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THI CHICAGO TRIBUNE: TUESDAY, AUGUST 22, 1876, NEWPOI' Joaquin Miller---Tho Red-Shizt and Top- Boots Story. o, the Poor Indian---A Fierce and Elo- guent Defenses A Now Pocme---Don _Carlos and Iiis Romuance, Bpeelal Correspondence of The Tribune. Newsont, R. L, Aug. 19~ Who ls that " asked one friend of anotuier the other: day ou the Cliffs, The personal pronoun referred to a young 1ann of medlum Lolghbond bulld with a profusion of gold-blonde hair, Dlowing out in sliort locka from n broad-brimmed straw hat, @Ehat " the friend addiessed turncd for ob- acwation. *Well, why dv you askl Bhowld ou think it wes ny speelol person ' ] should think ¢It? was a poel.” The guess was o very shrewd one, It was o poet, and & very speclal ove, It was Joaquin Milter, 5 wJoaguin Miller!” in staccato notes of sur- prise. “ You dou't suy sol" “I do aJoaqu'n Mitler! Why, T thought you knew {hat he wore his hair on lis shoulders, and— pnd—lad n genesal queer look, unlike nnybody clee. Why, I never was so sarprised In my life, Joagnin Miller!” s And this s only the ueual expression of tho weunl surprise of anmit voncerning the author of tac Songsof the Sierras nnd Bunland, when e Is met In this viciolty, We all thought we were to sce a specimen of a half<lvilized Rotky Mountain eavage, Hadu't he Hved with the fu- dlans? Madu't be written a bouk ahout 'em? A book where he confessed to lking the red- ekins, and belleving In then? Didn't we all read, two or Lhree or four years ogo, that this same Joaquin went to gec the DUCHESS OF SUTHEULAND in a red slirt and his trousers tucked nto his toots, and that he tatked a wild sort. of dinlect made up of Comanche and Medoe? And diln't wa all belleye this story with the sublime faith 1hat we believe every story that the newspapers tell! As the poet hias been made tne subjert of e repy newspaper storles of this kind, which haye not come true, it {8 only fuir that another &ind of story now_should be told which Zas vomne true, and so I will relate my own eaperieuce in wecting this eon of the Buvlands, It was only thie othey evening, and though it was not on the «liffs or the aveaue, It was not & hundred miles wawny., Perbaps with my mind filled with the wlld horder stories of Comanche and Modoc, and the Interesting tale of the top-hoots and red shirt, I expecicy Heaven-knows-what combina- tion of fashivng and striking fout ensemble when this gentleman should appear before me. And 50, When I see thils young man of * medium Tielght andd medium bufld,” cothied fnshigmnbli in black, I get'no indication ot the personality had involuntarily srranged for the Slerra poet In the very commoy neme of “Mr, Mitler” Aud cmumou‘xlnce conversation ’OFK on be- tween Mr, Miller’s friends and mysclt with the commendable celerity of such conversations, nml 1 gzet no light untll suddenly, fu some turn of the talk, with no hint from anybody, * @ JOAQUINT : fashes across me, I eased round gradually from amoving tale of moving household pods und poods, atter this ash,and with a view probably of maoking mysclf ugrecable aud atoning for my un- conselousness of the few minutes just passed, T wipenk of the Custer tragedy with ull the proper horror which one boru and bred wigh ancestral hatred and dlsbolief for Mr. Lo could be ex- pected to do. It wae one of those funny slips than which notbuing can be bappler after all fn the result. And the result licre did not belle tradition. Presto! my dumb visitor, hitherto uninterested in - the " friendly commonplaces, blazes forth, " What do you know, what does unybudy bereat the East know, of the Indlan {7 heexclalms, You know nnllflug ouly throtgh he nesspaper, and the white man nakes the uewspaper. The Judlan has no newspaper, The Indian originally is honeat. e learns trickery and thieving irom the wiite man, e s the only really huspitable man too in the country. He'ls like'the Arab, You go to visit an Indian 83 a friend, and you are welcome for a8 Jong us you may stay. To be sure, it su't wmuch, but What there §8 you are free of.! 1t is In vain'that I repeat the stories T have read from “‘oye-witoosscs.! Tt is-the white ey who scalps and not thy Indlen! It is the white muu who les! "The white mau who s falac In every particular whero tho Indian has been dewlt with, Then [ bring out MY TIECE DE RESISTANCE. A race that cannot meet civilization as it op- prouches, and recelve ity aud benefit by it, and hold fts own at the same thne, must go under, It Is the reeord of ull time, © ClyllizaCion I re- torts my opponent with scorn. * You call it celvilizatfon Lnol)prm sud ruunc a race, and bully It out of fts nutural rlzhts ou jts owp ter- ritory by superior saight! How would you like to huve a forelgn vace come here, and dizpute your territory, und drive you out of {t? To bear you all talk of the Indlop here, who know noth- lu¥ about bim! When an fuyading army comes 1uto & new country, It fs the lowest and the basest who stay and give In to ft. The nobler, those who are the cotntry, go farther back to suatalu themsclves, And this fs tho way with tlo Indiun. You dun't meet the true Indln here fu thoee busket-selling creatures, The In- dian {8 on the Rocky Mountalns with his gun, Il bins no newspaper, he bias no theatre, . NO NEGHO MINSTRXLS TO AMUSE HiM. His society, bls world, his amusement fa here,"-—dm\vlmi- a drele on the earpet with his fllrl;l:.‘—“ yound the campfive he {inds bis soclal * Jlow cane you to know so much of them 1" 1 ask, not hchnfi ready with facts tomeet this, ‘T lived with them fiye years, and hefore that T fought with thewn and they whll)rcd me,”? Ilad nothing to offer aguiust this last argu- ment for espousing the causo of a race, an, thougl I hud 1ittle to offer anyway to sustain the oppoeition throughout, when contending With 4 1nan who had had 50 much actual ex- perience on his side, I by no Jneans pive up wmiy sition, though I~ give n my admiration to A burst - of pessionate oratory, as lmcx(;ce(u(l &8 it was Yebewment and heartfelt. Through it all M, Milier evinced nane of the violence or unreadi- ness of the unskilled talker or one unused to suclety, I nad been led to cxpect from the thousand-und-one newspaper stories of hin any: thing but this uulr-;]»mscsscrl readiness und un- tmpersonal style. It was frank und vehement, buj not seif-axsertive, aud certain) FULL OF A FIERY GRACE, which 18 thehuart and souloforatory, Lehouldn’t wlvise Mr, Miller to swell the ranks of those who ure already tou muuy fn the over-stovked lecture-field; but it 3 not too much to say thyt if he should hwld forth as e did to that small sudlence In Rhode Island the other might, bo could not fafl to win applavse, even thotgh some stubborn souls wers too well grounded intheir yative clay of prejudice and newspaper education Lo be Wou over Lo his way of tulu ing. There might b others, however, e prejudiced who might be Jed to joln the ranks of Bittine Butl's sympathizers, und to theso the fi”“ of the Blerras would not sppeal fo vain, penking of newspapers und Lhelr eorrespond! euts, Mr, Miiler unearthed and dispatchied that red-shirt and top-hoot legend, with a good deal bunor, “Wo were talking of Conway, WA he—Miller—suddenly rousing, exclalmell, s'Lonway! What a fullow hi fs for & story, He old that story of iy golng ubout In Englandin ared shirt wnd my trousers tucked fnto my boote, You've ull licard it, 1 dure suy, There Yasn't the slightest foundation forit. 1 never hud uny such costuine with me in England, 1 Teft ull'thut kind of thing ut the mines, I DIKED WITI CONWAY At a dinner party une dul)-, uud Laskedhim where Legut suich a story. [lo suld that Le pleked It up aonie where, but if T would like to have Bl he'd retract 1 4 Oh no," e told M, it Wasict worth while, but Lie isted to have peo- {llclllmp polnted”—with sly Yon homme—*as 0Ny us tlhey expeeted to see o o that style 1 WS soiTy to dgappoing them, ! This whole nariation was very droll, and the Winding yg lxmnwivublsy and - unreportally bumorGus. ' Later, 1 euw e, iller i auother Dhusc—ug the poct, Tle told ne be had been Writing o new poeur, and, withont reciting o Elugle flne of dt, he dewribed the plot, the situa- o, by suck o ¥ivid manmer, thay Vho hegrers !lmul Bim recefved it vesy atmosphiere of Jocpl coluriug and cmotion. 14 wus fur better thun Woey recltations of actual - verse,? sald ohe of the party, And one pud wll of us onelided ‘that” Mr, Mibler' himsell wus or better than the goseips bl paiuted him, Mbelt we adinfited o litde of the disappofute nent he ha predited sn that red-shirg. b et We conciuded also (hat ramos i, t}yu(.lu ustray In other divectlons gs the red Bhirt Lueluesd, and that the poet of the Slerias aml Buulaids may not bo 50 black or §o red us ¢ hul Leen painied. \ To mukie w” juinp from what Mr, Curtls used 0 call “ulie flithe realm of Bohenis? ot us LB & monent b thi warld, the great worhl Kiuge un Princes; sid ave bow ' Royul per- sonnge can be romantle and senthinental. ‘This persunage Is TION CARLOS, Daily he goes bathing, and dafly af the beach with great cure be removes fium his fager s ring which be lands W a walting attendant. OF course 5t 19 1 rlug of Immense value Lo weet with suell vare, — One would think the attendant might feae garrollng or soe othier violence Ty sume rapacious individnal voe. nizant. But nv, Its vilue s not of money price. The rbe laa_romance. Inshie [L Iz en- raved, Murgarita Curlos, with the date 43, 167, 1t wan'on the 4th of February, ISU7, that he was marrlel to Donna .\lur%flr" 1, hla present wife. Shels now at Pau, Frnee, aed two months Lience, this sentimental husband wiil Joln ier i Putle, “Spanish Intsbands may be jealons and make ona very uncomforiable rometines, hut they aredetizhtfully Joverlike! " commented a littie Amerlean with o sigh, on hiearlng this. N 1% o ——atR—— — LETTERS FROM THE PEOPLE, TUR PARKHUUST SERMON PROM A JEWISH STANDIOINT, To the Editor of The Tritune, Cicaao, Aug. CL—~Much as has slready been sutd nnd written conceralng fhe Rev, Dr, Parkhurst's fudiscreet harangue, 1 cannot for- bear, &8 u Jew, from entering o solemn protest ogaingt that part of it where he says: 'flic Bihle must go hack into our schoole, This la a Clristlan Repnblic where the fathers iaid the foundation of a universul brotherhood with the soverelgnty of Chirlst, Buddha und the Pope, the Jtatlonnllst and the Mormon, by come here and Mlva while they submit to Chirisf, “\When they. wiil not do thiv, they must slay nway, Now, it [8 bt n few short weeks since we cel- ebrated the hundredth auniversary of the sign- {ng of a Declaration and tho adoption of a Con- stitution, to which every true Amerlean polnts with pride, whereln It (s vxpressly guaranteed that every citizen of this Republic shall cn‘]u_v full liberty in his reliclous belief. In anticipa- tiun of this great Llesaing, thousands of iny co- rellgionists inve flocked to these shores, became citizens, bullt houses of worslip, avquired prop= erty, aud are, in proportlon to tielr number, the largest tux-payers fu the land, And must we now be told by an overzealous clergynan jihat we have no right to be liere unless we snbmit to Christt The Reverend Doctor hins not, it fs true, included us in bis excommunication, but It §s 50 well kuown that wo donot submit to Christ that no other Inference can be drawn, Vust mnounts of money are gpent year after year by the Boclety for the Couversion of Jews, und with what results? An ocenslona) prosclyte, who will adopt the new faith thinking thereby to better his worldly condition, Again ani again have a certain’sct of reliizious fanatics tried to forve wpon Congress the passage of an amendment to the Constitution acknowtedgin, this to be n Christlan country, but the goo ecnse of the people at large bhas refuted the mepaure in every fustance, as It now condeusus Lhe wild teachitpgs of the Reverend Doctor, 1s 1t tn consequence of theso {mur suceesses that Christ {8 to be “forced” upon us, and s the foundatiun for this course Lo be lafd by having the Bible read and, explained to our children in tle publie schools’ as futerpreted by **Christian'’ teachersi Let us pray, with all fight-thinking people, that nons of us or our children may live to linve such u regime puss over this good land. We have, alas! suffered too much already in the estima- tion of the world by the actions of our so-called “Christion ™ statesmen, *“Christlan® soldiers, and all those who prepose this adjective to thelr worldly calling for the purpose of detracting attention from qualitics which are not Chrls- o, With a spirit of “trne ! Christianity, toler- ance, and libernlity of mind on all sdes, there 18 room enouglh for us all, and millivns more, in this country, uallow mi each sect to worshlp thelr God according tu Wheir uwn veligious con- vietlon. E OUR STRLET ATADS, Th the Kuitor af The Tribune. CuicAGo, Aug. 21.—There I8 no class of the communlty who appeal more strongly to the hearts of the hitmane and Lenevolent than the homeless aud houscless newsboys and boot- blacks of our efty. They are, {n a large degree, the materiul from which our criminals ure made; and, the larger portion of them belng naturally shrewd snd cunning aod well-schooled In viee, they make the most dangerous and suceessful operators in whatever clues of crlme they he- come gssoclated with, On the other haud, when [flnm:d under .proper influencos and restrainte, hcy makie good, enterprising, and vatuable citi- rens, 2 ‘The Newsboys’ Home was orzanized to help and reform this unfortunate class of boye, and fu this direct!on it has done much good, and has before {6 a large and dwportsnt fleld for operation, regret to say, lhow- over, that this institutfon is "crippled in it work for want of funds, It 1s somuewhat {n debt, and {u need of more room, and it {s very necesrary that an unflnislicd rtory 18 the huilding should be finished off into sleep- hfi-mnnu. this was done, and the fow debts paid off, there Is no doubt Lut under the pres- ent. Buperintendent, and the new Financial Agent Just cleeted, the Institution can be made selt-supportiug, aud prove to be for the fnter- csts of socety, nnd, as .u reformatory fustitu- tion, one of the best orzanizations In the coun- lt’y. 1t {5 to be hoped that our good citizens wiil 0 all they can to relleve the Home of its cm- barrassments ond enable the managers to do the great good they desirs and ave determined to accotoplish, < Huaran1ty, “roLicr-guors.” 70 ths Editor of The Tribune. Cnicago, Aug. 21.—Under the ahove caption one “X."” mokes o vigorous sssault on tho vproprictors of these Inlquitous dens. ITe favors, .very wiaely, their utter annthilation, and deems it necessary that public Juoney should be used 1o ferrct them out. Now, the law sces no dif- ference between the proprietors und the fre- quenters of such places, both being violators of our ftatute. From the showing made by X, in Lis communication, I think lio lias bect there, =In fuct, knows alt about it,—d his wisdom in that direction may have bebn dearly bought, I suggest that you furnish the address of your contributor to” any *ordinury detective,” and seedl he mey not be of usc in fcrrctfng out these “Irredecinable banka" witheut cost to “'E ullty. llm;.l he cc{l&lu: would be of use, if only in pofuting out to the proper parties the nflh’:!alspwhum lic kuows Indhige ,in fllllt! e Ausiox C, Br. Cra. A MISKOMER. Th the Edltor of The Tribune. Cnicaco, Aug. 20.—Tho residents on Ontarlo strcet bove bad to put up with the smell of o dead dog for nearly o week, At the corner of Indiana and Clavk streets anotlier. has been Jy- Mng for four days, putrefying and creating stench enough to create n pestilence or epldem- fe. Arethe sunltary employes nsleep? 1s ft not the duty of the police to report such casey, and have them [mmediately vemoyed ‘These matters are attended to fn other cities, whero there 1 less taxation, Lespectfully, Nonru 8iox, BILVEN. g 79 il Edltor of The Tridune. Cmicaco, Aug. 19.—If it be u fuct, ns your correspontdent 8. P 8. overs, that the Govern- ment would pever recelve sllver upon * coln "t contracts due Lo the Government (contracts fn which no speciiication was inade s to the puy- ment of gold—only “coln ¥); can it tu honor pay suything but gold upon the smne kind of rontracts duy from the Governmentt Doces not Sta refusal to recelve silver upon % cofn® coy- Lructs 3 ?, a8 plainly as i stfted {n s0 many words, that * coin Implics gold and not sflvert Meanei or Tig 0 oF ThaDS, . 1OWA EXPOSITION, Apacial Dispatcd to Me Tribune. Des Maines, Tu., Aug. 21.—The formal open- ing of (he Juwa Exjiosition Building, here, will take place Oct, 5, followed Ly a Falr for thirty doys. Arrangements bave been wade for exe vurslon-trains from 8t. Louls, tho tlckets good for the month of October, at $10 the round trip to Des Moines und return, This {s loss than holf the revular fare one way, A Commlttco is now I Chivago to perfect sinllur ArTabgoments srith that city, This will bo the finest exhibi- tion ever seen In the Btato. Most of thia West- ern and Eastern cities will be represcoted by thelr merchants and mapufacturers, e~ SERIOUS JLLNESS, JacraenviLLE, 1L, Aug. 21,—My, John Alex- ander, of Morgan County, known all over the country as the * Cattlo Kiug of thé Misstusippt Valley,” returned from the Cast a few days ago sivk, snd ever since Lns been growing worse, s physlclan says that his m—u\'er{'h fnpos- slble, and thut ‘ho will not Frobn ly survivy anather day, o la failing rapldly, ——mpa— Profits from Soda-\WWater. Protidence dournat, The hat westher sugzests u little {nquiry into the profits of the sodu-water business, ‘Fht cans. contulning ten gullons of carbonated water aro furnisbed to the druggists at §2.25 each, The copunon sods tumbler toutalns about vne-hall pint. If llmgmses were filled il every time s cau would furulsh 160 glusecs of soda. As 1lie glasees are seldom 4 ever filled more than two-thirds fnll of water, the rest beiug foam, it fa estlinnted that cach ean furnishes about 200 glasses of poda-water. One gallon of slrup s estimnted to go with o can of carbonated water, although sume retailers give nore, Assuming that a gallon and o half of sirup Is used, the cost figures up as follows: Charged tan, $2.5: patlon and a half of llruP 2357 fee, eream for cream afrups, ete., 60 cente; total cost of 200 glasses of aoda, 85. Al 10 centa n wlazs the retailer receives €20, which looks like a pretly fair profit. At 5 centsa &lasa there would he 100 per_ centum profit, and at 3 cents o glase there would he more mune 1 goda than {n groceries. To be sure, drugpia(s say thut thelr soda costs them between 5and 6 cenits u glass, and no doubt it can be so figured; but. anyhody who wants {ved soda at homn at a costof §3.75 fora charged fountaln and » gallon of any kind of strup, and s willing to pay 10 tents n doy for fee, will find that lie can have 200 mlasre of as good soda as he i ilkely to get anywhere for about twe cents o glass, e e — ‘' THE SCHOOL-LESSON." To the Editor of The Tribune, Cineaan, Aug, 21.—The excellent editorial which appeared in Tne SuNpAY Toisuxe under he ahove caption leaves untonehed a phase of the subjeet which has nwakened painful appre- henelons fn the mindaof not & few of your readerss Have the changes already wrought in the management of the schicols been such ns tend to secularize them, or is there now being executed a sciemo for bringing the schiools under Roman Cathofle domination? The Chi~ cago Evening Journal on the day following the Hauford tragedy, speaking for Mrs. Bulli- van, clalmed for Dher that with her religlons belief ond tralning she would have felt herself recreant to duty if she lad not exerted her whole influcace to sceure the appointment of Romanists to positions In the mauagement of our schools; and Lhis was urged in (w) Justifieation of the course she Lad pursued to accamplish that object. Little by Tittle the Board of Edueation 18 passing lnto the liandts of Romunists, and, unless they are recre- ant to their datics to the Romish Church, will not their power and influence be wielded in the sume direction? Has the exclusion of the Bible from the schools raised, the estitnation in which our public schools are held by Roman- {sta? Dy no means, On evéry band the schiools are now denounced by Tlo- mzn Cathallcs as * Godless echoals,” andl there are not wanting educated and {ntelligent mem- bers of ihat Church who openly attribute the vives and erfrues which are brought to light to the perniclous teachings of the pubic schiools; and certainly it caunot be the tmc)flnF of the Bible agninst which this denunciation {s direct- ed. T think the sentiment of the entire Romuan Catholic Church would be that sccularizing the schools [s the lust thing Lthey wonld desire, But it fs urged that we should sccalarize the schools {n order tomect the vlews ot the nu- merous ratinnalists whuare now to be found in our communities. The question will then arlse, What" Hwmit of sccularizing will eatlsfy this demandt When the DBible shall no longer be urged as the standard of morals, willnot the text-hooks need a thorough re- vistun to exclude fram then all mention of God, cternity, aiid moral responsibility, so that the magses of children who recelve no home traln- ing shall be left to become what the influences of the street and the ealoons shall mnke them Iu their moral chinracters? Tdo not 80 appre- hend the misalon of this Republic. Weare placed here the grandest amone the nations, anasylum for the oppressed of overy land, welcominy to our shores Christian, Mo- hammeday, and Pagun alike, and according to ench_entire freedom of belief, Lul pledged, as T Lelleve, to fustil fnto them us they -come and into their children in "our schools, which they should De compelled to attend, those high moral sentl- ments of responsiblity to o bigher powers that recopnition of God as the ruler of all, and of Jesis as the Bavior of men, upon \riylulu the very foundationa of our Republic rest. 1 am of those who believe that our existence and perma- nenee as a nation depend upon tho solution of this probiem, whether we cun mold the moral chararters of those who come fo our shores, uhethor Pagana (Chincse, ote,), or Rutlonaliste to this, the Amerjean standard, or whether we shall drift ourcelves away from it, and 80 mako sbipwreck of " the intercsts confided to ouy Keeping as a ratlon, It cannot justly be charged that the teaching whieh recogmlzes God as the B“{)(emn Belng—a moral tesponsibllity to Hi'n—and the recognition of Jesus ae the Savior of mankind is the teach- fug of scctarlanism, It is the teaching of Clirjstianity, and if we would perpetuate the freofustitutions under which we live we must preserve In its purity this natfonal birthright, As we cannot {n our homes compel our chil- dren to adopt Christianity, but must scek by o presentation of the truth to win them, no more should the nation ntlomlpt by legnl enactment, to compel any fuaividual to udopt any form. of belfef; hut a’ pure Christinnity should b pre- sented In our public acliools, and the highest morality jnculcated fn the full belief that Chris. tuplty will win its own conquests over indlyid- uul conscienve, G. e ———— CURIOUS DOWER-CASE, Bpecial Correspondence of The Tridune. Des Mowxes, Ia, Aug. 10.—The Supreme Court, at its last term, hud before (ta curfous casc of dower,—F. K. Blanchard vs. M. Lam- bert ct al. and heirs of 1. D. Blaochard, Plaintil’s nawne was formerly E. K. Lord. On ‘the 24th of Moy, 1857, she marrfed Horntlo Musgrave, in Hardin County, Ohlo. She, with Yer busbaod, soun after went to Indians, where they resided until May, 1858, when they re- turned to Hardin County, Ohlo, though they lived gcparnte and spart. For several years after, Muegrave lived with a woman as his wife, and it was reported that they were marrled, These facts wero kuown to the plafutift in this wcton. In March, 1807, or ten years after her marrfage with Muegrave, the plafotiff married 1. D. Rlanchard, under the name of E. K. Lord, and lived with hirm unttl he died, Aug. 14, 1872, She was re- spected by nll who kncw her, and affectionately treated by Blunchard asa wife. In June, 1871, Musgrave dled. The plaintifl by this action pe- titlons for a dower-nterest In” the estate of Blanehard, {u that el was not the lawful wife of Musgrave at the time of her marriago with Blanehard, and, therefore, incompetent to enter futo such marriogecontract, “'he Conrt held that the presumption of Jaw waa, that Sluszrave was the lawful hushang@ot the woman with whom lie lived after the sepa- ratlop fromn the plaintiff, and that he was di- vorced from plaintlfl, Also, that, inasmuch as Musgrave dle(]‘ln 1871, and the plalntifl und Bipnchard lived together na_man and wife untll the death of Blanchiard in 1372, though tho mar- riage way have heen originally vold, ftwill, af- ter the removal of all legal impediments, which was done by the death of Musgrave, nearly two years before thedeath of Blunchard, be” pre- sumed h-f:l under the statute, which provides that coutinuous colinbitation s hushaud aud wife {s presumptlvo evidence of marriage for the purpose of glvini the right of dower, The woman got hier dower, e OCEAN STEAMSHIP NEWS, Loxnoy, Aug. 21.—~Steamships Suevla, from New Yorl, and Keullwortn, feom Phlladelphis, have arrived ont. PuitaveLruis, Aug. 2L—Arrived—Steam- eliips Nederland, from Antwerp; Indlana, from Liverpool. Nrw Youk, Aug, SlL.—Arrived—Bteamships England, from Liverpool ; Navarine, from Hull, Faurnen Pousy, Auw. 21.—Steawmship Manito- b‘i from Glasgow, has arrived.! fovirLe, Aug, 21.—Steamship State of In- dlans, from New York, Las arrlved, e —atrm——— - SUICIDE, B7. Louis, Aug, 21.—Capt, MeAlllster, a well- kuown river mun, has been missing siuco Friday Tast, and it Is feored has cummitted suiclde, a he s made two attempts to drown himself lately, ——m— Au OI1 Pipo Three Itunidred Miles Long. Bodon Tyateler, The T'ennsylvania 'l'ram}mrullon Company, of which ir. nry Hurly s Fresident, bas been chartered Dy T othe State of Penngylvanfa for the purpuse of trans- porthiye oif from the ofl “reglons to the principal Atlantic seaboard cities. The plan proposed 18 to run the oll throngh & 4-iuch rl‘ve ald’ on tho surface; the forclng power will be 000 pounds to tho square fnch; there ars to o statlons ut distauces of 15 miles, at cach of which s cugine of 100 horse power will ho ergcted to work u pump to contluue the flow from point to polut, The Compuny baving deelded upon the construction of the work, the President sought the services of Gen, larman Huu%. of Hoosac tunnel fame, and who, durlng the War, was chifef of the Bureau of Milltary Raltruuds, and o hydmumfi»hlvnl engineer of great shill and experlence, 1la pronounced the seBeme, after a thorough exaninaion, to be entirel Yruullmhlu, amd he s now avting as enfhm:r- u-chief, n view of the enormous product of oll fn this country—30,000 burrels per day—aud {hu rapk ft wow lolds unwmi tho Teading articles of export, coupled with the exorbl- tant charges for vullroad carrlage frow the wells tu the svabuard, by the cuwapletiva uf tha cu- terpsise and its successiul operation, a complete revolutfon will be accomplished fn the handling of this artlele, As aproof of hiow valuable this trafic has been to the several railrouds aver which the il has been horne, 1L {8 only necessary Lo gay that up to the present time the raifroad charges ngoregate $STHOKLO00, The miulingn cost” of {ransporting ofl by rai) 8 50 cents per bareel, and the mioimu'coet by the pipe process is 16 ceuts, The averago charige by rail is 81, 25, ‘The estitnated cost of the entire work, Indud- Ingg fixtures, ete., is §1,25 ) ond - eousidering the difference In cost hetween this method and that by rall, upon the hypothesls that the cutn- pany will discount at least 25 cents a bareel on rail rates, it will readily be scen that with all the expenscs of operating, the tirst fl““ curnlugs will pay thetirst cost of the work. The “Peupeylvania Company 18 the parent company, but thre is aleo the Baltimure Trans. portation Company, ered by the Btate of Maryland, and sotuc five other companica are expecting Lo umite. ‘The first objective point ovterminus will be Baltimore, as befng the most feasible and direct route for the pipes. Follow- Iz which other terming will be catablished, o Polladelphia, Netw York, ete. ‘The pipes being Jald on the purface and there Deiug no obistacle i the way of forcing the ofl Lo uny hefeht, the line will literally he an alr lite, amd the distance from the ol regions to Baltl- more §s 309 mles. The ofl will be distributed from the plpes into Smniense reservolms with refinlng establistunents udlacent. e feaedbilty of this eoterprisc, so far as the Fa»sngu of the ofl through pipes {s concerned, ins heen fully established by the present system in operation in the oll “reglons, where the epgregate fength of the pipes conveying the ol from the several wells to the rescryolrs s uearly 50 wiles, ——— Btory of » Golden Robin. Doston Post. Lovers of Lirds will be Interested in the story of & grolden robin in Newburyport that bas been through quite a tragedy for a swall chiap. While engagred with fts wate last week o building iheir nest, wlich was sul{mnded M feet high, {rom an cxtreme braoch of un elm, his foot be- came entangled ina plece of twine, which he was deftly weaving Into the stracture, and, Jos- Ing his balance, he dmpyul about 2 feet, the lengzth of bis rope, and hung fu midair. The littfe rascal had just stolen the string from the steps near by, und retrihution was sure t, thaugh hie doubtless thuught hanging re penslty for so sinall an offense. He bung several hours, strugaling 4ill exbansted, to re- galn his nest, bis terrifled mate fluttertnr and m.'rl:umlnf,' around lfuy, aud the spectators below pitylnze his fate, but unable 10 relieve him, Finally 8 tender-liearted spectator cawe tu the rescue with a long Jadder und 2 hooked vle, e ascended the tree and climhed along he mb till he could reach the bird with the houk, aud, capturing him, brought bim down in safety, Robby's leg was found to be badly bro- ken and twisted, Dr. Hurd volunteered to set It, thinking §t might possibly be saved, though ina few doys it was obvious that amputation would be nucessary, and the ' Doctor performed it as skillfully as” 1 his patlent hod been a Christian, and'at a third visit removed the han- doges aud pronounced him all right. After Rubty hud Leen stumpling around his place of confinement o few days, Wis kind protector caught his mate and restored her to the bosom of her lord, aud now the little couple are the Tapplest of' all the sungsters that compose his “huppy family,” ———— Bcenes in Beigrade. 5 Berrian Correspondence Lundon News. The |»luuxron‘fl\uuan of the Helgrade streets, of which I hud heard 60 much, is destroyed by thelr emptiness, There ure here now only a few soldiers,—the little garrison of tho forts and sume orderlics und oflice meu,—and ali the man- hood of Bel 8 [Z',mm 1o the front, except the people connected with the dvll government, souie merchanty, wany of whom are forelencrs, und a few teamsters and people who fulflil the dutivs of hewers of woud and drewers of wager, Let us #it down outslde this cafe ut the coffier of the “ Place,” and lovk around us. The low- " browed ollu-e!ur\-h(fih Oriental houses, with the open-front shop under the projecting veruuda, fall to hold thefr ground against the biy, several storled, ornamental-fronted bouses common in modern Westerncities, Belzrade hritsarchitect- ure {8 Cafro aud Parls in about equal propor- tlons. The streets wre whie—ground s no object cvidently herey and they ure lined with treea which, when more grown, will affurd the grateful shaue which is 5o mwuch needed hiere tu the lieat of summer. As in architecture, s0 {n costume—the east and the west mecet in Belgrade, Look at the stately gentloman promeunding on the other side of the way: he mirht be o hadjl, with that tine dignitied face of the zenuine * old Turk " type. He wears & red and yellow ephod-like wajsteoat, w searlet fez, u short bralded brown fiukcz, with u eape to Ity and a long voluminous it, or rather Se'(lm:ll, of white flannel edped with binck breld und rlashed nt the bottom, His lega are cased in woollen greaves, bound with blie Morocuo straps; his feut nre 1n slippers, Lumbering down the centre of the street come two stalwart countrymen In shart loose hrown juckets, hugey Kncesbreechies thrust into top boots, red sashes, and broad leather belt, wl"z“l" kind of wallet {ufrout stuffed full of plstols, . —— Pauperism In England, . Lyndon Times, ‘The annual New Year's Day return relating to pnuqerlsm in England and Wales shows that on the Ist of Janunry, 1670, the aumbier of prupers was 752,657, which §s less by 64,035, or 7.4 per cent thun the number on the Ist day of list tunr. This shows the pnupers to be oneln hirty, or 3.8 per cent on_ the population according o the censuk of 1671, but, as the population has increased, the ratio In 1570 fs uced aud §s nearer 8 per cent. The decrease Is pgeneral throughout .En‘ulllul. In the metropolls It fs 114 per cent; fu Northwestern Dlvision, 10.6 per cent; Yorkshire 18 an exception, and showasearcely any Improve- ment ntall. Rathier more than oune-fifth of the paupers are in the workhouse, nearly four-ifths receiving ontdoor relief, The number of adalt able-bodied_paupers vecelving rellef,—namely, 07,005 (21,585 men and 75,480 wonen) fs less Dy 18,144, or 15.7 per ceut, thun on the first dayof lust year, The decreaso Is 26.5 per cent lu'the metropolis, 24.1 per cent in the South Midland Division, 30.4 per cent fu the Northwestern, and 20 per cent in the Eastern Divistons but York- shire suows an increase, having a strike of iron- workers at Mididlesborough, The pauper-roll of Engtand aud Wales stood as follows last New Year's Day: M-'u‘ 143, women, 810,202 children uuder 16, 241,169; vagrants, 82043 In- sane men, women, and children, 55,267, These ftems make rather more than the real number first above given, owlng to a fow belug relieved, and here counted tiice over, having had both iruulnur and {ndoor reliet on the duy referred 0, A Men Accused of Mu nlug. -, Curthage (3o.) Adrance, i On Tuesday last, Charles Maunlove was killed by lightning a few miles from Jopling aud aear the Stevens digiluzs, 1ils horse was lso killed, Il be rewembered that this Is the same Manlove who wus tried st Joplin a fow months since, under charge of having murdered Lis sister-in-law, Miss Belle Douglas, und was held 1o ball In the ‘swm of §10,000, Thus leghtning has stricken his case from the docket, und n 1: ed with mistery, Is sot at rest, 0 her deuth will fer Killed by Light- 1wl secrel MODERN WOMEN, Tt {3 a snd commentary upon our boasted ey lization that the women of our times have de- geuerated fu heulth and physique until they are literally a raco of Invallds,—pale, ncrvous, fechle, and back-achy, with only here and there a few noble cxeentlpns fn the persons of the ro- Lust, buxom ladles tharacteristic of the sexin doys gone hy, By a very large experieice, cov- ering a period of years, aud embraclng the treatment of many thuusavds of cases of thoso allments peculiar to wonten, Dr. Piarce, of the World's Dispensary, Buffulo, N, Y., has per- fected, by the combination of certaln vegetable extracts, & natural specliic, which he docs not extol ug a cure-ull, but ony which dmirubly ful- fils u singleness of purpose, being w most posi- tive and relfable remedy for those weaknesses and complaints that aflllct thy women of the present duy. This natural specitle compound is called Dro Pierco's Favorite Prescription. The following ure mwong those discases in which this wonderful medicine -has worked cures us It by magle, and with u certaluty never before attaloed by uuy medicines: Weak back, nervoud and general debllity, falllng and other displocoments of internal orguns, resulting from debllity and lack of streugth In patursl supports, internal fuver, congestion, influmina- tlon, and wiceration, aud very wany other chironfc disesies incldont to wonien, nok. proper to meution bere, in which, us well av fn the cascs that haye heen enumerdted, the Favorite I'reacription effects cures—tho marvel of the world, It wil ot do harm ju gay stute or cons ditlon of tho systew, uud by adopting its use the (nvalid lady way avold that severest of or- deals—the consulting of a family phystelan, Fuvonte Presceiptiou s sold by dealers Iu medd- clues generallvs 7 Woon's MUSELCM. E. CO. FIST KEGT. 1. 8. 0. IMMENSE SUCCESS Of te Grand Allegoriea) Military Deama of “Andersonvile, or The Union Spy.” QOrand sod beantiful realiatic tableanx, miiitary display erer witncesed on any Every Evening During the Wi Wednesiay and Saterday Matinecs SOALE OF PRICES! eck, inclnd!ng McVICKER'S THEATRE, Bonson with tho Grand GUARDSMEN, Everything New and Appropriate, and an Bxcele Excitlng Scenes, Sparkling Dislogue, Every Night and Eatorday Ticket Ofice open daily from fa. m. L5 p, m. Beats can be secured rix days In advance. Prica of tickels, with seats aecured, 25 centa, 60 cente, 7 centn, Next weck Mr. Charlcs Barry will appear as Gen. Washiugton in hiegreat HAVERLY’S THEATRE, Randolp-st.. between Clark and LaSaile, oo l‘mll!’rll'lcvl Opening of the 30th pening of Homa TR THRRR Mirthful Situations, During the week, and st the Wedns day Matinees, {he Fanous and U CALIFOK®NIA MINSTRELS! ‘Twenty-nine {n number, wi of ateniess exceile fresentan entenninment $iiity Courtwright, ana Baved ost of slflar ariista sre ene HOOLEY’S NEW CHICAGO THEATRE. THE MINSTRELPALACE MONDAY; ALI:‘-“’?J . crening at B:15, by Matinees st 2: HOOLEY'S MINSTRELS, The People's Ownl FIVE NEW STARS, puarauce of Mr. Fayetie Welck, the krentert of al) end. t _sccomplisied of dialect comediaus, ree Knight's Miliinry Spectacle, Introduciog a mintatnre ntals. * Everything new this week. See programmes, ADELPHI THEATRE, IMMENSE BUOC! the Ure: , Wedncaday and 15, Firnt week ot Geol !-Que Hunired Years feglinent uf Conlinental and a Crowded Jlnuse grested smpion of the World, JIM MACE AND STEYE TAYLOR, LAST WEEK OF THI Living Art Pictures. , Resnolts Nrathers, Carroll favorite company. HEDAY. EKEMPER FEALL, KENOSHA, WIS, ‘The Memorfal Schonl for cirls and yonng Indies, founded 1830, oreanized )i Teschers. Excellent diseipline, Duildings well srrange reompleted: new Music-House; and « \U proper order for tie upeniug WEDNESDAYY Music, Drawing, sad Painting the - EVERILALLT, D). D., Rector MOUNT YERNON MILITARY ACADEMY, uoi:an Park (ncar Chicay A Faculty of euperior 2% fCcomITD. new Chapel and Capt. Tl N. KU ‘Wright, Principal, The fall term comences on Vhuraday, Sept. 14, 1836G. The school, under new management, will increased facilities for tharough (n- or further informntion aud elrculars ta TALCOTT, President, i County, Il., or 118 Monroe- TISSES GRANTS SEMINARY 128 1-2 & 130 Dearborn-av,, Late North Dearborn-et, Wil apen Wedneaday, et v address Capt, ED N. 3, The bent facilities alnting, and the Modern accommoations for botl board- DUCATEONAL. TTADAMS ACADBEMY. GUINE Y, MANN. HOR. CIL\IKLIL( A ADAMAR, LL. 1., in of Boardof Managers. WILLIAM R DIMMOCK, L. 12 5(11(".‘ The design of the Schoul Is to laye, (n the oAk Chgraa AUARET o (e | Dtk Amesiéan” o Irzee. Hayh trom this Academy have been this year adinfited 1o liarvard, Yale, irown, and Amhent Coi- leges. “There nre nino teachers=all Kentlomen of aullity and expericnee. Tlicr {88 preparstofy elan far (s too young for the Acwdeiny; and the [astruction piven is careful and symomailc, dralgned to 0 the nuplle Horgugliy far tilclu ficework u tie Acadainy. " No pupllh ato re- celved ander 10 yerts of oge. Fic Muer (wih s Tamily) and the Amlstant Teschers reshle [n tho Academy Boarding Schionl; aud 1he younger hoya have each & separate alcove 1n a [arge doriitory that communlcates direcily with the s tiits ter's bedroom. oy rixate tamilles her: Hoys can FoF chtaluguen sddress Lhe S Preparatory, Aoademio, and Collegiate, CLIFTON SPRINGS, N. Y., Will open Sept. 13, 1876. Rooms larze, elegantly futnished, beaied L{ steam, and lghted by gas: Special attention to health, ransstle drill, “No public examinations or exhibitions. Y, Prol. (i, Biessncr, un experienced {nstractor and cmn‘ml:r, will hare chargo of the Department of us c. Dir. Tenry Foster will bave charge of (he Healtn Department. ¥, Georga Loomis will have the government of the achool, to wham all communications should bo addresscd. Send for elreular. Academy of the Sacred Heart, No. 361 North Dearborn-av. This Institute has been established under the patron- aze o the Itight Iteverend Iinnop of Chicugo, and o accordance with the expresed desire of parcits for & belect Acalemy. Clasex comménce the First ¥enday of Eeptember 80d the plan of studles will be the same as that pursued io 3l the extaniphmentyof the ncred Heart. Fur Clrculars and further information soply to THE LADY. SUPHIIOR, 401 Dearborn-ar, Chicago Academy, An Eogiivh and Clamicnl Day Behool, furnishes $URb ahd patematlc tratnieg for puplie of all aces.” Tn thy hepsrtinents tiey are mmon braeuea. and in e Primary aud Intermedlate carefully Instructed in the co tle Coliegiate Departinent m selentifc” pursulta, or for ad ¥ Coll Vnivetiiy, Native Gorman ant Freach teachers in- struct jn their reapective Isngoages. Puplis of both seaes have equal advautaies in atl departments, Tenth yeor begins Septs 11, Jdres pal, 1'Eightecnthisat, CAXE FORESTONIVERSITY, THE COLLEGIATE DEPARTMENT will open Sept. 7. i W. Patterson, D. D., President, FERRY HALL, Mian Martha I 8 cipal, The Elubth Yeur of thi first-c for young ladics will commence Sept For further {nformstion apply to I. W. PAT- ERYON, D. 1. or to MIES MARTHA 1L SPKAGUE, Lake Forest, 111, HICHLAND HALL HICHLAND PARK, ILL. ACOLLEGLATE & PREPARATORY IESTITUTION FUR LADIES "ALL Sesslon beging September acth, 1#-6. Course of Study ruugh and cxtendcd Rare cles for Musie Draws ing and Painting~Maneers Morals and Health of the finst im. ance. Coliege Building commadiaus, nd well furnished. No jonms for pupils above two fichtsof staire Localian ctive, Thowe wha have completo their ardinary schoel education eliewhere maybe rereivadtopimue aur higher courses with special advantage, EDWARD P, WEGTSN, Trazidest. HIGHER EDUOATION FOR LADIES. PITTSBURG FEMALECOLLEGE. TWENTY.SIX TEACHERS. Ton teachers fn the Conservatory of Musle con- nected with the College, Charzes lcss than any school in the United States nffording equal advan- tages and sccommodations, Fall term opens Sept, 7. 8endto REV, 1. C. PERSHING, D. D,y Pitts- burg, I'a., for s cathlozue. ~ A CHICAGO FEMAwLE COLLEGE, MORGAN PARK (NEAR CHICAGO). The fall term of thia {nstitutlon commences on Tucsday, Sept. 12, 1870 Another new butlding will be com- pleted and ready for vccupancy at that time. Ita capacity wili be sutiiclent to accommodate Afty ad- ditional hoarding pupils. For fartiier Informition or circulars address the President, G. THAVEIL, Chicago Eemale College, Morean Fark, Couk Co., 1., orut 77 Madison-et., Chlcago, rague, Prin- s seminary PENRBYLVANIA FEMALE COLLEGE, Pittabarg, East Eud, Fa. College Conrse cmbraces jepartmicnts of figher Educativn, ernment iy that of refined Christian horie, cation, #i5 miles from the heart of the city. Pree from dust and sinoke, easy of sccers, Gnd nn- surparsed for beaut Sel THOS, C. BTRONG. CIICAGO LADIES' SEMINARY, 1580417 South Eheldun et.. one squere east of - Unon Park, ply carly to tho 11, Able Profe all the depariments, ; TR a Thie modcrn Iantiokes. 5 cl of native I dailuns for Luth hoardi 'ANT TO BTUDEN! ADRIAN COLLEGE—Entrauce upon any stady ineny department conditioned anly by preparation to pursac that atudy, thas atfordlng greater Intitnde tlie onler of afudies than can In the selection ani be found elsewhere. ]T:l, 'II':: address GEO. Vo McELROY, Pres,, Adrian, ST. XAVIERS ACADEMY, Wahash-gv,, cor. Twenty-ninth-st., pened for the reception of boarders and sta on the fest Monday m Se Y MOTHLI SUP Expences low, For terms addres MISS ABBY I JOHNSON, Torseventeen yeers Prineipal of Bradford Academy, %1l begtn the fecond sear of her llome. Sulool fr Youns Ladles Sept. 27, at her residence, 1060 Charles- M., Busto Atiws SALZATL L, DAILEY. late of Dearlorn Senvua. 5 Chisago, Wit have - chiree of tiie Uensrtment of Mental rfinme»).y o Leitres, and Law Iteferenccs—~{'rof, artlett, Cheas Iparys the Be: PP ody, Harvard Caniliridge, M; asmes T. Ficids, Noston. ELMHURST BOARDING SOHOOL, For Young Ladies and Girls, wear Chicago, 11k, Next school year will comnience Monday, $ept. 11 1876, ‘Indofeed and patronized by the most em| nent eltizens of Chicazo and vicinity, MRS, L LER, formerly Vead Aseistint Wakhing Schol, Chicaxo, Principal, ~ Send for clreular to Priucipal, Elmburet, Duliige Ca,, 11, SOUTII SIDE § 400 Michigau-av. MIS. telioal will reopen T i wrad ev. Sem: iversity, TENARY. i, 1. KIMONS, Principal. The ursdzy, Sept, . with u fali eorpy Uni elass (3 now forming. For Civll and Reunnelner Palye Instruction very praw i this epuuLTy, Jtcoprus & o widres PHOF, Directar. ulonl Engine il fuwtltoe Al Al 2 ut, ror, N, Yo el Advaulugds uasurpussed (raduatcs ohtaln excelient posltions. t4ih. For the Annual Reéglaer, cone ‘anrse of S i paridculars, RAILROAD TINME TARLE, ARRIVAL KND DEPRRTORE OF TRATHS * Erplanation of Reference Marke.—t fatnrdsy ex. cepred. * Sunday excepted. $Moniay ex S FiYo Bunday a8 d. . ) paity, O CHeePRL L Ar riptio & RRTRWESTERY BALTAY, Canal-street., corner Madison-st., and atthie dew?. Leave. Arive. aPaciic Fast Line. @3 abuinque Dy Ex. 190k m s 2400 B allubuque Night Ex. viaCl'ton . 08 m. us Exprei GEFCEDTL & Dubuduis Exbrensis Db by 58 B SMllwsakes Fast Mail (dutiy)ly 7302 00 p, m. B kee Express, '10:00 8. 30 p. . kee Pastenger 5:00p, 254 m. Kee Pamsenger P13, 308, m. & 00 i, m. 0U A, 00 p. . 5 p. 00, m. 5 p. 302, m! a 00, ra. P 438, m. 3 538 o1, 5 & 200 p. . MICHIGAN Ciet-omce, 17 ., ; doiph, and at Falmer Haie o oM COMIer OF Han; Leave. |~ Arrive, ERcis e‘aiwgl ! o a@um NIght Expre t9,00p. .|+ 8:308. m. Baturday Kx. Bunday Ex, § Monday KX, § Datly, CHIGAGO, ALTON & ST _LOUIS aad ORI o, KANEAE GITY & DERYIER oM LIS Tieker fees: At Degot. and 151 Hamiatpn s B® Leave. Arrive. Raneas City & Denver Fast Ex, ! |' eator, Lacus Joliet & Dwighe Accomim ‘Matl, via Matn Line. Epec . Ex Atlantic Express, dolf Golelour Accominodation Night Expreas... CHICAGO, MILWAUKE] ] RAIL] lml::l‘lllaoul'! b Clark-st., opposite Bherm i3 ’ Leave, Miiwaokee Express, Srrrreely “-l|,. ,,E,,,“‘ 'azu.m. i Tow . . | 4 o M. W’A(::‘omhr Tow "0-;& m. [+ 4:00p. m. n Expross ,,, i o ‘\'igcunp(gf'u Mi pom.[*11:000. M. Night Exjires ANl tratns run via Milwankee. and Minneapolis are r{mdfillln"‘ via da Clien, o via Watertown, La Cro Depot, faot vl ToR.g UIRAL B JLROAD. d ol fi0Y o8 LR S s B TRBOALL, PO i lcker ORICe. 121 1anUOIIhAL.s WekF Claricr o > 81, Louls Expren .. Eouis Fast Line us y puque & Hloux City ¥ Pasmeuser <, CHICAGO, BUBLINGTON & QUINCY RATLROAs Depota. fuol uf Lake-st., Indlana-av,, and Bi:teenth nad und SIsteentli-ete, Lickel Oftices, 5i d at depots. Malland Exprees. Quizwa and Streat Roe 7 Atururai’asse; ‘Aurora 'avsenger (Hhday). Duluque & Bonix City Ex Pacioe Night Exp. for Oni ily, “Leavenwarih duseyt Exp, muud’n Tieket oot ey o oAl LIT Faclte, andat depot. Hapoition Huflgmgs o0t X Day Expres=Tuliman Draw-| Lig-Ttwor Steepinie Carn, to) New York without ciange..[ 8:508. m.| 8:108. m, ai| Atlantic ’ Expo vuil Tal e Lo i _ing Lars aud Hlotel Cary a09p. m.| B:30p. M, Ouly Uae FuBning the hotel cara to Now Yark. CHICAGO & PACIFIO RAILROAD, Depot corner ¢ -RvELNe and Lorrsbee-sireet. (! Ti-atroet, | Arrive. | Depart, b 9 )'amed Tarner Park 1 Frelght . Grovo Hall, New Ilaven, Conn, A superior Nome Schoni for Young Ladie OpCNESept. 1870, Address MISS M. P MONTFORT, Principal, o e L LA LR L AL LY e’ VASSAR COLLEGE ens $18 next year Sepl. 20, 1876, Students will pre- gt themuelves for examioation an tha 2ot PSIE, N, V.. who appllcat, glving fullin e’ to each formstlou respeciing the Coliege, WRS. COTHBERT'S SEMINARY uag ladics and b Full corps of o Superior buildin 1 attentlon glyen o muslc. Co lieopens Monday. Sent, 11, I . nerSixteentl and sduress 1 RACINE ( The Autumn Term will be lege and Grammar ¢ OLLEGE, | hool apen Lhe name day. iV, JAMES Dekov] “TIRVING MILITARY ACADENY, 0); oens Bept, . Tun acrey Lake View (near Chicage sy gTuunds; ever; Why scnd your o Yonne Laties’ Collegiae Tnstitnte MONROE, MICH The twenty seventh collcylate i Seninary, yearopens the 10th of thie Clussical, w Mus- 3, oue Iipe’ Organ, Apply 1o Prof. I.'J. LOY D! Collogo of Individual Instruction, FOIt BOTH SEXES. X SER OF STULY 81 ta adranes sepa- ¥, Fur catal Lakuslde Mull, Evaos. “Ille €. BROUSSAIS ALE, Min JEFFERS, The Primary Lo[mn MRS, GARRETTSON’S AND DAY-5CHOUL for young ladiea and children, No, 62 West Farty-enveiith-st., Ni York, will reopen on Wednerday, Sept, 27, Facl ties for the study of French, German, and Music unsarpasned. Vhoroughness in every department, onnlly or by Jetter, as above. MADADL DA SILV.A and Mre, Alex Bradford's (formerly 3Mrs, Oplen Engltel, French,and Gertnan luandin 001 for youuy ladles and children, with cailathenicy. No, 17 Weal Thirty N 3 Hoopens Sept. 5, made by letter ur perwonally, s abuve, 'S HOARDING e, G utnl 1 8chaol oh Eeptem. will bet wseluted by Sepictuer 4. 12hith-st. . New Application iy be uti:z i primarg | n ort o1l & grund scu ricn_conucetod withihie scho LAY OF THE. TWO UNI. Ji -l!m Jwatti, Tiosu, 8 Frotessors, '3 Geoturoy 18 auduats, o nies. niee | deiniuds (o ATraugenients fur teal essful Rindery AUTHAORE COLLEGES FOW BOTI 8EXES; u cxpeuses wovered Ly Prest, swarttiuore, Fa. STITUTE. FAMILY & ABE S SEMLMWOOD oA u?h]_u 1AM YWNEY'S Ty Ledica sud chits auilly oclivol fur yonny UHamushire Couuty, Mass, CLOOL, GENNA 1470 wil 4 Weda pply to tho Viluclpal. « Y. S PUARDING-BLUO0) BRI ooL Fait OHWICH UNIVERSITY, Scleniif Beluul hothaell Vi, Address Prof, CHAB. DOLE. _AUXILIARY P 10WA, PRINTING GO, oS MOIN S, AUXILIARY ~ PRINTERS, Weslip realy-prnted newsupers (lnaldes or outalics), on wail or telegraphic order, at ubort nutice. Our ‘geagraplieal position ennliles s tn supn! pnblishers fu fosen, Nebrasky, Dakota, Nart A fiesourl, Colorado. Montina, Wyeuming. and Utah, more readliy and at fower fatea of expremsage than uny othee auxilfary house can dolt. The 2pecial st of shicets whicly twe prepare for lowa publishers are now acknowledged to be the Leat for that teade. Advertisers will lind this the bist Advertising Medinm went of Clilcu: T0WA PRINTING CO., Des Moines. DICAL CARD! a PR DR, JANES. Lock Hosplial, cor, Washington & Franklin-sts. nre e, Jayears. Ageand experienc 1-(mportaut. Newinul Wealcnenn, Digkt lusses by dreanis, pitunies on ths face, lost man® hood, can nowlively b carel. Ladies wanlitg the most dellente attentlon, calf or wrile. " Plensait hoiig fur na tieats. A hook for e nfilloa, Marrisge Gulde, which L Wisersis ~who should marry— age. Dr Juties hos 40 woms and parlors, a0 00 ne bul itie Doctor, Ur it 1 slety Yedrs of ago. | Consultatiuny aiware freo Bud Inyited. * Oce houts, D& m, 107 1. 10, Slud, 1010 124, 1h, Al buslnesa strictiv eoolidentl [ of Medle ity Invited Werkness nad Inpoteney MARRIAGR: s GU » Mook 4 pager v D penr Trice 10 ecin, 9 fur ¥ siamps, st oflce Br, OL, Waabe, e, alted, persousily or by wail, frec of clineke, onall chrwnlc or iinevons discases, DIL. 4. §EAN 1 the oiily plyvdclan (e city whio WureAnts cures or 4o pays Utlige houte, O u. 1, (08 0. 2.t SUNdays Trow U 16 14 JERVOUS EXHAUSTION~A ME compristug uscilen of Jectures dell u oy, New ’brl‘ on Lhe cause and cure vile, sthowlng ludisyulably how et ie Fesillt of 20 years' expa- ‘as the author, DI L. J. "DR. S. W. INGRAHAM, WITH ah expertence extundiug over a perdod of nearly ssrter ol 2 wvy form of CHIONIC, RVOUS, £ DISFASE of elther s, L Bl be l?l;) failedd, Bente ma " PRESCRIPTION FREE Yor the speedy cure of Eeminut Weakuess, Lost Man- D il all dfaorts & t o by ludlwretdon or s, funatt, Olto. REN For the wpeedy cure of Seminal Weakneas, Lott Manuood, and all disorders brought un by indie- cretlons or excean. Any drugsst haa \nemgmll- ects Adlress DAVIDSON ‘& CO.p Dux 5200 Now Yorks N [ 1 e Walwor(, ftecelyer, w B tlres tuuile trom & Euna d, . LT o Dy, ¢ iy, Sundays eavepted CHIOAGO, ROCE ISLAND & PACLFI: RAILROAD, Dejol. curnceul Vun arcy wiud biciian siaficket ltive 56 Clark-st., S s HGAOM B 4 LAKE NAVIGATION. AR e L A LN it COODRICH'S BTEABLRS. ee, eie., dally (mindeps exunted) A4, 1. Vleave un Lo Cavalry Horses W DEFOT QUARTERNASEXI'S UPEL Warliiation #T o Culoaaodil . ', The ue eited will ‘IU\'IIM.'. uni o required nnmber o preured, from 11 o'clock B . anil tha’y o, € p. 1., 6t the Lnjon Stork Yarde, 500 drat-cliss Carait h race for the Uticd States Arny, e horees UM b OF K v r1, quick and actiee, viose ¢ . well brokea, 1 iTeah, drom 45t K53 Ikmte Db, fram 5 1o % i, and wdapled In every way botbe cavelry 0 huree will be accepted unless fully we ra the d. JAMES 3 _MUOKR, Major and Quartermuter, U 8 Aruiy. D1CA Lo . sonnd tn al) pare hu'mfmnm (JMRONIC BRONCUITIS: 7 The muat_e#ffeetunl remedy wh De fuuad W by DA ATURA TATUS e o forma, for smokiny aud Iubaiatlen, by R, AVORY & BIOOI Y, v stoodat., £ondon, snd Buld by them. aod all Cheinlery and Blorekeepers thronghiat thy Uulted Statcs wnd Canadn __DOLLAK STORE, JONT FAIL TO VISIT Stein's Dollar Store, 100 E. MADISON-ST, T FINANCIALL $100 oyl Fe $1.700 during the past few months, ander our fmproven Wysteu of operating In Stucks. nominal suins and prodisincr 1taks reducedto N (htorumation seat s conas 70 Inforimation sent un aplication. g (il UMD bige b i be ULIN JAY KNOK, eSS (Bl Compriviies of s Carrsaids