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Tho Convicted Ones Arraign- od for Sentence. The Day Spent in Listening to Pleas on Their Behalf, Col. Juesson Makes o Long Argument for Hesing and Miller, Mr. Btorrs Also Snys o Word =The Judgment Day Yostponod. A Socond Unfounded Rumor Regarding A1d, Hildroth's Flight, JUERESSEN’S CLIENTS. HESING, MILLER, BT AL, ¢ “Tho Unlted States Court was crowded to ox- «s8 yestenday morning. It woas understool that Judge Blodgott would pnss sentence on the members of the Whisky Ring, and every dls- tiller, Gauger, and Btorekecper Interested, a8 well 08 their numerous and anxzlous friends, felt Dound to be present, The leading members of the consplracy were early on the spot, looking extremely nervous. Must of thetn took up posltions In the jury-hox, but Mr, A, C. Hesing keptIn the background. There was nothing partieulnrly exciting fn tho morning's proceed- {nge. Judge Bangs introductd the eascsinn business-lie manner, and Col.Juessen followed with an appesl for mercy in behal€ of all the whisky men, but maore capecinlly for Messrs. Tlesing, Miller, and Cooper. Hia speech wns nu ablo effort, aud made considerable impression on the audience. s deseription of Mr. Ies- fng's snflerings was partleulasly cloguent. Tmmediately nfter taking his seat Judge Blod- gett said: If thoro are no motlons I will hear the District-Attorficy in tho matter of scn- {enciog the whisky met. + Mr. Bangs—If the Court please, n the cases ‘more famillarly known as the second batch of partics who ar¢ awaiting sentence, by reason of there belug an cutire absence in thelr cases of any questions ns to immunity, nnd they only standing upon thelr right and privilege ta make such statements and showings in itigation ns thiey may deetn proper, Idesire to eall those cnscs this morning and move for sentence in them respectively. I will commence, by an un- Sevtlunding with Col, Jucssen, with the’ case of 4. C. Hesing, There wns qulte o sensation in court When this announcement was mude, Every eye was turned toward Mr. Heslog, who occupied a seat ncar one of the windows. ™ e was visibly nzl- tated, but speedily recovered hlmself, nid_re- turncd the gaze of the erowd with s studied calmnesa, * “The Court (In response to Mr. Bangs)—You may call those cascs in such order as you choose. Yoit aro moro familiar with them thin anybody else. Mr. Bangs (after conaulting with Mr, Juessen -—M\‘:. Juesgscx(l destres Lo have the cases of A, C. Tlesing, H. B, Miller, and Willlum B. Cooper taken together., The Court—That i, to hear the proof and statcments fu extenuation? Mr. Dangs—Yes, sit. Col, Juessen appears in thclr bebalf. COL. JURSSEN then addroseed the Court. le desired {o make 2 statement in bebolf of all the distilleries, and Hhien partienlarly in behilf of tho threo defend- auts named, In common with all who appenrcd before the Court, hie felt and fully nlppruclnlod tho deep solemnity of the aceaston. 1te feitthe grent responsibility cast upon lim by his duty to mako a Jast appeal to the Court,—nn nr cal not. anly to his 1lonor’s genso of fustice, his judg- mient and reason, but an appeal Lo hia heart i merey,—it last sppeal before sentence Wis pass- el upon s clients. e also felt his nablity fo.d0 Justice to the matter, and asked the Court to bear patfently with him while lie endeavored to porform his duty to his clients. 1l wished o remark, ot the outset, that he did not be- Tiove his clicnts bnd been' guilty of that which would make them shirfuk from the steht of God, or which in the hour of death would 111l them with deapalr. It was niot so much the nature of the offenae which made 1t serluus I the eyes of the publie, but the eharacter of tho Inw, and the Tieayy punishment which under thut law might be luflicted upon them. THE GRTAT MORAL INDIGNATION which hiad heen displayed all vver the vountry amninst the whisky-men would neyer laye been Qaplayed it they lad defruded the Government out” of the tax an silks, or satins, or jowolry, or _any other of the luxuries of lfe, Ifihey had de- frauded the State or Government out of the in- came or personal-property tax they would not have Been pronounced thieves and scoundrels, A fashionable Indy might go to Parls and comne back loaded with “sllks and satins and other lin- plements of foman's folly, and cheat the Gov- ernment oub of every ecut of tax, and tho ~eqranimlty of the best men and women I the country would mever be disturbed for s ment. The man, wlse, who switdled the Go! ernment out of the income or rrrsunnhpmpmy tux would still be o respectable eitfzen; but Jet o man defraud the Government out of the tax on whisky, and from that moment the press and the people pronounced him an unmitigated eeoundrel. I the woman was caught the only effect waa the confiscation of . the propurty liu her possession; in regard to the man who cheated the Governmont out ot personal-prop- erty tax there was 10 remedy that hoo knew of; but * if the distiller was caught there was an univereal outery ngaltst hlm, and the law wis not satistied untll conflseatlon, moral degradation, and fm- Jirisonuent bad ensucd, and ie more {horough tlie annthilation of the man the more thorough was the sutisfaction of the publle. ‘Thege was not only an unjust distinction by tho publicin referento to this uffense \but there wos nlso a tinctfon fu the Juw whicl was_ the true seuse of tho term exceptivinl and draconie. For that_reason they were entitled to come before the Court and ask clemency under tho most fuvorable construction that gonld be put wpon the Juw. Mr. Juessen thien went on to show that the Juws of the United States weve exeeptional as compared with thoso of other vountries. Ho clalmed that TIE CONSCIENCE OF TIIN DISTILLENS had heen made clastle by the very Government that now suuight their punishment, and thut they had been defranded by the Government long be- fore they defruuded 16 1t would be finposalble for biln to vite all the dnstances of chifeancry and nxfi)rcnshm which the distillers hnd sulfered. ¢ could only take upafew leading pofute for presentatlon to the Court, The Jearned counsel then gave partieulars in re- gard to the introduction of the Tico meter und certalny patent Jocks, which ho termed extortion Bd robbery fn tho futerest of Ring-politicluns, mid asked 11 such transactions were not lkely to muke tho whisky men retaliute when they got avhanee, Col, Jucssen ulso comiented on the fact that wlllsk{ eould he s0ld nt less rates in Cinclunati ond Loulsyllle, where corn cost mory than ft ald in Chicage. The outcoms of this discovery on the part of the Chl- cago ten, wos the formation of the Dis- tilers' Assuclution. tont first met e approval of Commissioner Dougluss, but when the New Orleans Riog was discovered the Commlissliner’s support was vw? suthlenly withdrawn, The distillers went to hiim nod aak- el bim for dutectives to ferret out the thicyes, ‘Thoy then agreed to pay such detectives os ho would furnish out of thielr awn puckets, Com- mlsstoner Douglass tokd Scerctary Bristow, when Do left thp oflice, that It was ukolvess to contend agalust th Whisky Ring, and his conduct while I office seomed to prove the truth of-his re- mark, Naturally, tho honest distillers were wholly dlacouraged, a8 well a8 demoralized. More than this, they suw revemio offleers dls inlssed for peculutions, and abnost nmedlatoly relustated,” Wus jt sty wouder that the dis- Milora thought it was BIMPLY INI'OSHIDLE TO BE HONEST wnd imannge v et alongd Was not the con- selence of the Departimont & thousand thnes ore clustie thau that of the distilicrst ‘The Guvernment had by this time dono 1ts yory best to league the distillers inte s combluatlon, priwarlly to get even with theGovernment, und, of vourae, to defraud, Col, Jubesen then read soveral oflldayits show- Inz the couryn of the distillors in the furmation of the Distillers’ Assochition, for the purpose of Vrotectlng the honwst distiilers, These aflida- Vit hoso of 11, 13, Milter, Joln M. Becrist, dulin 1, Rrgiels, Tom tuif of Clactunatd, 0., M, Rolterhof, and several others, They re- tounted at gomo length the points mado in Col. ucssen's yoference 40 this subject, snd the ;\‘l'l:‘d takon by Comunissioner Dougluss in re- 0 it. ‘I'ha Mephistophoeles of tho Chicago Whisky hig, said Col, Juesaen, curvied the jewels to ca of Lho revenue nicn, sud from bt et the Ring wus complete, The ithblophcies iy tho Wk wnd thu Meplis: n’l‘ helos of the play guve o the Jowels to the e, wmdm:‘ux u{n-h 1o ono iu his pocket, Uit saine Mop) xuam sles Legan u courso of &vueral corruptio, untilnow there waa ouly ous hat aped s wiles, and who still liad the upustial spd unfashfonablé name of an Lionast man, Worse then alt this, this man Tabored for b own enrlehment, aml for the werpetantion of A certain st of - polit- cal napiranta. The result was thy Aucceas of Mepbistophieles and hia abet. tors, white the distlllers, plunderud amd fmpoverished, wero worse off than if they had never gonefnto this combination, Col, Jucssen AW 110 Feason WIY MEPHISTOPNELER RIOULD RECRIVE ANT MOIIE CLEMENCY than the members of the recond bateli. To the latier wos dug lhud(ucovcri’ of Root'atreachery, 1t the two clnascs were to be mensured by the aervico they had rendered the country, Cot Juessen claimed that tho sccond bateh were worlhy of fully a8 much conatderatlon s the members of the first bately if not more, With- out thele revelntions, Chester Ln Root would atil] be sitting in the Collector's ofllice, withont susplclon. 11¢ thuught the Government should bo satistied with what It had uccomplished and not subject Lhicse men to unnecessary deg- radation. The chlef aln of the Guvernment had been to break up the Ring. This had been done, and po thoroughly that there was no dan- ger ol its resuacitation, Col. Juessen then read the afldavit of Will- fam Cooper, whicly set forth the fact that he had hieen coerced fnto running crooked, that to this end he and 1, B, Mliller entered futo & corrupt Dargain with C. L. Root, by which they were to pay him §300 4 month, oot allowing them to ruit extra mashes, and {nnt he, Cooper, had {n- formed Gen, Webster of this hargaln, durin this Inst winter, and that Root, to avold jus hunizhinent i cecaped to Canailn. 1 morals this wos tiot excusable, but it was atlll a very grave question when men were of- fered the “ulternative of numu;i u[l matiey or closing up thelr distillery. Besides this, Cooper was poor. All his moricy, his property, were gone, and Col, Jueseen clatined” that N wos Entitled to the cdemency of the Court. 1N DEHALE OF JI. 1L, MILLER, Cal. Jucseen stated that ho was the moving splrlt In the distitlers® orgunizatlon, amd when he saw that the Government repelled his at- tcmy(u in behalf of onesty, then und only then he ylelded to temptation. * For this the speaker lémumll he was entitled to the mercy of the otirt. Col. Juessen then took up HESING'S CASE, and_read some silidavits which hp eafd would tell the whole truth, and disclose the whole story of -the Ring. Ile ha drawn them With great relnctance, but because he folt bound o do so in the interest of hls elient, and in*the interest of the whols truth. Before reading these, he read an affida- vit by C. ¥, Pletsch, Sceretary of the Staafs. Zeitung umYnny. showing that, at the time of the fire, Mr. Hesing was worth 8250000, but that sinee the fAre, owing to heavy tosses by reason of the fire, tho fallure of the Garden City Manufacturing Company, whose indebtednueay hie hal assumed, sid ta the couflseatfon af Powell’s distiilery, he had tost almost. all of his entire fortune, and all_his stock In the Staats- "}lc;'lung Company wak pledged to secure his chts, The nflldavit of Ifermann Raster was read, showing that 1leslng was not i : origina- torof the Ring; that he never attempted to corrupt _any man, or asslgn vartien] & Uaugers or Storckeepers, Dut that he was approached by Jacob Rehm to secure the ll])Yl)hlllllElfl of 8. A, Irvin ns a clerk fn the Collector's office, and that Hesing flatly refused to have anytbing to do with it. ‘The next aflldavit wos that of COL, JULSBLN, which was ns follows: Edmnnd Jucsren, boing duly sworn upon hia onth, saith: That o was Collector of Internal Nevenue for the Firat Collection District of 111i- nols from the 1xt day of May, 180D, untll the st day of Moy, 1871, and he waw appointed to sald positlon without any solicitation whatever on Tl imfl, and while the ity'of New York for medical treatiment, and that Anthony C. Healng, the above-named deponent, wha at that time was very Influential with the Ad- minlsteation thon in power, procurod the appolnt- ment 10 eald oftice of this niMant, in the ahence of suld aflant, nnd withont having heen insuy mon- ner reguested by thia afilant g0 to do, 't ot gt whote time thingdlant ofcinted o such Collector of Internul Reveute he wos not n any manner controlied inhis ofilcinl action Ly the Anthony C. lening, and that the eald Anthony C. 1ieaing nover at any time attempted to cnrrurt thin aflinnt, and did not_attempt to “Interfere wilh the appotsituient or asslgnmentof the Gaugers and Storokeepers of the divteict. ‘That during the safd terin of oflice of this aflant, the said Anthony C. Hieamunt ol for s tLime an Intorcut i tha Keller Dix- tillery, sitante and being operated tn enlid district, and that the sald lh:nln;inmurnt\ummnl 1o Atk any tavors of this alant on belialf of snid distillery, or ondeavored to fnfinenco him to watch the operations of said distillery any less sirictly than tho other alistitlers of tho dlstrict. That not only did the said Heslng not attempt to corrupt this aflant, but that he enutiuned him agoainat cortain intrignes and rlmsc« which wete helng orgunlzed snd - concocted in kufd district for the amr pore of the removal of Gen. Ira J, Bloomficld, then Supervisor of Tuternal Revenue for the Btatc of linots, which plans and intrigites contemplated salit removal he- < entd_Dloomileld was an honest and oflicient officer, and heeannse his encmies intended fo pro- cure i hin place and stend the appointment of a Tnan whom they belleved they could use for the purpora of urgnnlzing and carrying out frauds againat the Government, And this afiiunt further ssith, that on the 21st duy of Februnry, 1871, Jdacob iehm, of the City ot Chicago, county and State nforeuild, called at the oftice of this atliant, who was then Collectorof Internal Revenne, and attempted to dictato to thiy afiant with reforence to the appointment and na- signment of Gnugors and_ Storekeopers, clajming that poine of thore subordinate olilcers then in the omploy of the Uovernment in safd District were. nnilt 1o discharge thu dutles of thoir oflices, That thereupon thin afiant informed tho sald Jacob Ttehm that ns lmui 88_he wan Collector of the sald Distriet he would choora hla own wubordinate officers, and that aa to thelr chofce he wonld not be dlctated to by anyhody, atd that he would not place his honor and reputation in thic handa of any sot of men unlexs he hud the privilege to welect thom ]‘lh\l?f". and judge himeelf of thelr Otuces and in- egrity, Axu{(hln nflant furtlier saith that he ia positive thut the enid conversntion with the said Rehm took n the day mentioned, and with reference to ct mentioned and act forth In the enld anl. , becanse he, this atlant, on the duy when suid conversatlon took place, wrote and addressed and malled a letter to the Hon. Charles 18, Farwell, thon member of Congress from sald distriet, with roforence to the amd subject, and for the reason 8120 that the sald 1ton, Charlea I3, Farwoell had pre- viously requasted this attinnt to wend him a let of ail the suburdinate oflicers in said dintrict; and that This aflunt presgeved o fetter-book copy of sald let ter, which {s atill in the possession of this afiant, and that sald letter waa il the words and fgures as followe, 1 e, 2 lie was_temporasily visitin wit 21, 1871, —The Hon, Charles I, Far- well, M. ., Chicago, .—Dran Smi Your friend, Mr, Jacob Jelim, hus just called nt my of- fice and attempted to consure e with referenco to appolutments of my suburdinate ofiicers, 1 anp- pused, of conrke, that he did o of his own mio- tion, slthough his action and conversation betrayed a atrong rellunce on some power hehind hlmself. 1 took the Hberty to tell him that 1 felt perfectl Independent of hix pleastre o displensure, thongh 1 aaw it to explofn to him the flagrant injustico of the complaints which he takes tha liberty to prefer agulnst ine, The civil servlce of this country wauld Indeed be Ina pitisble condition If revenuo oficors were to be contrailed, or in_any manuer overnwed alter the fushion of Mr. Rohm, 4+ 1 shall have the honor to call upon you fn a very few duya, und will then give you the lnforia- ton for which you asked in yourletter. Auattack of rhewmathan’has prevented me fmm- ealling be- fore. [ huve no doubt that 1 wlll suceeed tn con- vincing you that fisgrant misrepresentations lave Deen made to you with referunce (o the subject in question. Very respectfully, *YEuiusy JUzeneN, Collector,™ And thiwafftant further saith, that ho nover re. celvad any auswer tu the letter above ret furth, but it o very shorb e “after the mualling of the suine the sahl Jucob Keln repalred to the Uity of Washington, uud thot very soon afterward this st ant wan_ auddenly and unceromoniously 1emoved from office. without uny cause whalever, and fur- ther this uftant suith not, DUt it look na If Hesing was the origiiator, the ebief splrit in the Ring? And yer Rehm cume hefore the Court und clalmed that he was seduced by Av Co Ilesing. All Col, Jucssen asked was that each of these men shoubl take hils plice, Al bo usked wad full Justice, und it the Court would judge Mr HNes{ng as e de- served Col Jucssen sald he should be deeply gruteful, Cul. Juessen then referred to THE EPECIFIC CHAROES 3 a‘;n!nst the defendant fu connectlon with QGeorge Miller and 1. B, Miller, and ssitl therg was o evidencs that ho beeamne a partier e wad going to ondertuko the department, ‘The only evidence wus it Hestng accommoduted Millor when he was on the verge of Lankruptey, and that he afterwards recelved a portlon of the profits. This evidenco put M on the same Ylunc with the other distillers, 1t waa ghuilar 0 thy case of Kisaloger, of Milwaukee, & man ider nudletment wlth o fue prospct of having the Indictment nol, pros'd. It had been tade to appear that Hesing was the McKee of Chica- ro, s he denlud, and procecdud to stato the difference. Me Interfercd n the appolut- mentsof ofticera; Heslng never did, — The onl, vommon clreumstance Wis that cach luppened tu be the publisher of nllcws]m}ulr. The Gov- ernment were agread that Hesing appeared guilty i the capacity of » distiiler, THE TRUE REANON why Roelle, Junker & Co. paid Heslng so gens crously wua thelr appreciation of his couduct on the Bunday 3ueluun, and of his waning fortunes and bis need of asslatunce. 1f every man who recelved money for polltical purpuses were fu- dicted, what would beeoms o thousands of virtuous people, induding” members of Con- ressl People tight recelve money in this way, "m-{ might know Where it came from, and they might uot ‘The churgo that Mliler, as County Tréasurer, padd Vieaing » portion of was of o kind withs the preceding, beeause to corrupt his salery Miller paid Bim of blsown froe will, aud entirely without the puggestion of Hesing, He was” pnid for Delplog Miller, Tn strict morals this might not e nll right, but it waa nol shown that fleslng kuew that this maney wa3 patd for any corrupt purposes. Col. Jues- sen sabd he biad” knawn Desiug for years, and, while hie wfll‘pmml, obatinnte, and Lyrannjcal when thwarted by a political opponent, he had neyer fonnd blm anythlng but honest In heart. When he took moniy he toole [t heeatize wmqt‘llml todu it to pay his debts Incurre the fire, l»{ the failure of ‘the (arden City Com- any, and subsequent dfsaaters. Agaln, Hes- gg’s actlons were nob premeditated. When lie was dffered the Collector's oflice, he refused to take what would have made Lim the Grand Mogul of the Rivg, had he heen ro disposed, Al theee fncts showed that Hesing was NOT TO Ii¥: SENTENCED A8 A CONSIIRATOR, hut as a distiller, Perhaps no other man in the country had suffered 80 much pa this defendant, Jie waa once rich, but now puor. e was once highly esteemed, but now nohody scemed to remeinber one eingle noble quality in his char- acter, ong Noble act in his earcer. e had al- rendy ruffered such pangs as no other member of the Ring hnd known, As a last appeal, he arked the Court to remember that noble wife, stting at hone and waitinig to hear the sentenee the Caurt shoulil pronounce, and to be merclful 1o n broken reed, Col. Juessen then referred to the case of MR. REED. This gentleman, he sald, was f.lmp!ry a_hook- keeper in the distillery, and his father-n-law, 1. B, Miller, had given him the position simply to fuvor him and give il o ‘lllL‘E fu_businesy and soclety. Therefore, he tluufim Mr. R atood in the eqme category with 3Mr. Balley, of Towell, Hans & Dniley, and_he was of the opinfon that tho Government officers would agree with iim in this opinlon, ‘At the conclusion of Col, Jucssen's adires, Mr. Bungs stated that he had recelved anote from Mr. 8torrs to the effect that e could not De prescnt untll 2 o'clock to speak in behalf of his'clienta, As thel re no other cases ready, lie would like to take an atjournment now. The Court sajd he had intended to adjourn at 12 o'clock, for the purpose of having u consu tation with Julgze Davis fu reference to anuth watter, ‘Tl Court then took a recess. STORRS’ CLIENTS. DICKENSOR, ABEL & €O, Mr. Bangs then moved for sentence in the cares of Dickenson, Abel, and Burroughs, and Pahlman and Rush, Emery A. Storrs rend a statement in favor of Dickenson, Abel & Co,, showing the amount of tax they had pald, thelr average yleld, ete. With reference to the speeial clrcumstances at- tending this house, he stated that its character, and the character of its indlvidual nembers, had heen high, Up to the thne of their erooked troueactions this firm had douo its best to run strulght and deal falrly with the Government. Rush and Pahlman stood o trial, but their trinl and defense was in no degres captious. Devel- opments of grent service to the Government were made durlng its progress, ond the Jury had such scrious doubts of the pullt of defendents that they de- liberated twenty-one hours before bringing in a verdiet, Several of the jurors, morcover, had made afldayits that their verdict was given un- der a misapprehension. Dr. Rush lad fur- nished informntion and ssietance of the most important character to the Governatont. PANLMAR AND RUSIL were both members of the Distitlers' Assocla- tion, and when it became fmpossible to prose- cute tho hustnees of the distillation ol spints fuirly, the Department received from no source more aceurate and valusble infurmation as to the cxtent and eharacter of frands in the whisky centres than from Jhe dofendants. There was no reason why they should be treated different from the oiher défendantsas tho Hgltest sentenee which the law permitted should be moted out to them, Mr. Btorrs then ave a history of tho formation of the Whisky~ filu;:s‘ with o view to show that the Gover: ment wuk directly responalbly for their pxist- once, and that 1t wna ubsolutely fmpracticable for the diatiliers to earry on a straight business. Had the Government heeded the warning given by distillers, willlons of revenus would have been saved, and the individual ruin Involved in the exposure of the frauds would have been avoided. Jake Rehin was the orjnator of the Rinj fn this city. e bad reecived §400,000, while hils yletims, the distillers, wero left hopelessly and lrrclncw\hl?' badkrupt, ‘There was not a single {ustanee, whon the real truth of the matter hud been nscortatned, where a Whisky Ringhad been organlzed by tho distilers themselves, Other heads—for inatance, Con Magulre In St. Louis and dJake Rehm fn Chicago—had planned the frauds; tho distlllers were mcrely involuntary apents. It would bo o miscarriagé of Justice to prinish severely the mere agents, They had a ready beon heivily puniehed, but the organtz of thie frauds up to thia thine had gone free, gnd had encountered 1o loss, Jmu\mlnry or otherwise. Tho Governmont woull mnke nothing by ae- vere sontonces, but would rather losa conslder- able, The Wh sk%' Ring was broken, tho Goy- ernment completély vindicated, snd there could he NO MORAL EVFECT BY THR IMPRBONMENT OF TILUSE MEN. Inaabort time, if they wore free to exervise thelr culllug, tho Guvernment would reallze $20,000 & day from thelr establishmonts, where- 28, It they were imprisoned, this large revenue would be lost. In conclusion, Mr, Blorrs argued that o policy of mercy in thess cases would be wise, and would place the defendants, who had along and useful carcer befors thom, on thelr foot aygain, MIt. BANGS, in veply, eaid na those wero tho cnses most nearly analogous to cach other, and probuhly woulil bo consfdered together, and us they were il that were ready this atternoun, e desired to make a fow statements before submitting them to the Court. It appeared to hlin there hud been o singular nllflust. toparry the direct aud only Issue betore the Court, to'throw the blune on “cortain orlginating parties, to churgo the blame upon the Govermmnent, snd to mag- nify the power of temptation, with the view of hiding ronl lssue,~tho guilt of tho dofendants. Under' the Circumatauces, ho could searcely forbear from making & few remarks, In the tirst place, the avidengo had clonrly shown that tho distillers wers the co-origlnators of the whale line of frauds upon the Government. After some of them Atseovered that a combination to defraud the revenue had been formed, the Court would romembor that some of them were voluutary applicants to join the Ring. "Thls was a volun- tary movemeit on their purt, made in the fuce of the strict declaration of the law and the severlty of the penalty, snd with a full knowledge of tho danger which they fuewrred, ‘There could be very little diserimination us to the distlliers who find-thus far been heard in mitigation. These men were possessed of intelligence, and knew ‘vur!uutly well what they wers doing, As to thelr previous reputations, the hl;ihur the eharieter tho wore poweeful wasthe Influonee to remnin honorable, and the greuter should be the punishment, Neither [gnorance nor want of sauding or ehardeter could for a twoment be pleaded I extenuntion. He dig not ask an un- due soverity in thoeo cases, but he did usk that the urdinary rules of. cominou senso as appliva- bletothelugalreaponsiblllty ofcitizensgo thy laws under which they lved should obtain, und that the taw should by adimindatered with a healthy veferenco to the public good. He did not ob- to any of the statcnents made gulng to the “ourt, but he protested agalnst couns wolng to the oxtent of saying thiat temptation so fur dimfnlshed the turpltide of erlmo thut it might, by their peculiar logie, becomie a virtue, Fo tollow vur this Bus of ressunlng it would take only 8 little more temptation to remove the turpltude, ond o degree more to mwake the fraud an absolute virtusl ‘Fhe Court usked (f there was not another cuso—Keoley & Rerwln—-whick conid be brought up that aftemnon, ‘Mr. Bangs—"That §s vather an oxceptional case in muny respects, ind Mr. Hoyne adviges mo that he' I8 not ready yet. There §s ons word 1 perhape ought o say in justive to M, FRUD REED. 1 have examined his case with some eare, and 1 amy sutisied that it needs vepecial considerutlon, o is a young man, und it tiie surrounding vir- cumstanees can modify or prove an excoption, 1 am fnelined to thiuk they should be constered, T am satistied thut he had guilty knowledge of ho transuctions, but hy was'to s lurge extent but a mere agent, and in Jusilec to bim aud in furthersuea of the vanse of justice n the ab- stract, L am willing to make this statement in this public masuner, The Court, sfter requesting the aMdavits which bad been submittal by counsel, said: will dispose of the vases whith have now been presented to mu some thne durlyg this week, Tho spectators wers mantfeatly” dissppoiuted at thls sunouncament, but they Suicd out qul- etly und allowed the Court to” devote & little thule ta clvil bustuv HUILDRETIH,. 1B 1A NOT FLED. The rumor was broadcust throughout the city yesterday, aud generally gained credonce, that Ald. Hillveth bad taken an unceremonious de- parture for Canady, In order to eacapo the judg- ment of the Court In the case of the United Htates agelust bimsclf, A similar rumnor was put afioat at the thne of the Auderman's THE CHICAGO TRIBUNE: TUESDAY, JUNE 20 1376. fndictment, but it proved gronndless. From all that a Twmnens reporter could Tearn Inst evening, it would appear that {mw)ny‘n omor was equally without foundation, 18 he woa fnformed that Ald, 111~ dreth apent the whole of yesterday by the bed- stde of his brother, Willlsm_ F., Who, his many friends will regret to learn, fs very dangerously . Tho fact that Judize Lawrenee seaterdny af- ternoon addressed the Conrt with 8 view of” oh- mlnlnfz a mitigation of judgment in the case af the Aldermnn, should have been accepted a8 o guarantes that Mr. Ilildreth had not loft town. i— MISCELLANEOUS CABES, UILDRETH. When the Court resumed, shortly after 2 o'clnck, the rontn waa agaln crowded, Mr. Bangs called the casc of James I, IT(- dreth, and moved for sentance. Judge Lawrence addresse § the Court in helinll of the defendant: e argued that, as Hildreth had pleaded guilty, he was entitied to the clemency of the Court, snd his sentence should b the lightest permitted by the Jaw, Anotber renson for lenfency was that this class of of- fonses had long been regarled as one of n venlal chiaracter, and was not considercd to ine volve the samne degree of moral turpltude os fraud upon indiiduals, The Jowest punish- ment that could he fmposed would Lave na much_effect as If the heaviest sentence wis. parsedl upon defendanty an incflaceable staih would be placed upon his character from which he would never It should also he taken into consideration Yhat the Inferfor reve- nue oflicers could only retaln thelr places by be- coming the Instruments of those ubuve him by engaglig in the whisky frauda. TOWELL. Mr. Bangs then moved for sentence agalnst 8tmon Powell. Mr. Btanford road several afidarits fn mitiza- tion of sentence, The first, signed by defend- ant, gave particulars In regard to his eninaging in the whisky business. Afilant also stated that ehe profits ot his distillery were preater durlige the time it was running strajght, but that b was foreed into the crooked business by t. Gavernment ofifciala, The other afidavits thoso of Runsom Kennjeott, Washington Wi ren, and Charles 1. Thompson, late’ Revenue Agent of the First District of ifnols. They all affimed that defendant had done his best to run stralght. SPRINGFIELD, ALL PERIN 1§ ECSTACY. pecial Dispatch to The Tridbune. SenixortzLp, I, June 10.—In the United States Court today, the vase of uld Jake Lucas, the plous Pekin Gauger, was to come up, and the crookeds were present in foree and with o lieovy array of legal talent in his behalf. It would not have served the prirpose of the distll- Ters, {f they are guilty, to allow even an humble Gnuger to be convleted, and 5o all were here to encournge the fold mau. It was evident thut they were lending every effort to prevent the trial of the ease. First, the cose aguinst Ackerman and Weymer, the distllers came up, Ackerman §8 in Canads, and Weymer presented o lang aflidavit for n continunnce, which Judge Treat over- ruled. Weymer went off under the pre- text of getting another witness, in order that the casenight come up to-morrow. A emalt case wos pending, and, wheu the jury went ouit, the Lucas cuse was enlled, The Iawyers put their heade together, und the vast “array of Government wituesees who had stood around a1l dny were already congratulating themeelves uponthe opportunityof befugheard, when Lucns returned to get up in allldavit Alrun%cnmmh to stave off thecase, and, meantime, the Court befng oflicfally informed that there was no moncy to puy the juries beyond to-day, the entire eriminal docket was carried over untll the next term, and tho Jurles will b discharged to-morrow, Dis trict-Attorney Connolly had prepared for a trial of thesa cases, nnd had no doubt of securing o conviction. He is, therefore, much disanpointed at the furtlier continuanee of the cases, und the distillers are in great glee, and left for Pekin to-night hnlmy in another temporary victory. Thero s little encourngement to belleve that “the cases will ever come up for trigl now. | e —— CANADIAN ITEMS, ¥ o Bpecial Dispatch to The Tribune. MoNTREAL, June 10.—The Irish Catholle Socleties, with the excepition of Bt Bridect's, Afd not take part fu the Corpus Christl proces- ston yesterday, owlng to some misunderstand- fug with their French brothren, who bad the procession to themnaclves. Tho yacit Countoss of Duilerin Ieaves here to-morrow for Quebee, wifere she will remaln one day bafurg}n-twvc«hnx to the rea, pecial Dispatch o The Tribune. TouoxTo, Jithe 10.—The mucting of the Bpeclal Coumitiee appolnted by the City Coun- cil soine months ugo to confer with F. C. Cap ol on the Huron aud Untario 8hilp Cannl rehenie, \an called for tolay, but nothing was dono for want of a quorunt. Mr. Capreol, Bir John A, Maedonald, David Blar, M. 1., und other gen- tlemen, were I»rescut fur the purposeof address- ing the commltteo In sdvoescy of the scheme, ———— THE WINNEBAGO COURT-HOUSE. Spectat Dispatch $o T Triduna, RockroRp, 111, Jutie 19.—A dlxpatch from Springficld to<dny eays that the Governor's Guard, with o mayuificent string band, will be {n Rockfurd to sesist In the %rflud ceremonles of |n)‘lug the corner-stone of the Court-House on thie 23 fust. The Light-Guard Band from Chi- cagv, with two or three other bunds, will also Torw, part of the procession. A spectal train will run from_Chlcago, 8pringfleld, and other cltles to RockTord, e —————— 3 SHAKE ! Memmits, Tenn., June 19.~The duel which has been pending here for several days, between Cunpressinun Behloss and Mr. Moore, of Tus- cumbln, Ala., hos been settled atpleably by mu- tunl fricnde, and the partles left for honwe to- night. The difliculty grew out of strictures lu thelr respective papers, Fig! Pensacolu (Fla,) Gazette. Capt. Johm A, Guttmnnn, of the Pensacola Guurs, signalized bimself 11 an odd encounter Iast'Fridny, and came out first best. Rlding down to the shore of Escanaba Bay, the Captain notieed o strange commotion fn the water, and that the beach for o considerablo distance wos covered with fish from 0 inches to 13 feet fn longth, sume dend, and some atill Jump- ing, whlle others contlnued to epring from thie water, above which sliowed the shurp dorsal tin af w shark, cutting the surfuce as ho pursued thio fish, The sporting spirit of the Caplaby wna fired In an fnstant, and surlmglup from: hile bug- gy hie oponed his pocket-knife with a blado less than 8 lnches long, and nuhul into the water, which was thigh ddeep, where hio encountordd the shark and ¥us||n\l his little kuife into it. The ereature dd not seem to feol ity and its 1 was 50 tongh that the Captain could not rip 1ty 80 hy contined Nis thrusts while the sharl endeavored to turn Ao ks to selzo him, Finnll{ the shark left thy blade, and retreating 13 or th feet, charged back with a rush. The Captuly sprane nside as it attempted to bitu him and selzed it by the fin, which was 10 [nchos lum‘, and plicd his knife, while they waltved round, the shark continually turning li the endeavor to bite. Finding Ws knife of no avall aguinst the nine lives of the shark, the Cantain caught up a whart, heavy pleco of driltwood, which oppor- tunely cume within reach, nud as the figh threw its head out of water struck it a severo blow at the tuse of the skull which instantly stunned-it. He then drew it ashore, whero (Lwasdispatched, 1t way exuctly 5 fect in length, In the carlicst stages of tho conlllct Capt. Guttmann's three companions, who were oft in the woods at its hegimning, came out on the blutl and eatled out {u uwlarmn, * It's o whark] Come out of the wa- ter!” ‘That Prussion geve his lips thelr usual tavist and shuply said, 1 know it,” sud went on with his wmusetnent, which ho says was ni- st equal to some fun he has had with hears aud bull bisons, numbers of both of which be hus slain, ‘'A DROP OF JOY IN EVERY WORD." Frewixatoy, Huuterdon Co., N. J,, June 26, 18T.—=Dr. It V. Picrce, Buffalo Y- Deaw i 14 ds with a happy heart that I pen these lues to acknowledge that you and your (olden Medical Discovery and Purgative Pellets are blessings to the worll, These medicines canuat be too highly pralsed, for they have al- most brought me out of the grave. Threa wouths ogo I was broken out with lurge uleers and fores on wmy body, Hinbs, and face. 1 pro- eured your Uolden Medieat Discovery and Vung- ative Pellets, und have taken six bottles, and to-day [ am In good health, alt those ugly uleers bavlug Lealed and left my skin in & natural, healthy condition. 1 thought at one time I could not be cured. Although I can but poorly expresa my gratitude to you, yet there {s s drop of juy fu every word Dwrite, God's Llessing reat on you and your wonderful modicines ts the Lumble prayer of yours tuly, . Jauss O, BaLLw. When & medicine will promptly cure such terriblo eatlng ulcers and free the bloodof the virnlent potson causing them, who can longer doubt 1ts wonderful virtuesl Dr. Plarce, how- ever, docs not wish to place his Golden Medleal Discovery In the catalogue of quack patent nos- trums by recommending It to cure every dis- ease, nordoes heso recommend it but what ho dnes claim Is thir, that there 18 but one form of bood dlsease that it will not cure, and that dls- ennc s cancer. e docs not reccommend his Discovery for that diseare, yotheknows It to be tho most searching blood cleanser yet dis- covered, and that it will free the Liood and sys- tom? of all other known blood poisons, e they anjmel,vegetable,or mineral. The Golden Discov- ery {8 varranted by him to cure the worat forma of skin dlseascs, aa all forms of Blotchee, Pimples, and Eruptions, also all Glandular 8wellings, and the worat forin of Scrofulous and Ulcerated Bores of Neck, Lege, or other parts, and all Scrofulous Distaaes of the Bones, ns White Bwellings, Fever Bores, Hip Joint, and Bpinal Discases, a1l of which belong to scrofulous dis- caseh, — e NEW PUSBLICATIC T THE CHOICEST SUMMER READING. SCRIBNER'S MONTHLY A ND ST. NICHOLAS. We Invite attentlon tothe merits of SCRIDNER'S MONTHLY for July, with its wealth of Ilustra. tion, fte Scefale and whorter Storles, Sketchen, Po- emu, Lawnys; and eapecially to the new sertes of filustrated pspery begun In this number, entitled: “The Bride of the Rhine s on, "o Handred Miles in o Mosel Row-Boat,” By, GEORGE E, WARING, Jr, Other noteworthy papers are: Signing to Declaration of Independence, “ A Little Centennial Lady " or, Washington's * Pot Marjoric, ¥ Reminiscenoes of Andubon," By A GRANDDAUGHTER. Harvard University, By HORACE E. BCUDDER. * Wagner at Bayrouth,” The Stuart Portraits of Washington, By THE ARTIST'S DAUGHTER. Daniel Wobster and tho Oompromise Meae- ures of 1860, &o., &o, ST, NICHIOLAS for July completes that fnimita. bly funny atory, THE CAT AND Tilk COUNT- EBS, traneluted by T. . Aldrich, which, with its illusteations by Hopking, the finest werles of wil- houctte pictures ever executed §n this country, 18 alope worth the subacriptlon price. The July 8T, NIOHOLAS hax also snother of THE WINDSOR CANTLE PAVERS, which have attractea o much attention here snd In England: herides, it a fall of other chiolée materlal for both young and old. FOUR MAGAZINES FOR A DOLLAR, For One Dollar, the Publishers will rend three numbers of KT, NICHOLAS, _containing the story of THE CAT AND TIIE COUNTESS complete, alko ECHIBXEWS MONTHLY, for duly. poriage paid. The Maguzines are sold by all Newa Dealers. SORIBNER & CO., Publishers, 743 Broadway, Now Yorl. TEB Popular Science Monthly, (Establisbod May, 1672.) CONDUCTED BY PROF. E. L. YOUMAXS. CONTENTS FOR JULY, L. The Mcchanleal Actlon of Light. By Wm. Craakes, F. R, 8, ([NMustrated.) 1. The Causcs of the Cold of the Ice Period, By Prof. J, 8, Newberry. IIL. A Fitting Recognitlon of American Sclence, 1V. Blnsius's Theory of Stormn. By Prof. V. L. Conrad, M. A, (Ulustrated. Orgtul‘! %II!‘ Oatbs, By Edward B. Tylor, The Chromla Pater-Familize, tet. (lllusteated.) Bigotry In Sclentife Controversy, Leesons In Electrielty, By John Tyndall, F. R 6. 1V, llusteated.) Certain Phoses of Bird-Life, By Charlea C. Abbott, 410f the Uncertainty and Vanity of the 8ci- encew" By Irwin Russell, Animal Powers of Offence and Dofenre, 8ketchof Alexandor Iain. (With Portrait.) Conuxstoxnexcr: The Water-lammer — The **New Philosophy " of Heat. XIV. Epttow's Tante: The Radlometer—Sunday at the Centennial Exhibition. Litkuany Noriczs: Taine's Ancient Re- lue—White's Warfare of Science—Deck- er's Nundertjahrige Republik . French Polltieal Leadets—Tuttle's Ger- wman Political Leaders—Clodd's thildhood of Religionn—Blnckwell's Physical Busis of Immortallty—Todhunter's Account of Whewell's Writlugs—Mivart's Lessons from Nature, etc. MiscztLANY: Destruction of the Rnflalo— Distribution of tho Rotksy Mountain Lo- cust—Fight hatween a Moues and & Scor- plan—Nutural History of the American Antel JI —Datning of Streams by Drit- Jee—Where the Army-Worm Moth Loys it Epes—tilnclal Fhenomens—I'erception of Musical Toues, ete. Notes. Tenxs: 85 per annum, postage free, or 50 centa per number, Arrieross' Jounwar and Tus Porvran Scigncx Moxtnvy, together, for $8 per sunum, postage prepaid by the publishers. D, APPLRTON & CO., Publishers, [0 and 851 Broadway, New York. THE ATLANTIC Foxr JULY COMMENCES THE THIRTY-BIGHTII VOLUME WITH A Capltal Number. CHARLES DUDLEY WARNHR ' Writos of his travels From Jaffa to Jerusa« By Dr. Lor- XL K11, Xulk fng's jom. GEN. 0.0, HOWARD Desceiben in & graphic manner the Oampaign and Dattle of Glottysburg, and the purl by took In It OLIVER WENDELL HOLMES Nnrrates In amusing verre Ilow the Old Horso Won ths Bet, the horse being ** the sutne that drew the one-horse shay, ™ W. D, HOWBLLS, ., Undor the eaption, A Bennight of the Oon. tonuinl, tells what he saw at the Philadelphis Eahibition; and 'The Charaotoriatios of the International Fair are alsv treated of by au anonymous writr, MRS, EEMBLE, In tho bweffth chapter of her Goseip, describes her first night upou thy stage, CHARLES FPRANCIS ADANMS, JR,, Contributes a third paper on Tho Stutennd the Raitroads, and HINRY JAMES, JR., Glves tha third and fourth chapters of bls new novel, The Amerioan. Fhere are poems by T, B, ALDRIOH, B, H., MRS, PIATT, and KATH PUTNAM OB- GOOD, and the usual editorial departments of Mecont Literature, Ari, Music, and Education, Now Ready and for sale uverywhere, TEIMS : 35 conta 4 number; $4.00 & year; with lifo-size Portzait of Longfellow, $5.00, 11, 0. JOUGNTON & CU., Boston. HURD & HOUGHTON, New York FINANCIAL. P . el biogduimivs SUCSEREU SRS $’| 00 Invested Has $] 700 Paid a Profit of W1 t fuw sontlis, under oug tmproved ol A e I Bioeke.. Miska. roduced o nomiual sums and profisincrossad, Book coutalae Tog full Information synt on appication, TUMBRIDGE & CO., Daokers and Drokers, 2 Wallsst., New York. THEGREAT SHOW AT CHICAGO, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, and Saturday, June 21, 22, 23, and 24, On Lake Front. HOWES GREAT LONDON CIRCUS, HIPPODROME, SANGER'S ENGLISHE MENAGERIE OF TRAINED ANINALS, AND Mardi Gras Camival Combination, 5 TIMES LARGER THAN EVER! At 100 TIMES MORE GRAND! ¢ A PERFECT PANOPLY OF SPLENDOR! TUTEA U s fii)?:*lfi"‘l;‘w WL e Lo FIED, 0°BIt] BT D0CRILE, TOWALD DORIL, RONT, ELLINGIASY, CONW ity hical AN, farming the o iatnan tare K 7001 choiee col I take place sLi)a. 1. of Gentlemanly Ushers 1o | Opera Feats, ADMISS unn 21, Cushiloned hfidren unuer Mendota, 27; 10 years, 24 cents, Alro Wil exhibie at Auro; Princeton, 23; Aledo, 2u; TADELPHI THEATR THIS (TL‘ESDA;TE\ NING, JUNE 20, FIRST PERFORMANCE Of the Brilliant Eprctacular Extravaganzo, QUEEX LIB; or, TRE TARL WHO GOT THINGS MIXED, THE SHOWER OF GOLD, oy i R Supereseclent oo, b Rlchnond, Lizzle lelscs, Lulu Delmay, s, tasry Tt Wotter ot kin. ‘A{t{vz&rong. Spencer, 1da Layden, Layton & iy 1, TIH BTARS! ALL THE BTARS!! Topniar Pricen; She, A5¢, b0¢, 50c. Only Matince Saturday. HOOLEY'S THEATRE, MAGUIRE & HAVERLY Tersces. WILL E, CIHAPMA Manoger, Porltively only one week, commencing MONDAY, June 19, of thr [TNION SQI]AR@L THEATRE CO0. FERREOL. Matinees Wedneeday und Suturday, ATLMOAL BING SAULE; ARRIVAL AKD DEPARTURE OF TRATNG, Erplanatton of R‘firm—u Marke—f Snturday ex. copted. ® Sunday e 3 VA manndar excepied. #hlondsy excepted. | Ar OHICAGO & NORTHWESTERN RAILWAT, Ticke Otfices, 63 Ciark.st. (Slerman Houne ‘Canni-aireci.. corer Madton oL abd st rbe ;:go;'a.‘ 8| Arrive. A o [¢ 3:40p. M. 1a, m. * 8: 40 bl m. m oMilwaukee Dassenger . .. IMlwaukes Passenker (daiiyiin g i biireen "‘l LXprese. ... 1 44, Paut & Minnospolia k: 1. an & Winons Express » b X [ress. a—Drpoteomnor of Welln and 12, U-Depot cornur of Canal and Kinsis-sts, MICHIOAN CENIRAL RAILROAD, Depor oot of Lakest. and foof of Twenty-second-at, iyt wl A ALY Hopere e COrRer of Tian® ‘. Leave. ¢ 6.008. m.| * 0,008, M., > 4.v0p. m. Arriv GHICAGO, ALTON & BT LOUI EAURAS GTOY & DENVER BHoSh Lm0 Union Depot, West Side, near Madlon-st. bridge, ‘Ticket Oflices: AV Dopol, aud 122 Randoiph-at, Leave, ) Arrie. Tansas City & Deuver Fast Ex. ould & Epringiield 1. oufs, Sprinzdeld & Texas. i ani) Peorfs FastExpress. Proria DAy Express... Peorln. Keokink & (ir Chicago & Paduca . It realor, Lacon, Wasii'ton E£.[*12:0p, m. Jonlat & Dwight’ Accommdatnl® niin i, m. | LAKE SHORE & MICKIGAR SOUTBERN, Leave, Bt ki Night Expres CHICAGO, MILWAUREE & 6T, PAUL RATLROAD. Unlon Depots corner Madisan and Canalats. Ticker 3 uth Clark-at. § Dopot. + oppuslta Bherman House, Miiwaukee Ev { e, v Wisconsin & Minncrofa Thro! Tiay Expres.... 1 Wisconstin, Inw % m. rots Expresa. o o Wisconatn & M| an Rt | ! m.t 7:008, m, NIght Expriss t 0: All tratiis run vis Milwaukee, Tickets for At Pl and Minnicaplin are good elther via Madinon and Irairio du Chien, of via Watcrtuwn, La Crosse, and Winona. o T8 SEEIRYL, St e RT3 Rutdotbhst moat Clarier Leave. [ Arive, \ L COHI0AQO, BURLINGTON & QUINCY EAILEOAD. Deputs, luq:o:ll.uk‘z;_llu Indinna-ay., and Sivtesuth- #i., and Canal and Sixteenth-sta, Ticl Clark-st. il &t depots. S THE_COLISEEM, 87 Clark-st, Monday, June 10, and entire week, rovival of the COLISBEUM MINSTRBLS. Last week of the VATDIS SINTERS, Flrst week of the Boston Quartette, Carter Iiro: Harry Spricge, Lizzic Narmon, Chas. Armstronz, amd o Touble Company In 8 novel ollo. Brery esening at 8, and Sanday sfternvon at iday afternoon at3.” Admirston, e, WooD'S MUSEUM. MONDAY, June 10 the I coxnay 3 i greatess Dutch comedian, GARDSER, svry evening an et ey Tuta L i PR G5 londny, Tuc: v Th At Friday matineen CASTER Wanted, '80 Foung ladles for the bailet, ONLY DIRECT LINE TO FRAN ‘Trawsatiantie Compi’s Mall Steatets letwoen New York snd llavre, caliing 8t Plymouth (G. 11.) for the Iunding of agers, The aplehdid vesseli on thiy Ta« vorile ruule tor the' Cantinent (cabine provided with cieeirfe bells) will sali from Pier Nu, 43, Narth Liver, wiollows: STULEMAIN, Recalotix, atuniar, duus h.m.; CASADA, Frange) X Trice of Passige 1n- goll (nelui wined : Firs: cabln, $110 to £120, ccordig to nccomusdation; Socond, $72¢ tlied eabin F40.. Hecurn Hvken at 7o uced Tates.’ teerage, §20, With sunerior accamnio: aationk fnciuding wine, beddlog, and urenslls, without extra charge. Hicamers marked Uiis $ do not carry LOUIN DeBERIAN. Agent, 55 Hroadway, N. ¥, W. F. WIOTE, No. 67 Clar coruer Randolph, Agent for Chicaio. STATE LINE, NEW YOIK T GLASGOY, LIVERPOOL, X, BELF, A Lok DUBLIR. The General T STATE OF KL 0N ursiny, June 32 1 OF TN 11 LTy Jube X And every alternate Thuraday thrreafter, Pirfl rabin, 14§k, According 10 secommolations, Recond cab. trutes, APLY to do WRe Mall and Exlwun.. ttawa and treator Passe tekturd, Dubuque & blu Clty, nsns Leavenwortl, Atchison Exp. 10 ft. Jus Aurura Passenger., Mendota, Oftawa senger. wer (8 tbugue & Bloux Cit PRen'C i Fape for Ovalia Raniae Ll Léavenwortn, Atehinon &'St. Toseplt Exp..10:00p, m. Downer's (Brove Accammiod’ni*lizo0a, m! Downer’ Grave Accommo trova Accomuiod'n(? 1 “Ex, Sunday. {Ex. Saturday. § Ex. Monday, ERIE AND OHIOAGO LINE. Tll':r:llnn'g;‘\'l.'x T’!WL"ln!lkr;” lll‘llmrr House, Qrand iy, and at depoty 122 Silchigan-av., corne: - B A e Trots Exvoution Dulidime, Leave. | Arrive, Day Exprea—Pullman Draw- ing-Ttoom Steepini Cara, to] !\N‘v“\ urk witliont ebinnge..| R:50a, m.| 8:108. m. © Eapren = Fulin elirawlnys ttoam sieep- ars “Only line running tire hotel cars to Now Y PITTSBURG, ¥'l. WAYNE & OHICAGO RAILWAY, Leave. = o[ Amire. m. a0 &, W, 300 8. 11, a. n. * Sund; cepted. g SMORday e - YD BALTIMCRE & OHIO RAILROAD, Tralns Ieye from Exposition Dullding, fpot of Mon. Toe-st, Ticket-ofiites: &3 Clarkest., Palmer Touse, Grand Pacliic, aud Depot (Ezpositlon Dusldl). TEaturday excepiod. North German Lloyd. The steansers of (hia Combiny wil) safl ev een s, oot ot Tnirdet. utioken. i New York Lianiton, Satur. Grent Western h(flfl!llfilllp"].illt: ¥From New York to Dristol (England) direct. <Eaturday, June 14 Tuesday, dJuly 11 teeraze. £10. Cabln parcy Pxeunto irat Hsfrond White Star Mail Line, To and from Europe and America, Rates as lu an ny other first-class Line, Office, 120 E Randolph-st,, Chicugo. ALFIED LAUE \J General Westert Agent. Drafts on Great Britatn and Ireland. CUNARD MAIL LINE. Safling threo timesa week toand from Dritla Porte, Luwest Prices, Apply at Company's Office, northwest corner Clark und Randolph-rta,, Clicaro. P il DU Goneral Western Azent. P IROPONA LS, A A AN AAAG A ARAAAA Proposals for Furnishing Ship-Chandlery and Cordage for Life-Saving and Life- Bont Stations. Kenled propouals will bin recelved at this o e e dal ity Ty oyt abfg-chianilery sid corisige for tweaty-tour fiiv- g ) -boad ations foediea pum th coktta of fiuf pronosal and sched e o beoliniued sl ! ut Oswego, linftato, a Chileago, And Miiwatkeey wiso an, Ud o, 10 lirosiway, r b upon afipiication The will b bid for (i Tuts (the pri ricle i wlvon ax per scliedale), to b dulivered at the tol ied i 0 wit: One Loty gomyrisiug the uF Tour stallonn, 88 Dawepa, ST o aia > o e and une for eloven atatinns X1 hids 1iaust $he ~fur oue ot niute full four .t e, ) stations at Desrolt, Micl.{ an ub Clilcay, i, Tota, nod st specity the place or places of dalve for cord: will be made and cun THYAN proposals must bo lndorscd, ** P Furnlshing Ats for Lifo-Baving and Lite- atfons, "t addressed to-the Secretary of the ry, W uh{]‘*mun, b, C. b TIENL (0 Teject Aty o nill bids, or to walve defect A1 18 e devtin L IhTeresta of Shy Loy et il 0 do 50, Bigo SRRy i nngsTow, cretar, The proposals e, s GFOSALR WILL DE RE rlof Weshburn, Wouif. Hon 0f ] Nt w f W, J Chicag nd I the red dotlars. Address wio e, [ ndused gl T duard 1 i Ly McCULLOCH, Beeretary. esciv e roall propaeale wibiitved, W, TIRbE b0 reject any vl R Bast TABLE CU TRoger Brod. Biver-plated Spoons, Kntves, and Forkyat great roducilans A {ob 10 of eiivern Forke atreat reduclon & foby 10t0f slvce-laled Jackson. 42 Blate-st., corner PHOFESSIONAL, PETERRT RSt e T ND FISTULA posltively cured without pabn ot the use of Kutfe, ligature, or caustic. A SURE CUNE OR KO PAY. Wit pas tlents from » distance 1 will cuntract to pay all travelteg and PO i R IR A TS0 1 "uns un freo. N [ Madisou-at., Chicaga, a }_Amive, 10p. m. 10 m. 1o m Tyinby. OMI0AGO, ROOK IBLAND & PAOLY1U RATLROAD, Depot, corher of Van Buren sl Sherman-sis, Tiv wtlice 34 Clark-st,, Ehwm:xfl‘lun:c." Tikek Omaha, Learenw't Pory Abconiinod: Nlell Expre: Lock Hospital, cor. Washington & Frankltn-sls. Chartered by the Riate of Hilinois for the expres pure Tobe OF GV hnmiediars telt il case OF brivate, ¢hronte, and uringry diseo al} thele complical forins. 11 s well i wn that 1 i‘ ol :‘mmll at the head of the profeslon vars. Aguand expertence are all-{inportant. ntund Wenkiiew, tht Tgsava by dreatiis, pimpies un the face, lost mians i oy bb Cured, Ladlles wantiig the most call or write. Pleasant home for pa« s mflitun, Marrings Guids, which dtacad 10t & wuld (narry— o wectite o by postage.” Dr, Janes ta ol d parlurs. - You ac but the Doctor. Dr. Jauen atxiy yuur of ake., i fnviled. “ Outice hours, § 8. W o . Al C. BIG: 1AB REN Huuth Cinric-at., cor, Vaa Iu- Ben, 1ond et s T e TeTnisCMCBRO: iy gndtiay e AL LRI Veans LG TaTse Prac Ice f thyelty forChironle xual Diseases. Reminal Weakners curvdsafel Pawphict, 3apages, ting 10 above, Y-eent stampa. - Hoo neu. ” Consuliation 1o uinl Pathology,” 2wt ihingon t Price, s0cts. PRIVATE aled envelope, for two arate for ladies and genue- Surriage Gulde, or bex arice Mze paied, wmbracthe everys GenCrative syetent (et 1y worth knowlng, THE OLD ERTABLISTE Clarxe, 1A4 Bouth Clark Tuk Doc-ron to consult {u CHUONIC ur [IRLICATR cAl Femsle Dluiculties treated witly safety an ! etebratid trang) €3 per b dota Suune, e per order ¥ ) 3 per box, Periodie 1! e v E 1 et Wnerapteds o $7-send w Tor *Work for the Marr g Victime of Suur Anows or FarvaTa liseaer stamp fof the Quries Noon, Address lotters DL 14 Bouth Clark: NO CURE! : xeavi Dr. Kean, 175 South Clark-st., corner of Wouree, Chicago, May be consulted, personnlly or by mall, free of chisrke ow It ehronic or nervons diseases. DI J. KEAN 2 \lll‘“lllyflfllll A Ale Lty who WRTFants curee or uo pa ke Houre, 0'a, . 10N D, B3 Butdays from 0 40 14, CLAl ~A MEDICAL ESS ures deilvered st Baind K, on the Cause and cure Tudieputabily how losk 10 coraprisiu Museuin of Atta of prematuie ds e, [ieattit imay be re alued, aftord] aupsls Of the pedinviits to i arra wnd physl eligg ¥ Tt Fifih-av., Clicas all Private, Chronie, and DR, LYON Rervos Dissuscaniid Forale Dimeuletr My eelebrated Freneh Perfuly Piils, th nown, Dioje, alsu nly sure preveative 5. e G Tarae siae pakcs, Correrpubdetca cun™ i atawipy Iu Englisl, Sl Call or Ereuel, or German. PRESURIPTION FRRER For the specdy cure of Seminal Weakness, Lost Mantaod, wad ail dlsorders brought on by Indle cretione OF excess. Any druggist has the nq'rtdl- ents. _Address DAVIDSON 0., Box 2300 New Yo PHILADELPEIA A_ll"‘ill'l'l!l:)l VIS RS T0 FULADKLFIIA-AGCH R 1NU AUENCY, 747 Bansomu-sh, Pliladelp!