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-J . 1 ' . ' ' " -' ' THE LARGEST DAILY NEWSPAPER HV THE CITY. OFFICE, 40O STATE STREET. THE CAKRHGTON PUBMSHINO CO. NEW HAVEN, CONK. MONDAY i MQRNINGy AUGUST 12 5, 1 884. NO. 222. VOL. LII. SPECIAL DISCOUNT FOURTEEN DAYS. accordance with t?&r custom in recent vears we propose to vive a special discount on Silks t . anct I Black Goods for a short time Previous to inyentory. All the prices will re main at the low level to which they have been marked down, and in addition we will deduct fyom every sale of Black or Colored Silks, Saiins, Velvets ana Plushes, and all Black Dress Goods, a dis count of TEN PER CENT. This discount will be allowed only from the 14th to the 28th of August. ft55 MY ANNUAL EXCURSION TWICE A WEEK TO SAVIN ROCK FOB THE COLLECTION OF LAUNDRY "WORK Will Commence After July 1 WAIT FOR THE WAGON. try on are going out oft own FOR. THE SUMMER. MAKE ARRANGEMENTS AT MY OFFICE To have your Collars and Cuffs Sent oy Mall, Thus Saving You Trouble. THOMAS EORSYTH, 641 and 878 Chapel Street, Sew Numbers. Works near Neck Bridge. ' 3T9 Horses and Carriages For Sale and To let. Carriage Making in all its branches. Repairing and painting a specialty. Anyone wishing to buy or sell an outfit will find it to their advantage to give us a call. CITLLOM V CO. Je21tf 108 FRANKLIN STREET. REMOVAL. We have removed to our new Building Nos. 821-823 Grand Street, Which is very spacious, well lighted, and four en tire floors on which to display our new styles of Furniture of all Kinds. We are now carry a very large stock and will be ble to meet the demands of our constantly increas ng trade. THE SAME LOW PRICES And Mberal Terms as have here tofore been the feature of of this establishment. P. J. KELLLY & CO., Xos. 821aud 828 GRAND STREET. STRAW HATS - 50c to 2.0O MACKINAWS, MANILLAS, ALL THE LATEST. MEN'S FURNISHINGS. - TRUNKS. - TRUNKS. KILBOURN & (XTS, 816 Chapel St, NEW HAVEN ; ; WINDOW SHADE CO., MANUFACTURER OF - WDTOOW SHADES; And Wholesale and Retail Dealers in Turcoman Curtains, madras Curtains, Lace Cnrtains, Cornices, Cornice Poles, Etc. Rr maidiiE a specialty of these goods we are able show the largest assortment, and offer all goods In our line at VERT LOW PRICES. In order to make way for our new Fall Patterns we have laid out BOO pairs DADO SHADES, In odd Intsofone to five pairs, which w. will close out without regard to cost of manufacture. MR. L. B JUDD "ill have charge of our Drapery and Shade work, and order, by postal or telephone wi receive prompt attention. New Haven Window. Shade Co, 694 CHAPEL STREET, - BELOW THE BRIDGE. If, b. Store closed evenings, ee Monday and' Saturday. , GEORGE W. BUTTON, Fruit. Foreism and Domestic, mjt 1,076 Chapel Straet. CLxxciition. The School ofJIodern Languages TTTLL reopen Wednesday ,October l,a. m. Please w T apply to i n. must iioo, . ' 838 Crown, corner College Street, aulSStawtonovl New Haven, Conn. YALE BUSINESS COLLEGE. New Haven, Conn. BANKING DEPARTMENT. OPENS MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 1. For further information call at the College. Office Ho. 3 7 Insurance Building, ' Or eoclcaa tin tva-umtU. .sMwsJis illu- traiea catalogue giving run particulars, auiuhb aulS II. C . I. O V I: II 1 IMi H . No. 847 Chapel street. Fall term begins Monday September 1st. Day and evening sessions. Apply for circular giving full Information. aull A Training Class for Kintergart ners. Will open in New Haven, Conn., September 23. For circulars address MISS ANGELINE BROOKS, 15 Home Place, New Haven, Conn. jyS 2taw. tham8m Miss Fannie- C. Howe. CULTIVATION OF THE VOICE (Italian method) and PIANO INSTRUCTION. Charles T. Howe, FLUTE AND PIANO INSTRUCTION, 102 CROWN STREET, selStf NEAR TEMPLE STREET. TAdC USIC. F. A. FOWLER, TEACHER OF PIANO, ORGAN and HARMONY. AUSTIN BUILDING, S57 CHAPEL STREET, Rooms 8 and 9. A correct touch a specialty. au30tf Greenwich Academy. tJsual Literary Courses, with Musical Institute and Cdmmercial College. Founded 1802. Both sexes. Influences decidedly religious. Home care and comforts. Charmingly located on Narragan mett Bay, and on direct route from New York to Boston. Grand opportunities for salt water bathing and boating. Terms moderate. Opens Sept 1. Catalogue free. Rev. O. H. FERNALD, A. IVI., Princi pal., nasi ureenwicn SHORTHAND ! EVERY person should be able to write short hand. It is becoming indispensable in business in our courts and in newspaper offices, besides being a valuable accomplishment in every day life. It is the best capital a young man can have. For young ladies it opens a field both pleasant and profitable. We will teach you by mail at reduced rates. Send for our "Compendium of Self-Instruction11 and learn this art at home. Hundreds have done it. You can do it. $1.00 post paid. Circulars free. coaswsiiii's SCHOOL OF PHONOGRAPHY, MEW HAVEN, CON3V. B. & J. M. 57, 59 & 61 OEAMEST., FURNITURE DEALERS AND UNDERTAKERS, Have the finest Painted Bedroom Suits in the city. New'Parlor Suite, Walnut Bedroom Suits. The best Spring Bed for the money. Splint, Rattan, Cane and Rush Seat Chairs in great variety, as low as can be bought. UNDERTAKING promptly attended to, night or day, with care. Bodies preserved without ice in the best manner. Also Sole Agents for Washburn's Deodoring and Disinfecting Fluid. A new lot of Folding Chairs and Stools to rent for TRUNKS, TRUNKS, TRUNKS, BAGS ! BAGS ! BAGS ! A complete stock of Tourists' Articles. The only exclusive trunk store in the city. Trunks, Bags and Sample Cases made to order. Repairing a specialty. Old trunks taken In exchange. Good Goods at Low prices at CROFUT & CO.'S, 210 Oliapel Street BELOW THE BRIDGE. ItfVEtfTORS! JOHN E. EARLE, No. 35 Chapel Street, Sew Haven, Conn. Gives his personal attention to procuring Patents 'for" Inventors. TT TTTF. UNITED STATES AND FOREIGN COUNTRIES. A practice or more tnan fourteen years, ana ire guent visits to the Patent Office has given him a familiarity with every department of, and mode of proceeding at, the Patent Oftlce, which, together with the fact that he now visits Washington semi monthly to give his personal attention to the inter ests of his clients, warrants him in the assertion that no office in this country is able to offer tha same facilities to Inventors in securing their inventions by Letter Patent-and particularly to those whose applications have been rejected an examination of which he will make free of charge. Preliminary examination, prior to application for patent made at Patent Office, at a small charge. His facilities for procuring Patents in Foreign Countries are unequaled. Refers to more than one thousand clients for whom he has procured Letters Patent. jy!8d&w ELECTRICITY IS LIFE. Why will people cling to the absurbidea that they must take medicine? Electricity will reach where medicine has failed, as 15 years1 experience has nrovAd. If vou are troubled with Catarrh, or Neural gia, or Rheumatism, Throat or Lung Troubles, Gen- ELECTRICITY. Go and see Dr. Cummings. His method differs from all others. His success is wonderful. - Ladit treated successfully-. Ladies can consult with the Doctor's wife afternoons. Consultation free. DR. J. W. CUMMINGS, No 4 Church Street. nclS WOOD'S BLOCK. EEADMIIED PAINTS, ALL SHADES! Artist Materials, Chamois Skins, Sponges, Carriage Top Dressing, Cotton Waste. THOMPSON & BELDEN. 396 AND 398 STATE STREET, COURIER BUILDING. jyia : . HENRY A. DANIELS. M. D., 144 LEXINGTON AVENUE. NEAR 39th STREET, ' Hours. 8 to 1 and fi fco 7 Diseases' of the Nervous system, Geni to-Urinary raAdawftii 1T1RS. 91. E. COWLES, HI. !., CHRONIC DISEASES A SPECIALTY. - i. 03 Olive Street. Office hours 10 to 12 and 11 to 4. ml5 8m Claret and Sauterne Wines. tlTr have" received this day 100 cases of Esche V V Viauer & Co.s Wines, our own direct imnorta- tion frbm Bordeaux. Having handled these wines for th past twenty-two years we can confidently recommend them for purity and general excellence to alKof our customers desiring reliable and StraiiBlb W HUM. KU TV . A. IIAJjU OL jySl 770 Chapel Street. k-. 12 inn i.i.u,wi.h.ii .. ii1Miiwwi.i,wiuiiiuiiihii Blair IMPORTANT INFORMATION. To those in want of Glasses: Durant has pur chased H$ of Dr WnvtlinV i nthftl- moscopic test lenses ror testing uie eyat. It is the best tiling ever inventea. ? anri sam it. hftfora J inrw tn an MV9lltilt'I X OU Will KttVt) muiiejf and be cerfectir flt- J. G. H. DURANT, 38 & 40 Chubch St. W. IS. TREWUELLA, MANUFACTURER OF MATTRESSES. Hair. Cotton. Husk Excelsior: also Feather Beds, Pillows, Bolsters, etc. Renovating Mattresses a Specialty, w iu cau ana aeuver at residence in city. r. . i - -r l. di -rx . f rn -wrr rm.-'ii t,mn m LfP al7d6m New Haven, Conn SMALLPOX CAN BE REMOVED LEOKT c3 CO., London, Perfumers to Her Majesty the Queen, have lnventea ana patentee uie wona-renuwneu - OBLITERAXOR, Which removes Smallpox Marks of however long standing. The application is simple and harmless, causes no inconvenience and contains nothing inju rious. - Send for particulars. SUPERFLUOUS HAIR. LEON & CO.'S "Depilotory" Removes Superfluous Hair in a few minutes without pain or unpleasant sensation never to grow again. Simple and harmless. Full directions sent by mail. Price $1. GEO. W. SHAW, Gen. Agt., 219 A TREMONT STREET, BOSTON, MASS. m28eod&w . Asinsrle dose of SANFORD'S RADICAL CURE in stntly relieves the most violent sneezing or Head Cold, clears the Head as by Magic, stops watery discharges from the Nose and Eyes, prevents Ring ing Noises in the Head, cures Nervous Headache. and subdues Chills and Fever. In Chronic Ca tarrh it cleanses the nasal rtassatresof foul mucus. restores the sense of smell, taste and hearing when anectea, irees tne neau, tnroat ana Droncmai tubes of offensive matter, sweetens and purifies the breath, stops the Cough and arrests the progress of L-axarrn towaros uonsumpuon. One bottle Radical Cure, one box Catarrhal Sol vent and Sanf ord's Inhaler, all in one package, form ing a complete threatment, of all druggists for $1. Ask for SANFORD'S RADICAL CURE. POTTER DRUG AND CHEMICAL CO., BOSTON. A aI g Mr. For Th'eeTie'fnTrTirevnTTonTh'e CU I IVor INSTANT IT IS APFLIED,of rheu v VOLTAIC mat ism. Neural gia.Sciatica, Coughs R.V !i jj Colds, Weak Back, Stomach and SV urBowels, Shooting pains, numbness, O0 Dyspepsia, Liver Complamt, Bil ?AN ious Fever, Malaria and Emdem J7 ics, use COLLINS' PLASTERS, an A'JL' S. v TT.TETTRTn RiTTT7PV nrnVtincbrl i LS ia with a POROUS PLASTER, and A cTlaugh at pain,, 25c everywhere. ml5mathaw JOHNSTON'S PREPARED KALSOMINE In white and all other desirable tints. The Best and Cheapest in the Market. A Large Assortment of WHITEWASH BRUSHES, Varying in price from SOc up wards. MASURY'S CELEBRATED RAILROAD COLORS AVERILL CHEMICAL PAINT. D. S. G-LEOT &S0IT, Nos. 270 and 272 State St. mlO GREAT 1IDSTJDER Closing-Out Sale I OF- COESETS, HOOP SKIRTS -AND BUSTLES IN OUR CORSET DEPARTMENT, Bolton & Neely, SUCCESSORS E. MALXEY & CO. jyM Not onlv to the suiTea wasted by disease doe- Lruage s ooa supple hnent the proper medi- .fcine and bring back .trength and comfort, )ut the delicate mother twill find its daily use pust what is needed to cnecK ana supplement the drain made upon na ture's forces. Try it. mothers, and be con. tvinced. Recipes to suit jdifferent tastes accomr pany each can. It does not tax the digestive organs, but is strengthening to-both invalids and children Sold by druggists. 35c. up. WOOLRICH & CO., au2eod&'Vl n FISTULA AND PILES, Cared without tbe use of the Knife. Wm. REED.(M. D.. Harvard. 1842) and ROBERT M. REED,)M. D., Har vard 1876), Evans Honse, 175 Tremobt St., Boston, treat VTSXIJI.A. PILES and ALL DISEASES OF THE REG. XU2T1, without detention from business. Reference eiven. Send for pamphlets. Ofnce hours 11 a. in. to 4 o'clock p. m. (except Sunday). aa8eodly WE HAVE COMPLETED Our arrangements for a SUPERIOR STOCK OF FERTILIZERS! Including brands from tbe following well known manufacturers. Quinnipiae Fertilizer Co., - II. J. Baker tt Co., Ilapes Formula and Peruvian Gnano Co., Frank oc, J. B. King & o. Lester Bros. Our aim this saaaon will be to sell only goods .that we can guarantee, and to make our prices as low as consistent with the quality. Farmers and market gardeners intending pur chases in this line should B"mre our lowest prices. as we have made a marked reduction in Dry Fish Guanos. Complete Manures. Call on or address RcB Bradley & Co., No. 406 State Street. jylO Sawaw VARICOCELE 4 SA J IT People s Dry m BLA NKETS FROM . . AUCTION. We have received another Auction, and shall offer them on MONDA.Y MORNING at prices which we will GUARANTEE to be V than equal value can be bought for elsewhere in this city. A comparison solicited. A GRAND EXHIBITION of line Turkish Rugs, Portias and Embroideries of Pal ace Work sold at less than UCTIONT FB.ICS by native Armenians from last but a few weeks. Ask hundred years old Rugs. J PROCTOR NEW HAVEN. Elastic Hose. KNEE GAPS, ANKLETS AND ARM PIECES. Silk Abdominal Supporters. For the relief of corpulency, enlarged veins and weak joints. Since we commenced the manufac ture of the above, using only fresh imported stock, we are able to furnish the best fitting and most dur able goods that can be made. A fact that our regu lar customers do not fail to appreciate. OUR STOCK OF TRUSSES, nTniifn.tiirel AKneciallv for our retail trade, in lrfudes almost every form of Truss of any value In market, which with our faculties ror mainng w or der special appliances and long experience in the treatment of Hernia, enables us to guarantee reiioi and comfort to every one needing support. Personal attention given to tne selection uuu roper adjustment of all appliances. E. L. Washtorn, M. D., 84 OHUnOH AND 61 CENTER ST., - BENEDICT BUILDING. DEPOT CARS PASS THE DOOR. jyl" LDTCOL! SAFE DEPOSIT COMPANY -AND- STORAGE WAREHOUSE, 32 To 38 EAST 4S1 STREET, (Opposite Grand Central Depot.) Sew York. a TjriTT mvri FTREPROOF THROUGHOUT Now readv for the transaction of business. Boxes rentedat from $10 to $300 per year. Silver, Trunks and packages stored under guarantee. Private entrance, Beception and Toilet Rooms for vault, coupon, Becepuu" ... - .i. " ,,i direetlv accessible to the . .1 mAitA T? nn LJ 13 gluuiiu . , street. Rooms or space m tne FIREPROOF H lllrlHM Sfi . :t wmin of Art and Merchandise rented by the' month or year. Trunk stoarge a "iSSPECTION INVITED. THOS. Ir- JAMES, A. VAN SANT-VO0RD, Fresiaent. ' ' ' v.- H" B.EDGAR, J. R. VAN WORMER, Secretary, Superintendent. JUST OUT! THE STAR CHORUS BUUK, FOB Conventions, Choirs and Musical Societies., Ity V. O. PERKINS. Price $1; Per Doz., $9. . n I. ;.. AnA 4 1. a l,nii Or flnH Tne ritar wnoru duw id "" - - -etv in want of good Sacred and Secular Choruses will eagerly aaopt, a mo " .'' " . best 168 pages, forge octavo size. 30 Choruses about halfSecular, half Sacred. Organ or Piano accomr paniments. For Mixed Voices. 1 : ' .i .i iwumi will bn found Hadrn's "Glorious is the King." Mendelssohn's "I waited for the Lord," Handel's 'Hallelujah," and Rossi ni's -When Thou Comest." Among the Secular Choruses are: Benedict s 'iinmo " Stewart's "Bells of St. Michael's," Verdi's "Storm King," and Hatton's "Stars of the Summer Night." . THREE NEW MUSIC BOOKS ! Choral Worship. ($1, or $9 per dozen.) By L. o. Emerson. For Choirs, Singing Classes and Conventions. , s gone Worship. (35 cts., or $3.(!0 per dozen). By L. 0. Brmerson and W. F. Sherwin. For Sunday Schools. ,M . The ITEoael Slmeer. (60 cts., or $6 per dozen.) By W. O. Perkins and D. B. Towner. For Sing ing Class and Conventions. Any book mailed for retail price. OLIVER BITSON Sc CO., Boston. au;6tf ; ' - PEACHES, Orstnses, Lemooj, BftnuM) Water melons, Citron Melons, Apples, Tomatoes, Sweet Potatoes And Everything kept In a flrst-class droeerr. ):' HARRY liEIGH, 670 Chapel Street. Telephone. '- aul6 I. S. MIIXER, M. D. 318 Chapet Street, between Or ange and Cliurch Streets. -" Residence, - ""-' Tontine Hotel ' SEW IIAVEX, COSffl. OFFICE HOURS 8 to 12 a. m., -2 to p. m, 7to EuNBAY 0 to 10 a. m., 5 to 1p.m. m7 8m BROADWAY CASH STORE. Spring Umk Is reduced and anyone csn buy very prime Spring Lamb - at tne following rednced prices. 18c pound 15c pound 20c pound 18c pound Spring Lamb, Hindquarter Sprinf; Lamb, Forequarter Spring Lamb, the Leg Spring Lamb, the Loin ' 18c pound 15c pound 20c pound 18c pound SOc pound 10c pound auc pouna 10c pound Spring Lamb breast to stew Come early to the best and cheapest house for 5 Meats and Groceries in una city. iAUIi JEISTE Sic BROS., ' XOl AND 107 BROAD WAIT. waS i Store large lot of Blankets from the 1'ar East. This sale will to see the three and four Downright Cruelty, To permit yourself and family to "Suffer!" With Bickness when it can be prevented and cared so easily With Hop Bitters! ! ! Having experienced a great deal of "Trouble!" from indigestion, so much so that I came near losing my Life! My trouble always came after eating any food However light And digestible. For two or three hours at a time I had to go through the most Excruciating pains, "And the only way I ever got" "Belief!" Was by throwing up all my stomach con- tained. No one can conceive the pains that I had to go through, until "At last!" X was taken! "So that for three week I lay in bed and Could eat nothing! My sufferings were so that I called two doctors to give me something that would stop the pain; then Elf orts were no good to me. At last I heard a good deal ' "About Hop Bitters! And determined to try them." Grot a bottle in four hours I took the contents of One! Next day I was out of bed, and have not seen a "Sick!" Hour, from the same cause since. I have recommended it to hundreds of others. You have no such "Advocate as I am." Geo. Kendall, Allston, Boston, Mass. Columbus Advocate, Texas, April 21, '83. Dear Editor: I have tried your Hop Bit ters, and find they are good for any com plaint. .The best medicine I ever used in my family. H. Talener. . None genuine without a bunch of green Hops on the white label. Shun all the vile, poisonous stuff with "Hop" or "Hops" in their game. jyoeodAw DOES WONDERFUL CURES OF BCIDWEYDISLgASES AND LIVtW COWPLAIHTSi O Beesass it acts on the LITER, BOWELS and KIDNEYS at the mm time. - Beeaase it olecuiaes tbe gyaUam of the poison, oos humors that develop in Kidney and Uri nary DImiiw, Biliousness, Jaundice. Constipa tion, Piles, or in Snenznatism, Kenralgia, ner vous SisordexB and all Female COTn plaints. WBOIM PROOF OP TMI3. IT WTTTi BKTtLEIiX CUSS CONSTIPATIOK, PILES. . and RHEUMATISM, By -"s; FRZB ACTION of all tiie organs and functions, thereby CLEANSING the BLOOD raatoriiicthenOTmal power to throw olT disease. THOU8AND8 OF CA8E8 of the worst forms of these terrible diseases he been Quicltly relieved, and in a short time PERFECTLY CURED. PRICK, 1. LIQXJIB OR DttT, BOLD BY DRUGGISTS, Dry can be sent by mail. WHIsS, HICHAB-DSOIT & Co., Barlington, Vt, S Sftd itunp for Diry Alnmpac for 18S4. ARL'S WHI THIS O N TRADE EVERY MARK WRAPPER. Is a pearly white, semi-transparent fluid, havings remarkable affinity for the skin. The only article yet knows to chemistry that will penetrate the skin WITHOUT INJURY. BEAUTIFIES THE COMPLEXION, Eradicates all Spots, Freckles, Tan, Moth Patches, Black Worms, Imparities and Diseolorations of every kind, either .Tlthls or upon the skin. It renders the Bfeln pure, clear, healthful and brilliant, creating a com plexion which la neither artificial nor temporary, but ft once beautiful and permanent In itsbeaaiy. IT TTTP V 5 (almost inMnnlly) Knnbura, 11 VUaiiO, prickly Heat, Chapped, Rough or Chafed Skin. In fact. Its remits upon aildlaeaaeaof the skin are wonderful. Itnera: fails. Css also PEARL'S WHITK GLTCKKLVi. SOAP. It makes the skin so soft and white. ASK TOUB DBUGGIST FOB IT. Large Invoice -or- GOSSAKR CLOAKS TO BE SOLD For the Next Thirty Days, EACH AT 95 CENTS. . . ' AT THE GOODYEAR RUBBER STORE, 73 Church Street, CORNER CENTER, Opposite the Postofflce. P. C. TUTTLE, Proprietor. sLOST, - CRESTED pendant to a fob chain. The find er will be suitably rewarded by leaving it at L. r. CHIDSEY & CO.'S, I . No. 1 Church Street. MAGOIRE & CO TF G LVCERI Tne Oldest Dally Paper Published in Connecttent. THE C AEKINGTON PUBUSHTNGr CO. SINGLE COPIES TWO CENTS. dsuviebed bt oakiuess thk cltt, 12 cents a Week, 42 chkts a Mokis, $5.00 a Year. The Same Terms Bt MaXL. ' Rates of Advertising;. SITUATIONS WANTED, one insertion 80c; each subsequent insertion 25c WANTS, RENTS, and other small advertisements occupying not more than six lines, one insertion 75c; each subsequent Insertion 25c One square (one inch) one Insertion, $1.20: each subsequent insertion, 40 cents; one week, $3.90; one month. $10.00. Yearly advertisements at the -following rates: One square, one year, $40; two squares, one year, $70; three squares one year, $100. Obituary notices, in prose or verse, 15 cents per line. Notices of Births, Marriages and Deaths, SO cents each. Local Notices 90c per line. Advertisements on second page one price and a half. ...- , Yearly advertisers are limited to their own imme diate business, and their contracts do not include Wants, To Let, For Sale,' etc ' - Special rates uralshatt onappucatfon for contracts covering a considerable length of time, or a large space. THE WEEKLY JOURNAL is PUBLISHED Evert Thtjrsdat Mornin9. Single Copies S centa - - - $2.00 a year Strictly in advance, - 1.50 a year All letters and Inquiries in regard to subscriptions or matters of business should be addressed THK JOURNAL AND COURIER, New Haven, Conn. Notice. We cannot accept anonymous or return rejectee communications. . In all cases the name of tbe writer will be required, not for publication, but as a guarantee oi gooa iaiin. Monday, August 25, 18S4. REPUBLICAN NOMINATIONS. FOR PRESIDENT, JAMES G. BLAINE, or Maine. FOR vice president, JOHN A. LOGAN, ofllllnols. . State Electoral Xicket. SLECTORS-AT-LABQE, Theodore D. Woolsey, New Haven. Charles A. Williams, of New London. DISTRICT ELECTORS, . 1st District I. Luther Spencer, of Suffield. 2d District Joseph E. Silltm an, of Chester. 3d -District James S. Atwood, of Flainfield. 4thDistrict Frederick Miles, of Salisbury, For State Officers. OR GOVERNOR, HENRY B. HARRISON, of New Haven. FOR UETJTENAMT GOVERNOR, LORRLN A. . COOKE, of Barkhamsted. FOR SECRETARY OF STATE, CHARLES A. RUSSELL, of Killingly. FOR TREASURER, V. B. CHAMBERLAIN, of New Britain. FOR COMPTROLLER, LUZERNE I. MUNSON, of Watertmry. A SIGNIFICANT "KICK." The religious papers which declared so speedily and vigorously against Blaine now find themselves in a tight spot. They cannot accept the theory that it makes no difference what the private character of a nominee for the presidency of this great na tion is, and they have become convinced that Cleveland is not what he was said to be and what they thought he was. The New York Independent calls for Cleveland's retirement from the ticket. It says: The attempt now to force such a candidate upon the people would, in our opinion, disgrace the party which nominated bim, and the whole nation, if he should be elected. We will have no hand or voice in helping on this matter, and we will not advise the readers of the Inde pendent to smother their consciences and dis grace themselves by engaging directly or in directly in any such movement. We are now in a serious difficulty as a nation, in re gard to the unchecked progress of Mormon ism; and shall we now, in the face of threat ening evils and perils, plunge into a deeper gulf by any seeming indifference as to the private character of one who has been nomi- Ttftterl to fill the hio-hest rimr-ft in the crift. rf the people? We say no! a thousand times No! Governor Cleveland should positively decline to be a candidate, and withdraw im mediately from the canvass, and be com pelled to do so if it is necessary. The Congregationalist is not quite as out spoken as the Independent, but it has evi dently got enough of the Reform ticket. It says: We should be more than glad if we could see our way to believe the refutations, but we are constantly receiving new evidence on the matter, and the better opportunities our informants seem to have had of knowing the actual facts, the more emphatic is their testimony against Governor Cleveland. The best that can be said for him is only that some good and true men believe in the up rightness of his present life. We wish that the facts might prove such as to enable all men to accept their view, but we greatly fear will not. The Evangelist is, if anything, a little milder than the Congregationalist and thus expresses itself: We do not wish to accuse any man wrongfully, or even to suspect him wrongfully, and yet we are haunted by a ter rible fear. We are left in a state of uncer tainty, in which the heart sinks with name less dread. It is for the Christian people of this country to look at these things without passion and violence, but . with open eyes; and, without being swayed b party feeling, but acting "soberly, discreetly, and in the fear of God, "to say whether a man of whom they have such fears and forebodings is the sort of man whom they wish to see elected President of the United States. These are very significant utterances and they will have a powerful influence, for there can be no suspicion that they are not honest and conscientious. The religious press is a queer spectacle just now, but it has the con solation of knowing that it is better to do right than to help make a man President who is not fit for the office. EDITORIAL NOTES. That cold wave was very welcome. The Hartford Telegram is the only Demo cratic paper in the State which throws mud at the Hon. Henry B. Harrison. It is poor business for tbe Telegram and will not pay- . . . ,. ... . Crime in this city received a decided check yesterday in the arrest of several hardened newsboys who plied their nefarious 'calling in such a way as to incur the disapproval of the police. , .. . . . Governor Waller does not seem to be anx ious to test his popularity by running against the Republican nominee for governor, but we do not see how the Democrats can do without him. The Hon. John T. Wait of Norwich, who has served the Third district of this State for many years in Congress will, probably be renominated and re-elected this year. He has made a very efficient representative., . : The nomination of the Hon. Henry B. Harrison is heartily approved by Republican newspapers all over the country. It is looked upon as adding much to the probabil ity of Republican success in this' State in November. The plan of using the enormous water power of the Alps for working . electric rail-, roads in Switzerland is about to take a defi nite shape, the idea being to connect the towns of St. Moritz and Pontresina by an electric railroad four and three-fourths miles long, the motive power to be supplied by the mountain streams; the' line, in case it proves a success, to be extended a considerable dis tance. 1 It is said that Mr. .Tamoa n Wr-Aon nf the -. tlttsburg Sunday Globe was the first man to demand the nomination of Grover Cleveland by the Democratic national convention. Mr. Breeu is now for Butler, and thinks he made a great mistake in trying to help Cleveland. ! The London Lancet finds a new argument for hanging in the fact that the brain of a plan whose head has been cut off, in the guillotine, for instance, lives and retains consciousness for an appreciable time after death, greater or less according to circum stances and physical condition. The Lancet declares in favor of hanging as destroying consciousness more rapidly and preventing its return more effectively than any other method known that can be employed by justice. The president of a Cleveland horse railroad company is satisfied with the practical suc cess of the electric system in operation on a portion of his line. He estimates that with an expenditure of $150,000 for the plant engines, boilers, dynamos, motors," arid con duits a saving of over $50,000 a year can be effected over the present cost qf opera tion by horses, besides securing to the com pany and the public the benefit of rapid transit. The one car now in operation runs oh schedule time, but it can be driven at the rate of ten miles an hour. ; It is very evident that the negro is fast learning how to take advantage of his oppor tunities. For instance, the little village of Lowell, in Kentucky, which is in rich blue grass country, fifteen years ago had but one colored man within three miles who owned any land. Now there are thirty colored families within that distance who own farms. varying in size from five to thirty acres, all of which have been bought with the proceeds of their own labor. This is an exceptional case, perhaps, but there is no occasion for despair about a race which is capable of such things. Women are "'gaining on it" even in Turkey, The former rigidity of seclusion for women is greatly relaxed in Constantinople. Since they have begun leaving their faces uncovered the most picturesque view is from behind. They still wear the veil, but so loosely that the face can be seen. From the back, how ever, there is nothing but the white head dress and the graceful folds of the envelope to the knees, below which is usually bare ness. On the street the women are models of propriety. They never speak to a man on such occasions, though they will stare at a foreigner with simple and childlike curiosi ty. A smile is not hard for a stranger to ob tain, but it is given not so much in coquetry as to worry the guardian eunuch. The largest cotton plantation in Alabama is said to be that of Messrs. Roberts & Salter, near Union Springs. These two young men have in the last four years cleared over nine hundred acres of land and dug twenty-five miles of ditches. Work on the plantation is regulated with military precision, and the "hands" go and return from labor at the sound of a bell. The small army of laborers and their families on the farm, numbering 800 souls, are comfortably housed and are apparently contented. Each family has its garden apart and raises pigs, chickens, etc. Although cotton is the principal crop, a large amount of corn is raised for food." "Actual experiment shows that this crop can be raised at a cost of 10 cents per bushel. It is estimated that .the yield this year will be 900 bales of cotton and 95,000 bushels of corn, the former worth $40,500 and the latter $21, 250 total $61,750. The cost of making these crops is put at $28,000, which leaves a net profit of $33,750. The number of regular laborers employed is 392, and there are 150 mules and horses and sixty-five farm wagons. A COOL WAVE. Mrs. Julia K. "What is the best thine for a lady to carry to occupy her hands with, and keep them from appearing awkward?" A baby, madam. Burlington Free Press. Sings a seaside poet, "Alone my lonely watch I keep." You are lucky. Man with the gold three base balls keep ours more than three-half s of the time. Burlington Hawkeye. - They came very near securing a down-east schoolma'am to teach a little school in Kan sas, but when the committee told her that it was "on the bare prairie," she screamed and said that she couldn't think of going to such an immodest place. Burlington Free Press. Cholera witticism: "Well, doctor, vou see that cholera is abating everywhere. Now, do you think it was the real, genuine Asiatic cholera, from Asia?" "Certainly, my friend, certainly; only it was from Asia Minor, and that accounts for the epidemic being such a little one." "Oh, I seel" Jones "What a waspish summer this is." Smith "Waspish! What a queer term for a Bummer season." It exactly describes this summer, how ever." "Why, how?" "It is the hottest at the rear end." Phil adelphia Call.- "How can you account for those fine stalks of corn coming up in the fence cor ners' asked a man of a farmer. "That's not corn," the farmer replied; "only weeds." "Ah, how singular." "Don't know much about farmih', I reckin?" "Very little. I am the editor of an agricultural paper." Ar kansaw Traveler Uncle Mose met Jim Webster on Austin avenue: "I heered bofe yer parents was dead. What did you get from 'em?" asked Uncle Mose. "Lemme see," said Jim, pensively, "from my fodder I'se got dese heah crooked legs, and from my mudder I inherits a weakness in de chist." Texas Sif tings. Looking over an old scrap-book the other day, says the correspondent of a New York paper, I came across some very quaint speci mens of old New England ways. One of the court documents of Salem, Mass., begins thus: "To all Christian people, fishermen and Indians." Tbe distinction between fishermen and Christians strikes me as being delightfully quaint. "Hullo, Jones, where are you going," said Smith as he met Jones hurrying down the street with his gripsack in his hand. "Going to take the steamer for Europe." . "Going to Europe! Why, man, they've got the cholera there this year." "I know it; but they haven't got a presi dential election there this year. Good-by." Somerville Journal. Dr. O'Dubbledot "No, sir; it's all non sense. Even the very air is changed for the worse, faith! and people don't live so long as they used to in the last century." Mr. Grumptious "Why, that's rubbish, doctor. I saw the death of two centenarians in the papers last week." Dr. O'Dubbledot "Av ooorse ye did,sir, and so did I, for that mat ter; and I've read of a good many others be sides.1 But just tell me this, sir, if ye plase. When were these same centenarians born? In the present degenerate century? Not a bit of it, bedad! No, sir. Iv'ry mon of 'em dates back from the last century. I defy ye to produce me one centenarian born in this cen tury." London Times. r I Character of M. Thiers. '. . ICasseH's Illustrated History of England. " The healer who was to inspire France's stricken frame with new energy, who was to nurse her with patient hand during long hours of convalescent fretfamess, before she could come forth again and take her part in the affairs of the family of nations, was Louis Thiers, By a curiously rapid process of elimination, the National Assembly of Versailles and its chief of the Executive had become the only power in France. The em pire had failed, the Commune had failed; there remained an amorphous Republic To the Assembly M. Jules Favre submitted tha treaty of peace, and obtained its ratification. Having thus, to the best of their ability, atoned for the past, the statesmen who were A a 41 i .11 . . ... . ... iru TOBturo we uuien xortunes or tneir latner- " " f . 1U1 WD J.UO character of the man to whom the destinies iana naa to- provide lor the future. The of the new Republic were committed had thus become a matter of supreme importance. It could not perhaps be said, even by his most ardent admirers, that his political record was absolutely free from reproach. An ad venturer of the humblest origin, he had been one of the most remarkable of the ' 'publicists, " whose vigorous and not too scrupulous at tacks had driven Charles X. from the throne. As the Minister of Louis Philippe, his appeal to the Chauvinistic instincts of the Parisian mob was nearly the cause of a purposeless war between France and England; after his dismissal in 1840 he made himself conspicu ous by barefaced intrigues against his rival, Guizot; and finally precipitated the downfall" of the Orleans dynasty by refusing to allow the troops to fire on the rioters. In fact, like all adventurers, he was forced during his early years to be somewhat of an opportunist. During the second Republic he showed that he had learned wisdom by suffering, and his attempt to restrict the suffrage was dictated by a spirit of statesmanlike caution. Never theless, his glorification of the Napoleonic idea in the pages of "The History of the Consulate and of the Empire" was a distinct blunder, inasmuch as it paved the way for the return of the third Napoleon. It was, however, his last mistake. With proud in tegrity he retired from political life rather than t&Ke omee unaer tne areamy cnariaum; and when, towards the end of the Empire, the cords of despotism were relaxed, and lib erty of speech, became possible, he appeared as the natriotio castieator of ministerial cor ruption, of financial incapacities, and of a foreign policy which, though it was favorable to free trade and to the regeneration of Italy, yet feared to attack Prussia before her strength was matured. "There is not a single mistake," was his terrible saying after Sadowa, "lelt lor tne junperor to comuiii,. It is well known that his objections to the war with Germany were dictated solely by the consideration that France was unprepared for so great a strain. After it had broken out, it was he who organized the defence of .Fans which went so rar to redeem tne military honor of his nation; it was he who submitted to the voluntary humiliation of a journey of supplication to the courts of Europe, and who, by his patient courage, was aDie to a Date the demands of Prince Bismarck. M. Thiers's financial abilities pointed him out as the only man who could lift up the load of pecuniary liability now imposed upon r ranee. Living Cameos and Bas-Rellefs. George B. Bartlett in St. Nicholas for September. This fascinating entertainment can be pre pared by children, at short notice, with very little trouble or expense. The articles re quired are two sheets of large card-board, two sheets of pink tissue-paper, and two sheets of white cottcn wadding, one ball of white and one of pink velvet chalk, a lead peneil, a pair of scissors, six yards of black cambric, a few tacks and a little paste. One sheet of card-board is fastened on the side wall of a darkened room, so that the shadow of the face of a person with large and regular features will fall upon the center of it when a lighted candle is held in front of the side of the face at a distance of three feet. A cup should be placed between the face and the card-board and kept in position by the pressure of the head, in order, so far as possible, to prevent any movement on the part of the sitter. The candle must be so placed that the shadow of profile is in the center of the card-board; the outlines are then to be traced with a pencil. The card boa d can then be taken down and the profile carefully cut out; the back of the head usu ally beine enlareed, so that various methods of dressing the hair may be permitted. This white card-board will be ready for the bas-relief after the outer edge has been cut into the form of a circle, and made thicker by several rings of pasteboard of the same diameter, but only three inches wide. When cameos are to be exhibited the outer surface should be covered with pink tissue-paper. A curtain of cheap black cambric or any plain-colored material, reaching from the ceiling to the floor, is then hung at a distance of about two feet from the back wall of the room where the exhibition is to take place. The card-board is fastened into a hole made in the curtain, so that the center of the open ing is about six or seven feet from the floor, and a chair or small table is placed close be hind this curtain and another mall piece of black cloth is tacked to the wall behind the opening. me person wnose lace is to lorm tue uas relief stands upon a chair or table so that the head fits into the opening in the card-board, about one-half of it projecting in front ot the surface of the frame thus formed. The side-face thus exposed is chalked and the hair is covered with white wadding, which conceals it, and also can be fastened in waves, plaits or classie knots; for cameos, pmk chalk and tissue-paper take the place of the white. Very pretty art studies can thus be made by experienced persons. When it is desired to show several of these art studies consecutively, it will be well to have a pink and a white frame placed side by side about one foot apart, as then they may be shown together or separately; the one not in use being covered with a little cur tain of black cambric. Thus a pleasing va riety can be produced by showing either a cameo or a bas-relief or both together. Faces of children or of grown people can be used as desired, as it is not absolutely necessary that the features should exactly fill the cut profiles in the card-board. The eyes are al ways closed, and a little chalk should be rubbed on the eyelids juat before the face is shown to the spectators. The frames may be placed between thick window curtains draped above and below them; this will save the trouble of a black curtain, as the performers can- stand in the window behind the curtain. The best man ner of lighting them is from the top; and when the room has no chandelier, a lamp can be held at the left side as high as can be done conveniently by a person who stands upon a chair or short step-ladder. Tne New French Divorce Law. Paris Letter in the New York Times. Many hopes and fears are based upon this addition to the code. Wives tired of being wives, or in a hurry to become wives again, and husbands craving for freedom were per plexed by the procrastination. Hundreds still in the bonds of wedlock have betrothed themselves afresh j contracts of marriage have been drawn np by the notaries; barris ters are at a premium and there is scarcely standing room to be had in the offices of the solicitors. And yet, now that divorce has become a national French institution, no one is quite satisfied with the provisions of its law. Even its partisans, and first among them M. Naquet himself, its great promoter, are disappointed. "It is a step in the right direction," admits M. Naquet, "but it is an insufficient step; the chamber voted my pro ject of law, but the Senate modified it and, not to procrastinate, I consented to that modification, for is not half a loaf better than no bread at all? Still, we have not got enough and we shall not have enough until our legislature admits; (1) divorce by mutual consent; (2) the validity of marriages con tracted between respondent and corespond ent when the plea of divorce has been adul tery; (3) that judicial separations having last ed three years or more shall be transformed into absolute divorces on the application of either party, whereas the senatorial amend ment renders this transformation optional with the tribunal before which the case is brought for examination." I am informed by some of my legal ac quaintances that this law is big with compli cations and difficulties, and that those who have been shipwrecked by marriage are like ly to suffer many disillusions W -e they hoped to find salvation, not the- least of which will be the inevitable delay of judg ments which they fondly hoped might be im mediate. Between three and four thousand applications for absolute divorce have been deposited with the tribunal of the Seine since last Thursday, and as business in the civil court was already, behindhand, one, two or even three years may elapse before the peti tioners can obtain a hearing, unless special judges are mercifully appointed, a measure strongly advocated by prominent and influ ential members of the bench and bar, who are positively brought to their wits' end by the temDie accumulation oi unnmsnea uusi- s. : However, be this measure of clemency adopted or not, people rush to Dame Themis for relief in shoals. And they are people of every class and creed some only to get rid of slavery, others to make new alliances in which they hope to find happiness. Nor is this rush confined to the bourgeoisie or to those who are qualified as free-tninKers. Duchesses and dukes, counts and countesses am no txntro-r tr rift themselves of the vincu lum matrimonii as any of those shop-keepers of the Rue des Lombards wno swear uy im erot and Voltaire and scoff at all forms of re ligion as-Yestiges of the supeistition of the aZtV i. and there would be queer revela tions and very unedifying details concerning conjugal life and family jars in the nobte Faubourg if the legislators, with an amount of tact for which dectnt society can. never be too grateful, had not inserted a clause in their bill by which all debates in divorce suits shall be held with closed doors. Something will leak out, of course, but not authorita- ; tively, and a good many reputations will be cracked; yet no judicial findings can be quoted as proof, and the. correctional courts will remain competent to punish for calumny the so-colled "slanderers," to which class are to be assimilated all who may venture to crit icise the social status of a man or woman who has figured either as plaintive or defend ant in a divorce suit. The one who gets a divorce will be in no better position than the one against whom it is pronounced; nobody outside of the parties concerned can ever know the true state of the case, who is wrong, -who right, what might have been the provocation, what are the extenuating cir cumstances. Nor has the law stipulated where divorce suits are to be tried, and, al though this juridical uncertainty may seem a question comparatively indifferent to appli cants, in it will be found fruitful germs of delay and, as the lawyers exnltingly remark, excellent reasons "why their fees should fat ten." Certainly the legislators at the Lux embourg have so hedged around this "path to freedom" with difficulties that very few will reach the longed-for goal, and yet, if few be chosen, many will get themselves called and try it, and furnish much food for scan dal and inexhaustible subjects for several fu ture generations of vaudevillists. There are some funny passages in this new law the funniest to be discovered in all French legis lation of which much will be made by play wrights. The divorce becomes obligatory, for instance, on "all persons sentenced to death," as if the guillotine was not sufficient to sever undesirable connections. As to the articles concerning incompatibility of humor and outrages, I can say, regretting that I can not particularize, that they are gems in then way, while the clause bw which "habitual in solence to mothers-in-law" is an admissible plea for divorce provokes a lively polemic as to how many times, at any one meal, a man may call his mother-in-law an "old fagot" without said epithet coming under the desig nation of "habitual." WILCOX & CO. ARE OFFERING A VERY CHOICE STOCK OF BLACK GOODS IN ALL GRADES AND QUALITIES, -AT- UNUSUALLY LOW PRICES. Grapes and Monrnin &oods A largo and varied etoek con Mtantly on hand to select from. WILCOX & CO., 767 -ta.Kri WX CHAPEL STREET. fe?9 IN CASH GIVEN AWAY Smokers of BlackvelTs Genuine Bull Durham Smoking Tobacco will rsosive Premiums as Ipllows on terms and conditions here specified: lstPREMM.S5,000 2d $2,000 3d " $1,000 22 other Premlnma m here shown. The 35 premiums will be awarded December 33, 1884. 1st Premium goes to the person from whom we re ceive the largest number of our empty tobacco bags prior to Dae. IS. 2d will be giren for the next largest number and thus, in the ordr of the number of empty bags received from each, to the twenty-fire sncceesfnl con. testants. Each bag1 must bear our original Bull Durham label, U. 9. Revenue stamp, and Caution Notice. Bair must be done up securely in a package, with name and address of sender, and number of bagn contain ed, plainly marked on the outside, and must be sent, charges prepaid, to Black well's Durham Tobacco Co., Durham, N. C. Every genuine package has picture of Bull. See our next announcement. $500 $450 $400 $350 300 373 $250 $225 $200 $175 $150 8125 $100 $oo $80 70 $GO $50 $40 930 $20 $10 DECORATIVE PAPER HANGINGS PAINTS, OILS, GLASS, ETC. I'l.ATT & THOMPSON, 61 and 66 Orange St. and 5 Center St. "A FRIEND IN NEED. DR. SWEET'S INFALLIBLE LINIMENT. Prepared from the recipe of Dr. Stephen Sweet, of Connecticut, the ereat natural Bone-Setter. Has been used for more than fifty ears and is the best known remedy for Rheumatism, Neuraljjia, Sprains, Bruises. Burns, Cuts, Wounds, and all external in juries. DODD-S KERVINE AND INVIGORATOR. Standard and reliable, and never fails to comfort the aged and help everybody who uses it. SOlD BY ALL DRUGGISTS TRY IT, nl3eod&wtf Cheapest place in the city to buy wood by the cord half cord, quarter cord or "barrel. Orders by mail or telephone will receive prompt attention,. MEW HAVEN WOOD YARD. nol4tfis EAST ST.. OPP. MYRTLE. UNIVERSITY OF BUFFALO. Laboratory of Chekistrv, Cor. Main and Virginia Streets, Buffalo, N. Y., May 28, 1883. Messrs. A. Heller & Bro.: Gentlemen I have carefully analyzed the sam ples of Hungarian Wines submitted to me by you, and And them to be perfectly pure, un watered, un fortified, unadulterated in any sense. They are, moreover, most pleasing to the palate, and possess qualities which render them very valuable as mild sitmulants. I am, gentlemen, - Yours most respectfully, K. A. WITTHAUS, A. M., M. D., prof, of Physiological Chemistry, University of New York. Prof, of Chemistry and Toxicology, University of Buffalo. Prof, of Chemistry and Toxicology, University of Vermont. I am Sole Agent in the New England States for the Importing house of A. -Heller A Bro., of Buda Pest, Hungary, and New York. HUGH J. REYNOLDS, Nos. 152 & 154 Crown St. - i Ke 'Haven, Conn. liffl ties 4