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men's duty to find this young woman, to provide for her, to pey fox ‘ter dresses and bonnets and dainty little frip- jes ; to amuse her, console her, and advise Jer; to take care of her when sha is sick ; to gettle the bills for the meat, fish, and vegeta- les, aswell as the creams, caramels, and com- fits which she eats ; and to guide and protect er in the home ; and for this she is to man- sgethe househiold, to sdorn end besttify the ‘home, {o present him with the wealth of her jove and the olive-plants which are the fruit- sge of that love. ‘When this does not hap- peny’ when the young man does not make the search for the young woman wait- ing for him because the tripwill cost him too much, and the expenses after ho kas found er will collapse his exchequer, then there 3 sumething radically wrong, and the calling the young 1080 cowardly does not explain it ar salve the problem. } We do not propose to solve the problem, of lesst ot present. The parties immediately interested are most competent to discuss it. fhe young men who decline to go into mar- sisge for pocketbook reasons can state their seasons much more explicitly than we can for them. The young women who are look- fng out of their lattices wondering why the young men do nct come, can certajnly ex- plain their condition better than we can. Txz Cmcaco TRBUNE, having the interests of both at heart, offers its services as 8 medi- am to bring them together, so that, perad- yenture, & little friendly talk between them msy remove the obstacles which now them one from the other. We would like to hear from the yourg men, both those who indulge in luxu- yiss snd thoss who do mot; also from the young women, whether they be plain or pretty, fashionable or unfashionable, rich or. The only conditions TaE TRIBUNE ill make are that the commurications shall be brief and respectful, and that they shall e socompanied by the names of the writers, ot for publication, unless so desired, but to estgblish some responsibility. At the same time and upon the same conditions, we ten- der our columns to the married people for fhe discussion of the financial aspects of matrimony. Meanwhile Tre Trmsusz will &d the discussion by such reflections as may oceur to it, hoping with the help of fhe correspondents to solve this distressing nd distracting problem. the “The smoke-bogrimed City of Cincinnati came pear loging one of its brightest ornaments 8 day crtwoago. The ornament was an Alderman. eonspicuous among bis fellows as representing the popular element of Cincinnati society. In plain terms, Ald. Dicxs is a ssloon-keeper, and wasnearly killed in & drunken broil. Among tle patrons of bis gin-mill were two of his con- sitnents who joined him inaquiet game of »gemuncx's Own,” with melon seeds for checke, st 10 cents each. Betting rsn high in Ald. Ticxs’ saloon, and Bo also did the altercation which followed a bet. One of Ald. Dicks’ con- g:ltuents pamed LyxK drew a revolver after the manner of tho Miesissippi River player, and ensually fired it at & friend namea NEALUS. Ee miessd his 2im, and the Alder- pan from the Third Ward canght the Lullet in his hip. The Third Ward, however, will not lose itsable representative, for Mr. D-cxs finds the place too lucrative jnst now o think of retiring. Wiule this little incident in eeciel life may be thonght interesting as sug- gestive of & simpler mode of poker-playing t3an the upper ten wonld think, it also indicates # triefer way of giving eimilar wards in other eities a chance of rapid rotation in office for thorr representatives. e e Still tho amenities of the newspaper profes- &0 in New York continue to excite the admira- ticn of the outside world. Hot shot is poured tnio the new Tribune building from all quarters. Yiedinis fearful. The besiegers themeelves ars hidden from view by the dust and emoke thzy have raised ; but the besieged remain plaio- Iy m view, disdaining equally to dodge the mis- silag of the nssailants or to bang out s flagof truce. Nobody understands exactly what the sowis all about. Now the gorgeous ealoon in b3 basement of the Tribune byilding is the ob- fect of attack; and again the howitzers ars trained to bear upon Mr. JAy Gourp, who is piosumed to be the real commander of the Ctadel ; but whether the Tall Tower bar-room or the Tall Bower tar-room is more offen- mve remains an impenetrable mystery. Alr. WerzLaw Re's friends claim that his chief fault, in the eyes of his contemporaries, is his practice of publisbing an excellent newspaper. Tiis, also, is & disputed point. Takingitall in ull, it is a pretty fight, but coafusing. ‘¥r. Beecren's paper has passed into the bends of the new proprictors. He will hereaf- ter devote all the timo Lo has to spare from preaching to building it up. It needs attention _fi same kind badly. Its circulation has dimin- izhed from 132,000 to a comparatively low figure. hetronble with it is, perbaps, aglut in the chremo market as much 28 distrust of the editor- In-chief, inspired by the lste scandal. Chromo Curistianity is not o popular as it occe was, and the Christian Union is supposed. by many. whether rensonably or not, to represent a kind ©f union which is not as yet greatly esteemed. e g Dealers in green groceries will be delighted to Xnow that one of the moat eminent English phy- sicians has discovered that asparagus and celery, 1t taken in suficient quantitizs, are specifics for soute rheumatism. As the disease is one of the worst in the world and the remedy ome of the moat delightful, we have no doubt that Florida £0d other resorts of the rhenmatic will speedily Yo converted into aeparagus and celery gardens, nd thus atone for the colic and cholers morbus £ has been sending us by the car-load all sum- Rer in the shape of watermelons. Yeaterdsy was a good day for the poor young mun who couldn’t go to the fashionable summer- temrts. They expended a good deal of pity on the miserable creatures, shivering on balconies andin airy sammer-rooms, who songht plessurs ::!nnd it not. Good, economicsl weather, i 8 Must the sovereign paople sequestrats the nallrauds, after all, or will the managers pass wlongeome of that pescb-glut from Baltimore a0d Kyw York on reasonable terms ? This is no tifliog matter. Grain-carrying is one thing and Peach-tarrying is another. Cheap transporta- tion for peaches we must have. Somesody suggests that Hawstear Hawrod's Bead omht to be put on the postage-stamps, 20 1hat everybody msy have the pleasure of punch- Ing it vhen a transiont newspaper is to be THE CHICAGO TRIBUNE Few Fork Graphic., The size of Chicago newspapers is rather as- fooiching. For instance, last Sunday, at the vary dullest season of the year, Tar Cmxcaco Xz, which ordinarily issues a sheet fully he size of the New York Tribune, consisted of E3teen pages, of which at leest six were msde TP of advertisements. It is undonbtedly true that paper is very cheap just now; but that Slone does not account for the size of the Chi- £850 papera. The truth probably is that there is 8 vast deal more of advertising done in Chicago i propartion to its size than there is in New Yotk Here, where g0 much of our business is Wholeasle, thers is comparatively vary little sd- Yertisiog dons. A roally grest merchant like Stewart advertises extensively, but the &maller morchants lack his courage and scute- . Moreover, the nawspapers for the most THE CHICAGO- TRI1B part continue to charge the same prices for ad- vertisements which they charged during the War. Chicago merchents and Chicago publish- ers are wiser, and hence that city ia gble to boast of such large snd piosperous pspers sa THE ‘TRIBUXE and its rivals. PERSONAL, Judgs William J. Whaling snd wife are stop- ping n.th? Palmer House. Gen. Hoffman, of the United States Army, is & guest at the Palmer House. William Wilkinson, Windeor Hotel, New York, is a iate arrival at the Palmer Honse. Gen. James Craig and family, of St. Joseph, Mo.. are stopping at the Grand Pacific. Col. A. De Grafl, of St. Paul, the veteran rail- road-builder, is a guest at the Sherman House. Johu Bright is zot a reminiscencist. He de- nies the report that he is engaged on a volume of memoirs. - Quail-fellow, weli met! The game seacon has begun; leastwise, they are selling prairie-chick- ens abour town. & AIr, Sheridan Wait has been elected Preeident of the Calumet aud Chicago Dock Compsany, vice James H. Bowen. «Clara Morris bas been doiog Cork,” says a newspaper note. Are we to infer from this that she has turced negro minstrel 2—Albany Argus. He has been found—the man who wouldn't take an umbrella when it was offered to him. Hae is the fellow Miss Vokes knocked down with her snub-nosed instrument. Alexandre Dumes’ little dsughter, aged 6, asked him “What is the difference between & woman and a man?” They were in a railway carriage, and he told her that the difference is that 3 woman always has extra baggage. Disraeli ate humble pie in Parliament just be- fore the adjournment. The London Times says Dbe appeared 88 the benchman of Plimsoil. What s position for the elegant sutbor of *Vivian Grey ™! Poor Dizzy is going into s dechne. A class of twenty-five Mormon girls is stady- ig medicine. Now if an enterprising young meo will stady Mormondom and embrace these opportunities, wo eball ses how the population will increase whoa there are no bills for medical attendance to check it. The play of **Money™ always begins whena ‘man reaches the second stage of his experience— which is commonly understood to be matrimony. Money makes the mare go; and the woman, too. Tne bappy bridegroown surrenders his money and hia life tozether. Sic transit pecunia. Writing of Col. Baker, the Englis officer con- victed of assault upon a lady, the Tribuns of Minneapolis remarks: “A momentary indis- cretion rained his reputation snd his prospects for lite.” * Momentary indiscretion™ is rather smild wayof putéing.it. That is Bill King's paper. A tramp called at & house in Norwich, Conn. the other dey, and, after being fed, asked if the man of the house was at bome. *‘No," replied sbe who bad served him, *but I'll let you know mighty quick that the woman of the house is at home;” and, tsking down an old sword, she started for him, but he escaped. The Rev. Dr, Tiffany, of the Trinity Methodist Church, haviog been called East by the serious illness of Mr. Tiffany's sister, the Rev. Dr. Honry 'W. Warren, of Brooklyn, will occupy his pulpit to-day. Dr. Warren is one of the oldest snd most distingnished of the Methodist clergy of this country. She is young. Bhe is fat. With a weed in ber month And s weed in ber Lat. What's her name? Who is she, anyhow ? This poetical description by s Saratogs corre- spondent is maagre and unsatisfactory. Honest and unsuspectiog men would hike to know who the weedy female is, whence she comes, and whither she goes. Mark her ** dangerous.” A queer civil funeral, that of Cloris Ponton- nel, the little son of & wine merchant, took place in Paris the other day. Two persons carried the cofin and abous twenty persons followed. At the grave the boy’s father delivered the follow- ing address: *‘Adieu, myson, adien, citizen. for you were a citizen of the future—not bap- tized! Now, thon hast returned to nothingness, for there is no roul. Become manure; there is need of it for good wine.” Another wealthy man, Mr. Hillard Carpenter, of Evaneville, Ind., is golog to bestow an im- menso fortune upon & new college. He has it written down in bis witl. The college is to be for the homeless and friendless, and tmition will be free. The idea is an advance in the right direction, and, if means are furnished to carry it out, & great want in the West will be eupplied. Butit will probably come to nothing. Every student it receives may be drawn from a better institution. Miss Marie E. }McLane, of No. 877 Michigan avenue, left this city on Thuraday evening in compeny with her cousin, Miss Donnelly, for an extended vieit in Rochester, N. Y., and vicinity. On the day of her departure Miss McLane gave a dinger-party to a number of her former school- ‘mates, including Misses Carrio aod Rose Morris, Miss Carrie Fletcher, Miss Lu Washburn, Aiss Ells Hancock, and Miss Mills, of Bterling. A liberal lunch-basket and several hundsome bouquets were furnished by the gentlemen to cheer the yonog ladies on the way. Varions American pewspapers bave under- taken to say what would have bappened to Col. Baker if he bad been an American and had put #n American lady in dapger of ber life by at- tempting 2n outrage upon her. One says that he wonld have been Iyrched on the spot; anoth- er that he would have bad his salary raised ; and & third that he would bave received s punish- ment a8 sovera through the courta 8s the real Cok Bakor did in England. There is still anoth- or judgment which may be more correct than any of thess. An American who' should do &8 Col. Baker did would likely te subjected to & Leavier fine and no imprisonment all. Ts it not characteristic of American justica to compound all crimes, except murder, thieft, and aotual bod- ily injury, for money ? The announcement of Mrs. Lincoln’s partial restorstiun to health will be received with pless- ure by everybody. A correspondent of the Post and Mail, who has been visiting in St. Charles, sends the glad news. Mrs. Lincoln ia now well enough to visit her sister, Mra. Edwards. in Springfield, and she will probably not return to Bellevue Place at all, as some feeling is mani- fested by her friends, who wers opposed to her incarceration. Mrs. Lincoln visited a fortune- teller in Bt. Charles a year or two ago. She gave an assumed name, and the clairvoyant immedi- ately pronounced her to be * Abraham Lincoln’s squaw,” to the astonishment of averybody in the room. The fortune-teller and Mrs. Lincoln had never met before. After that time, they contin- ued fast friends. TOTEL ARRIVALS, Patmer House—E. A. Colemnan, Boston; &. W. Burroughs, Maseachusetts ; Th etto ; George S. Rice, New York: Thomas C. Anderson, Louizna. cinnat; Gen, Hoffiman, T. 8. A. 3 C. A. Tingle, U. 8, &% Theodore Pitt Cook, Oneida: W, J. Whaling, : George W. Homas, Jr., : Judge £, Rand, Indianapolis ; C. Browster, Jr., New York; A. H i, Oaskisnd, Cal; Issac E. Hus- broack, New Jersey. . . . Grand i —John Corning, Francisco; T. Buchaoan, Utica; 8, W. Lyman, Bt arles Louis Colahan, Clevelsnd ; 8. A. Badger. Boston ; B, F. Orawl, Neva- Gx + Henry Sadler, Salt Lake City's J. D. Marks, Phil- 2deiphia; F. D. Berthel, New York; A. D, Huat, Lousvills . W. Hays, Lafayeits] ‘W. C. Clarke, New York; Alfred ' Sheldon, _Oregon: Mullar, New York: Mra, Sanger, Claveland J. W. Knox, Pittsburg B, ¥. Jennings, ton Bherman House— A.J. Eay, Springfields P, G. Leooard, A, Lyon, Jersey City ¢ ‘man, Philadelph Eennard, Omah: Ogden, lowa House—W. W, Were, Calorado ; T. W, Burdick, De- catur;_d. A. Bentley, Sheboygan ; J. B. Fiske, Bos- ton; E. D. Paonister, Baitimore; Hilgsr Corbyp, England ; . Bonts, Olncinnat! w.ax%::. York; J. K, Bl M. Tana GOSSIP FOR THE LADIES. How Mrs: McGoochen Did Her Own Work. Modes at Long Branch and Saratoga-=- A “Pull.-Back " Disaster. How the Old Lady Got Rid of Mer Daughter’s Beau---Chops and Soul-Communion. Miscellaneons Notes of Interest to the Fair Ones. HOW MRS. M'GOOCHEN DID HER OWN IWORK Brunsinck (Mo.) Brunsiwicker. One morning about two weeks ago, Mrs, Mo- Goochon besmed blandly acrosa the broskfast table on ‘her husband, and informed him that sho had concluded to discharge tho hired girl and do her own work. This aonounocoment startled Mr. McGoochen almost as much a8 if she had declared her determination to commit suicide. He had long known that hired help was neavy drain upon his meagre salary, but his wife had educated him to regard it as indispen- sable, and he bad made up his mind to endare it forever. That she should voluntarily offer to dispense with the services of & girl was some- thing for which he was not preparod. Looking st her with an expression in which hope, and doubt painfally mingled, he said: Yon—why—you can't do it, Eliza.” 4 Can't do it, indeod ! I'd like to know what's the reazon ? Lotsof women in this towndo & great desl more, nd think nothiog of it. Our family's small,—just you aud meand Henry Ward,—and if I can’t do the work for us three, T'd better go to a hospital and done with. " +What put you iato the notion 2" nsked her hosband, hardly yet recovered from his sur- rise. e Well, Peter,” she replied, speskiog in & ten- der, self-reproving tone, * I'll tell you. Ive been thinkiog lately how hard you kiave to work, and how little I bavo done to assist you, in com- parison with what I might and ought to do, and it appears to me tbat I shonld try to reduce our exponses a8 much s possible, and tho best way T know of is to do my owa housework. We are poor, just making a beginaing in iife, andit is my duty to holp you.” b= : ith o voice almost choked with emotion at tins unexpected evidence of his wife's devotfon and onergy, he feebly easayod to bresk her reso- Jution, saving that he didn't want her to be a slavo for lum, that sho was too delicate for tho task she contemplated, that all he asked of her was continued love and 6ympathy— +-Ob, that's all romance,” interrupted Mrs. Mc- Goochen. *1t's high timemy loveand sympathy was sssuming practical form. I'll dischurge the 1l this very day. But there i3 one con tion, eter.” Name it, my noble wife.” 4 That new carpet you thonght we wero un- abloto get. Now,if1 do my own workit wil 8870 at least a $100 & year, and you can certainly afford the carvet.” i +0f course, my love, if youars satisfied you are not undertaking more than you can per- form.” Sho was eatisfied, and g0 it waa settled. Mack lugged tho carpet homne at noog, and found the girl gone. His wife was gone, too, but she re- turned shortly, having only been around telling the neighbors that she was now doing her own work. Dinner was Iate, but thon it was the first meal by ber fair fingers. and he could make al- lowanco for tho novelty of ths position in which she found hersl( placed. ‘Acting on her suggestion, Mack brought home » new rocking-chair whew ho came to Suppor. They were saving $100 & year, and conld well af- ford such littie things. en his wifo returned from her visit to the rast of the meighbors, whom she had beea informing that she was now doing her own work, she was delighted with the norw chair, and daclared that they must have & full setof farnituro to matchit. *‘You know, Peter, that I will more than savo the cost of it in the course of a year, and I will feel 8o proud to know that my labor secured it.” ‘This was said 80 beseechingly, and she hung 8o lovingly on his neck the while that Mack couldn't resist the ap- pesl. The farniturs was sent down the next dsy. About thres days after, Mrs. McGoochen coaxed Peter into buying her a silx dress, and the next day eho wheedled lum out out of & set of jewelry. It was the same old plea—she was lightoning the exponses so much by doing her own work that she felt she was entitled to somo- thing exirs. Iy would amount to no more, she reasoned,<ban the hire of a girl, and Peter countd woll afford to give it to ber. Mack began to get uneu&. Was there, after all, auy saving in doing without a ired girl ? Wouldn's that sort of economy bankrupt him in less than o year ? He got a piecs of paper and s pencil and figured : ‘Expenscs one week without help: Carpet... Furniture. Dress and jewelry. $ 20.00 Total... Cost of help Balance in favor of a domestic. .. @ vees . $148.00 McGoochen was astounded. Grasping the aper and his hat, be made rapid strides for ome. Opening tho door, the first object that met his frenzied gaze was the hired girl. DRESS AT LONG BRANCH. Olize Logan in New York Graphte, Therois mot a green-room in the country where you can seo moro powder and patches, more postiches and pads, than in the parlors at Long Branch. The prevalence of postiches is especiaily marked. The mass of hair which it +was formely the fashion to wear piléd upon the pack of the head and on the spex of ths brain has now disappesred. Ladies whose types of visage denote sny Dationality except that of Greece now persist in ado ning the base of the skull with the tightly twisted Greok kmot—of any size from an English walout to s new ball of darning colton. But the great system of averages prevails in wigs 28 1 all things, and the discarded false hair of the chignon finds its counterpoise in the *low forenead piece.” For know all men by these presents, that, if tho Long PBranch lady know herself, and she think she do, she means to have a low forehead in this year of grace, whatever shapa sbe may in fature do- cido upon as the best woarfor that festure. The youth of the Bowery who was Bound to b & butcher-boy, by Hokey, or diel was not more set in his opinions than is the lady of to-day. She talks learnodly of the Greek statues, armless Miloin the Louvre, the Medician Venus, and others ; they have all low foreheads, and are beautiful. No precedent could beclesrer. And yet thess mas:orpieces have calmly stood with their Jow foreheade, through the decadea,— even through that one in which those women who were born with low foreheads wrenched out the bairs that their fronts might be intellectual- Iy high. **All thmgs come round to him who will but wait.” The Greek statuea have waited, and low foreheads are now ridiog the crest of the fashionable wave. Are there any Greek—or Irish—statues with their dresses pioned back ? Here egsin ia an oxcellent and sensible ides carried to a an ex- treme that is really tying.—I mean trying. The full gathered slart which flourished *“before the \War” was s terrible nvisauce. To hang a skirt, with ite voluminons gathers or plais, was a more difticuls mechanical performance than hanging & man. A lady was Dever sure her pet- ticoat wasn's hanging below, and the multitndi- nous plaits bad an unplesaant peculiarity called s*hikiog up.” Wheo & skirt dido’t hike up in front, it was so loog tnat ita wearer was con- stantly stambling overit. The pressnt skirt is admirable in this respect. It may bs so loog that naught but the faintest tip of the shoe is ever disclosed, yet, being tied back, it canoot trip its wearer up. Nevertheless, moderation should prevail in this fashion, as in others, A akirt tied back too tightly is subject to serious drawbacks. The atory of tho lady who has been deprived of the enjoymeat of & good, square sit- down for & year has Tun the round of the drew- m;)-'momg in all the great capitals. . iscration, too, should be used in the guantity of tournure worn with s tied-back l?drt. A bishop” is the current modiste's word for the more unfamiliar * tournure,” and, while a little bishop may be of advantage, used as an sdoro- ment to the spinal colomn, to maay bishops are oot in favor among ths orthodor. When the obeerving critic sees not only bishops of the most_portly dimeosions, but even what one wonld tmagine by their proportions to be cathe- drals and spires, and . these piled on and on till the effect ia monotooous, while in front the shackled limbs have not so much as & frill of sdorpinent, e dsplores the abéencs of that equilibrium which should be prezerved in matter s well a8 mind. DRESS AT SARATOGA. Saratoge Cortexpondence New York Sun. It is a atrange thing that fashionabloe drees has almost cessed at Saratoga. I can remember tho time when young ladies came here with ten or twelse trunks, sad appesred in a new morning and & new evepiog dress every day for three weeks. When they reached the last new dress, they never repeated befora a Saratoga aadience, but weat to New York or Long Branch, and ground them turough again. I knew two young Baltimoro belles once who, on arriving at Sara- toga, found their toilet truake missing, and they kept their rooms in almost solitary continement for five days, and finally left in sorrow rather than appear & second time i the same toilet. A week aftorward they returned to Saratoga. and stayed until they had appenred in a8 many aa* fifteen difforent end fuoll-dresa toilettes,—each toilet witn different lace, fans, jewolry, and kid shoes to match. In those times,—from 1360 to 1867,—it was no uncommon thing to see s¥eep- ing the balconies dozens of dressescovered with point and ‘Valenciennes lace costing $1,500. Tho Deltes of New York, and Buffalo, and Chicago, and Cinciunat, vied with the mora dashing belles from Louisville, and Baltimore, and other cities of the South, i 3 The mode in Saratogs this summer is not to dreas, 1 do not think ten full-dress party-dress- o8 have appeered in Saratoge this season, and these have been worn by brides or dashing young ladies from Californis or tho Weat. Peo- le como to Saratoga mowadeys more for social intercourso and rest. They do not come to stun each other with expansivo toilets and nobby tan- dem-teaws. Managng mothers come to make acquaiutances ; YOUDE ladiea come to flirt and catch rich husbands ; and old bachelora come to win fortunes with rich widows. Now and then they will taxe charge of an old maid, if her parents are wealtay sod they can have the as- surance that their future wives will support them as & gentleman should be supported. The newest stylea in Saraloga were introduced by the Countess d" —. ‘The Countess comes trosh from Paris, and is_sflectod by AMr. Bel- mont and the Turkish Ambassador. Bheappears on the States’ balcony Wi ber hair neglige,— Qropping bebind the head in sn old-fashioned waterfall, secured by & silk net. [a fact. fash- ionable young ladies now wear their hair in the style of tho dairy-msids up in St. Lawronce County, or like ttie waiter-girls on Cherry street. I'he skirt of tho Countess is worn exceedingly short in front,—say 8ix_inches from the fioor. The skitt sticks out and shows striped stockings. Behind is & demi-tramn. Tho striped-stocking over has attackod all the young ladies in Sars- togs bad. Even many married ladies have got it. Thoy say it makes their calves look largo, T know it makes msny calves lock long snd at- tentively,—especially if the young lady is plamp and pretty, and alfccts the short-drees front. Bustles behind have got to be stupendous, Thoy are narrow, and oxtend back sbout eight- eon inches,—away beyond the capacity of any Dowspaper. 1 havo saved up the Sun for eight Weeks, hoping to be sble to meet Mrs. Porkina’ reguirements, but, alas! I fear Ishall have to resort to an empty nail-keg. Daily she sings in her xopm: 1 am » young womaz named P., My bustle is bigger than me, - Hubble, dear, Idid find ‘The times I was behind, Bol just put tho 7{mes behind me. Golng to meet Flora Al H A “PULL-BACK.” 8an Prancisco Chronicle, An amusing incident illustrative of the beau- ties of the present style of feminine apparel oc- ourred yestarday afternoon at the junction of Ellis and Market streets. Coming .up the last~ mentioned thoroughfare, with a couple of libra- ry books preesed lovingly to ber bosom, was & sprightly and withal baodsome young lady, clad in the very latest agony of modern * puil-back,” and making remarkable time considering the length of stride allowed by her fashionable har- ness. From the opposite direction, but on the same side of the street, came a boy—a wild, recklees boy, with a prancing gait and s terrible suxiety to make some particular point in his mind’s eye in the shortest possible time. These two individuals had reached the middle of the Market street crossing—the young lady aoxious- ly watching the near spproach of an express wagon and tho boy with his eyes, bov-fashion, in the back of his head—when a collision took place, causing the youth, like the broken reed that he was, to go down ingloriously 1n the dust. while over his prostrate form pitched the ** pull pack” contamiog the frightened young lady and her armful of books. There was a flutter, a suriek, and the horrified pedestrians in the viemity who hsd mot observed the cause of the dieaster felt ther throats choke as they whisperod of heart-dis- ease and speculated foran instant on the uncer- tainty of buman life. But in this particular case thore was 0o denth nor desolation. When the interveniog vehiclea hed passed by, it was discovered that the misersable guy bad fled. bat there, a8 helpless as tbongh lashed to the eter- Dal hills, izy the unfortunate young lady, s look of fearful resignation on her face, and her back” wrapoed tightly about her. It surprised masculices who gathered aympathizingly around some time to realize the situation, but, when they did, helpiog haunds soon placed the youog lady on ber feet, and lo- comotion below tho knees once more commenced speedily taking her oat of sight. GETTING RID OF HER DAUGHTER'S BEAU Detrott Free Press. She lives down on Baker street, and she has & daoghter sbout 18 years old. The old lady re- tains all her simplicity and innocence, and she doesn't go two cents on style. The other evening when s splendid catch called to escort the daughter to the opera the mother wouldn't take the bint to keep stil. While helping her daughter get ready she asked : ++ Mary, are you going to wear the shoes with one heel off, or the pair with holes in em " Mary didn't seem to hear, and the mother in- +tAre you going to wesr that dollar gold chain and tbat washed locket, or ‘\;ill you wear the diamond father bought the hardware store 7" Mary winked at her, and the young man blushed, but the old lady went on : “Are you going to borrow Mrs. Brown's ghawl, or will you wear mine ?” Marv bustied around the room, and the mother said : _ “Bo careful of your dress, Mary; you know it’s the only one you've got. and you cau't have fix;?:gg'r until the mortgage on this place is Mary remarked to her escort that it promised to be & beautiful evening, and, a8 shs Euttonad her glove, her mother asked : **Thoso aro Mra. Hards's gloves, ain't they ? Bhe's been & 500«1 neighbor to us, and I don't know how you'd manage to go anywhere if she didn’t live near ua.” Mary was hurrying to get ont of the room, when the mother raised ber voice onca more, and asked : ' Did you run in to *Mrs. Jewett's and borrow lx::x"vbryl:allex l;nd :l!n? lYeB, I lIse you did.u\x:ll, , you look real stylish, and I hope you'll have a good time.” e, oo Bary sits by her window in the pale moonlight, and sighs for the eplendld young man to come and beau her around some more, but he haso’t been geen up that way since that might. The old lady, too, says that he seemed like a mice young man, and she hopes he Lasn’t bsen killed by the atrest-cara IN A BAD FIX. A citizen who was walking along the Jaockson road the other dsy, says the Vicksburg Herald, sawamanups tree near the roadside, and, halt- ing, he inquired : * What aro you doing np there 2" The man made no reply, and the oitizen coo- tinued : * What's the canse of your being up thers?” At that moment a men- rose ng from the fence-corner, zested a club on tha fence, aad re- marked : _“I'm the cause, atranger, and, if you'll wait till be comes down, you'll ses the worat flold of carnage around here that ever laid ont doors!” The citizen drove on, and she turoed to the man up the tree and continued : Pnlhn,nna, I can’t climb, and you know it: but if you'll drop down here for two minates, I'll give you a quit-claim deed of the farm!" SOUL-COMMUNION. San Franciaco Post. Another long panss, and ths first ball of the stesmor to slacken off steam sonnds. He—* Shall call to gee you in the morning.” She—* Do.” He—** What do you eat for breakfast?™ 8he (emilingly)—* Oh, Idon't know; ahops, 1 suppose. He (imploringty)—* Oh! make me one prom- ise befors we part. Do est mutton-chops for bfeAkfast, sad Tll eat them too, snd then we SUNDAY, AUGUST 22, 1875.—SIXTEEN PAGES. me—do promi jad At that moment the steamer stopped, snd Ed- ward aod his Angelina parted with the consola- tion of woul rusbing to greet soul through the medium of matton-chops in the morning. MISCELLANEQUS NOTES. There 18 one block in Detroit without 8 female gos2ip. It is & vacant block. An Indian maiden who wears army pants and chewa tobacco goes by the pretty name of » Fall- ing Water.” ¢ To prevent her lovor from ** going back™ on bis promise, & Detroit girl always introduces him to her friends a8 **my intended hasband.” The new embroidered stockings costing €15 and upwards, when worn by a young girl named Ann, might well be styied Hosannas to the Queen of Fashion. Advertising pays. A Toledo man advertised for & servant giri, and one of hiy thres wives znocked at the door 1o less than five bours after the paper was out. ‘When you observe a lady drop her handker- chief in the street and not atop to pick it up, the chances are ten to one that she hasn't got Qer stoop-over dress on. Men are erratic. Willism Homer. of Memphis, permitted lus wife to give a grand party, and, when the guests had arrived, he brought in the garden-hose and sprinkled them ont. A npewspaper-biographer, tryiog to say hie subject ** was hardly able to bear tae demise of his wife,” was made by the inexorable printer to aay, **wear the chemise of his wife.” ‘When a Vermont man found tuat the medical students had stolen the body of his newly-buried wife, ho remarked that it was a sad case, but that he had saved the cost of a tomhatone. A fashionably-dressed young Womsan, putting fancy touches at the music yesterday, was heard nging, ** Backward, pin backward, oh, skirts in your flight ; make mo look small agaia, just for to-night.” They must have been angaged, for in the ice- cream room, the other evening. he blew her cream for thirty minutes eo it wouldn't scald her mouth. Such instances of depravity are never witnessed after marriage. Aq exchange says: * The Sandwich Islanders beliove that Beelzebub walks tho earth in the form of a woman.” And now and then you will find & mao in this country who believes so too, and that he has married the woman. The funeral cortege moved slowly down the street, and, a8 sbe lett the house i she observed to her compauion: any of our folks shonld dig, I don’t think I'a wear crape rosettes on my bonuet, would yon 2" Ao Indiana girl wantedto seoif hor lover really loved her,. and she got & boy tqyell *mad- dog!" as they were walking out.' The lover flew over & fonce and left her to be chiswod up, :lmi k‘ahe went right away and married & store- ex] A Brooklyn sick girt cleared space around thirteen ears of green corn at one meal the other day, and, picking the fragments from between Lier teeth with @ bair-pin, observed: ‘If over I get well encagh agein to eat muob, I think I conld live on corn.” An English minister, whilo marrying a couple ot hus rustio parishioners, felt exceedingly dis- concerted, on his asking the bridegroom if he were willing to take tho woman for his wedded wife, by his_scratching his head snd eaying: “ Ay, 'm wal'in’; but I'd rather bae her sister.” A Boston school-girl of tender yesrs thus writes to her bosom-friend: * Dear Busie: I Shan't attend school agin until I Get some new cuffs, collars, aud Jowelry—desr Mama sgrees with me that it is my doot¥ to take the shine out of that Upstart Mamy Jones, and I'll doic if I never learn nothiog.” A seasido romaunt—Engene, Amelia : Come, sit down on the shelly shore, And hear the mighty ocean roar. Amolis, s fashionable young lady, to Eugene: 1 can't it down, you silly goose, Becouss 'd bust my puli-back loose. He hada very promising boil batween the sboulder-blades, and his wife, who was young sod beantiful, and could play on the harp, but hadn't nursod much in the bospitals, pat a mus- tard-plaster on it. A lawyer subsequently ex- plained to bim that they didn’t grant divoroes for such causes in this State. The Leavenworth belle is fraquently forced to take whisky in self-defense. At s ball given there recently, 88 & young man Was gathering her in for u round dance, her nose went up likea sonsitive plant, and, jerking herself loose from bim, sbe exciaimed: * John, ain't you got po moro of them cardemon-seeds? Because, if sousin't, TIl havato bave anoiher drink or chaoge my partoer.” +T don’t consider her anything but a pert, up- start hossy. She's got no tasta; her clothes don't fit her; ber bonnet's a perfoct fright: she's frackled, wears striped stockings, and has a wart ou ber baclk 8s big as a pigeon's egg,” bitterly oxclaimed a lovelv girl, hurling her cro- uet-mailet on the ground, and glanciag in the gimcuon of her vanquisher, who was proudly walking off the field with the light of victory in her eye.—Brooklyn Arqus. For tao or twelve evenings past, a youog man with red har and o sad look has cailed at the Post-Office and ssked for mail from the West. Disappointment after disapointment awaited Tum, ’nd last nght, when the clerk esid ** Noth- ing,” in his calm, moootonous voice, the young man turned awey, shook his fist in the air, and muttered: “1 sent her two S-cent stampsin that letter asking for ber band, and, if she doesn’t anawer by to-morrow night, Tll know that she's a mercenary hypocrite "—Detroit Free Press. o 3 The United States District Court in JoaquinAil- lor's State hasgiven $2,000 damages to'a young German girl of 19, whose beauty was permanent- 1y spoiled by an accident on board the steamship Oriflamme, of the Oregon Company, last March. The Judge gave it as his opinion tha® ** Persorial comeliness i8 & cousideration_of importance in the caso of every dsughter of Eve,” since it mav affect her power of obiaining a ** secure and in- dependent position in the community by mar- Yiage. Tho opinion must bo admitted tobe gound, and not the loss sound that it aimply translates into Jaw the famous old verse : My face ia my fortune, sir, she said. A singular wedding took place at Vincennes, France, the other day. The ceramony, was fixed for 11 o'clock in the mornicg, st which time all the parties appeared. Bat the bridegroom look- ed sullen and annoyed all through the ceremony, Slthough ho said nothing out of tho way. Sud- denly, a8 thev came ont of the church, he took his new mother-in-law aside and said to her: “3adame, Ihave just been reflecting s great deal, and have concluded that your dsughter does not suit me at all. I had never noticed be- foro that she was freckled. I prefer to go away,” and, notwithstanding her entreaties, he Jumped ioto s passing carriage and drove hastily away. He has not yet returned. Anchold widower in Moronci, Mich., hed & blooming and affectionate widow for 8 mear neighbor, and, wheu he was tajen sick, she very considerately nursed Lim aud supplied his every want. But, when ho was convalescent, she be- came aggressive, and hinted that he ought to marry her, and {hat she would sue him if he re- fused. Then the widower resorted to_ strategy. Ouoe evening wheo sno called. he was in his it~ ting-room without Jights, and the marriage sub- ect was revived. **But you know I never prom- {scd to marry you,” whined the wily widower. “That's very trae,” answered tho unsuepecting widow, “batIcan get big damages from you 21l the same.” Then there wes a chuckling noiso all around tlis room, and, asthe lamp was lighted, the widow saw threevery. razi_;e';u‘ble %Xai $;r°nsd 1adies sitsing in one corner ning to the con- versation. The widow now says she carried the joke rather t00 far. — The Plano of the Age. Julius Bauec & Co., the well-known extensive pisno dealers, under Palmer Houss, are at the present time Quposing of quite & lsrgs pumber of the favorits + Biner " planos, N3 The two zew valusble patents Istely sdded io ibis instrumen: bave sacured for 1t “L;;;:?;mfl lcal artists sd 0Opera ¢ i e m‘i‘;:q'nfiiflur ".h » bandsome piano. In swestness of tone, firish, and workmauship it cannot be excelled. Ok reons desiring s Arst-class plang,st moderats prices should not fail to call at the wareroom of Jullus rner State and Madison atreets. —————— & poet, to . & Co,, co1 Something New. The Vesta Grate, o pow invention for tha preventicn of smoke and gases from gratat, 1s now on exhibition 9t 190 East Washington streat, Al arelnvited to call snd ses it. Weciaim thero s no du&,{ smoke, oc 0 tsa of bituminou e ‘#‘.%fi“ oraisl ‘:bnmu all who feel OF eatorost ta having a clean city to call snd examine tion_or mo smokes or not. boller Finest Fabrics You Ever Saw. 1f the resder of this will step inta Ordway & New- 1and's, merchant tailors, 209 West Madison street, they ‘slegant Dew pattarns both (o Freach sod ‘i“n‘.m':i.".‘an.. ‘and soitinj haodsomer {ban they svar saw beforé THE RENDERING TRADE. Not “Rendering to Cmsar the Things Which Are Camsar’s, But the Rendering of Live Stock Into Bar- reled Lard, Tallow, and Fertilizers, Three of the Leading Houses in This Line of Business in Chicago. An Interesting Inspection of Their Es- tablishments. Nobody bLas ever denied the usefulnessof Bridgeport and its more prominent manafacto- ries. Much bas beso, snd always will be, said of ita annoyances, but the fact that tho section of the city in question contributes incalculably to the revenues and importance of Chicago sod the West, is gainsayed by no one. The employ- ment furnshed by the grest slsughtering and rendering establishmesta on and near Archer avenuo to large numbers of hard-working citi- zens sids materinlly in the general welfare, while the vast interests directly and indirectly connected with these 1pstitutions are acknowl- odged to be ot surpuasing value and consequence to the city. ‘The single complaint heard is, that unpleas- ant snd unhealthy odors are somotimes wafted from Bridgeport, or its vicinage, to other partaof Chicago. A complaint so serions should be duly usderstood before it is made. True it is that vile'smells are blown somewhers from the southwest, and the Bapitary Saperin- tandents and Boarlis of Health in the past have mado persistent_ud continuous inquiries into their origio. Some of the odors have been lo- cated in cortain portions of Bridgepors. Others, and by far tbe larzer proportion, bave been traced directly to the Btock-Yards, and to con- cerns situated elsewhere beyond the limits of the city. A recent trip of s TRIRUNE representative along Archer avenue, led to his inspecting sev- oral of the establishments in question. ile some mincr concerns were found ‘to be conduct~ ed in » stingy money-grabbing fashion, detri- mental to the health of employes and the public, most of the larger aod more reputa- ble houses proved to be managed with all possible judgment, aud with extreme sanitary precautions. 'Three, at leest, of tho representa- tivo slaughtering and rendering establishments of Bridgeport were fouandto be conducted with no scrimping of outlay at the expense of healtn. The details of the work done at these houses, the care taken to do away with all deleterions odors, the extent of their business, and much other information of contingent interest, was noted. '[he first sstablishment visited was the munnv(h house of JOSEPH SHERWIN. Mr, Sherwin's buildings and yArds are at the intarsection of Wallace and McGregor streets, and cover a grand total ares of 630 by 250 feet. Ho does an onormous annual business in slaughtering sheep and cattle, in rendering tallow, and in manafacturing the best fer- tilizer that finds its way into market. The place runs steadily all the year round, affording employment, on _an average, to_sbout 400 mon. The business_has been conducted for over eightesn years, and now amounts to about $1,000,000 apnually. .The processes of render- fug and fertilizer-making were found to bs done With scientific machinery, which has been thor- oughly inspected and teated by members of the Board of Health, medical gentiemen, and others, This consumes the noxious odors completely, and though evervthing was in full blast wken the writer visited the place, it waa impossible to discern 88 much of “off-color” fragrance as msy be whiffed in the neighborbood of any down-town restaurant. Mr., Sherwin sonounces that his house is always open for public or offi- cial ipapection, at_sny Lour of the day or night. He doesnot desire any nokification in order that he may have time to ‘‘fix up,” but is willing that the most delicate-nosed of xé:gummn should drop in unannounced at aoy o, . As an evidence of the importance of great es- tablishmants like this of Mr. Sherwin's, when conducted in & high-class manner, it was inter- eeting to observe the variety of manufactories accessory to it. Close to the slsughter-house in question, 10 active ruuning order and furnisbing employment to odditional men, and sustenence to addjsional families, is an slbumen factory, & manufactory. of violin atrings, s candle factory, and other institutions which aasist in using the refuse sod produce of the main concern. If the slaughter-houses are to be driven out of Bridge- port, all these adjuncta of course must go too. Afr. Sherwin and Mr. Shoeneman (the lstter gentleman's place is noticed below) ship their goods to the chief markets of this country and Europe. EHOENEMAX & CO. This house has known ‘s thriviog, honorable existence in Chicago ever since 1857. Its stand- ing in commercial circles is of the highest order, and its word is equal to ita bond anywhere. The manufactories and yards of Shosneman & Co. are at the corner of Archer avenus and St street, and cover an area of twa full blocks. This ia one of the oldest slaughtering and ren- dering firms in Chicago, sod it 18 aleo one of the most extensive. It does & business amounting to over 91,000,000 aonually, baving a weekly pay-roll of fnore than $1,000. Theimportance of Mr. Shoeneman’s operations may be judzed when it is understood tbat his place furpishes employment to some 875 men, that it produces upwards of 300 barrels of tallow per week, and that it slaughters and renders the lard each yoar o ovor 40,000 hogs. The walk througb this establishment was particularly interesting. Eve- rything was seen to move with perfect system 2pd finish, and it was evident that no pains are pared to insure the greatest possible degree of erulnlinus The yards were in such excellent order that the tidiest of housowives could not have complained. The rernicious gases which in some smaller concerns, aod in some of the Stock-Yard establishments, are allowed to escape and poison the surronnding atmosphere, were hera found, the same 28 in Mr. Sherwin 's place, 0 be barned into absolute punty. Deodorizers of the most approved kind were at hand 3o am- ple quantities, and the place was as wholesome to the smell as an ordinary kitchen. Mr. Snoene- man ships his goods to_all the prominent mar- kets of this country and Europe, and condacts, in every respect, a permanent and hanorable business. JAMES TORNER. 1t veing the intention to confine the inspec- tion to the three foremost rendering-houses of Chicago, the large establishment of James Tur- ner was next visited. ‘This grest rendoring and hide-curing instita- tion occupies from No. 513 w’mmmx avenue. About 130 men are employed "{mmediately in the building, or as assistanta to its business. These inclode cattle-dcivers, butchers, laborers, tesm- sters, renderers, atc., snd with their families are supported directly by the work done at this pisce. The establishment runs ail the yoar around, not having, ke the great ‘packing- houses, & fay months of spasmodic sctivity in the winter, with complste torpor, the ress of the time. It thus uffords continuous Iabor to all who become connected with it. The businass done approximstes tobalfa million dollars a_year, which does oot include the price of the cattioused up. It produces about twenty parrels of tallow, on an a&versge. for every day in the year, and cures aboat hides pér day. : Mr. Turner is owner and propwietor of one of the most complete apparatuses yeb deyised for consuming the unpleasant odors attendant upon the rondering process. This apparatus is in use in his fine establishment, and in msny of the leading houses all over the country. It is \per- foct in its action, comparatively akssp, and’ pe- culiarly economical. - Tis excollence is manifest jn the large mana- factory wisited, which, although the day was of the warmest of the seazon, was foond to be 88 cloar of dubious perfume 2s any bailding of zny kind in Chicago. Bo long aa it is evident that the slanghtering and rendor- ing businesscan be conducted in s cleanly,whole- some manner by the aid of inventions similar to that in use by Alr. Turner, # is all the more ag- gravating that Stock-Yard and other concerns Sre allowed to defile the air with their poisonous fomes. @ TGE TOREE HOTSZS mentioned abovo contnbute, perhaps, more te the well-being of Chicago than any like numbet of mapnfsctories of aoy kind. They faroiah continuous employment to a large number of men. Theysend ous products that retwn. in resdy money to the city. They ar condusted by heat business character, who have honorlblly xldmdflmmwilh Chicag: . with and enterpriss foryears. They are 5".?; all posaible saoitary preunum:‘m 0 have been pronounced decent a wholesome by the Board of Health. Thor a 1n lacatious, near the river, peculiarly conven. eat to the public. It would be well for the city if establishments of a like natare, Wwhethec within or just outside the limits, were comwailed 10 give the same cars and oatlay io their buwi- ness. Mesars. Sherwin, Shoeneman, aod Turoer announce that their places are slways open for inspection to friends snd straagerd. et iy Marble Mantels. The well-known and enterprising Gowas Marble Company, at No. 11 North Clark street, having largely ncressed their facilities for manufacturing marble mantels, and having & large stock on hand finished fot tmmediate use, and being determined to reduce thelr stock daring the bullding seazon, announce through our acction columps that Messrs, Elison, Pomeroy & Co. will make & grand clearing auction sals at thelx warerooms Wedneaday, Ang. 25, st 10 a. m., when will be offored some of the cholcest works in marble maz~ telsto be found in this city. Parties intecested in building should examins the mantels Tusedsy and ‘make selections, 8nd ba prepared to attend the suction sals, The mantels will be arranged on the main floax of the warercoms. The Institution for the Times. The tnstitution known as “ The Bryiut & Straiton Chicago Business Collegs” is doing » great work in ourmidst, But few, except its Tecont patrons, really Xnow what its present broadth and standing is, snd what excellant resuits are being accomplished, Schools of this kind, as they average through the country, are genenally considared shallow and of loose discipline. On visiting this inshtution one will be astonished to learn of the extent and thoroughness of the course, sad that the discipline is more perfect than that of any high school or nermal school in the country. I in about the opposite of what bas Trually been undar- stood to be meant by the term * Gommercial Colloge.” Interesting to Busineas Men and Families. Do you want a good furnace? 180 go to Watkin, No.215 State street, and ses the ** Radiant Home,” somsthing new. Itis constructed very similar to the stosoof gamo mame, nsving the mica windows, which radiate s much greater smount of heat than cast iron. It is » self-foeder and base-burner, and designed es- poclally for private residence, whers it will be appre. cistod. At this popular house you will find the largest iine of heating stoves in the city ; also s great varisty of cooking stoves and ranges, smangut them the wide- Jy-known “ Sample Cook and Unton Range.” In a1 here you can find aversthing you need for your kitch- en. It will payall in need of stoves, etc., to cail hers. — - Mr. Irz Brown's Northern Tour. After s year of almost inceesant labor, Mr. Brown haa intrusted the affaire of his ofcs to others, and left thecity for » two weeks' summer vacation. To- sy he is somewhers on the waters of the Upper Mississippl. His busineas, howeves, goes on the size, 1nd any one desiring chesp, choice real satate, or the vory best of suburban property, will ind Mr, Drowa's clerks always obliging snd ready to answer questions. His offico is Boom 4, No, 142 LaSalle street. e ——— We Candidly Assure those who bury furniture of us strict “ factory prices ® ‘which are fully 15 to 20 par cent below regular prices elsewhere. We mean to and can convince you of this. Sampaon, Greeno & Co., Manufsciurer’s Agents, 192 and 194 Btato stroet. g TN AR Collars. The fdea that any collar exeept s linen cme will ‘wash withont coming to pleces is abeurd ; butit is & well-known fact that Warwick collars will keep clean longor than any others, They are for sale st all fur ARTNNRS S Gentile and the * Two Orphans.” The intercat of the Chicago public in the Orphamt ‘waa imme ‘but not greater than Gentile’s, who it engoged to farnish several thousand 1n the next fen weeks, Studio corner Btats and Washington atrests. ———————— Young Lady. Buy 8 Wead sewing-machine, getting » liberal dissount for all caak, or pay for it in small monthly payments of, ., 35 amonth, Youll never regretit. Ofce, 208 Wabash avanus. ——— Orders for Dyeing, C. 0. D. Our suburbsn s well s city rasders can send dires- tions for dyelog, with goods, to Cook & McLain, No. 88 Dearborn streat, and be assured of best wark aad low- st prices, 0.0, D, Try it onca. oy Pianos and Organs. Alspge assortment of new planos and argans t4 rent, Becond-hand plance from $50 to $200, W. W. Knesast, orner Btate snd Adams strests, Chicago, Important to the Preservation of Teeth— John Gosnell’s Cherry Tooth-Pasts, the mpet efMcacious dentifrice known. Try it Far snle by all druggists. Wholssale agents, Tarrey & Bradley, 171 and 173 Randolph street. —_———————— Our Word for It, 1f you buy yourself or wifes pair of ahoes &t Wis wall & Greene’s once, you will be & regular patron of 76 Stats or 151 Twanty-second street afterwards. Spring Lake ‘‘ Magnetic” Water. by Buck & Rayner, makers of the “ Mars * Cologne. An approved, safe, and speedy remedy for dlerr) aysentery, cholers, summer complatot. and all bows affections, may be had in Dr. Jayne’s Carminative Balsam. The prudent will keep a botile of ¥o usefala medicize by them. - GROCERIES, &o. AoR o Beat, per of —Beat, K )uagsford’s Silver box. Cheeseiow beat, per it Chow Ch Craase & Blackwell FLOUR bri. Innesota Spring “"'"";’g:i’ per br. \Vinter Wheat, chol Minnesota Patent, beat, per B of o Hby freo of chArge. = ree o % Ah‘lfl l{nu of Groceries st equally orders aa if the parties by Post Office Orler or Expross, the depots free of charge. J. HICKSON, Grocer, 167 South Clark-st., Between Madison and Mowroe, - For Prices of Teas sos First LAKE NAVIGATION, GOODRICH STEAMERS. Por Eacine, Milwaokse, zad Weet Bhore porta, St e 98- m. A Good 8hirt, §1.75 A Good Bhirt, §3.00 FROM ETOOK- SHIDTS to arder & spezalty. % 4 Ply Linen Collars $3 per doa. ¢HARRIS & COBE, 1 171 8. Clark-st. GENERAL NOTICES. Salp fir Gty Taxes 1874 Cerx Corxeoron's Oryios, Boow 1 Crry Hazs,) Cmwaco, Ang. 17, 1873. 2 The sale of Lands and Lots for City Tezsa of 1074, | will coamence {n & few days, Parties wisking jo peo- | tect thelr property from sals, will core fn and pay 82 ity Colivatue,