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IDAHO ' . ■ -i ; *"■ 4k-*-; %fT m VOL. VIH. IDAHO CITY, THURSDAY, JUNE 20, 1872, NUMBER 34. fl) AH O WOR LD, PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY BY jhe Idaho World Printing Company ^ in Brick Building Adjoining Masonic Hall, Wall Street. : INVARIABLY IN ADVANCE. TERNS, : : : —- - - ■ — Hate* of Subscriptions ............$13 00 i Three Mouths... .$& 00 Mouths...... 7 00 I Single Copies..... 50 Rates of -fAdvertising: One square, ten lines or less, one insertion,.. $ 5 00 ,, « •• each subsequent insertion, 2 00 OBe^i^hth of a column, per quarter.......... 25 00 <• fourth " " " " 40 00 « third........ ......... 60 00 «half " " " " 60 00 «ne column, per quarter..................... 100 00 Business cards, 10 lines or less, three months, 10 00 2?n)fr.ssional (Sards. JONAS W. BROWS, 4 ttorney and counselor at law, and A Notary Public, Idaho City, I. T. Will practice u all the Courts of the Territory. Office on Com mercial street, next door to W., F. k Co.'s Express /rice. mar *6 '71tf. SA3FL A. MERRITT, A ttorney and counselor at law. of nee on Commercial street, second door above hie court house. , nltf. GEO. AI.VSLIE, \ TTORNEY AND COUNSELOR AT LAW. IDAHO City, I. T. office on Wall street, at the Idaho Woeld printing office. nl2 R. E. FOOTE, A TTORNEY AND COUNSELOR AT LAW. IDAHO City, I. T. WU1 practice in all the Courts *f tue Territory. Office on Commercial Btreet, two doors above court house. n UHf FRANK HARMON', M. D„ P HYSICIAN. SURGEON AND ACCOUCHEUR— Office on Washington street, Centerville, I. T. Nov. 16lf H. ZIPF, M. D , j)ïïïSICI\N. SURGEON AND ACCOUCIJErR X Office on Main street, next door to City Drug Store, Idaho city. [nl4tf. JAS. IIEALY, 31. D., PHYSICIAN AND 8UROEON. OFV1CS ON EAST side of Montgomery street, three doors above bail, Idaho City. nltf. JAS. H. WICKERSHAM, Justice of the Peace, IDAHO CITY, I. T. A LL BUSINESS PROMPTLY ATTENDED TO. /V Special attention given to collections. Office— Iu Court House. Jan. 26, 1871-tf. ^orirhj ilotirrs. r P II E STAT E I) CONVOCATIONS 1 of IDAHO CHAPTER No. 1. U. A. M.. art held at the Masonic Hall, the second and fourth Thursdays of each month. fc,> - 1 — burning Companions in kookI standing are invited to attend. [n38j JoNAS W. BROWN, Sec y. I hold, .m'ih«foarlh ^ufrd^y M .;f \.Y are invited. By order of the W. M. JONAS W. BROWN. Sec'y. B omb lodge io. a, i. o. g. t.. holds its regular meetings, at Templar nail, on Sunday evening of each week, at 7 0 clock. All members in good standing are in vited to attend. By order of the W. C. T. A. P. Turner, Sec'y. [feb. 29tf. Idaho World )B PRINTING OFFICE. Every Description of ÛSTERS, Lgj CIRCULARS PROGRAMMES, gp&J", ffj BILLHEADS, EGE.IPTS, LICENSES, FLVKRS, deeds, »unty and Justice8 , Blanks, Etc., / On hand, or printed to order. HOUSE, Comer Montgomery and Commercial Street*, ». LUTTES - , ........Proprietor. LAVING again assumed con *- trol of the above named house, I have refurn the same with new beds and bedding. Single .I.,___ >uble rooms for gueitts. THE TABLE be supplied with the best the market affords. THE GENERAL STAGE OFFICE ill -line* leading out of Idaho City will be found is house. [June 22-tf D.D TYPE METAL, FOR SALE AT this office. Qnnd If* all the purposes for which [ in some cases better. __Srami $îmto<U;Sf. ietr-Oim: ïew York aid San Francii direct. Ü I MAIN STREET, IDAHO CITY, ait RETAIL i>h:^vi.i£:ris iiv WINES AND LIQUORS ! GROCERIES, CHINA GOODS OF EVERY DESCRIPTION, CLOTHING, *C., BOOTS & SHOES, HARDWARE, GUNS, PISTOLS, CUTLERY, PIPES, , TOBACCO. Etc, H AVE JUST SUPPLIED their store from New York and San Francisco direct, with an immense stock of the above named goods, which they will sell, FOR CASH, at a REDUCTION OF 25 PER CENT. From former prices. J. 11. EMERY k CO. Idaho City, August 3. 1871-tf. HOLLOWAY'S Every Han lis own Pliysician. -- » -- CAUTIOîT. rplIK imm"nv' f n r TIOLLOWAY'S A PILLS nn 1 OINTMENT hu- tempted unprincipled parties to counterfeit these valu able medicines. In order to protect' tbefitVie end out^elve«, we h ne issued a new " Trade Mark," consist ing of an Esryptinn circle of a r-erpent. with the letter H in the rentre. Every b<>x of gen uine Holloway's Pills and Ointment will have this trade mark ou it ; iioue are geuuina without it. N. Y. Chemical, Co., Sole Proprietor*, 73 Maiden I, me, Now York. Crank Je Brigham, Sas Francisco, Cal., April 4yl Sole Agents for the Pacific Ooasf. BOISE, IDAHO ^ PLACERVILLE , STAGE LINE, THEO. V. MATHEWS, PROPRIETOR. Leave Idaho City for Boise City, daily, at 7 o'clock, Leave*idaho City for Centerville, Pioneer and Placcr villc, daily, at 8 o'clock, a. m. rates OF FARE i Idaho City to Boise City.............$6 50—currency •• " •* Centerville...... . ......2 00 «« •* •• Placerville,.'........... 3 00 " CONNECTIONS » At Boise City, with the N. W. Stage Co.'s Line of coaches for all points East, West und 8outh. OFFICE-—AT THE LUNA HOUSE; W. C. BEACHY, Agent. Janl8-'72tf RUBBER BOOTS. (Patented December 1, 1868.) Leather (Outside^Sdea^ ^ rtiHE USUAL WAY OF NAILING LEA 1 HER SOLES I on Rubber Boots makes holes quite through the Soles, which are sure to leak, These . Le ?' he r. are fastened to-anchors embedded in the Rubber when the Boots are made, but do not go through the Soles. The Boote are, therefore, Perfectly Water-Proof; and the Soles can be mended without making them leak. They will wear three or four times longer than the ordinary double-sould Rubber Loots. Have been extensively used for four years, and in every instance given perfect satisfaction. RUBBER CLOTHING COMPANY, 363 Broadway New York. Michigan Avenue, Chicago, ' 607 Market St., Sau Francisco. jjS-FOR SALE BY BOOT AND SHOE DEALERS. mar21m8 PtofHßnmif!. REPUBLICAN TICKET. FOR DELEGATE TO CONGRESS, J. W. HUSTON. For Territorial Council, J. V. R. WITT. For Territorial Assembly. I. W. GARRETT, B. L WARRINER, G. MINER, JOHN KELLER, P. C. PORTER. J. -H. RALSTON, S. K. GOLDTRAP, G. W. CRAFTS. For Sheriff, Dryden Clin to civ. For Assessor and Tax Collector, E. M. STRONG. For Auditor and Recorder, GEORGE W. RICHARDS. For Treasurer, JOHN BRODBECK. For Probate Judge, -MOORE. For Superintendent Public Schools, C. s. KINGSLEY. For County Commissioner, District No. 1, I. P. LAMBING. For Superintendent Road District No. 1, THOMAS SMITH. For Superintendent Road District No. 2, J. F. CHEATLEY. For Superintendent Road District No. 3, JOHN DANSKJN. IDAHO BOISE VALLEY, ADA COUNTY, P. MOORE PROPRIETOR. * I am Prepared to Furnish the People OF THE WHOLE OF SOUTHERN IDAHO WITH THE BEST QUALITY OF FLOUR TO BE FOUND IN THE MARKET, AT LOWER RATES Than the same can he got eheirherc. Orders addressed to the undersigned at Boise City promptly attended to. Boise City, Feb. 1-tf P. 3IOOUK. 1 ]\ill rriMIimif mm AM) TIMWARB. mm ^ FQRC g m ?S, G. MARRE, MAIN STREET, IDAHO CITY, Opposite Wm. Baird's Saloon, K eeps constantly on hand a full assortment of every kind of Ordinary Utensils, A large supply of the latest styles of which 1 have just received from the East; Stoves and Tinware, COPrER, TIN, SIIEETIRON, ZINC, Galvanized Work of All Kinds. HYDRAULIC NOZZLES, PIPES, AND EVERYTHING IN THAT LINE I will make, for miners anywhere in the Basin, SEVEN-INCH IIYDRA ULIC IRON PIPE, and will guarantee the superiority of the workmanship. I have on hand an assortment of With HOSE, NOZZLES, and full apparatus. JOB WORK Done well and promptly, at reasonable rates. AÉÿ-I have the largest and completest establishment of the kind in Boise county. G. MARRE. Idaho City, may 20tf S. W. WULFF, LICENSED AUCTIONEER, Office in Idaho Soda Factory , tepQn Wall Street, Idaho City, next door to G. W. Craft*. imay 2tf Throwing Hot Shot.— The Lexington, Missouri, Caucasian, as its name indicates, a white man's paper, is engaged in throwing hot shot into the ranks of the Bourbon Democracy, as well as of the bread and butter brigade. Colonel Pat Douan, the editor, can sling more adjectives, and infuse more of the double dis tilled quintessence of nitro-glycerine into his political articles, than any knight of the quill we have ever read after. Brick Pomeroy, in his palmiest days, wasn't a circumstance ; and that redoubtable hero receives many a prod from the gall-tipped pen of the gallant editor of the Caucasian. Donan is a slasher, and his paper is one of the liveliest sheets ^published anywhere. Supports Horace Greeley. —The Omaha Herald, one of the most influential Democratic papers published in the West, takes strong grounds in favor of the nomination of Greeley and Brown by the Baltimore Convention. Dr. Miller, the editor of the Herald, has made an extensive tour throughout the Southern States sinee the adjournment of the Cincinnati Con vention, and returns to his post more than ever convinced of the necessity of such a course on the part of the National Democratic Conven tion. Tennessee Politics. —The Labor Reform- ers of Tennessee have endorsed the nomina- tion of General John C. Brown for Governor, and have nominated ex-President Andrew Johnson for Congressman at largo. Ex-Gov- ernor Henry S. Foote has announced himself a candidate for Congressman at large, as a supporter of Greeley and Brown, and refuses to submit his claims to any causus or conven- tion. -^ lx Salt Lake City.— From the Salt Lake Herald we learn that Austin Savage, Assessor of Internal Revenue for Idaho, who is one of the stock holders in the Salt Lake City Na tional Bank, was iu that place, and has some idea,"by and by," of making that city his per manent residence. Mr. J. G. Bryant, an old resident of Idaho, is also in Salt Lake City, and has titered largely into the lumber busi ness. Expensive Suit. —A law suit in which the city of Boston was the defendant, and which has been pending in the courts for a quarter of a century, and in which over one hundred thousand dollars in lawyer's fees have been paid, was settled recently by each of the par ties, plaintiff and defendant exchanging a dollar. --- Released. —Seth Wilbur Payne, editor of the Utica, New York Bee, who was imprisoned in the Albany Penitentiary for contempt of court, in publishing a libel on the judge, has been pardoned and released by Governor Hoff man. His wife edited his paper during his imprisonment. - Greeley in San Francisco.— The Dem ocratic county committee of San Francisco, Çit its recent session, endorsed the platform and nominees of the Cincinnati convention by a vote of 26 to 3. Change of Venue Refused.— Judge Dwindle, of the Fifteenth District Court, in San Francisco, has refused a change of venue in the case of the People vs. Mrs. Fair, and her case has been set for trial on June 24th. Fast Work.—A Lawrence machine for the manufacture of wall-paper, produces seventy nine miles of paper daily, by running twenty three hours out of twenty-four. -:- »♦+ ------ - ------- For Greeley and Brown.—T he Louisi ana delegation to the Baltimore Convention are in favor of the nomination of Greeley and Brown by the Democracy. Retentive Memory.—A man named Mc Cloud, who recently died at Mount Sterling, Kentucky, could repeat the entire writings of Shakspeare, Byron and Tom Moore. Going to Recruit.— It is reported that Prince Bismarck intends going to the Isle of Wight for t|ie benefit of his health. His close and unremitting attention to public business has brought on a state of sleeplessness that creates great anxiety among his friends, as well as in official circles, in Berlin; and total abstinence from all business is ordered by his physicians. - - Ratiikr Expensive. —It requires five millions of soldiers, half a million of horses and eight thousand cannon, maintained at an annual expense of seven hundred millions of dollars to preserve the peace of Europe, to say nothing of the cost of forts, arsenals, ships, wagons, tents, &c., &c. Dead.— W. T. Beers, night editor of the New York Tribune, died of congestion of the brain on the night of June 7th. Beecher on Darwin. —A few Sunday's ago Mr Beechei*preached a sermon on "Pro- gressive Christian Manhood," taking as his text the first eleven verses of the first chap- ter of the second epistle of Peter. In tne course of his sermon he thus alluded to what is known as the Darwiniaii theory: It is of little consequence to me where I came from; it is of a great deal of consequence to me to know where I am going. There are a great many men at the present day investigating jthe road which has brought man up to the pres- ent state, and I confess to a curiosity in the matter, and I do not gay that these researches may not be of benefit. I regard the labors of Mr. Darwin with profound interest, believing that the world will in time accord him a great deal of credit. Although I am not prepared to accept all his speculations. I thank him for ail bis deductions of fact. I do not partici- pate a particle with those that dread the idea of man's having sprung from some lower form of existence; all I ask is that you show me how I got clear from monkeys, and then I am quite satisfied to have had one for an ancestor fifty centuries ago. [Laughter.] Only make the difference great enough and I am content. I had just as lief spring from a monkey as trom some men I know around here. [Renewed laughter.] I look upon the Patagonians or the miserable crawling Esquimaux, and I don't see much to choose between them and any latent animalhood. I don't care so much about that thing, for I have never been there. J had no early associations a great while ago. I have not the least recollection of what happened a million years ago. All my life is looking forward. I want to know where I am going.; I don't care where I came from. - A Clincher. —Gen. Anderson, the present Marshal of Atlanta, has a regular drill of bis police force about twice a week. This the po lice very much detest, especially since the warm days have set in. A few days* ago old " Tige" was marching his squad around with the old familiar " left, left," flowing from his lips, when all at once, one of his men abruptly stopped, much to the General's surprise, and turning to the military chieftain, scratching his head as if an idea of great importance had struck him, said : "General, may I a6k you a question?" The General, thinking that the policeman had suddenly thought of asden of thieves that could be captured, answered "Yes." " Well, General," said the policeman, "please tell me what amount of strategy and military skill it takes for a policeman to slip up on a drunken man ?" The General gave the order break ranks., march ! An Effective Weapon. —The Washing ton Republican makes the following reference to the invention of a well-known resident of Buffalo: Mr. Lay, of the Navy, has invented a tor pedo, which is now before Congress, and for which he asked one hundred and fifty thou sand dollars, provided it does all he claims for it. He proposes to be able to send it out two miles at sea, keep it under perfect control from the shore by electricity, and direct it under a ship and blow it up, or to let it proceed one mile and cause it to return without ex ploding, showing the perfect control he has over the infernal machine. It is proposed that a board of naval officers shall examine it and certify that it has all the merits claimed. If what is said of the machine is true, it will cre ate a perfect revolution in naval warfare and provide another means of defense against a foreign invasion. As naval officers would have to use it in time of war, they oppose its adop tion unless the most perfect tests are made by experienced officers. Eating when Sick. —It is the custonramong a certain class of people, when a member of the family falls sick, to begin at once to ask, "Now what can you eat?" Every one has heard of the old story of the man who always ate eighteen apple dumplings when he was sick. On one occasion, when he was engaged upon the eighteenth his little son said, " Pa, give me a piece." "No, no. my son," replied the father, "go away; pa is sick." When a young man has surfeited in seasoD and out of season, until exhausted nature gives way, and a fever is coming on, the good mother is in trouble. She anxiously inquires, "Now, John, what can you eat? You must eat something. People can't live without food !" Then comes the toast and tea, etc. The stomach is exhausted, and no more needs stimulating or food than a jaded horse needs the whip. What is needed is rest, complete rest. Nine-tenths of the acute dis eases might be prevented by a few day's star vation when the first indications appear. I don't mean complete abstinence in every case, but perhaps a piece of coarse bread, with cold water for drink. If such a policy were gen erally adopted, what ruin would overtake the medical profession. How many physicians would lack for patients. Jones assumes on coming home to dinner, the bearing of an outraged husband. "Why is it, Mrs. Jones, that you ride through WaH street in the very equipage I am struggling for you at high charge, and cut your husband?" Mrs. Jones at once reassures him. " You cer tainly would not have your wife from a five thousand dollar barouche, bow to a man who is at work for his living? " Foolhardy. —A Boston aeronaut, named Wise, advertises that on July 4th he will un dertake to make the trip from the Boston Common to Great Britain. Mixed.— ^There is a young man in Texas who has married his father's divorced wife. "Life is a desert;" marriage and miragp are the same thing, only differently spelt