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TheJesunitry of Evarts Against Oonvo;s_ationsl Apropos==-A Review WASHINGTON, The Election---Its ¥Effect Upon Watchers. the Coalition. ... of the Field. From Our Own Corvespondent. . ‘WasHINGTON, Nov. 6, 1872, We have met the bravely. WHAT NEXT? i Being his'n, the question is: Whose is he? ‘Alreadv the Wiseacres have begun to answer this ‘by putting forward Ppropositions of new Hues and new political combinations. Ex-Senator Drake declared, on & street-corner, yesterday, that the President must have three terms. He said that he, Drake, was the original suggestor of Three Terms,—in which case he must be & Muscovy Drake, and pine fa his Car, Dith: Idmost a A CHARGE FROM THE BENCH. “The mistake of the coalition movenent,” #ays Ji nflgg Cartter, *“wasa belief that Treason 2nd Rebellion had no long expiation to make be~ i?rs lhB' People, and in heeding the voice of the ‘high spirits of the day moro than the scntiment of business and industry. A great country, that is growing new and rich every yoar, does not basten backward to conciliste Rebellion. The Hariford Convention grew more hateful 0 the Amerdean people as its date recoded, snd the Teay blood of the Revolation i to this dsy T popular disquelification. Grezley's Pittsburgh speech against the soldiery might _Bave been an error of iho leart, but i ran «<ounter to this law of human nsture. There is Dogreat justice, perhaps, in this vindictivelaw ; ‘but it is the metkod of man. “After Grant’s nomination, the ratifimtion “Tmeetings in Lis favor were failures, The psople <id not come out to them, and it looked on the surface asif ho had no strength. Bat, amongst ths traders, bankers, end farmers, there wss & distrast of experiment, and this grew, dwing ke campsign, to be the ruling idea. although iip other. it was toitt vote of ] ranen Abditionist on an Abolition plat; *¢As to Greeley himeelf,” continued the Judge, “<he was nbither defected for any disbelief in g:.s honest intentions, nor overshadowed by any supérior prulmtyjn Grant. Teeling ranlow, quict, and resolute all the time, orfiu: and leaders abused each Greeley has led the Democratic party as ave, and the country owes him o srty orm, for it. The Democratic and that is :onfession without reformation,” Bariter, “ma ban dn be correctel wil £o rise as sy oth ¢ Judge,” said somebody, “ what next? THE JIDGE PERCEIVES MORE TERRITORY. “The prty that is to_beatthe Republican within it,” said Judge sion on some other than the seedy mestions which divided former Ad- ‘roinistrations. The question of State rights has been get asde by the rise of railwags, markets, cities, and corporations. is met by Ho by ingiron; ind, 8 1o cotion, the issue ceased of bo alive trenty years sgo. 'Civil Service is to ithin the service, and not 2% a mus{ come fr Free unt Zact that we are now export- ular elction. “] thinkthe territorial question is as likely er, and even a well-ordered Ad- ‘ministratia might be overthrown by it."” ““‘Whereg it to come from?” gaid a Boston geptleman,-“from New England > “From al sides. That railway to Ssn Diego ‘zaniht to pas over Mexican ground after it gets ] 1 Pago.” The Cuban question engages ns akready, anl, after four yearsof ravolt, the rev- <jution thee holds up its head, The British e their fronters. inanes. Zuining redons of steadfast ambition. the' sea. Tho psssion for land Texas is recéiving vances beyond Oregon. I an not sdvocatin movement 0f this kind, but it seems tome that it is the only one of & comprehensive kind in im- pending politics. An Administration wonld nat- Tresist this demand for extension: for it would not properly begin as 1 scheme of Federal g%ucy. but 28 a series of 2re £eems Lo be nothing else to debate about. It will be observed that things spiritual, such 23 reforms, do not enter into the above enter- taining expression from & gentleman who sooa afterward took his way to the White House to arall popular movements. ongratulate President Grant right heartily. quietest and mostsocial gatherings of former dig- utants, the celebrated Virginia partisan-ranger, Mosby, appearcd with one of his former officers, He frequented the Grant_newspapor rooms, and ‘Ead stumped partaof Piedmont and the Valley of “Virginia for Grant. It is_rumored that he pos- sesses & ctone-quarry, and wants to get a con- tnet for furishing laad. Others gay that Mosby was animate bya sentiment of gratitude to Grant for setting vocation of & safeguard for | 2ad tha, besides, he con- He is a strik- ssile Stanion's Te binself an band; tenned Abolitionitm in Grecley. MOSBY. As the election-refurns were coming in to the ‘headstones mves of the Federal dead in the slon cemeteries of Virginia and nglooking men, reminding me_of the profiles of Benedict Arnold.—a fine, aquiline nose, firm Upsand ckin, the chin advancing ; and a amooth face, indicztive of hard, compact flesh. His hair 16 light brown, and straight;-his cers stick up terrer-fashion ; he has a light eye, severe, but not frank, and a wis Ther Y, boyisk body. are ihree thousand about boys in Virginia to match bim s riders, ruides, and purtraits, His associate was a stals ‘wark iype of the black-eyed, dark-bearded moun- tain-prate. What an ‘anomaly that this man Mosby, who used to hang _his prisoners at the roadails aud hus printed the admission of the same tnufiphnnfly gince the war,—should be an anxiow vocate of Grani's election! But it teems > be no._matter who tho man may be, if he follows the bigger current of the purty. ‘THE SOUTH AND ITS PROBLEMS. In iha Southern States, the settlement of things now devolves wholly upon their popala- tions. The wants of. those States are credi, im- migra/ Iast fist of all. By aepiritusl reconstmetion, ion, and s spiritual reconstructicn,—the I mear s reform ‘of “public sentiment, to be nccomyished, not, a8 in the old ri:d Reetiny cetic rety, faithfuly eriod, by re- pfi, #the jerks”and s hard as- which drove its negro to church s8 uly 28 it drove him to the field. Modern educatia, and s social toleration for all thirgs, old and lespised, or new, startling, snd revou- tionary, ‘hich have come to stay, must com- mend thenselves to every wise head and hope ful heart'n that section. This is the timely end earnet word of good influence which has made the Geeizy fight on bebalf of the South in tho Nortern country, THE KREE ROADS OUT OF THE SOUTH. There arqhrea choices for Southern people defeated in ke election just over: O 1. Stsy st ome, and work patience and -god nature. 2. Emigrateto now territory, as to Texas, Southern Kauas, Colorado, or New Mesico, rhereimu antinegro prejudice will not be pro- onged. 8. Go North,nd acquire the trades prevalent Ll:m, aén& éfla’“ the current of movement and ICrease i} i S ”‘"g‘ me‘mgfl-{a dispossessed the Southern Either of thessmodes are brave enough and natural e3ough. the greater number of gv‘hi:es in the South mwlt-fiv at home; & large num- ber will move 9 Ad write * Gone to Texas™ (G. T. T'Eef.“ he\cho-giving door of the old ) the problem out by home ; & 8O afer'to educate children in the North ratler thy 4o gontend with carpet- ] enemy, and, to adopt his Fnglish, weo are his'n. We are hivn 0 bys very large deficit. The calored troops fought too Chief Justice D. K. Cariter, of this Dintriet, & man of etrong head and projectiveness, remarked 2a follows, while the returns were ‘coming n. Asg the sentiments of s Repgblican Regular, as well es original opinions, they are 1ot without The toneof pablic o 28 to iron ween Vancouver’s and Manitoba are g, aod emigration is assembling on SoErsaRial sud pokieal Cbabscon o got b s geograp] obstacles to get to the Pk Superior with shelr reile w2y8, andthe Eastern people want lumber and an‘equal narket to the North, while the West wwants the St. Laswrence and a channel to is the' only ome which presses equally mpon :a flourishing state of society. To add another lot to bis bomestead, another acre to his farm, an- wother farm to his tract, is the American's most ion. We do not want to have to _police our frontier, 88 wemust do, st present, -on ths Rio Grande. incresse from the Eastern Blave States, where the yan.ngiyhntem want to evade negro-predom- i “hat increase will press upon Mexico, 3ust a5 the chief movement on the Pacific ad- & vast for the & d only NOVEMBER 10, 873 {s gery, tAxation, negto-education, and physi aal Drivation s Kome or on the frontior, wiil move Northwrd. To remove from the ctdntry, after the example of the Brazi] Colony, will bs Bheer defeat and miserable Baylonish captivity; for, after all that cen bd said, no men are &0 nearly alike s Americans, North and South, TRE EX-sFAYEHOLDERS’ CUL DR 8AC, Whichevet course the Sopthern family will take, it must encounter the two inetitutions of tho dge: general education and manuel crafk. Nothing can ovade the public schiool and goneral Iabor; npltli:bm \aot;:l ?%lcza, the ng, fi;’ ind for- eignor will be admitted to an éqwal o i 1bg oldest and gentlsst Amerien. o The projudice Against Fork no longer exists among ANy great nutitber of people in the South ; necogsity, it 1t pluck, has compelled it to bo s "There rémains merely to throw over 13 ' preju- dice Against particular forms_of work. T% bea hiandy mechanic is & highet form of oceupation ihan {0 be & starvling planter; and for even woman to Work at manual occupation, with cheerful astbciations, is no worse than to keap & boarding house. The regenerators of the bopial code at the South have the bravest work to do, I heard a conversalion, quring the receipt of the election-returns, in Which a South Carolinian joined. He said sa foilows: ** The peoplo Sf our State have, as a real canse of grievauco, the plundor of the Public Treasury, the’xdbbing of the railways, and the depreciz- %ion of our credit by the rule of the carpot-bag- gers and ecallawags. Yet they might have fore- seen this, and anticipated it by one act of mag- D8nimity; made voluntary provision for negro- education. This they we not do from invin- cible prejudice, 'Tho thieves, did do it, to ap- pease the negro, and {ot %is vote. The old natives further sealed thair doom politically by winking at Ku-Kluxiem. Now, nothing affects the fegro Like addressing’ him in this wey: ‘Yon ere & npative of this Btate, &nd are rea%msible, 28 such, for its credit #nd progress !’ ut the old uncharity casnob say thoso words, even from motives of sell-in- terest. The negro, therefere, has fallen inio thehands of that clase of swamp snd sottloment tradera to whom he ueed to gell chickens when he had sfolen them. The controlling county b ians of the State are now such of those whito fellows s kept faith and dealt honestly with the pilfering negro; for the negro kepk u) his thieving some time after the War expire As the uatives refuss to provide schools for the negroes in many of the Southern States, they lose control of the spirit of education; and yet thera is po natural resson why the old classes nnd thoir former slaves should not fally co-op- erate to revive and purify all those States.” STATESMEN NEEDED, The problems of the South are the same now as forever ; to respact labor; to educate the poor universally ; and to put down violences of the sort called difficulties™ and duelling, by a vigorous public spirit and the courts of Inw. The Greeley movement will have been no failure if the better spirit of it continues beyond the election. “The duel,” said & Kentucky editor to me, “ig worse than it has been related. To hear old fellows, who have managed so many_duels, re- cite their inside reminiscences, is to be thrilled with horror at the unfairness of the Code, and tho advanteges forced npon the wesker party.” How can communities get immigration where the kmiife is carried, the unarmed man “posted,” sad public opinion, aad even tho Grend Jusj, abat the murderer under the Code ? Immigration the South poscesses alresdy in & greater relative ratio than tho North; African immigration, already on the epot, adapted to the kind of work, and requiring only the ssme treatment which an employer would be compelled toextend to Germans, Irish, Scandinavisns, or Bohemians; perfect protec- tion, the sdvantages of schools, respect for the Iaborer's wife and dsughter, and toleration at the ballot-box. It ought to be the bosst of every Bouthern community that, in its relations with the Foderal Government, it had never made Pederal interference necessary; snd, if the carpet-baggera’ crimes at present gounpunished, it is becanso the burdens of oppression have been divided between the native white and the emancipated black. THE DEMOCRATIC HELP. I have been at pains {0 state thus frankly why the coslition ticket made litile headway at the North; it sougbt tobe compassionate tothe South before the South had been compassionate to itself. It was a gonerous mistake, and the defeat may not go without lesson in that unfor- tunate section. ~All that we of the North can do is to present the grievances there continaally to public opinion, and cheer that evangelist who will be the moral Lee or Longstreetof his peo- ple, the General of & trne and democratic chiv- As to the other great wing of the Greeloy line of battle, the Democratic party, it came into sction with more willingness fhan morale. Its willingness was partly offset by the earlier endeavors of many of its leaders and or- gans to head off Greeley's nomination at Balti- mors, 8o that, for the last threo months, they ‘were merely refuting what they had said in the receding two months. But the party had Eroken lown 28 & national o:f:m'zltion since 1864. Not with a soldier candidate, as McClel- 1an, or with all the sdvantages gained by John- son’s reactionary Administration, nor with a re- spectable Democrst like Seymour, nor with an Abolitionist like Greeley, could it recover the general field. - SO TICK EERE. The people did not possess confidence in the mass of its voters and politicians; and, if it had run Grant, or Adams, or George Washington, it would, of itself, have been doomed. The' thin vote which it has poiled for Mr. Greeloy in the North shows, further, that, aa an. organization, it is demoralized and out of disci- line, P'Tiis party was oxpectod to bo of particular usetobe Mr. Greeley in New York Btate and Penneylvania; but, from the former State, it appeared at Baltimore to get helgmora than to giveit. Already undera cloud by the public fecling egainat Tweed, its_better men hoped 2gainst hope to hold ground in New York Cits and Albany by & coalition with the advance: sentiments and the intrepid character of the men at Cincinnati, These New Yoark leaders gave Mr. Greéley & moble support; but their Working politicians, who had gone hungering since the fall of Tweed, paid no attention to the Natiopal issue, and scarched about between O’'Brien and Tom Murphy for anew * Bogs.” TWEED THE NIGHTMARE. The tactics of Tweed would have ruined the ‘hosts of heaven, had they prevailed there twelve ears. Nob only the city, but the State, of New ork was overrun by his pensioners, retainers, and degraded editors. He claimed to own the controlling influence in thirty nevspspore With- in the Commonweslth; aud aleek Legislators, demure Judges, and_election-repeaters lived, Jike his favorite 8ops, in' daily afiuence. When Tsyeed went down, every one of these creatures felt the pangs of hunger. The motive of the whole having been pelf, no political co- hesion prevailed whon the pay-master was one. Buch fellows never read the Cincinnati latform, and have not known for twenty years who Jefferson was, or what Jackson beliaved. Long after Greeley was bro\;fibt forward, the New York Herald entertained the publio with ac- counts of the robberies of its great Brooklyn contemporary ; sud Fiek, Barnatd, and other worthies went their wey until the shelterless camp-followers of Tweed, flying from want and tho jail, walkied straight into the Administration camp. ‘Then Murphy and O'Brien deceived each other, and welcomed all; the Administration camp became the ruffians’ esnctuary; and, when Horaco Greeley was beaton by General Grant, William M. Tweed was also succeeded by Thomas Murphy. THE CHAOS. In Philadelphis, the ringleadors for Hartranft made an_easy purchese of the working Demo- cratic politicians. In the State atlarge, after- dinner_apathy prevailed. The leaders-of the eat Democratic party, having so long excited it with prejudices, reckoned prematurely upon u_,.;l capacity of that eoil to yield harvest of prin- ciples. nearly every State of the North it grow spparent, as the contest was closing, that the und at issue was not 8 Presi~ jency, but the State officers and Congress; and “the Liberal Republican character was expected to piece out the weakness of the Dem- ocracy. This explains why Mr. Greeley ran be- hind; the Presidency was the subordinate issue with the Democracy. 3 In the South, at the same time, persons appre- ‘hensiva that the Regulars would overcome Gree- ley, persmbulated for Grant; and, after the election in Maine aud Yermont, the humber was large. At the same time, independent candi- dates, like Apdrew Jobnson mud Golladay, started up o divert the iseue from & campaiga tc a tournament, The DBmDCIHMC£nrty in the Soath wes shattered nearlyas badly as at the North, for many Southernars looked upon it B ter, whom unmerciful Disast s master, saster Follw;n(nls,Fan followed faster, till his songs cne burden bore,— Of Never, nover more !” . Besides, a resction exists, evenin the South, against the old bugbesr of Federal interference. A Kentuckian said {o me, during the Louisvills Bourbon Convention : 5 “ All our organs and old men are talking one ®ay, and all development is going ihe other. The dangers of Federal aggression upon tho States was a good emough cry when the Slave Btates were apprehensive that the Federal Gov- help, communications, and new institutions ? ‘With the negro2s mada citizens, we have got the Inst bad blow from Washington.” o FINIS, i The Cincinoati movement made Grant's mis- administration the point of attncl 48 tho repre- sentative of the moral abusés in modern poli~ tics. A larger movement, of which Grant's Administration got the advantage of being _sup~ Fosed & part, was already under way, the move~ ment againgt Bonrbonism throughout the race; against clerical presumption in Europe and the old meaninglesa parties, prejudices, and dog- mas which cumbered the ground in America. It would have been singularif & party which prevailed in & war againat Slavery and Disunion should not have elected its man five years after the war, We have failed to divide it for the sake of spiritualizing it, is the word that can be said against Liberal men. Upon the same issue, the contest will be made 8gain, unless grosser issues proveif, and the whole political mass be brutelized. GaTE. THE PUBLIC GAMING TABLES. Their Last Days. From the Pait Mall Gazetta Digorder reigns rampant at tho geming-tables, and gross dishonesty laya itself out for n living here. In tho old days it was rarely, indeed, that you shw two players claiming the same stake, when the etake was of any importance. Cheva- liers d'industrie knew the chief croupier was there to gmtect thecnstomers as well as the bank, and that a false claim would probably be nished by exposure or expulsion. If the irector found himself puzzled io pronounce, or believed both clsims to be made in good faith, he gonerally paid both claimants, Now such squsbbles are of hourly occurrenco, and over sums so large thet it is difficult to at. tribute the false claim to misappreliension. That is the reason, ssrhaps, why the bank has aban- doned the old system of conciliation, 88 too costly, and has taken to the cheaper plan of leaving the rivals to fight it out. But the result ig that the rooms haye come to resemble beer gardens, while no gentleman can seat himself toplay ‘except at the hazardof an sltercation with some brazen-tonged escroc or brazen-faced lorelte. Reason the more, surely, for ladios, and especielly English ladics, staying away. A lesst, one would fancy 5o ; for the tradition still lingers with us of the times when the typical Engfiah- woman was mfiflledlas the incarnation of a purity approaching to austerity, and ladies. of indifferont character were constrained to aps their betters. The Mesdames Cruchecassoo might gneer at the shy ferocity of the Englisli- woman’s virtue, and the chilly prudery of her demeanor; the men might admire and sheer and call her begueule. But, on the whole, when the Englishmsn could carry his head high, and de- clare himself a civis Romanus, he never folt more proud of his country than when he con- trastedthe behavior of his countrywomen with thet of their forej sistors, Now all that is changed. An Englishman in dificulties must stand, s well he may, on his individual char- acter, and sayas litile as may be about his Roman citizenship. If any one is entitled to boast or to bully on the strength of his citizen- ehip, it is s subjectof that mew Holy Roman Empire, whose ocapital is Berlin, and whose = prophet is Biemarc) Weo know better than foreigners that, if Eng- lishmen abroad bave for a time lost some- t!xm_iot their self-respect, it is owing to the timid, penny-wise policy and the sentiméntal de- lusions of & Government, and not to any decsy of tho national spirit. But morala are known to deteriorate when nations suffer in their self-ro- spect, and tho greater laxity of manners among our travelling countrywomen iy an anplessant coincidence, to szy the leastof it. Time was when, if you saw one of them regularly seated at the tables, you could pronounce off-band on her character, with little danger of doing her injus- tice. Anonyme risked herrouleaux when out for ber summer tour, or some fallen Becky Sharp came down in faded finery from her gar- rot to try and double the florin or two she bad obteined from doubtful charity. Now every one feems Lo make their game, the women as freely and boldly 28 the men. They may not stake so heavily 28 Jewish bankers from Frankfort, Rus- rian Princes, Magyar boyards, or Mediterranean mongrels, and pour cause; but they play.out to the limits of their tetber, and often their tether appears 10 be a pretty long one. 1t is not a case of borrowing o florin or two from husband, father, or brother, throwing them endways on to the cloth, blushing to the roots of the hair, as, kecing them roll about, they explain to' the croupiers where they desire to place them, and finelly showing whits iecth and dimples when tho stakes were swept up by the remorseless rake. Not st all. Nowaduys the English maid or matron draws in her chair in most business- like fashion, emilingly receiving the cards to cut from a gentleman with the brand of the galleys on his features, and possibly the mark of the chain on his ankle, On the otber side sho rubs shoulders with a lady much betier known than respected in the Parisian dancing-saloons, and about whose vocation, indeed, thers could bo no manner of doubt, even if she did mob afficher it by a costumo excessively decollefee and a tewdry blaze of Palsis Royal jewelry. Not that in her gorgeous show ahie_has greatly tho disadvantage of Ler English neighbor. Except that the jewels of one are real and those of the other sham,—that the chains of ** respectability” are gold, while those of disreputability are mo- saic,—the pair might be intimates if not sistery. Probably s week or 50 may bring them yot nearer identity when the couple of ladies have estab- lished o play-table intimacy, snd the English jewels have gone fo the mon(-de-piete. For, in the frankness of the excitement of winning and losing aa the game goes on, the Englishwoman exchanges congratulations or condolences, or Tolds counsel with her neighbors, and 8o the in- timacy warms fast. The youngmatrons mayshow thomselves the more casy at first, on the strength of their matronbood; but in the great- er exuberance of their girlish epirits tho maids 8soon make up for lost time when once they sre fairly intoxicated with the excitement. The in- toxication is kept up, for when their impression- able natures have been steoped in the spirit of the game, they can never keop themaelves away from the tables. There they are, the firat thin in the morning, when the great professiona players, worn with long years of dissipation, ste still trifling over their breakfast. There they are, tho last thing at night, serambling for na- poleons, with fingers !gnklx'ng with_rings, among all the rascality and rouerie of Europo. There are women among them,too,—public char- acters they chooee to make themselves, 80 we need not gcruple to write of them,~who bring their children as regularly as they come them- selves, snd, slrange to eay, they are nob ostracised _altogether ~ by their own sex, while they aro the objects of assiduous gallantry to travellin, countrymen of character who may be ptesumes fo possess humamty and sepse. Yet, for_our own part, were we to embody the Spirit of Evil, we ghould scarcely know how to incarnate it more appropriately than in the attractive woman who, day after day, seats her child beside her in ahell, just at the age when she is most impress- ionabls, Women of the kind may be the excep- ernment might interfere with slavery ; bat what have we to fear from Uncle Sam Dow, except tion, but then they are generally tolerated in such Epglish society as lingers on” at & German gambling-place when the lights are being extin- fguishod for the season aud the best company has departed. Be the canse of this sad change what it may, we maybe thankful that the German Government has decided to remove this tempta- tion from the way ot wesk natures, now that the old conventional restraints are being so fast re- Inzed. Should apy othor comntry extend its hospitality fo the tablesafier the scandalsof the peast few months in Germany, at least it will do it with open eyes. s b Y An Extraordinary Scene in Court. On the 15th of July last, a most extraordinary ecene, and in our opinion & most barbarous and rovolting exhibition of judical craelty, took lace at the Assize Cowrt st Chelmaford, Eng- and. We quote the account of it given in the Medlcal Times and Gazelte : ‘A young 2nd, a8 the newspapers express if, ‘inlereutmg—laok:_nfi' married woman was ar- raigned for the wilful murder of her husband's first wife by poison. The deceased had died on October 10 last, and the prisoner, who was mar- ried only in December, was far advanced in pregnancy. The woman wag in the dock, with a couple of brief intervals, for the space of seven hours, and bravely she bore the trying ordeal, conducting herself with a8 much ezse and self- ossession 83 sny lady whilst dispensing tho ospitalities of her own drawing-room. In the course of the afternoon, just after Sergeant Parry had cross-examined Dr. Stévenson rela- tive to the presence of arsenic in the viscers of the deceased, and the Hon. G. Depman was commencing his re-examination, the pris~ oner, who bad risen from her seat dur- ing the delivery of Dr. Stevenson's evidence, was led out of court, and the rumor spread that her confinoment was imminent. Her speedy reap- pearance, accompsnied by Mrs. Gilson, Finch and Cartar, reassured the court, and it was intic mated to the judge that the trial had better proceed. It was evidont, however, to skilled eyes, that the poor creature suffered from either true or spurious lsbor pains. A couch was brought, and the examination of the expert was rosumed. For tho next hour or two the scene was ghastly in the extreme. Labor-psinsrecurred at one time every three or five minutes, the prisoner alternately reclining, sitting, and standing; tne evidence meantime proceeding 88if nothing had happened. At one time two medical men were with her in the dock at the same time, and it was evident -that their cheery counsel revived the poor creaturs, At 5:30 P m., the evidence for "the prosecution ‘being fin- ished, and no evidenca being forthcoming for the defenge, the question arose what was to be done, . Baron Martin offered to go on with the cnse till midnight, if necessary, iu: it was rep- regented by counsel that tho medical men wore of opinjon that the poor creature might be the better for & night's ‘rest; 50 the trial was ad- Jjourned till next morning, and the excited spectators, among whom wers a. large number of uomarried females, dispersed. In the conrss of the evening the prisoner was delivored of a child; next moming the jury was discharged, and the trial postponed for’ thies months, W7o suppose such & l_uu-mm‘nv%1 8scene could scarcely have been avoided. at tho consequences would have been had the trisl procesded, and either a verdict of guilty or of not uilty been pronounced, we cannot ‘say. Happily, such sn- other tragedy as this can rarely be entcted in all its details, Meanwhile the miserable woman is condemned to & further thres months of sus- pense,” -— MISCELLANEOUS CITY NEWS. The alarm from Box 365, at 8 o'clock last evening, was falee. Lillie La Casey, aged 19 years, s domestic i the family of Mrs. Gray, No. 204 South Haloted street, was severely burned yesterday marnin; owing to her clothing catching fire from s Toq. hkot s:ove, The injured girl resides on Rebecca streat. Thé explosion of a kerosene lamp in the fr: residence No, 139 South Halsted gfi!eet' av::“:; by Mr. Holden, and ocoupied by R. W, Masder, occasioned the alarm from Box 334 at half-past 6 o'clock 1ast evening. House and furniture wers damaged to the extént of $50 tefore the fire was extinguished. No insurance. The residence of Henry Tyndzl, No. 148 Ellis avenue, a two-story framo building, caught fire shml}‘v after 2 o'clock yesterday afternoon, and wa‘ml Ismaged Ibbné %5DDA; li‘ullyinsurad. The premises are owne . L. Newberry. alarm was from Box 98,’ B i A Jurge number of the friends of Police Ser- ennt Jonas M. Johnson assemblol at bis resi- onca, on_West Monroa_straet, last ovening, ond presented himself and wife With o sensibls wedding gift in the shape of a valusblo and. sub- stantial'8et of parlor furniture. Justico Scally did the oratorical on the occasion, tnd was hap. pily responded to by the recipient. The Chief of Police, yesterday, notified the keepers and inmates of cortain Bousos of ill- fame on Halsted street, in the vicinity of Madi- son, that they must either desist fom’ their ille- gal practices in thot particular locility or move somewhere else., Thia order hai been made Decessary by the frequent complsints of the parents of children attending the 8:hools in the neighborhood. Lawrence, Searles, and Brown, the bunko awindlers, were arraigned bofore Justice Seully yesterday, to answer to the Iast chage preferred Bgainst them. The hearing of tks case was postponed uatil the 14th inst., and the defend-~ ants admitted to bail. They were g1bsequently rearrested on & State warrent sworn out by the lg)eorinn who claims to have been virtimized by em. ~ Coroner Btephens has_appointed Dr. Ben. C. Miller and Dr. William P. Dunne D-puty Coro- Ders, to assist him in disposing of inquosts dur- ing 'the reign of tho epizootic. Zoth of his horses aro guffcring from the distemper, and, a8 he cannot procure & rig anywhero in the city for love or money, he is compelled tohave a few of the corpses sat'on by somebody ese. Sesen or eight mgnealu were Leld on wimportant casca veeterday. i e Cod Liver Oil. Hazard & Osawell's Cod Liver OIl I the best, BUSINESS NOTICES. Burnett’s Unrivalled coalne, etc., f logne (nll sizes) Cox lo at Strebl's P; TS e S, o picn S, 000, in Omnha Lottery.—Higlent B i sidaf tho Nebrasks Siato §'p§l:u [A':'yfg"m.s (;: o drawn e 2. Tickol : 8! i 1s PaTEEE, O six for ‘Address J. M. MARRIED DOGGETT-CORWITH—O0a Thursday evening, Nor. 7. by the Rev. Arhur Mitchell, at the retlisoco of tha io's father, Mr. Frank L. Doggatt and Mies Lizzia 3. Corwt™h, dsughbter of Nathan Corwith, —atl of this city. TUKSEY~CUNNINGHAM—-On the Sthiast., by the Rev. T. J. Butlor, 'D. D., assisted by tho Rev. P. T. Butiorsnd ftev, Fathier Flanagan, Robert Turnsy and Miss ‘Anplo Cunningham. HARRIS_REED_At Manitowoe, Wis., Oct. 31, First Presbtorian Ghurch, by tho Rer. G. T. Stovéoa Mr. Albert W, Harrls, of New York, and M:ss Mary B. Rded, daughter of Hon. Goorge Reed, of Mathowor, BREGA—~ENDERS—On Thursday, Nov. 7, jn_St Touly ot tho rsidance ot o brldet ot o the mar: r. Montgomery yler, rist's Chu; R T easor and Faay T Ranorn g, Cfatles OHANDLER—_LEMMON—At Brajdwood, i, Tge daz, Nov. 5, 1572, by Rov, Philo Norton, Chidndler and Miss Roweas 0. Lemmon. h;lcnfié.gi DIED. COSTELLONov, 8 of smallpos, James ¥ Gogielio. B His remains whllbo semmoved from the Pers Houca {0 Calvacy o Mouday moraiug, at 9 a. m. Erends sro faited (o atcend. STRONG--Chicago, Nov. 5, Wan. Strong, stene-catter, aged 37 yoars, Iate of Dumferlmins, Scotlsad: €77~ Scotland papers ploste copy. - WALKER—Nor. 4, at the residence of b inor, A. Robertson. rs, Mary Walker, aged 73 yous ‘;q‘fi.:x of Isaac Walker, of tho fiun of Bryuat. Walkie & Crate, Services at thy rosidence, 1208 Wost Tacksot ate, at 10 a. m., Mondss, Nov. 11. ~Erieads of ihe avtly ars ia. to 52 Dublin papcrs plessa cops. EGAN—AL Cbicago, oa tho bth fust., Mince, eldost daughter of James Lloyd Egan, Byear. [+ Eamilion (Qoc: Darera ploes toi MARTINEIn thisclty, Nov. 8, 1672, M 85002 yosrs and Smonthy, " ot 1o Meggh Mastino, CROWE-1In this clty, Nov. 7, 1872, Richard A, Crowe, - 55 years. interred in Rose Hill Gemetery, cotin papers pleass copy. (ROFLE-To thiscity Koy, 8 167, Edward ¥, ocond cldontson ot Bateic 454 icgaret Diste, wied 3 Searnt Funcral today (Sundas) at 11 g'clock 3. m. GRECG 08 e S0 Pat s tha sedanso of bis pa sents, Nov. 155 Wabashas’, Georgo 6. Gregs, aged 2 Remaina will bo taken to Peorls for lat 3 BRIDGE In Chicags, Nov. 3, 1o, Eantasl Bridge. .‘Fllg'gtllufi’o‘Ta;!r to residence, 7 West Monroe- oy o UACKENBQ! zabeth, 3 i 1“«: abeth, d“l{e of Avgustos Quack peral from her la residence, 878 Incians. Monday. the T1th 163i., 34105 s Hondap. ;1 lll!:a. atl0a.m. Friendsof the fami 52 Albany and New York papors please copy. PROFESSIONAL, THE FRENCH DOCTOR, B. BRIARD, {romthe Academy of Medlcine, Parls, now Professor and proprietor Chicago Medical Institate, has opened his Pharmacy and Consulting rooms at 188 SOUTH HALSTED-ST. Dr.{B. Brisrd, the distinguished French phaiclan, still contiques, s ia tho past seventoen yerrs, to otontif- fcally treat and curo ail formn of diseass, no matteras to their nataro or long standing. Gonsaltation fres. Alllanguages spoken, and a com- plete assortment of French totlet, articles kept constantly on hand at DR. B. RRIARD'S Drug Store, ‘WANTED--TO RENT. TO EXGHANGE. ANTED-TO RENT-ON, THE WEST SIDF, % singlo room, laclag south or soutbesst, with of without board, Address’ ¥ 79, Tribune ofice, giving prios, size, and fall description bf room. WANTED_TO RENT_EROM 8 T0 15 RODS: would by furnituro at a far prica; stato lcation. Address G 19, Tribune offco. ANTED—TO RENT— BY GENTLEMAN AND wilo, n pleasant house of 10 or 13 s0rms, in good Jo- calty. Must bo south of Madisoust, sast of Aspland- a7, ot south of Twalfthi-st end north of Thirtioth. Wonld board owners, #f desired, with permission of taking & fow mora, Funi must ba moderate; Good responsibly fenant. Addross, sating torms and localty, 1. £y 453 South Uniog-sh. ANTED—T0 RENT—SUITE OF 1 OR 3 ROOMS, unfuraiihiod, north of Sixtecath-st, east of Seato, oF tonth of Ontarla, ast of Claricat, Addicss T 93, ibias ofico. Y{TANTED_TO RENT —HOUSE, BY A WIDOW Tady, who cao furnish It, and woyld like to baard the ownor fo the rout. Addrass M. Av. HL Faltonstr ANTED-TO RENT—A GOOD HOUSE; WILL buy the furaiture If gaod. Addross 169 West Madi: woa-at, dlty. , without boar man aid wife. Address, stating torms, R 15, Tribune Branch ofco. oR leculAg?;:;IhpavF lso‘x'lz JMPROVED Zoal ostaf 2 gtzee. AP~ iy o, or addross, G, L BOYD, 16 Losenasts L T JLL TRADE A FARM OF 8 ACRES IN NE- braska for cottage and lot, and pay balance in cash. Address AT O, 50 East Harrison-st! 10 EXCHANGE~FOR CITY PROPERTY OR FOR sale—A nice house and fot in a plensant village on the A Flaw rant; will take part {a real estal BUSINESS CHANCES. GF BODTS, SHORS AND FURNISHING T it stotax 1t goot Loeations Toc ata: will sl 50, stock of bonts and shoes, sod store fxtures yralsl 137 l.lumfl ‘:;%ck o 4 hiy oods; stor0 at Jow roat, an: o es« A o fory stock dud stand: cheap tenk. A 03p. 15se, lease and furniture, na West Sido, cheap. Porsamy hAbx:ml, “Jesan 20 foraliare_hss 38 Yoomi mt reaseimble, and goo EBENNETT, 35 Soath Ca Tocation. AppIY 10 LARKIN o Coraer Stzdbon, Room 3 Pittaburgh & Fort, Wayne Railroad, 100 miles from city. ‘House Is Dicely finished two-story frame, good ttons col- Iar, well, and cisterp. Lot is §7ods square, well plantod with all’ kinds of fruft, and g achools and charchies, ssvoral shoj s, mills, aad actorles. A splendid chanée foF a man Wit Jarge family, cost of BOARDING HOTISE AND FORNITURE, DOTS A BOeS e e, aa Taotostons AAN PSTABLISHED SEWING MACHINE AG! ess, for sale. Apply at 46 Norts Di- B for sale, dolog good business, Address L 42, Tei- 1iving being cheap, Will sell véry cheap. AddressJF, | bune office. & To Exomsce A it 0 EXCHANGE—NEW HCUSE AT MAYWOOD, 8 sught new last spriog:: e cl orgainon, T Godtase well sad istarn 13 fees groged Wit taka bsealtorms, "Good ;:ifiyxndug&l;rmflavrflgn e o cheap lots in part pay. Apply to IVERSON, rear 183 ‘Adamsst. A Price complete, $&0. _Address W 7, Tribugo ofic NTRALLY LOCATED es Foll of boacders. of 13rooms, farnished, for sale. 0 EXCHANGE~COTTAGE LOT, FOR HALF OR To.ERCH AN ratary more- Couil on the owner, 171 Weat W ashington-st. TD EXCHANGE-FOR GOQD OITY OR SUBURBAN business. " Address & FISE BILLIARD BALOON, DOING EXCEL- lent business, for sale. Reason for selling, other ‘Fribuge odice. reai estate, 1 stallion, 1 Spanish Jack, 2 jennies, 3 horsee, T caringe; aies “Apply” 18 Soink Dearboraat, WANTED-TO RENT-3OR 3 FURNISRED ROOKTS for Iight housekeeping, on the West Side, for gen- tloman and wife: best of references. Address, for threa days, J. ANSELL, 201 and 23 South Halsted-sf, VW ANTED_TO RENT-ROOMS SUITABLE FOR ‘housekeeping for man and wife ; or cottage on North. Side, 15 minutes walk {rom Wolls-st. Depot or conveniant. Lo horso cars. Address I 41, T'ribune ofiice, ANTED — TO T—-TWO BACHELORS OF steady habits, doing busigess In tho vicioity of tho Sherman House, desire to rent a woll-furnished sleeping- room, heated, with ot without board, faa private family, withia 15 minttes’ walk of abovo locslits: none need ply but thosa who are prepared to furnish first-class ‘commodations in a pleasant bome; refersnces oxchanged. A 31, Tribune office. Room 4. TG EXCHANGE-FRUIT FARM, NEAR S7Z. for, sity_or saburban proporty. ‘Josoph, Michigun, KENNEDY & NEWELL, 19 Wost Madisonat. Apply to LARK] “EP‘U CONFECTIONERY AND CIGARSTORE FOB e at Mo, 5t Wost andiniob s _A TEUIT AND VEGETIELE SIO8R 1§ FIRST- ity for sale; rent maderate: cheap for cast, e SARLIN & BENRETT. D Camtin coraer dison, Room 4. 10 EXCHANGE-SOME DESTRABLE SUBUREAN Iofs for house and lot fn suburbs or suburban town. KENNEDY & NEWELL, 79 West Madison-st. A b Catnotatieadio T Address ¥ 19, Tribuse o ELY FURNISHED, DO- ness, sor salo cheap. Owner SMALL HOTEL. NI 3 good paying bt ce. 0 EXCHANGE-A GOLD WATCH AND CHAIN g, for 3 pisno. " taquiro for CONTRAOTOK, Sisand 318 ate.s! XCHANGE—ONE OF THE FINEST 3.8TORY T ow in Ohienco ae aud sisgentiy Anian- AF ACTIVE BUSINESS AN WITH 330 1O 5 and ”gbfllkl totake chorge of a business that will pay PR $iminy Teomn 8 20 1Far iy 30810 Ease Maalson-se. can find &n opportunity to travel in fowa, Kai x month. ¥or particulars call, oo &4, togethor with new and magnificont fyralturo through; TFIRST.CLASS MONEY MAKING TAILOR SHOP, out. Will o exchanged for improved or umimproved A T A Waor A S propecty” Sickaees causes disposal. Value, 550,00 S en pe haten of 11 West Sladinomst-s Dos Rddress N 14, Tribune oihico, at.ick W —TO RENT —BY GENTLEMAN AND ‘wife, 3 ur { rooms for hausekeoping fn pleasant loca- tion, or would buard owuer and wifo for rent of a houso, Addiess with pacticulars, 1. J. S.; Room 3, Bryan Block, LaSalle-st. VWANTED ~TO RENT_A GOOD_DESIRABLE dwelling, of some § or 8 rapms, on West Side. Ad- dross care TOWER BROS., 105 South Clinton-st. VWANTED-T0 RENT-EY A YOUNG LADY-X furnished room, with or without hoard, with fir gentro part of West Addross Tefbygno offc PARTNERS WANTED. ARTNER WANTED-FOR OFFICE BUSINESS, ‘With S50 to $1,000; can secure an interestina valu- able patant, that Wil reslize $20,000 to §50, 009 per. an- pum. A ratocliance for ladyor gontlemas to make & fortuno and & nume that will ring throughout the land, on » smail capital. Model can Lie seen and particulars had by calling on H. THOMPSON, Inveator of patent lovor sulkles, submaring telescopld lanter, ‘elc., rcher-av, G FXCHANGE—FOR CITY PROPERTY, A FRUIT farm I sonthorn Tilinols, that will pay for fiself in four sears s climats delighttal, Addzess, FOMONA, _A WELLESTAELGHED = DRGG STORE, FOR Lo splendid location, oq tho Weat Side: doing i 25 Dusthoss, and hojds a good loxse. Addross R %5, 'ribune ofice. Tribune offico. '0_EXCHANGE-FOR A SAFE, A FIRST-CLASS 18 karat gold watch and chain: movement msnufac- . Watch Co._Address L. J., 1001 State-at. Fight man, with capl sell whole or balf. “ANFSTABLISHED MANUFACTURING BUSINESS family must have, for ssle; the T Nal T tao Chaneos Wit of an articlo a;m "Address B 23, Tribaao office. 0, EXCHANGE_CHOICE REAL ESTATE—FOR T horsos carrisgos, or goods, Apply at 53 Weat Madi- ., UDStairs. ri0_EXCHANGE—DIAMOND RING AND GOLD A invotce a thousand dollars. STOVE, AND HARDWARE STORE FOR SALE: 3 00d. sying business: will e entan Soilans-® A §avess O 10, Toibiins offce, watch and ohafn for suburbatt lots. Addross O 72, Tranch Tribune office. [0 EXCHANGE A STOCK OF GENTS FUSNISH, Ing goods, clothing, bats aud caps. Also, borse, 3 A the beat focations in tha city! to Blechanics’ Tspo Fonndry' PRINTING OFFICE IN THIS CITY FOR 88 c\m‘:‘; agood trade established, snd ope of d reasons given. Apply and 8 Eas: Jackson. Buggies. & s0ts harness, snd alolgh, smaaniing to 3500 vfif&’ka Teal extate. Address O 7%, Feibuas Braach offico. FXCZANGE-IMPROVED FARM OF 680, T, o 3T ncron o Wigconstn, s 8 station au RETAIL GRCERY STORE FOR SALE, DOING A e Dasingss. situatod ia ono of the priacipal streeta 15 tho West Dicision. To anyons wishing to g0 ato the ‘business this is a tino chance, Satisfactory reasons given Tor solling. Addross W £, care of Garrior 4. goamtyseat to exchango Toc Englondod property. PE- MEAT MARKET AND FIXTURES ALL COM- Cll\_n[le(:in‘c‘m:’( P m. TER SHIMP, No. 8 Taylorst., noar State. lote, doing a first-class business, for. sale; good rea~ ARTNER WANTED-IN A WHOLESALE BDSE. | IO_FXCHANGE —I@ AORES 1IN AUDUBON | gmaforselliogiprice$5in. Call on ‘or addrcsa C. B o e B S | o B e EoeiReBito 0t e | Teaa S BTN FOOH FOR SATE ETECT 6 35,000 ready cash con ziake §30 per day o | 111, Tora Rouso agd fot in the city: SERGT bost tbano ever oforeds Audress 3V 65, Tribuna alice, | stodk of Bardware, stoves, dry goods, ote. 5. 5. MILLEE | [JAR AND BIULIARD ROOM FOR SALE-FLECL & Co., 165 West Washington-st- MoLBAN, Real Betato Broker, 15 Wabas ARTNER WANTED—-IN A LONG ESTABLISHED manufacturing business, Profits sufficient, to war- rant {uvestipation and investment of capital, Call_at onco on 1, B, CASSIRLEY, MNo. 1 Arcade Gourt, Ro- public Life Insuranco Building. PARTNER WANTED—A MECHANIC HAVING EX- perience in the manufsctura of cultivators and plows, and capital, to take an interest fn an established buasiness, Addross A. P, JAMISON, Monmontb, Ill. ‘PARTSER. WaNTED_WITH TRON 500 70 810,000, in well established mercantile business. Ad- dress X 42, Tribune office. ARTNER WANTED-IN SHEET METAL MA3U- facturing business, with £5,000 cash capital. Address A 26, Tribune office. ARTNER WANTED-WITH F] M 1,000 TO $2,000, In 3 manufacturing busines: location one of tho best on South Sido. Address MANUFACTURER, tare Carrier'No. 21, ([0, EXOHANGE_FLGANT RESIDENGE BE- i B O e, ers ook ark, bitcl and stode, 4 atmutialy buiit and handsomoly Arishod, conteiniag 1 TG sale; Tocated on ono- ol ,"..(‘Z)"‘g: 'good pasing business. Apply to 119 W a5 AND NEWS DEPOT FOR beat streets om West Sidey et Mad~ STATIONERY, rooms, bath-rooms, closets, hot and cold Water tbrough- out; sewor on stroet; lob X125 foct to alley, To exchange for 5 small farm next Chlcago, close t good town and railrond, under high state of cultivation, with first-class Improvements, freo from_ jgeumbrance; must be A1 in sllzespocts. _Apply to J M W, 78 Langléy-st. PXOHANGR—A SPLENDID LOT ON WA- 0, SEOH i Gt parmeaton Lotisgo and 108 wort Hixtures, bottles, RUG STORE FOR SALE, AT INVOICE ‘Prico, A3tures, bottles, eto.. at cost: or would sell w oic., to be moved without stock, or art of atock with them. Must be sold jmmo. ety Dty aponi S, 00 eadh peainety aAd 1 s ORGOE tately. tho prettiost little stores on the West Sido. Address, for particulars, A 48; Tribazo ofico. from $3,000 (o 34,08, -3 1ot# in exchango for house and o, A AR EoE S ntons for ety Bropertys. ‘WILSON & 2o, 8 muribar. 3 5 MONTGONMERY, Koot 2, Otls Block, 113 LaSalle-st. Rent $30 permonth. ~ Call Clark-st. IGHT-ROOM BOARDING HOUSE FOR _SALE. jng boarders, Price 330 cash. S B s PO o Gy 2t to-dap. S8 Soath XCHANGE-GOOD LOTS FOR DIALIONDS, m"wficn& pfznol;’,. horses, oto. Addsess Q &), Tribuzo office. PARTNER WANTED_THE ADVERTISER WANTS a partoer with 3500 capital, to jolo him in s legiti- imato and pasiag business; referenccs exchanged; ono but those with the above amount need answer. ~Address, stating whoro can be Tound, 1 89, Tribunp offce, VY ANIED-TO EXCHANGE-6i0 AORES CHOIOH g Bl in Natpses. s los feom rairaad Gotng & good tea No b ked. Nadros S T dbbas ofee: JOK SATE-A FIRST.CLASS DRESSHAKING AND urnishing business, weil focated on South Side, an . 5 good 1ade. "Bicok and Hxtates 31110 good order ‘perticaara desirons of losviag tha city th gnoumbrance of 84,000, for. Chicago city oF T ety al o o addros B, B, DAVEN: Fo% SALE-A BARBER SHOP WITH FIXTURES, doing & good business. Applyat60d West Indiana-st. ty. FORT, 181 Lasailost. PARINER WANTED_WITH AROUT S300, 70 connoct hiwmself as an actlve or sileat member of the firm, now doing a paying msoufacturing business, well established; object, to extend and fucréasg our business facilities. Roferenices given and required. Addross P Tribune office. ARTNER WANTED—A MANAGING PARTNER in tio Northwest. $1,50010 $2,000 only required. 180, Tribune office. ARTNER WANTED_TO PURCHASE INTEREST of a ailont partner In a profitablo and increasin, business, a monopoly, ruguiring tho assistance of & goo busincssman to co-ogurate with tho two active provrie tors. ~An energetic, first-class man will be offored Liberal . Capital required, $10,000. For interview, ad- M 9, Tribuno office! PARTNER WANTED_AN ESTABLISHED FIRA dolng 8 latge business, desiriug to increaso said business, will takoa partper, either ‘special or active, e SromiS10.0 to Sl5, 106" Caah cunlhri Thtale . Spportanity fof a party bavl Shount, For pattion St addross HUSINESS, eato of Letior Careier N ¥l No. 5, ‘with fall nsmo, statiag whero an interviow may ba had. PARINER WANTED_HAYVE AS GOOD 4 COM- missfon busfness as any firm_fo Chicago, and would tako a partoar who has 35,000 to 10,000 cash to lnvest, aa Ihave more business thsn 1 can attend to myself. Ad- dreas 0’53, Tribune ofico. ANTED—TO EXCHANGE_TWO LOIS ON FiltGirstat., near corshops for cottage and lot ited ; will accommodate [URNITURE AND LEASE OF G0OD EOARDING house for salo; c entrally loca 80 boarders HILL & DRISCOLL, 157 Fifth-av, Room 4. ‘worth from S2,000 10 $3,500. D. COLE & SON, 158 West Badison-st. ANTED_TO EXCHANGF—FOR SOME_GOOD Tow. WILL OF LEASE AND FIXTURES gfi%ofi:f‘ifl rooms, for sale, with restauraut. Rent bousiness merchandise, or other property, 20 acrea “Harrison-st. AIN-LEASE AND FURNITURE OF R reae Inquireat NOCKIN & FISCH- of land in Madison County, Mo. ; 320 acres in Allamakes 3 theast of Chicago, & boarding house. Sonpty, fover or aceesismiles onthonstof Ghisas: | Ehed, TWEGE Bospratuon st ofco. OYEL, BOARDING HOUSE AND BOARDING W ANTED—TO EXOHANGE, TOR. CITY O SUB- ban Propos ud in Barey 3 Missautt. - ADply at 39 Wost Mloroo st. stable, furnished or unfurnished, for sals or to rent. Ceriterlgiloosted Inquire personaly at No. 5 Wabash- ar. WING, Agent. WILL SELL A PARTNERSHIP INTEREST IN AN ANTED-—. §200 EW FURNITURE, wm?yfig?ffi. Do itk or yithogt top, ot | [L estaviished rotal hardwars and "ponse-farmishing By etaiaakioshy i Ap0 Y aapltal, Z 57, Tribane Branch office, PERSONAL. LEASE OF STORE, AND SOME FIX- T 1oeNsE, tuges, for sale: suitable for & liguor or lager-beer loon, 13 o splendid of the city. Inquire In the thare B Sont Halstea ERSONAL—ANYBODY RNOWING ABOUT MARY Naab would oblige Eaty Knaab, 604 South Jefforson- 8t.by giving information, ERSONAL—-WILL GEORGE W. STEVENS, FOR- 1) d, bably still in an insurance office in tha ity Fond b adBress 10 L 6 hraneh Teibue ofice, snd obl an old frend. AUNDRY FOR SALE—GOOD OHANCE FOR PER- A anogt busintes on Tasls cspiial: Address O 75, Tribuss office. NICE| CASH GROCERY HOUSE TOR SALE — Stall capital; good trade; chesp. AddressV 3, Tri- ‘bunb office. ARTNER WANTED—AN ACTIVE MAN, IN THE coal and wood busincss, with a capital of from 31,000 19 8200, Thg wight, mad, ean ealize trom 3100 10 Py e sommm widow Iady : object, compsny, aud porl 7 7 g0 not orec B Address B’ b4, Tribane Branch mos otfic bo 2y {, 1673, Address G 24, Tribune'otfico. ARTNER 'ANTED-1 WANT A PARTNER the hotel business, with S150 cash; & good thing. Testigato.Address D 55, Tribuno office. N In- ERSONAL—-WILL MRS. SIMPSON, WHO TOOK the dress to make for Mands Afnsloy, from 135 Halsted-at, ¥ BWS AND OANOY STORE NEAR PUBLIO school for sale; yooma for family; a bargain, ou sc- gount of aickness. . OLMSTEAD, &' Exchange Baild- . 3 (QNEOE THE BEST TITTED UP MARKETS TV M the city for sale; must be sold to-merrow. 291 Wes? adison-st. Fourth-av., pleass return it to 51 ARTNER WANTED—T CAN GIVE A GOOD BUSL nossman, having 35,000 cash, a splendid chanco to go into a vory lucrative businew. Ho must put in all bis timo, and furnish first.class voferences. This ia good {hiog for tho right man. - Address JACKSON, Postomice ox 177, ARTNER WANTED —WITH 55000, T0 REATIZE 100 per ceat. profit in 6 months ; busidess, manufactur- Ing, and a monopoly. Addross W. & CO., Postottice Box 293, Chicago. ARTNER WANTED—A BUSINESS NAN, WITH 85,000, in well established first-class cash busiaess, paying large profits; will bear closest investigation; i om offered. "Apply at 143 Adams ste PARTNER WANTED-WITH ABOUT &,000, T0 Jolnfa, a subdigjsiun of over 3] building lots, Sitecn minutes’ ride from Court Houso, A vory liberal arrangn: ‘ment will bo mnde with tho right man, Address D55, Tribunoe oftice. ‘PARTNER WANTED FOR A CUSTONER, WiTH (!“: ca ((nlheof ‘W.l”?fl. "Dbfihh(lgu llu 'E‘E‘B DlllnflfIA&'/uu‘m of a0ap, fa & hoase w & e CLEAN, Roal state Brokar, 53 Wabashar. PARIFER BANIED VIR a0 70, 86 OATE ., to g fnto Commlssion already established. Apply at 40 West Xdamant. ARTNER WANTED_IN A COMMISSION BUSL aessof leve yoars’ standing, paying from 310,000 ta 815,000 per annum net; business reiations well estal lished. Havo a largo recelving business, snd with ad ditional capital can do a large Eastern order teado. Ad: dress, with amount of cupital, § 1o, Tribune ofice. ONAL—VALLE, I WILL MEET YOU, WED- PR , at 1 o'clock, on West Washington-st, be- ot. leaving city. A. ¥. HOLMES, Room$, son-at. NE OF THE BEST SALOONS IN THE CITY FOR rifica;mast be- sold at_once, ownex at a esc s o er twoan Jefferson and Desplaines, oa north side of LOTTO. ERSONAL — MR, AND MRS, RHOADS, FROM OFETHIRD INTEREST TN THE PHONIX PRESS ‘2 ool Works for sale. 28 and 230 Michigaa-st. ¢, Loals, wish 6 Jearn tho prosent addreas of Mrs. Deoley, of this city. Call, or address O. M. REOADS: 293 Wist Lako-t. PERSONALWILL 3T W., WHO TOOK BTAGE, Thursday, 10:30 a. m., at Michigan-avand Twenty- NE OF THE FINEST CONFEOTIONERY, ICE argam, and oyster establishments in the State, in s city of 13,0 inhabltants, far salo; no-competition. Ad- S A BARTLETL, Jacksoavilte, T0: d-at, correspond with young gent. Object, scqualat- Sacer Addroes G- 1. . Ors Ghrsior 21, ERSONAL—A LADY OF PREPOSESSING AP- chiafrs and tables. Inquirs atgh W YSTEE HOUSE FOB SALE WHERE A GOOD Buslnoss may _be done; aiso, s Iotof dining-room West Madison-st. pusrance, and SSyearaold, widow, wishes ta form. tho acquaintanco! of some gentleman In' geod standing. Object amusemont, perhaps matrimony. Direct, Glass T LODGING-HOUSES IN THE P aud I oo anEAde. BLOSE. Jor P, WiEh Hho furpitays and Jease, at a bargain ; partles golng south. ¥oquire at 1] Washington-st. - Box216, City P. 0. ERSONAT, — INFORMATION WANTED CON- ETAIL DRY GOODS AND ROTION STORE FOR. ‘salo, with long I6ase of atore and fixture ol . L. Hutte veho loft home Wednesday will taks moenin afz eod whiskors sroblack, broma ejes; | ity foatostato o Gacoango. Addrees A- By 1oL Aadi- i sk Ptd s D S S A ld | ek ot Gk satafoons. - Auybody bringiag \aiormation T ER Somartiod by leaviog sudh ialormstionat 1 Twemti- | GALOON, BILLIARD-EALL IEASE, AND LT SHsh appaeE, Bustfiess. Afast bo sold this week. & ERSONAL —WILL 7HE LADY_WHO TOOK P the baby boy from the Home of the Friendless on the 294 of June, 1872, or if this meets the people who b: my heart’s darling, please Jot his rufloring mother know about him? Cal or address Mrs. WILLIAMS, 864 Indisua-av. ALOON AND BILLIARD-ROOBL, AND FIXTURES for sale, and room to remt, orleass at 85 West ‘Water-st., opposite C. & N. W. and Mil. R. R. depot. Northwestors Hotel. ‘R. HANNIGAN, Landlord. RSONAL-CORRESPONDENCE WANTED WITH P e A R iavess VIGROR SUNDERCAND, corner of Egan and Cottage Grove-avs, Chicago, 111 P;\mx‘m WANTED—WITH 310,00 TO $20,000 capital, to colarge well established manufacturing bustyesk, caatralling oo of tho most valuablo patents, it for & term of years. N T KR LIV, askegon, Hich. PARTNER WANTED—WITH 81500 CASH TO join a good business man with same amouat, in es- iablisbing & legithmato business, Refercnces required. Address B 32, Pribune offico. PARTNER WANTED —IN AN ESTABLISHED P A artivare and bouse Jamishing sioros bk F>iog Bonsa in the city. _Address, stating asallable capital, 57, Tribuno Branch ofico. ERSONAL-THE YOUNG LADY WHO WON the **new"” Wheslor & Wilson Sewing Maching at St. Stephen's Church Fair will please call at 28 Weat Maglson.at. SEWING MACHINES. | & WISON SEWING MACHINE IN etTeetoxkers o nto, prise 35 1103 agiaceav QTOCK OF ASSORTED DRY G00DE AND NOTIONS worth 500 at jobbia, ricos, with lease of store in 0T Ioeton o b e Fa et bargatas JOLN B SVERY. 13l LaSallost. Addresa RIRLEY & CO., chunge. 'HE FURNTITORE AND GOOD WILL OF A FIRST- [0, MULINEN AND OTHERS — WE HAVE 3 Sumbecat say snd four mille, forstle go oasy tarms. class family boarding-house for sale; desirably locat- od; furnftareneatly new: will be sold chieap to a first-class irty only. Al it Central Real Estate and Housa o Aeebs, . 19T AR s BSCEORE VNO MACHINE BEFORE EXAMINING THE B Bt adie, Ororsoomiuk and Camplete Sowlng Machine. Office, 133 Soarh Halsted-st. JEE LEASE AND GOOD, WILE OF A BOARDIHG houso fall of boarders. for salo; furnituro all mow. Apply at No, 163 Fourth-av., up-stairs. PARTNE) NTED—$200 _ WILL PURCHASE D lardh e proitabte sad vl stacshad : 6 for & good energetic man. %;E:’f;iibénfi-s“.'ffifiuflé’“j. T SOLDEN, "Ial” West adisan-st. ARTNER WANTED_AN OPPORTUNITY 1S offered for tho profitable inveatment of capital fn an eatablished business. cnturprh;d!n this_city, doing a good ‘wholesalo and rotall trade, and capablo .:( s largely fn- croased development. For particula 3 fhoboura of Band 10 o'clock &, m., fo LUTHRLY LAFLIN MILLS, soathost corner Clatk s3d Madison-ts. ARTNER WANTED_MOST PROFITABLE AN Tong onaatano & Slf aserors 1o, s Bonorebls ad k o a5, honoral cnakgotie man for 8700, Address P29, Trlbuno ofice, ARTNER WANTED—IN A GOOD PAYING business, slroady established ; must havea capital ol from 81, to 81,2 Nomo need roply except s gon- tleman of firat-class reputation, and means busineas, Address Y 9, Tribuuo ofiice. ARTNER WANTED—WITH §500 CASH, TO TAKE Balf interest {n o travelling businss that will pay; st bo activo and strictly temperatos fo the Tight man & rare chance is offered. For particulars call at 307 West TIHESE i L A0 o S a0 : Tmante. Otite, 207 Seoth Halstodat.. Open eveninge. OR SALE-A WHEPLER & WILSON BEWING PHE PROPRIFTOR OF 4 NEW TOW N, ON ONE OF of the leuding railroads runaing from east towest ihrough thia Stato, having disposod of apartof bis in- Séreatin his storo of Evaeral Taatchanaiss, would hks 1o dispose of the balauce, as his entire timels required in Machine, cheap, at 31 Soath Dewhlneu-!;.p R R A e EWING MACHINES_OFFICE OF NICH: | for & good blacksmith and wagos maker, 33 S G amsdat, mathacs | shos “reaker. - Buildiag 10t (o 16 aas. of casd #01d or rented on easy monthly pyments; work givea when desired; sowing machines repaired. ] TUTHEE_WEST SIDE SEWING MA- G Erepartim, 411 Weas Madisonsi - Befors pat. kind of busizess toall who will start their business. To anyove having = few thousand_ dollars o invest hs will give s liberal chauco in tho town property, 1f desired. For articnlars, address Passenger and Ticket Agent, St- Ing, C2 d examino our sewing machines,as we keep e ehEsEoth andl est. A1s0 a1 Kl 61 siinchraants Al d, and webave the beat facilities forrepainng ‘ways on han Intbecity. Csnvassers wanted. $200 2L, Room 23, 03 & D. O. R. R., Hamlin, Brown Co., Kan. PATING WILL BUY A GOOD OFFICE, that amount por moath. 316 Kast Washingtoa- TNGER_SEWING MAOHINE OFFICES OF J.N. WILKINS, % South Desplaines.st, and 167 Milwsu. Foe. o e ihos sl SAvady mosthly Lastalmonts end $300 WILL BUY MACHINERY AND GOOD willof a businoss which pass $,000 & year. pply to J. T- GOLDEN, 191 West Madison’st. work given in payment if desired. HE GREATEST BARGAINS IN ALL FIRST-OLASS sewing-machines over offered to tho public. Come como all, and sult soursolf {a machine asd prico. S51d on pasy miontaly payidents, HADLEY & PIE & Canat-at: Wmmn & WILSON SEWING MAOHINES, 15 8 woll.cStabliahod cas hundrod dollars mantbly. Room 38. HAND, WILL SECURE TO A S50 gotrne, wieh posh relorsacan, » bait intaress Bastooss, that %iil pay saveral 116 East W gton-at, FINANCIAL, Madison-st,, Room 1, from 9 to 12 5. m. B = i d sold rented om easy mont PiT S vt SPLILNE | pin e ped Gt RO | T S Ing asinesa in good working order; N] 0 n office, . ms of $5,000 anc 3 . B. Iacgs Drofta, Addross K 25, Teibube offics. + Someit.: bragsl, 560 Wabssheavs B WEEPE Tasulon ARTNER WANTED—ANY GENTLEMAN WITH $6,000 can hear of a splendid opportanity to go into Diseases of the Eye. [From the Annual Raport of tho */ Razt o tho Ohicago Home of the **Cases'of Diseased Eyos have been frequent, but the; bave yie'ded in every instance to th D e R T DR. WALKER'S Office, 200 Wost Madiso-st. e DISSOLUTION NOTICE. % THE PARTNERSHIP pays all debts and colleotsall’accounts. Obicago, Nov. 8, 187, RATHAN CILORR: DISSOLUTION. oo S of Maszay & Sobwastz Is this day dlssolrod by ‘matual congent. . H, Chicago, Nov. 9, 1873, OHAKLES SCHWARTZ. ‘WANTED---TO RENT. ANTED—TO RENT—AN UNFI 2 oT about S0 10 ro0mme Rk of FRIme A Uah gistolStatest. FRED. L. FAKE & 00, & Washing- ANTED-TO RENT—A SMALL, QUIET, AND the soerRostablo femlly mlan to sent foi ot fvo rioma on o ay 825 1 1P5,Sguch Sidey mill pay 82510 83 per month, Address ‘WARNTED-TO RENT_A _MODERATE-SIZED furnished 1 HdacelSTthed gr partly farnlshed house, on Wess Sido. elghborhood : : Address, at oace, W 10 Tribags omce, oo o wont WAiE a0 ST sothon coryem ¢ 20to $30 por mot. EDMUND' G: STILES, 515 Esst Sisaisonster Rooms S5 ANTED_TO RENT—LOFT LARGE AND LIGHT, 30 o ith foot; also, raom or 50 Hoor about Sese T1.) N P A 2 2 e ays, O, Tribunpodic, e Address, for 5 "ANTED_TO RENT—3 ROONS SUITABLE FOR et of Ao By S s caed vt of Halstod and s by & mawlyom 3 with lerias, &¢., MAG, 10 Michigan-gvs o d ANTED 70 NENI_L STASLE TaT s oo s, “wits so0 : st b on South Side, Horeh of Mouroorst. ‘Sed wise of Waells, Any party having ground and will build I will roat the sasie for & tormm of years. A ddsesssJ OLEN HAND, Evanston, L, thesand business. Tribane Branch ofiice. ARTNER,_WANTED — WITH "$5,00 T0 S0 cash, to lmmfldlltolg tako tho interest of a rotiring partner in a woll-established flour and grain order an receiving oor on business, and now. 9% 81,000 to 17500 pa Mot 1 10 00 potivs, carotal mun ths ia'a rare Shigoa. Address O 25, Tribune ofice. Feforences givan 2nd rogutrod. ER WANTEDVITH 53,50 CAPITAL, TN & P%&E\fih{m{ and printing boua.s ‘Woll established and centrallylocated, and doing an excellent and steadily in- Croasing busincss. Must b an eprgotie and wids-anaka Siam:Bonk relofences gives and fequirad. Resson for o Dariher, fo0 Thach bisingss Jor one mat. Ad- Yoss BRINTER, caroof Chandior's Adveriislag Agencs, 124 South Clark-st. ER WANTRD_DR. J. KEANS' PRACTICE Pt incrassed sq ortomsialy, ho womid take a pirt: L O R G L ° o Iatsmperato prac 2 e Saresa DR KB, 3eb Sath Claricst, Onl- Eeko. ARTNER WANTED—WITH SWALL OAPITAL, 70 S0t mo 1 4 catabliehiod cach business: Frofits very Tavges mo competition. . Address W &0, Tribune ofice. ARTNER. WANTED_T OAN GIVE A SILENT OR P active partner, lady or gentleman, having $1,000 or 2,05, » aplendid changatoumaRe mavay asts And BoTisk, Address O 45, Tribupo office. FOR SALE. 0% SALE_3,%0 ARMY. OVERGOATS (BLUE) b iooalo wha xetall, by OLEMENT & SAYER, 260 Sud 285 Milwexkce - TAOR SALE-A FIRST.CLASS RAILROAD TIGKET B S enver Yactics s 15 Weat Madison-st: exll; Rbeals, hvpise clothy Irviag s Works, 25 vols., clath, Kliress & 5 Sribuho ofice. T THE VERY BEST SEWING MACHINES 100 95 0o wenk and paid i work at 110 M- ‘wankee-av. MOAEYTOLOAN ON HOUSEROLD FURNITURE, houses, pisnos, and other chattel security. E. ROGERS, Central Unton Block, Room 43. CLAYRVOYANTS., NEY T0 LOAN OX HOUSES AND COLLAT- O R ot all s, CRoom 1o 16 East Madisonsis SPIRIT ROOMS, 3il WEST MADISON- b ‘5":;?2""?”%':: £ i, movdei Y Lo ! b At e e R AT Y through the day. & MOREY TOANED IV SUNS T0 SUIT, SMALL sums short time. Real estate paper bought. E. A. RICE & CO., 41 West ¥ashington-st. MPOFEL 10 LOAN —ON BROWN, 175 West Madison-st. GOOD _ CHATTELS. Money to loan on real estato. TRUESDELL & R. MATHEW AND MADAM MAYNARD CAN tell of ‘busincss, marriages, journeys, lawsnits, ab- aant frionds, Jost gristolen propériy, ot g you wish tokmow. Cures ts, patalyais, rhoumatism, deafness, Rare eyes, sai ‘weaknoss, consumption, liver com- ), catarrh. Delicate diseases cured in a few Baree O or R pay, S0 Wost Madisow s . T, J. LEWIS_RELIABLE OLAIRVOYANT, M R Riinses acd madical medinm, B0 West Hacison st RS, DR. CLEVELAND, ECLECTIO MAGNETIO M ian, 3i1 West Madison-st., second floar, gives Bpacibl elitation. and Warnis to Gute sl dotiext din SNNeS t BORMONES 0 . BUTT, NATURAL CLAIRVOYANT, 2 B Dasplatstanst. BHeo Sl Do Batt wil ttond to all acute or chroais disenses. BREL, THE NATURAL MAGNETIO Mol e fory o Dol Sasiotatd tor e Prosent at 439 Sonth Olark-st., and is now propared to Troat thoss in nesd of hor services. ADAM IDELL, THE OELEBRATED FEMALE physician and astrologist, isnow permansntly located in Onicago. St bas no squad i bor profowsion fa tollag o atare. Hor sdvice in re baniBoss s fovalasblo. Gsil and: bo. sonvinced of ot rost power. Satiafaction: gusrantesd or 1o pay. D) i R etastags and name, Ad 11 inel and stam; Brsor oot oa MADAM (SELE No. 15 Wert Wasbing. ton-st., Chicago. MADAME MILSOM, NATURAL OLATRVOYANT, 929 South Stato-st. _Gents not sdmitted. — -HAND _MICROSCOPES I B0t o ngmetec, oD, JORN FILLIPS. ot Sho pacer d R ook syt of Hurrisgast. —"Speciacios auited by fnspection to the eye. OR SALE_FIVE YOKE WORK OXEN, % conaition and woll broken.' Can o shonat AVARE BHOM. Livory Stablo, 19 State'sts Benr Aoncoor TrOF SALE-% YEAR LEASES; SEVERAL LONG + 4, Teases; the bast aver offered: |V (oo 18 Chamber of Commeree. OR SALE_BLACK WALNUT DINING GHAIRS, extension tables, plated casters, refrigerators, meat Broller, coifee ura, soitablo for restaurant or boaR bouse. Apply at 871 Wabash-av. OR _SALE_CHEAP, FRAME BUILDING, FIx- Tuxces wnd Toase, at 189 Norin Clark st WITH, MUSICAL. JFOR SALECAT A SACRIFISE, A TOCTAVE PL anoin good order. cheap. Partlea loaving the clty ad must sell._Inquire 16 North Sangamon-st. JfORSALE_OR RENT-$8 PER MONTH, & GOOD second-hand piano, over-strung bass and in good arder. Apsly ta V. 0. TAYLOR, & Ghataver of oo Saorcs. IANOS REPATRED AND POLISHED PROPERLY ; tunlng, 83, by JOHN E. HUGHES, 375 Blus . alsd, 8 good second-hand piazo for sh. ARTIES WISHING TO BUY A FIRST-OLASS Ditno, can save $140 by calling at 351 Park-ar. also, twa planos ta rent, 36 and 88 per month. PO, FENT SEVEN QCTAVE PIANO, SIDESAD. dle for sale. Apply 247 Ualumet-ar. Co., 18 ONEY LOANEDON COLLATEEALS, COMMER- cial papor boughtand soid by 3. B. DERRICK & ast Madison-st.,, Room8. 0. G. BRYANT, PRIVATE BANKER. MONEY 10 loan on collaterals, honschold furniture, and dia- d: I:Ep;;bllc insurance certificstes wanted at high- ot price. Oriental Bullding, 123 LaS: 0 LOAN—85,000 FOR 3 OR 5 YEARS, ON FIRST- Clasa clty propecty. B, Bt CLARKE & CO., Roam ¢ st 10 LOAN—$2,000 ON CLTY REAL ESTAT) est 10 per ceat. Money ready. SMITH, INTER- 00D & @o. 'WANTKD—sm ON GOOD CHATTEL SECURITY. i Address M, 23 Milwaukee-av. interest. Address G 7 VWANIED-S.0n, FOR & TERN OF YEARS, OX Address X %, Branch Tribune office. WA 5 3,000 a0d 92,000 0a residence DAy 10 per conte E 14, Titbune Branch ofice: WANTED-TO BORROW 340 FOR TWO YEARS: ‘will give 12 per cent interest and secarity o lot worth double the smount. __Address P &), Tribune office. 'ED_MON , 31,000 OR 81,500 FOE 3 OR A i o ot o5 aueelis, at 18 per cont ‘'ribuns office. ‘worth 3110,000; must close at once business properf 35,000 0N CENTRAL BUSINESS PROP- N B roperty. WilL —3L,00 FOR_ONE YEAR, ON NEW AR hO ot Addrass o call on ‘W. A. RUSSELL, %i3 West Twelfth st. = 1,000 CASE I HAND 10 LOAN FOR O . year. ABBUTT & OLIVER, Room3, No. Mouroe-at. TO LOAN ON INSIDE REAL ESTATE. JOHN H. AVERY, 131 LaSalicst. | TO LOAN ON CHICAGO REAL E. W $16,m0, $3.80 $25.00 tate 1o sums of 85,000 oney fband. ALERED JAMES, Rooma 8, souchwess corner Madison and Clack:sts. - MISSING. AN, MISSING-WILLIAM HENRY FITHGOW Ioft home on the 16th day of October last for Crowan Polnt, Indians, to bay horses, sinco which time he his not been heard from.” Any (nformation i regard to him ‘il be thankfully recefved by his snxlons wifs at Nu. 373 ‘Fausth-av., Obleago, I