Chicago Daily Tribune Newspaper, February 10, 1879, Page 3

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THE CHICAGO TRIBUNE: MONDAY, FEBRUARY 19, {879, nnd n other parts the river has harely room to flow through, and the wagon-road {3 ciit out of the solld rock along the bank. From Leadsille down for atout twelva miles there fs quite n valley: then comes a narraw canon for berhaps ten miles; then it widens out again, forming a valley, or pack, soma thirty nifes loug, by six wide'in the central part, about where the Cot- tonwood Creck comes fn from the weat. The Arkansas River runs near the eastern side, and betwecn it ail the maln rango 15 A DEAUTIFUL PARK, @ or prairle, sloplng gently towards the river. Pines and plnnns cover the tnountain-sldes and foot-hills, Along the river s considerable brush amd timber, and, for nmile or two up the Cottonwood, cottonwood-timher is plenty, and from that the atream {s named. The springs are about flve miles up the atream, just instde the canon, ur where the stream ‘comes down between the mountains, Mt. Princeton rises to the hight of 14,100 feet, Justupthe Cottonwood Canon are two or three heautiful fakes, tull of flsh, Dcer are plenty tn apring und fall. Mountau-sheep and antelopes ure found on the hills all the vear around. There are some mink, marten, beaver, and bear on the mauntains, and In the’ mount~ =COLORADO. PR |mmense Mineral Wealth of the Centennial State. e i Misstatemonts as otion of Somo 4 o 1o Silver CHf and Rosita, arhonate-Mines ot Leadville the ’n(;.s:-xl:nylng Mines of the West. — Qontinaance of the Rush to That Neighbor- hood—Great Profits of the Ranch- Business. —_— ey froms a Former Reat- Col., Feb. 1.—Va hava been hav- The poract from @ LeaDFILLE s days | aln-streams and lakes, 'Fho land there Is light pegbenoifl weathes o7 ek oo i oure, lokiniz moro ke stone aconnd o and seet =4 than anythiog else, s probably all madg 3:;:;‘% the day men work out fn theirshirt- { gy, trom the washings from the mountai=s of the deeayed nnd decomponed ruck, leaves, ete.; Vi « not hard as cold weather hero e e tliereforé it 18 rich and will bear’ the best of had in Chleago; and tho alr s 20 43 yon bave o crons. Wheat, oats, rye, barler, huckwheat, much dryer thats e"t"“:cl;','d"['f':";f r,':l:':‘: "::":g nl.llmnn. and nl.l. Kin fd“'{ vez‘et‘flo; l:f\:c":::: R 11 S L raise cor: esss ammbelnw zel 1 lko tho State ln‘lxl"y‘m nights ave too cold to ¢ zera in Chicago. :(‘::::‘n:lonnrl stay, and believo I shall ke It my future home. The mincs are inex- :Ialnlublv.sml the number yet hidden in tho of farming here Ia the prices which everything Lrings, utid the mining-campa near aro thie best markets {n the world, Of course, to be quite successful in any vart of the The bcnuvgl ountalns, walting for discovers nnd develop- | giaie, ane must Jook out for & gooid water-sup- . fonumerable. The bosiness of miniog | ply 10 irrigate with: und, alter o fow yenrs, n = Jtiog Is yet In its Infancy, and is earried | man can get a herd of stock started, which Is an snd ame! Gietrlcts under great Wisndvantages, | independent fortunc In ttsell. One raan came oo fn many a1 ¢ atew vears, here some flve years age, with $200 and an yetpayt Iargely, In the courso ol years, | chy cow; and now has a fine farm, n good herd 43 the country becomer scttled up, rallronds are |yt grock, and several thousand dullars in bunk. Aunother came here with nothing some twelve years oo, und is now worth £100,000 in bank, csides his herd nind vegetable-farm. Stock live out the year round, and cheao and sufiiclent transportation fs Bl f80 the ield and proft. from the mincs f this Stato will be simply enormous. The : 1 ores will be reduced to more of a treatment ! 5 EVEN THOUGH TIIE 8XOW 18 QUITE DEEP. sclence; and many "‘"";” whk::] n;:r;:;:“:‘)“:fl::: When 1 was there the suow was six iuchies deep, upon a4 worthless wiil bo worth and eattle which had lived out with no fecding owners. allwinter luoked rleek and fat. The grass grows tall liere in Colorado, and cures statding, nud ties much more heart thau [limols hay. The cabin on one of the ranches 1 stupned at while down there was 18 by 80 feet, ol rough logs, with half-windows, one_rough-board duor, no floor, nnd 0 dirt roof, You may not consider that fit to lve in, but it passes for a pretty fajr house {n this country, though 1 prant therols raom for considerable improvement, 1fecl I amn encroaching on vour valuable time; s0 inust draw this long, rambling letter to n close, In dolug 8o I will give n few clovations near here, which may be (nl Leadvillo Is some 10,500 feet C: 5,056 foets Pile's Peak, 14,147 fect Mt. Prince- ton, 14,190 feet: Massive Mountain, fust west of Leadville, 14,303 feot s Twin Lakes, 0,365 feet; Cottonwond Divide, 13,605 fect; mouthi of Cote tonwouod, 8,317 fe E. ELECTRIC LIGHTIN Home Interesting Expinnations, Pondon Saturday Reciew, Jan, 25, The theory of the electrle Nght is capable of belng expressed 1 a few words. Thaoks to the mutual interchangeabllity of all forms of forve, wo arc ablo to transfer forco from one place to another in ons shape, and at the end of its journey to uso It in snother shiape, Just ns wo can send money by post {u the form of notes and get it changed nto ‘zold at its destination. But, whatever be the form in which we seck to elfect the transference, some portion is lost or dissipated on the road: and, morcover, the trausformation nt the end s not usually effected without further cost, If we transinit the force tn thoshape of heat, there Is the loss by conduction or radiation: if by motion, thero is the loss by friction. Agnin, If, at the end of {ts path, we wish to usc our force fn the shapy of heat, it Is obrlously disadvaningeous to truns- fer it In the form of wmotion, as there {s no casy methed of trantforming motfon into h espectally it a high temperature Is deatred. To solvo all these difliculties, we turn to tho electrle current, which {s beyond all com- parison the form of forco whichofers the great- XOT NALF THE REAL WEALTI of this reglon is understoud by Eastern people, though tlie reports are often {ncorrect and col- ored. eltlier through ignorance or intention to decelre. For instance: an article T read inna Chicago paper concerning 8ilver CHT and Ro- sita. There are somo good mines there, but, from what I have heard from soveral practieal miners who have been thero, that correspondent tly exsggerated the facts, nnd shown that he was # tender-foot, with mouth wide open, ready 1o ewallow any yarn that was told bim. He snows bis Ignorance and carclesancas fn calling tlaces and things by wronz names, He speaks of mines there producing ore that runs $18,000 per ton, rieht from the surface. That statement, il not & lls, I8 akin to onc,—for, If it isa silver 1ine, that would ho more than half clear silver, which I have never known to bo the case,—and makes old miners laugh. There nre only 82,000 cunces in & ton, und sfiver is worth abont $1.10 to 8115 per ounce. It ¢ i » gold mine, the ore will not run say such amount, unless 1t bo In what is called apocket, und thezo pockets are not apt to hold many tons, Then thesa inlaes pinch down, aml there will be & lean streak that will not In many cases pay worklog expenses,—running the mines badly o debt before another pocket. is struck, and often rupnog out entirely. Further, it lsa * wellknown fact amoug mincrs, that nearly all (thero being scarcely an cxception) mines pro- dudog very high-grade oro are puckots, and very uncertaln in the amount snd quality of their ores. . THE DEST-PATING MINES e those produclng & medium, or even what vould be called low-grade, ore In larze quentitfes, llke the carbonate-mines of Lead- silla and the galena-mincs of tho S8an-Juan and Elk-Mountaip regions. ‘The two latter arc not yet much developed, for want of proper facllitics for cheap transpor- tatlon and smelting, but will bu amoug tho beat- paxing mines in the State when those facllitics . B, Cy ae obtelned. For the next two or ¢ EXC Y at facliitics for transmlission (it we except such three years, at least, tho carbomate: | foinifosombustible or oxploslve substauces), ploes ‘of Leadville and - vicinity will | yupg us heat is proliably the worst in this respect. b the bestpaging mines of = the Weat. *tln true that thero is & efinito losa during the Theore hers 13 so easlly taken out (they take out with pick ui shovel, from some mines hore, from ffty 10100 tons per twenty-four hours), acd o easlly amelted, that ores running 100 to Mounces of sllver Lo the ton pav bim—much better than the hizh-wrrade (5,000 to 820,000 per ton) ore of the: flesure-v@inw, whoro the ore is only abtainabie by the alow nad expensive mode i blasting, wud, when obtained, is gon- cally more diflicule and cxpensive to treat. ‘There are four smeiters hivre, nind two sampling- works, ruuning night und days but they cannot take care of onc-tentti (ho'ore offered them, Theroare thousands of tous plled up sround the smelters, waitiug for treatment; and teamns auling [t off toother polnts by the quan. tlty, besides; yet new mincs aro belng opened every tew days. There §s business cnough now, fnsmelting of ore produced {n this camp, for fiteen or twenty smelters, This must for some years be A TOWN OF CONSIDERABLE TRADE, thoueh iu will recelve a check when tho bight of excitement {s past, and will then settle down ito steady wining nnd smelting town, Peo- ple are flocking {u hicre us fast os atagescan bring them, and 1 have no doubt thero will be o popu- Intion of 20,000 hers by mext August. The Denver & South-Uark ataite, the other night, brought n filteen passengers; uml the Canon- Clty stage, forty-three, ‘Anc fast run covered wegons fitted “up for stages to accommodate those they cannot pack {uto the rozular coach, and often bave two or three of these extras, 1 {blok there must bo from fifty to soventv-five :IEI arrivals each day, on e average, Building s golne ou atagreat rate. Thero must be 10 bulldlogs in the courss of construc- transmission, lowever larxe in section be the conductor throuwh which the electrie current passea, it offers gome realstance to the electric current; uuid the amount of force which is taken from {he curront and chonged fnto heat il tlus alsalpated Is exactly proportional to this reslstance; and hereln realdes the whole history and mystery of the electric llzhit, Not only ducs this property cnable us to dismiss without prac- tieal limit the loss during transmisalon by the simple means of providing substautinl copper wires to couvey the current, but it enables us to turn exactly a8 much or a8 littie of the for contatned in the current into heat at the tre polut_or points we dosire. 1t the matertals would stand the hent it would bo a simply question In proportion to decide on. the dimen- sions of a platinun wire which, when placed in a given vircult, would be rlsed to any given temperature up to the fntenaest solar heats it would merely be necessary to insure thatit should be of dimensions small enough, wud have sufllclent reslatance to foreo the electric current to wivo up the heat requisite to effect the do- sircd fncrease of temperature, By no other meanaund in no other form cau “we conve! foreo to a amall body, and, by changing I sud- denly Into heat, rulso the small body alona to an ftense mid constant heat without lta bnlnfi In the neighborhood of nther small hodles, Al cleetrie lighting conalsts in the application of this principle Lo practice, nud the dilferent sys- tems differ only fu tho meaus by which the requisite resistance fs produced. O theso threy types of lamp at prescut in use, one (to which ll‘l supposed thut the alleged Inventions of Fdison belune) produces the required loealized resistance by menus of flng Wire of sume tion, Bill,' a falr tog-cabln will ront | refractory metal, which i3 u very bad conductor, for $10 8 month, and scare at that. | such ss platinuni or fridiun, or's mixture of the Lots are selling aL $100 per foot on the maln | two. Another produces thut seslatancs by fore- strect, and bulldings that_would rent on West Lake street, Chicawo, for $35 to $40 per month mnl bere for $200 per month. AN Kiuds of w Iness scem 1o be py ‘{Ing. Things are grow- ‘('m;nalhuly every . 1 beard, the other Y, that a company of 500 men from Michizan o srrived at Denver, on their way here. Men I rushiog off even now to the different out- mergmibs around Leadville. At Ten Milo b‘an sleeping out In the snow for want of b ter accommandations, und those who cal b cw ln;v 10 lie on the floor of a cabin are lucfi)‘. PDIIYO““ two dally papers Licre now, nud the umnanm, x:n:‘:nco\'eld t;oAlm'cr Ilufm"d for l‘hu e last August, redict for Leadwinte, the coming season, Y THR LIVELIEST TIMES sscd In o miolng-camp. This Post- on, a big busincss, ‘The Money-Order i ‘mhflou A business of about $4,000 per week; Hef e mall comng In aro usually two bage of t of papers, etce., welghing, on an "Ifl'lfll.l\mul 500 pounds. One of the clerks s dmg. 8 few auys ago, that he had not all of n m:)»belum mall assorted vet. The mail gets the Ut7to8 p. . He worked on it till 8 fu "In"nhl:. but cwuld not get througl ® inay be inora frregulurity Iu the m: Iug the current to pass along o flno plece of charconl, either (a8 in the Buwyer und Mann Tamp) in' the form of a thin needlo placed in an atmusvhere of nitrogen to prevent combustion, or (as in the Reznfer and Werdermuann luinps) by passing 1t through o fincly-pototed pencil of carbon, which touchies n larger prece, aml in which the effect of cambustion s neutrallzed by the gradual ndvanco of the thinner carbon, ‘The third type, to which all the more {muortant forins belong, produces the reauired resistance by compelifge the electriclty to pass from ong carbon polot to auother over a very abort inter- val of space, which is brldged, uo doubt, by ln- camndescent partieles of carbon torn frum' the carbon polnts by the clectric current, und car- ried with v {u Its course. The reslatance ul- forded by such an faterval, sid consequuntly the dezrce of heat zenerated within it, Is enor- mous, and thus the particles of carbon are raised toa heat which makes them tive out Heht of the intcusest whitences, Unfortunage- Iy the resistauce, though ulways cuurimous, is subjoct to great Huctuations, due to ininute purlties or incqualitics in the carbon, und this may increase thie resiatance 0 much as ta ston the current altogether, nud thus extinzulsh the lizute: or, on the other hand, may dimluish the erer witne, Office do now op, ol I co'so greatly a4 to causo the light to beaviest snowa fa Iml::::’lnh’i-’gr::?"il “;l" sink: und thus it is of the grealest importance Aotil, and even May, ¥y Alarcly | {5 removo or minimize these fluctuations, und eachof thu different systems Lt fall under Terent device for offecting it. id above, the wholo mutter a uuflf.,-lemly great und As 1o 1ty being unbealthiy he, re at Leadvill L'f,(“f the eane number of ‘people, with the e :‘rj){x‘ntulcxmuuru and crowding, drink- ey pde 1 und of the same kind of whiaky wa this head has o dil i we have conaists in producin V] ) coustant resistance o a sufliciently small space; R, wi s L ey rat eaa. of: Coloe \nd It is not surprising that Praf. Tyndall did not e sickueng'at o O tuould cacape with | oo 0% Jinger lovinly on the tritling pecullari- ngyy " oA 8 fow death lu thie sume | ("o tis modus operandl choscn by thie tugratulate ummn-f- Letinille, ml'}“’ several fnventurs fur the purposo of attainfng Uemely forpunate * Taousl (DEIUE, X~ | {iila desired result, however great the practical Sl the alley Jy much monioueh | the | climate | §aoariice of thelt succes ST conaider o s, more healthful than bere, ( MGG o o question of the gene- 1t in Cnleago, provide 'f”"'l oF better Bere | Loy ey of e sicetrle current which supplles the Bade tog sudriculy. " Pe tho chanio 16 00t | G oricfizhe, wo tlod a very different stuto of o7, esnactally yegetomin oniny cuBe8 r | (hinge, Notbloe can excecd the scleatitic in 8ve 0 ix centa n poaRarel BF¢ UD 0 | {oreat of the wradusl developmont of dynamy- s 380 T h"w““’,l"'if" oing- | ol tric machlues, from the little roughly-roude foean's pay Wit it g iUt | trument which was oxbibited on Frilsy Kets, and capecially Leadyiii Pg) oeur (08 war- {71, from which Faradaygos his irst msiucto- BUt that Urlugs mo b auoener st 1 wieh to | SIECHIS. spark, 10 the guvrmoualy powerful B Uupou, winl thut fs auler puluki:w Q@ § juachines of Gramme oud Biemeus which pro- duce torrents of clectriclty capable of sustalne fng alight of many thousand candles. The his- tory cxemplifies fn the wmost pert wanuer bow gradually the human iutellcct learns Lo erusp the full meanlog of the truths at which it THE BANCH-BUSINESS, — ¢ ‘_‘:l';esxmsluz Gittle or farming. It is & slower La fortune than mintug, but quite el 1y "h“hm wore 5o if pruper judgment Iy 1, ng wite for s rauch, has urrived, und how slowly it feels its way to c.,“n‘;:mau) returued (romw a trip dowas the | the full appreciatiou of the new powers that it Y the way, on oot the Hot Springs,—which, | bas acauned, Without any theoretical addition Calth-reag ara desilned to becowo s great | to the discoverles of Faruday, every steo 13 withoue ro, bl Water 1a tou wurm to bathe | In uwdvauce tuken by Wilde, Holnies, O sanitarn 8, They ure bmitding a botel, | Siemeus, or Grawme * was & new - reve- Dave “the prove UeEe 80 by 80 feet, und | lution of the meanivg of thesy dis- g, wise of 'a Post-Office o tho coveries; und, though lozically they were strict- ly deductive o tlheir character, und vecesearily ruuk lar below the great inductions upow whicl they were founded, theyoru worthy of, and have slways rcceived, he highest” scientific The Post-Of il 'ust-Ottlce now - I:f: o e mouth ot ‘lhuh c'u‘u:f:'wh::d rh-\-\;d“n:,uh“m hearest store. [ was wuct t must g v ool COUDLrY about there, uud thluk Dluey hyyy r:'r beautitul Ju’ sumuer. Somo | bonor. Vhic lecturer both felt und showed this, i farining wsmly beco discuvered even in | He carefully followed out in his best maoner Yilie, 1he A,:" 8razlug valley. Leaviug Lead: | thls development fn all its detall, illustratiug Boyg of the A2y River ruus ncarly suuth. | the progress mude during each cpoch by refers Way tie valioy will be Quite wide; | encoto own expericoces 48 advlser to the Trinily House, In which capacliy he had better opportunities of atudying the carlier sttemnts to render the electric Tight practically useful on large scale than eny other person, amd fn con- nection with whicti the firat application of dynamo-electric machines to clectrie lighting took but charm subject. I suppress a kind of awe at the Invistble agency that will make s powerful steam-engine groan and labor aver turning a bobbin of wire that a chlld would seem to bo uhie to apin round, and that a child could actually apin round if a small fnclefon were first made fn . gine whirl ronnd the armaturcof a dynamo- clectric _machine with the greatest ense when the machine |s not in _electrical connection, then suddenly brought up nnd made to and atrain as'thoueh an immense load ad heen flung on to It by unseen hunds, nwnd knowing that this chanpge has been wrought by the nere grent'e contact of a slip of copper with the axle, one s reminded of the fairy-tales where the Brownles, to punish some wagoner who has offended tlem, mako his harscs strain in valn to pull the wagons {hat shoutd be but trifling loads to them. or suddenly root him fast to the Rround, withoat his belng able to feel his bonds, Succesaful Ezperiments with unfavorable weather which prevailed all dayn large and fufiucntial party of gentleman met at the factory of the Willimantic 8pool Company to witness the experiment of lighting by clec: tricity. (lov. Andrews, of Connccticut; Mayor Bumner, of Ifartford; Congressman Miles, of Connectieut; Mr. Finkbam, of {lie Boston Com- mercial Jiulleting Messra. Cheney, silk sworks, South Manchester, Conn.; €en. Hawley, ox- Giov. ITubbard, Prof. Blake, and other celebrities from different States. Sixlights of the Brush electric machine wera placed in poaltion in the haseincent of the main bullaing, and were run by belts from the shaftinz for the spools. The light nroduced was of a beautiful white sunlike color. It burned without flickering. lnalarze roum 20ux 00 feot fourlights weraplaced. These raveabout Keven thnes as much leht s is wlven, by seven- tv-two gas Jets, while the quality of tlie lgnt was far of 1h hundles of silk thread of vacions colora, und examined them {n both Hiehis, marveluus, discern the difterence between blug nud green, trie gl dnytime, described the apparatus to the vimtors. ‘rhe dit- ferenee between it and the Jabloekhoft eandle conslats fn a dynamo-clectric generator of clee- ericity, automatic carpou regulators, or elecirle lamps for hedding and feedlng carbon rods, v;rhlch, by consumption in voltale arc, pro- duee Justment. carbons may ba placed in the lamp debt than Wisconsin was." are not Identk Btates. the lecturer, feit 1t this cantot only hare attends orant. lnce. And ot ls audlcnce, muse of ystery that The ™ most On recing an en- el Tnbor the Brush Electric LIght at Witlimantic. Iy Telegraph ta New York Ilerald. Wintiantic, Conn,, Feb. h—Despite the superlor. In orderto test the quality light several gentlemen brought some The result was In the gas-light it was hard (o When Eluced in a room flluminated by the elve- t the colors were as npparent as fn the Mr. Brown, in charge of the machine, light. The lamps are adapted to burn thircen fuches of carbon without ad- The carbons last seven hours, New b{ a slinple pruceas, occupying i few seconds, without inter- rupting the lght to any extent. ‘The light pro- duces little heat, apd - gives off but a trace of non-respirable gas, “'The cost of the four lights in the bl room of the factory would not be mory thau fifteen cents per lour, for carbon power casts nothing, A curious experiment swas tried with a short bar of fron hekl horfzontally three feot from the revolving bobblus und n chaln of nalls farmed tfo the cround. The as- aistant Hohted the gas several times with his finger. Representatives of the gas companies wero present, auxfously watching the light, ‘They wero rather disappointed at the success of the “experimont. The Willlmantic Company will prubably lizht the wholo factory with the clectrie light. Brush claims to be able to man- ufacture carbon with one-fiftieth of 1 per cout fmpuritles, ‘Lhe Hera'd reporter Interviewed saveral gentlemen on the result of the experl- ment. Al spoke In bigh pralse of the lignt and hopea to sce gas superseded sonu by some other mode of fllumination. s ———— COTTON, TOBACCO, AND TAXES, Some Facts and Figures Showlng tho In- vorrectness of n Southorn Assertion, Indianaolis Jonrnal, In his speech in the National House of Repre- scntatives on Saturday, Representative Chal- mers took occaslun to remind Gen, Brage that “Ihe war debt was not yet pajd, nnd the cotton and tobaceo 8tates wers paying for more of the This asscetion 18 loosely made. Tho cotton and tubogeo States . ‘Tho votton States do not produce much tobaceo, aml the principal to- baceo States do not produce any cotton at all. The cotton States are paying very littie of the puplle debt. Al of them together do not pay 48 tnuch os the State of Wisconsin, In 1878 the latter State pald £2,431,301 of internal rovenue, whith was considerably more than all tho cotton States put tozetber. Mr. Chalmers' own State, Misslssippl, pald 1873 only £89,824, Alabama pald onty 3137,- 000, Bouth Caroliun ouly 8110241, ete. These sunis are coutemptibly sinall in comparieon with those pala by wany districts fu the North, and -lmukl mako Southern members careful "how they talk about the revenuge pald by the cotton Hut to return to Mr, Chatmers’ state- ment {n reward to cotton and tobacco; what are the facts! Simply these: Cotion fs not taxed at all fu_any shapo or manner, winl only manu- factured tobacco i taxed, ‘Thero s no tax on the produetion of tobaceo, but only an the arti- cle 1n its manufoctured forms of chewing-tobac- cq, clizars, cizarcttes, anuil, ete. This tax comes at lust vut_of the consumers, and, ad the great majority of these are in the Northern States, (v follows thut _these pay the bulk of the tobace According to the Inst report of the Com- misstoner of Internal Revenue, thereare in the United States 1,040 manufactories of cliewlug- tobaceo, distributed in the Btates as follows: CRN ATATES. | AOUTHERN WTATES, NOUTIERN AT A 12 Dolaware + Uoorgls, 341K entitc aryland 1:Missonrt 13 Nortt Carolin: lll‘ SonthCarolina. [ I f‘.lr: Virginia .. (AR 1T T The total number of clygar-factorics in the Untred States, m-cunlluu! Lo the mauio authorlty, I8 15,359, distributed as Tollows |, SOUTIERN STATEN. “Alabamna e 20 ‘Arkansan .. 407 Ueortia 208 Kentucky . 10 77 Luuboana ;.00 0 4 Maryland . 44 Tenncages 41 'Toxas , 70, Viniin ke The foregoiug tables show at s how the tubaeco-mauufacturing busl is dls- tributed, In polnt of numbers there are more munufuctories of chewivg-tobacen in the South- cri than fu the Nurthern States, though soi: of ihe lareest factorles aro in the North. Of clgar-factorics u very great majority are wu the Nurthern States, sud thoss that ure in the Buuthern Stutes employ romparatively fow per- sons. ‘Thewe facts, howuver, are not atrictly vertinent to the maln questlon now i haud, which is thut ralsed by Mr, Chaluers as to where the bulk of the tobacco-tax s pald, Ou this polut we_repeat, that, a8 the tax is ultimately pald by the consuer, 1t follows that the bulk of f4 13 paid In the North, where the bulk of pojpulation fs. —— Qur Noxt Lmporor, A Washlogton correspondent of the Philadel- hia Zomes writeas % Mrs. Coles, duugiter of ator ‘Thuravan, who fs with her busband, a uaval oflicer, tu Jupau, bas fust been entertaln- cd at the vatuce of she Goveruor, Three days afterwora the Governor secepted the luvitstion of Mr, utl Mra. Coles for dinncr,—a thing never beard of before lu Japan. Alrs, Coles' Juvaness servunes sald, in wwe-struck whispers, *We live with a very great ludy.! Aud wow for *the why und werefore,’ a3 they say ou board the Pina- fore. Minister Yoshida went hume from Wash- tugton und afi thut tho lady’s tutlier was to bo the next Emperor of the United States.” o ———— ware of the importance of cheching a com:::.n‘mmouculsl in iLs irat otage. That whfch fu the begiuning would yiela to s wnld rewecy, i avxlected, soon preys 160 the Lungs. Ds. Bull's Cough Syfup aitorda luetaut suliel, Frico, 46 ceuts. Secret of French Ability to Bear Why the Natlon Can Stand Erery Dur. Natural Richnees of the Boil and Geniality finances under pressure of an unexampled addi- tion to the public debl und to (nzation exclites an astonlshment in this couutry which is not wholly Juatified. rome writers were under thie Iiipression that the caso with which France bears the burden un- doubtedly put upon her in the hope of crushiog her was Intended by some higher power ana re- huke to her encmies for having tried to compass her destructlon. enough, and the faets npon which it rests are not new. of all European countrics, and she is the home of a people In the highest degreo industrious, ingenfous, und frugal, whoscnumbers are farge, winl yet not too large. tron of Englund, but she has in her wines and In her virtual monopoly of the finer manufact- ures o source of wealth which has long ri- vuled our metals aud minerals, and which svems destined to uverpass them. ble that us the wealth of the whole world in- creasen, minl as the taste for comfort uni luxury aprenas inore nid moroe widely, the productive superiority of Englund on the whole tends to diminisl, while that of France tends to fa- crease. coal und fron; other cduntrica learn th WEALTH OF FRANCE. Enormous Taxation, den and Drain, and Still Grow Rich. of Olimate—Production of Men's and Women's Luzuries, Patt Matl Gazette, Jan, 33, ‘The very remarkable elastlcity of the French 1t would almost seem ns it Yet the explunation s simple France has probably THE GREATEST NATURAL WEALTIU Bhe has not the coal and For It {s observa- Other countries besides our own bave alue but nnd the methods of putting them o uss Just in proportjon ‘as other countries grow richer they desiee the more all that can be sent to them from France without flnding themselves able to provide any substitute for it. The wines of Germany are produced uader too pale o sky, ‘Those of 1taly suffer cither from too fervent a sun or from too confirned a lubit of carcless mannfacture. el finds little favor exeent in those countries nnd fu our own, have been made In remote reglons to produce winea toleratle to a reflued tasto have been for ‘The vintaze of Spatn and Portu- ‘The other attempts which the most part melancholy failures. France has therefore A VIRTUAL MONOTOLY of one of the sources of cnjoyment most ar- dently desired by the entire Western world; wid what iny bo sald of lier command of the production of fine wines may also be raid of her command of the art of manufacturing the finer textures. 8he makes, in fact, the createst part of thut which men most desire, nid the greatest part of that which women most desire. No nfimr country enjoys o greater advantage than this. In regard to all the other agricultural staples, France has & more favorable posivdon than ony of her neighbors.. Bha has n better climate thab Engluud, Germany, Italy, or Spain, Large por- tlons of the territorles of her Continental nelgh- bors are absorbed by iufertils saudy wastes, or vroken up by. seantily cultivated mountain ranges. But almost the whole of the wsofl of France s cultivable; and probably everythiug grown in every part of it 18 grown in the climate most congenfal to ft. In this last respect France differs markedly from (ireat Britain, of which a great part Is under crops of the uf which to suita lllte‘ the Brltish clmate there {s hexiunine tabe the strongzest doubt. Mr, Calnd in iis recent publi- catlon anticivates & great reduetlvn In corn cul- tration, and considers that inuch of English farmiog will assume the character of market- gardening, depending 1or its profitablencss an the advantnze of proxhmity to swreat hives of men aml busy centres of fudustrial production., Frauce, again, with this wonderful natural rich- nees of sofl and genfality of climate, has a nopu- lation which AR NO RIVAL IX THE WONLD for Iaborlousncss und frumlity, The cnormons mn‘]orllv of Frenchinen work hard, live ccunom- feally, nnd save largelve: The great nmjonty of Englishmen also work bard: but then they all live as well as _thelr means will permtt, mn{llu‘ vast musses of men made up of aerienitural laborers and _manufacturing opuratives harlly save at all. Lastly, while the French popula- tlon {8 nuimerous, it fs uot too nunicrous for the eapacities of the soll. There are countrivs, or rather continenta,—tlke China und Iudla,—of which the eoll, s0 far us we Khow auything about It, 1s exubaruntly fertiles but the population vonsists of such multituaes that uearly all which {s produced i4 at onee von- sumed; 0 that there Is littlo saving, o zeneral nupmximmun to poverty, and very scunty curity arainst recurrent desoluting ""“'fi? But, at whatever cost to morality, the poputhe tion of France is kept down; and, thouen hard- 1% ditulnished at all by emlgration, it never rikes to a level higher than that absolutelv cssential tor the eftective cultivation of the sotl, awd the effective conduct of manufacture. ‘I'he evidencee for tiese propositions fs'of old date, though the proper inference from it has not always lwen drawn, 'The wars of louis IV, undoubtedly reduced portions of the euch neople to pitlable misery, but yet France durlng the ereatest part of that relgn held her own victorfously agulnst nearly all Europes aud - England, dn order “to discharee hor ohligations as oune of the altles coslesced “agalnst the French King, had to begin thut system of mortgaging ber perma- nent resources which has since gone so far. A century later, the aceret of most of the miscal- culutions of the younger Pitt nnd Wis slngular convictlon that “his ulu-lu{ would collapse {n completo bankruptes, wos his fgnorance of the wealth of France, at that thue (recont as it hardly knows at all to Enghshmen. Yet, much as Napoleon L platdered the countrics which lie subjurated, the backbone of his militury atrengtn was the WEALTIL OF JUS PRENCIE DOMINIONS, He spiited the blood of bls subjects in tor- rents, but ho dld not exhoust their resources; umil his taxation, though heavy, was no doubt the less severely felt because the Revolution, with all Its crimes, had now introduced a better divislon of prooerty and a Juster system of faws than hait been known to the Monarchy. ‘Ihe fall of Napoleon ushered in threo relgis characterized by remarkable tlscal economy ; wd from the restoratlon of Louls XVIIL to the de- thronement of Lutuls Philinpe, the public and private wealthof Frunce wis steadity husbanded, while the public exunendituro was “exceedingly small for the urces of the nation, But un- der Napoleou 111, thers was plenty of proot that a lurge part of the natlonal fucome mieht be diverted to the publie exchequer without ditinlshing private ttcoms o humpering avrl- etiltural or industrial progress. Napoleon 111, was discreditably Javish in which lio permitied to bimself und ta lis Court, aut much ot the outlay which e caused 10 be made on such works as the demolltlon and ro- construction of l'arls wns a wanton waats of publie money; vet ho limpased Jittle or no adil- Honsl taxatloni wnd the syetem upon which be deliberutely proceaded wos one of coutinually borrowing to inake two ends meet, und of trusf- g to the natural expans.on uf the resources of Franco to provido a fumil sullicient to mect the vew {uterest on repeated loans. IT WAS WONDERPUL to what en extent this slun succeeded, The ex- travazauce of the Court, a prodigious system of publle works begun or carvled throush, amd two or Lhree wars would have scriously crinpled any other country; but Frauce only sectaed to pros per nore und more, No doubt that power of free trade which 1s atlll the only logacy of the Emplre never Hicely to ba repudlated had wuch to du with the great accumulation of French wealth between 1851 and 15705 but probably the best cxplanatiou les fo the faet that the Empire did not place muie burdens ou the people than were casily met out of the patural aceretion of capital in 8o extraordinurily productive a coun- try, ll'lm power of France Lo bear additional taza- tlon was thus virtually uutouched when the great disasters of 1570 aud 1871 oecurred, and when the uobeard-of fudemnity was exacted o community which for the oweut be- d ftaell w be tnavcially ruived. There was universal agreement thut the heaviest sacrifices were required; and taxes were imposed on which wo Government would have ventured ju times of prosperty und peace, The result been most strikivg, though it ought wos have been uuexpected. Not only have real sur- pluses of revevue over cxpeuliture become usual occurrences, but REMISSIONS OF TAZATION are, at ull cveuts, discussed; und the vast schema of public works projected and cow- uesced by M. de Freycinct scems to be contetn- plated without wmisgiving, though it Is cssco. tially of Lhie sainu type s many an undertakivg of Nauoleou [11. No expectation can be mors unfounded thau thut demucrncies will tako readlly to pablic ecunvmi. ‘fhe savings which find favor lu the French Asscmbly (such sa ro- ductious in the stiocuds of army chaolslus) are dictated by polltical rather than financial ob- fecta: but not a volce is raiscd for the dimlau- tion of that multitudinous civil and service walch filla so prodigious & place In French budgcts, seen, fo deeply disturbs Frénch politics by the keen computiilon for its prizes. for France, her enormous wealth atill Iwrmlu n comparative indifforence to nnblle thrift. of bits of gossip about Beecher, night talk, or orayer-meeting, last week,—the preacher of Plymouth s always at"his best at tliee less formol meetings,—up rosc an elderly Eeotchman to offer his experience. bear with me for five tminutesi ' he said. will—I have borne with you for fiftecn years,' replied the pastor with mock resigoation. ** And 80 have wo with you,” retorted the hearer amid a general laugh. ~ Mr. Beecher read s lctter from n despondent woman, who was tortured with the bettef that she had committed the Unpar. donable 8in,—thagthere was to longer any hope for her in this world or the next. Billouancss~—nothing else,” maid the preacher, laving down the letter, und he went on tn tell low another woman hiad time, a woman who was driving heesell cruzy with praying, taking part fn an excited revival mecting, and severat ather pfous charges, Bhie, tio, was appreliensive that she had comimitted sotie unpardonable offense and would come a castaway, and her pastor's recipe for & curc was ;nmm e tiot to pray, open her Bible, vo near a chure week. In three days she was restored to n more cheerful trame of mind, amd begralng to he vermitted to enter with more moderation Infa ber reliirtous privileges, branched olf totell of o revival where his father, aasisted by a number of youny att zealous min- fatere, was conducting ‘the services, awl one younz man, catechizing n female who professed to have found the Lord, asked of her, ** Would you be willing to be damned for the glory of God, 10 1t were v an answer, ik th Uoo, which reached the ehler Becchier's ear. uskiog this woman 1" old man. genftor of the third great division of the human todie In peuce. Invalid’s hous sce any one; he replied that be ruessed he woula see Mr, Becenier. t, De would see hitm anyhow, nd he did, wd take ing possesslon of th all busiuess-micn to fatl, eartie an equal from the same causc? and Tourlsts’ Hotel, BuMalo, N. Y., Dr. Pterce, throuch the skill attained by his several special- ists, each having devoted years to a special de- curabl cal uaiclal and shich, as has just been Fortanately it —— i BEECHER. Twoe Storles About the Grest Plymonth Prencher. Special Correpondence of The Tribune. New Yonk, Feb, 7.—Let me give vou a couple At his Friday “Will you “p *That In cume to him once un & bhe- siinple and hervle,—a solemn hy or utter one word about religion for o Then Mr, Heecher aaryt" She shrank from catectist repeated the gues- “Wha'ts this, eh! ke said: * what are you The voung ninfster re- beated his question, ** Would yon be willing to be damned for the glory of God, sirl” asked the * Yes, tir.”" ” ¢ Then," safd the pro- family (which has been divided into ** men, women, and Beeeliers ") you ought to bel® An ol readent of Brovklvn was Inst week given up as dving of drspepsin. He was noable 1o retain any food, aml in sheer disgust with the doctors dismissed them all and de.ermined Mr. Beccher heard of his ex- il sallied forth to the aid the fnvalld wouldn't tremity nud “The invalld satd he would: il Mr. Heeetier sald that made no difference fnvalid he lectured him roundly for neglectine the resources of the muedieal art, and the first thing the Invalld know Beecher's doctor waa fn the house, giving him lard baths wil Injections of beef tea. But it was too lute, und the man died of—na it was subscquently tound—cancer of the stomach. The story, however, Is worth telling, if for no other reason than he cause [t is Beecher atl over. e — e BUSINESS FAILURES. Laok of judement cauzes fully 50 per cent of or later. Do not propurtion of physicians fail to cure At the Grand Inyalids® partment of. medleal science, i able to cure a targe per ceut of cases hitherto coueldered 1 Many vhyslcians, o view ol the supe- rlor wivantaiees of “this mude] wanitarium, bring therestuthorn, obseure, complicated, und surgi- casea for examinations, operatfon, and treatment, Full partfeulars given fo the * Peo- ple's Common #ense Medical Adviser,” an {llus- teated work of aver (K0 pages. Price, post-paid, 2150, Address the nuthor, R, V. Pleree, M. D, Buffalo, N. Y. ———— Engenie and the Franco-German War, A woman was at_the hottom of it after all, The London Zruthi—which canuot tell a le— sliows how the Empress Encenie directly caused the Franco-tierman war, We knew before thut the Influence of the Eupress was thrown foto the scale thaut held the sword, but that she was potentinl fn the measure now reported will be a8 new to most readers ns to oursclyes, It scems that Marshal Lebaul declared to the Emperor, in presence of the Fanpress, ‘my was not ready, Waercapon the E sgired up, utd with flashing e “A Frenen Marshal onght to be ashamed to uss such craven langpage!’" The “Murshal bowed and without & word feft the room. In the ante-chumber e inatantly wroto lis resigoa- tion, but the Emperor followed and persuaded il not to tender it What followed we know. Truth declares thutthis {s Lebanf's own version of the mautter, and that he complains to this day that he went to war agafnst his will. Pertps v senso of Justice may nduce the ex-Fmpreas to conflem “this storyi but nothimg can reliesa Napoleon I1L of the responsibility for disusters which 1t was his duty to _have foresecn, with or without the testiimony of his War Minister, and which the cxlvlll»fi comdition of the French urtny rendercd sll_but fnevitable. AHECIRIBUNG SIEANCN OFEIC N ORDER TO ACCOM TE OUR NUMEROUR patraus throuiiode tie eity we have eataiisned firaucl Gittcey fn tho different. Divislony, as designatod Tielasz, whero adverttsements will be taken for thio saine arged as tho Muin Ofice, and will be reoetved . m. during the week, aud uaill v p, m, M8, Hooksellers and Btatloners, 113 NEW‘::I!:I!;“. ftationer, etc., 1000 ‘near Weatorn-ay, ide News Denot.*s lealer, and Fanoy MATON, SMOARDING AND LODGING, Tt sertton, ubin, ikres fines OF Iesr, 23 canls ber ine Each addittonat line, 10 ceni, North Sid LEI CLARK-ST.~FIRNT-CLASS per weik, with Uss of plane and ST, — FIRST - CLAYS TOARD, $4t0 85 weeki five minutes’ WAk from Htata aud Madieo 1106012 (‘LAHHVCB TIOURE WELL _FURNISHED " youl s 4, 333, and 437 Btstc-at,, fuar of tho Valimer lause. Boardand tuont, W 83 por week 830810, Al fur: 11, ST WASHINGTON-ST,— 1.5 to 8 per weok, Tweas T .81 per day. ANDS HOUER, CORNKIC Stadison: . —Perinaurut board ent, 2,00 per aay. Iav hoant S e LEASE FOIt 30 YEARS, { g foutl froat, um Adsine 2 ween (1 rhorat (L 181Gt apposits’ uew Lisrom i Uiale fuf an_uica bulid. 20 Lo %0 per year fur st va Yerreatud Lerces atier vy years o per cent uo v tlon. Thern is o party wall, und will not cast much batid. Good chutice fur samne oue. L B, SOYD, Bouti 7, 170 Madison:at ATIRVOYAN 0 IMPOSITION-LOUK THES Py depenlent bisiness aud med alr- vayait s SIS, POLTEIL bora with s astursl glit, she s heoB teated by soine Of the great Bovliity of Eurupe and America ells you st iama uf the one you wiil ustom- il vur ngs leuse vn i w «© £ 0uL uf the clty can 1uslng & lock of lair. €1, aad_etal uear Yhirteentii-at, No genls. ____CANT OFF CLO ¥ 1. CASIL PALD FOI AND GENTL l\.ll'nun'- caat-ull elothing, peis, aud Ledding. or sddress B, HERSUIIE L, 544 piates (L\fill rAth Fon IING AT 1. 4 GELDEIUS, sd¢ Siate-st. Orders by mall prompi- 1y atteaded 1 BIACHINERY. IDED BTICKER. WuOb- 8] saw-tahles, leoonlng mia- chine, O 50 Frlit, with ‘rooia sad power. F. W. KIAUSE, 7¢ Weat Waalingtuo: " = —SECOND-HAND 25X (TORSE POWEL l’lur 13 ::"J onglue, CULLING & Peotone, lll. T LoST AND FOUND, lIHEIl\'—TIIE‘Ih".m\VIA’?":!k'H:I. i o nfi:fl:‘“h’."l& HORNTIEN. RED MOKOCCO MEMORANDUM BOOK, Molug recclpts for 1ife aud fre-lusurance. e, 4 cou 5 aid otlier papers L tis asue of the lata Daulel U/ Liara. Alibe n- ral rewand will b pald fur thew. OF for any un~ about them. Apply st 13 south dan- L.-TRAINED BETTER DOGS, Newfoundlaod wsl o § 10. 19 P. M. COTTAGE GROVE Cor Fiora Smith grant an- car, will laddy il SHaervicws tal? Address G i, Trivuss other llervicw; coud rns = TV REAL EST In this enlumn, three lince or lexe, sertinn. Each addition=i ine, 0 cents, JOR BALE=DY T. 1. BOYD, M 7. 172 MADI- A fine business hior ry *tone tront, 4419, Tot 1n heart of iinw for whoieeats hoat- 3 00: 801t il pay 10 per cent. TF yon want @ aure Income, f02% st th F100 per foot—Lut X125, south front on Madleans oliey-sta. ; (his wiil be roid on cents per ta- herween Hoyna and rm 7o In Lif-room 2-atore anid baesment a1 madern {mprovement s it wi rs axn by one of the wealthlest cltizens, and was buflt for 8 home: eost £21,00 to build the alunes ft e butlt pon honar for & home: any one want- Ing an elegant fotee ta Jive 0 will bty chis. Q% want to aeil a epleiidid 7-ro0m cot. and Int 2% 123. on Iacksun-st., hetween Lincola Winehesers Av.: this fem nice eottage: L will seil It way down for and g0 n {e%l rx. A~ ote, 4X1A0. suuth front on Tarlor-st., hetween Wond and Lincuin ats., close ta ears: butlt nn all around, and are certaluly very cocap st €501 csanot du hetrer, 47K 10 aell at oner 0-poom dwelling, barn, and fot 21 on” Pralrie-av.. near Thirty-second-af. s house has liot and cld water, baih, and gass ¢ will e #01a for Irsy ) 4,531 n A 15 ) don. A splendid m 2-story and hawmient hrick dwelling amt 1ot . eAst tront on tetwren Madison an el tenant at $°401: roum Court- Huuse {0 1 hour. L y & firsterlasa frajue store, 27x80, 04 fpomxcliing aver, and lot 721, on Welti-aL., near viston-a 0 ~tinut frame atore, dwelling over, and Jot 3¢ Huy wouth frunt, on Luke-st.. between Union and al- e o te H-room dwelline, hetween Twenty: S iadown—A aplendid"datory and hase ment brick dwelling, born, and lot Z2x1<1, cast frout on Vernon-av., near Thirty-second-ut. this huuse has every mivtern finprovement. i1 per fuot—10 X160 feet. carner Fifty-third-at. and an-ay, )—A heautifal white-stone front, stane steps, and fat, soutls tront, on Manroe-at., near Lincain. A fine atone-frant dwelting on ‘{Vastiington 1085 wiil b sold ata bargaing 12 fs within 1 b Enlon I'ark. % FOI! SAL Tonglng t one-hai | A an 'k of 1 ITY. 1! aater party. uld at ahout alite, on terme 10 suit: ory brick 2-room house, 773 Fulton- oy brick, with sli anodern fmipro Weat Adatieant, ry brick, 422 touth Jeerson-at, ory marble-front, with il modern Im- enta, 1471 Prairie-av iezunt niarble-front, 1143 Michigan-av, ry {rame, with modern improvements, ory brick, 064 Weat I'nlk-st. T, south frout, Warres-av., aear Pavlina- 1ho wated to purchisse 3 guod frame-houses, tn move near Unfon Park. Tnquire o JORY A BARTLETT. o ot 3 WaabnRIon-t. 250 WEST i Morgan-st., Hutise und av.. Housc and lot. Lot on Hei- iireu-at.. onty $iveis £11) eas; 1a'n harzaint 1€ not sold hy March N2 Cornelis . cuttage, Int, 11-nv.. cottage and fof; want enst of Ellzabeth, rottae Broperty in- n-at.: I tucheste. near FEFONAALE TOCAPITALISTE—] IAVE X usiness-property (n 0003, ax) wortl of improved ety wlilen Wil pay e 7 80 10, pee eeut Interest on fivestoient at present low renl Capitalists wishing (o Invest in Chlcaxn's fimt-clas [Fraperty shuid not walt tua loni, af prices in out wood ated broperiy will gu up In the iext twelve moathis fore than s greac many pereans will iava sn ldea of. Tayutre of § £CON WEIL, 113 Washingtan- THE tr n AND BAREM i 405 F T 10use And fot, st (font, At n ha Al Estate rokers, 12 L Rirty -sev T ient [l BALE AT B RAIGAINCRLEGANT FOUTT: story miarhle front iuse, with all modern tmorove. ment Ao, = 11 Ashland-av. Inquire at northeast Corner of Matison and Dearinirn-s. A GUND BTSINERS well rented, cheap for ner aud 1 will €l on You, or Rend particulars It rai business; 0o sente wanted, Address D7 2 T Eauk=a frontiug on two cds wa | A going (0 C 1 OWNER, 453 oia . FOm saLES fnomstv RO0M | DWELLING, fmproveients, completely s hice h af 2 A1 runt on - Monros. atw., with furnfiure and & hargain: eall and exsmine unat 7 per cont. T, I otice, IT, N 10 treotay hulidinm all ado, 1wl sell clieap. Atply Itootn 2 V- NOW, TERE 18 127 ew Trame dwelling: wi i2us 1t 24,0053 10 tulld, a1 ihe | Feets 1t 18 anout 11a) fert west of Mewari-av., fruniing norih 03 Fiftieth ause needs. some Jitile repsirsg K 1t alx inanithe o this praperty and too 1t 14 clonn b Toek ik faland car! perfect title: no 1n, heee L8 Ffor €540 eash, o i ee it and. comoaud iy It g FALE-T) 100 front dwelling. & TIAT, PATC reash, 1AL SLEGANT WOWN-STONE ot feet. trumts, butle b > A fnlal: heated Dy ateam, an, in'tn wood order, “Also, the duuble hetek hotise, (41 Atichiga near Lichteenth.g lot 16 ferl fronty utise hie th sieaw, ol 10 goud order. A. AVERELL Deator; COUNTRY REAL LNTAT [Pl SALL=A GUOD KoK AND, GRATS T 10, Marfun Townati, Lee Uouaty, Bl =2t acma fenced. good impreyement dingn orchant, easynable terin b REITIL Hox 347, Dixod, unty, 1 [P0}, fAE=so0 ACHE FISE IMPLOVLED EARY in Wavie Connty. [a;, ucar tailrozits tkyacres tin- ber, balanea Ml cultivatedy good tar logre and barn Nrni-class well at Kouses iacee orchnnls 198 g 1 ol water; no beite k of u arin 10 the Mal P20 per cres 2 00 long fime at Oper cont. Adirees 133, e Jrosa I EACHANGE -ONE UF THE BERT imi At 1o o0k Caunty, 1 nlies from rast uf Liesplafies, agl 3 wiles from werew, all umder feave Gnd cutiivation: allilig, tie larg and orcnant; Innd the best (free nod s ater, matfon ar)3 Wil tak LA Ol T E~1 - aple merchiandi Wil rell (o AT 1N anR; Tented at§1 per njonth 9 BEs the farm fxthe best n v county: with three dwi i, 2, fne s, urcliant, ter, fenees, some nive timber, and elegantly sreanced for'atocks will pay ex e back If nok as Tepresente v, FI 0N W W " arv goads, elothing, or a nlce atock of n et now 1 ¢ mtock Kndy ot 3 hardware, ur would (Fade fur cleat elly property, sad DAY Bk in cadi on elther goods UF €Lty progertyi WO lean busineas, sua can arai i tho county, 1lave twa other s clear, for_general stock of woods, T L BOYD, toutn 7, 170 Midfsun-si iouTent urth of T o :I-lilllrv 'd’hMJL'm;‘flIl hlh" nnlll m::“lul':.fl’lfll:n o 3XT40, wwlth @ Drlck bt for s good acre bro ity Tayuire of JACON WEIL, 16 WABhIng- tun-at. AN ELKGANT ing, brick barn, o icsred CILANUK =87 000 -1 fut ston runt i aeia 1at: huuss coat S LTUTeet Jut; lease ) vears and to Laxes: an i “ of Elghteouth i il tnka farin, or fawn progerty,or clty lats] tha Louss 480, 3, T. I8 BT D, lthom 7, 170 Asdlson-at. 710 EXCHANGE-UIL FOILSAL with butliligs, 0000 fee Narse engine, eic., weil the Cha: lN"r ul LCom o —0) FEI T o kt VAT IAVE Yot T0 EX K POItA VRRY handsowie oll-palnting (i {201 with eiegaut gold franie, worth 614y + i, Tritne, DIAMUNDS, WATCHES. SIS privale omce, £20 ltans toaws 1 and 1. Eatabilsned 1854, dolph-st, iiear () 31 CASTE IN HAND 10 fur three 05 Wash- (ed ropres; ST AR PAID FOR 2 }uney 10 1usn on wathes, disaronds, of every Aoacripiion af (011 (113 Lo Olivo(ficenscdrs wua bast Sadisonat. Esiabil 3 [N SUN» TO SUIT AT 6 PRIE on clty, vilage, arm proper- h, e llower Assuciatiog of Feun. Forparilcuidre, auely 0 LIVINGSTON & eta, 110 Lavalle-st 7 0 TOAN 0N IMEROVED CITY TRom Btarrcit Tates ot the bau'or FELSENTIAL & ROZINARE, Lurtheast COTMOr of Waiugton st aod Filihav. N|OErTO roeity: “rincinals ity Reed soply vu b b 1 ’rine . U P s widasie e heed evvly MUSELTULOAN 0N MU AG0 1 ratrs"of Intereat, b flrbisl,mu O UN o prove: on, Braclu luproced <ty Kaeh additional line, 19 cents, More; German prefes i mn Teferences a3 1o honesty. 228 State- ANTED~MALE MELP, lumn, three lines or lees, 23 cents per ine TATIDWA! bring Deuno"f AAAAAA Trodaess N ding miring work eferr ALMEIL, 48 and 39 Wabash-sv. o need apply. Ad — 13 RIIOEMAKERS: THOSR e A PIRYT-CLASS CARRIAGR-AMITITE perare TNDER. PHELYS, dress C, B, Fmployment Agenciess FANTED=2 ORE GO0 LABORERS AND - W X_on the A. T. c_s-m‘nflrn Tock quarrymen to 1 K_0f K. T Calorator L ext. AL ;lh""rlw- on Tuesda; L. fon and G, &1, ‘VASTR"-A HOnh M. 10 gell our knuda by LA MELLE MAN'FU L0, NTED-STRE dlers. s Fiench blackin hiouse tn the Jackson-st. Wway fahilsh Iiadiing nat-ia ory, vhich will MOSES WAL VW ASTED=Y hromos, atatiunery, and notfon d ®: 1 supply It cheaner th Ten B SR GOAT N, 100 Flate-ot, ¥ next. 40 PATitculars call 479 outh Caoule For tr: \ STATF 3 B trade o handic (s cochrsied any other 437 aud 47 AGENTS -A TLARE CHANCE TO RS- permanent businets and maka mone; subscripiion books In clear terrf- wsigned (o reliahlc, energetle men. American Novelty Company, 1 State. . WANTED-FENALE MEL Domesticss VWASTED=A QIRL TO COUK, WASH, AND IRON " ljriyate fumlly. Apuyaz 463 uperior. i corner of A gt tox, wasnh Ao, FIs, SELT. Ay tnauireof B, Av ULRCH: T o, 51 Waat ‘ TAN =A (OO, COMPETRY' 157 _kenersl lousework, Apply WANTED=A G00ir GEIMAN 01t dertand st it GLISITBIRE FOR 2l cooke WILLING Iyde Park. » Washingron-st, GIRtL TO DO South Gree: 1510 RIrl tor Kiichen w A 2 Syl a7 KiEhen Worl i cata reitaurant.” 144 Easi "VA)'THD—NL‘"RH GINL IMMEDIATELY AT [0~ _ 151 Brunswicks ¢oine prepared to re Imployment Agencies. VW ASTED=G00D 11ERSTAN VIn Rirl for private tamllics, boardl (AN AND BCANDINA- ng.ho nd hotels, “Apply st G, DUSKKS” omce, 103 Stiiwau® NMisceltnncons, ‘X'A.\' afacturerst al TED-A GEEMAN GIRL TIL iar wlin e drs koodsbusness, Caly & 0, IItieat references. { aa huyer, exDel Ad- -, L, COT- 'rk, by & reifable intddie- ad ‘many years of tusie ast) hi nesacaperience; beatof cily referencen, Adirees 1 0o, Tribunc uthve. ¢ Irnacs. WANTED- FInsT-Cl, ITUATION ¥ A {ioring estabiishmaent b V) chant ta rrierence Monros Miscelianeous, JITUATION WANTED—AS TEACHEL. EACHE) 1Y yoitng geotleman who haa s practic: ae ho kngliah, Uernan, French, and Latta Able private tamily or & acliool Riven 1f deired Addrens GEOUUE. NAX afirsticlas EOWARD FLY & GO Wabaaneave an i AXING, Han- ARS METt. . DY A knowledza Ianguages, referen uver Centre, Lake county, Ind,, esreof licv, Wni, Herg, ATION “WANTED-AG ny frow exporiers QIT A S an atal Germany. Trinune ofc JTUATE Sl e somn BENDESR 310 1w, WORK tolight isbor. oase call or Ittinofs-st. Housckeeperse QITIVATH)V WANTED-DBY A WIDOW »Y hotieek 1 en. Call, or addreas, NCIES” FOR “GER- and manufacturers by s Uer. erchant of Jatge cxperience golng to Lurope in ah & comminsion basiness in the western part nt Bust of references given. Address C #, ' FUOMAX address € LADY A% n a widowet's fam{lyino objecilun to ©E2 Madison at. e e LT L —— iscellancous. ¥ GOODRIDAF. & STORES, Weat Madisos 3 a) 4 Traders” Han ‘West S "0 RENT—FURNIMIED RO famfiy at 127 routh Nsngamou: 10 BENT-STORES, Hioress 8 IN 0 REN I second floor, Tenting property and e day aa colicctions ars k. _TO_RENT-_ROOMS, RENTING * Sor bert fraime, 10 pan* e o1+ h Thom PRIVATE T—RTONE 10 LAKE-ST., 170334 FEET, 3¢ iid haseinent, sivam “rieyator, steam D Auply st Ttoom 4 Lieaper lijock, cat, Miscollanecous, - 1’0_RENT-8$15 PEIR MONTH, nortliwest corper Van lia fiatures tor 8 ssloon b it A LATH BASEMENT 0N ren’ aod hiermian-ats. § TAN HAVE 0¥ DE- ‘miand ttages, and dwellfo¢atn oli par(s of the chiy. He lected, esiaien mansged, wnd Inane negotiated. WM. il THOMES Wost Mattan-at. W ANTED TE: aviug from 10 fn A7k sud north ot Gl RIDUE & DEWEY rborn-st, prospen [ HYUBE rootis, and situsted cast of firsieclass tenant. BEV. senlur metnber hilities, and the biel: Teniune: and azrecable, 1s o o8l basly, Address, tor narilculnm, SE “U, Hox 2l New Yok, BANK HUILDING ng compieto for dolng & 1 uver 5, (0 A + whi scll bulain, tn one Ith can depeinll o, for .iman fowa lind 170 Madiwon: Q00 BAL f HARUWEre, BLOVCs, OLo.. W lustiivss, A e uOpartunivy for or £1,00) caal R . U Diest, tuwis anil of ase of aale. T, U BOY y o tnvestiient, Co. KOs R, 00 F20,000 O read, anil Rood-will covntles in . lwom 7, ne it 0 [articulare MANRLY v T [eon, sALE=TH FIXTURES, HORS and wagons of vyster aud fan’ houscs will tov ®uud opentix fur an entory Aol eaerello niaa. Addr feok RaLE-rioToGIA Aneat [n'tie ol ness of €2,50 Lo 3,00 & wid chieap, 0. Ws COOPELL Tocstiun M s Lasall JOIL SALL DX =BTOCK OF UENEKAL ME chandise, ciiuice stork, good Jucation, Kood fumers. Audres FRED 3 TBAY, “oun! DVERTISERS D) U T readers can du o n the hest and by ustug Keliozg's L.sts, ur sumie division. LUUU, 70 Jackeon-at., Chicago. GOODBRICH, ATTORNEY A Baraates Ohicago. Advice fre ce. J ‘wooled casluneres and tal Fallor aud Cutter John, 433 Weat Madis il Bl ground oar. duluic a busts c buusrt, Guthr FOR STUCK e’ trimmiogs, The o ribiig utiice. AALLERY, THE ino; wiil ha + ltoom 1 AT-LAW. 131 DEAR; Fuurteen yesrs' oF G5 ARUMATIO TAN DROVE K T AT D o 810p Cough fustantly. 14, M, . KIVES, THAVELI b, T, Taylor's nid Uruadway, N elty for the yurjude of teachiog Bl :‘thll:l riect satistaction gives, LAIMS=ANY JUST CLATNS perfecs ilo , cor. Al V35, Chllnl, of prise oner, ‘o pe. £ which have foF any cause bee suapend iy S LAY T oo 14 FOENT PO "AYark‘Tll Ié‘l I: systeim o New wikhlug lurictione picaso cal vyl or. Jackaun and WaDas 1T or serv 11 Lo pruas el O, 204 "Lasalis-at L e e e | T USIOAL, A FEW FTANOS ARD OO ANS FHIST-CLABS MAKES, {idea but Iteetes xood s s whl payiieuta If fequlr ALLET, DAVIE & cui'a suid on monthly . W. RIM. L. Corner blate sud Adsma-sts. PRIGHT PIANOS. “{liese celebrated planos, will others of Leat maked. can be found at ths warerooms of, V. W. KIMBALL. Corner tate and Adnns-sis. BloTHEIL 15 and 131 Lavuiie's. ONTIM B eI T ty fnsums o suit. Apply st UNION THLST + 131 Dearboru ut wearly ~ Lavaliost., oo 24, T FROM sved buslncss Wastilagton, AT LU & GTOKES, AV\J lJ;‘:z) 1ires trag , 00 0n firds e nquire uf JACOD WEIL, LOA 0 FOI THERE !“ market rate. GOODKING West Madisoa st Az A s 10 LOAN GEVEIAL SWALL BUNS UF MONEY A AL o Makuved propertys BE LHIIGE & DEWLEY, 29 earbora- ThOWILL, DUY FIIST. MBS b o ek BEVE D Dearbora-at, et MY T0 LOANTON REAL ESTATE. S50.000 3okl 54 stocks voauut sad s5id. 1. J. CHRISTORM, 137 Ensé Ltundolph-at. L ARS COM Ao € DR V90 STRUCTION, Flvnz&n.u-ur—unms AND GENTLEMEN CAN be tauglit Lelegraphy, wractivally, 0ulng thew for ewployweut. _Abply st Ewst Ulia N EW UFIIGAT PIANGE— NEWLUE FlaNg ¥or sale on tostallment-plaa. :"W OROANS, W. W. KIMDALL, Cornar Btaie and Adaws-ais Ssice. b A uut ual Aubol bownlug Co. " trucks. all Bulslied 13 bhe wost perfect prices o correspond with the dises geBeral sasostuciit of Bral-cisss aud cagrisges gL FUCkaWayh SIprces W s ulas Lave & d-haud bugeies ons, els., eic., that will bu clused vut 8t Largaius. Au pection sollelie S =1 - 70 EXCIA? 1,400 FOUND HOESE FOR vy de. EMPIRE PAR- s Egthmuits | sk ol AR A STOHA A(} E blisaed 18753 ITURE, CALKIAGES. dvaucesiuass, JU¥C ye: COMPANY. 70, 7. AND DErinanEDt u Current ratce, Saley Vault, < < wGuey Inaucd luwcey raicd vk 006 SUTMY WIBQULTvW VAL 190 W, Momeey | TOSELL SOME NKW ARTICLES, | 'ilu)omu tree.

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