Chicago Daily Tribune Newspaper, July 28, 1873, Page 5

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THE CHICAGO DATLY TRIBUN MONDAY, JULY. 28, 1873, WEY COL. JUSSEN WASN'T CONFIRMED Was the Crown Prince " of Prussla Poi- soned by Jesuits 7 Oplnions. of the German Presr. | Jusson nnid tho Onthollcss 0 the Bditor af The Chicayo Tribunie: i Bin: Will you sllow a short statoment of tho :position of Catholics a5 rogards Mr, Jusson's ap-’ ipointment on tho School Board? Nr, Jussen sflnttorahls woundod vanity by asoribing his dofoat to tho fact of his bellof in Blsmarck's polioy towards tho Ohurch; and, in his articlo in tho Fveie Presse, translatod in-your columns tho Inst waok, ho attompts to play therole of o'martyr toRomo. Tho Times stupidly or intentionally ropeats the etror, although correctod, and adds :n-socond ono of its.own that Bluthardt waa -olccted in tho placo of Juesen. It thereupon rcaclles over the presumod discomfituro of «Catholics, becauso, forsooth, Bluthardt is aa :much of oo infldol ns Jusson, " Bolie may bo, a8 woll aa other gontlemon thab ‘wero.nominatod and - confirmed. Ho and thoy bave o right to thoix’ viows, and o right that such views should bo ropresented -on s School' Board liko ours, roprosonting a_population of 80 many nationlities and roligious views. “But they. have not publicly ineulted us, Catho- lica also have a right that their religion—tho roygion of at lonst one-fourth our.population— .ehould bo roprosented. = Mr. Jusson was nom- tinoted to tako tho.placo of a Catholio ; but that * Woa 0ot the renson of his'dofont. .Catholies do < not claim or ask for- tliolr proportionato repre- raentation. : Mt. Jussen, by his vile slandors against our rolorgy, has Insultod snd' ontraged our foelings, :and hin dally abues of Qatholls clorgy in the . Freie Presse show that ho is o monomsnias on ‘that. gubjoot, and nooda only.tho opportunity «to put his fanatical and intoloraut views.into «offect, Wo foel ag poraonal insults his published .ul.mf;un accusing our clorgy of tho vilest erimos. LAll wo nsk {s, that fair-mindod non-Catholics +ahnll be appointed in the placo of Ostholics, in- «stead of intolerant bigots, OATHoOLIO, Zyanalated from the Chicago Unfon. A TEMPEST IN A TEATOT, . ‘Wo rogrot that the nomination of Mr. Jusson 10 tho Board of Education was rojected by the | +Council; but to mako 8o great an ndo about so -trivinl o ciroumstance, and to attempt to prove “by it that “ Rome {a governing Chicago,” that “#The Catholics aro concocting a schiemo to cap- +ture tho publio schools,” and that the timo has «coma ta gound the alarm fn ordor to warn the ooplo of tho danger of bolng ewallowod up by itho Josuits, ia slmpl{ childish, and hardly sulta- ibis ‘m the prosont stato of affairs, whon sn «wHvangelical” warfaro is so porsistently oar~ riod on againet thoso of other boliefs, Tiio pooplo of this Ropublio must watch the handling of its publio sckools with joalous oyos in order that itd system may bo protected against :all clerieal intorforence. avo tho poople, then, fulfilled thoir sacred duty in this rospect? Hayo -thoy not, on Ltho contrary, indorsed tho steady .encronchment of * Plymouth Rock™ upon tho. -public institntions of learning, og:ning ita doors to piotism, through which tho tender heartof -out youth ig being corrupted ? ‘Was it tho Jeaulis, or Catholics in general, who +made the domand to have *God" insertod in :the Constitution of this eounuz; for the purposo .of transforming our popular inatitutions intoa +clerical Stato ? Whon Catholics aro roproached for this domaud to havo the school fundg equally “divided, it would be woil to inquire into the rea- w800 of such n roquest. Is it not beoanse tho ‘Puritans insist that tho book of & raligious sect, lio Proteatant Biblo, bo introduced and kopt in our publio schools a8 a toxt-book ? The dogmns of the Catholic Church forbid its youth tho roading of that book. The Catholica insist that, 1 thoso schools for whose support thoy aro taxod alike with their Puritan follow- citizens, no religions instruotion shall be given, or, if it is, that thoy bo not compolled to pay for it, but that they may bo allowed to makesuch 8o of it ne they seo it. What is good fortho Puritan is a8 good for the Catholica, - 1t is cloar t6 oyery unprojudiced mind that the, Adangors which throsten us from ¢ Romo " aro, woxeoedingly omell in comparison with those. of A Plymonlfl Rook ” which have slroady broken in upon us ; and that, for us Gormans moro eopecially, it would bo.much more necessary to prosent "An unbrokon front to tho latter, our gommon enemy, than to wasto our atrongth, a la Don Quixoto, u{mn mere nd- mille, It 18 ovidont that Mr. Jussen bad tho indisputablo right, in' his_corre- spondencosfrom Gorniany, to upbraiditho Josuits, and to take side with Biemarck in'the contost now going on in the Fathorland for -the division of the State from tho Church. ‘But when, bis . lottors, - he gives ‘grontor publicity to xidlculous sforics of orimo ‘3aid to liave been committed by Cathollo pricsts sIn order to ticklo tho sonsation-loving palato ol ithe Yankees, ho muat, not complain if thoso mombera of the City Council who havetaken offenso against his lottera voted ngainat his con- Brmation o the Bchool Board, . 'Wé connot_discover in this voto the evidence that “ Rome " is governing Chicago, and neither ' are we nor Mr. Jussen justifled in deriving from §t tho conolusion that tho Catholicsare *“ strotch-. ing out their arms " to cluteh our publio sohools, Docauso the offico for which ho was nominntod was acoidontally that of & mombor of the Board of Education ; and wo ara convinced that had MMr.-Jussen been nominated by the Mayor to the oftice of Polico Commissioner, ' tho Board: of Hoalth, or 88 TFish-Inspector, his fate: in the City Council would huve beon preoieely the stme o6 it was. Al this, a8 we said, is moroly a tom- post in o toa-pot. Dranslated from the Illinots Staats-Zeitung of July 20, TUE FIONT AGAINST PURITANS AND KNOW-NOTH~ 1Nas, 1t is woll known that tho Nationalistio, Puri- <tanical ‘mxl,y, which now trics to crystallize .under tho doceptive namo of the “Law-and- ‘Ordor party,” will bo defeatod at the polls at tho ‘November o\uuhnu, if they do not succoed in crentlr;gm.uvinion in tho ranks of thoir op~ - pononta, : E ‘Thoy havyo triod this nlrondy in vain, by using somo contomptible men as tools among the Germang, But now thoy rosort to very dospor- ato means in order to divido their Gorman and non-German_opponents, Tho plan seoms to have beon latched in tho feriilo brain of Storey, of the Chicago Times,-aud is nothing less than to ereato a bitter oumity botween the Protestant and Catholio oppouents of Puritan- lam, A wolcomo protext was furnished to the -geaudal-monger of tho T'imes by o recont vote intho Common Council. A large majority of tho Council refused to confirm ono of Moyor Medill's nominations for the Baerd of Educa~ tion, The rofusal to conflrm was dopioted by tho Times s a terrible Romish conspiracy ; tho Chicago Councll, n tho opinion of that Jxlapor was subgorviont to Romo, and it was alle od that the gentleman in_question was not con- firmed boosuee Lo had awwouod tho encroach- monts of the Roman Catholio Church, Wo do not know tho motives of the different Aldermen who refusod to confirm this nomina- tion, It was etated at firat that some of them hied refused to confirm becauso tho nominoce, in his correspondonce to THE Cnicado THILUNE, bnd defended the rocont memsurcs of tho Gorman Emplre and of Pruesia againat tho Jesuite, Bu sovoral of tho Aldormon have ns- aured us that it was porfectly immaterial to thom whatthe gontloman in quostion sow fit to think about the rula[,'luua troublos in Germany, but tbat ho hnd made himsolf many encwmies by nnfi- gestiug in Tue Cuicaco ‘LunoNe that the ill- nosd of the Crown-Prince of Prussia was caused by poison administored to him, during his _8ojourn at the Court of Dresdon, by Oatholics, This idlo tnlk about tho poisoning of the Crown-Prince by Catbolics is just na nousonsi- «cal ay tha other (alk, starced at tho snmo timo, ‘thiat Lio waa polsoned out of Jonlougy by ‘s for: mor wlstrons, o fowar-girl. “Iis divonso, sa {8 woll known, i8 o liver-complaint, from which ho ks auffored for u long time, and for.the oure of which ho was just visiting the waters of Carls- bud when the Franco-German war broko out, It was quito natural that tho sssertion mado by the gentloman in ?uwt\mx should embitter man; Catholics against lim, And, ns wo nre susura b{ woll-iuformed persons, his dofont 1s mainly aitributablo to this focling, which has in no wiso any principial or confosslonal boaring. Tt whab did tho _desporato. Kuow-Nothing rabblo of Mr, Btoroy do? Out of this wmoat iu- nlmmunut acearrenco, Which the Common Coun« oil would have betlor avoided, thoy munufacture » torriblo onslanght of Cutholicism and Jeswit- lsm ou our systom of freo schools, aud_procluim it as a triumph of Tome. ‘o soandal-loving Gorman paper, Whlch 1s but an lmitation of the Tinws, und just M.nllllll(] a6 It ls menn, goss evon further to excouto the ordors of tho Tom- . poruuco Burony, and publishics tho lio, that the i+ gontloman in question had not boen confirmed Bocauio hin wasnot,a Catholle In good standing. ‘Thio uttor meanpces of tho diabolical attompt bogunby the ZTimes, and continnod by tho mild- orable Gorman tool of. tho Topaperanco Buroau, to sow tho gorms of confessional atrifc nmon tho . opponents: ‘of Paritanism and Know- Nothinglem, onn only b rightly judged by the follawing facta - On tho samé ovening in which | the Council rojocted the nomination of tho gou- tleman in ?nouuon for porsonal .ronsonn,. gnuy confirmed tho nomination of four gontlomen 'ns mombera of." tho -Board™ of ' Education, cach of whom. would strenuoudy opposo any attompt to brenk down or romodol our systom of publio - schools: in tho intorest of Oatholiclsm. he four mombors conflrmod by tho *Council—Morsra, Wilco, Olo- son, Riohborg, and Dr., Bluthardt—aro not Cath- olles, and wo aro sorry to say that Messrs. Wilco and blonon ovon have a loaning toward Puritmi- ism; the two Germans—Richberg and Bluthardt —woro eduentod ns Protestants, and, by thelr. tolaration and liborality, would OYpa“ ovory at- tempt of n Ohurch to (‘lmmy tho non-confes-. sional oharaotor of our froc-school Bystem, Tho Catholics tho . Council, too, " vojod rondily *for -tho oonflrmation of tuodo foiir Protostants, although, in spite of the latgo num- bor of Ontholics in Chicago, thoro is only oo Catholio in good standiy S‘“" CGoggin) among tho fiftocn mombors, whilo tbirtoen of them are Protestanta. 23l Instond of dosorving to bo blamod for Intolor- nfico,the Oatholio mombers of tho Common Coun- cil, by their votos on tho nominations for lléu Bohool Bonrd, hnave shown na groat doul of' liborality, and oven of solf-abnogation. It is woll known that tho lllinols Slaats Zeftung striotly adhoron to the Amorlcan-Ropub- lican systom of porfact soparation of Ohurch aud Siato. Wo shall oppose a Church only whenovor this Church goes boyond its logitimato aphero, Iu oase the Catholio Cliurch shonld try. such oncronchments, we should opposo it with tho utmont onorgy and boldness, “But it is not Catholleism—vory tolorant, a8 tho vatos in tho Councll shosy—which trics to oncrosch upon civil and poraonal liberty, but it is quito & diffor- ent roligious seot, whiol tries [ta hand ab such oxporimbnts, a8 the prosent Sundny tyranny is very apt to prove. A Indeod, tho iprospocts * of “Puritanism and XKnow-Nothingism'in Chicago must bo "dos- l)nrnto whon a fellow like Btoray, so deeply ekilled o ovory political villainy, in his endenvors to fight tlio frlonds of liberty, hits upon such etupid means as wo described abovae. But tho Times, 'to’ ' cortain’ oxtont, acts at leaat honeatly ; it doos not deny ite intontion to tramplo on tho Dutclimon,” and confosses that 1t will uso all moans to accomplish its purposo. But ho who professes to bo with the Germans, and sgninst Know-Nothingism and Puritanism, and still approves of the course of tho Times, I8 eithor s blockhoad or a scoundrel, If ho doos not geo or Iwnwh'u that tho omzonunts of Puri~ tanism will bo po]ltlcnll{ annihilated ot the bal- lot-box without tho vote of. Catholics, ho is a Li‘mfihm. But if ho, knowing all thia vory wll, los to disturb the indisponsablo confossiona onco among the oppononts of Puritanism and ativism foy paliry roasons, ho is a scoundrel and traitor, Up to this timo, tho how! of tho Z'imes and its Germon imitation, to use an osthetical phrase of the Union, has boon nothing but a ! tempost in & toapot,” or, to use unesthotical but plain lan- Eflnga, ‘g storm in a hog-pen.” It canonly ocomo dangerous if it should be pormitted to loavo its prosont dirty locality, This might per- hapa be possible if the peoplo woro not warnod in timo, and tho facts in tho caso wore not sln(uly 1aid bofore them. Wo bave fulfliled this uty by this article. s THE FARM AND GARDEN. Tho Now York Agriculinral Editorinl Party Loave Now Yorke-=Saltearsh= ©8 e NOW Jorsoy == Pennsylvanines ‘Washington and the Department of Agriculturca=To Xinrpor’s Ferry--0ld John Brown--The Shonandoah Vals ley==Over the Bluc Ridgc==Tho Coun= try-=Westorn Virginin==A Country of Coal, Iron, and Salt-=The New River =~The Kanawha Salt=TWorks--A4 Neow City==A Night-Eidec on the Ohio, From Qur Agricultural Correapondent. My Suaraer-Tous, Jensey Orry, July 16,—At 7:30 a. m., the Now York agricultural editorial party left thisa city for an oxtended tour through the Middle and West- orn Btates, a8 far a8 Salt Lake. Thoy numbor twenty-iwo gontlomon and six ladies. Tho Penn- sylvania Railroad Company gave them o special train, with observation and dining cars attached. il THE SALT-MARGUES aro the first thing to attract attention, Tosco pooplo cutting marsh-hay whon the ‘tido makes things a triflo moist, is a novelty to o Western man, Thors {8 docided difforonce botwoon this %ind of hay ond this kind of land, and tha alongh hoy and tho: ploughs of tho Wost, The latter may be drained; but tho only way in which the formor is mndo available iatofill thom up, and this is what tho roilrosd companies aro doing, in order to got plenty of depot-ground, and solid lond for tho rosidoncos of their em- ployes, * In timo, thousands of acres of theso low, sandy marshes will be solid stroats, contain- ing long rows of buildings. Commerco has her needs, and she builds at the points of distribu- tion for the world's goods. NEW JENSEY. Tho genoral contour of tho south part of Now Jorsoy is quite similar to that of the Grand Prairio. Thero are no hilly, and the surfaco iy gontly undulating. ‘The soil is sandy, and of lit~ tlo apparent valuo for farming; and just now tho ‘whole State is suffering with n sovorodrought. A littlo ryo and some oats are sown, while garden- vegetablos, fruit, and milk, for the city market, aro the chief staples. An immenso sum ig spent annually by the farmors of this Stato for ma- nures and commercinl fortilizors; but at this timo thoso avail but a triflo, for the drought i baving its own way, and the truck-growers and farmera of Now Jersoy are sad. THE PENKSYLVANIA RATLIOAD COMPANY have & double track of steol-rails, and are put- ting up largo dopots for tho storago of Wostorn grain at all points of demand nlong the lino of their road, besides at the torminus ot Jersey Qity, and of late aro largoly incremsing their rolling stock. Tho road is most admirably managed, and, as tho country is neatly lovel and dovoid of hills, groat speed and Leavy traing aro the ordor of the day. The 27 miles boforo yoaching Ironton wore mado in 80 minutos,—a protty good rate of travoling to enable one vory thoroughly to study tho country. AFTED PASBING INTO PENNGYLVANIA, the soil ia less sandy, the farms aro larger, and tho country becomos moro rolling, The big Duteh barns, the whitowashed fonces apd farm- bulldings, give the farma a thrifty appenranco. Cliestor and Lancnstor Counties aro ssid to bo the bout countlea in thoe Btato, and thoy nre cor- tainly samplos of good oulturo; but tho drought is making eorious inroads onthograss andopring crops, though tho crop of winter whoat, which {is just in shock, is very fino. Tho whoat crop is tho maln ono of this part of the Btate, though grazing ocoupiea the noxt position. The flolds are much larger than the averago of New York farms, and we sco noithor Canada thistles nor daisies in tho flold. As wo procood toward Baltimoro, theland becomes more bro- ken, and in some places billy. WE PASS UNDER, not through, Baltimoro, The tunnel undor tho city is two miles long, and cost 4,000,000 but it s & most valuable inyostment, especially for tho frolght traffio, which moots with no dolny whatevor. An hour in Washington served to givouan birdsoye view of thecity. Two or tnreo of tho clorky” from THE DEPANTMENT OF AGRICULTURE mot s at tho dopot, and ono of them and hin wifo jolned our party, on the ususl 80-dsy leave of nbyenco, the IHouorablo Commission refusing to oxtond the time for tho entiro trip. The fact is, tho Comminsioner {6 an old fasuil, aud tha entiro agrioultural pross have boon ondeavoring for & long timo to hivo his place anp&lliu(l with gomo active young man who is imbuod with the apirit of ngre;u!u\ml progrosg; butt tharo in little liopo 8o loug as monbors of Oongross make poli- tics, fnatond of the truo intoraats of their coun- iry, thoir study, The monthly crop roporls are now sont to ona county farmors’ club, and ono othor club in each county. ‘s givos to Iilinois about 200 eopies, whilo the pollticians got tho ro- mainder. Tho bopnrlmun of Agrienlture, with its dry-nursing, is of no partioulnr valuo to tho industries of tho Ropublie, Wa loft tho city by tho newly-constructed Washinglon & Potomac Branoh of tho Lisltimore & Obio Road to Harper's Forry. TR DROUAHT ! has mado ita mark through the wholo dlstance and formo million busiols of Weatorn corn will be raquired to make up tho shortnoss of tholay- orop batwoen this point aud New York, The, Pouusylvania Oontral Ruilroad hauly au jmiienso quantity of ‘Waatorn products.to tho son-hoard, | and is mnklngr: grontor offorts than pvor for tho lion's sharoof Waatorn trado and Woatorn travol. For somo distanco out'of Washington wo pass aver & scrub-pino plain, of apparently little valuo Loyond thnt of growing enrly vegotables, but, ns WO noar o NARPER'S FEDRY, the land contains moro olay, .and, the farms look mora Inviting, For some diitauco wo wind along tho Valtoy of the Potdmng, in’ company with tho .Chosnponke & Obfo Canal,. Our arrlyal atthe Torry wwas too Into Lo seo mora than tho qutlines of tho hilly of bluo trap and Bilurian shajos that wall in tho Uppor Potomno andBhonandonh, that hore moot anc flow on togothor ds the Potomna, Wepnespay, July © 10, — Tho searcoly lightoned ~up tho valley * whoh tho Fnrty woro ' nstir, and, undor tho guldnuce of sovoral of tho oitizens, thioy woro .olitnbing tho hills,—somo aftor botanical spocimons, somo for bags, but tho groater num- Dbor sight-socing, Tho history of B & JOTIN BROWNK'S NAID, ¥ nad tho sconos of lils oxplolty, wore pointed out Dy tliogo who weroe porsonelly familiar with thom, Ono gontloman assured us that Goy. Wise hired John Brown to como hero {n ordor to havo causo for seoossion, and that ho. was mosb ignomin- fously betrayed by the Yankeo schoolmnstor and otliors, DBut. othors claim that his plans wero woll-Ioid, . atd_would lavo carriod but for tho tardiness ‘of . Liis co-conspirators, which ship- wroclad tho whole plan. Wfinn wo look at thisns & stronghold: that » fow mon could defend, and {rom, which they ocould nr.l!{ into tho richeat part of Virginis, over o solid turnpiko rond for 2 hundred imiles, wo must concodo that thopluco, it not tho timo, wns well-chosou. % Lhouo rivora aro cut thmu&h 0 DArrow gorgo In tho rock, fully 600 foot deop, 'Lho Cheun- peako & Ohfo Canal i ont In the rack along tho onst sldo of tho P'otomno, while our routo lies southwestorly, up the Shonondoah Valley for 120 miles to Stavnton, whilo the Bulthnore & Ohio Ratlroad continuos towards tho .Ohio, ~ After loolklug at thoe hills, Istrolled for. Lalf-n-mile's wratk, up the Potomno, along tho foundations of tho old armory. Buch 4 5 A SPLENDID WATER-POWER ns thia now idle is o mattor of pur- prise, Tho foundation-walls all stand, and tho overshot water-wheols aro rotiin down - in tho pits, whoro thoy onco nideil tho busy workors **in the timo of peaco to -pra~ pave for war.” The dam: on- the Potomao, built. of solld blocls of this biue trap, nnd held togothor with coppor bolts, id yet_in good condition, na ia tho caual that onco lod tho water to tho busy wheols. Tho valloy is but.a gnrgc, and the work- mon hnd to build against. tho stecp billsidos, or nlong tho narrow path that londs up tho Bhonan- doah, Tho wholo picture i wild and romnutio in the extromo, as woll as'boing filled with stir- ring evonts in our history., Tho wator-powor is too tompting to long romain 1dlo, and oro long. the busy workera will como back to repoople tho valloy, not perhaps for the manufacture of arms, but for articlos of use and beauty. Tho botnuists camo_back londed with plants, and old Daily Lifo, of tho Rurai New-Yorker, bad n slore of bugs, whilo Tim Bunkor Lad decided upon tho best point from which to stock tho rivor with fish, and tho artists bad not beon dlo with their poucilo, Tho ladies had an excellent appotito for bronkfast, for tho; Lind nsconded to tho top of Jofforaon Rock, and. Liad econ the sun como up from bobind tho hills of tho Potomno, At 8 o'clock the special train started on ite mis- slon up TITE SIENANDOAT VALLEY, by tho Baltimoro & Ollo and tho Virginia Mid- land Ralronds to Harrisonburg. Mauy citizons of Winchester, Btrausburg, and other polnts, in- clnding ofiicers of tho road, accompnnied tho party, and among theso wore sov- oral” Robel-officorn, ~ who pointod out tho lncos of interest during tho TReboll- on, In onr party were two officers of tho Eoderal army, who had u{mnt nearly tho wholo criod of tho war in Vi pfin 8, boginning with Bull Run and ouding ot tho laut ight st Waynes- boro, at tho head of tho yalley, They woro in thorout at New Markot, whoro Sheridau turned thom back to Mechanicsville nnd won tho dey. #ho rido ” was fourtoon miles from Winchos- ter ovor tho solid turnpiko that londs from Ifar- per's Ferty up tho valley, and from that point for nix miles the day_was_hotly contested, of thia was recountod, and poiut after point was slown, a8 the itrain rolled along at;an ocasy rato. The hills and outcropping rock are of 8- lurion limestono, in many plscos quite plouty. It makes an excellont building stone, aud is Delug quarried at several points, Charleatown, where Old John Brown was oxo- cuted, i# o boantiful village in this ghurmlng valley, whose mild climato and rich soil make it onoof the best agrionltural districts in tho world. To our loft riso tho mountains of iho Appalachisn cbain, with the Biue Ridgo in tho distauce. 3 At Harrisonburg we tako stage to Staunton, 25 miles further south, Throo stages aro filled with, our party and thoir baggage. I have callod this A BOLWD rUMNFIAE, forit is such, and eo solid that, duriog ths war, large numbor of engines woro stolen from the Daltimore & Ohio Railroad, and hauled with toams on this rond from Btraugbucg, on thoir own wheols, and not a dont mado in tho turnpike, which is mado of thie Silurian limostone, that had beon Dbroken fine for thomaking ‘of theroad-bed. No wondor that this valley wng o vigorously de- {fonded, for {t was tho groat granary of tho Robell- jon,—n valloy 120 mules long and 80 broad, proably tho bost whont district in the States, i not in I.E\B world, It is tho whent of this vallo: that has given such a valuo to the flour of Balti- more aud Rickmond, vy All points cnst of the mountains have suflered ‘with tho dronghit; yot here the wheat nnd hay crops aro good, while the pasturage and spring crops have suffered. Wa naa o faw fine orchards, and now and thon o farmatond, with its troos snd lawn, that give unmistakablo signs of woalth aud taste ; but tho majority of farms show little tasto for fruit-culturs or tho adornment of homo. Woare in that middle elimato that is gald to bo gbove_ tho miasmatic lovel, as n doctor told us ab Now Muarket, At loast it lies botwoon the ox- tromos, and is shut in from tho cast and tho west winds. Wherever we saw & ponch, an apricot, o penr, an_apple, or & quince, the tree was londed with fruit, and tho vines ppear tonced littlo caro, A distinguished horticulturist, ono of tho party, oxclaimod, *‘ What n PABADISE FOR TIE FRUIT-GROWER | Why, in tho namo of Providenco, don't theso peoplo plant orchards P Buoh a soil aud such & gonial climate ought not to bo thus trifled with," From Stounton wo took the Chesaponke & Ohio Railrond to Oberlottesville, whore wo remained over night ; in fact, this part of tho trip was mado after nightfafl, boing o distanco of 40 ‘milos, aud passing ovor the Bluo Ridgo at Afton, Al dn early hour, July 17, wo loave Oharlottos- villo, tho seat of tho Lno—Wmlhm[ilan Collega, which wo had no time to visit, and retracod our stops to the sammit of tho Bluo Ridgo, at Afton, for breakfast, Wo passed through o tunnel soven-oighths of o milo long, that occuplod seven: yoars lngfmudiug‘ and cost over A MILLION OF DOLLARS, Tho road was first constructed over the monn- tain at & grade of 800 feot por mile, but, under the now managomont, tho grade ia 70 foet in one place, and not to exceed U5 foot in any othor. oint of the road from Lichmond to tho Obio st untingdon. P'ho avernge Virginian uses fow vogotables, and we hnd abrenkfast of broiled spring chickous, hot rolls, corn-brond, Lot waflles, aud coffoo ; and yot fhis broakfash lind boon ordared formoro than o wook, Ab Hur{mr'a Torry wo had wild blackborries and whortleberries for supper aud brenkfast ; and hero, in the mountains, whero tho bushes wore bonding with blnokbereles, and whore the potato is comparatively at home, nont- tontion was paid to them, At Oharlottesvillo an obsorvation-car waa at- tached to our spooial train, that is to go through to tho Obio Rivor, Nonr tho baso of the moun~ tain wo have puro, soft water, coming out of the 8t, Potor's or Potsdam sandstous, We slop an lour at Btaunton, tho coutro of business near tho hond of tho valloy. TFor hero we bogin to outor the range of mountains in Wost Virginia._ I should have stated that the timbor on the Blue Ridge is chiolly chestnunt and onk, of tho valunblo declduous trees, and pitch-ping and rod eedar nmuufi the conifers. While the londing roclk iu tho vallay Is & hard Silurian lime- stono, it Iu no less singular that o lim-dmuuh‘)fi to tho soll {s of great valuo, and plastor I usofi ou the clover and limo on rod clovor are THE ONIEF FEWTILIZERY for tho immonss whoat crops thut aro produood. in_tho valloy yoar aftor year. The cultivaied farms dre Lokl nt'$30 to £50 por acro, aud tho unoultivatod ab from U5 Lo §20, From all that I could learn, mn{»lo from all soe- tions of tho cuumfiy aro inyited to Virginia and Wost_Virginia, and have boen cordluily wol- comod:- 'Uhero in A want of labor iu all this rogion, a3 s ovidoncad fu tho thousunds of nores of uncut hay and the unthroshed whent, Tho constrnotion of tho Midland Hoad, thal rung through this part of tho valloy, s drawing off tho colored Iuborers, and tho farmors must struggle Mon;i as bout tlmr mny‘ Btauuton has about 6,000 inhanfanty, Who Dot and Dumb, the 1ilind, and Insane Asylmng aro at this point, and thora nre five fomaly neminurien hove, wndor chnrgo of as many roligious donorainutions, Lusked an obd Vieginian what were tho chiof- n‘:opu Deforo the wur, ¢ Well, sir, bofore the war the L OUIEY OROP WAS I'OLITICIANS, b aud thoso sowed to the wind aud respod sun had” p 7 tho whirlwind., We planted no orehards and oul- tivated no gardon-vogotables, Now the new-coni- ers .aro giving us lodsons In both, If you sco a big barn aud » prosperons-looking . farm, you mny Lot & Ponnsylvanin Dutchiman 16 the ownor, Biuco tho, war, wo have boon trying to do song- thing for oursolvos, Wo hayve Lud to roplaco fancos and buildings that oro destroyed by tho .armios, and this can only bo dono.as_we enn raise money from onr crops of whoat, 'We' npod monoy to buy tonms and " stock for onr farma, and wo woulid lke to soll & part of our land in ordar to improvo tho otlsor part.l’ Boon aftor loaving Btaunton, wo ontor tho . MOUNTAIN-LEGION OF WEST VIRGINIA, a reglon of immenyo woalth of iron, coals, ‘alt, valuable timbor, of fruit-growing, and with s, most genial climato, sud picturesqio tconory, unrivaled in varioty aud extont, with minerul springs for tho hoaling of tha pooplo. g Wo pass through Buffalo Gap at an clovation of somo 2,000 foot, and lookup at Blliott's Kunob, that stando 4,400 feot abovo thoson, ~ Horo i i furnaco for tho makinfi of charcosl iron. Wo aro now going west, while thoso mountalns run sonth, Vo orocressing mountain and valloy. 1In ono of tho lattor is tho nlum wprings, at which o stappod some two hours to drinicthe water, aud to climb tho hill, 1,000 foet, to sco a o 3 mmuuuu{u OFIBON % oro, nt tho very lop, aro rocksof brown homatile iron-oro,” that yiolds 66 por cent of iron ; aud tho noxt bolow is ‘manganeso, that yiolds pure Bosgomor stool j noxt below {a tha red oro, that yiolds 60 por cont. 3 At the foot of tho.lill is o furnaco, and tho ores are hauled a milo. down tho mountain-side wtih teams, and ,the whole -managed in a very primitivo way. ;” A part’ charcoal ‘and & part #pling conl from tho Kannwhia Valloy aro used in tho smolting, and yot tho ownor, said that it cost ouly 820 jor'ton 10 tanko Pha pige, which ho gold in Baltimoro for 53 a.ton,. aftor paying $10,50 por tou freight, cartago, and commisaon, o oxpooted to mako it for §15-08 soon as e could ‘got tho oxpected roduction iu cost, and bottor fa- Gilitios by drifting and tramways for the bauling of the oros. This Company owned o frontago of 2}§ milos of tho monutain. . inquired it ho sold choapor than othors in tho market in consoquence: of hls advantagos. “Not in tho lonst,” was his roply. Uliu sug- gostad to mo that n fow dollars ol on the tariff {;or ton would not put out his fires or ruin his usiness. T'ho stronms aro cut doop in the rock that is lero tilted uq in nil kinda of directions, and Bome of thoso littlo trout-ntrenms are crossod at & dizzy hoight on woodon trostles ; but theso aro being fllod, Tho filling of the trostlo at Lick Run cost $350,000. Culverts aro first con= structed, and then {illod in above, On this rond tho tunnols nggrogato 7 milos, and aro out through limestono, shalo, and sandstono. A fow of thom are arobod with iwriuk, but moat of thom aro in tho rough rock. . - £ ‘Wo spent the night at ! WILITE BULIHIUR SPRINGS, Tho wator of theso springs is_similar to that of Shoron Springs, in Now_York, All through this rogion aro mineral springs, for which spo- ciflo virtues are olaimed. . This was once tho Baratoga of the South; Dbut, sinco tho wor, it hias boon mainly patron- izod by the peoplo of the North, Fhiladelphia sonding tho lorgest numbor of ‘“‘3' ono b, The chargo per dny is low, Bay @3 for or ’ necommodations. ‘The bulldinga and equipmonta costnot far from $1,000,000, and, with its hun- . drod oollnguubiu capablo of - accommadating an immonse numbor of porsons. X wes told that the property will have to changoe hands, and until thon will be run on tho prosont basis, Thoro aro 3,000 sores of vailey and Jnountain combined ln tho pmpnrlz the springs ‘boing in tho amphithoatro of the hllls. It ia o moBC enchnnunfi ‘place, 2,000 foot abovo tho lovel of tho son, and under gonlal skies. I should havo taken great pleasurs in stopping horo a weels, but early in the morning wo must bid our pleasant host, Gen. Poyton, o hearty good-byo. To show tho offoots of the war on the rosources of tho Southern peoplo, Gon, Poyton told ua of & planter who spont his summor ab this rosort wyith his family, and brought with him thixtoon sorvants aud goyonteon horsos. Ho wag Lillod i the war, aud bis widow works a emall farm, snd ono of bia sons iy o streot-car conductor, ‘Tha cottages contain fivo rooms each, and are, located around tho grounds on_ all sides. Tho merls aro taken at_tho contral hotol., Some of our party romainod in tho dining-bsll until 3 a. m., and pronounced the institution moro at- tractivo than Baratogs, not in its show of dress, ‘but for the eloments that make up s usoful sum- mor resort. . Jury 18.—Wo aro now in the BWEET IRIAR RIVER COUNTRY, tho waters of which flow iuto tho Ohio River. Thus far wo havo passed over mountains whoso rock etrata havo boon tilted up and broken by {uterual forcos; but wo now come (o mounteing that wera onco olovated plaing, out of which mountaing have boon made by tho donuding forces of the rain- fall, Tho summer’s showers and the wintor's otorma and frost Liave done sll this, and thus presonted to man one of the mnst valuable min- oral regions of tho world. Hore ars U roet of conl in strata one aboye the other, 65 feot of which I8 in seams of over 8 foot each ; salt wator in inexhinustible quantities; and mountning of iron oro that mako those of othor parts of tho country sink into sigmifieance, - Wa follow the Bweet Briar down to the junction of Now River, winding among mountaina {n such & parrow canon that it has required many tunnels and much rock-cut- tiug to hold the train to tho side of tho moun- tain. Tho country I8 wild and pleturesquo in tho oxtreme, ‘I'ho road is now, aud tho countr searcoly known to- tho tupror and huntor until the engincer maslkod ont this new bLighway to tho ocean, aud oue that is to bo A WINTER OUTLET for the gmdnuts of tho Illinois pralrie, It ma; be nsked, Why not have .discoverad all this ba- foro? Bimply bacause it was waiting the sgo of railrond-tunnols to make o railrond possible, and withont a railroad o great part of theso rich ‘minorals would have remainod lockod up. TP, NEW RIVER . is nlmoat an unbroken canon, whoso sides are from 1,000 to 1,500 foot high, and thoso hills aro filled with co mnorals. The valloy is so nerrow that it will bo difficult to find room for furrows and forgos, though the wator-powor is unlimitod, as it con bo used ovor 40 rods, the wholo length of the rivor, Atthe mouth of the Gouley Rivor the riwer loses its name, and from tho falls is known a8 the Kauawha River, and, for 100 miles to tho Olio, 18 navigablo, The valloy now broadens to naarly a mile, and is ocultivated in farmas ; snd tho valloy is '.»nuy for tho minars are gettiug out cannol, £plint, aund bituminous CoAL s fast a8 it i poseiblo to find carrying capacity. Ona hundred and fitty tons of cannel coal is gont daily to Now York, This is_taken out of the hills, noarly 1,000 foot above tho water-lovel, aud lIoaded into boats and cars. The splint coal is in large domsnnd for the lmulunf,' of iron. Thoro is more coal along tho two 'rivors mon- tioned than in sll Pennsylvania, and the iron- mastors of that State will soon find a shierp com- petition, that may wo thom worse than the tariff, for that they mny bo able to manage, but they onunot control tho iron-mastors who put ig-iron on the market for §20 o ton, sud then fiuvn o profit lefl. Tho party reached CITANLESTON, tho capital of West Virginia, having been oacort- oa by Mayor Buydor and a lurge delogation from tho ~coity, ‘'who met tho party at White Bulphur Springs; and in tho ovening they mot o largo party of tho citizons at tho rosidence of Col. Walker, oditor and’propriotor of tho Laily Courier. JuLy 10.—'ho party acooptod tho invitation of Mr, 1alo to visit tho HANAWIA SALT-WORKS, gome 7 miles up the rivor. It was horo that Gon, Washington lnid his land-warrant to covor a burnjug spring, and the salt eprings that sont tholr snlt-wator out with tho frosh wator. Thoe gas comos up with overy new boring, but is soon oxhausted, In ono caso it was usod a long timo for boiling the salt. ‘Cho salt is found at il dis- tances from 600 to 900 feet, somo wolls aro deopor, but no additional quantity is found. Thore 8 morc or loss ol in thoso malt springs, but thatand tho frosh wator arostoppod off, aud tho salt wator allowed to flow. Tho briuo s very strong, aud tho salt {8 said to bo superior, it boing used almost oxclusivoly b{ tho Cinclunati pork-packers, So soon as the Chesn- Eonllo & Ohio Railrond reaches Clucinnati, Jontral Illiuois will make this ouo of hor wintr- outlotu for hor sanlus roducts, and tho cars may roturn fillod with salt, pig ivon, and cannel and splint goal. At noon tho party loft for HNUNTINGDON, on the Ohio, a distance of 60 miles, whero thoy wora rocolved by tho cilizens and troated to & splendid collation, and driven about tho mow olty,— city of {wa yoars, thut o deatined to bold an important place in the list of Ohio River oition, ‘Whore “in no question that a large part of tho smelting for ilnu fron-rogion namad will bo dono at this point, Furnacos are slready in contomnplation for this purpose, At 6 o'ulock the party wont on board tho stenmor Flootwood, and hind a night rido of 100 miios, down the ¢ &rlght wators of TILE DEAUTIFUL onlI0," to tha Oity of Porkopolls ; and to-day (Sunday), tho 18th, the an’cy i8 ntopping-at ths Burnct, rosting from the Iabors of tho weelr, Which has boeu & wook of hard Iabor and a wook of righ oujoyinout, that will mako tholr musolos strong- ory nud brondon thoir viewn for tho coming timo, whaon thoy roturn to their dall; |.onx To-night tho Fnrly loave for Toxas Touls and Sedalia, o jt S via Bt. RURAL. PERSONAL, Prosidont Grant and family will vielt Auguata, Mo, about the Gth of August. Schuylor Oolfax, 0. M., Ia_announced for an agricultural address at Monticotlo, Ii., Oct, 3. It is roporiod In Tows papors thnt . T. Allen, of Des Moiuos, hias pitrohinsed a rosldonco In Oliengo, peying therofor £60,000, i Obarlos Bradlaugh will glvo hia firat Jocturo in Amerien noxt Soptombor, ~ Bubjeot: * ''he Imn- poachment of tho Houso of Brunswick."” ‘Nolaton, tho distingulshed Fronch surgeoh, Tas beon Berloualy 11 with honrt dincauo, au but littlo hiopo is ontertained of his recovory. It isnow stated that Colfax s waiting for Droy to dio, 80 that ho can forwnrd a man who snw Drow whon Drow saw Ames draw the monoy on tho 81,200 cheok. Mo}, Harry Gilmor, tho Contederata ¢ rough- ridor,” was ono of four candidatos for BhorifT, in Daltimors, and got 563 votos out of 14,868 at tha Domocratle primarios, last wock. “Gep, Willlam Vandover, of Dubuque, has startad for Now Moxioo, undor liu appoinfmont a8 Indian Ingpector, and will go next to Arizona, and bo abeont four or five months, John J. Bhaw, Into of tho Morchants' Hotel, 8t. Paul, has leasod tho oight or ten acros aronnd Mionobala Falls, .and will oroct_thore a largoe hotol roady for noxt summor's trade. Qounsolor William I, Howo, of Now York, wonrs & 3260 .palr of suspoudors. Thoy liavo ‘buckloes of gold, cugraved with the namo of Ned Btokos, from whom thoy ara n pregont., Goorge W, Crummy, tho lom!in’; faro-gamblor of 8t. Paul, was ona of tho delegatos in tho rocont Minnesots Republican Htato Couvontion, Crummy says : ** Btick to tho good otd party aud roformn it," Dillson, of Duluth, the Washburn candidate for Attornoy-Ganoral of Minnoaots, will bosatis- flod with tho ofMoo of Unitod States Dintrict At- tornoy, vico Cash Davis, who amoshed the Wash- burn alato. A tologram hLas boen recoived from Jonnlo mght announcing hor jilnoss at Fort Wuyne, Ind., in consequence of which sho will bo un- able to fill bor engagement hore during Fair wook—2Afonmouth (L) Atlas. Goeorgo 0. Daten is ont with n'long coomunica- tion charging corruption and crime upon tho Federal oflicors of Utah ; and the Ogdon Junc- tion Baya thero is alrendy a terriblo shaking smong official dry bones over tho oxposires, The dificnltlos heretoforo oxisting between the Trustecs of Mcl{endroo Colloge, at Lobanon, 1L, and_the Rov. Robert Allyn have beon com- promised, and the Doctor will atill rotain his po- sition as Prosidont of tho Collego. Ono nct of Mr. Gladstone's, m\{a o London Tottor, muat not bo forgotton. Mo hos grauted a lifo pension of $1,600 per annum to Dr, Liv- ingstone, and this moots tho approval of all olasses of sociaty. IMe hns even antedated the nct, 80 that a yoar's pousion will be due on tho Ist'of July. Ex-Gov, Pollock, of I’unnsflvnnln, at the alumni dinner of Lafaygtto Collego, at Easton, sorvod a8 n substitute in making s spooch for Mr. John W, Hollenbaok, one of the Collego Trustoos,”for which ho said ho shonld chargs n lawysor's fao of 91,000, and pay tho $ama into tho collogo tronsury. Hollonback hns since ‘banded ovor the monoy, Queon Victoria sont Lady Smith, of Lowos- toft, n copy of ‘‘Lenves from our Journals in tho hllzh ands,” in commemoration of hor ono- Duniredth birfhday, Tho fly-lon containg tha following in tho Quoon's bLaudwriting: *To Lady Smith, on hor onc-hundredth birthdny, from Victorin R., Balmorsl, 1873." . Lady Bmith was able to write her roply to the Queen, — e Death of a Weanlthy Catholic Baromnct. From the New ¥ork World, ‘Tho Roman Catholic Cburch in Englaud has lately sustained a somowhat sorious logs in tho porson of Sir John Button, who joined its ranks Homo twenty yoars ago. Sir Jolin was tho eldost son of Sir Richard Sutfon, & groat colobrity in tho sporting world, long conneoted with tho Quorn Lhunt, and likewiso netadlo for his splon- did shooting proserves 1 Norfolk. Ife had grout incomo, = Jarge lot of which he do- rivod from house dprapnrty in London. Iils es- tato thore inaluded Cnmbridgo Ilowas, fn Piceodilly, 80 callod from Laving boon long bem. antod by Quoon Victoria’s uncle, tho late Duko of Gnmfvrm(;e, who loased it of Sir Richard. It subsequently bocamo_far more famous tun- dor its noxt tonant, Lord Palmorston, who occu- {;icd it In bis palmicst days of powor, whon it ocamo, under Lady Palmarston's ablo auspices, tho most repandu hiouso in London, Whon Lor Tutwmurslou died Sir-John Sutton leasod it to tho Naval ond Military Club at & ront of 816,000, that boing_ $5,000 moro than bed been: paid by Lord Palmerston, . At ono time thero was a rumor that Sir John Button hod givon tho ground for tho purpose of ercot- ing & grand Roman Catholio Outhedral, which should roar its statoly front in about the most contral point of fashionable London, whete 1ler Majosty could command & fine_view of it frum hor windows in Buckinglam Palace. Bir John had not tho faintost taste for any of lis father's urguits, and that old Nimrod used to sny that Eo ¥woma give any man £10,000 who would mnke his oldest son fond of hunting nnd ghooting. Early inlife ho formed an attoochment with a clorgyman's daughter, which his fathor disapproved, and this furthor estranged fathor and son._ T'ho latter rotired to the Continent, embraced Romanism, and spont much of hia timo at ornnn-plnyin{;, deting in the capacity of organist at a church in Bruges, Dy- ing ohildloss, his titlo and tho entailed ' estatos dovolved on his brother, now Bir Richard Sutton, who I8 ominent a8 o sporting man, ‘and to whoin his fathor had bequeathed s handsomo fortuno, and iron, and porhaps othor’ which will now be raised to somo 250,000 o yoar, s Erench Olnssitication of Miracles. Iu a communication which the Abbe Hoffmann addrosses to the Paris Univers for the cdification of all Piouu souls, the miraclos of which Alsace- Lorraiue is roputed to bo tho scono are loarnod- ly oxplainod. 'ho writor domonstrates, with the nid of Thomes Aquinag, that there are two Kinds of miracles, namoly : Miracles of the firat and miracles of tho socond class, Tho former ara exclusively tho priviloge of God—tho latter aro worked by his creatures, oithor augels or domons. 'Tho mnuffestations in Alsace-Lorraine Doloug to tho socond clags of miracles, and it is still o question whother thoy are the works of saints or augels, ‘To mako thom miracles of the firat olags, thoy atill Inck tho sigillum Dei. bl S e el An Amazon. A Prusslan amazon hag appoarad on the thon- tro of war in Spain. A Valontia newspapor says: 1o have had the pleasuro of sooing tho Prus- eian loroino announcod, who will, it is snid, command n battalion of voluntesra against the Carligts, Bho s well grown, hardly 26 yoors old, Dns a rather pretly faco, nud blondo bair, Lo woro o long upper garment, long riding trous- ers, and s Phryglan cap, and carriod acnvalry sword, We do not know whethor sho will re- hiero or go to Barcoloun.” — e . oriimor County Dairy Markets TLirsrx Faree, N. Y., July 20, 1873,—Tho markot at Ullea Ull{‘ for the week cnding July 20 showed wmoro activity than 1t 0fd lant wook, and pricos woro rathier botter; 1810 belng pald for one fanoy factory, and 150 for soverul athors f not quito ns good gualliy, shales woro mostly mado, however, ot from 130 to 130, wlich wo quoto a3 tho rullng figures, Lho rangd of rices Was from 113¢0 o 181{0. Wo eatimata tho offer- Ei at7,000, ani tho sule ot 6,000 baxes, Tranactions in bubjer wera of liitle lmportance, only o limited number of rkins bLaving boon sold, and (heso principally to_supply tho home demand, Wo quote prime at from 270 to 200, and Welch tubs st from 270 to 280, 5 At Littlo Fullg, for tho woek ending July 20, tho sales of farm dairios nmounted to 708 boxea, Thioy brought from 03¢0 to 11360 for fair to good, and 1% to 110 Tor primo to fancy, threo lota only’ gofug ‘at tho Itter figuro, ‘Lo markot for factorles thls wook was unfluctnating, witly brlalslos, I fact, us Wwo oxpeoted Lust week, ‘pricos Lisvo ut Inst touched bottom., "Phis, in addition to tho fucreancd production of ehieose, congoquont upon tho forvard growth of vege~ tatlon, promoted by tho refcouing rullh which Live beea falling, mado tho Littlo Falls uarkel o seeuo of » vory plemving charucter, Fuctory mon didnot, a wsual, hiold tiolr oliooio 8o very lato on miatket duy bo~ forg effecting salcsy bt wady hele tranatera datly, au witl ol ot (o ouatomary dickeriug wild nyors, . Vo sppend tha following tablo of leading transac- Uous, by rofureiica to whch 1t wil Lo goun {23 ot rocolvod tho highest prico—Tto, and 14 tool 2 Ourlist coutains: Avnold Bros, 50 boxes at I3 Avery & Ivos, 100 ot 1303 Tcochier, 00 ot 120 ; Bathel, 00 at 14303 Tirackotts Bildgy, 190 at 133 Brockolt and Fuotor, 00 ut 1440 ; Cayadutla, 134 ut 1930 Contral Valloy, 75 at 105 Olnrlostown Four Gortices, 74 nt 13tu's Cold Brouk, 89 ot 1307 Cold Orook, 145 ut 180§ Quld Spring, 100 a¢ 1930 ;- Orafnur Cornors, 1k nf Tio; Lalry ill, 87 ui 1o Englo, 120 at 13ige irata, 164 at 130§ Vairold Auso, G035 ut 180 Rorihy Fatvield, 100 ot LMo Old Selrsiofil, 0 at 13c 3 Vlat Qreck, 63 at Lo Tawsnclovor, 07 at i dohustown, 00 st Iyo; laduo, 03 at-.d80; ville, 100 at privats térms 3 Manheim, 108 at 3305 Manhotm, Contra, 85 ut Lo ;' Manhelm' Turndiko, 80 b k32/c] BMinayillo, 65 ut 100 5 Middlevillo, 295 ut 103 Mok, 3t 3330 ; Nowporl, 85 at Lo; Nowwillo Amocintion 230 a4 130 ; 'l Stono'Ohurel, 100 ab 230§ Opponbeisd Dalon, 854t 13560, Talling Uaton at 130 ; O1d Balisbu; 0 4 2303 Bramln By, 6380 19555 ot 1%0 ¢ 82 8¢ 123¢0 ¢ Toot 408t 1 5 gnfl{:‘.nu-n.n + A, Bm ‘Bmith Grook, 160 at 130's ‘6t Jobhwelie: 198 130" Straltord & Ballabiiry, 100 'nt 193¢0 § Top Natoh, 100 at 123¢03 Whilo Creok, 100 at 180% Zimiperman O2R Socints b Now Yo Clio roculyits at Now York for thowoal eniin dny JUl7 10, woro 10,318 baxen, Rnd. ths oepocte wire 78,041 Loxes, Higheat price paid for choeso, 125, Tor tho corrosponding Hino lant yeae tha rocelpts wors 78,009 boxes, and tho oxports wore 71,400 boxos, -ighe | price pati for cheons, 11k, g Tlio wonther cantinuos showory, snd paatures now aro looking woll, Hntvesting tho Lny crop is advance iug finly, Miny farmiors antictpato fnishing ozt wetk phould thu wostlor hold plessont. MARINE. Port of Chicnao. ARRIVED.,........ July 26, Prop Qubs, Buffalo, eundrics. Helir Radical, Pentwator, sundrics, Btmr Corona, St. Josopli, sundries, Stm bargo Olian, Rlotz, Manisteo, Tumber. Tiargo armony, Manihice, lumbor, Hehir Ithaca, Mukkegon, Jumbor, Solir Barbarian, Oswego, conl, [ Hehr Ashiabula, Kawanunes, tanbarl, Belr E, Ellensood, Whito Lake, lumbor, 8tmr Shoboygan, Two Rivers, sundrios, Prop Ira Olinifer, Baugatuck, lumber, Beow Rowons, Whlte Lako, lumbor, Tug R. Wetzel, Racing, towing, Holir M. O, Gntoron, Goderlch, salt, Helir 1. M, Knapp, Ttacino, no cargo. Blnr Alpens, Muskegon, sundries, Bargo Iutor-Dconn, Buifalo, no cargo, Targe Argonant, Duffalo, 1o cargo, Behr Bpeed, Muskegon, lumbor, Sehr J, Bean, Jr., Huntington'a Pler, lumber, Heow J. A, Jolnson, Baugatnek, wood. Hoir Ouba, Mnakegon, lumber, Stmr J, A, Dix, Ludington, towing, Hcow Louiso Strom, Muskegon, alabs, Hehr Minnlo Williatas, Bulfato, coal, Hebr Kearsargo, Good Harbor, wood, 8chr Ennon, Ludington, lumber, Belir Gamo Gock, Muskegon, lumber, - Sehr 8t, Paul, Muakegon, lumbor, Sehr Anlanta, Monomiugo, lumbor, Heow Sallor Boy, Muskegon, alabs, Bebr R, Winslow, Buifalo, cosl. Bcow L, Scoville, Muskegou, lumber, Hobr Jonny Lind, Grand $aven, lnuber, Hebr Minalo Slausen, Duifalo, coal. Sebr Warren, Muskeigon, huabor, Hclir Gom, Savgatuck, sfaba, Behr Mary Booth, White Lsko, lumber, Sehir Mariner, Cotrovillo, wood. Stoam-hargo Kow Ern, Grand Haven, towing, Bargo W, Buirn, Grand Havon, lumbor, Bargo O, F. Allen, Grand Haven, luniber. Hehr Malne, Ludington, Jumbor, Scur J. A, Travis, Muskegon, lumber. Hehr Harrlet Ann, White Lake, lumber, Sebr Quoen of tho Wost, Muskegon, Tumbor, Bebr Ebcnoezor, Almapeo, railroad {ics, Sehr 0, Gordon, 8t, Josoph, lumber: Bebir Peorla, Manfateo, lumber, Belir W, B, Allon, Baffalo, coal, Selie Abgil, Wiliots B, wood, Behr Willinm Bturgos, Escanaba, fron ore, Hebr Milwaukeo Bello, South Buamico, unber, Bebr Topny, nTuskogot, lumbor, Bcbr Lizzo Doak, St, Josoph, lumbor: Bebr James G, Unrrison, Erie, coal, Bebr Ida, Toriogo Luke, lumbur, chr E, X, Davidaon, Buffalo, coal, Behr 3. B, Nowland, Manlstee, Iumbor, Scbr Miuncaots, Menominee, lumUer. " Schr Miner, Grand Havon, limber, - Bclir Driver, Ludington, lmber, Bebr Potomnc, Milwaukeo, {ron-ore, * Hebr Bololt, Pentwater, lumber, - Bebir Z. @, Slmmons, Maniateo, lumber, Helir Xato E, Howard, Portago Lake, lumber, Schr Madlaon, White Lako, lumber, % Beow C. U, Dutts, White Lako, lumnber, Scbr Sea Gom, Grand Haven, lumbor, Bchir Col. 1. 0. Heg; Portage Lako, lumber, Trop Arizoun, Bualo, sundrios, : Prop Oity of New York, Ogdensburgh, sundries, Prop Plymoutk, Schr Fashlon, X1 BuiTalé, anndrios, Tuskegon, lumber. Prop Coloradh, Buffalo, undrics, gehr Glad Tidligs, Mutkegon, lumber, Scbir Fulcon, Ludington, lumber, Sclir Minerva, Musliegon, Inmber, delie Myrtlo, Btuskegan, liunbar, Selir Margarat Dall, Mubkegon, lumber, Trop Fouitain City, Buffalv, sundrics, Bow Laurol, Duck Lako, lumbor, Stur M. Gril, Manistoo, lumber, . Bargo Wiudsor, Maniateo, lnmbor, Bebr 0, Harrison, Whito Lake, lumber. Sehr Kilty Grant, Saugatack, Tumber, Belir O, Shiaw, Sangatuck, tan Vark, Belir Mary, Grand Rtiver, luwber. Seow Bilver Clond, Loliand, wood, Sebr Prosto, Ludlngton, lumbor. 8ehr A, J, Mowry, Lincolo, lamler, Stm Bgo Aunlo Laura, Muskege, lumber, Behr Henton, Wallows Pior, wod, Bim Dgo M, A. Robortson, Crliing’ Inlet, Tumbor, Bebr J. N, \Wiilard, Muskegen, lumibar, Behr Conquent, Miskegon. lumber, Belir Boventh Ohio, Muskegon, lumber, Hcow Mngdalens, White Lake, lumber. Prop J, L. Hurd, Lake Suporior, sundrles, Belr Floronce, Grand Haveu, lumber, Hehr Tel-Culor, Holkind, ataves, Tug W. B. Miritor, Sungatuck, fowing. Bolir E, J. McVen, Saugatuck, 1o ¢argo. Btoaw barge Ggo, Dunbar; Muskegon, lumber, Bargo Contost, Muakegon, lumber, Lo Comot, Muskegou, Jnmber, T iear, Guuth Iuven, wood, 8chr Black h“wk, While Lake, lumber, 9 By, Grand Laven, lumber, Bteam bargo IL E, Pufus, Grand Haven, towing. Targo Wyoming, Graud Daven, lumber, Tiargo Oity of Etle, Grand Haven, lumbss, Ber Progross, Helland, wood, > - Seh Horo Uglane v v Caledonia, Botiay Beow Lawroncd, Saugisy moreods Sehr Cornclin, Menomitia’ poms, Sohr 8, M, Forrost, Menoilims, jambor, Selir Lilgrim, Ludington, 1oy, mbor Bebir W, 11, Hawkins, Lultwigi®s, _o0q . Frop 8. 0. Galdwall, Port Huron, Fa 000" Beow Gosstor, Luko Turhor, slaba, - Sehr Tom Palno, Buugntuck, slabs, OLEAKED Stmr Corons, Bt, Joseph, sund Trop Oconto, Greon Duy, sundrios, Puap Favorito, Menominee, 100 bars fron, 10 brls tugr, Proj. Ira Chatice, Baugatuck, 200 groen salted hide, 13 (ry ides, 40 brls salt, . Scbir Gortaugo, Dutchman's Mill, 5 brls salt, 2 brls flour, 3 rl boef, 1 brl pork, Behir Lena Johiaon, Yort Colborno, 17,128 bu cara, 8chz E. M. Kuapt, Buffalo, 30,000 b corn. Bark 8, V, R, Walson. Bufralo, 33,000 bu corn, Targo Eldorado, Monomineo, Auniirica. Btmr Bleboygan, Racine, 56 hdls sheep polts, Prop Chaw, Nliotz, Manstes, & brls pork, 6 brls best, 300 bu oats, 3 tons fron. Prop Onetds, Buffalo, 20,533 bt corn, 2,200 brla flour, 0 bags oot meal, Schr Q. G. Coopor, Buifalo, 52,809 bu corn, Btinr Alpens, Muskogon, sundries, Behr 0, Gordon, 8t, oudph, 20 belysalt, Schr Mary Helon, Whito Lake, 60 boge feod, and sun- drles, Bark Oity of Palnesyills, Buffalo, 40,000 bu corn, Behir Jauiea 1, Bently, Buflalo, 27,000 bit corn, ‘Prop Cubs, Buifalo, 45,000 bu corn, 3,000 brls fiour, 16 Sl Toke Slehiute. Bontees, 12,068 ba wh ol 0 igan, ontreal 3 u wheat, Dirla pork, 60O 'brls oat meal, " 180 Sehr Zitnn, Port Colborno, 21,680 bu corn, Bolir J. A, Travis, Duskegon, light, Wiy 26, Lnkeo Freights, Wero modorately active, and onaler, quotablo at B{o for corn to Buffalo, and 103a for corn to Kihg. sion. Charters wero: o Buffalo—8chr J. R, Bente Iey, cort at 53(0 5 schirs Cliy of I'aincavillo and Owasco, corn on privato terma, To New York, via Duffalo— TProps Doan Richmond, B. ‘W, Dlanchard, snd Col. orado, corn sud oats, propa Fountain City and Plym, outh, corn, through, To Now England, vis Ogsdon~ burg—Profe City af Now York, corn st 250, To Kingaton—Sohr Elvina, corn at 1030, To Port (ol Voruo—Schr JEtns, corh at 6, To Erlo—Prop Arl. zona, corn, {brough, Ospacify cqual to210,000 bu corn und 45,000 bu cats, Vosscls Pnssed Dotrolt, DeTnors, Mich,, July 20.—PAssen Ur—Props Qor- don, Campball, Edst Saginaw, Toledo, .‘{nhln{? biaric Porana ; sches’ N, B, Blondurt, Burton, Portland, 0, Ranb, Ohamplon, G, H, Walker, Mismi, Duniies, Georgo Davis, Qlobifor, Entorprise, Washington, TARRED Down—Proph Idalio, Bt. Albans, Alusks, An. plo Young, Russia, Java, Anio Cralgy ‘Linckot! knd barge, Visnny sud bargo ; bark E, Jonc ; sclirs On, dun, 'Tolly Togers, Amprican, ioboko, Amoske Baplo Lea, Bzm ¥lint, Abbio dndrows, B, F, Wa ‘Winp—Houthwest, DeTnots, Mioliy duly 20,—Passen Ur—Prop Wing. Tow: sclirs Motefoy, Montealun, ¥, Filahior, Metzopoity s%dmw";?“l"'wgg' 2 Olty; schrs . ’ARskD DowN—Irop Evorgreon + sclrs Bo; tor, Wilbor, Finnoy, Wood. s v Wao—Soutliosst, 1inots River nud cannl Newss Speciad Dispatoh to Tl Clicago Tribune. TABALLE, July 90.—Tho canal-boats Ohicago Tolle and Montauk arrived from Poru, both loaded with corn, aud the stmr Lancastor arrived, towlng the canale boats unter and Caroline, from Kingston, both lgad- od with coal for Ohfcago; thu cauul-bootd Doorfiark aud Montans, from Peords, aud thy Bannor, from [La- con, all light, for LaSnllo; aud the Gonovove, fiom Ohiflicothio, with corn for Chicago, Tho prop §, P, Cortor doparted, towing tho canl-boat Gold Mun{or, with lumber for Poorla; also the prop |I- linols, fowing tho caial-boat Ildoro, Witl Jumber for Uenry; flo _canal-boats Ustovilve, Montauk, and_ Ghlcago ~ Bolle, all with *cfyrn for Oblengo, and the GaroHuo oud Hunter, both Wity Kingaton coal for Olifenga, all pasacd into tho eafial, Tho propollor 8. P, Cartor, towing the caunl-Yaat Gold Huntor, with lumber for Pooria, the Il withh lumbof for Lonty, and the Naufilus, witl and_morchundiso_for LaBalle, all passed out of ro uuunt o O GEb i fout niny Inchen'of watar on tho s sill of Lock 16, and fonrfeot six inchoa roportal) on Kiclkapuobar, ' Rivor fallin; OANAL OFrI0%, OHICAGO, Eaat Morris, 143 tons coal . bu_corn ; Jenulv, Morris, 5,000 bu corn, 2,000 bu hata ; A, Woolson, Jolict, 0,000’ b corn; Cayuga, Rojmao, 8,500 bu corn ; Delle France, Morrls, 8,000 bu dorn ; Sherman, Sences, 6,000 bu corn’; Atlantio, [More 800 bu_corn ; Allda, Joliet, 75,000 tbs omptyf Lar- prop Whalo, Henry) 8,800'bu'corn ; Friendsnip, 'y, 6,460 bt corn 3 Mouareh, Lockport, 5,710 by 740 b Qummereo, Otlawa, n_corn; Ip, T, Fuly a0, —Anarezo—Thr 3 Onondogy, Morrls, cort 3 Wright, Morris, 0,160 bu cors § Paramount, Laalio, 0,000 bt corn, OLeatzn—T, Monard, Oltawa, 13 m lumba Ryburn, Marscillos, 6,017 £t Inmbor, 90° m siing| bila 6alf's Wayo, Mokris, 62,202 £ lumbor ; 8 Jolet, 130w wiinglos ; LeGeau, 73,89 41 ¥ 60 m nhingles, 20 Jats, 300 brla salt, 23 brla o, 1, o poper ey, 90 'Drls eall derln s il Loctiport, Ught; Harviet, Bunoca, 1,000 £ humboley ‘| ately low. SPEOIAL NOTIOES, Midsummer Malarin, At this scason tho hoat of tho sun lboratos from the #oll, tho wator, aud tho filth of citles fmmonso quantitios of unwholosoino gosos, which tho strongust can soarcaly tutialo with fupunity, and which dosolop tho most dlse tromalng disonsos In tho weak and fooblo, It Iy, thoroforo, of paramount. fmportanco to Invlgornto tho body In hot wonthar. * Vilalize and atrongthen tuo stomnol and tha porvons aystom with at lonat two dosos por dny of Hostate tor'a Btomach Bittors, and you will, bo kura to asonpo tha fits of indigostion, nttacks of bilions colls, afck hends schos, diarrias and dysontorien which aro so common at this soneon, 1o prudont, A Nitlo oaro and fornoaet ox- orolaod now may provent Sour boing proatrated by romite tont or Intarmittont, faver, or by amnlo buwol or livee complaint, (broughout the fall. Vhon viger Is voring out of avery poro undor tho rays of an almost vortical sun, this gonlal vagatabla tonta suppiics ta the norvous systom alimont whiolt onnblos 1t to withstand the drnin. ON TIE BREAKFART, LUNOIFO! 5 SOFPRITRLS ™, DINNLR AND LEA & PERRINY Worceslcrsmfa Sance 138 INDISPENSABLE, JOXIN DUNCAN’S S0ONS, Now Vark, Agonta for tho Unitod States. LARGE REDUCTION Liaies" Fashionable and: Seasonabls SUITrs. PIELD, LEITER & 0, State and. Twentieth, and Madison and Market-sts,, ‘Will offor on Monday, July 28, thoir entire assortment of Suits, Dresses, &o., at about half price, to close. Handsome Linen Suits, §5, #8, $10, #12, §15, and §18. Grass Cloth do, $3.50 to §8. Bilk and Grenadine do, proportion 8tuff Suits, $16 up, and o handsome line of Cashmeore Mantlos and Sacques, without regard to cost, All faghionable and desirable goods, e LAKE NAVIGATION, | GOODRICE'S STEARERS Tor Racino, Milwaukeo, Sheboygan, ete., daily, Bundnys excopled, 9 u. m. - Saturday Excur- sion Boat for Milwaukec, ete., do'n'l Ieave une tild p, m. - - For Grand Taven, Grand Rapids, Muskegon, Bpring Lake, Froitport, Manistee, cte., dfiloy: Sundays excepted, 7 p. m, For 8t. Joseph, Daily, Sundays excepted, 10 a.m. Saturdays, Boat don't leave until 11 o, IS For Green Bay Ports, Monilny, Wednesday, and Friday at 7 p.m, Wednesdoy's Boat gocs to Eseanaba, For Green Bi_i}’_,fifll}flllflllfl, 4. A 00D TIBE FOR AN EXCORSION TRIP, The Elagant Upper Oabin Bteamor, D ER P = IR I, Will foave Goodrloh's dock, faot of Michigan-a., Mondey Evening, July 28, at 7 o’el’k, Touching at Intormodiato Do, nd conneoting at gaba with Porjaiae Ratirond o "NeOKuNeE, ¥ars, Maals and lorths tnoludad, only A8, T ' BOTLIN, Supt. FOR BUFFALQ, And Intermediate Points, Wastorn Tranepartation Oompans's steamer ONEI! Capt. Drake, leaves dock foot uf North fi:&%‘o.nflfl: Satnrday, dufy 25, at? p. m. Compans's, stoamer FOUN. ‘ostorn” Trunsportatl: TAIN OI1'Y, C: oavo dook foot of Nurit vada, J; m. ay R R AR A A nfon Line steamor ' 12 t. 3 leava dock Toot 'of ‘Beuth Lasalio-be., Wodnosing: Jun 80, at7p, m. Yor Burths and Passogo Tlokats, apply at 76 Cann comer Sadiaon, SApLE 3 A A B tagor Agont. FOR LAKE SUPERIOR. Lake Buperfor Pooplo's Lino Steamors, dock betwoor 3Mndison and Washiugton-ste STEAMER J. L. HURD. Ourt. Thos, Liayd, will loavo MONDAY RVINING, Jaly 28 "R, EOh [ 3 7: Foslakt or PO BPY AusTRIAN, THE TWPORTANT ADDRESS Of B, M. BMITI, Soorotary of the Tllinoia State Farmers’ Assoointion, beforo tho Live ingston County Farmars® Associntion, At Pontiac, on the Fowrth of July, Yanow roady for dolivery aa an B-pago docus mont, for general circulation. Farmers’ Clubs and Grangoes will be sups plied at tho following raten: Binglo Oopios.. 2 ota. | 100 Oopiea...75 cta. mgol;) lop! of ll piea...75 cts. ios......,16 ots. | 1,000 Copics. ...$5.00 Address J. W, DHAN, Room 6 Tribune Building, Chioago. PROPOSALS. Wood ad oal for fhe Conndy. OFFIOZ BOARD OF COMMISEIONENS OF GO0 on..} OICAGO, July 4, 1873, By dlreation of the Jonrd of Commul nty, publio notico js heroby given that so will bo rocolved until Monday, Augut n0oom, for Wood and Caal, toba dolivered for the uao ol tho County, aa follows, to wit: 1. €50 cords ot boooh body wood, four foot long. The wood ta bo delivered in half-cord loads, upon the ordor ot tho County Agont, at such places within tho city as he aball diroot. 2. B,000 tons of soft coal, to bo doltvorod fn the city in hait-ton loads, on tho order of tho County Agent. B. 900 tona soft coal, 76 tons hard eoal, and 800 tons hard coal sorecnings, to ba dolivored at {1 nasno Asye 1um and County Poor Houso In tha town of Julferson, 4. B0 cords booch bady wood, four feot long, 400 tons solt conl, 20 tona hard cosl, and 200 tons hard coa) acracn- ings, to bo delivorad at tho County I{ospital in thio Oity ot Chicago, ¢ . 700 tans soft coal, and 30 tona havd cool soreenings, to o dolivorod at the County Jail and Oriminal Court Bailding. Tho blds for coal ahall spooify tho partioular coal, ay Wilmiugton, £0., aud the prico por ton far esch kind, "['ho Connty ronorves tho right o rucelyo more br I tho goal and waod i tha Iioard miny doturninu, tho a ¢ ilnato. smounta bolng only an sstlistes, Al proposal Lo senled o Oahiaednangs f Gook Gounty,” and indorssd or coal, a8 tho case may bu), an sata for Woade T804 With tho Clori of said Hoardy L Dantt’ cobarvos tho HIRLE L0 rojoct any and all pra. pouais, ‘Tho sutiraet sl Sontinis fos o borod o 039 ‘accoptanes o k Joar from the aooolERet ) M BEEAR, Connty Olork. LOTTERY. RAERI L Ly L DR ‘Oiotal Drawing of tho Dally ombinations GLARS NO. 107, FOR JULY 28, Wy, 3 Boaloct s Seaeud o (syomt. " Lirizca’ crgiod and flgs. soouted o doposit, casiiod and lnlfifi-?m'mf Zivon by tho Sunted ¥ 0. DA B Reodhmi s o, Dk Bty Dok oome 8§ and waill Clarkout, ; Ok 451 Bodgwiok-uL., 118 Houth Canal-at., 47 Traioh Btato. e e ——————— DISSOLUTION NOTIOES. DISSOLUTION. Natice 16 Noreby given that thofirmof Tubof & Erta has been dissolved by mutual cvusout, Oaw, K. Erta #ilt collost all utstanding accounts and pay all labilts tox. LIEQDORE &, IMUOL, CLIA, K. BITZ,

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