Chicago Daily Tribune Newspaper, December 26, 1878, Page 3

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THE CHICAGO TRIBUNE: THURSDAY. DECEMBER 26, 1878. 3 OLID ARGUMENT. Tie Clark-St. Peter Cass Continued Throngh Christmas, Addressen for tho Defense by Messrs. Van Buren and Muonne How the Defendants Stand the Strain on Thom, Court met yesterday morning at 10 o’clock, ‘pursuant to adjournment. Mr. Van Buren promptly resumed his argument In defense of Bt. Peter, aud continued his speech until 1 o'clock, The crowd In attendance was larger than Tucsdsy. It was composed of those who are not. stomed to present themselves upon similar occasions, The hollday and the beauty of the weather served, in & measure, to call ont this attendance. The remarkable case on trial attracted many, and many camo to hear the elo- quent attornoys. The aigument of the Asaiat- ant Btate’s Attorney made Tuesdsy was com- mented upon as one of marked ability, [t might be, as was observed, that the evidence of the prosocution s thin as the milk of human kindness. But the argument placed the facts in & light Indicating the defendants’ gullt. And i the case had been submitted st its con- clusfon, it was said, the jury would have expe- rienced difleulty in reaching o scquittal. [t was, asstated, to hear what reply would be made tothe ingenious plea of the State that many came, Bul the multitude came to satisty amorbid curiosity,—to see the defendants and observe haw they bors the strain attending the closing scenes of thelr trial. MRS, CLARK axhibited signs of deep, almost hyaterfcal grief. ‘These showed to the gaping crowd that, If she ‘was & murderess, she was yel a woman; that, If she was an adulteress, as claimed by the prosceu- tion, she was undergoing punishment,—a punish- ment more polgnant and severe than human power can fofllet. 8t. Peter occupled his accustomed chalr, watching the pro- ccedings Intently. Except the alightest paleness, no symptoms of nervousness could be detected. No appearance of tremnor was visible in the man whose life hung [a the balance. Miss Benolt, who has attended her lover dally, and sought to encourage his hopes by her presence, was with him yesterday, Christmas brought no relolelng to ber, Her celebration of the day was begun and ended at the midnight mass. Long belore court opened she waited for admittance at the door of what ay prove (o be the waiting-room of her lover's sepulcbre, When the Crier prociaimed the ad- Journed sesslon convened she took her place alongaldn 8t. Poter. No criminal waiting for the verdicr could evince so intense an lutcrest as did Fiflo Benoit fu_the p.rocemun}u for and azsivat. her lover. Sho has been s feature in the case from the MF'""‘"{;" Her fldullt( to Bt, Peter has been the subject of general re- mark. It may havo been misplaced, but It was given all the ssme, and Lercafter it will ba cited in connectlon with oue of the most ‘‘celcbrated cases” the _ criminal anpals record. Carlos Clark, ™ attended by s delcgation of male and female friends, camo carly, and all cstablished thomaclvea com- furtably for the day. Tho attorneys, with his Honor, came Iast. Thoy chtered the court- foom with & hm(l‘ueu-llke alr Iflg lost no“llm: 10 organizing, Court was opened prompt 1 the hour loEtl:leh it had been sdjourned. yllu Honor took bis niace on the bench, the jury pos- sessed themselves of the box, and M. VAN DUREN, gathoring his notes, resumed the argument un- tinlshed Tuesday night. ‘Chese were the groupings of a picture the moarbidly curious, Lhie interested, and the pub- lle saw” yesterday mornlug fo' tne Criminal Court. 'The br L'ln.I bosutiful day without scemed & mockery In contrast to the gloum within, and the peace and good will the da; celebrated and rencwed halted at the Criminaf. Court-ruom threstiold, Mt. Van Buren began by referring to the statement. devicd an to the prosceution of the nccuged. He reiterated the charge that the defendants were pursued by the State with the ferocity of blood-hounds, The fucts bore them out in this assertion. They had been persecuted with but ooe view—con- viction at_all hozards. No motive had been tter fallure had attended the cffort Llish ony connection botween the mutive and the comnilssion of the crime. Mr, Web- er's theory of the crime was exceedingly un- tenable, thade up of suggeations from tattlers and rossips, It was {mvossible for Clark to have et his death as argucd by the Btate’s At- torney. Hu could not have been shot from the second-story window. Counsel then went into the elucidation of a theory that Clark was shot by & liorse-thief, 'The conviction was sought on evidenace all of it illegitimate. The only legitl- mate testimony produced was thut regardiy, tho bullet, This could be refuted,uand Dbad been, ‘T'no ball had beeu plared in tho heart. ‘The thief robbod Clark's r('rlun of moncy which could wot be identified, but left the borse by which he could be traced, The State must prove that there was no otner pistol that would firo s balt similar to the one alleged to be tred frum_8t. Peter’s pistol, This Lad not been done. It could not Le, Counscl then again referred to the bullet, It had been placed In Clark’s heart. At tho first post-mortem ex- smination the heart was taken out. 1t wns laced fu & poot of water. It was unwatched or iwo hours, Dr. Davis swore that the bullet passed through the pulmonary artery. West- colt saw threa men ruuning thelr fingers through the artery. Either sotne one lled. or huit an Inch of that artery was cut off to manufacture testimony. Who It wus, tho coun- sel strongly pected. The Coroner testificd that he saw a doctor put his finger into the heart and fecl around. Why should he do it1 tiu was vonvinced that the bull passed through the artery. “The samv villatn who cut off the artery pushied that bullet futo Clark's heart. ‘The marks on the bullets were not eaused by rust. Butler and Grim, guusmitbs, sald this, T marks were mada there by the plstol-sight, aud the gunswmith who fixed the pistel for Jus Dixou tixed the sight, ‘The fnvestigstions of Prot. Pipgr wera the results of optical filusions, ‘The ball which plerced the Dreast-bone uaver lodged o the Leart. It was sought by fnfernal villaluy to encompses the conviction of defend- ants. “Couusel then launched s curse against the Lyenas who had robbed the grave of Alvaro Clark to procure the breast-bone and roanufact- ure evidenca for the prosccution. ‘The upper rt of the bone was removed befors belug ruufiht futo court, whethar by the maun who fouud the bullet ln bia heart and went un the bycna cxpedition, he knew not. But the mis- creant who would do ocbw was as capable of dotng the other, Ar, Van Buren touched upan the alibi briefly. He claioied it bad been fully proven, A whole family of witnesacs would not come deliber- ately upon tha stand and swear to & black lie. " Tho family of Bt. Peter were hard.work- log, lonest folks, They told the seuth, +Joc's whercabouts wers accounted for at the Curoner’s fnquest. The alibl bad beeo estab- lished, beyond question, uncontrovertibly. in conclusion, counsel assured tbe jury that the part bie bad taken as advocate was i the beljef that Ht. Peter was gulliless of the crie, HBy- fore Uod Lo belleved this. Ho mppealed to the {ury to adopt thls view of the situation, which bey must do it governed by the facts as sub- mitted. Mr. Van Burcn conciuded after speak- ingz six hours. He was fullowed by ME, MUNX, of counsel for Mrs. Ulark, Hespoke of the peculiarities of the case, and the Importance of thoduty devolved upon the jury, The State dare uot submit the cuse without ument. The defenss offered to do this. But sho bired counsel must sir s eloquence; 'varn his fee. The couusel yesterday used epithets sbout s Dure womun, & WOuwlAD a3 pure as his own mother. Mr, Weber—3y mother! It's s lle. Mr. Munn coutiuued his specch, but Mr. Weber aross in bis chair and [uterrupted him, He denounced the stateinent as false, fnfamous- 1y false, aud hie was ready to throw the lle tu his teeth fu thecourt-room or elsewhere, Judge Uary interfered and restored order, but for the momvut it seewed as If trouble wers lin- mineut, Mo warned the gentlewan that it he was golng to get seusitive av early In the action, be wonld have frequent oceasion to get seusi ve, Ay, Weber—Ig 3:“ make any allusion of the character you mado belors I')l'kuock you down, r. Muna—No you wou't. No you won't kuock we dowo. Judge Gary—Well now, look here. talk about knockiog anybody dowa 1t you 1I'liput ;nu auder restraiot, - At this Mr, Weber moved forward to the J d. Hestated to bls Honor that so od him persoually, or his ts, be bad nnthiog to vay, but bho de- to permit him to lnvede bis pri- afluirs, aud protested agalust it pnm;nl @ ol on the waters, #0d Mr. Muun sgain resuwed his argument. Heattacked the theory that Clark was killed oy the sccoud step, from tue second-story i window, e showrd bysn exhibition of the dingram of the premises that thia was not true. The ball eould uofInthe naturcof the case hava taken the directon shown, At this moment Alra. Morae, 8 alster of Men, Clark, entered the cotrt-room with the ehildren of the accused. Mrs. Clark and Mrs. Freema: ceach took one, and Eddy a chair, all In prom! nent view of the jury, Counsel, after referring Lo the ocrasion nf his prosence In conrt, took up the evidenco. The attempt made to show an #il-feeling hotween Bt. Peter and Clark wesn fallure. Nour was it proven that 8t. Peter hod made threats, ‘This not being catahlished, ;!:]orztwu the motive! 'The witnese who testi- Ul o this, David C. Blakesly, was & lisr, The State had called Mrs. Clark & perfurer, and had produced s liar to convict an'innocent svoman. It could not be as- sumed, upon cirenmatantial evidence, that these defendants were gullty. There was no motive’ proven, and witiont “motive there con'd bemo crime. The relstlons between St 1. ¢+« and Mr, Clark were perfectly friendly. Lo, the Durlanas, and Lyman testified to this, ‘This motive being destroyed, the State man- afactured one. The relations, intimacy, and famillarity of .Joe St. Peter and Mrs. Clark fur. pished that motive. They have proved nothing that would cunvict them, They were jovlal and Iriendly. There war nothing inthis. Lite in the colintry was freer than in the eitr. [t was frequently tho case that hired men sat down to dinner with thelr emploser, After he left Clark's and went to Durland's, it was claimed he visited Clark‘s when Clark was absent In the city, Hoald. It was bis duty todoso, It would bave been strange If be badn't, Counsel dented, in,short, that, allowing everything stat- ed to be truc, there was nothing unreasonable in it, But tho defendant was vot (ndieted for adultery, for kiesing, or for Iying, She was charged with murder, and the Jury were asked to take what they could not give, and that, too, on ciretimsantial evidence. Butthe Jur,vwould not and could not on that evidence commit ju- dicial murder. He denied that Mrs. Clark w ever locked uo Io a room with Mr. that Mrs, Clark ever played an accordeon gs a sign for 8t. Peter to visit her. But If Mra, Swanson's evideuce was triie, it 18 no evidenco of the foundatiun of a motive and conid not convict, 1be Btate was without artitlery, cav- alry, or nfantry to batter down the defenise, It sought to do it with pon-zuns, ‘The 86 found under Mra. Hoover's plate was no evlaence of guijlt. Counarl referred to the circumstantial evidence sdduced. But this sort of evidence was not infallihle, Caroline Zin- mermann’s testimony could form un livk in a chatn of circumstances that would tend to eon- vict. She told twn different storics under osth. Could such a witness he believed t Nettio Schumacher sald abe saw Joe run up be- hind Mrs, Clark ana kiss her. The defendants denfed this, and it was reasona- ble to supposa that Nettle wos mistaken, Lavinia Drigos' story about Mr, Clark's being ealoun of Joe 3t. Peter wus not worthy of he- fel, It was not rcasouable that Mrs. Clark, bad as she waa painted, would take Lavinja Briags {nto her contidence. 1o denled that any kiss, or any tamllfarity, had been witneased In the Blue Island depot.” 'And even if thers had been, no une coutd swear it was Mrs, Clark, Bhe admitted baving been at Joe's sister's Louse once. ‘This was uu evidence of Innocence beyond dispute. Bhe went there to visit the sick, and was that a motive to commnit murder? I all the evidence furnished was true, it docs not furnish a motive to kill Mr. Clark, Mr. Munn, during his argument, made fre- quent citationa from cascs applicable tothe point under discussion, and at 3 o'ciock the Court aajourned. MINING STOCKS. A Word of Warning to Eastern Investors. Rpectal Correspandence of The Tridune. AriuBDAS, Cal,, Dec. -No one llving at & distance from the Pacllc coast can Lave any idea of the extent of the inquirlea tuat have Iately been pouring in on Ban Francisco brok- ers, mintng sccretaries, and business micn fn re- fgard to the minlug stocks of the coast. These inguiries femanate frum all classes of persons lving in eities east of tho Missourl River, and 1t would seem a8 though almost overy disap- polated Investor In railroad, telegraph, or gas stocks lo the East was determined to try his luck {o Paciflc ventures. Nsturally the rapld ise in the Comstocks last July and August awskencd 2 strong futerest thercin o the minds of men ut a dis- tauce, and certaln Kastern journals immediately grosped the opportunity offered, and, by making o specialty of mining matters, managed for the time belng Yo obtaln o large lncrease of subscribers. Fanned sud fostered by such journals, the excitement In regand to stocks scems to have spread over all the larze and many of the small Eastern citics, so that now it is uo uncommon thing for a targe firm of brokers fn San Francisco to recelve fn one day Hifteen or tweuty orders from the Eust, It may parenthetically be obscrved that these orders are for the most part small as compared with tliose recelved from bome custoners, aud many a broker hna been bieard to say, ** Confound this Eastern peddling business!” Novertheless the demand for ‘““{nvestment stocks, *dividend. payiog stocks,” and ‘“‘bonanza stocks™ scems constant and nugmenting, Thercfore it scems opportunc judt now, when ruwmors of a fresh deal ara rife, whea the process known us *milk- Ing the market ' is ogain to be attemipted, that s word uf warning be uttered in tho ears of mun eager to Invest on this coust, In the tirst place, Eastern men bave no ldea of the feeliug existing in California with regard to stock gambilug. It seems 1o be w prevalent {dea abroad that everybody in S8un Francisco at least dabbles In stocks.” Never was thera a greater mistake, The lower classes hero—sery- ant-girls, Isborcrs, cte.—-ure very apt 10 Invest thelr savlngs fu stocks, but thu great bulk of respectablo busiuess-men, whatever ay, have been the case in the past, Would no more’ think of dubbling in atocks thau ot sitting dow at faro-table, Hu-o‘xr'ulz(mz. as they do, the evil that stacks hiave done in the commnnity, they hava resolutely sct thelr faces azainst them, and torbldden their cmployes, on pain of disunssal, to dabble therein, Nuy more: it mar astouish your reuders, but It {5 neverthcless a face, thut the much-belabored bonanza firm and those about them svstematically alscoursgs thelr friends frum stock gambling, % \Vhat, tuoy have been heard to say, **what is tho use of wasting your time and racking your brain with prices hblnfiup down all the time! [t docsn't pay.' “Burcly these men oueht 1o know, Every one’ hers s perfectly aware that ' the bonaza kinus ure this moment luaded kuwn with the lesding Comstocks, and that had they dur- fog the fate panic deteriained to stem tlie tide the effort mizht have absorbed the entire re: servoof the Nevada Buauk, 1L ls notorious that one-ball of tho Suvcrintendeuts of ore- bearing imnes have ruiued thomselyes, owing to the large buylne orders they tolegzraphied o *Frisco us soon s they struck a rich body of ore, ‘The stock went dows lu spite of the tind, and falt the Superintendents bigh and dry. It costs 81,000—nnd If a recent proposat be Carrled aut 1t wli cost 82.000—to place a stock un the ¥on Francisco Stock a: Exchaoie Hoard, and unice listed there o L tho merey of overy utg of wreckers who choose to work a deal on thoir own sccount. As cveryone knows, stochs are bought hery on marging of from 40 to 60 er ceut, aod when such a bear movement s ¢n irain some of the less scrupulous brokers will not besitate to use thestock deposited wita them by thelr customers ta cover thelr own sales, Uf course each depreciation - values raises s demand for mors “mud," i, e., marzing from customers, and the inabllity to cumnply with the request causes the mortgaged stock to Le tarown on the market, so that the suow-bail lacreasus In volume as it volls down the il 1t Is thus that the present market value of the twonty-two chief Comstock imines Is about $40,000,000—just one-tbird of thelr value two months ago. Now If tho people vn the inslde track are unable to control the 8an Fraucisco market and save themselves in time, how can met thousauds of miles away cxpect to come out ahcad (u such dealad ‘The thing {s manitest- Iy ubsunl. Fastern tnvestors huve no business with such matters. Colifornlans are not fodud spoculating {u_wheat or provisions at the Cli- cago Board of Trade, nor do they meddlo 1o New York with Western Unlons, Lake Shares, or Harlems, and vo amount of coaxlog would {uduce them to do so. So also Fastern men should leave Pucitic stocks to take care of thew- eives. Perbave *dividends” catch wore ruxl‘ennl lu_ the East thau auything elie, and it 18 weocrally uuderstood herg that if any one wisbies to sell & wlue or stock East, the declara- tiou of a dividend prellminurily is the best wmeans to the deslred end. What wutters it it the promoters of the enterprise wsacss theus- selves to the value of & 2w thousaud dollrs to pay & **four-bit” or even a dullar dividend, roviding they can atiract Easteru capltuilstst No miue, let It oo distiuctly understood, which pays & divideud this wmonth is secure of paying one mext—except such ialnes as she Standurd, Idaho, te., whick eftber ars not lsted ut ull or the shares of which are ot In the warket., On the contrary, & dividend i3 uot fofrequent- 1y followed by assessmcul The fArer a8 ment,buing v order to obtain * further deselop- wenls,” 1s willlngly paid; the sccond, belng swall ooe, (s paid, although with more reluc- d 40 the Fanic goes ou until the asse wment-freezipg-out procéss has compelled mews- bers to sacritce thelr dear-boughit stocks. Thou possibly comes auother dividend, and the game recommencen, Notice, for fnstance, that, with all the talk of developments on the Comstacks, and the fre- nuent mentions of Iedres and ors-bodies in Unhir, Yellow Jacket, Unfon Connolidated, cte,, thero has never heen more than ons bonanza ul,en at a time. One bonanza is enough to keep ali the others up in nr\-mnnl.h and with the ctation of thelr futiire Aevtiopment, amd \ence forces are hushanded and tho excitement Is kent up over & series of years. Arizona I8 oa vet ton & mining country for much of this to bave taken place there, but signa ure not wanting that such will be the case there, ton, in.the bear future. Beeause such inines as the Silver King, in Ploncer District, Pinsl County, and a8 the Toughnut. In Tomb: stone Diatrict, Pimn County, are every week sending In thelr carloads of rich stiver ore, the public 18 beinz tauiht to helleve that every mine in the Territory la gofug to yield & fortune to those securing it, whereas it fs w posttive fact that the two men who discovered the Toughnut last sps hiad been hunting for It for seventesn eara, that the much vaunted McCrackin Mine, in Mohave County, bas hnd for the pres- ent at least to suspend all operatione, Not nday pasres without the San Franelsco l[‘otl‘fl cuntainineg notices of meetings of atock- olders diseatlsfled with the managzement of the mioes i whieh they. were Interested, Benrcelr ® day hul what thers Is some suit bronght agalnst hrokers or ilning companies by plucked birds, And vet, for the must part, the brokers src_honeat, hard-working men, who take their half of 1 per cent on each transaction and de- cline to advise their customers to buy or sell. It Is » great mistake to fmagine tha here will be accosted by *capy ers " touting for regularly es Whoever zoes into the atock market here does it with his eyes open. He knows he can margin, Jle kanows the banks will ad 40 to 50 per cent on his stocks, and if & sent- holder in the San Francisco Board, paging his $1Ua month, he knowa that he can, generally, 28 & “chipper,” scalp his tivo bits or four bits per share every day, especlally It be dabblea in “buyer 3, or ““buyer 5" “or *“lujer 80." ‘There i, however, nothing occull sbout the gamble for those Mving here, except In so far as every mine, containing as it does great puisibili- ties, must tos great extent he adark horse, But for men {n Chicago, New York, Buston, and Philadelphin to expect tu make money by such neans 18 a fal) uny tore, a delusfon, which it s the duty ot every honest man to aeek to expose. X, TIE INDIAN. Putting the Ioe luto the Iands nf Mr. Lo, To the Fditor of The Triune. Cnicaoo, Dec, 20.—1 fear you and your readers will weary of my tatk about Indians. The sub- Ject seeins 50 forelgn to vur every-day life, and therc are so many topies of pressing Importance, that It would not be atrauge if you sliould re- fuae sbace, and they timo, to consider the hope- less inuddle of eur Iwdian affairs; but, to my miud, there s no subject more vital to the American people; nay, every other hecomoes in- signiticant by comparison, Lhave lived among the Christian men and women who have left Eastern howes und safety to make the wildernesy blussom as the rose,— to plant Christian, civilizatlon, schools, and churches In the desert and among the beatlen; ond kuow that no uobler band of misslonaries could be eullsted to carry light in- to dark places than somd” I have met on our Weastern frontler. To have seeu their faces turn ashien-pale, and tbolr children clasped con- vulsively to thelr bosoms, at the word Judiau; to have scen sensivle, plalu, earncat women walk the strects wringing thelr handan despalr, while their husbauds and brothers were nway fighting for that Unlon, which bard nrmed the savages.around their doors, and then driven them to commit crimes which may not cven he named, through the dishonesty of its agents,— Is to have laid up memories which will not easlly dle; and, when I forget the wronesof the Wi ettier,—wrongs inflicted by the Indlan and tny right hand have forgotten its cunniug, To those wbo kuow anything of the facts, It is bard to be patient with the self-complacence of our scotlmental, Jong-haired Seeretary of the Interfor. He uud his family are {n o sule place. ‘The managemeont of the Bureau gives him thou- sands of appointments, and williuns of money to control; aud be can sit ot ease in bis hand- somo office, ond resurrect dead-and-gono foll- ures as experiments for diviliziog bis toteresting proteges. lle can win the confluence mud co- aperation of good men by the aunouncemeut of plous purposes and pmuLullm of doing won- derful thiugs for the Indisus; sud, as for tho scttlers of the Far West and travelers on its desolate roads, nm{ are uothing but poor whitea, the lawful prey ol ever Luffalo are scarce. ‘Ihc last pretty catchpenny senteace devised to protect the Burcau frauds and niussacres fs this: *'The War Department may govern the Indiav, but uever can put & hoe in his bond aud teach bim to use It." , tovet a hoa fnto the baud of Mr. Lo, and develop his noble muscle so thut lie can use the fmplement, is the grond missfon of vur grandlloquent Scerctary and his Infawous Burcau. Now, wlll people refuse toremeniber that this is just what thie Hurcau has been propostug to do’cver sinco it bad an cxistence! And how wany Indlans arc using s hoe to-day?! How many hoea dil tne Secretury send out fust vesr, and hiow inany of them arcin uset If the people furnish mouey to buy hoes, and to carry hives o long distauce, and Keep, & husinge school, they should have somudofinite informatiun as Lo bow the interprise prospogy. have uo documents from which to fearn facts, und, ) I had, should belisve as muen ot their contents as J kuew to be true,—that is, if they wore Issued by the Bureau: hut Tus Tuisuxa lately guve & letter rom Coutnla- aluner *Rayt, In which he tells us that, In the last year, ho expended §142,200.90 for the Cliey- enoes undjAl hoes,and gives a lst of the aril. cles purchasc ¢ Bucon, buking-powder, collee, tlour, lard, s0up, tea, beef, beans, corn, howiny, salt, sugar, and tobucco,"—and not n word about hues. Mr. Havt adds that the lnjured (nnocents did uot get all the beel they should tiave hud, or would gut befure Lhu year wus out, by 4,757,- 800 pounds. Morsuyer, thev stould bave 2 3 or would get, moOrs corn, bLeats, sUYAr, coffee, and fouwr. IL is probable that the lices do not ‘properly come under the Lead of *Buppljes,’ wud that they wero furnfabied with the - géalpiy -knives, Spencer rifles, - tin chppers, plates, sud spoons, Of cuurse, the Bureau would not miss un oppore tunity of furnishiug hoes, sud plonty of thew, —tor it hus a prafit on every hoe, Should wot wonder if it had sent out a couple of thuusand f-binding veavers; ten thoussnd anowing- chinesi patent churns, wind-mills. cider- presses, and portable saw-mills, lu unlinnted ouantities; aud shouhl report the suuwe as an expertmeut for cducatinz Mr. Lo i the use of the boe. Buvh an experlment would be in the dircel line of that other experiment of our uhilosophilenl Becretary,—ilat of sending youny Indians ¢35t 0 bo taught grammersud hoe- ng. When the appotntees of James Buchanan went (nto the ‘Tertltory of Miunesota to take charge of Indians, they fouud thousauds of doltars’ worth of ayricultural implements roi- tng on gruund which had ocen fenced, pluwed, and plauted by aceuts of thy Government en- gaged In the sensible work of teaching ludlsna to hoe, while depriving thews of sll necessity fur hioelng, They had sut around, like 30 wany crows, or worked a hittle for obicial pay, sud so Jearned wheie the seed-potatucs were put, that they mincht return, g thew up, and eat them, The funces they nud pulled down, and turned thelr poules I Lo eat the zrowing crops, aud burned the ralls 1o firewood, 1n- dAluny that had been taken yoang and cduvated by the whites were lving m wll the vices of beatiienisin, were perfevtly vagabouduzed ana a:&nchm Ly tueir tribes, or nad fullea Into the old ruts. Tha beurta of the Baptist mbistonarics had been wade wla:d "f the bigh pnivilere of edu- catiug youug fole-in-the-Day, sud had wade bim s geutleman and o gcholar, The Govern- ent bad built 4lin a commodious housy, and feuved bis 600 acres of 1and, gave bim sutticlent sunuitics to place him beyond all necessity of lavor, and mafntatoed blm uod his 6:x wives in ulleness and spiendor. When be wished to visit Wushingtou, bis expunses were paid, sud be traveled and lived fu style. His lust visic was 1 1583, wheu bo took b seveath wife,— a precty wilte girl of our Capitdl Clity; and the Great Fatber presented b with §10,000 for be- fug 8 goud ludiag, althourt thure was sbundaut evideuce that be bed {uteuded Joiniug the Bioux in 1 wassacre of 1342, sud bad ouly been pre- vented by the deunken baste of the braves, who precipitated the outbreak before tbe Chippo- wave Lud received thelr promised supuly of am- wunklon: aud tbat be hod been wost fnsoleut aud threateutug sll through the dreadtul six weeks 1o which Fort Abercrombio was besicged by tue Sioux uud Red Leke Culupeways. Ilis tribe wus slways jealvus of bim, acd duaily burned bis house awl fences, aud sent bin aod his barein back to Wigwamdow. John Tumus—another ludian taken younx sud edcated ta New England—was sn outcsst trow bis tribe, Scurued by ludfans, distrusied ,—iy beart will bave stopped beatinz thie noble Red Man, who fs quite at liberty to shoot and dissect, or dissect without shooting, a dozen or two of them when- by whites, his case was pitisble. T taikedfwith him often, and the last time waa Just before he Immicrated with hin family to the British Possesslons, where e might have a permanent home and enjoy t ruite of his lahor. If he ralsed corn on the reservation, it lLelunged to the tribe. ‘I'here waa no protection of isbor, or Dife, ur prooertv,—no punishment for crime,— but such as existed hefore the white man ap- pesred. The tribe was what it and tribe atill Is after tho of plous pretenss of clvilizing Commune in which Slavery and Polygamy are maintained by Americanb held finn by American Christianity, had outgrown the Indian sysiem, and wanted the protection of civilized Taw; and, to find {t, went to the Selkirk settlement. ‘The Government has bufit miflsand houses for the Chippeways, and they have burned them. 1t hasavent miltions to keep them in savagery, under pretense of Christianizing them. It has fostered murder, and rabbery, and idleness, and every concelvable form of vice, ot feeding and clothlng them for no serviee rendered, and fn- terposing between them amd fustive. Had the (Government, when Minnesota waa sumitted as 2 Btate, turned all the Indisns of the Territory over to the State, we would have had'nomassicre in 192,and the Minnesota sivux, instead of being a terrcr to the frontier, as they now are, would have been peaceable eftizens, sod moat likely voting citizens, Whanever Indfan finds out that” be will be hanged for murder, ali the same as & white man, he zets to be a good Indinn, [t s not true that there Is no guod Indian but 2 desd Indfan, and nut true that Western people shink su. It Is trus tnat, ander Bureau management, there ts nothing for the Indian but extcrmination; and that the whites never can trust him so lonz 18 he may commit tne most monstrous crimes, and take refuge hehind United States suthority. Bo Toug as It costs £200,000 to hang an indfan murderer, and he cannot even be brought to trial unless his victim was an ofllcer of high 0 longr the ploneer must distrust Indiaus, and only fcel safe when they are dead, The entire hintory of our Indian policy {s such a blot on our national cscutcheun as few na- tions have had to bear, snd the glarlog bypocriey and trickery with and by whicl It has heen perpetuated {s cnougn to stamp us & pz- tion of knaves and dupea; but, of all the tricks of which I know anything, none hns been quite k0 shallow as this “last, viz: Bending young Indlaus to Virginia to leara to ho! | Every one who kuows anything about Indians kuows that it s not tho scant of knowleage, but want of wlll, which keens them from working. Like sl uther slnveholders, they hold labor in the utmost contempt. AN agricultural and mechanienl work s left to thelr slaves, the squaws; and they scorn both labor and labor. e scorn the use of a hot as much as Henry Clay did that of a blacking-brush; and enly necessity can ever teack thent to use It, Most of them will Loe rather than starve, and those who will not should he left to the slternative; but to expect to coax them to work while feed- ing and clothing them, is to expect o reversal of the Laws of Nature. Now, In this light. look at Mr. Schurz's * periment.” Your Indian aristocrat looks unon Iabor as the badge of slavery: and, to enlighten Iis mind, we send_bim to Virginia, where labor 18 just ns disgenceful an it is un the rescrvation! How much hoclag will your young buck of the Plalos learn fram the young dandy of the Old Dominlont Are not the First Families the very folks to nct as teachers In a hoeing-achoo! and may we not expect your yuung coppe. colored arlstocratto learn a profoundirespect for bard hands from his Virgluia cousin? O dear! when will our statesmen and people learn to unc a little commou-sonse in their dealings with the Ioaiani JANE UHRY BwissuELM, Suggestlons ms to n New Indiaa Policy. Tv the Kdttor of TAe Tridune, BaLT LaARg, Dec. 18.—I want to offer a sug- gestlon, through your paper, touching the dis- posttion of the [ndlans,—premisiog that 1 have Mved in the Indian country twenty years, and have had occaslon to study the question thor- oughly. My suggestion {s, that the 8tates and Terrl- torics containiug Indlans be made the agents of the Natlonal Government, in a sense, In the ad- ministration of Indlan afMalrs, instead of 1he kind of ageata now employed tor that purpose, The entire territory of tho Urlon (s now urzan. ized iuto States or Territorles. They areall strong enotigh to atteod to their own local affuirs, {ucluding the regulation and govern- The oftficers of the Territorles (there are but very went of the Indlans within thelr borders. few Stutes in which the fodinus longer give any trouble) aro appoluted by the Natlonal Uovern- ment, and ure respousible to It far more than 1o Most of the ex- Lhe people they preside over, ecutive ofiicera ol the Territorles have littla more than & uominal renson for ‘being, as it is now. Tuey have llttle eve to do than druw their salaries, and ma:m. us well be given some- thing to do as not. toita with them the people most dircetly luterested,—enlisting thereb: theirgood sensa aud consclentiousness—throug| their Legislatures, and = very alffercat sce of relations wonld soon -appear between our race sud the savages. The latter would be fed in of great meed from game or coll weather, thus many , an outbreak prevented. They would learn to regard us as their (riends, or at least @s not neceasarily their enemies; w 1t would bo seea to be to thie intereat of both ruces to keep the peace. Frieudly tribes would be wude tirm allics, for the Iudisn is as grateful asa dog. [lcadquarters wonld be ot home. Now thuy arc as far away from the Indian coun- try as they could well be xed. The Anierican Colonles were sinong the Indiaus, the "mf as the Weatern Etates and Territorion are. Had the m“fl and Parliament attowpted to manage their Indlau alfaliy, it would Lave been sowie- thing parallel to the Federal Government's ene deavor to mauvsgo ours, aud would doubt- aud less have resulted, ws thls endeavor T and does, in mismauagement, aud thut contluvally, o the “whame, and _mortitication, and “verplexity of atl of us. Healaus, in the multiolieity and pressure of ua- tlonal aflures, Indlan mutiers arc usually neg. lecied; treatles are uot ratitled ; approoriatious delaved or refused; the promises of Agents and Cotnmisaioners of thu Fresident to the Iudians ore not kept: und this nas Leen the inoat sruit- ful source of Indmn ware fur filty years. The Btates and Territortes, on the contrary, having 1ttle else to do, vould Jook after Indian matters promptly and eflciently: tndecd, they would have tos and our word, whatever it uilght be, would bo kept to thew. Uct the States aud Terrftorles foto the babit of polleiuz and dealing with thelr own Indiaus, the saiue v with otber citizens, a9 the Colonies used to do, and they would soon be maaters of the situation. There are some tribes with whom they could form allisnces, offensive and defennlve, It would be understood witli respect to all the trilws, that, when Tn- dians perpetrated fsolated oulraves on the whites, they would have to Le given up and unisiicd; ok 18 the tribe couldn't or wouldn't Hu that, It must itself he respousible. Expert- cuce woulld teach the policy of scrting ene trive over azainst anuther 1o the intercst of prace, as waa dove i Colonlal tisues, The tribes need not bo treated an soverelynties, except wrhaps a8 regards eack other, Treat them ds citizens, privileged tu enjoy the protection of the Juws, und bound (o obey thein, 1 usliz one tribe aralust anotber for any purpose, thelr tribal character mizht be recoZutzed 8o pleass them, but uot 1o Interfers with the operution of vur #ystein fnany wavi and the policy would be ta o uway with the tribal orcanization as fast ae inble, fearning the Indian to be dealt with y Che Stats ks an individual only, Justico dnd right, not the oecessitles or op- portunities ol Agents, anlllrlnnl. ontractors, would be sevn to belndispensable; and it would b possible 10 make them tho rule, which It 18 uol now, 1o lookinz after quiet anoug the red wen, the staying band of the State would olteu be latd on the dolugs of the whites. In tius it would be the business of tho Statu o see that Justice avd tulr-dealing took the place of the swindling, overrcaching, lylng, wrong, and vutrage in a tiousand ways that vow mark the utercourse of the hostilo races, oilicial and un- officlal, and keep shelrbivod coustautly at flebt- lus heat. t course, the National Governmeut would bave to bave ultimste supervision,—certainly whero the use of public mouey was required,— 88 fu cuse of war, for support of suvacvs, or for buylng tanda of them, ~Hug, by acting tbrough the local State or Terrhorial Governcuts, its action would be sure to Lo hetter conmdered betore taken, and better exccuted and miore ef- fective when taken. Warg ulebt be absolutely uecessary, occustonally,~but oo, 1 belleve, for tong, Compelled 10 provide for sud polics them, the State would soon make them sell- supportiog,—iu short, citizens, fn as fur and a3 fast us migh be. In case of war, the National Governuient should furulsh everythiug but the weu, aud should leave the commuud with the State or Territory, luaugurate this system now, and In Ave {:\:" the ludian problems will have dissppeared trom the list of troubleswne vational questiony. Lsiy uut worth examination st least Doverass, ———— alzsc. 1o the recent number of the Temple Har thers 18 o story sbout Balzac, which 1s probabdly new to many readers, He wus, lke Dumas, Wways fudcbt, and dreadiully worried about duus, Ouce, when be was 1u bed, vueof these uu- pleasant persouages prescuted himself, sud In- ssted oo "dnlfal bis debtor. In valn was bie told that M. de Balzac was (i}, that be was out, that bo was in bed,—he refused to budge. At searcity last the servant, in despnlr, told Balzac who was dewn stalrs, and to his great amaze- ment recelved orders to show the importunate visitor up. The tradecsman, -Irem{ A lttle mollificd, is ushered into the sfeeping apart- ment. M, de Balzac sits up courteously In ted, miakies his creditor a charming bow, and Inqulres to what circumstance he may attribute the pleasurs of nis early visit. Flattered by the warmth of his reception, the fournissewr mur- mura sonething in which the word **money !’ is alone audible. " Money, my dear fellow?' cHes the man of lettera, with hin broaa smile, full ot bonhoin e, *money do you want! Look in the right-hand drawer of the dressing-table!" Be- enming instantly supple sa a cluve, the other fushes to the drawer, opens I, examines ity putsa his hand to the back—thers i oothing, **Al," says munsteur from the bed, ““perhiaps the left-hand drawer.” Same scrutiny, same result. *Or the middle one.” 8tflf nothing. * I must trouble you to look under the aressiog-table*” (3. de Balzac in 80 bolite it 18 & pleasure to listen to him). The créditor puts bis head down—no! In this wa the whole fusniture of the room Is examined, and even the chimney. *Now,” sass the author, turning sternly upon the crestiallen tradesman, fn all the ‘majesty of a tasseled nightcap, “if there f8 no money fn the Jeft- hand drawer of the dresaing-table, nor the right- hand drawer, nor the middte drawer, nor ander it, nor under the bed, nor oo the wardrobe, nor up the calmuey, how the devil do you sup- pose | am to give yuu any 1" With thac he lies down flat ujon hls back, and the creditor departs anatbematiziog the poet. BLACK THURSDAY For Depositors in » Cincinnatl Savinga (7) Institution—Scenes Resulting from the Adne Fallure—False Reports About Other Banks, Cincinnat) Commerciot, ‘The general expectation that there would be d scenes at the northwest corner of Fifth aud Vine streets yesterduy folluwing the an- nouncement of the suspention of the bauk- ing houss of C. F, Adas & Co., was fully re- alized, Among the hundreds of sad cases of depos- ftors whose little all, the saviugs of years of close economy and bard work, which the day developed, was & Mrs, Kalab, & poor washer- watnan. who lias a deposit at the bauk of $400. When tod that she could pot get loto the sha did could get bauk, uud that If w0 mouney, she broko out fn plteous sobs that touched the hearts of all who heard ber. 1 awm old now,"" she said, the tcars flowed down her furrowed cheeks, I can's work inuch longer, and my moncy (o the bank was at) [ had tadepend oo, I eurned my money by hard work at the washtub, and {t's & shame {0 be cheated out of It o this way." Mrr, Wilism Suyder, s widow lady from Fulton, whose husbaud wan drowned from the steamer Exchange about two years ago, pressed through the crowd and saked to be admitted. Her husband's life was insur: $4,000, and when the money w: 1d to her by the Company she put it all In this bauk, and had been trying to live unon the nterest from t. ‘Tuis was all she had In the world. She had been 5o saving of it, and now it was all goue. A Mrs. Amenn, a poor woinan from Fuiton,- whohas a deposit of $800 in the bank, came down early tn the wmornlug, and remained in the crowd around the bank the most of the day, sobbing piteously and begying to be admitted, A scrvant girl, ‘Tihie Hunneke, wbo lives at 845 Richmond street, jong sgo received from Germay, her portion of a dcceased eatate, and deposited there, every dollar of it. deposits which formed stheie all, the bank, the savings of scveral yi proached one of the policemen, snd be allowed to 1{0 inside the bullding, ing told that the ordets were to admit no one, he fell to arzuing the case with the otticers. Sald he: 101 were to steal vour hat you would have ine arrasted and eent to the Work- house. Hut these men, whd have stolen m; made, An Irishman, who hed (ntrusted his savings with Adne & Co., loudly aunounced his tuie tiou to storm the bank smush in the wi dows, but prudently desisted from the upd, taking, for the reason, ua he said, *-that \| were too manyoflicers guarding thed—n place.” & Another man, whose nawe could not be learned, threatened the windows, and in astrig- gle with one of the nflivers, who stepped ta to prevent bifcareying out the threat, he had one 8till noth «.;r t of hia hauds quite hatly burt, madidened deposttor had to be t was fearcd that his Shreats to bre en away, K fo the wi ws would excite otliers to violence, and seri- ml trouble would ensue, F, Dieckinan, of No. 82 flarrison aveuue! states that day betore vestenlay he deposited a check for 8150 with Adac & Co. for rollectlon, and 8¢ the sume time drew a cheek fnr his taxes on the bugk, Cheek No, 1 was collected, but his cneck for taxes remains unpald, John King, u crippled news man, Secretary of the Newsboys' Union, loat §200 last summer tn u savings bank, the Miam{ Valley, we belleve, and now he is loses to the amount of $500 in Adac's, Tlo statea thut bu saved this money at the average rate of ubout A ceuts per dav. Our reporter slso £aw Lwo women standing in & dvorway ou Vine strect, just below Fifih, “Uhey had thelr arms about cach other und wern weeplng bitterly, In response to questions they sald they were sisters, und lived on Vine strecr above Court, aud by haid fabor tn sewing ond the closest economy they had saved up iu the last three Years aboul $300, al) of which was deposited In Adae's Bank. Said vne, sobbjug, ** Qur rent |3 due next Satur. day nlizht, our cost §s just vut, and we have not acent now with which to pay auy thing, snd we ara In despinir, We have no coal, uud no money to buvthe neceasaries of lite with. We havs worked so hard and felt 8o havpy 1n the thought of our money so safuin the bsuk. What can we do now('"”’ A 1nun leaniog against the lamppost on the corner was spoken to, sald he: **1 bave wurked bard fur nine vears ani bave duprived myself of almost the necessaries of life to Jay up money for useinmy old age. I have, by ;Emlmng and contriviug, fald by §100 & year, sud the $600 were all deposited In this bauk, Al T huve worked for sa long is zone, and nine years of carnest, falthful, hard work govs for nothiug, 1 vever will try to suve u cent nuain, What [ earn bereafter'l will spend myself, [ have worked for rears to lay hy mones that samebody clse will enjoy. Now and as Jong as Llive ] will spend iy inoney as it comes fo, and reap ull the benetita T can trow . Half a dozen men who were ilepositors, stand- ing by, exjpressed themselves fo the sumno way, sayinig that they would hercafter spond thelr woney as they reccived it, and ot trust it 1o anybody. A large wan, wearl fur cap, said grufv: * Well, for that matter, [ cuces you will have 1o, for this is the last savings bauk {n town, Thers wero tour of them, and they have gone uw one alter another, like powder-ulls explod- fug. First the Cinciunati, then the Miami Val- fey, thes Hemann's, and now Adac’s, The best way to iet tos worth of your money s 1o spend 1t und enjoy it as you o, 1 have doow wy lagr work for bauk Presidents,’ A centleman connected with the Longview Asylam aad, * My £2,000pope up 1o this break, and Lam left withiout a cent, Sowcbody elsy will enjov tho money { have tolled to save. No wore bank business for we." Anothier pulled our roporter asido and sald, **1 was ln unly u counle of hundred dollars, but doyou know that a fricud of mine deposited » large suni of money In the bank at A o'clock In tho afternoon and they took 4t ini " An old, forlorn-looking wuman was sittiog on the fag-stony tn tLe middle of the sidewolk, the ruid alr cutting througl her thin clothiog, Bus she was secmingly oblivions to everythinge but ber griel, She was swaylng to snd fro wringing her bunds and walling as though heare-brosen. Shg was Ju the very wnidit ol the crowd, and was contluually fostled sguinst, aad kicked, and husticd, but she pad wo sttention to avythlog that traubpired about hor, Our reporter tred to queation bier, but she d_uothiug but *der und fecviy, der und feovty." Oue old German, & white-baired man, who Is woll Kuown, ot very violeut, and secied to be stirrlug up the crowd to ke an assault upow the houss snd swassh the windows, atc. The R‘""-""“‘“ to qulet him wituout efuct, sad nally furced bim away from the viclnit; A gentlemania a long ulster sud plug{.n ashl’ Lo our revorter quietly: * By direct soilcitation of Mr, Adae a few days azo L opened an account with bis bauk. Tho result is, I am out s uice round little suwm, and had the suiusl becn de- Layey lttls 1 mighi bave been out much wore,” and tho veutleman coolly knocked thy ashes frow & ciger aod walked sway. — Spunlsls Grapes. ‘The white Almena grape, which now retalls iu our stores at from 10 to 20 cents por pound, was A Icw years ago a luxury almost woknowa fu the not 82, relative’s ‘The moncy was taken to Adae's h‘gnk cs- terday the the unfortunnte girl, with a vounger biother, forined a part of the crowd tlst was resent around the hankIn the vain hope ut ing adinitted and allowed to draw out the A mao uamed Jobn Didar, who has $500 in a ked l‘; Upon be- $500, all I've got fn the worl will' go frce. Justead of arrestt fug them, as you would some Iit- tle thief, son officars ¢veu come here and stand guard over them, and threaten, il we don't po off, to nrrest us, whose mouey they bave taken," ‘The ofticer mnade no answer, but in his heart, no doubt, acknowledged the polnt the msa had West, and costing In the Eastern citien from 50 10 75 cents per pound. The cheapening of this fruit fa dae to the opening of direct stcam com- munleation with Spain. ~ Formerly the fraft was lirought to our ports onsaihiog ve from carryiog out carroes of staves. ese)s Teturning Much of it came [ & datnaged condition, owlag to the length of the ‘voyage,and had to be thrown sway, which greAtly enhanced the coat of the salable grupes,, Now steamers load with erapes, oranges, lemond,.and ralsing in andeome to Naw Tork, where they get cargoe: of grain and provisions for Liverpool, Bpanish por AN UNII.AI}PY DISCOYERY. The Husbund of Gien, (iorden Granger's Widow Accused of Blenmy. fPashington (b, ©.) Poat, Dec, 30, In well-enlightenel society-circies yesterday the rumor ,was current of a scandal, which fa ikely to bikst the reputation of an army officer, and cover with coufusion the nai me of & most eatimable and worthy lady, In 0o way respon- sible fur circumstances which can make this present Christmas and hardly fall to New Year's a very unhappy period of her existence. The facte, without any attempt st coloring or cn- largement, are simply these, {ron . competent and reliable sources: (raneer, as understood Mra, widow of the Iate (en. Gordon Granger, basbeen, sincethe death of her husband, employed in the Quartermaster General’s oflice, stasalary of 8100 per month, She has also been in recelpt of 20 per month pension-money, and when Commodure Vanderbiit dipd, he gn«; her, by bis will, $20,000, her' fn circamstances fac ahove stiill young, possessed of many personal all of which haa placed want, Shefs tractions, and the suitors fur her hand have Leen numerous. When Gea, G rangcr died ha was Colunel of the Fifteenth United States ln- fantry, and Lieut, mental Adjatant. Lieut, Blalr laf 10 the young widow's heart, succceded Thomas Blair was the Rezi- Id violent seze in win. ning her affections, sud some four or five months azo they were masried at Santa Fe, New Mexico, Previous to this, however, Lieut, Blair obtained leave of sbsence to vislt Scot- lend on *‘private business,” and It was on his return that Mrs. Granger vave up ber clerk- alip, left Washiogton, und went on to Santa Fe, to perfect the Lridal arrangements agrecd n}:on between hernelt und the lieutenant. Matters were pleasant and qulet enough for a abort time, but just now s investization s roing un at the decided teudency to overcloud dream of hapidness and peace, procecds was first lodged with Lieut. Blair’ u- ‘»(crlw officers by the Hou. Milton J, Durhatn, of It the jutormation upon which the | var Departiient which has a Mrs. Granger's t entucky, and that it 1a to the effect that Lieut, Blair Is guilty of bigamy, having haa s lawful wife marriage with Mrs. Granger. nd children {o Scotland at the time of his It 18 als0 atated that the proofsof this inarrlage are reguiar, complete, aud now in possession of the \Var Department. {ien. 8her , who {r & warm friend of Mra. , has, It I8 said, written to her tocoma )y back tv Washington; and, it Isniso ited, direct steps have been taken to prosecute Lieut. Blair criminally fn the rivil courts, and to organize a court-martial for hts trial for conduct unbecomini an office and a zentleman, with reference to his dismisasl from 8 service which hie has so thoroughly disgraced. it 1s poasible that Aleut. Blolr axcuse or palliation of his von perhiaps, & will offer some duct, claimiue, **Beotch maorriage,” some supposed divorce, or something of that kind, but, as the matter now stands, the record of his deception and bnsencss looks very black. ABUNE BUEANCE t TO ACCOMMODATR O PALroDs Chrouguont the eu‘( we | Branch Unices [u the different below, where ndvertisenients wi Ui have e eatahiished visious, as dealgnated i1 be taken for the rame price as charged st the flce, and witl be recelved unul 8 o'clocs p. m. duriag Ibe weak. and uLtl] 8 . ra. 38 MM, Beoksellers aad Statloners, 122 Twenty:sscond-st 5. M. W ALDY: 31, Newsdealer, Btatf Wetern-ar. aged Jeweler, -ai.. corucr Lincatn 1TY IEAL B Fo HALE~g10) 8T, cola, 2 fine lata with cast’ Hih fuod cornéra left on this atreet; four uilt on This hlock 1his ye: Micligan-ar., s, of SA. easy terma. THY ot the 8, Divislon, : Heveral destrable huuses in ya st jews than they can be duiliested bume. foner, etc., 109 ul-a.fgi News Derot., 1 Newsdealer, and Faocy 2. Ll ne of ihe e fiandeorne houses ., 2 fiae Juta et 8 sacritice making the best residence section AP, rious partaot the city Lrlsimas ean best Lo observed by giving your wite & ol sALE—Di EXCHANGE-THE SOST able manufscturiug bisinew - the exchiange for s block of st Uua soiicited. J. L. LEE, Jook, SALE-ONLY. stn-llousk I locks from_de| TEAL ENTATE WA T ANTED-SKYEAAL HOUSES, low prived, can irntly lovated. #8 Washinoton l4!’:{.']'1'”4‘1!1»!![ b Wfl’ DENSTD WA KI¥e such inf North Siae. 7 NORTH Ath room, 84 tn 8¢ i day-board, 350, 5 AND @) board, plang auf vs: a thorougl Kasbingtou-st. ___SUBURBAN MEAL ESTATE, _ ORMATION WANTED—UF JANES M waa foat from s pareats tn (hicako & v . MOARDING AND LODGENGs CLABKST, - T weok, with use uf AND B LOTH: €088 $2,201 111 18351 plearant suburh; cheaps iralos, W, K WEI, 1 dearburn, NTED, HEDILATAND L U MAGILL, o, wimation s will v will be weld rewsrded by addrely L, Windsar Jiotel, W ces Madirgaat, & ~ FIUNT:CLASS 2 flotera. LARRNCE' HOUEE. No! ¢ biatet,, four blocK ot T Tlourd sud_ 700! toBlu, Faran N EVADA O per day, caToot fo Feus Wi L, 148 AND L VA 2N “near Slanrve-at. -toud Toots and hoard, ieral reduction ta weekly #1.0mer dayi 8 QANDE HoUex, coRNER 5"t adisou-at, ~Pertiagent bosrd ai Tranisient, $2.00 per uay, DAY bosi W ISBROIL Hious STA Tamer House—Sice warin 10 $7 per week. 7 ransents, OAND-FOR GENTLEMAN B AND <hlldren, and nurse irl; can farnisa oy ¢ Bacebt curpata. locatlun tuit be guar uiness enire, atating uecorinodations yon can furnf! Address. 1, Lribime vilice. OARD—FOI TWO P 1y, restdiog esst of 8t ! ouine, 41, 359, 35S, AND 837 Palmer llos— : per week, §3 a4t boary. W 4 b WiF} h, PRIVATE FAM: e and south of Twelfil-sta. 1 avenus prefcrred, butnu objection tu cross sirvete) aiale tering, elc. Lwu *oomms required: ust have modern Nddress L7, Vril Boase D RURNISILE ‘I wenty-eecond st. by & gentiemu ud 1roy dinner.” Addresa i 7 “Twenty-sovond-st. Boauncron recelve 8 mutlie; forred, nesr GIRL, WIT ¢, North or 104 Eribune vulce, ’Fon A I North Clarl AY ther ¢ an ladisna cou fudiaua sud cu waileb contaluing eg will s Whcrally KAUE OF GLU cher-av. 10 Fraukiin: furfca peturn by W AN, 513 e Y OBTI—B3ALI Loy i ine: blie Onder wil recel ing tha vame 1o Ay W, I —-Llls"l’l Cil AL i a1y tu uw N of 18 North M . bigh, 1, 4u0 B3 welght, and around'iis ucck, A llbersl row turn of samue, of [BfurIatio; 0. HOUGLL ka3 West fudiau; 1]ARE: C| wil AL PARTIESR IN WANT OF 1t ited to cxsiutuy Lur stuck and A fuli line of auj parlor aults fu 1 . bal cagiie. jucent Fockers iUauies, ture; Jirusscia and Ingrain I gouds . wll sld sy Uaymeats. J ak.. nasr th bridk scta 4t th, OR 8 ALE - - 1wq slugle lelytis a0d double eliper alel (QurpERs Fon A J and wweil cullen’ 804 Funers oF waguR 4 AME AND SiCh HULSES, curable, cured Tree uf o 10010 )lu\lr Bpavie bus gL 4, pTUI ble {det 1 Bl ile, cure g tatutug Lul) wiforiiation W DI W AL ES, Wholedale, VAN 3 Chica, Trialaise. 33 \WARTRLCT ive, Apply 8 guod schuol llefereuce. CAFTEN "¢ AL T vr'; Halsted-ot, Tueds RaliaisTuanian, Us N uF boulevard, Puckettoua cartainiig gur. r CEZIL URNITURY 431 Weal Madieun-at. veniencesi EOE 8HE WILIL hauth ide pre: Audress b ABOUT 3 Gron Thirty. v & AFTES, Tt At A suilable rewaril pald RUTIE RS, 4 bouth Fraak. PO, nes J WO BTABLE IN WEAT 0 roy Liuree, fftecn hands ) neuk»unk‘ with cheln 1l be paid for re- d adiug Lo 118 detection, BOUSEHOLD GOODS,___ ARE ricos We hiave ol $25 ud LTy sy nd a1l Binds of furai oves,aud 1hise MOUSLS AND CARIIAGES, BEATED, ONE 4¢ AT, AND tlula Poriiaud FORTLAND usnd aisiiha viculur discase ced. Bond for vawphietcoas 130 West Broadway, New Yourk. A NCE, BRI Y 20 Uss suly tor hol thellaimeatin yulow wrappers S insic ey y 8 T0 HAUL €, 10 pu year: moil ¥ witliout renioval i'BTJme NINU 4 Wilasg, aud oblier wi warraated, Losu ouice, SIKKCHANDISE 5T0k: lowest Tosned et WIHEELER & alf price, aod oo FANTED_FOUR & T L Wy o0l men. WILSON'S, VWASTED=A NCACKSMITIU workma A'gol stendy man emplopment by atirenng Ac [IMER, Rowoon .. riage Works wanna, _WANTED-MALE HELF. T =N BEUS. (00D PAY 0 Twenty-second. AND OENPRAL Wil fiod siesay Fulton County, Ind Miscellnneous. AXTED ~ HEN TO TAKE 'AORNTS' fonr monilis frea; B b b 35 ticles; ctrenlation, 10, WASTEOCAT, o ouise. Golor Comeeatly Thursday m ANTED-A FEW iroduce s ncw mapaf 1t plled by Col. Wood, e fres, It 1, DALDWI VAN to ) seil our goouls lieferencea reutred. LADE i1 €0.. Bitiark: Iy of tw erences. Anply at 10! morruw aficmniy WasTe EAT GIRL TO TELP, Food bouse and musical education—viesi an strument, afth. VWARTRD-A'SERT _take care of hil: prefel \VANTED=THRE] WATTHR ARSI, YV ASTED=A 60D GEILMAN QIRL A YV _sasav., fuarth door narid of Thiricsnt ATiy ek firmy descr 5 & C0.B PAC aris, 300 men Lo ulond I orning. PXPERIENED MEN TO I . he United States, en lerkof irouse of Representse For_terms ‘sppiy ta M, G, New ¥ D MAN FOI BVERY STATE by i CED SBRVAXT FOR mitet Bave uneac:ptionable pef - 1 Pine-st. this monnag or to- FORt A d In- st 900 MIchigan-ay., near Twenty. L HULUSEWORK wede, or Norweziag nrth Clrgla-at. DISH-W A 4] Bouth Clar] Keamatrensea. VWANTED-120 EXPERIENCED IANDS UX 0V atendy s BNtk onirte, el 8 75and _SITUATIONS WANTED-MA| Bookkeepers, Olerks, &ce SITTATION WANTE [> £t e LN DADEHE o re L L) 71 bratasnay. L) 11—BY A FIRST-CLASS BOOK- Kecper witl twenty years' experiences is an expert ant, and can show fFord Lhrouziout hiv entire nasfoess tife. * Ad- ‘rinune ohice, commiison and curporation sccount; a guod dressD) 2, S ity ears in b IlneluuA‘AiT’ PRE-. o (uslnesss cal gire good 0\ D v, Tribune office, o Traaes, SITUATION WANTED-IIY A FIRST-CLASS COL- ) ored m; At ool caliur address 10§ ITUATION du secon QITLATION WAN couk or general h frst-clase references, GITUATION WANTE! 107 twu firet-clam i a4 wecond gl i ia M a Kentee! M YATION W QITYATL A " Demeonstlcs. WANTED--BY AN HONEST GIRL TO 4 work: wages 1} 3 Weat dackaan WANTRO—BY A NEAT, T1Y GIRtl; COOK. her, 1 give good teferences, Pleass Buren-at. per woek. .\daress . and frofict. 'or will do gen- 281 Calume PAVILY AS fean girl witl ST.CLASS PLACE K ths. Sohee one | hoardlug botise preferred. Ape A Ouden-ay. DUERSMAREI AT 470 TED-A West Jacksou-at. wonld I1ke to taxe liome work or 40 0ul Ly thie sy, FAMOUS M. STUI 110m the piatnest cowcs or ¢boty and keld. 1l TAE 1 ol BT 185 AND 1w BIATRIST, DIMENSE STOCK. 144 AND 10 § A TTENTION 13 CALLED £ our e wiock i URGA N SQUAKE FINNG For sl iustruuient warcanted Ave years, stovin of every uescriptiou, EINVOIC EMEISON 1'1ANO c0.'8 AUTIFUL CHINTMAS P l\. e KIMBALL ©¥ BONTMENT OF THE SMITH AMKGICAN 0RUANS, FIANOFORTE., ONL rurgan, ouly €30, it 1] OREAT S 1§ Eold only. h;’ASI 13; BTURY & AMP, Ab7 ofgaant w i et ot w o i t you E: i ST Ol 3t \ll'h.° anly by AP, id 1y & bt ATHUSHEK PLANOS Tor, ral A V& UA 2, to the riciio Yarlegated woods, o un very '8 d square planos. KIAITAL Cutner Slate ani Ausmi-si upHEDL hid sqanre piagos. W R TEALL Comer itat 11T W, Ki3tna F OLIDALS et Drgans, new and beautitul avon & Hamiin ¢ stytes. Bt the iowest prices {or vash, OF 40 FA4Y faOLly ©F qUArEHy paymenta, 1ie best orua few second-lisnd at bar QITUATION WAN orzanist and cholr-eador. T Aberience. Ll 1erin ool Addrre B 7, cans' ea ritine ofic NY AMULUST TO planos, withuut toum 14811 Ofice ATD Foit Mouney 0 1981 on watchios, yhovery wscription st GOLUSY f In n.‘--(nna within reach of all. A galnt. & IIAMLIN UNLGAN €O, nd ahad) T TRV-AN by & gentieman of ‘14 DVANCES MADK ¢ bonas, etc., ot LAUNDE dolph-si., near Llark, Hwown: LOAN ON FULNITU reinoval i OLD GOLD AND BIL! llmomh; and 110’ Luau aud” Buluou ceneeat, () kaat Madison-at, Eatabllshed [Ads. O YOU WANT TO INVEST A FEW FHOUNAND J dullars Ina fold aiine. £16 ot plaustble you sver ¥ 10 50, address I MENCUANTS 1N % w, Trinuncofice, EED OF MONEY AN HAVE jDaral advances at it per uent per At uu (helr surplus rlocke. witlh taragy; atrl I Addrees & o7, Trib 881 M ad{son st —ro dise, i us &L 10 per ueniture withous removal, ctly rondden WEAL FRTATE: IN BT F. 8. DREYER &C0., 1o et pe ks NT-IOUSES, ‘West §ido. RENT—A Wan- o Misc 'l\o ENT—WE Afll, cat rooms, ~ furnis! ahd withoul Loara. to be yLlained fu agy part Ot sity, Iy of which wid » FalBUN L. BUILIIAG. 10 £auy dascrs, but wil 14 TRIBUN, 1. Dews thal Ty [ wente. ail ¢ erty withiu thir smuie reasynable lwcumbrance, uugoftice, o EXCHANG] Broved luid ta Tow MALL HOUSH Ty cli it e il not adveritass sl T Aretecl Inturnatio’ freo ‘to rel oty 1t it oouier or bourder, bit wi fact. wiil Bad 1t tu thelr fut deal wiih Brat-class people oniy. Wy 1) call porscistly when 1equested. £ WHLDING. wlil “vay amount uf lu . a0l Uk & Dusicu man wanted. Ui, Trib- X0 EXCHANGE, _ NGE--1M DL AND BARN 328 it Adauig-at, clluneous, s fli AGENTS FOR THE 4,204 wutdralahed, with o re 10 strictly privas ds people unly. - IVATE PAN. arcotutiudate an unoxceutivs - wiil aut advercise tho attocslvnus e do not cliploy \TURK FACTORY chinery apd a g owuer wleli- T BUsi- stuient 1o Bluvly 255 . 2 AN OF 1:5 witlh stnck sn farmtog lmole: Haroved resbisiice nron or Chic minutes walk of Court-1iouse; would Address Z 31, Lribe NE DIFEOVED AND UNIM- & fur generas mereanulv ko, fn‘a"“k‘“" oot Bod shuce, Bt Huow §1 lecropelited L cludiug raling, plite t uo; ERT, [‘Gfi SALE-AT ONK-: feet of ciegaut bt ulus aid ¥ Price Juu Cluoad 10 paJ. Dped GURTI THELR COST, ‘0 waluut DAk coustert,’ oo Sud deska < 1 60, 1 ribue, d180uth Clask as.

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