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WEEKLY STATESMAN PUBLISHED BT .I01IPT CAHDWELl. TERMS rott WEEKLY) Subscript loo for tsretvs months .' ituBsrriptioa for six month fAYASLB a ATAC. AdvsrtUlag Katt ...fl GO ... I SO 5m lw; w; w iB tm'ta Ida 1 tit Iih squsr. .. 'I o squares.. Tkr squares. 30 46 80 TO W roar square.. MMKjlUKi.., Ms square.. , ejnselorcoTmn llalf cotnma.... Itti column... ir 1T5 0 On square eight line f 1 for first hsaertion; fty cents for ab subsequent insertion. lrlectal nutlets Brit to read I nf mat Ur, f l.SDy ai(ire, each Insertion. Kight lines or less nam square. (HiMUi( matter, lucai "! - r n. ... . It AaWerflas-osesiU uraM in alma wilt Iim las a maiar b--s-am aaator caarael. HTWc will contract with parties themselves at the a nor rata and not through third partial. ITIN .DECEMBER 9, 1875 THURSDAY. TO HBKCUIBERI AND COHBU POIfOBNTS. . Persons writing to this office in relation o their pfipera or business, will please state the postoflice to which the paper is, or will I sent, or tho answer must be mailed. They will also state whether they take or It-i.re to take the DAiLTor Weeklt. llyao doing, much delay and trouble will he avoided. 'JflaNliBHiatt V. BVTABatiJIHn THE DIFFERENCE. "Grangerism," in origin, philosophy and fact, is organized opposition to rings and corporations as plunderer of States. Ru tabagaism, on tho contrary, is tho embodi ment of ring and corporation power in the creation of government. It was Orunger im that would compel Tom Scott to serve Texas if Texas served Tom Scott. It was Uutahagaiam that, in order to secure the services of Tom Scott's riot? in fastening the new Constitution on the State, endowed a corporation openly hostile to Texas with enormous wealth and resistless power over men, corporations and newspapers in Texas. Grangcriaui loves tho State. . Rutabagaisin ravages the State, tirangcrinui is honest and frank and fearless. Ittitabagaism never does an act directly which it may do indi rectly. Instead of rentricting suffrage aud giving counties and towns good local gov ernments nnd a decent judiciary, the negro counties are disfranchised by a system of I errymauderiog, aud judicial districts, as crKiked as the time serving wlicy of dema gogues that suggested the cviminn of right aud thus begat the consummation of a foul wioug, ore constructed. Grangers arc hon rt farmers. They would have snid that courts routed by barbarians would be in- and therefore we restrict suf- hiulB.. iuiliiu1 anil t n ftrnn- 4 tsgaism, on the contrary, not "v jtv n moral nerve to elccltire Unit the 'V . . . - tudoio nuu no niib in mo jni- f suffrage, declares that corporations less linn 10,000 inhabitants shall Jnpi i pone a tax of more than twenty -fivo cants on each hundred dollars, and there fore no public work rau be undertaken, no bridges or highways or buildings construct ed. The honest, toiling people of Texan towns urn not to lc trusted witii the dispo sition of their own property. The pious, good, great nud wise Ilutabagas como mod estly to the front and declare that we can not don we please with our own. , AVby not? The answer is simple. The Kutaba- ... vt i . i. .. li.i- i .1 uas leareu to uucihi tne raooie uj uiairnu- ( niamg it in corporations, ami tnus tne gov ernment of -Toxus becomes offensive as thu most odious of centralized despotisms. Gran gers, on the contrary, are Republican freemen, devoted to the political philosophy of Tlionuis Jefferson. The words "Home Ilulu" wero collocated to embody the whole theory of true Americauism in gov ernment. Rutabagaism has violated it in almost every clauso of the new Constitu tion. Future legislatures will find them selves, if this proposed organic code be adopted, shackled hand and foot, and help less and powerless. Grangerism would give to legislature, representing thu people directly and fresh from their midst, tho broadest freedom and unrestricted powct But future legislatures, tho Rutabagas said, are not to be trusted. "We know it all, and these legislatures, elected under systems of unrest i icted suffrage,' will be full of knaves. We will uot protect the ballot box and leave tho legislature free; but we will tie the hands of tho legislature aud leave the bal lot box to pollution. Honest, fearless Grangers would have reversed this policy of Rutabagaism aud restricted suffrago at least by the imposition of a poll tax. Hut weonly proposed to show that when we have designated a system of legislation by tho term "Rutabagaism" we had no ref erence whatever to the Grangers of Tcxa. The intelligent members of Urauges con demn, as we do, tho whole theory of the new Constitution. It is founded in a Nlse philosophy and in thorough igtiorauce of the theory of pure republicanism in govern ment, and no IVmocrat, comprehending the principles on which the party of Jeffer son w louuded, without stultifying him self, rsn vote for this RuUlmg Constitu tion. Ton nCOTT F1H1LVZED, We concur with th Shieveport Timt$ that a Southern Pacific Railway i a neces sity of tho South; but no Southern Pacific Railway should be socoustiucted or placed iu such hands that th. South only contrib ute to its resources while it gives nothing to tho South. The wealth aud travel from Tiaa aud the Fonth wonld flow into tho highway at the one hundred and fourth parallel of longitude and bo liorne to Cali fornia; but tho riches of the Orient and of California would all be given to U Louis aud Philadelphia. When Texas endowed tho Southern Pacific with richca, it was de signed to Ik? a Southern road. Rut Tom S-.'ott is oeo of the largest shareholder in tho groat bridge at St. Louis; he owes, wo aie told, tho trustees of tho Atlantic and PaciHe (St. I-ouis and Viuita) road several millions. Therefore, Tom Scott would sell Texas and the Texas and P&ciJic to St. IrfMiis to enrich bis bridgo and to pat tho debt ho owes on account of his speculation In the stock of tho exploded Atlantic and Pacific bubble. Tho lection of Kerr to tho Speakership is Scott's overthrew, and no Southern Congresiman, cognizant of the fact influencing Scott and of his purpose to vreit tho designs of the State of Texas by oicg Texan wealth to build a St. Louis road aa Southern Congressman will daro -j..n Krati'i scheme in tho House. But i it uoiSt- foul shame that Rutabaguism, swloir all these facts, undertook to buy Tom Srott's Influence, in bektlf of tho ab surd bw Constitution, by renewing the land ., .t inada when the Texas and Pacific was jM-Dtiico ."i'wfifr Pacific 'railway" "Hue. Tie genius of demagogiim surely became trsasce n-Jently brilliant when it declared Jllist Tom Scott's land grant shou'.d fail if S 4 S B II HI 5 11 If, 14 31 t 8 15 SO 85 45 I 1 10 II 18 16 4.'. 5S IS It U SO 65 I 19 14 10 ta ou m llH SO S5 S5 56 W ts a H 75 190 l the new Constitution were not adopted. The Mihaa chieftain knew that if Tom Scott's bill went through Congress the great Philadelphia trickster could weft af ford to squander a Bullion in Texas to in sure the success of the 'new Constitution. But the election of Kerr empties freezing cold water on the nerves and muscles of the Philadelphia giant and the new Consti tution must'owfl Its ' adoption" at last, if adopted, to the rigorous exertions of that lively lot of gnod fellows who love it and admire it, how passionately and fervently we may never know, because they expect to hold offices under it. ; Cut Tom Scott is stricken with a dreadful paralysis and Texa, when Cougress adjourns, will have escaped forever from his clutches. AN EXTRAORDINARY LETTER BT- SINES MEN SIIOCLD BEAD IT. ite following remarkable letter mil ar rest the attention of every mercantile read er of the STATEfiUAX. Experience has stored up a vast deal of practical wisdom in the brain of the observer of current facts who wrote this paper: Mtrtle Gbove, Texas, December, 1875, Editor t Democratic fitaUtinan1 read your paper each week and my copy is bor rowed in succession by three of my neigh bors, snd how much further it goes l can not tell. I am only careful to read it and the advertisements before it passes from my hands. Since yon refer to it and would know how many people read each copy of the Statesman. I can tell you that certain ly twelve white adults read each copy of the Statesman that comes to this office. While your advertisers are profited, it occurs to me that you are most villainously cueaicu. These borrowers rob yon and annoy me, and it is consciousness of this fact that in duces me to write this note. I have ob served another fact which merchants every where should comprehend.- I see that the borrowers of my Statesman give their or ders for dry coods and groceries, boots, shoes and millinery exclusively to those whose advertisements appear in the States- Kan. It is therefore true that Austin mer chants owe you commissions on every order that goes from this county to your trades men. But you derive no advantage from these people. Those who do not advertise are certainly losing trade. Their business does not grow with the country's growth, while the enterprising, pushing, vigorous advertiser, as I see iroiu tne conduct ol my good neighbors who borrow the Statesman, is constantly extending hir business and becoming more and more widely known. If Texas stood still, if new populations were not coustantly added to the old, the old es tablished merchant would need little am from the Statesman ; but the incoming peo Die from other States can only lecome fa miliar with names and faces and the busi ness of men by always seeing them in the pHgesof the newspaper. After reading about some (rood fellow of Austin for three or four months in each number of the States man, 1 begin to tet-i nae ne is an oui friend of mine, and if he advertise any thing I want I walk over the whole town till I find the nmn. Then we have a talk about the advertisement and laugh aliont tlie potency of the press; we take a drink together, and thus I have made a friend through- the intervention of the newspaper. But 1 only began this letter to tell you how it is that a newspaper in the country is high ly valued. Its illusion is not ended when it tells the subsciiber himself all it knows. It then goes missionarying over the neigh borhood. It travels without ' crutches, is never too weary to talk; and never, like a placard or handbill, glanced at and kicked aside. People read newspapers and nil that they contain with infinite av'niity, and es pecially one like the Statesman, which thinks as it pleases and tlien tells all it thinks. But I have written ten lines for each one I proposed to indite when I lagan to discuss the philosophy or advertising as I see it dcvelopsd even here at Myrtle Grove. I would as willingly lend my tooth pick as my newspaper, and I only wished to have you suggest tho fact that my Iki rowing neighbors may no longer harrass me beyond endurance. - It. G. M. TOW SCOTT DONE FOR. Tho Impression obtains that the election of Kerr, the declared enemy of appropria tions by Congress to railways and tteam ships, is fatal to the schemo of Tom Scott, who must now settle with the creditors of the bankrupt Atlantic and Pacific (St. Louis and Viuita) Railway. Mr. Scott will bo forced to pay the paper of the concern which he indorsed for some millions. It is rather rough ou Tom Scott, but a good thing for Texas. In fact, the completion of tho Texas and Pacific to Fort Worth will satisfy the country for a time, and, mean while, the Texas and California company, which has expended fifty- millions of its own money and never received a ' dollar from the government, 'on the line from San Francisco to Sn Diego, will .find money to complete its road to El Paso.' There the Fort Worth and Dallas line will meet one from Galveston, Houston and Austin, und Texas, rather than St. Louis and Philadel phia, will be eunclied by the vast cession of land proposed to I given to a Califor nia and St. Louis company But Tom Scolt is dead. The triumph of Eerr over Randall who belongs to Tom Scott's ring was Scott's final overthrow, and Rutaba gaism's crutch was broken when Tom Scott fell to rise no more in Washington.-, Thk Attorney General, if tho Constitu tion b adopted; will surely have his hands and head full. He is required to bring suit against such coiporaiious as tho Oal veston Wharf Company, but is denied the right of employing assistant counsel. ' He will lie required by emery new officer in ev ery new county to. .explain tnd, define the mode of operntiou of every. new..clausc in the new Constitution and must also devote certainly six mouths to a thorough prepara tion for tho proer eond net of the suit against the Galveston Wharf Company in the Supreme Court of the Tuitcd Stales. Small as lie is, physically, the distinguished gen tleman will have to multiply himself some forty or fifty times. The whnrf company and other corporations sought to be de stroyed or divested of vested rights by the Rutabagas, all except Tom Scott, will cm ploy the ablest lnwyer in and out of Texas, lut the State's attorney can have no assist ants. . It is a flattering estimate of the gen ius and worth of the distinguished Attor ney-General tuns averted by the Constitu tional Convention, but we do not see very ell how he cau meet the exactions upon his professional force and learning thus Imposed by tho extraordinary convention. Til a RuUlg. fellows are now traveling over tho country persuading good, honest, sensible raon to become candidates for all aorta of offices and sinecures created by the new Confutation. ' The more candidates the more adherents there are of tho new code and thero will soon .be enough, the Rutabagas say, to cany it. Then tho San Antonio Erprt has gow in with the J5- amuur and the country is in a blue way. Our good tread, Hon. John Henry Brown, is going over his district getting: out multi plied candidates for motiiptisd offices, and if Tom Scott had uot been killed off by Xbo election of Kerr as Speaker of the House, these teirible forces would have triumphed. But after all these embryo candidates come into the conventions and, except one for each oiace, tre kaocke l on the head, will they not "turn tail" aad ijickia" their handa deep down Into their breeches pock cl, go into a "Crown" study and conclude than Hon. John Henry advised them un wisely t Every fellow obliterated aa a can didate nnder the Constitution will surely deal it a heavy blow when he gets a chance. and it is barely possible that the defeated and disappointed aspirants fcr places will be the deadliest enemies of the new Consti tution. They outnumber the other fellows as ten to one. Minnesota comes to the front on the woman suffrage question. At tho recent State election a large majority was given for tlie constitutional amendment, which pro vides that any woman of twenty-one years of age and upward may vote at any election for officers of schools, or on any meas ure relating to schools, or may be eli gible to any office pertaining to the man agement of schools. All af this would be approved in Texas, if they who voted, in matters affecting the schools, also paid for the maintenance of these institutions. We bsve seen the beneficent school system in operation in cities where the managers were representatives of the illiterate untaxed rabble. Then the school system speedily became a scheme of robbery, and superin tendents speculated in school books and or ganizsd rings inside the board of visitors, and taxpayers groaned, and a city was finally almost confiscated. They who maintain and support a government or a school sjt tern or a railroad or a bask should alone se lect its officers. Westeen Texas votes against the new Constitution because of its sectionalism; because it handcuffs counties and towns, and, of course, prohibits improvements and progress. Western Texas, whatever Ruta bagaism thinks to the contrary, docs not rejoice when it pays twenty-five per cent, mare for all it consumes and sells all it ex ports for fifty per cent, less than other por tions of the State, and all because the east monopolizes, under the new Constitution, all concessions made by the proposed new government. Even grants of public lands heretofore made for canals and ditches for irrigation have been revoked. Western Texas will never vote for the new Conrtitn tion. ' People say the Statesman has underta ken a big job when it fights the forces of officcseekers battling for pap under the new Constitution. We understand perfectly what we are talking shout and the result of our policy.. The new Constitution may be adopted. The consequence will 1e that when the officcseekers have fastened it on the State the people will begin to feel the force of wrongs inflicted on themselves and the absurdity of that philosophy which is forever prattling about Democracy, and yet accepts an organic code that defies and de feats every principle an 3 purpose of Democ racy. ' In reply to a letter-writer we have to say that he knows lit'.lc of the duties or re sponsibilities or honors of the editorial profession who abandons it to gain any or dinary political preferment. Since suffrage has been polluted the value of office con sists only in the money incident to its ten ure and therefore the depravity that pre vails in government, aud therefore' the higher the relative position of the journal ist who comprehends the duties and respon sibilities of his profession. Tup. Democratic and intelligent press of Texas, the Kem-Jhy, says, "almost unan imously condemn the refusal of the Ruta bagas to restrict suffrage in county and town elections." Instead of this they twisted and gerrymandered judicial dis tricts iu order to disfrarchise the negro counties nnd in resorting to cowardly arts of demagogism, they destroy the capacity of the courts to administer justice. Who can approvo such a constitution ? Tweed is tho great living, lively, ecstatic representative of corporation robbers. He and his " pals," who stole from thirty to fifty millions, were born of the tanteitllotUt. He was of those who buy and sell votes. He represented those who had no interest, direct or indirect, in the city they ruled and ravaged. ne stole for himself some seven or ten millions of money, and by its liberal use has escaped the clutches of the law. Our dispatches say that the extradition laws do not cover his case. IT IS ABSOLUTELY IIORRIRLE. The new Constitution, which sensible cit izens are asked to vote for, reserves and grants to Tom Scott and ties np for him a reservation of more than thirty millions of acres. The tract conveyed is nearly seven hundred miles long and eighty wide. Of this Tom Scott gets half. The adoption of this bastard Constitution ties up the whole of this vast rich district of country for years, and no sane, sensible Texan will vote for if. ' ' ' ; ' ' ' It was not the Statesman that was incon sistent.' We did sty that tho Constitutional Convention was' mqst generous ' to .Tom Scott and - so niggardly in concessions to other railways that all otliers and" their owners are hostile to the Constitution. "It was not the Statesman that was inconsist ent in assertion; but the Constitution in fact. Why was Tom Scott so peculiarly blest in winning the affection of the hay zy headed Rutabagas V I JrooK Duval, at Tyler, declared thecivil rights act constitutional, and yet white peo ple would obliterate the color line in poli tics, even as Radicalism would have us do in social life. The one consummation will follow the other as tho night the day, and blackness in morals and intelligence wil) lie universal as the suffrage The Cuero -vr should proclaim it, and the people of Mason never forget that few people of the. better class care to emigrate to a country where they think it necessary to wear a six-shooter at their tide, a bowie knife ia their boot, and keep an eye over both shoulders to insure safety.' Ths Bonham Kntrrprim tells of a fellow named John IL nell who paid somebody a debt of (515, and says if the sum had been due the iVeryrias it "never would have got a cent of rt.n Of course not. There is no reason why the good Enterprite should ever catch Hell. Hon. George F. Moobe, who is the choice of the profession ia Texas, will neither seek or decline a nomination as a candidate for a til ace on' the SriDieme Court bench. He will be nominated and elected, we prtfume. without opposition. The people of Socth Carolina will not be subjected, this year, " wo are told, to more than a tea mills tax. Ten cents on each hundred dollar would make Texans go into ft hjsterkal dooble-sbufBs of acute ev er lasting ecsUcy. Tne liveliest and most readable, end noo the lss pious,' christian paper ia Texas, Is the XiM4$r. We can't account for iU fervor and vivacity otherwise than by sup poaIc? if owes ranch to a ccasional" Tnocr.ii Mississippi fuss been free frrin negro domination a whole month, c bare not heard of a single effort to overturn the Union, and tho State is still quiet, and the negroes tnooze in security and suushia?. Whitelaw Reid, the pres gang of the country will regret t-i learn, is about to re tire from the'ehnir editorial of tfce New York TrUiune to.be succeeded, it ii said, by one rif the ire mortal Adams family. FoRTV-Forit candidates are t be voted for by each voter at tho n-xt election under the blessed new Constitution. Yet it was founded in economy and conceived in psrsi monv. ' Tuf.v are shoeing inu'.ea in Mexia wiih Bessemer steel, and that accouats for the soreness of the Teleijniyh in coming out of its little row with the Meiia LeJ-jir. Gn.vxT has brought the business i.f speech making into general contempt, nud the jk.i ple no longer run after speech maker. EDITORIAL NOTES. A memorial to Congress is being numer ously signed in Utah, piayiug for the ad mission of that Territory .1 State tlii winter. Thaddeus Su-wns's -'colored ' house keeper, " Lydin Smith, to whom hed':i.-iC I f-jO.000, has &ued the iUlr fur fix jttiri' pay at $200 per auuuui. Geu. Sherman's report, 'which was given to the country several days ago, showed the regular military force of the army to consist of 24,001 men and 1-340 ollicers. Zck Chandler is said to be turning all the old rats out of the Interior Depart incut just as they nre gettiug fat. Now tlie country has got to fatten up a new lot of rat. The Neirs-tiHil-Courier euys: "Marian Singer, daughter of the sewing machine in ventor, has appeared upon the stage in San Francisco in burlesque." She ought to be a "Singist" and devote herself unhooded to Hood's song of the shirt. The sewing machiue swindler arrested at Sherman is named Langdou Chevcs, a name illustrious and historical iu South Carolina. We arc curious to know whether this be his name. Is it not assumed ? We never heard of a descendant of these old Huguenots whoawiisotlier than an honest gentleman. : The pool '-sellers on the great four-mile race in California hold more than $'200,000 to await tlie result. As- there is no imme diate prospect of the race taking piano, and money is worth four per cent, in San Fran cisco, the pool sellers are in the enjoyment of a very respectable-temporary Juinanza. Ex-Lieutenant Governor, or ex-candidatc for the Lieutenant Governor's place in M'i souri, is preparing a fresh -now spr-eck fur the Granges. 'The old one will be deposited with a mummy ia a snrcophiiguA iu tl.e Patent Office at Washington.. It has done better service than Wendell Phillip's old lecture entitled "There is nothing new un der the Kim." ' : '" The Mississippi Legislators contains the . Senate : : .Demr.crat, 25-; 'Republi cans, 11: , Independent.. Republican, 1; total, 37. Democratic . majority,. 13. Of the Republicans, six are white and five colored ( one of them (Everett)' nnd "the In dependent (Furlong) acted almost entirely hist session with our party, so that tho ma jority of the Democracy on any close test would stand liltccu. liie statii3 or the house is: Democrats, DO; Republicans, 18; Independent "'Republican0, 1; Fusion Re publicans, 2; total," 117.' Dcjti'ocrr.Uo ma jority, 77.- Of the whole number, tenure colored Republicans, one colored Iudepen- dant, two cotorert i usion liepuulicans, and one colored Democrat. The white Repub licans muster jast five votes. The colored Independent, Carter of Warren, defeated a regular Republican nominee. The Fusion ists, Sunderlin and Young, both of Wash ington, were upon tho. Fusion or people's ticket, equally composed of Democrats aud Republicans, and defeated the regular Re- publicanB. - .The colored Democrat, Mr. Vaugliau of Panola, was on the regular Democratic Conservative ticket. The United States Senate, at its next ses sion, will be pretty equally divided politi cally. The Senators may be classified as follows ; Forty - Republicans, (including Alcorn, Robertson, . Hamilton and Ed munds) ; twenty-nine Democrats, and three independent liepublicans--Booth, Chris tiancy and Cameron of Wisconsin. There are two vacancies to be filled, one caused by the recent death of Mr. Ferry, of Connecti cut, and the eternal vacancy from Louisiana claimed by Pinchback. A Democratic Sen ator will be chosen in place of . Ferry, of Connecticut, wbicli will give the Democrats thirty, instead of twenty-nine votes. Should a Democrat be-elected from Louisi ana, as is thought probable, and he be ad mitted to a seatsvhich ia believed, improba ble, the Democrats will muster thirty-one votes. From the total Republican vote take those whose votes cannbt always be counted upon Alcorn, Robertson,' Hamilton and Edmunds and their list is diminished to thirty-six. Leaving out the question of tho Louisiana senatorship, the Democrats will be able to cast a total vote of thirty. Add to this the four doubtful Republicans above named and they will have thirty-four. To.this,add thrco Inde pendents, Booth, Chrisliancy, aud .Cameron of Wisconsin, and the opposition to' the un doubted Republican element wvmld number thirty-seven, or a majority of -one. AIi though most of the Senators put down s doubtful or IudMiadeut liuiblicrins more frequently voti with the .Republicans than the Democrats, it will be seen tit a glance that when they do the latter they will leave the 'Republicans' in the minority. Such a circnraHtnnce is likely to happen very sel dom, but iUwouVl have occurred last , w i n ter. had a direct vote been taken , in the Pinchback "case. ' It is certainly truo.lhat Alcorn, who' has never adopted aUy absurd or extreme heresies of Radicalism, will be, for tho remainder of his term, the freest of thinkers and most independent of voters. The Poatofflre. i. '. The forthcoming repot t; of- Postmaster General Jew U wU iik a veryfavorable exhibit, eif the financial, management .of his department. . A , portion of his. report will also li devoted to the new system of pre paying newspaper postage and its 'opera tions. - No change in method will be rec ommended. , The Postmaster General looks wiili regret upon the practice of postmas ters who receive large saltric., ranging from fifteen hundred to Tonr thousand dollars, who devote only few hours each day to their duties. He strongbj condemns such ofiiceis aa come to their offices lute in the afternoon, hastily turning over theirmail, signing such documents as require tlieir offi cial signatures, then leaving their duties to subordinates and giving their time ta their private pursuits, Mr. Jewell is of the opin ion that officers paid by the ' government should give their w hole time to the govern ment, and that those .who cannot do this ought to tctirc. In regard to what is known as the "third class matter," upon which the rate was so unreasonably Increased dur ing the last sess.on of Congress, the Post master General will, make some important recommendations. The present postage on all printed matter 4nd packages is a cent aa ounces' or fraction or an onncey on all transient matter, so thnt it not ntfreqneatly happens that a traaaieitl newspaper Will re quire four cents postage, or as much as the original cost of the paper- Mr. Jewell will recommend a return to the pld ratos, name ly; half a cent an ounce on newspapers, but will aik that the law remain as it is In regard to other article, except, perhaps, books, awl upon this be has not yet de cided. " - ' i ,i ?- Mr. A- T. Stewart, of Xew York; has bought for 300,t03 franca l?6O,C00 gold) tb ?atet work of Meisaonicr, which is now on iu way to this country.. Jt represents regiment of French tisifaskiers goinj into battle aad saluting tLtir chief, Kpohion L, who is seen standing on a 1111 ia the ccntie of the scene. - -' - - --'- For SuUj'a StatcamaB 1 TUB WANDERING tPCHIT. On arisgr. wiiil. aatcmo Bjgbta I fur. And are pale leave Bit tarrying ny . - Tpon a?'r l"tresth; Ar.a through the rhlll, damp, wind; naze There come a thrill of othrr iny: Aud hiMlJTUi?r.f iet k. Ou, my lave '. - v TThfrc It Jtmrtorl npen tMi 0ht - -If nam I: dim thai Hua log sigh Amid the e ghottl jr Imvra? The aweeplng of Ua vle lt- flight Now miesling with t'.ii wiad of ni;ht . That with d p nwviniuj heave Near ri-.Uf ua this aim, a wall Sweff U r.chicgly ac-oa my hrow LiVep- tngBn;crco d; I mm to rce a ptumtom pale, Axd '.he a my atniniLg rbjht dstb f.ul To p'croc the marky fold. I'poa that l4t grey eve I think. When cn I he terrace high we atood Oh evening t ad and dire! My fljige-.a looped rav chain's rach link, Miceeyeft wonld nothing do hut eink Beneath yotircae of fire. Ah. my Live! ' Ton left me with a cold adieu : But on tne bo-' torn step you turned And looked on me asain; Your proud eye deep with anzuith jrow. And changed to Jet their harrl hae. With clcam of bitter tain. Then iroaced yonr lips a aaaoriBg amilc Tuat cu.l made that dark, thin faoa . Wh ch U'SB o dour touia . . . . . Yoa l-tmlinz raid: "So, iu atvhil', Ternas i re I can ride a mi'CT A plighted bride you'll be!" -.. In sco n yon waved that daik, slight hind. Yon would notbciix what I would ny. But tprang upon your atecd; . " And bowing low, in mockery bland, I'c trc the Ft ps where I did stand, Yen wheeled your horse with tpeed. Seoru, wra U and iruel death all fiahcd Upon your glowing southern face Your ateid high-reared above; Tlirn down the gorge he maddened duhrd, I heard his hoofs aa rocka they clneluil No more I've cen my love! Ha! hiy lore! , Tlie clah of hoofa distinctly rings ll from the tocky gorge o dark, - A mist eomca cones Moating by, i I fell the sweep of viewless wings . That to my heart a whiuper biiuga: Tour irand' riui tcnil it nigh! Texas- Pacts and Fane Ira, T-.vj murderers will swing in Jasper on January It. The death of Cttpt. James Thomas, of Dallas, is announced. ( It cost Brooks & Coons $J000 to btiru their livery stable at Burnet. . , The Weathciford high school boas-Is cf one. hundred and fifty pupils. The epizootic prevails in Bonham. Any how the Keie ir blows mightily. f The Dallas ITtraUl, too, is for Uu"k Wal ton for the Attorney Generalship, Bishop Elljjtt, after two months' absence, h again at home in San Antonio. .- Fifty-five .persons registered Saturday at the Ilutchius House, a fact that shows how Houston prospers. ; Gatesville is talking about an associatio n .here to regulate things and keep the peace. It undertakes a big' job. The Messenger should" knfiw that the war between ! the ''Ra'ptiUts nnd MethiV.li'sts iu McKinney was "colored." .--... It will t:tke the papers ff Texan about six weeks to dispose finally of the "Maid if Athens." But here wc part. .. Buffalo Bill has been interviewed by the local editor , of the Telegraph, fie rather likes the new Constitution. Twenty-live coaches and two locomotives, are required to haul Texas immigrant trains from Little Rock to Texarkana. Every business jiaa of Austin and of adjacent towns should rend the queer letter from R. G. M., at Myrtle Grove. The Hill County Record says it cost Texas $1300 to find out who were and who were not Grangers in the Constitutional Conven tion. j Judge Doimer it see ins has won golden opinions in his district. He will have no opposition, it is said, as a candidate for re election. . . . . A good S.m Antonio colporteur tried, his hand at tract-selling on the party of Col,. Pierce, but concludeel he could do better at Matamoros. ' ' ' "' ' '" ' ' 1 Revs. Buckley and Daniels', B.tp lists, are preaching to convert Wade, the original genius and philosopher who recently repre-" sented Rock wall in the Constitutional Con vention. .., .... ; ,T "Peter's" letters to. the Statesman, ,aro widely copied and Peter is a trump. He is now carousing with ranclieros in South western Texas, His., letters will appear regularly, t , , ,:. A. L. Jarnagin is mayor of Gatesville and) it's a queer name Jarnagin and a pretty place and its gates are always ajar to wer oome strangers1 even ai those of Dallas are a-jug.. , . i --. (. c i ... ; The big-cake at the Austin fair, the Cle burne .Chronicle says, weighed over one thousand pounds. , "Tis distance lends cuchantment," and if the cake didn't the story grew. ' ' ' The Texas CVuferis'lhe handsomest paper aonddcted, the girls say, by the handsom est and smartest boys anywhere in these parts, nnd in this we-concur with the edi tors' sweet heaits.;.' , ... ... -.. , a. The Dallas delegation to the Tom. Scott whisky-hcadcd convention at St. Louis is still dropping in. The whole of the loveiy tea parly will be at ' home, it fondly hoped, by Christmas. " - "' ' : "' :' "''' The Sherman Uegifttr should correct the error.' There lias lcen no ratification meet ing in this city. An "old rat" called one,' you sop, but the, .Vwtsst pinna o- mice an' men gang aft agloe." ,. ... . The IsaJer congratulates . the admirable Mr. Crawford, of theConititntiouul Conven tion, ou his return to Jefferson, Mr. Craw ford i one of the innst pleasing sitcakers nd elegant gentlemen m Texas. . The Jcffersou Ijtndrn will probabiy sup port the new Const itutio.i ; but it i very probable the . effort will kill the paper. Even now it is all jaundice!, and yellow as a pumpkiu and ghailly enough. Hillsltoro is beefless and the people huugry, and ike Master--shot a negro, and McFarlaud was shot in tlie shoulder by one Johnson. Wheat looks well, and the Mor ris House is the place to stay all night. The Ji'iirhitl, the new DnweraMc paper at McKinney, is a model cf typographical taste aad -beauty. What it will be editori ally will be seen when it gets through with the publication of the .Rutabaga consti tution. , , . . -- We alwuys read the Ezimiiier, but nben two copies appear on the same dayt as hap pened yesterday, wc can't come to lime, and the intellectual waste i deplorable, now do the mails get wr:mg between Waco and Austiu ?:..-.. . .. . .. Tho Statxmak tenders assurance of heartfelt sympathy to Col. Swindells, of tho Dallas llentli, confessing keenest sympathy, and comprehending the irreparable loss, and incurable grief incident to the los of a most loved son. - ...-.: .Th colic-prou acini New England berry denominated "pumpkin" grows to-huge proportions about Brownsville, and several of them piled np about a Quaker gun sent terror through tee hoarU instead of "atom: ath of the yaller-kivered popalattoa of Matamoros.- - . ' ; . ,, j By all means let there be" aTulT meeting cf the exccutlvt board of the Prcss' Aisoci ttion at Jefferson oa the fourteenth, to re form abuses of tho Press Association, as this affects dispatches furnished Texac newspa pers. We receive by mail from Memphis and St. LoQis the same news on the same ay that it pomes to tss by telegraph (?) ftorn Galvcstoa - . ' The Pallas ILraLl of the - third says: 11 Dallas has been exceedingly quiet and U2or.il for the past ten day, but there it ah ways a lull before a storm, you know." Now if the Statesmax had made that inno cent remark about Dallas, the town would have howled, and they would have ordered a fast day at Smith's big hotel, and the preachers, next Sunday, would have de nounced the Statesman all over Dallas. But peace should reign in Dallas, not for ten days alone, but till Christina., and egg nog made of nitro glycerine and pocket handkerchiefs of gun cotton, and then Dal las will be hvely. , , , Texaa Padltlrm. All the officeis elected, except State offi cers, will be installed on the third Tuesday of April. State officers will be installed, on the first Tuesday after the assemblage of the Legislature, which meets on the third Tuesday of April next. The Chairman of the Democratic Execu tive Committee of Galveston county prom ises, in a letter to Hon. J. D. Sayers, that a great deal will be done by the people of Galveston to secure comfort and pleasure to the delegates who come to the State Con vention in January. The Immigrant speaks justly when it says of Capt. F. M. Martin, late of the Consti tutional Convention, from Corsicana, "that he worked earnestly and faithfully for the interest of our State, and was recognized as one of its truest and best working members. Like Brown, of Kentucky, he says he is willing Ho 6tand by the record' " The judges of the Supreme Court hold offices six years, judges of the appellate court four years from next November. All the remaining officers hold two years from the Tuesday next after the first Monday in November, or until their successors are elected and qualified. Their term of office will consequently be for two years and seven months. The Corsicana Immigrant says "the Con stitutional Convention must have discovered a great reform in the people of this country, as we see they have assigned Navarro to the Thirteenth Judicial District, and appointed no time for the holding ot court in this county, or limited us to any specified length of session. So we stand unbridled in this respect. It will make times cay for the people, but it will be dreadful dull for lawyers." The Bastrop Aicertiter says that as a suc cessor to Col. Clark, who declines a re-elee-tion, "we know of no man whom the peo ple generally would prefer to Col. W. S. Walton, of Austin. He is now in the prime of his manhood. Of a splendid personal appearance, the vigor and breadth of his mind is fully equal to his physical strength, while the qualities of his heart stand forth in proportional prominence. He is a fine specimen of physical, moral and intellec tual manhood." All of which is true as gospel. TKLEGRAPll 1C. I Associated Press Dlsuatcoea.1 Washington, December 4. The tradi tional two-thirds rule of Democratic con ventions does not enter the caucuses of the party this time; a majority nominates. Thoie is no change in the situation this morning beyond an increased anxiety an 1 less positive assertion. ' ' Washington, Decemler 4. Mr. Kerr was nominated for Speaker by the caucus. First ballotKerr 71, Randall 39, Cox 31. Second I allot Kerr 77, Randall 03, Cox 21, Taylor 1. Third ballot Kerr 00, Ran dall 63, Cox 7, Taylor 1. During the morn ing Mr. Wood aunounced himself in favor of Kerr, and on the third ballot Cox asked his friends to support the successful candi date. New York, December 4. All matters were referred to the examining committee of Plymouth Church. Mrs. Moulton's let ter was not read because it had been distn. buted to newspapers for publication. With out further action the business meeting of the church adjourned. Milwaukee, December 4. The jury in the Taft-Wiemer case returned a verdict of guilty. ' Albany, N. Y., December 4. The offi cial count gives Bigelow, Democrat, for Sec retary of State, 39,811; Seward, Republi can, 37,541; Duscnberg, Temperance, 11, 033. The board of canvassers cannot de cide who is elected from the thirty-third district, nice Congressman A. F. Allen, de ceased. The question is left open for Con gress to settle. . Nashville, December 4. The Democrats of the Fourth District nominated H. Y. Rid dle for Congress. 1 London, December 4. The Daily JVeics announces that Parliament will not be called earlier than usual. : A deputation waited on the Earl of Derby and urged an intervention to prevent Egypt annexing Abyssinia. The Earl doubted Egypt's intention to annex Abyssinia. Fi nancial reasons would render it unwise. He believed Egypt's violation of Zanzi bar's rights was the result of a mistake. Washington, December 0. Representa tive Kerr rcceivsd many of his friends to day, who called to congratulate him on his nomination for tho speakership. All par tics concede his fitness for the position. The remarks ot Representative Randall, in caucus, and his motion to make the nomi nation unanimous, are everywhere spoken of id terms of commendation. Surprise is expressed that the West and South carried all the offices. For the two or three hun dred subordinate places there are at least a thousand applicants, not a few of whom are already at work to secure the respective positions, including clerks, assistant door keepers, messengers, document folders, pages and bath room attendants. A dozen or more. applicants, want the privilege of keeping the restaurant, which has, for some years, been in the possession of George T. Downing, colored. The first business of to-aiorrow will con sist of calling the roll of members by Mo Pherson, the present clerk, and tho admin istration of the oath of office; next, the election of speaker, clerk, doorkeeper, aer-gcant-at-arms, - postmaster - nnd - chaplain. Questions affecting the seala of some of the members ma f arise, and therefore the or ganization bo protracted by debate. In view of such an event the President will not transmit' bis message to Congress nntil Tuesday noon, which, ia the more probable time for that purpose. The document is longer than that of last year by about fif teen printed pages, in document form, and contains upward of sixteen thousand words. The message will be telegraphed to the press of the country. Washington, December. $. The Senate wis' called to order. Senator Ferry in the chair. It adopted the usual resolutions to notify the President and House of Repre sentatives that a tjnorura of Senators bad assembled, and that tho Senate was ready for business, and then ad journed. after the statement on authority that it was not prob able that the President's message could he received to-day.'- -J - The House was called to order by Mr. McPherson. McEaery's certificates were read and laid aside. The Mississippi dele gation was received, the credentials being signed by the Lieutenant Governor. Roll pall is progresaing.wilh a harmooious crowd. New York December fj. Diligent (march U being made for Tweed. .Last night he was in charge of the officers and went to his home to visit his wife. He wished to see her alone, was permitted to do so, and was heard of do more. Telegrams have been sent to the different cities to keep a lookout for him. Twenty minutes after his escape was known word reached every po lice station in the city. : Not the slightest clue can be discovered as. to his wherea bouts. A reward of ten thousand dollars is offered for his capture. Jjitcr The bouse was searched from top to bottom, bat no trace of the fugitive was found. . At the back of the honse are other houses, and to hare escaped Tweed must hare passed through them. Mr. Tweed's son was In a very excited condition when he learned of his father's escape ; he polled his hair and exclaimed that be was rained. aa did also Mr. Douglas, the son-in-law of Mr. Tweed. The statement of Deputy Ho- gan corroborates trie foregoing. artien Dunham admits having taken Tweed out to drive some three or four times while be was ia bis charge, as Tweed was complaining of tern Lies aches. The bond given ty toe sberij for the proper and faithful perfonn asee of his duties ia for fc-'O.CQO, and thai of Warden Dunham 20,000. The general impression teem to be that some of Tv-ed's friends bavo put him on a steam tug, which will put him on soma ves sel bound for a foreign country. It is not positive wbetner any indictment lor lorgery has been found against him, and the ques tion of his extradition is, therefore, an open one. The trial in the aix million suit was to have commenced to-morrow. New York, December . It has been as certained that Tweed'a private secretary was last seen at his stopping place a few minutes before the departure of the 10 o'clock for Boston Saturday morning:- He took that train, saying he was iroing to Boston and would return Tuesday. He, however, carried a large trunk. It is ru mored at the Fifty-ninth street police sta tion last evening that on Saturday, from 4 to 5:30 r. x., a tug was noticed cruising in a mysterious manner in the East rive. off Fifty-ninth street. Nothing was noticed by which the tug could be identified. Madrid, December 6. Cushing had a conference with Senor Callantea, the new minister for foreign affairs. It is under stood that negotiations continue to be sat isfactory. New York, December 7. A St. Louis dispatch of the sixth instant, to the IlemlJ, says: "The United States Grand Jury did no work to-day, having adjourned nntil to morrow morning. Tne report is current this morning that a true bill has leen lound against Babcock, and a warrant for Lis ar rest is tn route lor Washington, but there is nothing authentic. The grand jury will have the evidence nnder consideration to morrow, and immediately after meeting a vote will hs takcu on ihc subject. The district attorney was absent from town to day, nnd the object of postponing the vote till to-morrow was to consult him." Washington, December 7. Tho only Senators absent to-day were Alcorn, Cra giu, Dorsey, Goldthwalte, Jones, Norwood, and Sharon. Key, of Tennessee, qialificd to-elay. -n The estimates of the Secretary of Treas ury for 1877 are $314,325,000, or $4,500, 000 greater than for 1876. Baltimore, December 7. In the contest of Wallace against Gwynn for the office of Attorney General, Gov. Dicks states that by the returns as certified to him, Gwinn, the Democratic candidate, is elected, but he withholds the commission in order to com pel Gwynn to bring the case before the courts to decide the question of the consti tutional power of tho Governor as to bear ing the contest. Chicago, December 7. District Attorney Ward is requested by the Attorney General to resign. The supposed cause is reluc tance on the part of Ward to prosecute the whisky frauds. Washington, December 7. Iu the Sen ate, English, the new Senator from Con necticut, was sworn in, and the Senate then took a recess till lr. v. Tho House took a recess till 1 r. .v., when tho drawing tor seats will take plscc, after which the President's message will be read. Wabhinoton, December 7. The Presi dent's message opens: " In submitting my seventh annual mes sage to Congress in the centennial year of our national existence as a free and inde pendent people, it affords me great pleasure to recur to the advancement thil has been from the time of the colonies one hundred years ago. Wo were then a people num bering 3,000,000; now we numbvr 4 0,00(1, -000. Then industries were confined almost exclusively to the tillage of the soil ; now manufactures absorb much of the labor of the country. Our liberties remain unimpaired; tne oondsiuen have Itcen freed from slavery, and we have lecoiiie possessed of the re spect, if uot the friendship of all civil:7.ed nations." Graphic and well worded details then follow. The President earnestly recommends that a constitutional amendment be submitted to tho legislatures making it the duty of each State to cstal- j lish and forever maintain free public schools adequate to the education of all children in elementary branches, within their re- j spective limits, irrespective of sex, color, birthplace or religion; forbidding the teaching in said schools of religious, athe istic or pagan tenets, and prohibiting the granting of any school funds or school taxes, or any part thereof, either by legis lative, municipal or other authority, for the benefit or in aid, directly or indirectly, of any religious sect .or denomination, or iu aid or for the benefit of any other object of any nature or kind whatsoever. . He alludes to the importance of correcting the evil of vast amounts of untaxed church property, and estimates that by 1890, if un checked, this property will reach a sum ex ceeding three thousand million dollars. He would suggest the taxation of all property equally, excepting only the last resting place of the dead. Our relations with most foreign powers continue on a satisfactory and friendly footing. The President is happy to announce the passage of an act by the general Cortes of Portugal abolishing slavery in the colonics. The past year has f ui nished no evidence ot an approaching , termination of tho ruinous conflict which has been rag ing for years in Cuba. The same disregard of the laws of civilized 'warfare and just de mands of humanity which have heretofore called for the expiession of condemnation from the nations of Christendom, have con tinued to blacken the scene. Desolation, rain and pillage ' are pervading the rich fields of one of the most fertile and produc tive regions on the earth; the incendiary's torch is firing plantations and valuable fac tories and buildings these are the agents marking the alternate advance and retreat of the contending parties. ' The President naratea the damage to the interests of commercial nations, especially those of the United States, and insecurity of property owned by citizens of the United States in Cuba. He had hoped Spain would bo enabled to establish peace in her colony. Because of this hope, and from an extreme reluctance t interfere in the affairs of another, and a friendly nation, he has patiently and anxiously awaited the progress of events. The armed bands of either side now occupy grounds as in the past. Tho President mskes a long argument, and concludes; "A recognition cf the independence of Cuba being, in my opinion, - impracticable and - indefensible, the question next presents itself is, that of recognition of belligerent rights in the par ties to the contest. "After further argume nt the President concludes : 'The recognition of independence or of belligerency being thus, in my judgment, equally inadmisasvhlu, it remains to consider, what course shall be adopted. Should the. conflict not soon be brought to an end by acta of .the parties themselves, and should the evils which result therefrom, affecting all ' nations and articnlarly the United States, . contin ue, in such an event, I am of the opinion that other nations will be compelled to as sume the responsibility which devolves upou them, and to seriously consider the only remaining measures, mediation and intervention." , . ; , , . . .... . x The Market. , j. . ... Galveston, December . 7-Crold 1 UK 115. Silver 109JU0i. , ' , Cotton firm; good ordinary ll'c; kiw middling 13c; middling 12$c; good middling 13;,c; sales W3 bales; receipts tlVi bales. Liverpool, December- Noon. Cotton market firm; middling uplands P.d; mid dling Orleans 7 810d; sales 19,001 ba Ire.-' Nsw Yobs: December 7. el !14if. Slocks dull. Money 4 per cent. Exchange long 4.84); short 4.88. Governments steady. - Slates steady, except Tennessee, Booth Carolina and Virginia,! hlch are bet ter; Louisiana easier. Cotton firm; uplands Wi; Orleans IT 11. sales 10,030 bales. -' -'' Ftrssaalt. j Gen. McDonald, the convicted whisky ring conspirator, ia very cheerful in kis dis grace. He" told a reporter ef the OLU Democrnt, who visited hint in jail, that he was in as good spirits as ever lie was, and that ho "had not lost ore iota of his man hood or self-respect fay this thing. " He boned his friends wonld cot tbink aay the Jess of him for the mi of m tunc that had come upon him. Ho had only "pity for the specimens of weak humanity who have no more machood about tbtm than to plead guilty aad testify against others, aad thereby aavo themselves." This miserable nan seems utterly unable to comprehend that he is not a martyr, but a convicted thief. Brothers Moody and San key must look to their laurels. lira. Lowrie, the converted Baltimore atreta, U d Jng the revival work at Port Jems, New York, which ex cels anything they have yet done on this aide f tlx: water. t Her congregations are noth ing like so large, but over six hundred con versions are already counted up as the re sult of her labors within a short time. Mrs Lowric's method seems to be novel, hue does not confine herself to any pulpit or platform, but goes about among her hear er, preaching, praying and exhorting ia all parts of the house. The male preachers have always been successful in converting more women than men. Perhaps it will now devolve upon female evangelists to turu the flinty hearts of men. Tho Republican press carefully abstains from cither printing tho news about Minis ter Schenck and the Emma Mine swindle, or from expresing any opinion up-u that disgraceful business. Twenty-four scats iu tho next Congress will bo contested fifteen by Democrats and nine by Republicans. JkTOTICE IS n ERE BY IKN - That all Jatt clsima of whlver n a! lire atalnst Travis eMtnty alU ba paid ua pratoutation at aiy for convenience of persons holding Travis Couiily Bonds. arramrenien have bees made to hava Janu ary coupons paid on presentation, either at myomVe oratthebsukof C. p. Johns Co. ,,. :w wit Treaanrer Travis County. FARMERS OF TEXAS. On enternrisUic Btsn in jonr Midst who plan' ed say new rsbbsn seed had forty thousand that made lari aad soid. heads; another grow -aluns that weighed a poand each, the 'rf twur. from my Han var's black seed. Yoa will And extracts from their latters in my Catalogue. With seed equally as goid . way eauaot yoa 'tlo a well r My laive lilnstrarrd Seed Catalogue, containing a vast varlaty of vagelable aud flower srvtf, sent iw to all. ; ; JAMSS J. H. eiREGORV, dec w8w MarbW-head, Max. . SPECIAL MICE 10 CD1 HEADERS - - - SPECIAL CALL. - . AGENTS WANTED To sell the Xew Patent Improved RYE Cl'PS. Giionmttfd to be M bttt paying bn.Htt qfrrt to A ututt y avty Hovn. Alt w, awl lmt npvMN. Iht value of the celebrated few I'atent Improved Kye Cups for lha rastoratlon of alght breaks out and blares in the evidences of over (iOtiU genuine test lino nisls of cares, and recommended by mora than oun thousand of onr best hysiciana in tneir nracUce. The Patent Kye Cups are a sclciitillc andjihilosoub leal discovery, and as Ai.ex.. Jl. Wvith, M. 1., and Wm. Bkatlbv, M. I)., writes, lly y. are certainly lha greatest invention ol the aire. .. , . , Road the following eertiilrates: Kanot-soN Btatiok, Logan Co., Ky., June t, 18; J." Dr. J.Bali Co., ex-ollrts: . (JriJUiHtH Your I'atent Kye Cops , la my Jiidjr mcnt. the most splendid triumph whlsh out cai sci ence has ever achieved, but, like all grvat aud Impor tant truths la thia or lu any other braucn or acienca and philosophy, have much to contend with front lha Ignorance and preindtreof a loo erpttcal public; Ixit truth is mighty aud will prevail, and It is uulr a qn ra tion of time aa reearda tbelr gent-nil acceplanoa and endorsement by all. 1 havain my bands cuilidcalesot persons testifying In umioalvocal terms to Ibeir a. ila. The most prominent physicians of my couuty ' commend your Kye Ciiim. 1 am, rcsitfctfiilly, J, A. It. BUY SR. 'i riATiBV. Tt. !., BaWlea, Ky.. wrhes: Thanks to you for the erfattst nf sll lnrentiuus. My sight is tiilly restored by the ass of your Paltiit Kye CBiS, af ter being almovt entirely blind for twenty six years. - Alkx. R. Wvrra, M.TI., Atchison, l'a.. writes: Af ter total bliudiusi pt my left eye for four years, b) paralysis of (be opi lr net ve, (o my ntter astnnlshnt ui yonr talent Kye Cups restored my eyesight pertua uenily iu three minutes. Itev. h. 11. Kalkinshc-bu, minister of M. K. CUarrb writes: Your Patent Kye Cwps have rratorrd my sijjbt for which I am most thmkful to the Father of Mer cies. By your advertisement I saw at a glsure that your invii.ualile Kye Cutis performed their work per fectly in accordance with physMiHrietil law; that they literally ied lha rye el tat were starving for nutrition. May liod irrraiir uloss vuu. and inav vour name ha s- shrined in tha aOvctiouate metnoritu of uiiiltl)ilitd inoiisauua atone oi t lie nciiciacinra or your auia. HoRAcaH. Uubaxt, M. II. aays: I sold and rfortcd future Kale liberally. Tha Patent KyeChpa, they III make monev and make it fasr.mo: no small, ralrh- cuny aflatr, hut a superb, nainhcr one, tip-top bul ness, aa fnraa I can aee, to be flfelnmr. ... " .Mayor n. c. auja wioro ns, Nov. Ill, 18M: av tesledlhe l'atunt Ivory y Cups, and I am aaiWanl they are eood. I am nit-asrrt with litem. aa certainly the greatest Invention of the ngn. no. iiuitA t. oniKi.fcv, talc- ettitor of :ne New York 7Vi'6vtnyar Ur. J. Ball of onr eity. Is a ronsrh-i,. tions nudxspontlbla man, who Is lacupalde ol iuteu tinnal deception or imposition. l'an. W. MKititirK writes: Truly 1 ant grateful for your noble Invention. My slj,'lit is rotored by yonr Pal cut Eye Cups. May lleavsu bless and preserve you. I have been iisitis spruiacles twenty years. 1 am Tl yea a old.- I do all my wrltltnr without glasses, and t biers the inventor of tha Patent Kye Cup every litnu 1 take np my old steel en. Adolfh Uiornrkru, M. T)., physician to ICmpero Napoleon, wrote, after having his nli;ht reetored by our Patent Eye Cups: With rratitiide to (Jod and thank;- " fulness to the inventors, Pr. J. l ull Si Co., I hereby recommend the trial of the Kye Cups itu full faith) In all and every one that has Impaired eyesight, believ ing, aa I do, that since the eijwnment with this won-' derful discovery has proved successful on me, at my advanced period of life-90 years of ase 1 believe thev will restore the vision to any individual. If thry afu properly applied. ADOLV BlOK.NHKItU, M. P.. InmmW irwifA nf lAi.. A'm.k mm Juno 5, 1878, personally appeared Jdohi'Buirabcrij, made oath to the following cvrtilicate. and hv hlui sub. scribed and sworn before me. W'u. BTKVKNS.J. P. We, the undcrsignud, having personally known Or, Adolph Biorobcrg for years, believe him to ba an hon est, moral man, trustworthy, and in truth aud verarl tv unrpoticd. Ilia character Is without reproach. M. BOSNEY, Ex Mayor, H. n W. DAVIS, Kx-Mavor.. K. U.TKWKSBUKY. City TreaV GKO. 8. MKRHILL.P. M. Rcader.tlhcse are a few rcrtiftcatea out of thousands we receive, and to the aged we will guarantee your old and diseased eyes can be mads now: yonr Impaired sight, dimness of viiirn and overworked eyea can be restored: woak, watery and tore eyea cn red; Ibe blind may see; spectacle no aiccarnaa; sigtit ruaiomi and vision preserved, fpcclaclcs and surgical oieraltouM useless. . - Ploasa send yonr addrrss'to ns snd wc will aub4 yas our book. A tit M WOUTU UKAU1NU! A DXAILOUD WORTH SEEING. Alrtrs your ryes and mlor iwr tight; tfcivie ateay your tptviiKltt. By reading onr niaslraud Physiology and anatomy of tha eyesight, of loo pages lulls bow to restore Im paired vlalon and overworked eyes; how to cure weak, watery, Inflamed, aud near-sighted eyea, aud all other diseases of theeves; waste no more money by ad mat. Ing huge giaases on your nosa and disfiguring yonr fac , Books mailed frea to any person. Bend lour address. AGENTS WANTED. to sell the Patent Kya Cups to tha hundreds of pe pla with diseased eyea and Impaired sight In y ur county. Any person rsa act aa our agent. To gentlemen or ladle SS to (20 a day tuarault4 Fill) particulars sorit free, m rite Immediately to ' i No, Ml Liberty Htranr, P, O. box 9&7. , Mew York City, N'.V. Doant miss tha OMtnrtuutiy of being list la the fleld. Do not delay. ' Writs) by flint ni.ill. Ureal In ducements snd large prodta Sercd to farmers during the winter months, andito any jwrsou who want s a Srt C'saa paying business. IsTaa jIbwt Jo mumon Aliawcji to, aoafTS bt r lii-i in tms I'MiTSii Statu. Persona wii-hlnp to remit Bumey to iw 4. Ball ft Co. can procure . draft oa aald Srm Irnm. lb paJtbr of tbis paper without extra charge. oil wAro Ham ' jsr ALLK JL CO CORNER EAST AVKSl'E fc CEDAR 9t. WHtrf CSlI C A0 MlTAtl t ; Hi Grocers and Lumber f.lbrchanls, TJBAics r ai i. cniimr ri!3i it i : it. hiiin(ii,i:m. SASH, lux, lit, f.I.IN'I'x. WlllTfi PINK alOl I 11 IXi.S. OK AI.I.IZa. !Vci4 IjiB.hcr a1S) cm hand and r!r-ss-ii fn nrdac - i - flP'lflt. BII.I.H (r MMUNKIOX 1.1 MBKlt , cat to oruW slid e pes i hort iuh r, Taey mm tair stock of Groembt and l.amlr at. ways cnmj.lrte, Tb-y inrlts an examination of tbtHr stock aad protuls always the lowest price and bnt '"T. t . sepl.l,. SPEEDWELL MATHEMATICAL AND . KKOIXIlKRIKO I OI.LXK, - 1'nriv ITLrhMAi Claw U a . a .. ... - ... m r'liMJ, tor I reepp Th. mi.u. I ... u. ... : . .... . "- 7 win u inoroBga thri -tile f , I ' . - ' wn ice t am, uxm cren. era! scleu. d Uwn such sabjeet aa may teuT,,, Ajepar ib rtdm.iJortin? epm the J,rt?J of surTsruj, and engineering. otuaWhaufcal. T traphJcl,bydraollcormliiury. rl Bdeau will b re,i,irert, wh a tha weather ... !rmu. to eater to, Se, d with l, -JsZL??: i ' r"" tuT reference such au Llh- X d "'" 11 t A limited nambe! of sod.-nirt, i . at tba coll-jte with board i and ILu.J't' term., snd Urd and lglnTean bTi.3 ff tfi?!? aa exp per mouU nvl saVrd irVj f u to " Jr Grsaaat OneWa Ce-llere, rwD I wk tJ;1, , lttandAurti.:'bT.0,l, . ' bUlir.net; 'i rta,u,rf. .