Chicago Daily Tribune Newspaper, May 7, 1877, Page 3

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ADA TUR The Little Girl Wio Hos Visited One Hundred Spheres, And Proposes to Give Seances at Fifly Cents a Head, , Pt e e John Tark, expressman, Laving a stand at the eorner of Washington and Franklin etreota, pos- sessen & phenomenom. Tle has & daughter, Ads, aged 13 In years, and centurics in wonderfal ex- perlence, Sharp, anick, and amart, nsturally, her facalties have been preturnaturally sharpencd by contact with a world of which most people are fgmorant until after death. 8he Is a Spirftaallat. 1t fell upon her suddenty like 8 mantlo, It envel- oped her, and spread it ampla skirt over the fam- fiy. Ordinarily, girls of 13 aro contentod with the fancompleta drenms and peppormint drops of this 1ife, but Ada Turk has manifestel ** ayearningafter the nnfathomabla ' gencrally rogarded asinconnlst~ cot with her years, Now and again she sbandons temporal things, and wandera, When she comes back, sho tella of exploita and sights which make tho honeatoxpressman and his good wife stare. She has Leen n revelation unto them, The apirite ey of the hundred ephercn has been confided to Ber, and she reveld in the treasures diaplayed bes fore har gaze o8 slio stalke abroad among tha dis- e Turk Tanded tn this Ifo at Kenoshs on the 10th of Scptember, 1863, The spring aftar tho he family removed to Ch , and are now e o AmOnR 8 EPoupof AAmIting ROIEhLOFA e o, flid_West Lake street. fer eatly life. Ilko thil'of Spartacas, **ran qulet 88 tho brook by which she played,” but with maturing_years she frst,” thoughtfal, and then prolific in the selation of ‘wonderful :x}»erlnncel. Ono wonld jook into the sharp, bine ares_of o little suburn-baired girl, at he was contemplating & Lox of mysteries, Bhe at firat atrikes ono &8 8 very sharp dameel, dismond-pointed, so to epenk, and tha casnal con- yersationallst would unl{ dotect in ber yulcs tho slight raep of a very sel ~Ipu--emd andvery wary oung ladv. Dut extended ncqualntance dovelops {hu exlstenca of elther a remarkable power or & ro- morkablo Imagination, and mukes Miss Ada Turk s profonnd puzzie, or n macnificent ilinstration of the effect o) the fancy over the rensoning facnltics, A TRINUNE reporicr hns been trying to solve tho roblem, 1l lias been to the casket, No, i est Lake strect, and bas talked lke & whole family to Its jewel. first tie found both Bise Ads and her molher, especially the latter, roady to expialn, but he was somewhat discouraged foward the close when the neighbors dropped in to add their testitmony, and finnliy thrown Into cark- lmden%flr at tho sl 1 fafluro of all tests offered tocurs his skepticiaum. 3138 TURK WENT DACK toher fiest revelation, and obscrved that she twas counting some buttona one day, when the {ablo tipped and spilled them. 'This was abont the firt of laat Septembor, From that time she has exer- clsed & phenomenal control over tubles and farnl- fure, moving them at her witl, thongh strong men st upon them. As she told of It, iLoccurred to the reporter that perhaps her talent mlght bo heredifary on her father's aide, as his daily bread @epends tpon aimilar eforts on his parts but Misy Tark solemnly aarertad that It was apirits, —an eles ment to which the average expressnian 18 constilu- tionally averse, From manipulating tho furniture falr Ada ex- tended lier operations, and, haviny organized some amsteur circles, sho oatoniahed the honest denl- gens of her vicinage by her emnulations of Glen- dower, with the nmual banjo, tambourine, and srumpet accompagiment. Up (0 this tinie, 1ot one of the family, they assert, had ever believed n Bplritualism, - They reganded Medls aua band of mirgufiled rouls, **who, Lolder than Nemrod, seek to rino by nonscnsc heaped on nonsenso to the skles,” llnt{lnn 1t was brought to their own door bnln.-|lr own daughter, and they, hearing, accepted ssdivine. About the 25th of Alprll Miss Ada was sitting fna chair, when shie suddenly went off into a trunce. What hapuencd, sha docd not Glatiuctly remember, nordid she eco 88 inuch ns was enbecguently re. yealed to her, 1t was deemed remarkable then, but, in tho lizht of o -nh:nfinanurnnu,tlut offort, of only twenty-onc hours' duratian, bas been fxno- uinfoitaly relegated to tho diguity of a common nap, But two weeks aro w-a-{, whilo scated in o circle at & Madison strect mediunys, sho went oft sealn, remaining in o comnatose stato until tho fol- Towing Samm:{. Inrelating whnat sha saw, sho assnmea tho bral. pees-liko descriptive. *‘1saw peoole,’ sha saye, “ibut they seeined to Lo light and niry, with'no substance fo them. T uaw all iy duad friends, and recognlzed theni, The first who sapoke to mo was Mre. Briggs, who was for a'long time my galde throughi the spirit-lond. *Sunbeamw,' Dr, Huntoon's control, took me out in Jowa, whore the Doctor wis having a efrcle. 1shook hands with them all wound, but I cuuld not speak to thom, " ©1Id you know Dr, Huntoon?™ *+Yes, he tind been to iy clrcles once or twice. After leaving there, Mrs, Kriggs took we Into the epheres, There nro Just 100 of them. [ went to Igem oll, sometinics” with one yulde, and some. thoea with anothor, Zimran took me lo the one- tundredls, the hizhest aphero, Orat,” Who I Zimran?" imrat In Abraliam's olilent son, " Hyss Adn fe somewhat obicure in ber Ditillcal knowledge. Zimmn was the first of Abralgin's .sun® by lieturab, whum ke had laken to wife, long after Sazah‘sdenth. Iehmacl wus Abraham's oldesi sun, . +¥Z{mran took ma to ths ono handredth sphere f2st, but I wan not allawed to o fu. Luoticed that all the spiseres Jooked like large rooms, and that cach had dour minde of pold,” and 3 o door-plate on It marked with tho nume Der, - Thoy. s, bad tuellow Nghte, praduating Inbrightness, It waa brighter at the top tha 8t the bottom, where it wasall dark, I lnnnad In &t tlie dours all through, but Aid not sco any one [ Xnew from the ono humlredih to the thirtconth, Zimran llves in the twentieth, but ho can go any- where, Intho thirteenth Tsawan SPHEIE DEVOTAD TO CHILDREN under 12, whio bave to come down to the boitom Leforo they can start up sgain. ' 1 recognized Ollle Jenufags there, ile wia 3 f‘ennold when he dlcd, abont two yearsago, Ile fooked Leautiful, an was wurrounded Ly Mowers. In Sphere No. 10 § saw my grandios, “my grandpg, aud tuy sunts, Miey vald: ** (Glad to seo you," Thete lu a teachor ineach sphiere sent froni another to feach the ayrite, "Ry i) stand sround tho teacher, and #ho tells thom to be good, Thoe teachura are brighte ¢ than the rest, and weuar long rolics. ““In Soheres Nos. and 81 sawa great many splrita that camo totho circles, and recounized them because_ they told me wlio they wera, In Ephera No, 5 I raw Mra, Edward Morria, She told mie Ler husband shot her, and then aliot himself, Taaw Morrls himaclf tn Epliere No, 2, 1l was very duwn-hearted. 1lis head was ull swelled up, |n7h¢ had o bole in hls forehs abont tho size of L0cents. Allthe epirits in No. 2 felt bad, They had not developed, “You lmuwgon must develoj Uefore you tan go uqtu thio highcst. In No. hiero was no gkt atull, and wo fAowers. Ieaw Lowers fn o)l the rost, aud tried to take lolnllhlllli tlae‘y lsnolved 1o miy hand, Then T came too. Afer mather chimed in, * Whilo Ada was gone, the spirls of Susle Crotker camo into her Y 0idn't whie cat auything while fn the trance?” *'0, yes, woe gove horfrult and candy. She #ould dak for 1t on the slate, and worave itto oor, Mr, Turk came to tho front with plous assertions LP it was ol true, and wae going on, when a gen- n who had buen introdaced as Dr. Morzan : _**1don't know whather yoo know it or '3 dors't cAre wasther you kuow it OF got. ou arc & skepilc. Tdon't know whether you know itornot, and I don't care whother you know it or 30t, but'the grestest curcs on this ‘earth has been i ve douo 'em. K am Dr. Morgau, B ey s atorlia s to1d Tua How (10 som. 1 dun't say wheth belove In Spenitoal- m. 1 kuow men's cycs has been put back In thoir vads, and I dun'tcaie whotler (rm know it or B}, "And thoso eyes do busincss jo~dsy, If It s Sperita, woli und yood, 1f It 1a not sperits, oll S Where s the application of all this, Doctor?™ ** [ don't knov whethor youl Kagw where the ap- Illuflun {u or nut, and I don't care whether yun kuow where tho application is ur not, 1don't Zuake applicatlone, and I dun’t ey it {» sperits, BUT TIAT'S ALL RIONT." The Doctor haviug disyoeod of himacif tohls sat- fafaction, the reporter turned to the young lady. e had noticed o cabinet in the rovwn, and asked er if aho hud materiglized yet. No, she had nat, Did sho propose furthur seancos? Ohi ycs;nasoon 8s2he was butter dovoloped, & ball you cbarge an admssion feo?" **We uover have yet, but wo propose ta chargo ®ringers 5O cents, The mother sricd to stop har and deny fr, but it :o‘l‘ :‘emud. ‘The mystery, of the seauces was ved, In the evening the reporter called on Dr, Adam Wiler,’ who attenied Ads whilo. in her ugo Sciousness, ‘Tho Loctor guve & shln. atralglitf Ward biatory of the cuse, and sald she was uncon. Scloas, with Intervals of wakcful moments from Bunday unti} Baturday, 8he took 8 Hitle frult and 8ome caudy, but uo other sustenance, during that Y, Auoihcr spirit clatmed to coutrol her bod: While-bers was swuy, and prophesied the time o erreturn. " 1o @14’ not pretond to esplain tho £atee of ber trancy, aud when asked if ho beiluvod 1tdue to spirrtnalistic influences be onlz hufil.u-d. ud said bo wae not culled fn o treat the dlveme ed, but tho physicat Tha question Gow 1s de of the exponents o S04 the immolation of altargy “what disposition should bo T system (bt eucour- acbool children upon It —m——— The Permanont Location of the German : Supreme Court, The Buprome Court of Appeals for the German Bu1pirs has boun located at Lelpale, snd ot st lin. This bill was passad by & wmajority of 70 Jeusinthe Qurmau Parliamcut. The Soclalists, Fola, and ttramantuncs all voted azwinat Herlin. Jed bitterly to tho Emplre, thoy desired to l«flmu the Caplial aa faras possible of its metru- bolltan character. su without strung relnforce- Licnls from the Liberal Lenches (hewd antl-Liberl ] {:m« could nover have hoped o sucuro the mis- - urity. They wero teinforced by the Bavesiaas, Vurteiborgers, Baxous, and Thuriuglans, sll of Whu preferre ¢mallc disectiog. Moy things combined Lo pro- Suca this rawlt. Berliz had Dever buca & favorite ':;i: x‘:“nlfilu“'u:ldu-u’ h‘ul mh Nhn:‘nhfiawm cos, L lstivn of wi abaro thy pd- culur natioogl Hlarctaisuica Of 1he Capial: LA litis” a(iter* agia” Baciber mannerod thas the tpalc to Berlia, sud by & good- s Shin It ek e g rest ol Oermany, this northeastern corner of the eonntry has long been conaldered nr An active and Intelligent eather than an agreeable and plrasant portton of the Fotherland, And thouph modern eventannd mutnal ncquaintance have donn mach{o nliny prejudice, & remnant of theold feetine leleft. Notwithatanding, had Berlin sncceeded {n develop- Ing eoclal Interconrae hetweenthe variona mections of um:_:lp er claracs, the Iden of taking the Ku- prema Tribunal cut of the eentro And remaving it o wealthy provineial town wonld never have been concu(vc:l; but Aa In Derlin, much s in other COerman_ towns, the saveral straiA of the educated clneves are distinet, snd mon, a9 & rile, amiociate with thelr brethren in rank and professlon ooy, It was probably regarded as of no nartiealar moment, from n social point of view, whete the Jndges of Appeal fake np tholr renls dence. Added to thene nezative gronnds wero some poritive ones. As some membera Intimated retty frankly, they had no wish to perpetunte the r’mulln Supreme Tribunal nnder a new form, The Tribunal, they hinted, has lonk heen ro- parded as linble to be influenced by tise politica of tha day, and én A ceriain weil-romembered occasion, fn the mormy time of the army re- form conflict, it attempted to encroach upon the immnunitica constitutionilly enjoyed Ly members of Parliament. 1t wan in vain for the partieans of Rerlin to mect thi; ument by the retort that the Institution of the Aselatant Judges, which along enabled the Minister of JInstice lo infinence the decisions of tha tapreme Court, his been done awny with by tha new law: the fesling that, after what has happened, the Court had betier bo ro- moved badily ot of 'the metropoiitan sphore, pre- valled with mauy, - ——— CURRENT OPINION, Pluchback {8 in Washington, and we may ex- poct another fight over the Monte-negro ques- Uon.—SLt Louts Globe-Democrat (Rep.). Mr. Hayes has not been two months fn office. Ho bias done & great deal n that time, and ha has not made s mistake worth mentioning.— Tioston £'ilot (Catholic). 1f Gen. Logan should go to Rassta, tha Czar would gain a gallant soldicr, and we should 1nsothic only mast living who mastered finance In two weeks.—Neao York Tribune (Rep.). We were in_ Chicago two days this week, and there found that the aimost universal sentiment of Republicans was {n fayor of the Administra- tlon policy respecting the South.—Dubugus Times (Rep.). Tha Repnblican Congressmen who wero ad- vertised to make an attack upon the Adminis- tration at tho opening of the extra scasion, have since read over the Cinclnnatl platform and Prealdent Hayes? letter of acceptance, and an- ?EI?I thelr engagement.—New York Tribune ep) . Beene: Apartment {n Ben Wade's houso; Ben hopplug about and speaking: *“O grea rindstones! O blazes snd bumblebees] O lauk, blank, blank, blankity, blank! O it I only bad him here for two minutcs!” [Ha mnflu a lunga for the wall, and his flst smashes through the plasteriog at dnu spot supposed to represent Hinyes,]—Loulavlils ~ Courler~Journal m.) ‘Wo think that, in maintaining our own rights, Wwe bave stoud a8 the representatives of the na~ tional liberty, It s apolitical revolution of vast luportanco to s, and to the institutious of the country. Wo belfeve it to be complete, and feel an additional sensc of the Divine galdance which hns led our people, In the fact that it has been consumiated in quictness and peace, For this happy result we arg largely Indebted to the pa- triotfsm of many of tho colored people them- sclves.—Southwestern P’resbyterlan (New Orleans), ‘Iho Misslasippt leveo and Tom Beott's rallrond Joly" na these fnprovements, which are the very lite of our section, ura politely called b tiat ustute and {mmlemnl Democratic journaf, the New York IWor/d, are the main planks {n tha principles " of the & tho “swallow-tailed lnmtry cannot stand upon thnt platform, they will have to step aside and allow thelr hg:u uelghbors to doso, Ifthis be treason, the Northern Democrats can make the ot of it.—Nalchitoches (La.) Vindicator (Dem.), ‘The shameful story of blood which comes to ua from Kemper County, Mlss., I8 ona of tho most shiocking and brutal of the age. If it fs true as told, it Is = disgrace to civillzation, and there is no punishment known to the law too severe to be visited upon the lawless and vio- lent men whose fierce and vindictive passions have lod them to stain thelr bands with blood, and Llacken the rnruuuon of their county with n talo ol inurder which will go_ringlng through the whole land.—New Orleans Demoerat (Dem.), That the wise, patriotie, and goncrous action of the President toward the “people of the Bouth, Is already burlngluaml {rult, is apparcnt on nll sldes, Doubls and arprchemlnns. which, at tho outset, existed In the .minds of some white Repubiicans, as well ns Intelligent color. cd ones, aro rapldly giviog way to feclings of confldence and hope, Partlsan bitterncss has Leen alinost wholly dispelled. Dy a sriso and enliglitoned siatesmanship, President Hayes hos e‘n})turud the Bouth and restored peace.—Vackson (Miss.) Times (ftep). ‘Whatever may be sald about the new poll of President Layes, one thing s certain, that {t has already met the n{vpmvu of most of the in« dependent men of both partles.® A few daya 830, 8 Democrnt of high standing in this ity called to azstiro us that he was sfncerely in ac- cord with the course of the Jress in -uémnrtlng President 1iayes in the groat work of Southern reconclliatlon, Civii-Service reform, and rlfild ceonomy. lrcak for many Dewocrats,” ha sald, “and I tell you frankly €hat if the SBouth- ern }yc(nlu do notcordially and unitedly respond to tho fearless and punerous action of Yresident Haycs, thousands of uswill jolu the Republican party tostrenirthen his Admfolstration,'—2hilla- delplia Press(leep). : I think that, In whatever proper measurcs Mr. Ilayus proposcs for the benetlt of the coun- try, espeelally for the Interest of the South, itts thic duty of cvery patriotiv citizen to support him; and, as long as be continnes to follow out the jolicy of his Insugural und his_subscquent declarations towards the Bouth, I shall fecl bound to meet bim half-way. That bane of pol- {tica for tho last ten_years haa been too much scctionalism, and, whilst I believe the theory of the Damocractic party to be the correct theory of goverumont, 1 Uelfeve in llberalizing the Democratic party in such a way s to guarantce perfect and complete protectfon to ‘the fudi- vidual and personal rights of ull cltizens of the cuumr{. of all classea nud conditions,—Hutler, of South Carolina (Dem.). ‘When a negro s guilty of erime in Georgla, ho s tricd uud sent to p¥hnu at rallroad-speed ; when whito men murder negroes, thy tovernor appoints o comnlittes of respectable cltizens to go and’ fuvestigate the clrcuinstances and re- port, Befors that *duty” {s discharged, may- ap, there (s anothier tiussacre, und the same [o.rof:mnmn 1a gono through with. Ofil’eum pe tho Intest case in pofut.—Thae Loulsvilie Qowrier~Juurnal says: “‘Ona of tho loaders of thoe Oglethorps (Ga.) riot, who escaped and had been at large, returned on Baturaay, was arrest- ed on Sun uY, tricd on Mlonday, and started to the Penltentlary on Tucsday, \(crll)" hflulucu not snmethmes swift in thio South?” But he was a colored mon, “Justico™ s not so swllt In_pursuit of tho white mon who murdered oue colored msn snd brutally beat another at the samo place.—New York Thmes (ltap.). One of tho greatest mistakes of Grani's Ad- minkstration wag, that, with all Lis running around over the North from Malne to Missourd, ho never would give the Bouthern peuple’s chance to ged sequainted with thelr Pesfdent,— and that, too, thongh ho received soms very warm {nvitations to visit them. - Wa aro glad to seo- that Mr, llayes contemplates & new depart- ture fu this, as in ¢o many other directions, Bome prum(nent Virgialans, who called upon him yesterday, told him that the folks wanted 1o acis hin duwn {n Richmond and Petersburg, "The Presldent sald ho couldn’t get off Lill after the extra session, but ho should try to accept tho {nvitation then, and perhapa extend bis trip farther Bouth, The New Orleans people have already manifested a desiro to renew the very pleasant nequalntance they formed with him when ho went down on a Congressional excur- slon ten years ago; and there can be no doubt that the President would find a run through the Bouth very agrecable.—Springfeld( Masi.) Xe- publican (Ind). : Gall Hamilton, Mr. Blaloe’s Uterary cousiu, bas been writing some very sharp articles lu the Tribune about the Nation's misconduct: and tLis from the last number of the Nation s the ouly comfort sho gets: “*Amid all the talk of the terrible attack Mr, Blaine proposes to make on the Adnfufstration and its Bouthern policy when the extra session begius, it has not scemed to occur to any one that, fnstead of Mr, Blalne's making the attack, the Adwinls- tration might make an attack on Mr. Blalne. It is refreshing to see that this fdea has st lust occurred to some one, aud it is cven announced that such an attack will be made, snd by no lessa person thun Mr, Stanley Mathews. It will be recollected that this Alr. Blaine is the same Mr, Blajue who was formerly Speaker of the House, and whose correspondcnce attructed 80 wmuch sttentlon a year ago, particularly a latter in which he called “the attention of some of his fricods in Lhe lobby to a milroad rul of his, aud intimated that he did pot wake sucl rullngs for pothing. lv is the same corruvt wan sod tricky politiclen that he was then. He shjelded bis reputation for a long wbile under the cover of ferociuus attacks on tuo Democrats, aud, now that that poor line of defeuss s taken uway from blw, Lo {3 1n & position in wlich the first bold attack will put him to rout {nall his nakeducss.” »Tus CHicAGo Triboys snd Cincipoatl Cormercial bave tarricd *the old sliver dollar of oar {sthers’ in thelr rezoective Blates, sad outh from this on; and, {f THE CHICAGO TRIBUN #till a0 not happy. The Legisiatares of Ohlo and 1inols are passing bills making siiver coln a legai-tender for all debls contracted aiter a certaln date. As the only sfiver colnage now I #abeidiary, and not worth Its face valne by con- siderable, the Commereial thinks this {s 'Ezulmg too far.! "'—Springfidd fiepuldican, The Etatcs are authorlzed by the Constitution to make all- ver a legal-tender, * Gold and allver only ma Le made by the Btates a Jegal-tender, . The Uni! ed States Government retaina to ltself tho right of coining money, e do not deafre to force the subsldiary silver coln to the front. Our subsidiary coin docs not contaln silver in denointnational provortion to that of the old sfiver doliar. ~The pecaliar merlt of that old dollar Is, thatl it was fixed upon as the unit of money, and in the quantity of pure silver that it contalns It never has been changed. It is tho money-tnitsand the unchanged cofn of the country. ~ Without dis- cusslon, this coln waa taken from the people. It ia not too much to say that {t was picked from the public pocket. The muney-standard of the eountry was cbanged without the knowledge of the people. Even the Springfield fepublican never heard of it until years affer it was done. And {et thero cottld have been no act more pro- foundly affectine the welfare of the people. We think this act was uncalled for, unjust, and per- niclous. More than that, it waas & trick of the meanest, and an outrage of the gravest char- acter. That which wée demand Is restoration,— the restoratfon of the double standard,—the ald silver dollar, thesilver option, the old specie basis.—Clnelnnatl Commerelal (Ind. Jlep.). Ward Il. Lamon, whom the venerable Ben ‘ade, in 8 card 1o the Cleveland Zeader, des- fgnates o llar *4f" Lie sald so-and-s0, is at the National llotel. He was called upon to<lay by a Star represcntative In regard to the matler. Col. Lamun aald that he was not yet ready to meet Mr. Wade's accusation, nol becausc be thaught he ought to unider the imputation of being a Har, but because he knew that eves one who knows hfin and also Ben Wade wouli Know just who could pmpfirl( bo eutitled to be called n llar, & You sce,’” suld the jolly-looklng biographer of Lincoln, % Den Weds fs too old to whip and too wicked to die,” With refer- ence to the article recently published In the New York Tritmne, Col, Lamon says that in some ot its statements it was incorrect, ~ What ho meant to convey to the publlc wae, tbat, after Lincoln was nominated in Chicago, Ben Wade and IHenry ‘Winter Dnvia endeavored to forin a combinae tion tocall & new Convention and noninats anuther candidate; that, after Lincoin was elezted, the Iate ex-Cnlef Justico Chase called upon him one day, when Lincoln asked him it he knew of any arrangement having been sug- gested by Wade for tiieealllng of a new Conven- tion, wherenpon Chaso admitted that he did, and pulled frum his pocket correspondencs to which Wadc was s party, which invited s com- Dbinatlon of public men to have a_ncw Conven- tion called, at swhich he (Chase) should receive the Rupnhilcnn nominatlon, ‘Mr, Lamon also intimated that thero was corrcspondence on the part of Wade looking toa Dictatorship, with clther himaclt or John C, Fremont a3 Dictator, Washington (D. C.) Star (Iep.). e —— WESTERN PATENTS, A weekly listiol United States patents fssucd to the Inventors of Illinols, Wieconsin, and Michigan for the week ending May 1, 1877, and cach patent In the llst will bear that date. Re- ported expressly for Tnz Trinune by A, 1I. Evans & Co., patent solicitars, [Waslington, D, C. Charga for obtainiug patent, $20. A copy ol the Patent laws sent free on applications ILLINOIS, Dabcock & Mason, 8pringficld. dental tool. 4. Camphell, C)llnnflbprvnrduz meat, 4. 8. Dorton, Dristl Statlon, spectactes, A. D, Hoffman, Chicago, wite coiling machine. J. . Kingwell, CbluFa. drive chain, M. L. Paliner, Trivoli, feather-renovating ma« chine, D, Q. Btover, Froeport, barbed feuca-wire. J. ¥, Wallensack, Chicago, tran<om opener. . W, Alexander, Galesbarg. cultivator, O, & F. Ilalse, Atlants, ratirosd sigual, R. E. 8etton, Quincy, reed-organ actions. | F. M. Martin, Cambridge, studs for watches, ' - J. W, McGafley, Chicago, hosa carrisge. 1, K. Ktone, Hockford, Sauges. 5 D. Hrobston, Chieaxo, holsting apparatns. A. I, Brooking, Milton, reciprocating chiurn, if, W, Farley and M. C. Richanda, Oswego, tubs, palls, casks, eic. ¥, J, llolmes, Mason City, hatrow, €. Il Jacobe, AVinncbayo, Ui tiglitener, . M, Peet, Waverly, cutter hangers, o, Pratt, Jr,, Princeville, threo-ticec-cqualizera. A. J. Reynolds, Chicago, uutotnatic frult-dryens, 1 I Schmitt, Clicago, grate-bars for boller arnace 8. ¥ P, L. Willlams, Tamaroa, nnt locks. - ¥, 1ijil, Chicago, cofing. A, 1. Iolden'&'Co., Clileago, mixed palnts, WISCONBIN, F. F. Blone, Greentleld, tira tightaner, L. 1. Morrtll, Sparta, watch dust-cap, MICIIIGAN. J. Bonderman, Knlamazoo, book support. L. Coller, Flint, broadcast sowor. 1. A, Daly, Dotrolt, sewing- machine shattle, 1.C. Kellan, Detroli, dampers for steam-bollers, Evialo el bbbty The Govarning Classes of France, After notfelng tho recent pastorsl of Mer. Plo, Blshop of Poitlers, In which he complains that the Chureh In Franco is no longer rocrultod from thegoverning closses, and us a consequenca 18 losing much ot its old-ime authority, the FParis correspondent of the Scolamvan writes: It is a curious fnct that tho two most conscrvative fustitutions In France have been deserted by the governing classes, for the army finds {tself in tlie same situation as the Church. Iu the olden tlmes the French uobliity used to fight. The flower of French chivalry perlshed st” Poltiers, whers the Kine of France, with -his four sons, fought, surrounded by twenty-six Dukos nd Counts, and 140 banucrets,. At Crecy, cleven Princes and 1,200 nobles were among fho slain, snd ‘the prime nobility of France was swept away upon this memorablo aud ssuzulnary dn'y.' At Agiucourt, 8,000 French gentlemen fafl, and tho Dukes of Orleans and Bourbon were taken prisoucrs, And thonobility contin- ued to serve fn tho King'sarinivs up to the tine of the Revolutlon; In fact, no une conld become an offfcer who could not pass muster at the Heralds' College, aud show that Lis wus of noble Lamdly, It would beinteresting to have a return of the number of noblemen who sacrificed their lives tor their conntry during the German war, The st would not be'a loug one. Thero sre, of ceurse, exceptions to this” gencral description. Thore Is Marshal MacMalion, the Ducd'Auinale, who commands an ary corps; the Dus de Cuartres, who (s a Colonel of cavalry; the Marquis deiGallifet, & Bripadier-Ucneral, ete,, ete, - Bot the genoral run of othcers do not be- longto the goveruing classcs, and Lave voither birth nor monuy, ‘The Inducciments to scrve aro notyreat, A Marshal gets £1,200;a General of divislon, £800; u Generalof brigade, under 4000, and sodown to the Sub-Licutcunnt with his 400 a year. The mess docs not cxist in the Fronch” armny, nor do otlicers resige fu barracks, Ths feld-oificers generally dine alone; the Captalus together; tho Licutenants tozether. This in the Interest of discipline, and because the Infertor oflicers cannot afford to dine as well &4 thclr superiors.’” An Invaslon of Pitealr’s Island, London Keho, In that lone :xot of Polyncsis, nmid an arch- Ipctago seattercd far and wide over the Pacitle, and celebrated as Pitealrn's Istand, an fuvasion of an extraordinary character {s reported to Laye taken place, Itis = tradition of thc ses, ol course, that this speck of land, amid o wil- deruess of ocean, was originally coloulzed by the surviving mutiucers of tho Bounty ; and thero Is, prohabl{; historical justification” for the stato- ment. But it moy bo doubted whethor any descendants the mutineers are atlll to bo found there, sluce, in 1855, 100 of them were re- moved, upon thelr own petition, to Norfolk Is}- ant Do this as it may, the place sso solitary, so aesolate, avd so out of the comuion track, that wo only recelve ucws from It once in every two or three years, ‘The Jatest {s to the effvct that an army of rats, landed from sowme wreek or sn. ot recently betaved much as Mr. Brown- lug's rats did {n Hamalintown, swarming over everrtuing, cating npnver)‘lhhlq, consunming all the flour, and duvuurlur the entiro grain crop of o season. - The {sland {s scyen tniles in width; across It they marched, myriad after myriad in ous comvack array, some of them as o a8 rabbits,~aa assertlon which might appear ex. gerated afd wenot remember that. the Freu naturalist, A. (entll, declares that he saw in the sewers of Farls' specimens of this vermin ‘s largoas fullfl'rovn tou-cats,"—creatures, fudeed, which full-grown tom-vats refused to tght. With alocust avidity :Iw’{ comblued an unlimited ferocity, as the poor Fitcalrn laland- ers have reason to belleve, Io not & few fstunds, indeed, theso castaway creatures, escaping from shinttered ships, have extermiuatea thele former folabltants, rabbils aud scabirds, tho latter fallluz a prey to them when youpg; aud In Moutevideo travelers as- sure us they render the dirtler streets danger- ous to eveu to human belngs after nightfall, Well, they scem to have made, as tho Greck dramatlat ‘pbruscs it, *a flerce, unbiden feast!? upon Lhe barvestsand storesof Piteuirnd’s Island, and it fa not -ummlnE that the humanity of & Padtle trader should bave been sppealed “to for a supply of lour, Neither that ho should sug- goat 8 wore frequent “looking u” upou thesy recluscs of the ovean. “ Lot-Jumpors” in Deadwood. Salt Luks Tridung. This ts what o pilyrim writes from Deadwood; “ Lot-juwpers are bold, bad wen; the, {umped my lot. They also dodge bullets and lot the wrong inan get shot. Night before last & man jumped his ‘brotber-in-luw’s lot, and when he waa upbralded therelor siote hls kivanan hip and thigh, Tho fnjured party got hls navy, found his man, took a gond afin, fired—ana killed an {nnocent byetender. Abaut a dozen of us emart Alecks lald out a new street. We dfl it by etealth, like thieves in the nleht, as it were, tokeep out the jumpers, Next_moralug we went to take possession of our lots, and found our thoroughfare blocked up with frame shantlcs. We withdrew, That's why T don't think a lot-Jumper is_entitled to rlon angel's plumage when he shall have crosscd over ta the other side.” p OURRENT GOSSIP. NEWS FROM THE WAR, Hurlington Hatckeye, Oally the papet-man ‘Touched his guitar, While ho was reading the News from the war,— Binging, ** You bet your boots Now hers'l] be fan{ ‘We don't ears who It shools, ‘War has begun.” e sang 84 how he knew, 6ix months befors, ‘There'd have to be a Ene Hopean war. Now he was glad enongh That it had come, o And his heart laughed at thy Toll of the drum, Dut, when th Ceae at last, Arming his youth, Bent Petroviarsichravat Over to Pruth; ‘When Ibralmrastehnkas Met Btchoblelefstt, Bighed the nowapaper-man, *‘Glve ns & rest.” No rest—for Rhatifat~ ¢ Irtschuskeamoa- Dariprtefoaimat- Phretchigolos Met In the fiold whe: Guiguervenogorih ‘Wallahnoskwapchtinere Pratch—&ec. THE JEWS AND THE CRUCIFIXION. Public Leader (English Jerdsk organ). The old and tenaclously-malntained fallacy that the Jews as & natlon are responsble for the cruclfixton of Jesua Clrist, has long aga been exploded to the satlsfaction of every on- lightend mind, The principat fact that had alded In unmasking this hoary falsehood was, that at the time of the Advent the Jewlish race was a8 much dispersed throughout the world as at this present time, and had been so for many centuries, Thus colonies cxist now fn Europe which, founded In the earliest ages of the dls- verslon, have carofully handed down, from tho time of thelr first formation to the present day, local historles, couched, fn thelr first chapters, in the traditionary language of Biblical writcrs, and annlogzous in thelr marvelous detalls to the Biblical ‘narratives they so closely follow. Every one who lins at any time taken any Inter- est In general history hos beard of the princely carecr of the Alexandrian Jews, who, when they Immigrated to 8patn, gave the Jatter country o race of enlightencd stateamen and nobles who raised her to a liglor pionacle of prosperity than ske has ever aince reached, and who also fminemortally connected with her listory the pames of sume distinguished Hiteratl, which will be pronounced with revorcuco and pralse when Bpaln, engutfed in the abyss of wonasticism and bigotry which she ls every day prenaring for hiersell, slial] Liave seen hier name erased from the roll of European nations, The scttlements of these Jews were made long hefore the Ad- vent. Again, the Polish Jaws, who at the pres. ent moment number between 8,000,000 and 4,000,000 souls, knew as little of the birth of Clirlstianity os their Spanish brethren, for antl- fs:mlwl have concluaively proved that they settled in thelr present homes when the other Sarmatiau nations ilrst appeared, —about the time, In fact, of N:buchnr&emr. In Gallicls, also, there are Hebrew eolonice of unfatbomable antiquity; snd fn Gernan; acveral lsolated towns even found thelr clvic annals fn the rocords of the loeal Jewish com- munitics who appear to have beon the first sct- tlers, Such, for example, are Nuremberg, Ratisbon, Prague, cte. In Ratlsbon n legend cxists to this day that so Lighly esteemed was Its Deth Hamadrash (Houso of Learniug) at tho time of Christ that tbe Jews who assembled to witness the crucifixion sent special tnessages to nsk its advice na to the courso they should pur- suc, and the reply of the Jleth Hamedraah was to tho effect that every peaceful means should be cmrlo_vu] o provent the catastrophe. ~ With n sublime disregard of detall, Lowever, the legend nelther mentlons what beeame of the message nor the 1nessengers, et CONCHO-SHELL IUTTONS, Scribner for May. It was possibly durlog his atay in New York 1n 1780 that Washington begon to wear on his coat tho concli-aliell buttons now in possessionof Capt, Lewls' daughter. A new fashion in dress, {utroduced by a President, is worthy of recond, especlally when thero is an nteresting story connected with it. This story, related by Robert Lewls, fllustrutes two strikiogly char- scterlstie traits of Washington—generosity and economy. A needy sallor, with a ‘wheelbarrow of sbelle accosted the general on the street, and, bolding up a number of conch-shiclls, im- plored him to buy them, Washington listened with sympathy to the storyof lis suflerlugs and want, aifd kindly repiled that he would buy them if Lo could’in any way mnako use of them, Nceessity perhaps sharpencd the saflor's wl and he promptly suggested that they would make Jovely buttous for his velvet coat, The Qencral donhtless smiled ut the Ingenlous proposal, but agreed to try them, Carrying homo his occan-treasuro of Inlnk shells, Liescnt for n buum&mnxer ta know f he could manufacture a useful article out of tho protty playthiogs with which o found him. sclf incumbered, The workmsn replled he could moke the tu'tons it he could find an in- strument sharp enouch to plerce them. Wash- ington would have nothing uscless about him, aud g0 the shiclls were dellvered to the manu- facturer, who in duc time returncd them to him in the shape of coucave buttoun, a little larger than a quarter of a dollar, with a silver drop in the' centre lkling the gum where the eyols fastencd boneath. ‘The Prestdent thon eston- islied the Ropuolican Court by appearingin a court-dress with pink conch-shell buttons sparkl- inz on {ts dark velvet surface, Eighty years ago, 1t scema, fashion rulod in tho hcarts, or over tho costumes, of men and women just as it qoes now,—for Capt, Lewls bLears testimouy that concli-shell buttons lmmadlntelz beeanio the rage. Tho snell-venders’ aud button-makers' fortunca were made by tho Geueral's passion for utilizing everything” that came juto his pos- session. . —— ANNA DICKINAON, Bostyn Letter to the Desrott Free Irem. Apparcntly Miss Auna has the hydraulie pressuro of Job Trotter or Brother Sheannan when otlier arguments fafl, 1 remcmber, somo ten or cleven years 2go, when President Johu- son was here, he visited the school-ship, then one of Boston's lHuus, and, ilke other gucats, lu- scribed his name on the visitors’ book, Shortly after came Anna Dickinson, aud, whileregister- Ing her own, took the cool liberty of drawlug her pen through tho name of tho Fresldont of the United States, Tho Captain, on discovering the imperttueut performanco, without making allowance for the fact_that_3tr. Joknsun's pol- {tics wera not approved by Miss Dickinson, had her namo at once crossed out, and a marginal note juserted explaluing wh{. “Traditiun says that the future Qucen ol Traguly wept painfully upon learnlnz of this * unmanl outrage.” Judge Russell, who was thon Col- Jector of the Port oud a patron of the schoul. ehip, cruelly refused to have the Captain hauged at the yard-arm. But mark how lcaden-footed iuulw surely overtakes tho cvil-doer, Judge tusscll llved to become Mlobster to Vene- ruels, to Lave a free fight with Prealdent Que- wan Blanco, and to come Lome a few weeks nito & blighted belng and a candidate for a Eu- ropean appointinent. ‘The Captain was subse- quently trunsferred to Now York, aud experd- euced pramnotion. The school-ship Ls sold. Au- drew Juhnson is dead. * And Bosion, which al- lowed the outrage to pass without a resolution or even a letter from Wendell Phillips, les to- day a bLelpless victin before o Waguer featival, How cuuyl throuchout all, the wise obscrver can trace ** o inighty malze, but not withouta blan,"—as tle Centennial poct observed of the as corustalk. — A NEW USE FOR ELECTRICITY, Baltimors American. Mr. John Kelly, tho stage mapsger of the Acadetny of Ausic, hag lwprovised an ingenlous arrangement for keeplng Lhe staze cntranco clear of loungers, who are apt to congregate in grouvs on tho prompter's slde, fronting tho passage, which is the only means of entranco and exit avaltabla without crossing the stage. The circumstance that during eyery perform- ®uce & wan s statoued ot tho electric u%pmuu o rezulate the lights fu the suditorium bas Leeu utilized, by directing & wire [row the battery to MONDAY, MAY 7 877, the floor of the passage, which is covered with zinc, When several peraons stopin the passage, bocking ft up, the tan at the battery touches a knob and lnsllntlly a lively current of electri 1.{ s communicated to the zine, and na quick as lightning the loungers sre bounced off. their ridiculous antics resembling the jerky movements of one of thoro woaden supple-facks that children amuase themselves with, This ar- rangement Is found far more effoctive than all the large posters that could be hung up. In caseof fire it wonld he very advantaccous, In- sgmuch 88 & number of Lousckecpers and ladlcs who receive numerous caila have had convex mirrors placed ontalde of the second story win- dow so that theycan tell whois at the” door by glanciug at & mirror, it would not bo & bad idea” to have a small electrle hattery connected with a strip of 2inc fastened on tha door-step, By such an arrangement book nzents, soap- peddiers, and huckaters could be disposed of effectually and without any annoyance. A RUBRICAL S8ERVICE, Naw Fork Tribune, When the Rector of 8t. Ethelburga, London, was threatened with ecclesfaatical prosccution, ho did not go to prison after the manner of Martyr Tooth; hut substituted a rubrical for a Rituallstic service. Tnrve parishioners had en- tored a complaint, and {he Blshop of London haed refused to stay proceedings under the Pub- lle Wotship sct. The Rector gent bls curato to the church to announce that thercafter the scrvices woald bo cunducted with extreme sim- plicity, without choir or organ. Arrangements would be made for the celebration of the ol Communion three times a year, provid- tiree pacishioners seot In thelr names oun the Baturday previous, stating that they Intended to recelve the Communion; the'canons required this, and if no one sent In hisname there would bo no Communion. These would be the sorvices in that church for the future until thedeath of his father, who was an old man,and then the church would ba closed by order of the Bishop of London. The curate, remofluE 1is biretta, called God to witness that e would do all that one man could do to have an Infamnous act repealed, On the third Sunday Iu April the *“strict legal scrvices of the praves- book " were held. The curate wore a very fong surplice without stole or hood. There was no sln&;ing or chanting, and every vestige of ritnal and music was -‘removed. © Tho sltar was taken awny, and an old wooden table that was fn use & generation was in its place; the reredos was hidden from view with a white cloth, and the organ locked up. AN ADVERTISER, Boston tommercial Bullein, Bpleer was wadlng wearily through a plle of work which bad sccumulated during a Urief abe sence in New York, when a stranger banged the {nner office door, placed his lighted cigar cone venlently on the corner of the desk, and, spit- un}: gracefally In the waste-basket, sald: *'Mr. 8picer, I presumet’ ‘The paragrapher -u?urcum asmile at a joke he was reading in the New York Commercial Adoertiser, fnlialed about three cents’ worth of his pucst's fivecent cigar, ana replied, ¢ Yes sir In one time and toree motlous. “The fame of your {oumml bas reachied us in New York Btato,' continued the visitor, “ Apotber feller that wauts o notice,"” thought the writer. ' T wish to tallcto you about advertistng, sald the caller. The nowspaper-man brightencd, and rather wished lie had a fresh elgar Lo offer the visitor. ! “T1am introducing In New England tue cele- brated Proilfick Plukhampton Pumpkin, and 1 am authorized to offer the sceds to you at §50 o Zn-ft, Lialf cash and hal? sdvertislng In the ‘ommereialee—'® ‘The exact manner of the Western seedsman's death will probably never be known, but his {ricnas will bo plensed to know that his remaing have been carcfully tplnn.u.l at Forest i1, where the Prollic Fumpkia vine can twing o gariand to his aseinory over Lia early grave. CHEAY FOR FIFTY CENTS. Jennle June, A curious little story is told anent the Ruasian visitors, whose presence In our harbor haa been the motive of various recent hospitalities, Among the fnvitations which the Rassian oficers scceptod was one tothe * last moetinz of the scason ! of a fashlonable up-town * sociable.’ There never bas been auy expense attending It, except that which was (ncurred for dress by cach fndividual, tho gatherings taking place at pri- vate reslilences, where musle aud refreshments were furnished by the Lostess. The closlng en- tertniminent was st one of the flnest houscs in Now York, and all had gone smoothly cnnugh untit ons of tho officers mentioned to a pgentleman conuected with the affafr that such sa eutertainiment vas vers “gheep " ut 50 conta. The gantleman inquired his meaulng, and found that the forefgn guests, with mowne others of the visitore, hal hiud the Lat passed around tothesn by a young * blood.” and cach ono was muleted o tho sum of 50 vents, to pay, as was stated by the fashionable sharper, for tho dance-musie, which consisted obly of the ordinary plano, played by a pentle- man and lady present. Was it an {ll-timed roctical joke, or wis the person who performed t a ¢ deadbeat 1 'I'hfs {s the question that fs n‘tzrnaung Murray Hill to ita’ centre to-day. Lither way, tho Russfans will earry away with them some queer fdeas of New York manners and hospitality. JUSTIFIABLE IIOMICIDE. Tirginta (Nes,) Chronicle, Last night a gentleman went {nto Mager's ‘barber shop, and, cHmbing fnto ong of the chalrs, strctehied himaclf out for a shave. The barber Jutherod his chin, ot an edge on his razor, and then begau to tell him his family history, and of course hio expocted the man togive him his in return, but was somewhat chagrined to find that bis victim was fast asleep. When theshay- fug was finlshed, he wuke the sleeper, und said: S1falr cut?” 4 No, &lr,” % But you'd better lave it cut, It's zedlng{gmlt long. The sum- mer's coming on now, Your bead'll get hot and all over dandrufl,” * But I'say I don't want it cut.” 4 Nobody in Virgzinia wears his halr long now.” “You 'd—d fool!" abouted the mun, “can't you see I wear awigi™ ¥ That's because ou never used my | halr-insigorator, .emme gell you n bottle)"” The foregoing is the substance of the testimony at the Coroucr's inquest this morning, The éxry &romplly rens dered verdict of justifiable fde. . — BIBMARCK A8 A FABULIST, Boaton Journal, Bpeaking of his retirement, recenty, Princo Blsinarck remarked: * When a man starts carly inthe moruing on a guuning expedition, he commences by firing at any gatne which comes 1n hiis way, going even out of his path to killa quall or o partridge. Later in the day he be- comcs morp fastidious, and as night approaches, with iis gawme bag well filicd, wearied with the heat and tol of the sport, biu cares not to cross aficld tokilleven a hare which his dog has started frou covert. But should sowmo ons sa to the sportawan, *Just below horo you wifl flud & wild boar, & superb fellow! it awakens his ardor and fusplres o wish to crown the day's work by a conquest of somd hnportance, 1 have been oi iy feet a long time. {am tired, Let Hulow or Camphausen bring down the qualls or the hares, Should you flud a wild boar call upon we. 1 will come,” gflu:. wild boar £ o auother name for the Russjan TIE MULLETIAN ROO¥. Priludeiphia Thines, If there was ons thing that Mullett could build better than anothor, It wusa ruof. In fact, Mullett hiad a pateat roof of Lis own which ho put upon nll publlc bulldings, to his great personal profit. Tl put one upon his master- plece, tho New York Lost-Oflice, that crowning triumphi of {znorance and ugliness, and u dug thaa it gave symptoms of the Inevitabls deeay, Workmea were scnt up Eemnhy toput in'a girder, {u_the bope that the roof might thus be persuaded to hold up for a while longer, but thoy wero not quick enough. The Mulletian structure tumbled about their heads befors thicy got the glrder fn, and thre or four of the wel were kifled. Mullett shiould have been seut {0 repair that roof bimself. A CINCINNATI AUDIENCE. Clacimnatt Enquirer. Tt was ono of the most attentive and enrap- turcd audiences ever gathered ju Pike's, A fow entercd fate during the meguolicent old-style dance-music of Bach'’s Sulte No. 3; but they wero nearly all working people, young meu of the laboring classes, and giris that stand o stores, and they could not get off from tholr employers any carlier. A fow of these bad to get up and leave before the concert was u\ulw over, g0 that they could rest enough to take thelr tin buckets'ghd start early in the morning; Lut it was only a fow, for thewost of $hom were 50 enrapturcd thut thoy remained to tha end, ischarged. even at the risk of belog d! TURNING A VYERY SHARFP CORNER. New York Graphic, A plcture: Seven years ago. Saloon In Pean- sylvania. Francls Murphy, proprietor. Drunken fight, Baloon-kevper kicks au fuebirate dowa- staire. Horriblei The fall has kulled tho smunl Chaoge: In s coust-room. Murpby on trial for manalanghter. Bentence pronounced, * Five {e;-us' imprironment."” New scene—December, §70. Remarkable temperance movement In Pittsburg. — Effective. lectorer fnduces 20,000 reaple to aign the pledge. Bnbsequent]y same man in Northern Pennaylvania and Western New York. Obtains 35,000 signatures, In Buf- falo a few days. Geta 2,300 converts totemper- ance, April, 1877 (this month). In l’hllndelpgell. Unequivocal saccess. Temremnccdlmnln by the thousands each week. FInale—arevelation: The successful temperance worker Is—Francls Murphy, the saloon proprictor and man-slayer of stven years ago. e —— A GOOD MEASURE, T0 (A4 Bditor of The Triwne. CmicAco, May 0.—A bill has passed the Benate sathorizing the Governorto appoint one man to enforce the 1awa for the prevention of cruelty to animals at each of the stock-yards in the countles 0& Ctiflk ll:d Bt cr’t“n'i !h’n'lll. bill '.L‘e"t":l’, of “‘l‘; unanimons ag e House, 80—} aa muumnnrr:lh ight direction, d X. A Tioyal Sridegroom, London Mawfair. The helr presumptive to the Japanese throne, uncle of the present Emperor of Japan, is_en- gaged to Frau von Tettaw, nce Von Bredow. Khe was the wife of an offlcer of the German dragoons who foll In the Franco-Glerman War. The botrotnal was made last Christmas, and tlio arriage Is to be celebrated tlis year, when the lmpf coualc will take up thelr residence in Southern Uermany, tle Prince being resolved never Lo return to s mativa countey, tltiu had ! apan because his nephew, aud not be, was called to the throne. Lo J CITY REAL ESTATE, 'OR BALE—#83 PHI FOOT, LOT 20X 10 A And Cara-3ta. t 1 18 the last woek this Lot sill be offer: §3ATone nird ita valne; It i free from moriasgen ile TAIE cani, batnnce ook fime. = o sewered, sad gan, R .Sl‘ni tl- down, & splendid 81l modern brick dwelling, lof and bam on Vidcennes-ay, n ° eighth-at. T, 1;‘."5’0;?)‘.", Ronm 7, 170 Madison-st. R SALE~ROCAE 100 CENTHE-AV,, €O! Ne Ing# rooma, tnust be snid clieap. GEO. ALLES &C0., 125 Bvuth Clark-st., Te . BUBURDAN BEAL ESTATE, FOHHAI.H—- 100 WILL BUY A BEAUTIFOL LOT, ane hiock from depot, at Lacrange, 7 miles from {icacal 813 down and 1 montiiys cuapest praperty e market, and shown {rees abatract -cent traln already on, _ITtA TROWN, 142 LaSaile-st., Room 4. TR JOn Ao acrva {n R meb Countiea. bperd’s B 25 0, Hnmbolit, and Ein- BNYDKI. " ftoom 14 Drarborn-at. TO RLNT-I10USES, West Nides 1o % AT SR o West 23 West IAK::I?.)L v Tro-stor F o Carroll. av,, Bear Bt. ory frame ellin it. i Weal W asington-t. Leatli £ton-at., comner L Rultes of rooms for familles at 712 sod 714 Carroli-av, and corner Fulton and Kanyamon-sa, Twao-s:0y and bascment brick, Uskley-st., nesr Har- riaon. Applrto e 3 BAIRD & 0 RENT=K0, 111 _NOIlTH PAULINA-BT,, ALL 0 rooms, €205 lower part of 109, B count fof caabi, Apply on premisss. WANTED=TALY RELP. ° Bookkeepers, Clerky; etc. ANTED-SCANDISAVIAY G"nm?fll,!flfi od refererica reqat Milwalie2d 1ot Teqaired. Apply'at 120 and & Empioyment Agencies. ANTED-200 RAILROAD VAR O wen; At J. & COLT Went Favorphats | Miscelinnoons. - 'TKD—O‘M{T“. ACTIVE CANVAERERS AND 4 ii et-veilers sell two mewiy-patentad 509 Hleics That cere te Rami Stormnsion tes, 3o F. BYRIKET Laon 17, Rnd antions, Athorican Novelty Doy 187 PER MOXTII T0 AFILL fmproved Letter Conying Books coples withe e, hrish, of water, All nthers are impositions, Apply at'110 Dearborn-st., basement. )1 bay one; K\lr time (o make money, Call and elzmlnr‘ l.fl('". fauth Weierat., or send for eircalar. GHAS. D VA‘TED 00D AGFNTS T0 CAXVABS FOI A 1atue Bore Aod ehromo combination, an’d Aentd sy 1§ ¥ or Tllustrated circular, PICe TOHIAL PRINTING C0.. 70 KaNGOIp-sE Chches, Hie VWANTED-MENWE A EW Pl FOR inteducing the tastest.scliing srticie 1o warld, and guarantee #10 10 $13 pef days 61 free oroutnt for £2; $15 watel frea to_agen drem, with stamp {of papers, JIAT CU., R he ing-forka, ka»hlmh!{\ l)l-'culzlzfl. oomuhu?lou- encils, nopdestractivle peok, chronios plotogrs, !na'afi other new ‘n'r‘m-rnu;bm:ll?n m?leg. i l‘n‘;i: KOO8, AN owest _prioes. - 45 and 47 Juekvan iirs Chicaigss NAED_FEMAL Douestics. “ ANTED—A GOOD GERMAN GIRL AT 438 Michigan-& Wa N w0l wages: P Cormer of Frankiin, e AP0 FANTED-0fit], TOR NOUREWONK, 314 WEGT ‘ A}u son-#t. None but the best. DRK.‘ ny T ANTED—A GQIEL 70 DO GEN Tl 3 _‘V ok 411 Went Wasblogton e AL HOUSE “V D—IMMEDIATELY~A TOUNG GIRL IN 1l family 1o arsiat in houseworks no washing r_:;m.n & nday aod Tuesdsy till noon st 25 Bix- ‘v NTED—A GIIL T0 DO GENERAL HOURR: Y __work ina privata famlly. 83 Eouth Cariis-st, TANTED—A ND__GIRl 000D “ _en equired. Apnlyllflh'h‘(fla-lv.lu"m VWANTED-A O T OIRtL A8 COOK FOR & private A o e o B Dtivate toardiog-house. Call eariy. 319 iluols Nuraes, " AXTED-A NURSE GIRL ABUUT 15 TO TAKR care of child: - i, S M Pl bt werk o et Employment Agencies. VWASIED — GERMAN AND ~ BOAXDINAVIAN {rin fo e 11 ol . o KEE SR AT Al etk Bouted st _ SITUATIONS WANTED—MALE. st TR TAONS WINTED_MALE, Bookkeeperv, Olerks, etce slTUA'"fl.‘ WANTED-BY A ROOKREEPER Who has 14 hours Lo spare erery morning 1o poss Efig:vr ‘asaist some bookkeeper. Address Urawer SI‘I;FATI OX WANTED-NY \ YOUNG MAN AB A~ isiant bookkeepcr or entry clerk| good e Aadress I 30, filhu'l:e lllr!:en. s refgreBes s god s new, 1 MONTTI, 2-5TORY BNICK house, + 812 "per woatll, 2-6t07) frame. 10 farvard.ei.§ $10 ber monih, 2atory frame; 10 labvard-st.{ 620 por month, -story brick. 1020 West Adw inqu ern [0 MEXT-CATTAGE 10 SWARNES-AVL HILR: house, milk-vala Larn, eie., eotisge contalns 5 room, [t 1610 kuod order, every Cunvenfonce fur the UK tustness, " Apply 10 J. CORBIDGE, 629 West uuroe-at, Nouth Nlde, p *['0, REST—a1 MICHIGAN-AV. 15 TI00MS, 0 er month, I ire of W, M. DEE, Kast Ly st PE R un BLate o Darbore, o 22 Kast Qulncy. c10he runt dwelline Voo t4 Vidcenmes ar 1A 10k No. ennes-aY, &DHADLEY, 00 Lasalie-ate n North Nide. '0 NEST-TIE CHPAPERT HOUSES IN THE city, 217 and 218 Norih State-st. § two-story and 10"rooms, with all fudern improve. ments in completo order. ELBIIDGE UANECY, b3 rast., foom 23, ‘Traaes, SITUATION WANTKD-DY AN A X0. 1 MECTIAN- ici acqualuted with (0ol making watch ma- chinery, msking snd adjusting of sewing machines, g enimimn ol TR B WIN, Gity PoatrOmce, o ol Miscetinnecons, SITUATION WANTED-UY A COLORED MAN IX a diaing-rvom, OF &a purter or earriage driver, Ad- rese . Ao LRG0, o0, soni Fourttise, nd bioswar, Loatssiile kgt _CORES BITUATIONS WANTED - FEMALE. AR RSO WANTED - EEMALE, Noamuiressen, SITIIATIO.‘ WANTED-BY A FIRST-CLABS dreaamaker In a amiiy: best of rofe - qulred. Call a6 360 Thirty.oretests o orences 1f re Employment Agencios. GITUATIONS WANTED-PAMILIES §X WANT OF oo Ecandinntian or Uermib el sppiied at (b DUSRES SMmee, 173 Norch Tiaace [0 REXT—A" FINE 3-STOHT AND DAREMENT gl Sk o, Rt o ot R o HOX, 437 Nortli Lasal 3 Miscelianeous. 'O REXT=WE IIAVE LEFT JUST TWO OF THORE clegant manaand brick houses with parfors, dinfog. '?fl,m. -)‘||u|d Kllfllflll on am. Hn}ur .lfl' Ilmmml:m‘ hl‘h T second floors slx aro renteds only £k per Mo Hiotand cold water, TURNKIL& BOSLY, A-D, Y Ruburpnn. PO BENT=TWO LANGE NICE HOURES AT EY. sustcn and one at orth Evanstan, ail with Ia ftent Jow 10 ood tenants. BAIRD & DRADLEY, NFEARL FORTY- ENGASDALE-AV., L dweliing” with lot 1x nrge frame g fect. Vi ne Sl a Fatest. itoht very low. DATHD & DRADLEY, 00 L KNOLEWOUDI=AN 8-HOOM OUSE o) cottage, 10 Arat.class order; lake water, g1, 9ply pne black frm depoty {rev rida to ses them. E N, TI ELOU-AL o 1 RENIIS WINSETRL, T 0000 TOUEES wiili large urounds and pienty of truit, _Onm fiouwa foetly turnlslied. " Apply o DAVID FALES, 87 Yoris 1aad Mock, [=J{OUSER AND COTTAGRS IV E IR DENEY & COu 80 hearsorman oA AT o N, BV ol B e By VE' ol rorneats S bt 2O RENT=ROOMA. West Slde. ‘0 REST—ESUITES OF TIIREE AND BIX NIOOMS T in Thompeon's Rinck, Weat \Illlll’l'll." Ino Lot order, suil for L i 2 » . FHOSEEON, 70 Went adhonia o o 2% 1 South Nide, ’1'0 RENT-TLOOMSB T“D RENT, FINGLE Ot suite, Iarge, bl L aod dealrables with of withe T e A S Y DYSIANLE FLATY . S OUSG ESPICRH, T—HTORES, OF Mlorcs. [}, REST—TIMER 000D ATONES a0X180. WELL Iighted, cust fruuts, hetwaen Lake and Handoipi: #ta., on Cenal, Can roiit ue o mare and &ive partics Lenens of sy amount of roumn above for sy kind of low. ~ Apply to b, seconyd 1018, 10, i1 ‘Buor, LARK-5T, il fe HENT—STORE NO. 110 ROUT Al 3 Bullding. qu“fil At Btoom 43 Exchango Buliding. Ottices, 0, RENT-CIIOICE, DESK.IOOM. WITIL GOOD Yault. Toquire of JULEHART or DEWEY, 20 Dearborn-at. Miscelinneous. N = YARD PORMERLY Nt e % v o M e Eo A THE WA o RS st st T BOARDING AND LODGING, Wous Niuo, o =1 WEST ADAMS.ET.—TWO EINGLE 100! 351 WEEL ARAY G TAR eilner o 1tes oF Eeullemens day bourders Lakes. Routh Nido, 9L B N E: 204 FriiTua il 410 83 per week, h use 5 CONNER OF fruut ooiis with no. UP.6TAINS, DAY- 43 8T t-clata Gerian Losrd ut €3 1o’ 88 per wee KLI;;‘NB’S HOTEL, 100 T LASALLE-BT.;-‘ 4@ DOARL 64,501 Alagie meals 43 contsy ticlldiog cof- o SHANTB' HOTEL. NEIL CLARK D AT T Dekusiion 6 puanders for the suinmer, Dey-buard, §5 per weeki tranalent, §3 perday. L. T, OUSE, OUPOSITE TIE PALMER STy EEA I o firiuted voomss Bmv-cluaa- da7: rweex. |0 €x T B0ARD WANTEL, ~FOIl GENTLENAN AND 80N 7 Y1 Pat-aea it s din I V' b s i ' re; Trfl'ltl:. un‘lc::fir E Koom 3, 112 Dearborn-st. Gtate terna. ESS CHANCES, "3 N EXCELLENT OPPORTUNITY FOR A GOOD AN R Tt o e rutbus i tumzllun of the L Luaineas |n o 0st enters douriablng young citles {a the Wost,~aratl- rusd aud comuicrclal ceatre, —wl pulation’ of 10, and sityated I hoart of & thickly scttled coun« try. Tuan {odividusl or 05 baviug capltal to carry 01 & Arst-class estalilahinent of tbls character further fuformation will Lv given by sddressing, for 8v0 days, stating caplial, ete., F 8% Tribuno ot [} A wad 4 ut'mfiunuuxkt}'fiwift e o e -ut. consiat e D fiviures: 0vo billisra tabiee snd ove ol tablosad & Gae stock of Imsported Muors. _ Iuqulra st the premises. LE—A RE: RANT AND BALGON WITI P N Feothpleia; » 1otvs ball 13 bulioiag s bleb. 1 Sccupled 08 an average of twico s weck- ADpIY Ak 173 Bouth Desplsines- BOOKS, 0 TASH PAID FOR DOOKS—CASHL IN YOUR HAND, Uring big prices. CHAPIN'S Gldeh AT dp A PEIRSUNA e S AL N —~ WANTED, TAYLOR C. BELL, PO AL ST T, (b ritira, o iat placs linmediately. }is prescnes {a required fo the settle- ncut of sule bisloess pertalnlug w bis estato. Must come fmunesd lstal) MUSICAL, " 3 105, PIANOS AND ESTEY OROANS R eoaly” sekaowivds o all sed Buperior Dthers; prices 10w kiod ferius o sult, BIOLY & CANE, 210 blate-st. e TIARTRER WASTED-10 FAKE HALP INTEREST P N e d B e West Madtaod-at. berween 3 aud 6 b, 15 e v FINANUBAL, DVANCES M. oN MONDS, W fn\,""v"“" 5, ADE 0N DIAMONIS, WATCHES, p! | ¥ate office, 130 Rane 'k, _Iio0mn 6 8ad 6. Katabilahed 1834, ABTL PAID FOIt_OLD GOLD TAND BILVRIL, -3loney 1o @0 on watches, diamonds, and valuabies of every descriptian st GOLDSMID'S Lo oico (ficensed), 00 ladieon- frir cent_Otlier sunis 10 auit, tliree or 0 = IJ 10 per cent, o LONG. T ONEY LOANED 0 DIANONDS, M i M, Stesiy: Tl b DANE-IN T SRR AV EY TO LOAN—81, 000, 81,500, §2.000, §2,500, or upwards od real itfen. ll.u\‘Vf THUMAS lol. La: i u:-uunur- VW ANTED-GILT-EDGE with collaterale; L‘)fl 0. COLE, lioom 11 Med X w ECIAL PATEL 7 4, AND A PEILCENT. APPLICATIONS FOR + ks en choles Improeed syoperly desired: JOIN G. BITUNT. LL. 34 Vortiand Block, DAY 104 Handophoats - 0 Lo oo MISCELLANEOOS, 'ASII PAID FOIL CAST OFF CLOTHING, ts, miscellaneaus goods of any kind, by send= 10.J1 4 308 Stale-at) ESTER FUI BEND ORDEIS EARLY FOTR repsiring snd cleaning your Lestcr furnace; plain §aauinga for repairs oaly o ceata per pound untif Juna Eie oo o Ani avold cxEemslve charece. FHAN K- cure ) c3ceaalre charges, . LIN FRCI ficcessar to Al W, & Fo Festcre soin manufacturer, 57 L NOFls, BEDRUY - AND COCRUGACIES EN: tlrely'exterminated by contract warrsuicd; arilcls saidi houses examiacd froe. ARTHUN OAKLEY, 168 East' Washingion-at, ()¥ES000 CHANTE=T ST AT TG it Jrice {n cash fur Tadlew ahd. gentlemen's casts Lo 648 Btato-st.| ordera by [, TS TSEORTITE TR at wiesala grocers ailddle s Weatcrn, blalon wiling 1 Sisaks the saloof Liverpool dalry and’ table salt of superior quale iy upon & gof guaranice commlgsion, will ba plasso kit i 10 aduress e of Mensrs. U, W. C, Baal - o, Norin B Loute stp, - o baatord \WAILY WART YOI 10 CENTS AND & BTANE wo will mall 1o aoy sddross the incel complets unta Turkia o P vy pubisho Address FOSTEIN & co., 384 Dearborn-at., Chilcazo, VWASTED=AN INTETEST TN X WELL.ESTAD: iaied nowsparer i fob printiug omics Ty 8 gun- ttorial work and mien S0 particutars, 1% Trivans ofice. Chlcas it TO AUENTS. OUFIT ANDA 1 free, o % LQH!‘:,“MI).“ ‘Df terms address J, IVORUES, T e TS TR 5] catso, write law otico o - o&})«ufi 2 162 Weaalington-ste, liooma 46 aud s0, Chis Cao. when b rarmde She B W b oot 19 hvy WOk reed. { i Went Angison i [)'YORCRS LEGALE Y AND QUIETLY OBTAINED n every Kiato and Tervitory fur facompatinility, etc. He ec afterdecret 12 yeard 24 Dearborn-4s. llemau compelant (o do the ed tho businesa affalrs of the company. Add: rviersuces 4ldence unnecessary, experience. A, GUODIICALAtiorn NEW AND SKC- s usad o pi 0. N, I.—On Thurs- ioad of burscs tron Delsvad, Wik, will o ] iy, wad s ouly 6wt e, *! B EALEOLY? &CO., 114 West [tandolph 3 MEDICAL. RENOVED ¥ROM 81 GIRKKNST. TO 251 IIURON. s, between Clark-st. and Dearboru- TIoUTS. c abaorbout has never falled w lours, - Persous autferiny yupepil, o catarrl, rugchlal s conault Mr, Hrunton frea of cliarge It by aficrnouns this week, &t (ua druy store of J. L. Mchuuald, coruer of Randolpl-at. aad Fifthe av., where tho prepsratious sro for sale, Price 60 cuia Ar Brunton will explalu ssstactorlly we pria~ cipia of bl remedicn, ¥ 710 EXCHANGE 30 ACRES OF FIIST-CLASS Taruing {3nd. 1 nutle from dpat & Dratdwood, Will couaty i {1 wil int ko' spisuid raria wiss good i Leados w A pmuvi‘-”'fllumln‘ ey Couuly, In, eear, tor goot e B ot rldence m‘-&;}h 4 the South Blde Rolllag- il cloars somn uweliags: Tor ygod, fasm lends e ! Room 7, 170 Madiss a2, CONNESION HoUsE: faidoiph s, (lslo buliding). Bafe o Do o o wosa. ol 's'-riiliiux OF FLOUIL WOOL. BALT,, FUGNI: 1 ‘or any kind of s .l (HHISAGO BTORAGE A) J 2 ls_or KON t'mum'Awly P i 0 B4 Canal-at., secol ot MACHINES, : TFORSALE—75 FIIST-CLABS BEWING MACHINER, 1‘“‘““ "-EA"Ml tcl“lmmlllwm: will cloid .mbucmg ! v o all B3 DOW; Ivney Wansd 6 e ‘Ll‘l:t:u{fl A"l:’k~ Hoow 2, up-slatm 7 ,__LONT AND FOUND. KEWARD FOB RETURN OF ] U? ket lost Y-‘ rday bobweea Ure ool P e g gy rmifmw FARAW TR e L

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