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TIIK CAIHO DAILY 151' I, LI)TL, TUESDAY, tfEHKUARY 27 1872. JMIH.. H'VA"" STKAMOAT IjnvilEU. til, s.iii " ""J,n' MjipecUl attention tmM toorJ.r. Iro.n MU. mi nif hi nr U - THE bullet- nnd publisher. jons n ocnni.r, miic February 2, 1872 SUNDAY JloR.IN 7 y,(,r.iiril'-.fi;l(i'.SwVrn Mi trffllf....ij. .. ... ,1.. nutJif I . - i. i .. .i,.f ii.Mfi.Ai r.arriMl I.ICHIKJ.U tUXUUUlM, l ftaai or tio lun.r.lii"i ISiiWV"-' it wk, by carrier, Un tear by crner. In drame, im nonlh hy mkII, ... Three month,. ............. y t rnftnth,...... .. - 10 IN) 7A .....1 2 25 ..... 4 ...... t 00 0J Tr, Till DOLLAR WBEKLT BULLETIN. Jhn II. Oberly On. nave reduced h ub f rii-lion pnr of the W ekly Cairo llullelin lo (Hi PrtA'Pf mtvJM. making it th cheapest pa r,rPuNIhed'lnloiilhern Winnie. The following is tlic nnewor of Judge Davd Bavin to tlic nniiouiiccmint of his nomination for the presidency by the national labor reform convention of Columbus AVamiinoton, February, 22, t'hamlierlln, President National T.rmr Itcform t llo nlcased to thank tlie rnnventioti for tlie unexpected honor wMch thov have conferred tinon me. The rM.f mnritraev of tho republic hniild ne ther he oticlit or ilceHm-d hy an Ani- erei&n citlzon. Signed, David JiAvi?". THE New York Herald gives it ns a scrap of history that there inn been but one instance in the. history of the gov ernment, of a vice-president being his own successor. Danbd D. Tompkins oi Sew York, served n vice-president under the two ternn of Pre.-ideut Mon roe, one of which terms occurred in what is historically known as the ' er of good feeling" from 1821 to 1S25. The inJtonces in which a rce-presidf nt has ftejJoJ from that jio.'id'on to the prciideccr aro six, to-wit : John ArJinw. Thoma-i Jefferson, Martin Van Burcn, John Tyler, Millard . FiUmota and .Andrew .ToYirifon the three latter succeeding to the presidency on account of the demise of the regularly elected incumbents while holding office Judge David Davis, whoce nequi escence to his own nonimtioii for the presidency of the labor reform conven tion 01 uoiuuiuus, we publish to-day, ih a native of Maryland, is now fifty-seven years of age, and is one of the judges of the supreme court of the United States. Judge Davis graduated at Kcnyon Col lese, Ohio, in 18.52 : Htudicd law in Massachusetts, and went through the legal course at Yale College law school. He was oiio of tho pioneern uf Illinois, ha raj removed here in 1S.'!", and be gan the practice ot Jaw in tlm buck mobs. He vn clecled to tha Jegisla tuteinlSll, and was in 1817 proini nent in the convention which formed the old state constitution, lie was re peatedly elected judge of tho eighth judicial circuit of 1 11 state, serving in all, in this capacity thirteen years. It was here that he formed tlie friendship of Mr. Lincoln, which, on both sides, was one of the mot remarkable that ever csi!ed between two men. They rode tlic circuit together, year after year, and rarely heparated, except from necessity. Probably Judge Davis knew Lincoln better than any other human being ever knew him, not excepting his own wife, hi December, 1SG2, Lincoln appointed him one of tho jus tices of the supreme court, nnd he at once c'tiblMied bim-elf with the court nd bar a, one of the strongest judges on the American bench. Physically, Judge DnvN is wry large "d portly, and weigH nearlv three hundred pound. " Ho i-," writes a correspondent of the Cincinnati Com "f etal, "a western man, nnd stands b'Eblyathome. He has been conspic uus forfmauv . , .i. -vU6lauUa),ept menn iwnmtr M IS highly l01 :ht of by the rfc'aij proJession "II over tho country. UK 111 . 11 very pleasant nnd -o UK gentleman, and 1, b:i yreat per- MtiuW,.,. ii. , 1 jl'uiaritv. llw t, .,,..... : ... His character is as DUre nA .iiih;ivi in u ii.uvnimiuiiir, inu j u:u j uu j;ro era 1 1 v nil s' i- aon uwU!llUK , , dorstooJ tliat (he senator had stopned out M Over uifiii r.,.. . ""-'' clear, his cxt,eri(.n..A! . is I ""periencctn liuAu.V.i . s observation wide. &tn t V"1"8'- quick and strom. " J"ugincnt f"" ? i Mr llavMi . boTTrotwr. , ,of'St-1 Ivome. will 1 ''tetwl to build a Chi,ln. UbetwM Mrs.UUh,ia ' , ' lnP,w iHuiuun, and th neeii.. r . ,,r' U. for damugos U th V 's iIr ' gleet. Ho hs oxrreu. .1 . 1 l"u I circuit court up ther Ulal t th.t , r lo the t1'" Prt of m " llt,ay'f eiw,wu on tlic would about cov Urreled shot-gun woul.: u,. Tin. .l,...v . now ftlmoit exclu.Wtlv fur n" , u,t'1 bird.-aurlfr-rN, ' ,llC 'tinf I St-C'ln li I .. . AN AR1HT0CKATIC KN0, ino marriagoof t - .1 . - JiHrnni. ..1 i. tiTS" Wr ot h? KJwur;r' .."u " o Derbyshire which, It bu 10 come oil at n (. u i r. unite thrco of the most nobf.-"' a richest fnmlllM I,. u.L. Pouwrf,,. "J.of.Norfolk. CVJC .n , la.ln.-llow. ""'I Kutber- round tlm v, . ""'"(', un. 1 ur. I rol. lest TLa8",1 l'Orhnp.. than own -"""Vio,! r ...... . H,ui,uour, as jr .pnend to ou, U10 fucts w hich ner ippro.ch of rcIOV.i?n ''""M the th. re rtlo.poIIUl con' Ktin Ud Klogdorn. ,lv" of Ui TiJnj. TKtJM HULL 'AND MORTON. -z r TRUMHULL ENDORSES THE U"1 KRAL PLATFORM. TUB BENATK. SVasiiis-otok, Fob. W.-Tho resolution to Investigate tho alleg.il rms to the French cinie up. Mr Cole endeavored to hnvet llnul Toie Ukcn -t 3 p. m, but Sehiithr Trum bull took tho floor nnd addt-esed the n t.i. He mM that every effort at roform thl body wn mat by bmiuiUs upon thoe who nuiki' the i lVirt, by Hpprloli upon Iheir "motive, by chKr'i- oi inn party lalth. tjnestlmn ffectlng tho purty of tho govornmont mid wulfaroof tho pub lic aro, in the opinion of tomo members of tbu body wlio asjurr.o to no pocuimr . nenU of tho republican party, no longer to bo decided on their mcrlu, hut only with a view to their bearing on tho party. Chief among thoto who would subordlnato public welfare to party tands tho senator from Indiana (Morton). In tho dlcui Ion of the rosolutlon under coiulderation davotod two or throo hours to rmruIIs on thoso who have iclt It to bo their duty to sk this lnvcitlgation, and not content with that, ho has taken occasion to wander away from that subject and talk about a senatorial cabal. I do not know by what authority anv member of this boJy as sumes to be tho peculiar eiponont of tlie republican party. or even oi mo tratlon. I intend to say something In re ply to the repeated assaults by those who Hilume to bo bettor republicans than their follow senator. I Intend to hhow the coure of those senators, and bcfo'ro I have done, unle3 I mlsunderslanil what the principals of the republican parly are, I think I hnll ho able to show that ho who ttnd foromoit here on ull occasions to denounce other, as asaulting tho I mrty has himself forgotten tue principals a which tho republican party was un founded, nnd Is hlmsolf at war with them. ilr. Trumbull then reviewed the course of the malorltv in tho scnato on the qucs- I. tion of removing jir. ftumner irom uic halnianship of ttio committee on lorcign relations j on tho resolution to Investigate tho management of the ow lork custom- bouse, and on tlie rename resolution, nnu insisted that on each nnd all theso ques tions the majority had avowedly acted not with refctenco to tho right or wrong In volved, but whollv with refcronco to sup posed interest ot llie party, i no cnaior from Indiana (Morton) speaking "ot tho nronosition ot .Mr. bumner. nau uoioiy . ... ealil mat ino question was not as to inu propriety oi tne act, nut was wnciiior iiui inaiority intcquaawi iinnu vj ir.e urgni atlon aiul usnces of tho party. That was a standard, oi uuty lor senators acting un der oath. "When it was proposed to In vestigate tho abuses in the New York custom-house, the senator from Indiana did all liu could to defeat it but now he boafcts that it has vindicated Itself from suspicion. That committee had not yet made Its report, and be (Mr. Trumbull) would not assail it. Hut its conduct in makinc the investigation was public nnd it was somewhat romarkablo that witnesses who testified that tho custom-house officers had interfered with tho legislature of Now York wero asked whether they wore not thnro themselves for tho same purpose, as if tho peoplo had not tho right to tako part in politics ; and as if tho commltteo could call peoplo to account for their po litical action i no nau seen it stales, too, that notlco hud been given that witnesses brought before tho comiuitteo for tho pur nose "of oxiiotinc corruption and malfeas ant in office, wero thcmtulves to bo prose cuted a gotu way to encourage witnesses to testify. Again tho pending resolutions (Iia .Mrnn nlil ri' rif "liiirtv. nnrti" lia.l i r I been ruHod, and senator who support tho resolution wero threatened with lino and imprisonment. Ho would not comment on tho motives of senators, but tho people were thoroughly aroused agulnst fraud and corruption everywhere, nnd they would undori-tand tho motives of theo s'jiiutors very well. Tho tcuntar from Indiana had denoun ced tho platform of tlm libornl republicans us anti-republican and essentially demo cratic, uud ho would now uudnrtako to show that a man who held thut vlow did not know tho inclining of republicanism. Ho then went over the resolutions in tho platform one by ono and insisted that tlioy were nil in oymolrto accord with the prin ciples of tho repulican party. They wore the principles ho had uoiitondod for through all his public life, and Uod help- In liiui, no would contend tor them to the end. Mr.. Morton sold Mr. Trumbull had como Into tho fiunato with prepared speech containing two things an assault on him (Morton) and u defence of the Missouri liberal republican movement and its nlatrorm. It was .inneeef arv for him to show furthor thiui liu hnd shown alread v that that was u movement designed to d- vido uiul ucroat tho republican . party. Ho was torry that Mr. Trumbull had Indcntlflo.i himself with it, hut as he had dona so, others could not do less than rccoL'nlzi) the fact that trumbull had pre tended that theru wa no evidence that tho Cincinnati convention wm to tnalioa nomination lor president. Ho (Morton) thoro was no doubt about that, but he would have tho ecreturv read from a snetcli ol'Gov. Ciniz Jtrown of Missouri, tlm leader of tho movement, to show that a nomination was to bo nindo hy that con vention. (!ov Hrown in that s'pi'cch, deli cntulv intiuiatod that ho expoeted tho nomination ii'iiuolf, but nt tho sumo tlmo. expresped n wllllngnois to stand aside for u stronger man from nnothor state, and ho Morton behoved It wns-gencrally undc; moou uiui .eiiMior irumniiii was to bo I ,u...ti,i..t.. mm i.. ii of the renuhlic.in rrnrtv. s..n,iln.; ..... ever, within easy rotumlng dlstMiico, and whi alnndtm. willi 1,1. L.ii.i, nil 11..1 over; "IJaVkis is wlllin'." 7 1. uh3T .Mr. .Morton reltcrnted tins statomcnt tlit.t tlm I.1I..I.J llnnnl.ll...!,. nl..r... leentlally Deinocratie, und that ho based V'!' critii"' 011 tho resolution which dc ar"1 Ku-klnx law unconstitutional. "ld there was still rebellion in the ?,".u,h' u,lJ hn '"oliovcd moro men had been t " wnun,lud hy tho Ku-klnx lur- "i'JJ V, vn,t umn wero KU,oa ln M r Mortnn hl Uulls vote on tl .nr. .Morton then critlcizod Mr. Trum, the amnesty bill, and in- nd Mr. Tlm.... 1 .. 1 .'. , f... .1.. 1 ... rr, vnieu n , , ' a,nc,ljell n?paof nB,,lnst "iiuw jihyu iinssoti ny 11 inro-rUi 'ourtlis 'on1. htnator TriiniuuU talked much iibouA tlvil.,orvPn reform, but ho luid beon in. uniu-d to-duy thut ovory sonator had iiuiju una hunilroil uiul tliriiiTnriintiiniu1,i. .1.. . . ....1.. l "lco slnco the iidnilnlstrutlon o una ii r. TruinJull snld ho l.nd no means of liltuwl ut h un IHIIinf.il thnt in tho lust Hvu J"-"' hu h.1,1 ini-iirl,.n I'lKtio u uozen rccom- in olUe- uf,.n,,thlt'ie, wore no men wojpst! lmJ boe" P'eca tburo at hU ayVhttt 'm,1''',! lal,i l' vh HUthorizcd to dred it, ,1 ,tl ru",Lu11 ono hun- Mr Tril,,'rie,,11rec,,"'nen'tloni. lilH. tO .u It 'UU r,V"UrkSd lhftt,le WOllld Mr i . e "Uenoe. 'U ri,.r. 7 "H '"V enator(Truinbulli ted I to dlH ! ,,e (Morton) Imd ultem..'. he ,v1l ,llu le.tlgrtlon by raisli K true "Ci pRrl?"'" TliStohruiJw.a not true, hut ,ctowjodgod tlml ho was Prl) nun, rMty vim an indlspenaa. bio Imtrunn-iii fi- thii nifotcLiiunt of llu principle vi..'li ho bplicvcd noref sary for vatloii mid' nrtsof vaiion of tho country. He claimed that Mr. TrumbulL liti uiwmvs neon n pxriytinfNii and lmU i oplvod:ut tho liandsyf tn;rcpubliean par ty tho"high'cil honor that could bu confer red with tho exception' of the presidency, and now If hn wished to desert that party, ho wished to know It. It ho Intended to eomo forward and support the nomlnco of tne oth of June, now Is good tlmo to say it. As I su!d the other day, I don t want to bo ehUd. and I.dont want my party to he' oln-ated. Hrecklnrldge. and Toombi, and Slldell, having dtclded to go Into tho rebellion, itald I cb'uid In this chamber to betray tho government and country. I hope their examplo will not hi f.illi'-we.l bV otlitirr." If th.-'y 'rrican to leave un, 1 can bid them n kind good-bye. but snn not willlng tljoy shjU remain and light us from our dwh camp.' Mr. Nyo obtained tho floor, but yielded to a motion to go Into oxocutlvo session. Tho scnato went into executive sosslon, and soon after adjourned till Monday. IIuNoTs, ICorrtM'ondcncenrtlit Missouri Rpubllca. rASSAOK BV 110TII 1I0U8KS or, TIIK SENA- ror.i.vi, ArronnoSMKNT bill. Sritisoi iKLi), Feb. 23. The scnato this nliornoon departed from tho strict rule ob served of lato In rcgRrd to pcclal. orders 'tb tako up and pass the senatorial appor tionment bill. This will bo rcmomoercu at tho Loland hotel radical caucus ar rangement, and is as follows, the chunges made In the plan originally agreed upon being few and Immaterial : First district The first, second, tenth and eleventh wards of tho city of Chicago, In tlie county of Cook. Second The Third, Fourth and Fifth wards of tho city of Chicago, In tho county of Cook, and the township of Hydo Park and Lake, In enld county. Third Tho Sixth, Sovntli sindjblghth Vards of tho citypf Chicago, Iri'tbo county r t.ooic. Fourth Tho Ninth. Twelfth nnd Thirteenth wards ot tho. city of Chicago, n tho countv Of tjook. Fifth Tho Fourteenth. Fifteenth and Eighteenth wards of the city of Chicago, n the lounty or tioK. Sixth Thn Sixteenth. Seventceth Nineteenth nnd Twentieth wards of tho iltv nf Clilenco. In tho countv of Cook. rioventh Tho townships of rtew lyicr, Northfield, "Wheeling, Palatine, Harring ton. Hanovtr. Shaumbere. F.lk Grove, Maine, Nili t, Evanston, Lako view, Jet forson, Loydun, Proviso, Itlve.rside, Cicero, livont. Lament, raioi. vortn. i;aiumei, Thornton, itremen, Orland, Itich and 11 oom. In tbo countv ot uook. Kighth The counties of Mdllenry and Lake. Ntnth Tho counties of Winncbag and Boone. Tonth The counties of Jo Daviess and SteDhenson. fclovcntn Tho. counties of (Carroll and Whiteside. ... -.',. Twelfth Tho: counties of .Ogle and Lee. . :2&$t Thirteenth The counties. ofaDeKalh, Kendall and On'tndv. I V 'Fourteenth Tho counties of Kane and Du Pago. Fifteenth The county of "Will. Sixteenth The counties of Kankakee and Iroquois. Seventeenth The countios of Living ston una i'ord. Nineteenth Tho counties of liurcau and Stark. Twentieth Tho counties of Putnam, Marshall and "Wooodford. Twenty-first Tho counties of Hock Is land nnd Henry. Twenty-second Tho countios of Mercer and Knox. Twenty-third Tlie counties Warren nnd McDonough.J Twcnty.fourth The countieiof Hend cruon nnd Hancock. Twenty-fifth Tho counties of Fulton and Schuyler. Twenty-sixth The county of Peoria. Twenty-seventh The counties of Taze woll and Logan. Twenty-oighth Tho county of McLean. Twenty-ninth The coiihtiei ofDuWitt and Macon. Thirtieth The counties of Piatt and Champaign. Thirty-first The counties of Vermilion nnd Kdgar. Thirty-second The counties of Dong as, Colo and Moultrlo. Thirty-third Tho counties of Shelby, Cumberland and Ktllngham. Thirty-fourth Tho counties of Chrls talu and Montgomery. Thirty-llflh Tha county of Sangamon. Thlrty-ilxtU Tins counties ot .Mason llrown. Cats und Menard. Thirty-seventh Tho county of Adams Ihirty-eiglithTho counties of Scott Pike and Calhoun. Thirty-ninth Tito counties of tlreeno and Morgun. Fortieth The counties of Macoupin mm iiorsoy. Forty-llrst Tho counties of Mini I son. Forty-'iccond The counties of Bond, Clinton und Washington. Forty-third Tho countioi of Fayette anu .Murion. Forty-fourth Tho counties of CIhv, Wayne, ltichlund, Edwards and Wabnsli. Forty-llfth Tho counties of Clark, . ... I T - i r ' urawioru, i.nwroncu anu iinspcr. Foity-sixth Tho counties of Jetfercon Hamilton and Wlilt". Forty-seventh Tho counties of Frank lin. illiamson, ftullno and (Jallatln. Forty-elgHh Tho counties of Mbnroo, luimnimi anil r'crry. Forty-ninth Tho county nf St. Clair. Fift'iitli The counties oi" Jackson, Un' ion mid Aloxnnder, Fifty-flr.t Tho counties of Pulaski Massac, Johnson, Popo und Hardin. A KEMOhmESS SWINDLE. (Prom tho Hartlurd (Conn.) Times.) Some vetirs airo wo do not rememlior how many, but supposa It to bo h do.un the.ro wu n nowspnuer arnounccincnt about u innn wlio Imd loft 11 pnekauo of money ut JCurl s hotel, then on Pnrk Rjw, Now York, to bo put In tho safo for sul'o koepimr, receiving for it tho usuiil check from the clerk. Upon preionting his check a dy or two later, ho could not (;ut his package the clerk wim horrified todlscov or It was missing. It happened that 11 check had boort presented, which' was nil exact imitation of thu check jjiven by tho clurk, and on this bogus check tho packuge had been, innocontly enough, delivered to tho parson claiming it. The depositor brought suit to recover $13,000 tho alleged amount of tho deposit loft at Mr. Earl's. For years tho muttor was in litlcution In the urts, going from bno tribunal to another '4 Weeping Karlu "on the keen jump ' (as been tl.uv k(0 lmJ t th 5,5 000 Sf1nftt0?moR,murobel1. ' This amount Mr. WUS'lnW scttlo this troublesome Job ' and n' Vv ing a. few months since paid Uii i 1 stallmeut nnd ended tho ugly mutUr " received, a week ago (ho was Ju town day or two ago and told his old friends of iAmi..iii,u UW.1U11 uiiuiur.ng a let ter. Tho packago was tho original miss ing package from tho, safe was Identified as such and with it wore papers which nroved bovond u, uucstioll Unit tlm nni..i amount deposito'd In the hotoj safo wan nut 6.000, but only $5G0; and it was also ro- uuieati.at tlio uoposittr nau a conroder- In .. .1 .1... I . I . ! . I ----- - - - . . , . vi w.iu liiul liio wiiuio uuaruiiuu waa . I winnnn a robbery. Aaupiioateglieck Was made u liko tho other that thmu loemod to bo iiodlfforcncoi and tho two roguos have doubtless divided the "swag" wMrh the court has decreed to the plaln iltf. Tho nolH which revealed these racts, was signed "Howard," with this Interest ing addition: "A conscientious scoundrel." MAI.OOMH. 0I1A1UKS M. IIOWM & CO., GENERAL COMMISSION mo V OU WAKDLVO M KRC1IA NTS. No. 64 Ohio Loveo, CAIRO, ILLINOIS DOT22dtr A. 8USANKA, Proprietor MAGNOLIA "SALOON And Dealer la Fordgn anil Domnllo WINES, LIQUORS AND CIGAItS 97 Ohio Lcveo, Betwetb Ninth and Tenth Strrtts, Cairo, III. .loclTIf Send for D. C. JACCARD & CO S Il lustrated Price List and Catalogue of Waltham, How ard, and D. C. Jaccard & Co's Watches, Jewelry, and Solid Silver and Plated Ware, &c. When in St. Louis you are invited to inspect their mag nificent JEWELRY establish ment. Nos. 401 & 403 N. FOURTH St., Corner of Lo custOdd Fellows Hall. -Watches, Clocks and Music Boxes Repaired and Warranted. Orders by mail promptly atten ded to, dSm-l-2). PAINTFJIH. MOORE & MATHEWS, House, Sign and Ornamental PAIISTTEBS, Decorative PaprrbniiKlor, KsiImdiIbi. ins, etc.. Done in the Ingnent ttrle ot the art, ami a rates i ina hat defy competition. SHOP IN PKRRY H0U8K, CORNER or 8TH 1TRKET AND CMMEItCIAL AVENUE. J. M. PHILLIPS & CO.. (Successors to E. U. Uendricki k Co., ) Forwarding and Commission MERCHANTS WHARF-BOAT PROPRIETORS YkfSsa.Llberal Adrancea n 1 ai Conslxnmenti-. 11(10 Are prepared to receire, ai.iro ani orward freitthla to all points and buy hr.il aell on comrnisiion, SHrriusInei. attendra lo vromptlr CliOSE & VINCENT. GENERAL COMMISSION MERCHANTS DBAIiBES X2T XjXH4 J3 Ckmknt, Plabtkh Parib, AND PLASTERER'S HAIR, Corner KlKbtli filrrpt nml Ohio l.t re CAIRO. ILL. r. Z.MATHUSS. k. C. UDI, MATHUSS & UIIL, POB'WAEDI 3STO AND OKSEUAl Commission Merchants, DRALEIM IN i HAY AND WESTERN PRODUCE NO. V4 OHIO I.KVKK, i With St., AIKO.IIX .WOOD RITTENIJOUSE, FLOUR .... . ANB General Commission Merchant 183 OHIO LEVEE, Cairo, Illinois. MILLER & PARKER, COMMISSION GENERAL FORWARDING MERCHANTS, AND DEALERS IN FLOUR, CORN Oats, Hay, etc. AGENTS 0R FAI1UJANK'S SCALES nr.AV RMTArKARNT. 0. WIN8TON & i (!0., REAL ESTATE AGENT AUCTION ERH, 7t (nKI'ONH KLOott) OHIO I.KVKS, CAino, ILLS., Bar and Skll Real Estate, PAY TAXES, FURNISH JABSTRACT8OF TITLE It I prFr ConreTaoces of Klsds. 1NMDHA1VCR. , n. MORRIS. U. It. CANUEK Notary Public, No. Pub, and tl. H. Com, FIRE, HULL, CARGO, LIVE STOOK. CU1DEM, iilr'K, urstrEANcnai JKTKA, IIARTroRt), AMfti is.moi 97 NORTH A1ISKICA, l'A Asts - .2,71,000 W 1IARTFOED, CONN., Assttn - J,M4,210 It rUOZNIX, IIARTrORD, Assets 1,71,118 8- INTERNATIONA !, N. T., AmeU I.S.M.398 1J FUTNA1I, HARTFORD. Asset 706,917 CLEVELAND, CLEVELAND, Aisets. - 315,0 S UOMK. C0LUMI1UH, Assets ..m 3I6.i"7 1 AMERICAN CENTRAL, MO., Aftietl VH.UO l CONNECTICUT MUTUAL LIr E, Asset yi.iMi.uio U, TRAVKLKR'8, HARTFORD, Lire AND ACCIDENT, Assets. l.vm.uu u RAILWAT PA3MEN0ERH ASAURANCR CO., IIARTrORD, Aets J'JO.CM, i INDEPENDENT. BOSTON. Asset - r.-w,6ti SAFFORD, MORRIS & CANDEE, 71 Ohio Levee, City Nations! Bunk, CAIRO, ILL. FIRE AND MARINE 1 3iT S TJ IR, -A. nsr O E COHPAMENt NIAGARA, N. T., Assets . ..1,4W,II6 ? OKRMANIA, N. V., Assets 1,068,721 76 IIANOVKR, N. Y. Assets 726,802 00 REPUBLIC, N. T., Aasats . ..711,92.1 01 Comprising the Underwriter' Agency Y0NKKK8, N. Y., Assets 679,404 U ALBANY CITY, Aisetn,, 4VI,13 23 fiiiemen'm ruxi), s. r., Assets, C7,bOi) 0 SECURITY. N. Y. MARINE. Assets 1,4.12,849 00 CTORES.Pwellinjrs. Furniture. Hulls nnd Car O Kors, insured at rates as fnvorahln as sound. iiBrmaueni serurny will warrani, 1 runeotlullj ask oi the citizens of Cairo, share ot their patrnnai e. C. Jt. UVGIIEM. JAKE WALTER, BUTCH H JEli AND IirAI.ER IV FRESH MEAT, EioiiTit Street, Rktwkrn Wabhinoton and Commercial avenuj-h, AdJolnluK KltlulioBi0 Hanuy'a. Keen (tin he.i nf It'.r tt.L- u,iii. La,nb, Bauijaje, etc., and' are prepared to nerve iii.nu. iu ,ne most Hcrrpiame rtanner. ST. CHARLES HOTEL, I). REXFORD Proprietor roaiua oaio itvir. and arcoNti it., Cairo, Illinois. Ihf Only Firtt-Cfan IfmiK-1 in thr. City free of ri arae. leno dectiii BOOK lllNDKHY, CAIRO CITY BOOK UINDERY JOHN II. OBEELY CO., moruirross, Bulletin Building, corner of 12th street and Washington avenue, Tin:. ' Cairo, Illliiion, All kinds of Ulndini anil Itiilimr .Inno at tha very lowest prlaes, erv lowest nrtaea. Having r iiii iim .rrl. cea f Mr. lluela, who has haiT many yaara xperlenye in one of best Hlnderioa ofbt. Loula, auperlntend Itila eatabllahmenl. we can ndaolly promiHour patrons work equal to of aar Bindery In the west. ' eon lliat DAVIS LOUK STlt'H SEWING THE LAROKST. THE SIMPLEST, THE CHEAPEST, THE REST. TIIK QIIKATEST IMI'KOVI'.MEST OK TUB AOK Terms Most Liberal. Airftnu winlf.l for unoccmilfd teirltnry. Hend lorcireiuur nnu price mm. Brntiels olHrr. ilia .Norlli t'oiirlb Nrrl NT. l.OUIN, MO. h. r. m:vtiin. mhukkit. WAIIOMa. WAGON M ANU PACTOUY." or Sale nt Wholesale or Ketail CORN KB 512l).KTnr.K.T ANU OHIO I.KVKl. Cairo, Illinois. norllir j. v. iamiii.i: HTOVEN. TINWAKK, KT A. II A 1j L E V, DEALER IN STOVES, Tin and Hollow Ware, Clothe WrinKPM Voile ware, Coal llodi, I-lie shOTfU, Air iiate. MASiricrinta or TIN, ZINC. COPPER AND SHEET IRON WARE. No. 166 Washington-avenue, CAIItO, ILLINOIS). snrlloofln. Guttering and work donnat alioitest nollcb. 1! klndi of Job lelililtl IIOOKN. NANII, ETUI 00 TO W. W. THORNTON'S, I1UILDERS' SUPPLY DEPOT' 13 TENTH STREET, CAIRO ILLINOIS von Doora, HhIi, Ullmlx. SfouMliiKa, EaT 13 a I (era, (st ood Wl lido w and ltooA fmmn, Flooring:, Lath, NliInKlra, Glnsd Nnali, lnaMl Side I.tghla, Glnxcd Trnuaoma, Nstals Welsjlil, Naab 1'ulllrM nnd CorUa, Blind FnatenlnKa, Rooflnsr Fell, KootltiK Criuenl, IMaalrrlnsr l'Ier, C'nrpel Flt, Wlillo Lead, Unaeid Oil, American Window Glaaa, Engllah andFrencu Plate Glaaa, Putty, Glnaler'a Polnfa Newer Plpea, Patent Clilinneya; Etc., Etc., Kte. A0ENT3 lor Hock Hirer Paper Company!" KheatliinK Kelt and QuarU Ucmcnt. ii. v. jonn a imprornu iioonnt; always on lid. ,J : i . llUTCilrJia. CENTRAL MEAT MARKET. KOEHLER & BROTHER II hi reopened th POPl'r.AK MEAT MARKET. COUMERCIAK-AY., 1 Belts reu Krnili and lenlft Mrl. and will lceep conntanlly on hanJ M J yra; laiiahtsred lu th Cairo market. They uiy ' oora. el(ion. Olve Ihem a trial. vepwitr. ii. ri.i ii MACIII NE jF flr WlNKN ANI;tl,I(iUUH. wmViTsciTdtteh, Importer mill WholrMittr llenlrr In WINKS, LIQUORS, AMI , T023ACGO &c CIQAR9. ,Ki ni t.it dir lx' lirmi'i' u( OHKAM AND STOOK ALE, leiporlrtl Aim or Dlfreressl Kind". 75 Ohio Levee, CAIRO. IM.l.NOIS. m Principal Office 104 W. Fifth St., Cln. O, tiik osi.y nri.iAni.r. oikt kxtkhpriak in TIIItCOUNTHrl $100,000.00 -IN VALUABLE (IIP To billstrlUiteil In Ii. 3D. I2r33'S :s7lli t-tnil-Annntl GIFT ENTERPRISE To ! ilrtvt Monilsjr. Urch 2!th, 1472, Osr, Omnd Capital I'kieb or $10,000 in Gold! One Prln ft.1,000 Its Nlltrrt Fivr! Frizes SI, 000 Five Frizes $500 GllKENnACKS. Ten Prizes ?100 Two Ksmllr Crrli(e nnd .VMrtied Hone" with Mil (rr Mounlfl linn-", wurlh II, U rtil.. Hone, si.'l itUKUif" with HllTcr-Jlouult J Two Iliror., w.rth "' earn. Two flr.r.taneil Konewnuil t'ltnor, worth fi' farh Tn f4m1lj.11.lnK mvhinpf, worth liu) mch. I'Wi xotil ami llf r lrr hunllng worth from U' to l.allt' KoM leontlnr chlu, Kfnt'uRoM rtcliln. Midi nd doulilv-rUleu illver lUe ml lejp)on, hoto(rsh albums, li-wi-lir, i'lr., etc. Whole number xiftii.10,1"). Tickets llmlie.1 U tOAMI. AkcuI. wanlnl lo ffll Tickets lo whon I'Urnl prnnluiM' will I paul, (lOllr tickets Ii'. li tlckelnlin: twelte tiekelt, iii;twentT.flreIO. Cln tilari conlalnins nlullll.lof i.rltn. a df .criplion of the niann.l of drawing, anil other In. fcriimtion inrnfermopto tho diilribution, wilIU ! o any one ordering them. AMI truer tnuit tut Ut I.. II.MINK, lloxbc, urn... Cincinnati, O 101 Wett Mh tl. nortwipnlT PIANON. SIXTY-F1VK FIRST PRIZE MEDALS AWARDED TIIK ORKAT BALTIMORE HAJfCrJttrOKY WM. KNABE k CO., Manufacturers of ORANU, CqUARE AND UPRIGHT JPT JiJISrO FORTES BALTUIOIIK, MA KV LA Nil. Th'ne Inetrumenta have been before the public for nearly thirty years, and upon their excellence alone allalned an unpurthnnal prtmnntnet, which pronounce" them unoqualed in TONE, TOUCH, WORKMANSHIP And DURABILITY "All our.Tuare Ianot lute our new New Im proved OretstriiDK Hrale and the Agraft 1iAt S)- We would rail special attentloa to our (ale Patented Improvements In tlatan Puhos and Hqi'Aar (iaAKtii, found in no other Piano, which bringi the Piano nearer perfection than has yet been attained, EVERY PIANO FULLY WARRANTED TOR FIVE YEARS, Illustrated Catalogues and Price Mats promptl furnmhed on application to WM. KNABE 4CO llALTIMOat, All! many of our r'Kiilar enlaWUhtd aganciei. HIM.1NKBN. MRS. M. SWANDER, DEALER IN MILLINERY A1 LADIES FURNISHING GOODS, Cosnmerclal Avesiue, opiioHlle Klllo and llaytborn'a Cairo, Illinoih. CLOTHING FOR LADIES' WKAft Made to order, or Kendy.lf ad Has received a full and eomptelo stock of sood., he newest end comnletest in the cilr. A3 im mense rarity ot RIBBONS, LACES AND FRINGES alio otters great induceme'ta to herpstrena and all older tonall onher.exaiiilne the prices, styles and quullty ot tier goodm Mrs. Swanaer, havini; sold her property. ll sell the whole of (liexo goodit at aim below coal flow U the time to purchase Chriatmaa good I the very lowest prlcea. BOOTH AND NIIOEM. WILLIAM EHLERS, Frtahlonabl ROOT AND SHOE MAKER, TWENTIETH STREET, lielween Washington avenue and Poplar ' CAIRO, ILL, Boots and Hkoes Made to Order. Kin Workman Employed. aatlilaotlon Warranted. Patroaax ollcit