Chicago Daily Tribune Newspaper, October 9, 1876, Page 3

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YORK GOSSIP. periond, and al and witnesars; and uame, an if married rogularly, AN ACTOR'S BURCULATION. All tho leading theatres here have a number of reserve actors, upon whom they can call in case of an emergency, ‘These actora are pald thele resular salarles, the same a8 if they acted every night, but are debarred from appeating any whers elsc, While thers faa “run’ of a pop\:ll_:r plece, the reserves have an casy tl'me of It. They simply report morning and evenin; the sta, r,-mum? in .551 ate dunflfm\ for the terim, It not otherwie regnired. #ervo At a certaly thasteo alon from i manager to ongage in the specilation of aslde-sliow In anothor theatra, provided would not himeel! take any public part, with four others, ho rented & small theatre up- tow Mring & number and :actord (whose name in Legion at the present time), tho party revived somo ol rice of admission, and have husiness aver since. nd aftends the box-ofiice and handics the cash, Tho nighlly expenses of the exporiment (limitod to three woeks by contr: and the nightly recel thus far, to each of eraged over $30 per night, t Amusement-Soason= Little Game that Paid. R { the Centenninl--cA n’s Reparation. e ary Marringe-Compact--- g Jay Gould in & fmall Way. Naughty Mar gn Batraordin One of the re- ately obtnined permis- French Flatg-=-A Chance Meeting, of unemplgyed 1ays, put down the ndence f The Tribune. r(’)‘irfi.—An amuscment-secker inof a dearth of attractions at st now, The fall season was nusual brillinuco, are shout $160, 0. The profits ants, have av. This Is an cxceptional Ann general thing, actors are—-touse an expression of onc of them-—fools with their money, and it leaves them rapldly. the most pradent, And thera s 8 ®avings-bank nat far from tho corner of Licecker an: which hias on ita lisL of depositors not lexn than nd they are regularly aoen pot- ting their money o bank, llke thrifty women as e theatres Ju ;pentd with ul ver befora presented to the rlod. The list i5 s0 atrong that less puezied thon residents of fnow how to seleet ‘lvrfxxrlnl (hirty actreses, SOME POWER IN A NAME, APTER ALL. There 18 a small clags of curb-stone operators in stocks, who Infest the outsidoof the Wx- change at the New strect entrance, whose chief ‘bualness {8 to try and ascertaln the movements of tho principal oporators, and follow them if possible. Thoy are badly bitten sometimes by Ditndly adhering to this. plan,—as, for cxample, when s prominent bull operation is In progress. Thay leaen that the Vandorbilt brokers aro bulling New York Central, and forthwith they bu Tho game insldo ins; tho ntock so as to sall out large Lack at the reaction, nt the ontside game docs not work ro curbstons man mey stock over long_enough Tus' at Booth's, Unlon-8quare, * Baba" at an opcra at the Academy, and ttractions olsewhere, it s not aur- ja a difMculty inchocalng. All thero are low varlety.theatres, duce the worat features of tho Parls, and otherwise pander to tho They are cheap and tawdry, ro well N}I‘o"x’v‘l‘:;d(v N kK over! New otk dan pay tholr monoy and take ofco of fon and plessure in almost any ro- Jdirection and af any gral \B METIOD OF SRTTLING NOTRL-DILLS. Jandlord of a leading hotcl at ke many other dlstingulshed 1s fond of a nico little game of draw- toward the closo of thq lie hind on experience, 0 of which would soon end his carcer ‘Among his regular gucsts was a well- xnown millfonalre capl ooks at o profit, ablo to carry to tako mdvantage of the roduction, tho all-powerfnl name ia stock movements is Jay Qould, and there fa no doubt whatevor that hun- dreds of schemes attributed to him by the curb- stono men_and the newspapers were “In 110 scnse icklances manifented In these operations that elther an unusual rlee or fall y attribnted to the -nerit jker occaslonally. But, y a fow weeks 80, in a stock {a knowin, machinations of Jn, bulling and benring Western Unio oaitive that there in mone: m, and so on throngh i Nothing could be more deceptive, and yot theso etock-jobhers, who are quick na a flask “of light- 1n everything clee, find themaelves completely® n teylnis to follow Jay Gould, f the atreet, and the man who bosca his sproulation npon what hie thinks Jay (lonld is doing had botter go straight to a faro- bank and riek hils monoy on a card, PRENCII PLATS NOT BO ROSY. Many people who aro tired of boarding-housc lfe, and many others who are weary of golng up and down stafra In four-story houses, fancy that o roliet for all thelr difiicultica may bo found ina French flat. They look upon the row of rooma on one floor, the neat contrivances for cconomizing space in kitehen, dining-room, closct, cte,, a8 the vertahle panacen for all their gh for *‘fata™ ae the ver, thelr domestlc ambition. Dut that glitlers, 2o it ma; n ends to vislt He was llberal and so”extravagantiy pro- e had arrange pers, boot-blacks, halt. cverybody in_tho hotel, — ratuitles offered by the t they tried to all-bogs, ho held back Soswered, **1LIs all Tight, v X 0 l1cave Monday morning. On Baturday h|l|]odn|l were sitt iin host called asl i e toolen stroll, ly feel embareasscd. m:wllbemlly that bar] Yoys, walters,—in fact, refased tho customar He In the mys- Cannot take an; on the balcony, maire, and, after uents, the latter went up- After woiting awhila for 2 strol “um'l. al:'l‘ fl‘lrmnmlrri, roposed that thoy meltle tho hotcl- hen achance to get ahead 1t was instantly secondod by tho reat, ded to the hotel oflicy, whero the ted to nnke out theie bille. rd isppen~d to_enter tho office at the mo- reliended the aituation at a glance. *Never mind your Dills, gontle- ho has won enough lo, and bis own too, for 1y wish I had let Dim alone ou a couple of Lonra ald his hotel-bill lgcfam thelr frfend had ns ol 1s not gold ‘y atated that, in n ority of casen, life in a French flat (s 2 delusion and a snare; (hat is, as & aubstitute for either o well-rozniated houschold orn really-camfortable As 1 am not engaged In renting brown-stone fronts, or takingboarders, Tamat least n disiuterested witnees; and, ns 1 Lave porsvnally tried six months of it under favorable circum- stances, I can safely point o my own experience. These apartments ure now constructed upon the principlc of Javlating vach floor from evel iwith separate bells, stafreases, ete. : but certain things In common, snch as elevators, ash- ote,, which cannot be kept apart; o family whoso naxull orgone are senaitive to mmells! Yoiu cannot got rld of other puople’a kitchen odors In a French flat; and many eople who havo trled this system of livingare Ond- Soma of the moat fashionably-lacated of theso nicw apsrtments [n this city aro mow va. It will oxtend to ohior cities, and have its day thoroin o8 here. TIE OLD BOWEN & M'NAMEE DUILDING: Thousands of persons, residents of this city, remember the white marble front bullding, Nos, 112 and 114 Broadway. Ita Corinthinn architce- turo 18 still fresh to tho eye, and, in apite of the magnlficent Equitablo bulldiog and other vast structures which tower above it, this bullding is one of the finest on the streot, y the then wenlthy flem of Bowen & BeNamee, ut the yoar 18505 and the writor hes many a thno dodged under the blookw of marbla ns thoy were boing holsted into position upon the hwgo defs rlck which faced its front, i from me Lo pay all yunrybu # month to come, when lie was sitting with s I e e tondlond In yot Dasting lz“fl.?l‘.é'.“fil‘&”m profts camo In on that party. A LITTLE CBNTENNIAL ROMANOE, It 1a privately announced that o wedding will take place this winter which will Lo the fitting eequel of o romatico of two cities,—this thne in reallife. The parties are Mr. Ben H— and Miss Badle T—, both resfdents of the Murray- 1Mt section§ aud the romance of tho affair con- alsts fn their novel introduction. went to Philadelphia sbout two wecks sgo, with a party of young friends, to visit the Centen- isl; and, a8 sho wished to stay & little longer Iban the rest, it was arranged, or thonght to be arrange, that her brother-in-law was to meet her ttthe depot in Philadolphlo, and escort hior to New somo miechance, o meant the Penn- ot, at_tho grownds, while she mennt cninsylvanis Depot, down town, ncar It “was evenl boarding-house. e Toarding-boio. but, ae 1t A L At not mind the It wus orocted depot In time for tho She falled to mect contalnod n fow dollare, aho and hurried forward to the T:15 traln from Philadelphta, her relative, and wau noro disconsolate than ever. As time wore on she began to reallzo that sho waw fna strango city withonta cont of money. Justat the crisis of her despalr, she chanced to soe & gen- tleman whom she had often ecen on the straet near herown home, bat whose namo was unknown. she rpoke tohim, and ex- This firm way come Henry €. Lowen, now of tho Independ- ent,—and #0 woll known ad a friend of Decohorand Tiiton, —and James NeNuniag, than whom 1o more onixl gentloman or truor Chiriation ever Jived. o led several years ago, and was, for a long ! prior to his docense, connected with tho dry-goods U, Clafiln & Ca,, and swas highly os- Theeo mattera ara recnfled to memory just now by the changes belng mada In he old baflding to it {t malu floor and first story, the FEquitable Life Aswtrance Company, whoso ‘Pl restanrant is fo be kept one of the Dolmonlcos; oud onv of the objects’ tho Equitable Compauy in loasingtho old Bowen rewmfica was to provido inmates of ngg with first-clasy meals ot o mod- Another object tras to provont auch changes in the building adjoining ns might exclado the Hght from thic upper storles of 1t ofllces, A BTEADY BINEE ON A LANGE BOALN. The continued vresente of o inany thousand strangers 18 not only making business very lively in this city at the presont time, {n tho way of leaviug eeveral hundred thousands of- fresh dollars every day, but it {s aimost produc- ing o marked effeet upon the sueinl enjoyments {8 more remarkable than tho crowds on the prinicipal Atrects, eapeciatly nupon Broadwsy from the vieldity of Clintou placa Thousands of famiiica nro entertalntng puests, and the overflow from the way into thousands of which aro all 4, Emboldened by despalr, plained the situntion. 08 hie wes en route to this eity The acqualntance thus commenced ripened into something etronger than friendship, aud, asthey walkod home fram_church Jaat Sun- tay, an intlnate friend of tho Jad 84 above, andadded that tho weds jor o restavrant on the told the evory ‘This Is au enterpeiso of ug would be & ioor. ECCENTRIC, BUT NAUGHTY, bulifing Ja uest oot TProbably onc of the most extraordinary wills tyer made publicw as placed on record In Jersey City, a fuw doys ago, by the Administrator of she cstaty of ono James Comely. o was nom- Iually a backclor, but, Hike Turksof anclent re- aawn, was “conslderably marrled,” mnotwith- Hauding, This man, who died worth $00,000 in tiovernment Londs and cash, hiad Hyed rogularly {or yearn with migtre 8, ono_at a tima, 1 hia tired of ono ho p ? o ned hor off, and took to 1is method was oxtromely busl- ileforo recelving lomicile, ho required hor to &l wowlng that she came to 1ive wit ot ns @ wife, that she disclalined any d would Jeave him manded her departure, 10 ave filled his inearure of blisy for tha nud hosettled upon ench of them per yesr duriug hor life, * +Llicse persony wore not wives, and I make this provision for thelr soneo of juatico, and not forany ction I owe them," Then he tnade n for fourtcen HHepitimate cildren, ey, Joln, ond contlnue to live am! mumunity of Freo-Loy 3,000 qf his eatate, peaple, Nothin 1o Forty-second atrect, hotels is finding 4 rivato bosrding-hduaca, o adopt tho expedicnt’ of Philadelphis, inake a8 much moncy as poasible out of the Cen- Moro marked even than the crowds fu tac evident dotermination to have what Indy would call **a Jolly timo;" and ces” of resort and amusement are The prosence of 8o many ars haw rondored it next to Imipossible to get ng dono by modistes or milliners, crs for suita and now dresses of varfous grades have compelled tho honse to ndvortise for addl. tional hely, and (he orders ruah In faster thoo thoy can bo Allod. The whole population not caga In tho cold business of every-day warking for dn) bread socma to bo on & spree, ond that's what's waking things livoly, TUBY MET' DY CHANCE, TIE USUAL WAY, There was a sonsation ina well-known fash- fonable boarding-house, on Madison avonue near the park, a few ovenlngs sgo, It socuns thatn young lady—the. daughtor of a widower—was wnlsslug when ovoning came, and tho question of her whereabouts was unanswerable, is n down-town merchant, and haos a grown son and the daughter mentioned. are fn the hably of startin B o'clock avery morning, leavls her thne In the usual way. dieappenrance thero was 8 acans butween th daoghiter and fatho of o fellow- only known about four wucke. They met by chanca in the hoarding-honso waa short and sweet, proposed match on nccount of young man's apparcnt lack of means to support u Ila wald, ** Walt," but 1t appears that thero this young man's vocabulur; walt, Tus young Iady colncl and begged her father to yiold, merchant could not aco the point, and ralsed such man's continued presenco viriually drove him It scemn'he planned an elopo. tl {0 the day-time, and ran away ininconia of 8500 ke declaress tonniul crowids. with, the *“Oneldn (o Thede bequests abaorl lnco ‘Bo. hequeiti S fillod to overflowlng. L to the Oneida Com- ond commonds his childron to thelr affec- arc and protection. The will 1a likoly to asle for & troublesons AX ASTONISIED PRESIDENT, The President of one our leading 1ifo-Insur- 'y much surprised and T ; y by acall at his house baut 9 o'clock in the mornfug, Tio carrlage- loads of persons and a hearso stopped In front by the wuy, la located stocratle up-town streets d their blinds, A funcral op- 8nce companies whs ver tontshed, last Bunday, At hls dwelllng,~which, in one of the most. ar Inthe city, The neigh sn aud were' amuzed ut hors openy cd ut the sight. ¥, 1t waru surprise; ald bo only fira carria| n ristocrrtio houso was the cauwo of the outdoor astouleh- gen for a funer- The fathur and eon down townshortly altee tnight befare hor ihe explanation of hia 20t conteol e riaibili uninvited guests, ho could It doumns that the corpuu uton who had died the day n Insured fn the Company, ives had Informod the wid- Hoct tho insurance money c body fnto the presence of cod representative, and con- ‘cascd was tho person {nsire ascd person wae really do- and the honust wmoiirners to stop the funeral-pro- ho Lifo. Company's Vrcals The widow had the When the P'realdent orderud ;'l;: was Incliued to pree His ity 100 e friends pnd sores o had taken (h 4, and ded with him, uuflr} that the duce ed With, R0, o row about the yo in the bouso that the ontof the famil ment with the with her to New Haven, Conn,, where they wery married, The common sequol happened: happy pair returned—obstinate father'relentod—tableay! MARRIED WOMEN A8 SCHOOL-TEACUENS, Now the New York Board of Education have got hold of the subject which worrled the Brooklynitea for severalmontha last winter,—), ©., whother it la proper to allow marrled women to act os teacliers fn tho public schools, Most persous who grapple with this subject hayea ry positive opinfon, either affinuatiyely or spenk a very decidod Yea or an Nuys but, whon two oppositos mieet and debuto 1, there 1s much aurpriso that so maoch can be sld upon botk sidos, the nverage citizen, 1t {s reduced to a cholce of evils; itisunfairto thounmurried toemploy themar- ried, and deeldedly unfair to the marricd not 10 em- ploy them, Nominully, every wowmnan withu busband #hiould Juok to ki for support, such women have to suppurt, not oul; but thulr husbands slsu. The fear {s, who are married aro thereby deprived of thele they niay resort to decalt awa™ have, Ly enterin y snd yeb deawlug thelr o estno 8% befuro, The have solved the problem by o rule that mnsrriago whull work & forfelture of cancy ahall not Lo supplicd unttl the former Incume bent (k. ¢, the bride) bas bad an opportunity to #hiow catsd why sho should be retainod. way spocial cases call forupeclal action, and the priuciple rowaluy tutack, b, t the house of g nd whow him llln' 0cuesiun 10 Moy nattempt to swindle A BTLANGE MARMIAGE COMPACT. S aro 80 many theorlos of marrloge and © nowadaya that fhe future writer upon World” will find many deal with In describing the | this country, With thetr | sorts of uotlons and doc- t pon this topl ¥ exneriences of thel ry doy, accounts of appal} ‘any peraon from nuarrigge, 4 18 not-strange k domu new panatea age-ralation, and ea. 1o cit clty weas aollclio Hire, by which a ntor into ‘a 3:mvlunnl surious probloms to marrage-relations {n trlnes by leetares u nogatively; the: [ 2 contemplation of oth men urid worn, o & el veutiveo for such Zethor s man agq Practicaily, many 10 settly tha cus- uatlons as teschors, ro should be. Tho | miuny eoldle wuny euldiers’ wi 0aition, but the va- 0 warrago was to be 8 drawng but {8 { Whollier it can be Informa wo that th _THE CHICAGO TRIBUNE: MONDAY. OCTOBER 9, 1876 ¢lebratinn fook place Monday evening, this pAper wae read In presence of & company of fi ed by the contracting parties o women hias taken the man's BOB INGERSOLL. Sketch of the Life of the lllinois Orator. His Political, Military, and Legal Carecer. A Portraiturs of n Happy Home-s Fraternal Devotion, orraspondence Dloominglan Pantagraph, En Paso, Oct. 5~Wihon 1 promised to give you s sketch of tho early life of Robert Q. In- mersoll, the orator pur excellence, T had no idea that the task of gathering mateeials would be diffieult. Great men are weually willing enough to lend an ear to the seribo who gives to the world tha infnutie of their lives. Nay, they themaclyes in most {nstancos, will furnish the data from which the sketch can be written, Mr, Ingersoll s, howaver, g0 llttle an egotist that ‘not only hos he on all oceastons refused to give any memorauds for this purpose, but he will not oven talk on the eubject to hls best friends. Many on attempt has boen made to obitaln the materlals for an article,ut to all the blography, hunters hie has fnvarlably responded with some question that led to an ancedote, and from that to unc of his own Inimitable tolka that begulled tho Matener, and Inconaihly led nim away from ll.le‘ malu polnt until he forgot the object of his vialt, . The reason for this reticence, Lie bas himsolf confessed, Is that * 1113 CHILDIIOOD WAS JIARD AXD DITTER, and he tever liked to redall It, even to his own memory. ~ Hils father was a Congregational mintster, and to him were borh five chfldren— John, Ruth, Mary, Clark, and Robert, The yourgest of the family, he waa born fa Dresden, o smull town in Northern New ' York, on the 11th of August, 1833; consequontly hie fs now a little over43 yearsof age. Hlis father seems to have been more poripatetic than even the mafority of Lls class. Robert ‘was ' baptized tvhien hie was3 yearsold fna theéatrein New York City. His father was then preaching in thecity and In this theatro, hls church. having been destroyed by the great fire, Ilis father, 1t scems, intlined”towards liberatism, and_lis strifes and the unnoyances hie was subjected to from tho narrow bellef of his fluck :nrl?' em- bittered the precoclous youth and filled him with the utmost hatred of the glovmy splrit of Calvintsm, 5 Tho father diod In 1850, but when Robert uttered that famous lecture on ** Heroties and “Hlcresles,” and it ivhich occurs TUAT GRAPIIO PICTURR OF JOTIN CALVIN, he said, when e retiurned to hls Lome, * Fa- ther, I've paid back another of the fusults they heaped upon you.” ‘The elder brother, John, way destined for the ministry. . lle was sent to Yale College, and from thefe to a theolugleal _seminal e Is now a physiclan in Wisconsin, He fs u deyout Old Schivol heltever, This scems to have axhuusted the means of the hiouschold, and Clark und Roburt secelved only o comnion- schiool education. This nust have been meagre, beenause they tuoved nbout a good denl, When tohort was 10 they camo Weast. Ina year or _two they moved back, Then they returlied to thie West, und sottled fn Wisconain, mud, inn short timy, they moved into the southern part of Illinvls, neav, if not in, Shawneetown, ROBEKRT WAB A FRICOCIOUS, BOY, Iic was a great rendur, aud.at this perfod of his Jife his tuvorite wuthor wos Robert Burns, 1le had comnnitted the works of that poet to memory, and it is probable that it was froin this fountafu that hu trst §mblbed that glowing, flery Linte for tyranny, and contemps for sham of avery gort, that forma such'un_clfective part of lis charneter. Ie and his brother Clark were lnseparable, The lutter is some 1ifo years' the clder, und, though he has been_overshidow- ed by the commandfng genfus 'of Nobert, they orocost {n much tho same mold. Between . them thero exiats A WARM APPECTION that has heen manifested on more than ono oe- casion. Robert refused to talte any offizo inthe district when Clark was running for Congress, and when he was tulked of for chances lookod bripht, he went to Chiago and lnd o personal eltercation with Horace White, of Tus Cuicaao Tituune, on aécount of an article that sppearcd fn° relatlon to Clark's course in Congress, His frlends_eudeavored to restratn biu t lie told Tnz TRIBUNE mana- gera that he would rather remali a private Indi- vidual and have the privilege of saying what ho thought, than_to be Governor of ‘Llinols, Iic was agsured that all wight be secured I lie would allow Mesing to manage his apnolnt- ments. 1o pruudl‘y -sald, ‘“No man, Hesing, «nar Whito, nor Medill, nor anybody clse, could run him," and helot the Governorship go ruth- er thnn recede from his positfon, though at that timu It sectned to him to be ruin of all his polit- ieal hopes, [Thero are soveral errors In the aboye puragraph. We do not belleve that Mr. Ingersoll ever bad a personal altereation with Mr. White; we certainly never heard of 1t be- fore. The nextatatemnent that * Lio was nssurod thut all might be sceured If he would allow Hes- Ing to mannge his appointments,” Is n sllly ab- surdity ns weil ue a propustorous assertion. It is curfous how such nonsenslenl storles will get started and flont around the country as bay-room possin, growlng Jarger ua they tvavel, und be- coming more sbsurd with uge,~Ep, TRINUNE. ‘When Robert was still underage, he bad studlo: llnss. beon adinitted to the Bur, and heand Clark 1o % . OPENED AN OPYICN IN, SUAWNEETOWN. ‘They were both Democrats In common with cverybody else. Tho rough and rude popula- tlonof Shawncetown fn that day knew but 1it- tlo elso than to ““*drink. whisky "and dann the uigger,” 'The two boys, for they were but little els, spredily beenine ™ leaders, and Clark was sentns & Heprosentat{ve to the Legiclature. ‘They Jived liera for seyerul years, but the aur- roundings were uncongenial to both of them. Clark £ll fn love with o _young lady In Erfe, Pa., went Enst, und married her. Ho declaved that e never would curry her. to Southorn 1ill- nold, Ouco the two brothiers had passed down the Ilivols River on_a steamboat, and had stopped at Yeorla, They were charmed with tho place, and now a pleture of tho pleasant clty reverted to thelr meniorles, und both safd, “wi'Ll o 10 PHOHIA.! To romove was ot much more of 3n under- taking than to pack thelr carpet-sacks, They arrived {n what was to be their future home In Tebuary, 1857, The Bar of Peorla was then fa- wous: there ware the namcs of Purple, of Man- ning, ot Merrimn and Sanger, of l{onl and Knowltoni Grove was fn the hcfzhtof his fames Judge Duvid Davis was within easy reach, and the tall figure of Abraham Linceln waa not an unfrequent visitor ot the Court-House, Into +the contro of this circla the two brothors wers thrown, and bofors loug they hqrrun to make thelr mark, Robert was the mory cloquent, but Clavk was tho better lawyer, It was not long Lefore thoy wers recornizod as . LEADENS OF TIE YOUNG DEMOCIACY, It was i age when in that locallty Democrncy and whisky wore much more synonymous terms than thoey ave even now. Roliert ot . tuls timg had all the fnpetuous —enthusiasin ot hoyhood, Ho was open, frank, frce, the head of every frolle, the leader in every en- terorise, Wlien be drank §¢ was fn and'with o erowd, whom lie enchauted with his talk, his wit, nud his fondness for repartec. There fa o goneral Imrrculuu thot at this time he was Egreatly disal !mml. 1t is true that wany a wise ono shook hia head and fearcd that this young man was golng to perdition, But it waa more the fear of whut he would do fu the future than of whut hie was doing In the present. TUE EFFORT OF 113 LIVE, however, was to make him a total abstinonce man eventually, e hgs now & horror of atlm- ulunts of overy sort, Even then, in his cupa, o was a brilllant, erratie genjus, und the freaks of what hie did and what e sald aro scattered_all over the traditions of this perlod, Ho was through it all & hard student, and e has always been and 13 to-day AN OMNIVOROUS KBADRIL But at this time bis mewory was so refontlve, his understanding so quick, hls (magination so gluvrlnig and bis wit so ready and nm that many of hia frlends wero deegivod into nking Lim loss delégaumu s brother Clark, In 1 Itobert was nominated for Congreas againat Bill Kellogg, It was a hopeless contest for, ¢ Bob,” The (fiuflul. W na&m l’y _agafuat him. 1its opponent was an old l@"m with o largo acqualntatce, and wag well yetadd fn the arts of campaiguing. Bob conduéted lils partof the m"'l’fl'b’ll a4 1f It wure a huge frollc; and yet on the stump bo displayed qualities that_aston- {8hed olilco his friends and his enomics, Mo tore Bin Kclluug'- arguments in pleces, worsted him in every del :te, out-talked und out-arzued bl Ruaning on the Democratic ticket, hy went fur boyoud nis opponent In denounelng slavery, and solumuly avawod thut * ratber than juterfero butween any Luman belng in his ciforts to se- ture his liberty, I would bo' condemned to boe chained {n the loweat deptha of hell,” Bob was beaten, and it wos : THE LAST TIME UE EVER RAN JOI AN OFFICE. dn1663he wout to war ‘as Culonel of the Eleventh 1linols Cumlfil.nA campaign of a year and a half sickoned of Detgocracy, and ho came out and denounced it. Clark was se- lected as the successoe of Owen Lovefoy fu overnor and his Congress. Dob remained at home and practiced Jaw.” In 1865 he was mppointed Attorney-Gen- eral of the Btate by Gov. Oglesby, In (508 he waa spoken of for Governor, when occurred the tvetts nurrated above, Bince then he lias Leen enguged [n the practice of his profession, In which ho haa been extraordinarily successful until the Ciucinnatl Conveutlon drew im out, and he electrified the eountry by his nomination of Bialne, 8lnco thenhis carcer has been one of nutional {uterent, s ereat literary work s his hook contatning his lecttires, in which he gives vent to his relig- fous views. Asexpressed, Mr. ln‘gcmall hua a8 K“ not well defined hie Lellet, He scems to be sy In tearing down the old notions of others, Heoes't holieve fn tho Celvinlstic God, and tue doctrine_of hell scems to bave Olled bim with abharrence. In 1863 he married Miss Eya Parker, the daughtor of a farmer of Groveland, Tazewell County, 1., A TANE WOMAN IN ANY AGE. Bhe best s the description of King Lemuel,— the proplicey that his mother taught him, “Who tan laud a virtuous' woman? for her prics 18 above tubfes, . The licatt of hier hushand dath eafely trnst her, 80 that lie shall have uo necd of apalls Sho will do biin good and not evilall the days of her life. Strenath and howor are her clothing, and alic aial) rejolee In time to come, 8he opencth hier mouth with wisdom, and in her tonguels the law of kinduess, ler children arixe ub and call her biessed, her hugband also, and he praiseth her,” An affcctionate, tendor, truc-hearted, and loving woman, shu trane- formed the reckless, catcless, heedless genfus Intoagreat-souled, atrong-hrained, versatile, and pure-minded man. Two daughters are the ro- sult of this unfon, Few houreholds equal this in strong but tender affectlon, mantfested sim- ply and naturally, without affectation and with- out concealment. No allurement of ofllve could ever detach him from the woman he loves, ‘When he goes on any lone journey T8 PAMILY ALWATH ACCOMFANY MIM, Together Sthey went to Europe; togethier the made the campaign in Maine and New York, Buch u‘wr{uct unlon of *two souln with buta llnqlct hought ? s exceodingly rare. Nor is Tier's the mnsculine intcllect” that partukes of Rl hils triumps and drives him forward beenuse she is urbitfous. Dress and soclety, and place aud pasition, arc thiugs sho cares as little for as he. In intellect she doeaw't trive to bo his neer, but In At womunly quallties, in devotion o hitg, M wifely regard,in the domestie virtues, -sho surpasses most wotnen, as much as fu mas- culine strength and viror he surpasses most men, and e ropays this affection with a con- stancy, acore, and attention, n delleate defer- ence to her wishes, and a loyal devotton {n her that reveals the Ideal lover of the romantic s:hool. There i, however, in all this © NO SHNTIMBNTALITY AND NO “Gusm." About this houschold there is no artillelality and no reserve. In this family one §s expeeted to say exactly what one thhiks, There fa no fattery, no awe, and no blunt brusquencss, It {5 a householil, every metber of which Ieads au ope, free, frank, Joyous life, with contldence in himeell and screnity to othors. Parker Pilis- bury, the old upustle of Abolitlonism, ruma West and tovk up hia residence with them for a week. We asked him what he thought of it. Jlean- swored with uplifted hands: %1 never saw any- thing like it. It's a perfect atmosphere of love from the head of the family down. Even thu lhorse enters into and secins to apprectato ft.”! Such are some of the sallent polats fn the life of & man who will rank 0s one of the great ora- tors of the world, They have been ilven againat his wish, but great mei, like the sun and stars, belong, not to thamselves, but to ol time, and tlicy must perforee lay aside s portlon of thelr individunlity aud staud before tne public as they ores for who in these days shall escape the peri- etrathie penell of the ||c\rnpz\1;\:r fiend{ E.¥. BALDwWIN, Editor El Paso Journal. TWE “Tho Doss'” Couvictlon Only Hceured by Immnenso Lalor—The Way in Which an Itonest Jury Was eeurod—1fls Movenents After Uis Escape. New York Triduns, Oct, o, Many Democratiz papers have repeatedly os- serted that somae Republican campaign plot 1s conceated under the eapture and return to this country of Willinm M, Tweed at this particular tme; and doubtless euspicions and fears will be intensified by the simultancous cavture of Tweed’s confidential agent, Elbirt A, Wood- ward,’at Chicago, It has even beon asserted that Tweod was to mnke serlous charges caleulated to embarrasa Democratic eandi- duates on_ untlonal and = State _ tickets, “oud these cherges have been denounced tn ad- vance as false. - The natlonal suthorltios here, .towhom Tweed wlilt be deliverod on his arrival, have been carcful to keep secret the political Bur(muu for which they propose to use Tweed, ut thuy leave all wiio inake lnql\:lrlu under the fmpresslon that there are to be some revelu- tlong, and that they will be damaging to the Detmocrats, 1t {8 posslble, however, that the only political use to which Tiwveed can be put Is o legltimate and proper oue, 1t will undoubt- cdly be shosen that the Democratle authotities who held Tweod were very.eavcless in per- wmittiug him to osespe, and ihat subsequently they made no serious elforts o eapture him, whilo on the other hand the Republican officinls who couvicted him were very active fu tracking hlm down, pursulug biin so closcly as to drive him to fight to Cuba, thence to Spaln, aud there recinlining him tn the abaence of un extradition- treaty with Spalutirough Republican diplomucy at, Washiugton, "The true etory of the manner tn which Tweed wwas convicted has never been told, and pmhuhla uever will be in oll its detofls, But it require not unly the strict rules of law, but special logls- Intlon awl the shrewdest dotective skill and the largest body of detectives probably ever cmployed on uny ‘case, Lo conviet him iinally of misdemeanor, even though he put in no deféuse whatever. Aftor tho fallure ot the first and socond trinls, some of the jurors having been corrupled fn cuch case, fL beeameo appurent to those prosecuting the Ring that it was not only necessar! !own\ch-flvnrf Juror, but to change by law the method of selecting the jury, Pro- vlous to the third trial the law made tho first two jurors selected by the Court the Y triers' of the others: that i3, the first two declded -upon the qualitications and impartiality of the others. A law was rushed through the Lerisin- turemokiug theJusticopresiding the judgoul the qualiticationsofall the vwelve juross,and author- Azngg hin to sut a~ido any Juror, eventhough e ceptable to both sldes. The Tweed case came before Judge Davis, and Lo scrutinized the jury with such care that 1t was inade up only of ve: futollizent men, It was sald at the time that | was one of the most intellipent * juries ever se- lected in this clty by other than the *struck” < PrOCeEs. . - But a system had to be organized also by which the counsel eonld bo informed concerning the pereons catled forexamination as furors, the Jurors when dlually selected, and tho court offl- vers who had them i ‘charge. This was necessury to provent friends of Tweed from getting on the jury, and also to prevent any ap- pronches by his agunts to the corruption of the ,urnn._ A'schewc was _gevised, and its detalls utrusted to Henry L. Clnton, To carry it out, somnething ke ity or sixty persous wero vm- ployed, nany of whom were speclal -detectives Troin the Department at Weshington, unknown to New Yurk Ring men, and a majority of whomn wumdyuuug lawyors of this city, who, it is be lieved, volunteered thelr services as detectives, At any rate, fully fifty detectives watched the Jury ‘wnd the ‘courl-oflicers fn charge of from tho hnt:hmlng to the cnd of the long rial, ‘Whenever at tho beginning of the trlal a panel of jurors wna drawn by the Sheriff and County Clerk, 1ista were Lnediately turnishied to Mr, Clinton, wlio set tho defectives under his direction upon the work of learning before tho openings of court next day allthat {t was possiblo to ul?uln of the antecedents of thosevalled, AN facts dlscovered wero reported to Mr. Cliuton, by ‘whaso clerks they wera entered In a book, alpha. hellmll‘y rranged, This book figured fu court ns tho ® Bluek” Book," aud the use inade of it was o great mystery awd o source of much irouble to Tweed uid his coupsel, who fro- quently alluded to it. The prnsccullnc coun- sel consulted It every time o new man was callod, und the acqualntance which It gave them with the juror enabled : them to examine bim fn such o way as to justify the Court fure- Jecting him {f thought untit. “In. this way scv- eral of Tweed's numerous fricuds were disposed of witliout resort to the * peremptory chal- fenge,” In collectlug this “Informativn the Washington and tho amateur detectives used every means possible, making Inquiry of fricnds and “nefghbors of the jurors summoned, und even of their ftnliles. Attimes they protended tobe sgents of "I'woed and supgested to the jurors that they might “maoke u good thing of getting on the Tweed jury.” In many instauces the telegruph was used, Among others called was un old gen- tleman who whl be ramembered as having cre- ated grent amusement by reference to himself as ¢ thy great American juror.” is history from childhood fu Clevelandt and o this ity was luvestigated, the telegraph belng nsed !reul{. He was found perfectly unexcoplion- ublefu all respects bub one; On a vill to Greenwich one summer he bad dined with Tweed at the Amerfcus Club. Tle was refected on thutaccout alone, From this fact it can bo scen . that the examiuation waa of tho strictest, In fact, tho mmin cfort of thie prozccution was directed to the sclecticn of o 'perfuctly honest fury, It was known from the experlence of thetirst trials that Tweed would put in no cvidence fn defeuse, and henco it wag clalmod by tho prosccution at the Ume that conviction wos sure to follow I m truv he reet of the the jury was selected, the detectives alluded to watched the officers fn their movemnents to and from the court-ronm, and effectually preventend munleatlon between them and Twee The tnantcr of the escape of Twees hands of the Sheriff s still a mystery outslde the Btato Department at Washington and the American Legation at Madrld, ‘T'he charge d'af- raires at Madrid, Alrey Al Adee, s a nephew of John Graham of L Iawyer on tho trial nt which he was ‘convieted, full particulars of Tweed’s inoveincnts from the time when he left New York, and lins nlready forwarded his report to Wi The full detalls are, of course, atill cenough Is known to warrant the statetncnt that ‘Tweed was {n the clty for some weeks after his dirappearance from Ludlow Street Jail. The the United Btates de- tectives, under directfon of District-Attorney Plielps, compelled him finally to put to gea n & yacht, which landed him in way,to lavana, and lils camie known to the Untl reported the fact to Becretas ton. ‘Ihe Becretary immedintely dirccted the rest Tweed, and steps were taken but Tweed, hecoming aware of the efforts making, left Havana for Bantiai subsequently salled fn the Carmen for Me, Cushing was Informed of this fact, and Mr. Adee, on the former's suiling for home, ample precautions and secured Tweed on wera as poor as they, I should bo Clrcumatances make people what they are mich more than many suppose. wratched child i this town but, if m had been born and bred up in cumstauces, they might have heen as ha Who doubta “{t1 Hevent: youths sent to reformatorfea become decent Crime Is an accident for WANTED-MALE FELP. not a There 18 nof RST-CLASS TOOTY per cont of the winter. CApTly W THOMAS b, son Coal and A}, nembers of goclety, which rociety Is reaponatble. On Inat 8aturdsy evenin I walked through Isnw the well; Tsaw tho swarm of women and children waiting for the water, I saw the horles o dirty children plnyIng in the strect and dirty 1 looked up at John Knox's house, and wonidered whether his apirit could rost in peace with such misery sitiing on his very door- 1. 11 shoy the dark side of s beautiful town it 18 becnnse I lore bumanity etter than places, and believo that mankind'is best helped Inyg lhchlruth, even if the truth ls unpleasant to CARPENTER TRIMMERS AT WEST near Folkat. . J. NIGUOLS. 1s city, Tivecd’s G floor nicn waated at 91 Employment Agencies, NTED-10 MEN FOR O d section wark tn | 2U., 17 North Ciar koA ARGELLY which cane so_slowly, AVEL TRAIN, GRAD- sharp pursuit of him b southwest corner Lako and Market-ita, Mtscelinncons. ANTEN=YFN TO SELL THE DEFIA ty lamp ext{ngnisher, Mann's paten; chrom Pt T MULININGTOY, ubs. He made his rescuce thicre soon be- A States Consul, who Fish at Washing- 10 chlinney-burners e ureatest Inducements o 43 snd 47 Jackeon at., Chicago. A Remintscence of Johin Brown’s Boyhoou. AN Jlacen Paftadium, A resident of Morrls, then a onn., who remembers when Johin Bown was a and attended schootat the academsy, writes: ne rewiniscence will sufiic to show the early characteristics of the man who conceivad §t & duty to undertake, with a company of less than twenty-five followers, the liberation of rlaves in Balmon Brown, a brother of John, was also & pupil ai Morrls Academy, and by some misdeincanor had in- curred his displessure. Not willing that Bslmon ehould cyade the punlshment the cose merited, John reported the case to his tutor, and, nfter narrating. the particulars, safd: *Mx Vi d dono this thing st 1 would have punishied Lim. pect you to punist him now for dolng thls—and If The tutor let the matter oo or that day, and that night, Salmon was lkely to escape punis) 18 word,—more in_sorrow 1 angery,—giving his brother a severn flogging.'! CITY REAL ESTATE, ;upii"é\vlnlllci"'xffiusz CONNER rt of Litchficld, AKD BANKE r n, ih to sectre tho service and every one of thelr converts to aell the Exc ki €50 per month fo Christisn work: EXTEN, President, ress or water tisad, uns 1 Virzinia fn 1858: c yes ‘I'weed’s friends here ray that he will never of hia former confcderates.’ His Lrother Richard, his son Willinm, Mr. Tiweed, “the (General,” nrd Foste his former Becretary, who mect almost the Hoftman House, laugh o the dea ‘hecontents of Lis trunks which were selzed at Vigo may reveal many dark scerets, but they say he will reveal none. The pancrs have Leen forwarded under seal by Mr. Adee to Washinzton, fully examined before Tweed's brother, retary arg that” the Wil Tweed {snot W. I, King, but fsa whom Tweed bas had ns's personad Tollower for years; that he found him originaily on board a oat in the East River, and, taking a funcy to him, has kept him since that time about his erson. The King brothers ore sald to be still n Britlsh Columbla, and it s thought that Woodward's purpose was to join thet. Henry C. Genet was in the clt He has not been moro Ll 4 from the clty since his escape frown the Bherif, and has repeatedly visited it EDINBURG. nt-Houso Lifo—Shocking Conditlon of the Pauper Popuintion. Corresvondence New York Graphle, Episoune, Aug. 25.—“You'vo a beautiful town,” salll T to o prominent citizen of lterary proclivities, who was hurrylnz outl of town to eseape from the Albert Memordal celebration. “ Aye, beautitul enough,” he replied, “If you look on the outalde, but it's o whited sopulchre There's o deal of wickedness WART TO (1VE 5,000 00 men who wish ye men §70 per 1, week durlng the " & CO.. Chicagy, TIG o Tiweed's tulking," Tl 1 know he would ex- N tand et # NTE 0_CANRY OUT TARCELI (TOUI 1auDdry ot 310 South Ciarkst. Nefercuces 4. cing made publie. e e e ] WANTED-FEMALE I ELP, Domestice, ANTED—AN INTELLIGENT QERMAXN WOMAN Hotise for 3 small (amily aad do tho liouse- 158 Pral - Hunt captured TERSON _FOIL GEN- tamily: German pre 51vania girt may catl sgain Y., corer Van Borunit, Senmutresscess TANTED-A UODg TAILORKESS TO WORK 0!{ abav. S RAGUERTY, - Prevared to work to 17 Employment Agencics. A)"I;ED — GERMAN B 1 wirls for privais familica. hot city and country, ot Mits, DUIK. SITUATIONS WANTED-MALE, T MP) et housework in a smsit #2,0m—Xew frame cottaze 8 Flitmore Pay 2 aw (rame oottagoe 17 Holurooke-st, Above proverty wili be s low cost, Inyuire al 385 Western-av, & few, evenings an fifty miles Thirty-reventh-st.. . BENRY & JACUD 0 UAPITALIBTE=BRVERAL A RO. 1 Lt {n the heart of ‘the 070 (0 £300, QL frum i, COB WEIL, 140 Deatborn-at.. ve! m\'c 11 ‘:Pn’(t e J.fi:fil & J A " HUBURDAN REAL ESTATE. BALE—#100 WiTA, DUT k from dopot, at Ls 5down and 35 month ITOATION WANTED—BY AN ob piater and proof-rea calariy qusiifod a8 s proof-resders ake cliarge Of nawspaper work, and_coull aasist writer {f necoraary; no objection ta tha cubutry, dress P41, Tribuce otice. Employment Agencica, NORTHWESTERN co wiil supply men and boya for auj ¢ suat) 1s wanted, picase Drivate tamittes and uotcly deallsy nr EXPERIENCRD EAUTIFUL LOT. u?:. 7 iniles from cnpe 13 G| with harn $1,000, on RidZe—New 2-3lory, 13-To0in Liouse, 81,200 only £200 duwn. Desiilaines—7-room cottage and3 lots, $1,000; aro the chrapest homnes It monthly payments of LA BROW N, 163 Lanatic: GNT-HOUSE WHICK TOUETa CHEAD. dAS. N & CU., 04 “'ll_lllufl'-fln- RO, 215 AND 2 depfrtiment free af chare. and nothing clse. 1 or ndd hidden away." 1 thouzht you Beotch were highly moral people,” I refolned. “And so wo are. over here and make inlschief.” How the Beoteh hate thelr Celtie nelghbors! There 18 no love thrown away upon the English, The conquered are not in the habit of wasting uch affection an thelr conquerors, and uothing carages o Scotehman more than to by taken for but he_remembers that Seot- and a King, and that the Queen ot Great Britain passes most of hier tima {u the Ilighlands, doomiuy Ministers and dispatehe aucnts to thirty-elx hours of linrd rattrond travel Ini order to obtaln an sudience with the head of the Governinent. I d1d not dream the feeling of natfonality was 0 strong until I faced it, yet It pales into noch- Iugnesa when comuvared “with the lutense aul- musity townrds the Irlsh, Destrous of learning whether the vice of Edin- burgz was due to a forolen element, I made in- quiries, and bad placed in iny hands a paphlet ublishied fu 1560 by the well-known booksellers, Douglas, snd written by the author of *The Englishwuman in Amerlea.” Therein I learned a different story. The writer had vigited the worst siums of London, Blrming- uebee, New York, and other towns fn both Ilurope and Ameriea, and solemnly de- clares that there are strata of misery and moral degradation under the shadow of St. Giles' crown and within sight of John Knox's house wmore concentrated and unbroken than are et olsewhere, : igli gmm:d. aod It's the Irfeh that come % TANTEDSTO DISTILLER fiers, anil wine aud spirit merchanta— man wiih 16 yeans' expericnce (n England, Canada, snt the States; understands rectity #pirfta, tanufacture of co tnicat of forelén wines A‘P RALY unexcoptionablo ruferences. 70, RENT—I10U! UATION WANTED writer for short-hand flccs beet raferences furnlsticd. JATUATION WANTED-T A _BIORT: il work 1n s Jaw or milroad of- Addresa Y 05, Tride OTTAGL OF 7 an Enplishman etween Luke and Randolph, land gave Eng Y A YOUNG MAN 21 years of age, 0f exemplary clinracter, st say kind e can carn an honest livlog; ont: ready and willing to ah satisfactory references. b nn R SITUATIONS WANTED—FENMALE ““‘Dn!nmnlcm ON WANTED=RY A YOUNG WOMAR B ukA-’:::‘m?lf chitdron, o ‘second work of business where! sin) AR WIGRER PARIK, tise, With pood carringe-hauie and nortiieast corner lobreysst. be rentel cheapto s godd tenant. BAIlD & BIUIDLEY, 00 Lasalicest, VUSES 770 NOITI CLAT Weila Iy, TWO NEW DASLMENT AND TWO- ek houses with 10 rooins, and il motdern provements: excellent [ocation: todes sirablc_teuautd. laqulre of JOLN McEWRN, 248 D—BY A GOOD COOK TO DG Addrees Y 34, Tribuno. Eilmonston & WANTED-BY A NIESPECTADL] private family ‘aa general servau '0 RENT=IN EVANSTON, IOUSES OF FROM & t ond-third of the former price til Il on long time, with notl) In advance, or for mont| heye also louses with from 5 Employncnt A now by mall the kind Stato wages pald; Inclose yiica s, Plenss remetmber we alao 1 any department freq of Mrs. BAKER; male E1, 00 Btate-ut., corner of Lan~ t (o of servant wanted, 1 adt TO ILENT-ROOMS, STNICELY T or withuut board; traus) ED—GOOD GERMAN, NORt- and Canadian heip can’ be had 3irs. BALKHAM'S office. TED—FAMILIES IN WANT OF rman femala help can e 'S ofiice. 60 Milwauke-av. RCIIMIDTS EM: rontxed by all frat- —410 Wabasli-av, ISHED ROOS, WITH very core of viclous wretcnedneas Is the fIigh ts taken. 476 Gtatoeat., street, with Holyrood Pulace at ono end, sud bigh-hanging, pleturcaque Castle at the other; with thu courts of law, the Parllament Iouge, the City Chambers, the sascinbly halls of the Eatablished and Free Churchics, the Cathedral, and other prominent buildings stud- ded down the whole of fts length. Old Town _constituted the Edinburg, Migh street was cratic quarter, INT—FURNIENED ROOI (3 tu Foapectabls’ pa 50 West M -8t S, BUITANLE b Tlompesn's lock, Weat rovements: rent low to good . THOMUSON, 20 1fes nd servants, rinepal part of Now it fs called tho Via Dolo- et it Is still, by necessity of great thoroughfare, through which 1t8 representative must needs pass. #OCall the dark nnd desolste plares of the cnrt_). the Uld Taown {8 about the darkest and most'desolate,” writes the Rev. Mr. Magulre, From g report inade on the condition of tho noorer classes In Edinbure, {asued fn 1808, 1 learn that the population of a village fserammed fnto the six or seven stories o These tenements are dark, dlrty, and are never They aro without gas, or water-pipes, , Or temporary receptacle for nshes, 1lie only entrance to them is by one lontr, dark, they retiirn the enormous profits to thelr humano owners of from 40 to 00 per ceut, Onu roof cuvers a popnlation of 210, 18, or 200 pereons, Hving In frightful dens, un- , and often without direetlight ; 13,200 Tumnllivs, comprising not only the viclous and Lut large nuinbiers of the poorer labor- nsees, Iive in einele rooms, and of these single rooins 1,530 are fnbahited b According to census, 130 of these shielters were reported to be without windowz, and 900 were daing In this vilo way are housed song, or more thun one-third of the populal of the wonderfully beautiful town ol TUATIONS W, D-TLADIES TN WAN, firvt.class fewaln nelp of all nationalitics can bo iy LAIRE, 895 West Madisnt: fisccliancous. TUATION, WANTED—BY T-HO0MS—VEIY LOW, s, 3 ro nqure a lioem L. YOUNG LADY ‘rench, Latin, music, and sing- Chicago or the immediate victnlty. ms, U 3, ‘Tribuno ollice, near Clurk, _ App ¢ call or address A, lady's companion. Dourn.a " HMONSES AND CARRIAGES. DAYH, THURSDAYE, AND AAT carriages, anu harness & soaclaity, 106 aud 194 East Wash!) 4 {'0 RENT =10 PER MONTH store, Ogren-ay., bear Taylor gy rooms over state. —'T0 RENT. “GY A MAN AND WIFE, alcoye rouin, with hoard fur fanilly, where the comtorts be fiad; wnna must ba modornt: Jompty. yetetonues Aeat-clias, ~ Address [y ouse. 3 LARGR NRICK stuno stair, and Clhr\"rl'l'lla il flTflAU'R SALE OF 8 DRIVING 'y wagons, 5 st of sl nesach . ot ot I biankots, at WHEN & at., commencing 8t 10 8, 1. LAIGE ASSODITMENT FIRST-CLABS SEC Liand carrlukes, consisting of Victurias for 4 or ¢ :kl'l]l‘ plhactons, and bz of side-bars, end ai u . fe. in some quiet pri’ harp, this day (Mo FINANCIAL. OUNTS TO LOAN AT VERY LOWKST RATES ‘on city or farm dccnrity; 1arge nmounts at 7 and farm_loars at #°and ¥ percent. M. 80 Was bifngtol ICNREPS, C-PAMCIRET Pul T Al Kinds, topand ope BUHngs, our own make. other well-knowa uisk heap. FENNOYER & CO, BUSINESS CHA 01t SALK~THE R A LVANCES BN DIAMONDS, WATCITES, 4\ ‘vonds, A, E S pri co, 120 itan- EST LOCATED DHUG STORE 10,000 {phabitants. . ty and Modleal Colle DYANCES MADE ON DIAMONDE, WATCHES, bonds, or other good keeul money loated on furnfture. 19 TO LOAN IN §UMS OF 3,000 AND U Tl a8 jer cont upon 1, ma At 10 per cont. Portiand Block. AR RS involca from 81, 500, An unusually goud openlng. . JOR SALV=A CiGALl BTOIE, callly, haviug & £oud trad y. Alios ine giass ofice _pa Aud & truck. Apply st 79 South Clark- d Addreis Q 42, Trib- N A Q00D 1O- ir) Tacts are stubborn—stubbbrn as John Kuox, opposite whose house I the well which supplies High street with water, Under the houso of the grout reformer Is & whisky-shop; aud those who bee how difilcult of access fs the well, and whut slaves It makes of fechlu or delicate women, van wondor that a large popufution should take wore Kindly to whisky “It s imipossible for these peo- ploto be clean i their dwellings, clothes, or persons under present clrcunistunces,” doclares the writer of * Nutes on Old Edi od only kuows what it is to slave after the water! It's Killing me; and, in the glen nole burn [stream sobbing at the thought Mind you, all d UUTCUINSUN & LUF¥, 20 A{ONEY TO LOAN IN SUMSTO SUIT, NOT LESS A koo reul catate scutity, JOIN d it 8= WILL T MY P, g0 ur Cook Couuty. take one-third Interest for < Untop § rds. TIN A GOOD CASH TER owbuys halt {nterest ln t of $10,000 yearly, 0 creentazo of the 7 ¥ii AND OTHER CTIY iiogua—I an proparod t buy D gieimber atwinall dlseount. C. m EY TO LOAN ON Y 1or overs commisitons U2 Washington-st, 1.0 TO LOAN ON - ARETHING PARTNER WIETES TG el balf (icrest, (h & well-estaol auIacturiny lm‘-gnult. ;::ymul-nm 1 Hoed anily withous iyl the 'an Uppartunily xeidom o Address for three by the door,” of "tho miscry about her. these people are Scoteh, not Irish, a8 my friend wheu calling Edinburg **a whited of them aro as honest as Alfsslonariea red medical men appeal to the rich fn vain, The same houses, gutted from cellar to roo "MISCELLA CIH COUNTRY Clieapeat manner parate 00, OR BUMS TO SUIT, TO L n du vo fu the lest an TOeFLY At current rates, i b J‘ W_ $5.000 % NEL & BOND, I " " BOARDING AND LODGING, South Nide. T VAN BUREN.8T,, NEATt STATE~HOARD adice or gunticmen, 4w 85 per week with WABASI-AV,~TWO NIC o] INISH, Y TE ke Cors Waor, an boud es. . Iieferences exchas) North Side. NORTH CLARK:HT,—TO RENT—FURNISHED mnl'll!lulhy board st $4. i sepulchre.” Man, they are poor, LL CABIl PAID TR, wod miscellnaeous goods of enidtng letter W JUNAS UELDER, GO Stat BOACHES AND BED-DUGA—IIOUSES UN bie made perfectly clean by conlract (Wi o), Huuses exuinlned frec. OAKLEY, 15 Euat cto) NTE 1 “,‘}:fll ulrkel:piates ‘accun Weateru tiun Wurks, o9 uumfir -8t Chicaky. IOUSESIOLD GOODS, ON EABY PAVMENTS: \vnlll’\hfmc steck to select from, and supplied w e for rubbish, would in return of from 8 to 10 per cent. ulis as proved that bo made to pay by renovating \V fn the Grassinarket, ‘MMe restored bullding, now rendered Labituble to human belugs, ro- turns H per cent, ‘This {s 1ittle compared with the 40 and 60 per out of thomiserable wretches fn High strebt, Cowgate, and Caunongute; bug, when 1t i remembered that cousols pay fur less, and thut the Kingdom of Great Britaln hos tost ritics that ylelded Test, (L scems fucredible that tho moneyed class of atown lke Edin- 0 the duty and the right- Io next them. ‘Think of a respectable artisan, with a fanfly children, belng vbliced to occupy & rtment from the windowa ° of which could bu scen thyee debased wounen sltting fu broad daylight absulutely cun I hopo for my bafrns,"” sald the artisan, “wlhen they can't get abreath of fresh alr with. out seciig such as yonl 1'd rather they were fn thelr graves than grow up here | ¥ that these unfortunate creaturca call themselves ** God-forgottep, d that a third of the population of God-fe never enter achurchi that, out of 145 familles visited by mlsslonar] Y were Scoteli;'so Ireland ls not the causs o this }»ln, -8pot, ‘This thint of Edinburg's population is declsr- ed te bo niore drunken aod wore dirt, dangerous classes elsewbiore, aud to tish natlonality. Iift God's elect yo are seeking herot™ ehiricked u frightful old hug ot a woman-mis- “Its the devil’s elect you'll find 1" Do yonthiuk the missfonary would dare to mock me by t.lling me of God's Jove! Could he Lave the juve todo It Aae 7" words of o wretched mother whose three futhier- less children lay on straw which served fora bed Lilnythropy can buard, to relizble part| L B3 WEST MADI- St hodscliold furaiture on o) v e ToUms 10 ront, with or wiitout bosrd. EVADA HOTEL, 144 AND 13 WABASILAY.. T Ilnnnu{u'?—lllm Teduced w $1,50 per dsy; per weak. manthly poymenta; IE EMPIRE PARLOL 1 scll furnfiure, carpoi; elebrated Enioire parl lowest cash prices. Balcaro MUSICAL, NTION 18 CALLED TO Ol EHmen ot Grai s, and €0, wi, B ititsoy, LOST AND FOUND. LL EMERALD HOSOM-PIN, BET Finder will bo réwarded by {EHAIII L6 aaluy ut loow 9, 130 Eust Wealiogwa ste ~BUNDAY AFTERNOON, OCT. 8, orsea; one chu tiyini on & leathicr Laft crllght bay, 7 years old. whit turning them to suveuth and Clark-sta. ul’ll!“ for sale or to rent on SR _Cornerot 8 PTANO AT A BAR: ore. er with o thin ro L W. BASMUSEN, coruer Thiriye MEEDICAL. A S GOEECHEL, 1IOMEOPATIIIC P graduate of & German univeraliy, haa acnt of all dfscases 0f woinen aad chil whouplug-cough nvarfably ca, 154 Milwaukoe: ORCES LEGALL! QUIETLY u cvery Stata sad Territory fur lucou c 4aaTy. vi-u sfier ‘l‘x:'zfi?" 13 year: OMINERY, G FORTABLE BOITER AND 010 20 Lorss-power chewpi whil pay ‘W;?HlkA englue frow 1 cash. 830 Archer-sy. PENSONAL, UNAL~WILL THE 4 LADIES THAT ACCEDT- note from (wo g whea slding kuoj N "OF A J. MELCHEIT, Buch wero the +aby twachiacs clicap for cas! iticuen on Frids) sama sutolutmen| sale Lwy; will theu pzplalaall, €, 15 K [BESEUSEERIEL NPl oA SOOI Sr TN CHANGE~TWO ELEGANT BRICK HOUSE: 1 Lnow tho loj um!ldt.:ellmm:fl. Tur Bk ferin, Addisss ed ond wrotched classes well,”” Avrites JDr, utbrie. 1 belleve, £ 1 |

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