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► * - ' W ,* i,:.» K _ _ !»• 'M 18 « y » (L.» t " 'jL.Lj* * / ► *, •.M+Smrif» V* »«VMOM. ■ -r\ 'SS*Se* ;*•/?; Æ3 K* !g »e ' ff- m •• -■■* *. - --»'./« - n n;i(i Aîüffo'iiijfto iî* ■ ' Z:IV* ' W"ft Jf'i;îjiljNm»*» '»/(T Ü'ï^fiC îîilb^til^îllH r. ■ ■ • • ' *« - t j_. h." 1 ■ i i. ■ " ■■ ■........ r rn^-l b il i ■ Z'i «> 4 : ' ■ ». i rn<:\ ? $ • 'ûV- • ' • • v AV . --- ^--| _____jj___ IDAHO CITY, TUESDAY, JTJT-TSr 27 , 187 ^ 3 . 1ST CD. se jjJq^ttVWg WttUL published SiHIOAYS, WED«MAY* AND FRIDAYS, The Idaho World Printing Company A ^ 3EliTW ; JOSE*. BUSINESS MANAGER. »s,» wt H*** ^ f,a ^ _____---- _ irc ...... INVARIABLY I» ADVANCE. r ® S5 ' ' ' * , , , of S u b sc r I p t I o »t " 1 (Hi I Three Menth«.. .$3 00 I SîM* Copie«..... S» •* M lîv c'arrur, $3.per qu»rtcr. - »«« ■ ------- . jjrtte* ol A.dvert»*inart m ten Une* or le**, one tasertkm... f I 00 0^ !< l u .. nuLuiequeni insertion, 2 UO ^U. of * column, per qu-rt«, . .... . . .. W 00 " ...... - ......... 80 00 " !"£ «« oo " 3 ^ q u*rter..................... 100 00 csrds. U 1 Unes or les*, ihre« months. 10 00 gfttôfifMl (îaris. geo. aimur, V TTORN'EY VSD COUNSELOR AT LAW. IDAHO ,>;r l. T. Oiüie ou Montgomery stroet, Mcuml îieribeve tàe ?o*loû»c<f. JONAS W. BROWN, V TT0RNF.Y «NI* COUNSELOR AT L\W. AND N.itarv l'ablu-, Idaho Cue. I. T. WU1 practice •- i l The l'ôan* of the Territory, times on Cotn îitrciil street, two d *or atx»e Court House. \V3I. J. ROTH WELL, 31. D., IMTSIClAJf. SC Bi» EON. kC.. ffmluste of Jeffer | MC 'lei. il t -»lie««, PhlU<lr-l|'hi* Other »U r.<per end of Graatte street. Placer» «lie, Boise Co., IT [drei —ti DR. THORNK, ... BEN 11ST. PLACE!_______ . ett (rrantte «tra t, nearly opposite l>r. L -.aerll's. .S'. 3.-Kine g^M ftliing* s specially. horirty Rotirrs. I DAHO Encampment, No. 5. I. C. R C . bolds it* mrufar meeting« at fi -'-I Tovî*.- HMl. ->n Wednesday evenings r f*.Kh*erk. *j <t o'clock. All tnefubera U pd »unding *re incited to attend. By erliroî :h* E Com. £uu Hiartr tec'y. {Jan. ti, 1874-tf - LODGE, No. 0. I. O. O. T.. IA holds iu regular meetings at Its hall., ou «Mrda; ertnings of each week, at A o'clock, ill Beaabfr* :n. g »-«I «landing are invited to «^a.i. By order f the- W. C. T. • I«iSUT W. Junes. Sk'j. Jan 15 74-tf ?9Cus, $tationrrj| aid potions. — 8,0. SILSBV, (»ncTttaoa ro tan. a. rorwrr a co.) CIRCULATING . library AND VARIETY STORE. WmiciKiL^t,.............iptHO CITY, DKALKR IN • . . AJ»D. .. , general news dealee TOBACCO AND CIGÀBS, ■ * * CHILDREN'S TOYS, - All of which witi be ^OLD CHEAP FOE CASH.~m inâ O,.' ,k '. ,B «Y Hoe. not Voand in my stocks ti,,' . :«w.be procured in ihe abortesl possible AinnU P'i«**-*—»ny facifiuea for so doing being * uew »d expeditious. -•---— •&*»»* iJune 13. IIRIU ■V7-; Tim- ® inota ö»a »otic«.. r„ 11!5 «UPAK INErtSUlP HÇKET0 in bwt »»>®n John Foster end —- Pfr *u, QN.i.Tf Hiiiera' JionieHotel, and dringend* i,k.:: r l r Urm name of Foster A Peterson, nt > ' , Ul : ii i3 At * JOB PRINTING AT NEW YORK PRICES! ; t 1 AT THE IDAHO WORLD t nn -HOSTSB&, CIRCÜLARS, BILLHEADS. NOTES. HERDS, TAGS, PROGRAMMES, RECEIPTS, LICENSES, ; VISITING CARDS ■Ball tickets, LETTERHEADS. ALSO LEGAL ft JU8TICE 8 BLANK of all kinds, and every description of TEMPER® M S always on hand and printed to order, PLAIN, OR IN COLORS, > , ïT'yfctî nt.- *1# And at prices 50 per ceet v *below our former rates. ÏO Ugjj a ^d examine specimens and prices s* 1.11 (Mr wf '! GOV. f flLDEN AND PRESIDENT ORANT. — A number of journals unfriendly to Gov. Tilden, but friendly to President Grant, comment upon the Governor's temporary absence from the State at Long Branch, as forming a parallel for Grant's habitual absence from Washington at the same place during the summer, and as justifying the same. The Constitution of this State pro vides that "in case of the impeach ment of the Governor, or his removal from office, death, inability to dis charge the powers and duties of the said office, resignation, or afjsencefrom th e Stale , the powers and duties of the office shall devolve upon the Lieuten ant Governor for the residue of the term, or until the disability shall cease. This shows that any real com parison between the case of Tilden and that of Grant is out of the ques tion. As soon as Gov. Tilden is ab sent from the State he thereby ceases to discharge the powers and duties of his office; and as a thoroughgoing con stitutional lawyer he must, of course, have notified Lieutenant-Governor Dorsheimer of the new functions in cumbent upon him, and that gentle man must accordingly now be at Al bany discharging the powers and du ties of the Governor in compliance with the Constitution. % t If Grant, when he goes away to Long Branch for the summer, were to j follow the example of some of the ear lier Presidents, and request the Vice President to establish himself in Wash ington and there assume the duties of President during his own absence, he would thus make his case really par allel to that «if Gov. Tilden; but as the matter stands there ts no resembla between th«*tn except in they are both jut Ijong Branch. Mr. porsheiruer is perfectly quali- fied to til! the office of Governor ' of New York, to which, in the event of Gov. Tilden*« absence from the Stite, tin* people have elected him; and yet we earnestly trust that the ill health of tiie Governor, which lias rendered it necessary for him to seek retirement and rest at some place where the af fairs y)£ his office cannot be forced up- on hi« attention, will speedily be rem- edied by his thorough restoration, and followed by bis prompt return to the State and the resumption of his prop- er authority.— „V. Y. Sun. resemUlapee the fact that --- - »♦ « — The Remedy for Cholera. —Once on a time a certain doctor waS called in great haste to see an Irishman sick jvith cholera. The doctor had been keeping record of his cases, and this was a desperate one; and not wishing to.take the risk of treating his patient improperly, he went home 1 to consult his record without prescribing. That night he Irishman, getting hungry, helped himself liberally *to potatoes and cabbage Next morning the doctor on calling again, and, to bis surprise, found, his patient nearly well So he entered in his diary, "P«»tatocs and cabbage cure an Irishman of cholera." A day or two after he was called to see a Dutchman sick with the srfmc malady, and so he ordered potaUies and cabbage. The next morning the doctor called again, and to his great surprise found the Dutchman had died. So he entered in his diary, "Potatoes and cabbage will cure an Irishman of cholera, but will kill a Dutchman." • ___ ♦ -- ÜÄJ Silsby's.—Go to Silsby's, at the postoffice, and get a supply of fresh readme matter. If you are not fond Wf tcâdfrtg yourself; remember your wife and children. He tedps all kftids a, ff /tawUircs Ûiero, and almost gives .ittawajL ** /• • * '' ii! £01*0 Jÿi»; ai Vit bilê The decrease in tobacco in the Con -1 necticut valley has caused the price of manure to decline from to $10 to $15 per cord to $7 or $8. This reduction in priefe gives ordinary farmers a chance, and will be a good thing for Connecticut farms. In one of the French departments there is a "Society for the Protection of birds useful to the farmer." All nests found are reported to the socie ty and protected by it. In the past year the society protected 214 nests, from which came 904 birds. At the dog show last Month at the London crystal palace, there were 1,178 animals exhibited, and a marked improvement in all breeds was noticed. The Princess of Wales took the first prize for a fine animal in the class of St Bernard mastiffs. The fanners iu California are sore troubled, not with locusts and potato bugs, but with squirrels. They exist in some portions of the state in such numbers as to destroy all the cultivat ed crops. It is proposed to tax the property of non-residents to get a fund to exterminate them. J. M. Brown, of Surry county, North Carolina, has planted 2.">U acres in to bacco this year, requiring 1,250,000 plants. Boston now has a 1» untired first-class firms whose speciality is wool, and nearly all these have sprung up with in twenty-five years Tlie California wool clip this year is 43.830.000 pounds. At the present rate of increase, by 1SSÖ it will be 224.700.000 pounds. They lutve discovered a new plant "way dow.ii east in the Slate of Maine," Which some enthusiastic people think j w jp supercede cotton for making cloth, •piio Colorad«» potato beetle has reached Vermont, and seems to like the country of the Grim Mountains quite as well as that of the lfyxtky Mountains. In consequence of violent rain storms in New England, just after shearing time, large numbers of sbeep perished. A great many lambs died from the same cause. It is estimated that the three lead ing products of California will, during the present year, foot up as follows: Wool, 50.000,000 pounds; wine,*15. 000,000 gallons; wheat, 45,000,000 bushels. L. Ice 80,000 Years Old. —The altitude of the Stevens mine on .Mount Mc Clellan is 12,000 feet. At*tli^ depth of from 60 to 200 feet the crevice mit-* ter, consisting of silica, calcite, and ore, together with the surrounding wall rock, is a solid frozen mass. Me Clellan is one of the highest eastern spurs of the Bnowy range; it has the form of a horseshoe, with a bold es carpment of feltsphatic rock nearly 2,000 feet high, which in some places is nearly perpendicular. Nothing un usual occurs until a distance of some 80 or 70 leef has been made; then the frozen Territory is readied, and it con tinues for over 200 feet. There are no indications of thaw, summer or win ter. The whole frozen territory is sur rounded bv hard, massjve rock, and the lode itself is as hard and massive as the rock. The / miners, being unable to exca vate the frozen material with pick or drill, found that the only way was to kindle a wood fire at night against the back end of the tunnel, and. in the morning takeout the dlàînfeg^ ted ore. f This* bas been'the modi mîîinig Am* rfi'fre'than two years.' Th# tuirtdf 4s over 200 Teert deep,and there i -ÜA » „ j. « ... I; ... i'll ■con \ it ti 9fJW is no diminution of the frost. There is, so far as can be seen, no opening or channel through which the frost could possibly, have.reached euch a depth from the surface. There are other miues in the same vicinity in a like frozen state. The theory is that the rock was laid down in glacial times, When there was cold enough to freeze the very earth's heart. In that case the mine is an ice house whose stores have remained unthawed for at least eighty thousand years! The phenom enon is not uncommon or inexplicable when openings can be found through which a current of air can pass; but cases which, like the Brandon frozen well and the Stevens mine, show no way for air currents, are still referred to imbedded icebergs and the glacier period .—Colorado News. --- This is the way they get rid of the grasshopper pest in Russia. Every laud owner is obliged to send into court yearly one hundred dead grass hoppers to each acre of the land owned by him; say if John Smith owns ten acres of farming land, he is to bring^ un the first of August iu the court 1,000 dead hoppers, and for every short one he is fined five cents. The p«>or classes are engaged in catching the hoppers, beginning in May, and sell them on the market where they average about two cents apiece, thus giving an opportunity for farmers to buy them in case they fail to fulfill their taxes on them. No farmer is al lowed to catch hoppers not on his own land. The method of catching them is very easy. .They boil water on the field, and supply themselves with tin cans made especially for the purpose and fill them with boiling wa ter, and then they hunt along the place for the 'nests;' they pour the water in the hole, which kills them, and after they pick them out with a hook- This keeps the hoppers de creasing yearly, until some years they have to appeal to the government to reduce the perœntkge, as there are no/ie*to be found. This would be the best and cheapest remedy for the farm of this couutry to adopt. . *he müuicip'al AdX County. —We condense the fol lowing items from the «Statesman. Farmers are in the. midst of harvest, and there is quite a demand for work hands. * *• The Northwestern Stage Company have commenced buying giain by con tract at two ceuts per pound, coin! The new council have assumed con affairs of the city. Sam Claÿtdn *"will have three or four thousand pounds ol peaches f this year, notwithstanding so many draw backs. lion. John McNally brought down two lots of dust from custom rock crushed in the Wide West Mill, which went $40 to the ton. After the assay one of the bars was stamped $800 in g«dd and $18 in silver. Affairs in Al faros county appear tô be brighter ng.^ * . The Boise lumber company have shipped ten thousand feet of lumber to Silver City. •The Negroes, this summer, are dy ing off iu the District of ; Columbia. The week ending the 26th of Juno was marked by the death of • one hun dred of this unfortunate Face out of the one thousand whole population in -.Washington. City J v A fearfullpercen tafca * The whd* Negro population of tfte*United States is rapidly^ dying out, and iias i beom smee i ih6>conatiit<mûemenfe cf the • rebellion* * *t • • tlh»:** hm» D!*7;U.«-(ÎX'*.