam in this guilty ; but I
11 swear to state all that is false, unless the truth
. can benefit the prisoner; to tiiis, in all and ev
ery part, I swear; to every word and sent, nee
e- 1 swear, by Hun above, and him below, aud all
,j. that nerves, 1 swear."
is Ball roads In Che Called State*.
5. A correspondent some days since requested
us to publish the number of miles of railroad
now in actual operation in the United States.
The Sailtray states that in niue
16 veare, or from lKid to 1859, tho railways of the
!r United States increased from 7,555 to !i7,M4
miles in length. In this period the increase in
the New England States amounted to C 2.74 per
cent, while in eight of the "Western States the
; increase was 1,201.41 per cent At the same time
!* the former gained in population 1C.12 per cent.,
*' and the latter 40.22. The total cost of the roads,
v up" to 1859, amounted to $3G5,431,t»?<\ of which
7 large sum it is supposed one-third bas been
* wasted iu construction. There are at this time
It 2£,00u miles of finished roads in the United
e States, aboat 16,000 miles either under con
•n struction or projected, requiring
-d f°r their construction.
1 Ex-President Pierce arrived in Boston on
u* Saturday tram his lengthy Luropean tour.
Opealai the —nialaawif ■
The campaign in Minnesota is opening up V
brightly for the success of tbt&epubiicaa ticket, brou
In some neighborhoods tht people, without grap
distinction of party, are going for tbe Republi*
can ticket Tha that back A
in tbe country thero U an almost universal
stampede of the farmer* to the Bepublican side, bgei
They universally say— into
M Tbeotatl»altco for a tfra, take
Tl** Tu<n octtbeelJ U>U«chate tried. doni
Democracy's we thed and luund waailnr,
Let ua fry tlii UepubUcan lide."
There was a great mass meeting held at Hast
ings on last Wednesday, which was addressed thcr
by Gov. Ramsey, Judge Goodrich, and I.Don- &
nelly, candidate for Lieutenant Governor. j
When the meeting'was organized there was red
introduced anew feature in election campaigns of t
in Minnesota. The Singing Committee of the
Hastings Bepublican Club, opened the exercises roo j
by chanting the "Song ofthePoorPre-emptor" auic
to the good old tune of " Rosia the Bow." The
whole aadience caught the chorus, and when
the last refrain at its close went up of Aiu
"1 lien Lcrr'B to the ItcnubUcaa ticket— AU!
S'crislnfto ten .th tt.«Biar—
Then down with Lteu ocnu-j's Becker,
We're b«£g--ued enough *s w« are"
—the applause sounded like the tramp of sol- A
dicrs of the line storming the Malakoff. "
Becker is the Moccasin candidate for Governor.
A large part of Governor Ramsey's speech was Q f <
devoted to State politics. Comparing the two of 5
platforms be said: bas
To sum it all up, tbe Democratic platform of
State policy nu t>nt no railioads at all—immedi
ate taxation ol the people to pay the interest on g. *
the Railroad Aid llonds—tbe "railroad compa- « .
nies, however, to retain all their Jauds, fran
chists and road beds. It surrendered every
thing to the corporations at the start, gave them
a bonus for uot living up to their engagements: . "
iu edict stopped the building of the railroads f
entirely; and propo&ed taxing the people unnec- ®i
e*«arily— to them if tue taxes were
collected—disastrously to the railroad compa
nies und the bondholders, aud most disastrous ,
to the credit of the State for a long period. If ,
carried out it would oppress the people, and it ° e< ;
might destroy also alt hope for the railroads £; li
and the landholders. The people could not
bearany more taxation. If any man looked at
the statistics, be would see the present taxes v,z .
all over the State, in a great measure, suspen- J lOl
ded or delinquent. The attempt to levy or col- " e .
lent more at this time would be most unwise, ca '
und could uot but be a failure. v
lie thought the Platform of State Policv
ad ipted b) tbe Republican Convention much
itie most manly and states-manlike. It was op- 1
posed to repudiation—it admitted tbe obligation e] &
to make the bonds good in the end—it übided
by the terms of the Loan Amendment to the U £ L
Coustitution—held the Railroad Companies to
the contract to build tbe roads and pay ti>e in- * ec
terest 00 the bonds—or, failing, ilo so, it
claimed that all the lands and piopc 1y of the
roads should justly go iuto the h-rds of the .
State, to be used as " assets" 'jy ihe sale ol
which the State authorities might reduce the
whole debt of tbe State to tbe bond-holders,
aud yet, perhaps, secure the building of the
roads by putiiug them into fresh hands pos
sessed of larger capital for the purpose. Il the
Republican patty gets into power, tbey would
ei;utuvor to "sacrifice'' neither the people nor P" 1
their creditors, but by a wise compromise, if °t'
possible, while holding all parlies to their obli-
endeavor to retrieve or settle the disas- "V.
tern of the past, as the necessary preliminary to Wl '
better times in the future. Keither capital nor P o '
immigration would come amongst us until •]
those difficulties were settled, so as to give con- <
lidt-Qce in our progress, and excite faith in our
destiny at once. * r
Tbe Bepublican Party. m ' (
The sudden springing up of this great section- ..
al party in the United States in lb.>4-o was not
le>a a matter of surprise than of regret to ull a f. <
men of national feeling, and strong hopes were
entertained that tbe rapidity of its decay would
equal that of its culmination. Up to this time, 1Q '
the result shows these hopes to bavc been de- r '
lusivc. We have before ua a brief and succinct < l u
hUtory of the party by oue of its own papers, in cei
which the followiog frank accouut of its origin P. e
and object, is giren : h 1
"TtieOiuaw i>r the Ren-Bur as —The Inripl -m
rti»|'*U'Wartl* IU-'ir.aiilrat-i 11 * erf takt-'i 111 I*M. Iramn'.Lite Fr
!y :ift- r tli lirenkliie is jiiecva of exUUnc fti tiisl'yitie re
jnsit <»t the Uiwm I In t-e foll.mlnc j-i-ar. . •
vVMjn, In laterals Am>rii:u.=. urnl A ti->bvcr\' mcti <t a 1 lrl
p-u '•? ami hues, cc-aLlasd to the authors ot th # ral
t'rtat c laic.*' (J e
The purpose in ourview, was to do something sh
else than puni?h the authors of the Repeal Act; ag
it was, iu reality, chiefly and almost solely, to c;i
prirti.t tktSouth from itapij.o iU htnefit cj tli* p r
A'!, by saving the J'errimrfes of Kansas and an
Nebraska to the North, and ultimately forming hi
out of their princely domains two mighty new re
free State* iu the West. In the North, where co
alnne thev hare had the power, tbey have /"//;•
Ifhnl vit/t political dsteat, those who supported til
the Repeal of the Missouri Compromise, almost bi
to a man, and in addition to ibis, thev have the to
satisfactiou of seeing Kansas and Nebraska now ati
preparing to cain admittance into tbe Uuiou as ra
fr<t Thu-t, then, both their avowed and tr
real aims have been prosecuted to a succes-ful j s
end, and as before suited, we arc unable to dis- l,t:
covert anv reason why the party re
shail longer be held together as aaistinct polil- it.
cal organization.—£t. Jos>*fh IF*#/. th
We will try and enlighten our Western co- at)
temporary why the "Republicans should hold
together" awhile longer. ri(
1-1, The Republicans want to keep slavery tu
and slave codes out of the remaining Territo- ®
ries, until they arc all safely in the Union as free
States; this will require a good many years ,
more of constant vigilance and organization.
2d, The Republican organization is needed to 0 f
prevent the slaveholders from mulcting the n
countrv iuto two or three hundred millions of a i
debt and damages to acquire two Catholic slave M
State?, known as Cuba; or, of plunging the na- j {
tion into a bloody war with the leading Powers
of Europe for the attainment of the same bane
ful end.
3d, Tbe Republican organization is vitally ne
cessary to prevent tbe re-opening of the African
slave trade, and importation of millions of C
" savages."
4th, No other organization is able to mate
successful bead against the schemes and dc- q
ma ids of the slavc-brcedirg class which now
rules the Government, and has opened a tlood
ti-le of '* extravagance, corruption aud section
alism." p
. *>th. The Republican is the only organization,
in the language of ihe which "iu IsGO can T
unite the majesiy of a free people, and take the
Government from the bands of the spoil.-men b
' aud place-hunters of party, aud restore it to its c
original purity and dignity." Brother, will you 11
} not jump aboard the train and help in the good p
? work? p
The Kauia* Constitution.
In Leavenworth, the 7<W;and Z'itu ij sup
port the Wyandot Constitution. Is is also en
dorsed by tbe Atchison CAampiop, tl»e Doni- .t
t pliau Post, the Palermo the Khvood
Prt**, the Lawrence ItfpuUu-dn, the Topcka |,
i 7'r'.hm t i, the Mound City Rrrald, the Ossawato- f<
3 tnie Herald, the Ka-isas I.'j-pnv, aud the Wyan- •
dot Oazt'.te. It is opposed by the Leavenworth
s Jltrald, ihe Atchison Uuion, the lowa Point v
t> the Junction City Stutii'd, the -Yc
tiOi-al DtihOcrat, the Wyandot Ar-jui, und the
Fort Scott finnO'-rat. The llera!d of Friidom v
i and the Kansas Prtu are on the fence. w
The St. l/ouis Hpttbi'uan has let up in its war 11
upon Kansas, so far to advocate its speedy ad
mission into the Union, in the following word?. J
The people of Kansas will apply to the pres
t cut Cougrens at its approaching sessiou for ud- ,j
Kussiuu as aSi ate iuvo the Umou- They have
framed a Constitution, which, it is presumed,
n will ratified by tbe popular vote. This Con- t |
stitution, exceptionable us it may be in the eyes /
c ol some, coutains no provision which, as we a
i conceive, ought tocndancer its acceptance at p
I'.ie hands of Congress. Nor are we aware of -j
u the exi-tencc of any n*asoii, aside from any nr
i giunent drawn from that insirument, which will
,C be seriously urged us a ground of exclusion
0 before that body. The feeing is a prevalent d
one, that Kansas has populationcnougu, though b
she may not be able to count up quite the nom- tl
ber prescribed in the act of Congress. The signs t:
cf coming opposition on that ground, wh'cb are
very few and faeblc, may properly be disregard- t
e cd.
ij Now, let ur all feel that "by-gones should be r
e by-gones." Kansas bos all the capabilities for
0 o'noble State. Her rich soil, healthy air, mild r
e climate and beautiful scenery are prolific ele
ments of growth and progress. ller vast re- c
' sources will be rapidly developed. This is as t
certain as the instincts of American emigration fl
which unerringly guide it to tbe choicest locali- v
J tie.", aud this development will be aided by the
r fact, wbich wc hope soon to be able to'pro
uouuee a fixed one, of a rich gold region lying d
| iu immediate proximity to Kansas. _ r -
The application of Kansas for aamissioa as a "
r State, we have remarked, will probably meet .
lt with no serious opposition. Here and "here a 1
t mousing politician—"a jmlitical Grimalkin"— I
r may be found toset up some pretence egainstit, i
, 3 winch will be merely u sham to mask a motive 1
v which he will be ashamed to avow, liut the 1
" c circle of such poor plotters is small. We think *
1 we can safely and assuredly say, it will embrace x
h no representative in Congress "from Missouri. |
!' Tbe Partcaar Chartered Steamer* 1
jj •'Converted" Into ]Sea*or*Har< '
Tbe six steamers chartered from private par- 1
ties by the C. S. Government for the Paraguay
expedition baring been subsequently purchased
in compliance with the iustructiona of Ci>n- ,
gresb, aie now tbe permanent properly or the 1
L United Stata.s. They have all been overhauled,
e docked, surve/ed, aud almost re-built. Their (
e bows hare been altered and somewhat improv
* od, but the gener :d objections to this services- '
n bleness as men-of-war can never be removed- '
:r They arc too weak, and, no matter what mis-
C representation may assert, be continu
-6 ully needing repair. L T p to this time it is estl
** mated that each of them has cost tbe
uicnt as much as the t
will have cost when she is ready y e |
t!ie latter is a splen did of 2.000 tona
j burden, while tbe ves arls alluded to are misera
: blc, woithless things, outwardly looking well
J tnough, but not at all capable of sea eerric*. i
Four of them—the M.yptlc, .Sampler, Mobswk •
nyd Wvandott, have ' jpeu put iu commis&son for ;
u f nice on tbfa Coast Afnca to aidin i
bji:: tho Airican Sis Trade. ' I
m STATE OF BUMPS.
We find the following items in the news
brought by the JUmJa Addition to tboM tele
graphed from Boatoa:
Tcatiii.
A correspondent of a Liverpool paper state* g
that an extraordinary and significant morement
ia takiug place ia Yenetia. The people; baring
bees abandoned to Austrian tyranny, are flying
into Lombardy. The emigration baa already •
taken plaea «a a-iaifa neale; people hart abac- f t
doned houses, ffcfpa, ihops-all tbat they pot- m
sensed—to escape the Austrian yoke, analrtbe
coming Congress definitely abandons the pro*- •)
ince ol Venetia to Austrian rule, it ia said tbat *
there will be a general exodus of the people.
So bad is tbe financial condition of Austria
that her troops in Italy are not generally paid, *
and some acts of mutiny baTe already oc*:urr- tl
red among tbe Croatians on tbisaccount Some j
of them, says a letter from Brescia, hare been c
shot, and tbe great bolk of tbe force bas been
sent borne to aroid further inconvenience. The g
most alarmiug discontent bas shown itself
among tbe Hungarians, who are daily deserting
from Verona and from Mantua. These poor fel- *
lows do not yet know what fate is in store for p
them, but they bare decided to emigrate to fl
America rather than trust to any amnesty which ,
Austria can grant. *■
ParMa« i
A letter from Zurich cays: c
"Tbe Ducbess Regent of Parma has for the
! last month been residing ia a delightful cottage
: near Rapperschwyl, a small town in the Canton c
of St. Gall, and commanding a view of tbe Lake (
of Zurich. At a grand Federal rifle-match which f
has just taken pi :ce here, tbe Duchess not only t
accepted tbe iuvitation of the inhabitants to to 1
present, but generously increased the number i
of prites to be awarded to tbe successful shots, t
She has her four children residing with her.— i
Robert I.is a young prince of much intelligence, i
llis brother, Count Henry, is a quick, sharp t
child, whose only regret is tbat be xo longer I
wears tbe Uniform of an artilleryman, which ne
had adopted in Panna. Tbe Princesses, Mar*
g&ret and Alice, are two models of affable sim- 1
plicity." <
" ■ i
Naples. (
lLfcß3Eii.LßS,Tuesa»i\, Aug. 10.—Advice*have
been received from tuples to the Gtb inat. Tbe 1
Envoy Extraordinary of Switzerland at the i
Court of the Kin;j of* Naples bas presented to ]
tbe Neapolitan Government certain demands, .
vir: That the Swiss standard be given up, the
uniform and the uumber of the Foreign Legion '
be altered, and that tbey are no longer to be ]
called Swiss.
The correspondent of tbe London Times at
Naples states that circulars baTe been sent to 1
the bishops and Ciril authorities, directing them (
to use ail their influence to induce the people to
sign petitions agaiust the Italian Confederation,
as proposed by the two Emperors. Tbe writer '
adusi "The Neapolitan Government was *' cre
ating great disappointment, because, while af
fecting to do something it does nothing/'
Auatrltf.
Vienna, Aug. 12.—The Ministerial crisis con
tinues. It is fullv confirmed that Baron von
Bach has tendered bis resignation because tbe
reforms wbich he proposed were rejected by the
Emperor; but it is certain that there is no ma
terial difference between the programme of
Baron von Bach and tbat of M. von Schmerling,
whose advice has since been asked. It is re
ported that the commission for tbe working out
of the Constitution is especially opposed to tbe
views of Baron von Bach and M. von Schmer
ling, and that the new Constitution of Austria
will be founded on aristocratic and clerical
power.
Tbe Prussian Austrian Difficulty,
Concerning the recent collisions between
Prussian and Austrian soldiers tbe N. Y. Trib
une says:
The conflicts at Fraokfort-on-the-Main and
Mentz, between Austriau and Prussian soldiers,
are important as symptoms rather than other
wise. Acta of war tbey are not, fur the respect
ive governments are at peace; but they strik
ingly illustrate the hostile feeling wbich has
grown up between tbe two powers in conse
quence of the course of Prussia during the re
cent war. Austria relied on German help to re
pel the attacks of France; and but for Prussia
sh.* would no doubt have had it. This has
substantially been alleged by the Emperor
Francis Joseph; and there isno reason tououbt
its truth. The defeat and humiliation of Aus
tria are thus due to Prussia; and it is but natu
ral that that the Austrian arm*, on which the
defeat and humiliation were especially ibfiicted,
should cheristi a corresponding animositv
against the Government and the army which
culled them to be thus left in tbe lurch. At
Frankfort and Mcntz, portions of the Austrian
and I'russiau federal contingents having been
biought together, this bitterness of feeling bas
resulted in sanguinary collision?, complete ac
counts of « hich have not yet reached us.
That the two Governments are quite as bos
tile to each other as their soldiers is certain;
but it is not likely that they will carry matters
to the fighting point. "What is probable is. that
an effojt will be made to reorganize the Fede
ration, and in «ome way to strengthen the cen
trul Government. At present, this Government
is not a very efficient or a very respectoWe one;
but it is difficult to sue how anything short of a
revolution can produce any serious change in
it. The natural jealousies of the several States,
the prevailing distrust and dislike of Prussia,
and the present inability or Austria to exert any
active power out of her own dominions, all cou
sptre to keep Germany as it is. The military
riots will of eourse be suppressed; but tbe mu
tual ill-feeling of the two chief nations of Ger
many will long remain to perple/aud defeat tbe
efforts of German statesmen.
Wlscoitftiu l>emocratle Convention.
The Wisconsin Democracy had a great time
of it at their State Convention at Madison last
week. Sheahan of the Timet went up to look
alter the interests of tbe Harper essayist, but
seems to have made a water haul. The Madison
Journal indexes the work of the Convention as
1 follows:
Great havoc amonc candidates.
S-im Bugh introduces incendiary resolutions.
Squirming among the Bondsmen.
The platform.
' The Convention refuses to "Abide by tbe
f Compromise of the Conrtitution!"
The Buchanau Admin stratiou endorsed !"
An unfavorable allusion tothe "Little Giant!"
Tbe flection of Delegates to the Charleston
Convention postpoued till February.
r The "Reform Democracy" again put off.
An an'i Repudiation resolution dodged.
Th«*y adjourn in a panic!
Some of the proceedings were decidedly rich.
For instance:
' THE COMPROMISES OF TIIE CONSTITTTIOS* ItEPCDI
-1 ATEI>!
} When the third resolution, "that we will stand
i by all the compromises of the constitution"
s came up, Mr. M. J. Thomas asked what tbat
meant.
Mr. La Due—l am opposed to that. lam op
-1 to cvinjiroinifirij thi cChstitulion(Ap
plause !)
I'ht rtfO : rf,'ob TOtrd dOiCu
another rutv cvstomeb.
Mr. Hugh offered a resolution as follows:
Tint we the admlnl-trailon cf
J.IU-S !»u-h U.e IX-.ocralic rr<\-iJci;t tithe Uiied
fcUto*. an* t:o- utlv wt*r, lui -j>eodent aa3 practice.
Mr. Lees did not understand why these reso*
1 lutions were offered. We were cot here to act
for the United States, or* to beg favors of tbe
National Administration. What we want is to
relieve the State of a (action that bas been a
J cuisetous. Mr. L. was going on in a very loud
t voice—
A Delegate—Louder! (Laughter."^
Mr Sat Clark was surprised at this opposi
tion. He thought the resolutions so cartjully
1 tror<l-d that no one could object to them. He
was of the opinion that we do have something
r to do with the Uni'ed States, and the National
Administration. We helped elect them.
The resolution was adopted.
A COVERT PRIVB AT BOCGLAS.
Mr. Sat. Clark offered two additional resolu
tions, t>ne endorsing various acts of tbe Na
-1 tional Adniinistratiou and closing up with a
» general endorsement of tbe Administration;
the other denouncing as base Ji*r>rgahi;<r»
s (Douglasites) those who were attempting Jo cre
; ate the impression tbatthe revival otthc African
* slave trade is likely to become a party issue.
These resolutions were adopted.
1 TUB DOrGLASITCS FLOOBED.
i Mr. Mi'ler, of Rock, offered a motion that tbe
t delegates to the Natioual Convention shall not
i be elected till the 2id of February next, and
that when this courention adjourns it adjourn
s till that day.
9 Considerable confusion followed the introduc
tion of this re-o ution.
Mr. Lees, before voting wanted to hear some
e reason for this resolution,
r The ayes and noes were called on Mi .Miller's
j resolution. It was adopted—ayes 123, noes C 3. 1
!• The poor souls dared not hazard going into an :
election uf delegates to tbe Charleston Conven- I
s tion. "We must put thatoff till after election," !
q one de'egate would whisper to another. "It j
i- won't do to attempt it dot."
e Mr. Bugh offered tbe following resolution:
k Tbat tie Democratic partv of t!iis Stile re pu
rr dfet'.* the ld<*a of «pc'(ogixinefur. excuMnp, prln tav mar.-
r.i*r e thefrau I»and e ttu >iioni o. ibe LcgUlaicre
ifi <>i \ht tuilrixid Land OnutU.
\ Bugh's bribery and corruption resolution was
like a bomb shell thrown into a powder maga
xine. Tbey did not know what to do with it.
. Tbey were" afraid to na*s it, tbey dared not
' reject it. In this dilemma, tbe mildest and
p milkiest substitute that could be devised, with
w out apfwaiing to endorse bribery and corrup
* tion, was brought in and passed, not without
opposition. It was a bitter pill even then to
force down tbe unwilling throats of the nuraer*
ous bondsmen present; out they bad to take it
as their only hope of ever getting into a posi
tion again where tbey would be of sufficient
conseq'uencc t" be offered a bribe.
' AN AXTI-aEPCOIATION COMD SCATTERS TUB CCOWP.
Mr. Falvey offered a resolution against repu
dialing railroad debts, and tbe obligations en
ic tercd into by cities, couutics, towns, Ac.
3 Mr. Haight of Uodge Co.—We must not pass
.' tbat resolution. It won't do to pass that! (Ex
citementaud confusion.)
r- Mr. Bonct—AVo bare passed resolutions
%. enough hero already. I move this convention
do now adjonrn. Tbe motion prevailed by ft
rousing vole.
* Slormcna Hc<irßliif<
The Omaha A'thnuHv* gives tbe following
Item relative to the returning Mormons:
n " B«*nt advices from Monroe, Columbus, and
>la i F or t KeanirT, inform ua tbat» heavy emlgra
et tion. from L'tah and OalKoruta, daily paaaes
those points, eastward. Numerous arrivals in
this ciiv, confirm tbe statement. Upwards of
' 4 * five hundred persons from Utah bare arrived in
ell this dty since our last issue, and probably as
» i manv more have reached Florence, six miles
; „ o rt(> of here. We are ignorant of the causes
T which led to this stampede of the Saints. They
"or ■ brin" rumors of apprehended difficulties wilb
ES- i Uie uoop6 i f Silt Lake during the cotntng an*
I tumn,
rmawtM JJTM raniufc
TlxDeinocncTof KebtubkmmiuM .X;
fnrflllMlll If Ilulllia fli|
If MMiiaiv-B. Mw
ForTfnuoriai imw-#.v Wjwm.
Far Tentorial Oosalt4fluref Cfl»»on Awn* "a.
* 1 Tjlp *
The Dcpjocntcr of Dutraqae are iodulfing in
a bit of a row orer their late primary elections
for delegate* to a Const/ Convection. Ooeaide ■*
mcbsoi the other of buying Tote* si * dollar w
apiece, asd pajing for them in eovnttr/eii «
mon*f /
A correspondent of the SL Louis RtpuVli- 1*
can, writing from Springfield, IU., MJ< : "From
the signs of the times we are led to beliere that fo
Judge Woodson, of Green county, will b« the b
Opposition candidate in this district for Con- ej
great, to fill the racaner existing."
—Jlujor John Biddle, a prominent citisen of n
Detroit, died a few days since at White Sul- t]
phur Spriogs, Va., of apoplexy* He was born |>
at Philudelphia, and was a brother of the ce!e-
brated Nicholas Biddle, President of the United j (
I States Bank. At the time of his death he mast
| hare been in the neighborhood of serentj years
: of age. c
Carl Schorx is spoken of by the Repnbli- .
can press of Wisconsio, as a candidate for
Gorernor. Mr. Schun is a German of pro
found learnipg and great ability. 11 is speech
at Chicago last Fall was the most scathing and -i
brilliant philipic of the whole canvass, ilis dis- J
section of Douglas will never be forgotten by
those who heard it. His more recent speeches
in Fanned Hall, Boston, were equally instnict-
ive and eloquent. The Republicans would do
themselves honor by giving him the highest of
fice in Wisconsin.—(Mich.) StaUtman.
—A correspondent of the St. Louis Democrat x
writes from Gentry County, Missouri, that that
county can furnish more emancipationists than
any other north of the Missouri, and that in the t
course of fire years they can elect their candi
dates with ease. Three years ago no one dared
utter a word in opposition to Slavery; now it is c
boldly denounced as the greatest of corses.
There are not more than two or three hundred
slaves in the whole county, which is almost as
large as the State of Rhode Island. t
-Ex-Judge Watson, ofChariton County, Mo.,
has been indicted for robbing the county safe c
of $5,000, about a year since, when he was act- j
iog as County Judge. lie is a man of wealth
and of respectable standing and associations. j
—On the first Monday in September (next *
Monday) an election is to be held in every (
school district in Illinois for School Directors,
who bold otfre for three years* Heretofore,
this election has been held in October, and the '
chuDgc was only fnade by the last Legislature. |
It is important that the people should remember
it.
—The Denver City correspondent of the St.
Louis, Republican writes : " Our people have
rery wisely adopted resolutions in meetings held
throughout the country, appointing delegates to
meet in Convention on the first Monday in
August next to nominate a Delegate to the Con
gress of the UniteJ States to represent us in
tbat body, and it is the desire of the people,
since the resources of the country have come
to be known, as well worthy of the attention of
settlers and capitalists, to have this matter
speedily consummated.
—Wm. McCarty, a Sergeant-Major in the 4th
Regiment, U. S. A., stationed at Fort Ridgley,
attempted to commit suicide at St. Paul, on
Monday, the 15th inst., by cutting his throat,
He was discovered before be bled to death, but
it is doubtful whether he can recover.
—The people of Hartford are to give Gov.
Thos. H. Seymour, late Miuisterto the Court of
St. Petersburg, who was a passenger in the
America, a public reception, surpassing in ar
dor and other "fixins" anything heretofore
known in the sober State.
The last Legislature of Texas, it is said,
contained thirteen "men of mark." 2fot one of
them could write his name.
—An An'i Lecompton Democratic meetiug
held in Xew Brunswick, 2f. J., recently to elect
delegates to the Democratic State Convention,
participated in by the Hon. Garrett B. Adrian,
resolved that it was inexpedient to send such
delegates to tbe Trenton Convention.
—lt is well understood that Dr. Bellows, of
Xew York, was the choice oi the late President
Mann, of Antioch College, for his successor; tbe
choice of the student?, the faculty, tbe trustees
of tbe Christian and Unitarian bodies, so for as
their wishes could be informally expressed. It
having apjjeard, however, that Lis obligations to
his own people would nut permit him to leave
hia post in Xew York at present, the next per
son thought of for tbe Presidency of Antioch
was the Rev. Thomas Hill, of Waltham, Mass.
At a meeting of several of the Trustees of the
College aod many of its most promiuent friends,
it was found, after Dr. Bellows declined the
nomination, tbat the choice of every person
present was the Rev. Thomas Hill, and that this
judgment had in most cases been arrived at by
i iudependent reflections, previous to the meet
ing, and without any knowledge of hia being
thought ol by others.
—The Washington Star describes Mr. Don
nelly, who enjoys the enviable notoriety of hi.r«
* iug pumped out of Gov. Wise that sad and f*ul
letter that has made the unskillful laugh and
' tbe judicious grieve, iu the following manner :
1 " Writing letters to noted public men is a dis
ease with him. He thus seeks to achieve a pri
vate correspondence with nearly every one of
them, in turu, as thev rise into prominence
before the country. lie is a person, further,
not only utterly without position us a politician,
but notorious as a crick-braiucd blatherskite,
without intiuence of any sort, even in tbe polit
ical circles iu which he has been for a
dozen years past, without taking root. Frorn
1 what we kuow of Mr. Donnelly, we are by no
' means suipri»«d that the worse than foolish
t letter of Gor. Wise to him was aired in the
newspapers so soou, aa it was morally impossi
ble that be could resist the temptation to show
it to hundreds of politicians, of all grades, by
wav of confidentially with his
own importance.
Mr. Beccher writes as follows concerning
the New Plymouth Church of Brooklyn, X. \
1 " Tbe papers from lime to time, bare informed
the Public trulv of muuy things relating to
Plymouth Church; aud sometimes also, un
t trulr. A paragraph has just appeared, stating
u that the whole enterprise of building a new
i church has been relinquished, aud tint it has
i been determined to enlarge the old building.
1 This information is entirely incorrect.
chance of plan has been made. The ground for
the cnurcb is purchased, nor is there any move
ment for relinquishing the site selected. There
/ hare been more than twenty desigus sent in to
5 theTru-tees; but, as yet, no one of them has
; beeu selected* They are, for the most part, ad
-1 rairable designs, and there is no doubt that any
oue of the best six would be abundantly good
for all purposes desired. All rutnors aud sto
ries, such as have from time to time been circu
lated, should be discredited hereafter. An en
terprise of such magnitude, and involving such
interests, moral and pecuniary, cannot be
* pushed to a conclusion without time and uelib
* e ration."
1 prosreit vf tke Slave Traders,
The New York correspondent of the Charles
ton Mtrcnry reiterates his assertion that a doxen
or twenty slavers leave that port annually. He
t describes different classes of operators in the
1 business; such as the managers, brokers and
1 capitalists. The second class are the most con
spicuous, although the whole business is con
ducted with the utmost secrecy. They are
5 mostly Cubans, and flourish on the outskirts of
good society, wherever money and the love of
monev are conspicuously in unison. The cor
i respondent says;
~ ** I know of two ladies, now attracting adora
tion at a fashionable watering place, who invest
' ed in a little venture of this kind not long
and, as a result, hare augmented their hanking
account —nne to tbe extent of $23/ ah» and the
'• other fIG.W 0 . The headquarters of the traffic
a in this city are mainly in South, William,Uroad
and Water streets. Two vessels are now fitting
s oat for the business."
A Convention of the Democratic party, says
* the Port Gibson Recall*, of Clairborne county,
j Miss., pursuant to a call, met in the town of
i Port Gibson on Monday the Sth inst. Among
'* | the resolutions offered was tbe following:
£ | Jietdrtdy That we deem it due to exact jnst
i ice, equal right and sound policy, to declare as
■\ \he voice of this meeting, t&at so much of tbe
* f 2C'th article of tbe 7th sectiou of the Revised
* ' Code of this State as declares against the legal
| right, and forbids tbe bringing into this State
1 of slaves from beyond the umiu of tbe United
| States, under tbe penalty of ought to be
i- ' expunged from tbe atatates; and regarding the
i- j aaid enactment aa an endorsement of Federal
1 usurpation, as a reflection upon the institution
>s ' of slavery, and as being contrary to sound
c- ' Southern policy, wo do further declare it to be
I the sense of this meetingthat the legislature of
is this State ought to repeal aaid enactment at its
in next regular session.
a
DrankeMon la !t«w York*
The speaking of the number of erim
}g inals in that city aay»:
" Of this morbid and terrible list it is hardly
id necessary to say that the ovtsrwhelming major
a- ity are Irish. Victims of tbe ever present cor
es ner grocery, or the grog shop in some form, of
in which alcoholic bells there are 7,000 on 'his little
of iataod, the poor misguided men of Ireland, ao
in figure in the catalogue of Tiolence and shame,
as Dupes of politicians, who cry rum, free trade,
es and slavery, their pockets are emptied while
es their health is undermined aud destroyed, their
ry wages reduced or ent off, and their staius as
lb laboring men degraded by the fact that millions
,iv j of laborers are bought and gold in this so-called
I democratic country."
Vk*WmHmlfe«Cvtvaf
A oorraspondent of the Tarre Bute (Ind.)
£*prm, writing from this city, throws tome
light os this Texed question:
Here to lady No. 1, with tan aerea of wfcaat
graeefaUf thrown around bar p«r»on —twelve O
baahak to the acre. Ten timet twelve are one
budred and twenty, at eighty centi a baahel t *
l»xS0-*W.
Lady Jfo. S toddks under four tosa of bar at B
••▼cxi dollar* and a half per ton: 4x7.50—110. 5
She rlarr*! erect, as stiffly as I Me Iforwegian
women every day with a load of kindling wood c
oa their heaoa. B
Lady Ho. 3 sweeps the path and the cirtrum- A
iacent dog fennel with a triun in which is exhib
ited one yoke of steers at s3s«—s7o.
Lady lio. 4 ia enrobed in twenty acrea of com,
forty bushels to tbe acre, worth thirty centa a f
bushel: 800x50—1240.
Lady 5o 5 haa a mule colt suspended from ,
each ear, at |ls—s3o. 1
Gentleman No. 1 wears in hia fob a spaa of
matched bays, S3OO.
Geutlemau So. 2 stnds hia shirt bosom with j
three hogsheads of tohaceo, and is oiled and fe
perfumea with aix bushels of onions. t
Gentleman No. 3 geta fuddled on 1 cwt. of c
hemp, begins dinner with dessert and eats up
1o fish.
Gentleman No. 4 flourishes a cue, and busies
himself from morning until night, and from
night nntil morniog, with bagging a splendid
crop of wheat—in the pockets of a billiard
J&isceUaneoug.
JL LIN OIS STATE FAIR '
AT FBEEPOET. ;
The new and direct route froa t
Chicago t* Freeport, '
via Chicago and sortbirc9tcrn Baling, will be completed
and running regularly oa
SEPTEMBER Ist, 1859,
And part'et lttend'ng the STATE FAlft wUI be takes fccm
this city to Free port, ana retain at
Oae*Half the Regular Fare*
Two trains dally, will I»*Te Chicago fur Free pert WITH
OUT CJIASUK OF CARS.
THROUGH I.V FIVE HOURS.
Stock aod aitidea fbr Exhibition will be carried
FREE OF CHARGE,
by owucn paying rtfular rates to the Fair, and tha amount
WILL RE REFUNDED,
ob return of the pro pert* with proper certificate of the cfl
c* r* ital tbe uock or artidei hare be*u oa exhUiUlao at the
Fair.
Through tickets can be purdused froai the cth to the 9th
of epteaber, lnclt*lve.aX th« different R&liro&d Offla-s oa
Dearborn atnec. or at tbe Depot of < and Northweat
em lUliway, corner w est v* st«r and K nzie street*.
For stlpment of Stock or Glides to Filr. apply to X.
nrtTH.t., QenTFreljiit Af«it.at Freightoflee.
GEO. L. DCXLAP. GenT Eupl.
E. DsWirr Beaz»oa, Genl Ticket A«ent.
aa3gst3«3-m
QjILENA & CHICAGO UNION
Rail Road.
SPECIAL NOTICE.
To enable all to attesd the GBCAT ILLINOIS
STATE FAIR
TO DE HELD AT
Fraeport Sept, sth, (Sth, 7th, Bth Sc 9tb,
1859.
Tickets will be sold good from
BELOrr TO FREE POET iXD RETTOT.
From September '4lh to 10th ladoiiTc, at
One Dollar Each.
M. ROSE. A«tt.t.
*uX-»nvtd 11. 11. PORTER, Gen. Pass. A grot,
r± A LENA AND CHICAGO
VJT L.MO.V BAILKOAD.
SPECIAL NOTICE.
To enable all to attend the
.ixiT.li/ state ram
OF ILLINOIS.
TO RE HELD AT FREBPORT
Sept. wth. tti, 7th, eth and 9th, 1-19.
Tickds will be sold good from Sept. 4th to ICtb, IS£9, only,
TO FBtEPOBr ABS XETUBH,
At One-Half Kegular Fare.
A Special Train will Vive Ikltf dere erery momlnz fnr
Frwport and retun every cvec.n« durtnif the c«otiD'X»uce
of ilila Fa r. £. M. TALCOTT, O-a'l. m i.
11. 11. IWtib. Gtn'l. Paw. Age-t. aa?7-asaj Sw
QEVENTII GUAND ANNUAL
SIEIBITION
or TBS
C. S. AGRICULTURAL SOCIETY.
$20,000 in Premiums.
\ COSPETITHtt OPE.VED TO THE WOULD.
Premiums Paid in Plato or Cash, at the Option
of the Recipient.
- THE GOLD SCEDAL OF HONOR. A-HD TIIE SILVER
► AND BRONZE MEDALS OF TIIE SOCIKTT.
SPECIAL PBEAIUXS,
k Including a pur*c of f.r Trotting llc>rv=»: #7OO for
\Vb«a(, and others for l>i-#s. Gun'. J'owJer, I'ajut^A
* AVcriauf Art, &£.. are off*rttl by tse Hoard uf IraJe,
. AtiJuban Clai, of Chicago, and otters.
The Annual Cnlud States Agrk-ultural So
r duty, furlsi?. be bdd on the s;oclous *t Cot
' Life Grove, three miles from Cbitigu Court House &nd
about thirty rodsfruci illchl^jaa,
C«aiMMWar*V«M'y) Sept. 1 %th y m»4 Com*
tUminf mnlit hMtwr+my, B*pt. 17/ A.
•VEIt FORTY ACRES OF DRY GREEN* SWARD,
i bHADE TP.EES, Ac., are tLduaed,
Containing
A Well Beaten 1-2 Mile Bing,
r One Thousand.
E T!fbt Rooftd Sulla Kid Pens,
> Sis Handsome Commodious Halls,
FIFTY BY OXE nCXDRED AXD FIFTY FEET,
* Oompoo'tlnn Warpr-Prro? Rvif* an<l glo/cni w!ndi»w*, ir.ik
a lw In all over li)ttO»quarc f-t-i of for uhlbi
-3 -ion parpo««-s. cxelu.<irf of /fltr 1 ! Quarters* lija;ii«ss Of
-3 tltcj. Refreshment aa.uon». Tents, tic.
e THE DEPARTMENTS «>K FAR* PRODrCTS,
A« • KIL'U LTL* KA L 1 MI'LIJIENT>, MAXOACTIT
UFS. JIF.CIIAMCS, FRUITS and FLOWERS, FINE
r ARTS,Ac-, willoccujv tbe««e Hall,la whicfterery facility
y for Uie cljplay of rods and ar lei's, acd their ]'rou..Uoa
- from tbe wea'lie*, U l*lc* provided.
3 A Tnlrty Power E-tfne. and »wo of Er
lawn's « a'oric Enj;liie» w.ll furn ?h amt>le power.
Twil'owv* Pressi-s will be In trtntlsc 'Lilly
Z paper*, bulktlna. Ac,: W aUo a Office, w.ch two
ltiiteri»s. In ihe Edlf hal Hall.
■ • An abundant cupply of pure Lake Wa'er will be ftiraUhed
. tromtbeCi'y Works fjr«tock,Ac.;and Ice WjUrfurvUi
-3 to-s
□ llay and?trawwi:i,of course, be provVleJ for rtock cratls
. an . e'rren cum in the hu*k, oata, corn, Ac., at coal en the
j:rounda.
All the TtaHroadi centering In Ch'cac> will cany vi«!tor»
V at hi'f »nl ttock. A?„ fre«. patU-uUis u
, to t la. Hie Premium i l?t and IHlty t'aper c» u • n».
Tlie iloul* will clone their u#iiil raiw, ard
J. gT'-und In t: v ruv- ind !>m. isg ra lu tl.e citv u-in
O necurt-d. while the of uur dtlaus ■*-> ill be found open
_ to welcome visitors
A br.U ant round of ATnu.«*tnentj» In the city in emine
'• of ftrrjar-ill' n Rt-ca-'tw Uaxuirs, Evt-i.;rij Klcurs'.'.ns,
e and a Grand MlllUjy Jtcv ew r>f tbe e ctlu- Nth
n la tbe vjrlntiy of »r.«? crounJ-i durln* the wt-k.
u A line UinJ <if wi 1 !•« in t.pn«*aut «:ter.-lance, and
■S the Lut day wlli be o«.cu[i:ed ty a grand trial of
v Steam Fire .Engines,
And competition for the
I- Citizens* Purse of Si,ooo,
[' FOR TROTTXXfO BOBBSB.
■c Tbe of vLn'j lon to the will be as fol
y. low*:
admls ion cJf.
Cnudrea under tea years. 15 ~
No£eaaon Tlcketa Lmukl except to mtmltra who ar*
entillcdtoen-ry dunag the Fair.
HemV*r»* $ ? r<)
j. Fee for liie Xeabcnhlp 10 CJ
Q TXHICIA, ETC.
- Hone and Rider. Bugry, Carriage or «>ther tlLl
ete. aad <lrt*et et*.
e IfEach occupant cf Carriafc other than driTer.. .. Si •*
d Tbe Mala Entrances will t< on th* Ea#t SUe, but a I'rt
ntf Enrrano haj beca provldM on tie Wert oi<le
l' for 'bs«c t» aToid tbe crowd and du.« cf tbe ma : n
etiiraccoa, for *L:cb privl eje la ants adJiiiccal wLI
l * CiUTlfwd.
"C or For Presnluai Lists, aad k3 other Infoncatlon, afpjy
>f " HORACE CAPBO.V,
r- atil< aIM lm TREMOXT Hot'SC. Caicaco
"another great prize
)■ il WON !
, t 515,000 Drawn!
g DO Tec STILL DOUBT? Read the fallowing Juat
ie nmv<d: —
l>fnf Zrotni^—De*r Sli—TTo-ds cannot erpnw to yen
, theuncUerable joy »rd mUtudeth«t fl:i» tny heart, aa I
•11 at d'»«n to lafk-nu you. a.-cord!n* to pmtrL—. t.f the un
lookrd fitrreaa t of the nutabenywi gave me. I canscaroly
° Tvaliir xae fad yeaU-;div L lt;c!'.'j:«n'.e miui
lUraa re* nncni-rs drew li th- la< drawing tbe ma<-
-- n:eeeot«um for *ia.tU). Fcr the present plft* accrpt tte
lnc:oicdasa ucaL tr'iu:c cf neTer rfr.m mt-tu.V. Ar . Ac.
A'»i UtK Is, HOLMLS,
1 NewOrVana.lT Dwpblne itre.u
31 I'ROF. Zl'i'EIKL. the ocly Sdentlflc A*tn> now
lirlax. will rive tcfalllM? IsformaUon <>n all tuJiivrs eoo
fi tiectodwitb U'e,and will dlculate Prlie Lottery cumStra
for UK«e wbu ar» twm i-a lertdn datra. U
ad atance, by »end ng the e-irrect date of th-ir LL-th. W.tb
t- po»Ui e <aap enclosed, will be Inforaed fTatta wbciber .t
)• ever txwibie for ibem to be »uere»rfil In
Inciter o»« dollar, aChar»deiljUe Portrait of Ibe » nter
16 to*forwarded. v>*eib.7 w.ih lteaaswen waay «ues
lion* wbalrter a*ted, Conanltatlon fw» |l* Offlce hcurs
Li fcr Ladie* fnuufi till 4m: for Geatleacn from 4UJ» r.
M. I'rtrateUootaj at N3.« Monroe, cvr. uf bliiestrvtit.
auStxU
JNYALTOS, ATTENTION !
Prafesser Joha Baptist Smith,
ld BOBS WITH A XATCRAL GIFT,
Jt
of la the Citjr ofSlMtßil) Cauia,
Caft Ue attection «f thaddseasaf tbtaeity
fee aa cw* all klada of Bbestaatkm. Co&sutapcioo. aad aU
other dlmn. WITHOCT THE USE OF MEDICINE,
aod wit So-U piin. AU_penc3a wbo are cafferlbx ffom dW
will p'eaae call oo Prof. Smith at bis office, where they
caaaoßswtwttbbln tnt of durp*. and ob'aln from him
Q * dtrnfereaen. Cbaixealsacoordaacawiibtbetlisaa.
OCoe in ftnet, bctwten Fnnk2n aad WeQa
jtnet, au3la«
'J- CHICAGO MARBLE COMPANY
ir- Oifaaised July t. IS9. 09ce and cor
of terof Waahloftoa Streeta.
u ptaxcTt-Ka:
a SHKRXA3 J H WILJHIA | C. W. PRICKTT.
•O Ua**toßoed a Joint Stock Company, csder the eeseral
ie. bwofthaSUte. wltbapaidtac«{A*loft6-.00, ft>rucpor>
| e ikxb of raaoufrcturtag alarb.e la ail it* braaebca.
t T AK E STREET MILLS—
Jr Cbl«apj,Ju!rl«. |M9
w >KW WIfEAT FLOUR—-A uperiot anfci'frr.o S<>utb-
DS en» W*b'tte Wheut. To oar numerous frieo*Li as-1 (u;'oc.crs
wtaay cailao"! wcwin tbow the tticrtf artida la tba citv.
5 All artielts la ths milha* line su asual at our low
bTEVEMi, KORKJ.> A CO !yl3
firs 00OM.
pER PERSIA AND ASIA.—
W< win <xM>* <n TUOMt, AVOVtt m.
OCR FIRST TILL IMfOETiTIOSS OF g
RICH SILK ROBES,
A DEUX JTPE asd A TOLAFT\ ' _ ,
BUflCtB LTOS3 DIM BXLKS,
DOUBLE CHAW hLACK
XLEOAJTT PARIS pafafTZD XK81503.
PtLatoa in Mmlitylcs; >arw FttaMiOtUUe*.
Vaicadaa, Ac., ke.
SUPERB PARIS EMBROIDERIES,
la Collars, Pleerea. Handkercbiefk, SdfbA
Ftoaadno, «C
Alao, % complete aaaortmeat of j
BLACK THREAD LACES,
POETT LAC£S, TALSNCXJCIKS LACXB.
—AX9—
R«al Ltcea orfCTevy D«K^pUoif
In tbe Piece and la Setta. The* coodi ara all »electfd for
FtbT-CUSS CUT UTill HADE.
)£az>y of tbe ttylea an ccatoad to ua, asd act to ba bad
elsewhere at any prtce. and wt will aell every style a I
LARGE PER CECTaGS LBS tbaol&ftrtor xooda caa
be bought elwwbere In ihi* city. . .
shall receive daily after thii date, larjt addWcai
to our stock, aod will always exhibit
03E OP THE BEST AS-ORTED AXD CHEAPEST i
STOCKd OF GE>'f RAL DRI ti«/Ot« '
THE UMTEu STATES.
W. a. BOM * CO.,
So*. 1«7 * 16) Lake Stmt.
1859. Fa ll Goods. 1859. ;
J. M. STINB A. CO,
37 Lafce street, (up stain), and 41 a 43 Wabaah areaae, '
Bez leave to rfferV>theCa>b and Prompt Short Time Trade
ax Law Parcxa a Lirce and w«ll-selected stock of
STAPLE AXD F.O'CY DRY GOODS,
Poth Foreign and Domestic: Notions and Fancy Goods:
Wni.len, Yama a:id Htelery Houda,and a creal rarlety of I
articles adapted to the FaU. Taaoa. <
The atten lusof Cloae Bayers to oar varied and
unsurpassed asaartment of aaa Desirable Gooda ,
ia respectfully sol.cited. 9 a027-a£HSm
T. B. OAHTEH '
Haa lest received a few
Very Choice Styles Silks. I
—atao—
ELEGA9T KUBHOIDEBIES
la FrenJi and Swiss,
SETTS AND COLLABS,
LACE SETTS,
EDGINGS, INSEBTINGS, Ac.
PRINTS Just opeced.
New Goods Arriving Dally tt
TRIM MINGS'
No. 78 Lake street, Chicago.
WertapeatfaDyaak tbe attention of tbe Ladles ef Cbleaco
and of tbe Dealers throughout tbe Northwest,
to our new and choice arrivals •
Dress and Mantilla Trimmings,
SHAWL BORDEBS,
EMBROIDERIES.
Laces ami While Goods,
61<rre« ud C«outlets,
HOSIERY, SKIRTS,
LADIES' FURNISmXG GOODS,
OORSIFTTS
At "Wliole««Ie and Retail*
A. (Late C. T. Atfcia.«oa),
19 Orders receive our special aU^cUuo.
gUREKA, EUREKA !
TOE EUREKA WOVEN SKIRT !
EQUAL IN
Durabilty ami.Style of Finish to any
thing Ever Offered in this
Market.
OSBORNE A VINCENT. DOUGLAS A SHER"WOOD%
And othira,
CoraeU) Skirt Supporters, dec,, Ac.
A. Gr. Downs &, Co.
190 . ■ • Zsaka Street. . . . 150
Jrj
pianos, Jttusic, Gtc.
ÜBLISHED BY J. P. JEWETT
A Co M . n, and Just rvccivvd by
Root 4* Catty,
95 . • • Clark Street,'.Cblcaco • • • 95
THE \nV (OXGEECATIOML
HYMN AND TUNE BOOK,
For rubllr, Social aad IMrat* Worship. By Iler. Ellas
Nasun. 6fo: CXth pp. II;. l'ricc 75c.
The Wesleyan Sacred Harp,
A C«llv*ct!nn of Choice Hymns and Tane» fir Prater, C'a>+
and Caxp sle»t!cjrt. Choirs and C'>r!|frf*itloraT Sir.g- I
leg. lly Uev. V>'. McDonald, aalher cf W<n>yia Min- I
rtrel, rjjd S. UuLbarrf. E»i- author of iluaical Gt-xu, I
Tcmperaste Mdod:»t, tic. 12aio: pp. S3, rrice Ux.
TBE NEW
TEMPERANCE MELODIST
r De*Sened f>»r the TesJperarccOr gar.liat:or.i t,fthe
I* United Stairs acd Canada. iJy Stephen Hullaril, E.^q^
* a'-thor of tf Canaan, Mosi-al Oeo.s, «tc.
12a;0: pp IM. Trice
i ROOT & CADY•
J ar.d lUtall Defers In all kinds of rl-.giug
Musical Ac iu - J
nM. HIGGIXS, 45 Lake-et.,
• Chicago, 1'.1..
—nCALn ix—
'• Ugbte & Bredbaryt* Piano Fortes,
y
MASON A HAMLIN'S MODEL MELODEoN*.
MUAiC I'ubllfhor, »nd
Uutii Dnsos's eitor.fcTo Calalcf-i#of M
I lhjtj.k^cics.
or *v*a» or i«sacaA^r»*.
N«w llanos W Ulra, where jry *:«
riven.
PIANOS TO RENT.
He hirtrat prce lor fid l"aawla excharc* for
» H. M H. to the pu!.:ic, that
ha* mi«learrAnri:t::er.U «.th ilii-ae tiiree uvt -lU'L-iv-: A:ni
rrllable h')U.»e;'ia the Ea.-t i:a th<-
Fortf#. MeloJecna, and the pui/llcaiinsi tl lluiii'). f>>r ibe
I" exclusive agmcv. la this M.it«, U<t th<* **'.k <>t xz
r tltleaf'f MusjcJ MervhaadSc. 4*" i:*f«.rrncescftne
f " orcer, f.-r the »upvrW«riiy ana
Piam> Forte-, can h« fc -i»ea ai -li Laie «tn*t. in the Urje
j Iron Froct Liocfc.
I JULIUS BAUER,
r 99 • • . Soutb Clark &*., . . • 99
Importeracd *h-iI«Ce disLt-r in Musical
y Htrir.cs and Mu«ic. A> •■•tit for tJi*• IVlcfcra
-0 te<l I'laoo of l>.«nl:iian. Gray .V On. OM l'U:;>.s
taken in exchATire f«.r new I'ltnn*. «:c. Mci.-dc-n t.« net.
•1 I M ai>is, Orrmv M«k"de<-n» tune«l and rrpxirtil. aini iaji-r.v-'
I" al!otheria.tri:i:u - .t-«. All (.Tiers thankfully -^
orocLCtly executed ty addrtseing
Is * * z JULIUS RATER.
Ie Iri-dUI-lT K-i. •*> Str.tr, I'lvk ♦♦l»«t
rs
5 T~VISSOLI"TIC)X OF COPAUT
JL/.NEK.-HH'-UV.t!;- Tn..:na«
. Tcy and Alcial-«Wt Murvas. fvr.i.vr.> cj. r?i: <>-«
? I'.uuilnTN liraw I'"un>l »tc.. it .V- -S> n
rfr-rt, Chi-ajn hen.Lv authorize .I<ihn A. Hl<l"pt<> o,;;ect
.1 anJ rcciiv-ibe dc tadui t«i uv su.«l jr;j.v t1..-s :i.. '.: i p-»y
--uu'tit of our Ju>". delts. the l'ari.pr>< L-.rcl.y d;s-
cur Land*, tLli 221 ilav -f Auri-t
TH'iMA> »• I'MS'HKEY.
ALEX.VNDEK Mt'itltAY.
The *lls now l* ~n in all itsnnih-.-«.
1 the oil star..L V» W:v-'i,:, k -t.>ii sirwt, !,y tin
trtu> r*spe tfuilv tolldl tise ftitrt-ruj" ,>f th pui.iic.
ALEX. l-.AKN'LT,
au23- tx ALtX. ML* Kit AY.
I DISSOLUTION —The Co partner-
JIJ ship h'ri-t.triir? existfin* U-t«-en the su; vrn[«ri un
der the firm of I»!;kir.r n, I'urSf A l!:itl > >!'..•» > vi-o f v c.'j.
tnaJ o n*nt. All t-<'rs<ta» inilrbt tl t > tbe late llrni will
rriaie partueot tu A. F. IMCKINSuN «h<> i suthnrlzt'd o
eett.ethe a.ialr« ..f the Cnn. an.t wh-» *1:1 the
Cfinm:nio& l>u_Mnevi. We hia t.> our furtner
tairr-'tj and the pullia. A. h. J2i,
W\>* J'AKKE,
DAVID IJ EL.
Ch'.ojo. AQfust 2U, l£S9. auliaSlT tw
, po PAR I XEHSiUP.—TiII- under
e ha e a Cf>-rartr.«T«l.'p the i aite cf
n JIOWE A FO>rEU.f..rU»*purj*».i of x. r.i.g and llaadl
< V-t Grain In U»e <>. AC. I.". I». —t«r rn f U^aL.-rs.
inln f r ir*;*Tt.u:.v *.i:c'tej.
Aug. 'J, LvJ. ."<AMI'EL
T s.ul->lci-asi JullN FMSTEU.
THE Co-partnership of HALL A
GRIFFIN l»th ♦day diabolrea hv
~ Chlc*CJ,AtK.3i, laW. P. H. r<Al L,
7 aallw E. F. GllLFflN.
GRIFFIN BBOTHEBS,
bucceseon to Uall A Gr.Sn,
st GENERAL • OMMIs.SION iIERCBANTS.
S Poßiefoy's 13'oct pim« of Clar* a*:,! Sr-uth Water
i] stmts. Wf *re preporwi to male* oa Gram Is
1 stvrcaadnn Shipmenuto EASten M-ir»H*
v xroAB ? axit'iM. An-cjTtrscurrnr.
j August 31.13 U.
f. I TAKE PLEASURE "ia"reer.c.T.<ni!in» GRITFIN
e tr»ci;r<il I'iends, tr.d hip.* ilrv t*:.lfiT..r Ihrai
c. their huwncas [A24 aO Ini] t. II BALL.
• E A 4 PEKR I X S ~
2 QELKBSiTSP
5 nVreeitershire Sauce,
T 7
ft Frtmousead by Coanoiwum to be the
?. ONLY GOOD SAXJCE.
And Appikahle to Bmj VarWty of Dlahea.
~ Kxtnct of a letter fmtn a Xoihxl at Hadz*a
to his brother at Worcester:
S£at. 1531.
~TtU Lea A Perrtai that their 9»aee '* hl*hlv estusnl la
anil is, in my opinion, the muii pajuatue aa well u
tke su*l uace that la r.rw'.r,"
< 9 B«W9 of CsuXJifeiti!
Ia Socr—ln lia*v, with FVh, Xeata, Gaoe. salad dreea
!■#. Ac.; A I'uiai WoaccrrEiaurax Saccx lm*
plquaacr. test and Savor: jrirts tone lo the ttomach,
at diratton, aad promoWi cealti.
01
C, O* t*2 Disiaa are d!seoetinuln< th«
a- we cf a eastor, asd a cruel of Lxa A l*na:xa'
y VoKDnanu Sacc*.
m Sold by aU rwpectaLle jroeera acd fnltereza.
Sola WholttaleAcentsfor the Unl^dl Statea,
JOiXN DUACAN AtONB,
<O6 Bread*aT, New Tork.
A atockfclwayv la stora. Also crdeia recalTol f-T direct
[ Aippgcla (rata Eatlar.d dvTT-iT
A' KLIXE & CO^
• commission MEKcn i rrz.
j 15 St. JoMph, no.
__ Pay perwzal attention to
_ CONSIGNJI ENTd OF MERCHANDISE.
no r*c*rr irrsjj.
n Krfcr {.•» Sle,?r. Lyc» i To, ir-J TLor.. A l'-H Ir-. :'t.
v. I.SuLi: KcrSflUs, A lireJTj,
a. J.C. A Co, FalrUaks 4t Grc- —•-a.' ai.l E. J.
WwjUey, Esq-. Chicago.
gafw, lode, Set.
lflLDEftl
SALAMANDER SAFES.
WE ill SOT SOVSBSID
Ay .Tnr Ilwt Prices.
W« afaftH meet the market, and
DO A LTTTLI BETTER TEAS AST OTHER SATE
KOUSE cr THE W«E1»!
ovn on aumam hu
Ihn /mn > '
PRATT * WOBCESTEI, Ageats,
107 SOBtk Wltex MTNt,
QHICAGO BANK AND HOUSE
Lock Mannlhctory.
Tb« rabaaibera would rtapectfaUy Inform tbtir fMJsda
ami the public that they bar* opened
A BRANCH OF THEIR NEW TORE HOUSE
kitbedtTOf Chlofo, where they Intend m*»n^rtaring tod
offering for ale aii lioda of
BANK, PRISON, SAFE AND HOUSE LOCKS
HOIM Trimllnp.
availed ounelrea of the latest Improvements ta
machinery for the fadlltatlnx of oar work, we vt wthwl to
offer our *toek it reduced pr.oea.
Particalarattentlon wlllbe jivea to the Bell aad
Jothia* Department.
DAY, NKWELL A MINSK,
a aa Sontb Fraaklln Su.
15—LILLIE'S IMPROVED
Safes and .Locks.
.SOLD UT
E . J. WOOLLEV,
At Falrbtaka* Scale Depot,
I No. S3 Lake street CMcaco, Q.
: jaS-bW-lT _
iietrigcrators, i-ianges, V\
DRAPER'S PATENT SELF
CLEANING
\%\ITER FMETER.
T-iJ is the !h!n£tn attach to the Hydrant, totakethe Isn
pan-iJ out of tte water, fvr Dri-fcii g, Coo ting and Waafc
i; sceda only to tried to show Ils great raiue.
to a at
R. D. M'FARLANE'S No. «
La&i-V trc»t;
ir.J Uv <Se »us*criber. Aceat for Proprietor.
uiU-ly IK A. BOWER.
JNAMELLED PRESERVE
KETTLES.
Trench Tinned Preserve Kettles,
Enamelled Press: Spoons,
Trtndi Tinned Praatrve Spoons,
AND A GREAT VAKIETY OF
FRUIT C.J.VS,
VAN SCHiACE'S
No. •<? State No. <7
PATENT MOVABLE WATER
IUCK
COOKI.VG JtJ.Vfif,
prjTcil, ly a niiaii-cr In u*e, to te
A SURE KEiL£I>T AGAINST PUTTING OUT Till
FIRE,
ab«iu\l tie water be jf.~pped. It a!«o prevent* all t>wka*«
an-i leans*? tfuubil the rar.£». llAKe..> ANI» (m)Kj> In
tin- " ■■•l Baan.", »uJ 1« vo y ■rj.cil In JWi. Xt nnv fw
eaitS'A'-.cU <■'. '• Ne *;t.t \»y by
H. C. VAN SCIIAACK, Jr., 47 Stalest.
oulxal praiia «
RA3TGES, WAXES BACK STOVES, HOXTSE
KEErMSG AETICLES, Ac.
jpilESlfFTX'rFalTthe'YEAU!!
AT SI'XSER PttICCSI
—cr rsiao—
Arthur's Self-Sealing Cans and Jars.
Arthtu's have sVod *,ii- t«t f„r £vm v :v.
rca »*L2 at
JfO. 47 STATE STREET. NO. 47.
Slsn of the Golden Tea Kettle*
IX oil A S G~c"o RG E ,
201 • • • Lake Street • • • 201
DEALEIt IN* STOVES, UANGES,
F'jrsacM. Vp:.ti'..i?. r< r.M 11-usc i'ur.L-bir.,;
THE .nOUNING STAR,
C'-'tlaj llanji' *fi! Wi!rr llu'k M.'Vf. T!i:<!» a il?-
*rtivlc "be* *-a:.t j <>■ <i :»!ni NVjicr
HciUr At ttL LaiC. Ij *: Ml -u-.vt.
The Celebrated Cook Stove
XE\f WORLD,
' Fcr at ?)1 Lake atr-rt. *!th terual ether ilcsiraLla
TIN* PIPES, RK(JISTERS, AC.,
Prvr-ant'irv t<» *■ itt.njt '.n W.»rru Air FMrruwc^—lono
*fc< rt:: .tL.-, a:.'i a '•> l.k« i'l l^kii
, "v LAin'-ii assortment of
Ihoac Crflel-n»U l
Stewart Improved looking StoTes,
m
norSEREEPEK'S GOODS 15 GENERAL,
' AtALLLN 4 I'ALr"N >.
' NewFIVE MINUTE
- ICE CRE.I.TI FUEEZER,
A'.' <ics, froia tbrw l<« twenty Ap; arii'M
rvaul*. cfitils. Kor »ale at ALLEN i I»aL
Tt I_»»c strvet.
♦ \ RTIIL'K'S CELEBItATED HA
-0 J. 'er.J S Krait t)r
e j-riircs. Al*i, Tla t r-:t <.'ar.« ~f 4 il it
AXLEM X I'A
i. Tt La«« sTr«ct.
1 CCIIOOLEV'ri sMI.F-VEN'ni.A~-
t;r.» K. .'rlt-vratiir*—the a the nuirkft~.» m-
K<c:vut of tic
CvOlers, Ic.,ic. For aai<*at ALl£> A l>ALf«»Vi\
j 71 ?tr"eL
, J.)EFRI6ERATORs7i
LT3LLVS PATETT SEIRIGEIiTOBS,
For Sale bjr Haiallteo, Fuller <JL Co.,
■■i m LAKE STREET.
Ti.e public WJI '_hi- tmfcf laa
fx.l. r'air ijf the (' > III:;»t.t /.?.
trtut.; 1. tt' LvmiJi'i l'i!»"it. tV.r tae
■ <" 4WinlP'J to U. K. A I'n. * •l!|.mai»
litfr«'erai.,r. A ioivv tuiuttf ; rrrwr.: to
Ui.-' ■. J—^ la
ev »rj - the < n •■iM'-it:.
H. F. AC'j. manaf.tcturv th«w toont. rfor
i b tf i, I utctfiN £•■ -;rr>, »ad hjvp • :i hsad
a 10.-.-c ...•►■ni.Mr.: .-.-.l r. r , a:; lir
L •;•••«. Thi'r *!.-«> n.*s'jfa»;i - jrv' and cave '>n naiid 'ti
A p';s.; beer cu«.k\ water covicn. Ice c-*eau3 freez-ra. iwuha,
'L 4c- Ac.
E-;--cial utter.tl:* calW to nnwn A Kent's Pot«t
.* .< J u&r:.--r «V,,t
j. az.dfur the sanie at u;e _ut t i.r cf the Chicago
Ir-.tltute. Let every u-c cxii acJ examine it,
Jj W. L.VNDRETII, Dealer in
X HOCSK PTRNIiFTING
Cviklrjaud l'ar'or [Ji-lwve, Bird
Witer C eIC. •
NO. no aTATS STREET, CLJ ujp, CL
;■ XOItHEY'S NEW + MINUTE
]• A. I« Freezer. Nj. ''■) SUte sl.-t*!. H. IT.
[I LaNT'KSTU. nO-lv_
° ARTHUR'S G
r X*. Cui at J Jara.
ecM7 U. W. LANDRETH. 2W Swe rtrr^t.
iHarljtnes.
i NOTICE.—THE EUREKA LM
: uTX. PPOVED SHUTTLE SS'.VINO MACHINE.-. /!•
cm.-.'! y LlLi# IL*', E*;.. —".J "'h- * , i. i -»i: e
I Uin-i-l.s acd tr.alt:t.< t!;? L'-ck r*titcii. I'r.u- %'*>. W..1 r.\i.
! rtitc.'i. in-a stkl cV i-f A.'cll* waz.!r<t ::i r<t-rr •*7 x-.J
t.,*a :« U.esute <•/ 111ir..-L«. Addr<*M l>. J. LX.V Y.
1 IV.nc:j«*l i-9 tfr<<a«la'3V. V. T.
I f:r C.tt '.v ir..l w .rk. nil Jn-»4
<29-; ANI) S4O SEWING MA
CIIiNES.
L. CO2VZZX 4 CD'S HAW A3D OmtOVEC
Doable Lock, Tight, Fut StUch.
T I WARRANTED t" xa the h'abwt
a | .:i msri-1. th<- «a.' »t;Jcii i» tt;.- |li, If*.
a.*" iarf--, rich-* ;i--l»-r tin; arm, "t ::i t;.<j
tah.r.
11103 ilu U,o o. ar-.l 2^—t w .H, =j tj
.. the '.r.e' . CCN VF.HY EASY *NP ALMOST
Lt"C, an 1 are aeatiy Sij-htd. The wiii
n Stitch, Hen, Fall, Tuck, Oither ft Eabrcider,
gy
I Wars
(tasksr Cizj S2O, 125 and 9& fswisf X*-
ehinsa,
cf rblch are la duly 'i*e. Tbi- »id «tr'e we
•ei'.. "'V» ai* S.ile A<i-nfs here f>r tno L'MVEHSaL
HEMMErt ANI> GALGE, ail;urfab!e To a'l Ihitknewes ;t
cJ<>th all vWttba of fiem: will h<xi <• *er *c<aia »nii f r u*,
AXDCAX UII.T BM ATTAviUS TU AJIT M^CUUX.
# i'r.te. 4.'..
ÜBGE Discorvr TO IGETIS I\o CLEEGT.
m 1 IT ACENT> WANTZJk evrrj-wtier*. «"r>ni»- and
! uj at 13J L.VKE or ad-Irv«a L. LU.tXELL Jt Co
j I'. o. H..J Stf, au^
■ I?INKLE A LYON'S SEWING
X 1 MACHINES.
Ite Timily use, laileriag perpaw, fcddlery fts.
Warraated to rive beUrnllafactioa than any other Uv
chltirrs n market, -r iuumv refun-l«"t. Wanted, au a«eat lq
» this rttr. A'Ureaa FINKLE A LTON,
AS Broadway. York.
' TTMRRELLAS! VMnnVM.\<l
U caution::
Th« uader*i*aed rtjpectfally call the al.eot: jn of Job
len, St re keener*, and U.e Public :j th« !-ci that there la
I aa arUcie represented acd *oM for
Walloain Umbrellaa.
Tie fubUc are hereby bforsud that the original VA_L-
I L')s4> is tiaaped cocipleuuuaJy ua every da or (tick, u
l follirrs:
j " DiUoala, Patented Not. 17, lSii."
| son ornzaa aaa osT^utß.
. j
. j WHITE COP WASTE FOR
, I ▼ T Kani^-.r*.—A , • "3L. r'T ,••
. Itv jj.t rec/lveJ. ILTThIT £: Lt'ILER,
| *yj;:ali63ci ;* Liii »tjv.t»
1 JHfWrtnfs, Set.
;G0 TO HEAD QPIBTGRS!
GO TO OEID QUARTERS .'
For all Patent Medicines
For mil Patent Medicines,
THE GEEJT tnSTEXS DEPOT
THE GKEiT VISIUS DEP9T
—m at—
JOHND. PARK'S,
SVMESSOR TO BOIX£S SMITH A CO.,
134 Lake Street.
RJDtZMUZIt 7HI PLAC3,
RXXSMBSR TIH PLACS,
Ob Lake, *«ar corner of Clark Street,
ta Lake, arar eerner of Clark Street.
It you want a remedy
for your C 0 U (* II f> ta
JOHN D. PARK, VHLaIO
(treet.
tW~ Iff oa want a remedy to
purify the Blood. r*» to 124
Lake »L JOHN D. I'AHK.
fW If yon want a Ferer
and Ajrue Remedy, go to
JuIIN v. FAiiK, U4 Laka
rtwet,
tF~ If you wnnt a Hair
•tontl** or H:dr
u> JoUN D. i'AKE, I34Ui#
itrwt.
iyif you waj.t a Rheumat
ic Pill or Lui:n-.t'st, 20 u>
JOHN D. FaRK, ISt Lake
trit you wart aresady tWe
JuILN D. PAIUC
i:< Lake-sC
ycu wart a l>v«
—warra::tetl, ft %> Jul-N D.
FAKK, lii Lake-it.
orif you wrjita Pur*at!*«
or Cathartic l".ll. Tv t»> JOHN
D. I'AKK, 1:1
rr>tj wast a pala K
ler or Hiiri Extractor, o t«
JOHN D i'AKi. is* L***-*.
(F*?of Couth CajiUlki* or
Pulmonic W*ver% »•<» tn
Lake-ot., JoU.N D. PARK.
T.t I'rr t. Huinjhrcv'*
>n«)t-*this I'.eiued,r-s go to
JOH.N I». i'AK\, 12* Uke
.-Utet.
UTFor Dr. n,«rrlilll » 3y
ma nf the l{yp>njh-<%pUte*,
'*e acw retrifiv :',r C'lutmy
t., n.c t-J«>UN D. i'AKK 3
121 street.
DfFor a Powder. Parte or
Wa-h f.j- the T-rth. M
JOHN i>. PARK. 12* Laka
•U-vet.
\W For a Liver ind I>T»0«p
--tic
PARK li* lakct.
For Vifrr.lfujt A »Vorra
Cunfectlow, f> N". 124
LaJte »t. JOHN D. PAiiii,
12«Lake-jt.
fr?rr
t.n« <f all »«•
J>>i! N l>. PARK,i:* Lako-at,
r»"F-r Rat roW.«, l!'i<aad
C > feraactv ii
to JoHN l>. PARK'S, -2*
>t>ret.
IT For a Remedy for D«a.
eaw of tk* >^:cu )P> to
JtjP.N P. PARK, U* Lata
«ret*
F*Rfy !*'-ar'«, DrJih
t* and Tci!«*t Artu.c.v &•
JOHN D. PAKE'S, l.i Lal«
•trect. . _
IF* F-t Hac.ttmblrf Ki-
iml TfutuiTV. KO to
! JoHN l>. PARK'S, Lake-at.
I For Triwe", Sl:uuMt Rr.»c«a
1 and Atdvmlr_il
tllt-V j.-u '■ r thf R.:»tiU
fji'turv, and w:.l *ll -.t '•)»
Er««. JuIIN L». PARK,
ke-at,
TO RID TOm UOLSE OF BED BrC3
TO SID YOIB UUIMK 01° BHD BlliS
fse Datclicr's Dead Sh#t,
Use "Dutchcr's Dead Shot.
THE BEST 810 POISON IN IS*.
THE BEST BIG POI.SO.N IN ISE.
AGZHCT AT
AQESCY AT
JOHN D. PAR K'S,
JOHN D. PAKE'S,
131 Lake Street.
134 I,ake Slrrrt.
rpo THE RE-DRUII'JED AND
PoliodcJ Cliizeu* of CLlcaffO.
Y J'l *r»> .-TUT. -: .L i vf 'L • vl!r»t JCILV<UCda Ifl
Ui-:.>ui ■ t
••AL'-Ollo!.:.' DRINKS
Thnt ,>ver .1 iu !l.at .<• . u-ithe I-.JUO
Miter.
Thev nre ~ M • . v- u u Oiviry. - r tii. 7 .r- .I'.*'- n-rd to
y x* .»•• r c-i'v ?!:»• v."T> ,T '■■« ".li* sj.ie.
Tli- .: .j •« .i- ■,. • v. 11'...1-o >»aluan
ry ..r j u.cii..4 .'1 r- _!•!.! >• M under
at-i'Lip 1:. 1 - » Li. )i •nl r».t 'i.,; * hi« aut ImxO
taaH'-n-d wit;,. au
Charles' Land n Cor«llal Gla,
Whii !i 'j d'.-t.l', •! irvi'.T «f :!. • Hr.-.-h (J,:v««ni
Z: 1.:, U
»f the most ..ilile r>',*. .r i.v\ t;..<
Vlii.ETAltl.E (Cl.\(i !;< 'if,
Ar.d L.i l . y t\ • r:i ,-t !--.vr%m vi' iht.
Tb>: :n,i«t ;>>;•' -1>; l;.< • ' Y. i:.d «->t
•nlv riV')mme«:d ;U •;?<; '> ,• t !,•; l.> >• v.'i l.i;.irty. pri-jcrtU»
Iti* a !i;eihc;ie « l.tT • a -tin. .iai.'. .1 r>r d.
Tie w.LI :'.nd t
' 11 I'. H I A L.
But * certain r. 11, f !i: ri':»< ,-.f a;. f. .<-»-jjT 4 t cr>
Analytliai cl.r:ui«*« 'fall it j-irfixtlF
I'll?*. *?id ,t»
>•-: 1 j. ; .i.-*. aJ. 1; ll'. UttLi-* ' v *ll l\->.Ur*-
i«i, t'.i. i'tlM'i'S A ."-iv.,
'yH O: r «.?•• l'r» t il^uee.
caN r<) 11 u\s L 1 i-Ji IN vitio^
0 RAT'i;.
Never DobilKatoa.
«»!»■ • •;i —ll .• x>' ■' J...*'l 1!« .•.<-• n-;.tu»o«l
1 \ t . • ■«' rtui
-1 •:.« . ••• v - ~ ••• • ; . I"
*f r<:.v-T. .1- :.. - > ■ .v i'ol
-11: ■ -I'tti-1 ■' ■ • :ii .J . ''.. -1 i. ''U !> n» M .if.
r.:y -,., v. -. 1 ... ,r» lr.f\' tmu,
tl.e ir, t ~ •• .k::il ma>*
- .»• A- H.;. '.-an.la cuo
IfOUAToii, i-.,| It W..: > ir¥'.i>.<--| :l
<• .re Liv."C"r.j :»n'<. f; :-i.:.t
i •:» —
Iff *1 x W i'- it!.,.A ,:; 4 t.. ( , ; *n.i
B* j.i./v l>, th :• ttuT.
Prlri* Uue Dollar per Zlottle.
SanfordN Family Calliartie Pills,
rur. •• v ? 1 jn*. ••.? ia
UL.\.-> 1 A A 1 rt roilr. AM» ',V.LL
Kifil' 1\ ANY 1 1.1 MA Ti.
Tl,e F*''•".a" ■/ Ti; • !'• '-n wci' im.w
PILL S_» M,t ..• A
Ij4T,- l"ng t 11,.- I'll.].- -T f'fit- ;iur.*-i Vt-'ifJ
1.. i-« 1:i ■, j 1 ■ : »■ < 1 1-. •iit.iry -j .il. 4in! .Ira
t -rt, w-ti: r- r: ,• s . ■! ■■: . f,. .U,
wl..:r i-'^l,.n:. :i a. I'-n :U „f the
r «.r • !;: tii .• i. < ~, I !.'• -s ' o«tlT«-
■ ■•.rr t:.o K,--t.II -»' - .-. r *»pjjhl In tt!e
L'»•!. A.i !:.!*.«t, i\ l'l-i .».*#«. *>V ti.t .;i ■" :..UJr»*;i . t
A Kh , k l;ii..»i,
■.■..jj ••• !■> »1: it. 1* v.-. ■«'• ;:uci«ruua to uica.
Price Three Dime*.
T..r L.v.r I:,.- .• n: r F»::. iy • pi;). , r « T(>
W !■< - l - . 1 sale uy Uia
YjOI TO IIK ~ ADMIiTRD
RICHEST DIADEM
rvL*
Woro by Klnjs or Emperors.
Wk*l J TTlij a Beatiiiiu) YT«*a<lorUa!r».
I'iSii.lr .n th- i, w;i. < tin'.-vir «i ."nrf'it
t ..«-• tivth i-e ttiu* .t !:.«• ■,{ t,< c-.1-
than h-lf her. kai!!,'«. Pr f. W *».'■. lUr (;<• t-Mt.v! If
:i»C'l tw.i ',r thrw a a . r -t -:.il lf-iAa
•■.-i tl'. v-'-are *- a !i nr. -t:: ir:,- vt.
*-• Tiie v.T.ter ■>! the nr-t is ::.r i'L^ut,
Nc-# A;ir.: 13,
Dm 'W.iui.r-rJw P-rm.t ti..-1.., tl.a
-...ivd.,'ri«. 1 ifii ... r :..f -»;p , ~i.,r J,... ri t, :: <-f :„v Wr
l' V'i .'" f: ' '' ' '' U ' Jrn,;l '
I tuU-d-Utrf .1 wru!-:.1,y ' . x , r~ t ... lt „ Th
:( \ ~ur ••lf,».r ' t v- :t«
f\n l"v V'v'ir lir-v.rj!^,- 1, %■.■ rv *.:.dur
Jfcrsir \-.u.-str,; v."'" V.'"TU-\LiIERU.
"•Drrth
"W-ljih ufllci-, n N'asu'i-«t.. April 12, 1;5?.
Ptur. o. J. Woni>:—D«r Mrt -<.rn» rr,.<iith "r s't
WfUiP 1 iveelv.-.i x J-.lt.ei.f y. ur lUr He«tur*tit ti
ffa»r Amy wtfc, w!ioi..ud.id dtctrv.t ..,i ~.-r l«*ir li-V*
1 tiiu»iinf at the w. ul i r-r-.n- the n-t hrl r >
!t»..rt«:u4l .•«.].,r. txii t<» b« r :l« we.l u.y wrji :ae.
ft"*- Wtrka tiul .1 baa *..i..: t r/tU «.Tnt 'IY
tur;.iN< jl. Iht! *r.iy !| jr»:.»a.ti/ii I. ..h 0 rj,. 40 t i»*
tjra.ttllyifjc nm -a r. i n , ra , h .l
ta-- J.nv« .1; «r<os« in * 4 r.t 7 rirb .*
uf U» cl rfcUr. t'!IARLila CAKL-EW.
Xi"
e.r?".? 'lujj*'"." c, \ ui ' u lJ " I r«c»mrod
• »-r • 4 '^ur'lUr r^'t' M I
whL-Mrr»wMth »'tv aimost white luf.i r-d^lw'rrfwM
• lark ; ami I n..w tr*\ •■.•lAWtl teat a To* T i
»Ui lu«n t-. th'-ir r.aurU -..ior. It i, L."
me',{all dawln^andm.plca-su.t
rrnons whi fn-ely. j t} siLUY
v°i J '. P 112 Bnia.jw*y X w
i^iiassr t f;r ,z
' J * 111 iJ Ficcy i;„oa. t\
J7AMILY MEDICINES CARE
JL ."u!ly prepared by
* ,« S Sv E ? DINS 4 CKAJIPTOX,
t3 * '-'ark ttreet, >.-.ra«r Mvllycn.
BEAUTIFUL COLOGNE on
drauttht. Esaffilne It at the >tcr>>
STEBBUB 4c C»A^pxo.l,
>y> Clark strtet, cor. iUUaon.
PINE DRUGS, .MEDICINES
L nr.-! •_'Vrr..'44\ '!i " '-!!•-, 1 •!>■?> h\ i,. tf j
1- ,■... ij 1.-. L.aj» J*., 1 T t ,'*i^

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