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ows, thorefore, that tho present Demo- tio sscendancy in the Bonata i duo wholly the influcnco of oriminal outrages upon ’° fght of sulfroge at the South. And, in tb' lzung tho futuro of tho chief legis- body in tho CGovernment, it is noces- to assume thiat thoso outrages will ontinned, In viow of thiastartling foet, boctt o of o Boliil Bouth, mndo solid by b es against the fundamental principles of mmmpllh"c, becomes 5 hundred-fold more o us and menncing than it was whilo the bliean porty rotalned control of all chos of the Government, Zen, frauds n tho ballot-box meraly operated to the jary of the peoplo of the localities whero Qey wero perpotrated. Now, they react 'ntho wholo country. Tho honest vote 4 the peoplo of the Btato of Tilinofs is nul- 4od by tho frandulont vole of tho peoplo of e Btate of Boath Carolinn. The balance of warin both Houses of tho Congress that will comble on tho 18th fnat, is hold respoctively jy Ropresontatives and Senators choren by sson of frauds upon tho right of sulfrago. Theso trauds must bo stoppod or annrchy is s to result. The majority of the people o thia conntry will not long sudmit to be lsd by tho minority, tative Wa have called nitontion on a previous oo~ asion to the extraordinary amendment made ty Congress to tho Civil Appropriation Dill )y tho Conference Committeo, and run \biongh both Honses the Inst day but one of o sesslon, We refer to tho sohiomo to lenso \ha Rook Taland Arsenal to the Moline Water- Jower Compnny. Thint Compnny sold throo- fourths of the Missiseippi water-powor to the (Government soveral yeara ago for an im- nense sum of monoy, and thay have now pansged, through trickery, to got an amond. pent fostened to an appropriation bill to taleh It back withoul refunding a dollar of {ramoney. Thoy seom to have mado n eat's- pwof Benator Wixnour, of Minnesota, and i have secured an advocale in Senator Duvis, of Tllinols, and n manipulator in Rep- neentativo FIENpeRsoN, of Rock Island, unstor Epyonns, of Vormont, was the first todetect the cat in the monl-tub and exposo # He hung on wilh grent tenacity nnd {mght the monstrous grab inch by inch, and rada nrecord on it that may be uncomforta- Hclo‘:qmn honorable geutlemen hereafter, Awsoy, of Towa, and Dawes, of Massachu- wits, asisted him in fighting the grab of tho Arwenal water-powoer. But Sonator Davis, of Hinols, crowded the scheme through on one petest - and another, and some Senators bdped him with the argument that, if the nter-power grab weroe strick out, tho whole il would have to be sent back to the Con- fmenéo Committee, which might endanger i floal passage, although it wns shown that thero was no renl danger of anyihingof tho xrt happening, ns the offonsive nmendment wid bo olimiuated in a fow min. we, and the bill be reported back immediately for passnge, The yeas and nays were finally called on the uestion of conourring in the report, and it s carried—yens, * 856 ; nays, 24, Among ths yeas wo oro astonished to sco tho names o Seoators Oonzsny, Davis of Illinois, Towe nnd OanceroN of Wisconsin, MoMrrrax 1d Wrxpose of Minnesota, Papnook of No- busks, Proms of Kansas, Frury of Michi. po, and Texcer of Colorado, all Weatern Buaators, In the centre of whoso seotion of it Union the great Rock Tsland Arsonal ia Ixsted, on which tho Government has ex- paded mors than seven, millions” of dollars, Budthe debnto on the question taken from Ut Congressional Record, ond then: try and wacelyo of tho rensont thiit ould ¢Auss': all+ tiso Wostern Bonators to voto in favor of arferring on any Becrotary of War hera- wlertho full authority to leaso the Arscnal nier.power to the Moline Company on any bms ho plenses and for 1,000 yonrs if he tosos, Read espacially what Sonator Ep- w08, the best Inwyer in the Senate, bad to &y sbout this oxtraordinary scheme, — THE PROBE-CRUSHER(PAT'D), Aellow who went crazy boconsy o Missour] tiffited biin {8 wanderlug over ‘Texns with a twdell around his neck hunting for another Wtetheart,—Loulselite CourlerJournal, Atellow went crazy hecausa Abelio tn Missour] falng was— Aye, false—and to him1 When bis reason grew dim The fled to the Btate of Texauso, And thiero, with 8 bell round his neck, o wandera about wlithou tcheck, Aud secks in each part Of tho Stato a sweothenrt— A mental and physical wreck. [37Detrolt and 8t, Louls papers please copy Vithout eredit, ——— The ingocent party who cdits the Milwaukco 'y News (Dem,) expresses the opinlon that 8 " Qreeaback movement last fall was run fn Setnterest of the Republican party ns a side- ow, and used for the vurpose of entlelng mocrats to desort thelr party.? Tho editor d thls “leading Democratic organ " will do Mlto aequalut himsclf o little more correctly -fteird tothe aforesald * Greonback moves Eat? boforahe makea such assertions, Ho fmlelm upon {nvestization thatihe * move- " was mado, uine times out of ton, in tiuyBlate fn the Unlon, fn the interest and by "illllh the consant, co-operatton, and hearty filnee of the Democratic party, aml ‘l the Flat Junaey recelved fts chlel Faalus, support, and encourazetuent from such M1 aud prominent Democrats as Senntors IRMAN and Yoonruzes, and Congressmen X0, D LA MATYR, SINGLETON, BAM Cox, "Wlfl, and others. fIo will also discaver thut m:q Fltlss clected from the Bouth in o Forty-tllth Congreas invarlably acted b the Democratic party, and that every P ]lll “movementa® that wero made at e st session looking towards defeating or fucting resumption camno from the Deino- ;‘"t Mde. Gen. Ewing, of Ohlo, who s ono the clfor captalns fn the Flat camip, and o ective caudidato for Bpeuker, recently do- ._“ed 10 Washington that bie was a Democrat _‘;'.Wd 8 “Greenbacker” afterwards, ‘The 'mll mistaken. That Fiat side-ahow was In- 'Y Fun . the futerest of the Democratic —————— The forgeq tolegram busiuess was overdone . Peeaback Convention Saturday, One of mn""mn, on behalf of Cautenr IlAnnisoN, 'mmi‘dl telegram purporting to Lave been & the Sign of the Eagle, Louxini- ’Mcrl’" Where Oautsn 15 kuown to be, and & g o8 the thauks of the ex-Congressman for hm:;euhnck nomination to the Mayoralty. [ thorncteristi stupllity the tclegram len o » sending, {nstead of a recelving, .—h]l‘,&he‘urtun\;nukcru were Dot wiao cuough . ;,erdlmsmlcc. but the reporters who p mg'“"lb aud saw tho telegram * dropped M AUlng (osdandly, Thew thera was anex- ot The reportors afterwards asked Il "lm:. shiel mapagor how o hapnencd. to ‘try Gh., l;wem.n fraud, und bo ropHed thut the ‘m’h‘“m werg W fools,” and wonld el Y6 kuown tho Qifference I 1t hadu't Yonr ::::0 Preternatural sagacity of Lse nowss J:;Iflllln of New York are, as & rule, more [ ed thay clesuly. A remarkubly of- Uagyy 2'0eroklo - from Brooklyn, Ald, o W8 tlected to Congress lust year by mnl?cu of the Republicaus over e reg- P e:\{rnlh: vauinee; 1t s truo thut he has ey charged with bounty-jumolng, but as * coulirmed Ring Democrat aud & were bouyty-jam ike Topublicans could not long remain undecided. ‘Thereupon Misther O'RerLLY cnme out ay a Dimmycrat, the same as his defented competitor, 'The extra acsalon was calied, ot Misther O'RRILLY got into trouble. Ly hts vote ns Alderman he profitably controls the Brookiyn Councll, mid makes it Reputilican, Not desiring to lose clghit months of £ood— caating votes, he han got the Republienn Logis- lature to pass a bill amending the Brooklyn charter, so that he can be Alderman aud Can- eressman at once, by pointing out that if this fsn't done tha Republicans can't control the Councll, nnd now he in trying to forco the Dem- ocratie Governor to sfan It by saying that unless this {s done the Damocrata can’t organize the next Mouse! It is the willingness, both of Re~ nubticana nnd Demacrats, to traflic in such cat tle, and swap the Presidency for an Insurance Departraent or the New York Comptraliership, which liss made honest men of buth parties units in an ardent wish to have New Yorl abol- fshied from the map of national politics. — —eE—— Ten Greenboek Congressm 11 In a liney One aald **Bracknuny 's good enough ""—then thero wore nine. Nine Qreenback Congressmen making up a slnte; Raxvart spoke of Chalrmanships—then there wero clignt, Right Greenback Congrossmen mwore they made eleven; Ono's son got a Post-ONico—then thera wers soven, Boven QGreonback Congressmen with Dems, nor Reps. wonld mix; Tox Ewina arguod with one—thon thers wer 8lx Qreenback Congressmen would in no caucas hives Joux Buznaax sent for one—then there wers five, Flvo Greenback Congressmon hold the balance of power; 'TILDEN tapped 1 bar'l and then thera woro fonr, Four Greenback Congressmen burled ench partee; One got a clicek by mall—then thora wore thrae, Three Greenback Congressmen vowoed they wonld be tiue; Ono thought ho had the casting vote—then thers wera two, ; Tywo Greenback Congressmen howling for Soft Mon« Ey; a banker drow some—thien there was one, ix. One Qreanback Congressman fonnd himself hlone; o shut up hoadquarters—then there was none, ——————— Even Indiana {8 not solld for the straddler Hexpuicks,~the man who has no opinions on controverted party pointa. A canvassof the members of the Legisiature by a correspondent of the Cincinnati Enquirer shows that elghteen of tho twenty-five Democratic 8cnators were fn favor of TENDRICKS for 1830, but not a man of them atd he expeeted to aco him nomlnated. Fivo of the cightecn favored TiLDEN 08 n sec- ond cholee, nnd one was for TILDEN bofora HENe DRICRS. A few sald THURMAN was thelr sccond chofee, but no one was eruel enough to favor the Ohlo rival beforo JleNDRIOXS, The mem- bers of the llouse stoed fn about the snne pro- portlon for Henpriors as first cholee, with TiLoes, MoDonaLD, und Vooustges as second. Nearly all the Republlcans were warly fu favor of GRANT; many were for BLAINE and Bugn- MAN a8 second cholfee, and one sald he would voto for TILDEN before he would for GraNT. Of the throe Fiatist Senators, two were for Botren, and the other wos for WILLIAM ALLEN. This puts BurLer bandsomely [n the lead. — Bays an Eoglish exchange of March 1: *The approaching completion of the Berlin-Wetzlar- Metz Roflway will glve the German Government the command of a through rallway, with a double line of ralls, from the most uorthern part of the'Emplre, Eydkulinen, to its western boundary. This, in time of war with France, Wil be of fminense importance, not mercly be- cause it will materially facllitate the speedy concentration of larze mosses of troops on the French frontier, but beeause it whl furnish an- other and direct route by which supplivs of all kinds—food, ammuoition, clothing, medicine, and recrults—ecan be forwarded to an army in the figld engaged In nctive operations in or be- yond the western provinces of the Empire. The , utitity of the nog Unc fn this latter revpect witl be’ reatly augmented by the fact that it runs, for the greater part ol its leogth through well- cultivated, fertilo, and thickly populated dis- tricts. Commercially, also, the rallway will be of rome importauce, .since a great purt of the traflie between 8t. Petersburg and Parls may be expected to puss over it." ———— Prince Lrororp's nddress to the students of the Birbecle Literary Institutu s spoken of fun foollsh, adulatory way by the London Spectator, which commonly is ludependent cuough to loak at Rovalty undazzled, without the fotervention of blue glass. The two brilifant polnts of the Prince’s address scom to have been his denfal of the truth of tho proverb * which declares that men readlly recard as geand that which is unknown to them,” and his further statement that *in hifc, 08 {11 chess, It 18 often the opens Ingg, and the openlug only, which Is under. our control.” Both of these declarations are more strikiug than profound, Tor it s trus that familiarity breeds contempt, as Prines Leoronn will soon find out If he mixes with the rubbie, and is not true that men have more control of the beginning of thelr lives than of the ¢nd- ing of them, ——— Bpeaker RANDALL sccms to have returned from his flying visit to Now York a most foro- clous TiLpEN advacate, According to the Wash- {ugton corrcapondent of the Philadelphta Fres, he declares that the friends of Mr. TiLDEN havo been in communlcation with the party leaders In different sectlons of tho country, nud are as- sured of an almost universal rendiness to de- mand his renomination ou occount of injustice done him In 1870, ITe {s surc that TILDEN is in cexcellent biealth and fully equal to the strain of another campaign, Ileconsiderait of the great- est {mportance to huve a candldate who can carry New York, and for that reason Mo shall work for TiLLEA, uvd hu is confident that four- fifuhs of the Democrats of Pennsylvania agreo with blm. Curry the news to Tammany ilallt —— Tt {s « common thing for a merchant who fecls noerand has to discharge some of his clerks, und ask for a reduction of rent, and pull 1o bis horps generally, to Qut an advertisement In the news. pavers und blow about his “enterprlso,” But that sort of thing doosu’t decelve the publle, SBo when o mnewspaper suddenly stops its supplements, and adds a little to fts maln shicot, nud tulks about bulng got up rogardless of cxpense, the wentle reader lsn’t takon in worth s cent. ' Why not bo fruuk with the * pub- lie, Mr. Btomeyt 'There's nothlug to be ashiamed of in honest poverty. . It Canren HaumisoN remalns in Kentucky (wherahe feals an aimighty sight more at home, politically, than in Chicago) he will not bo obllged to accopt the Flat faction's nowiustion, which, if hie does, must cost hlm the votes of &cveral thoussnd honest-moncy Democrats, Whiereas, should e carpet-bag to Chicago from Kentucky before the ejection, and decline the Fiat nomination, It will cost hlm thelr votes, sure. Cantan s somewhat in the poslsion of the jackuss between the bundles of straw, ——————— The reasoning of the Domocratic party in Chlcago I past fiuding out, Last ycar they deelded that Minxs Kritox was *“a biger man ¥ than Canzen ITARKISON; this year they put Canren before Miuss. Verlly, the first shall be last und the Jasy first, But thero §a just thls samonces about the thing: Last year Canren Ilannison's friends vuted agalust MiLks Kenos, and he was beaten; this year MiLzs Kxnuor's friends wil voto ugalnst Canren, and bo will be beaten alos, ——— By stopping fts supplements uud adding o -auarter uf an dnch to ita maln sheet, the Zines will be aule to suve a handsonie sum dally, and way still clalty great credie foe “enterprise™ Iy enfarging, But 1t will actually print one-quar- ter leas mntter than formorly, it bilod | NS 1 the Tinwes would enlarge its brains, add a story or two to_its Euglish gramwmar, saue a supplement o Hta scuse of deceucy, und apen new suurees of futorution, there wight bu Luau VHIVAWU communlty could stand, The 8t, Louls /epublica: of CusugrrAnD, the ** Buteher of Culloden," ““was the Jast Hoyal Enciish General that ever meot nn enrmy.” Not ro, not so, our child, The Duke of Camniinas was under fire In the Crimea, in command of a diviston, and we tancy thut the late ex-King of fanover fought In the fleld, Our esteemed contemgorary thinks also that by Beptember next the Demacrats will have absorbed alf the Greenback Congressmen, *as well as five of the Callfornla members,”” May our soul be a sactifice, but that is bosh, Call- fornia only clects four Representatives, e t— some need of its enlarging; but It has olways been large enough to print all the smut, bad grammar, and varfous misloformation that this It there were, in fncb, going to bo any more per diem of that sort of thing we might pray to be delivered from the Infliction; but the iarger shect—about an fnch and three-quarters to a mile—is only an ecco- nomical subterfuga to let the Old Man out ot tho expense of priuting supplemen! Prince Loura Naroirow, according to the Parls Ordre, will stop at 8t, Helena on his way to the Caps, and go to the wlllow to meditate on the spot where the first NATOLEON rested and ask *“bis great shado for Inspiration and counscl.” 1r the “great shade" gholl con- dessand to answer at all the plaintive walllogs of this princellng, it will probably bo to advisu him to go home and snuggle up in the sbelter- ing arms of his mamma, i Col, Twostas A. 8corr writes from Egypt that it would prove a greatcomfort to any ousy Awarlcan who could spare the time tocome over there and enjoy & trip through that won- derful land; but bo adds that he sces nothing of that side of the Atlantic to compare with our own good Amerlca, and that he shall return to Lier conflrmed i the bollef that we have the best and greatest country on the face of tho earth, e t—— When Capt. BoyTon approached the river landing at Cincinpat! he was met by Madame Movbansra, who politely presented bim with a sllken American flag. The Captaln fecls sure that he wil carry out his Surpose of swimming to New Orleans, o says ho has no fear of slli- gutors,~that his principal dangers are from steamers at night and the unfamed natives by day. 4 Last vear the Democrats decided that Canrzn Hannison.was not a goud enouih man for Con- gressman; this year they say that ho s good enough for Mayor, Is the office of Mayor lcas important to the taxpayersof the whole city than that of Congressman on the West Sido Is? ————— The Times of yesterday was, lke tho quality of merey, twice bicssed. It drooped “as the gentle dews from heaven® at nightfall, and then nobody could see Lo read fine vrint, i The Times yesterday came “like a maledic- tion which follows after prayer,” inasmuch as it wasn't seen or heard of on the stroets until af- ter churchi-time. f The fight for the Speakership between the doughface RANDALL and the bulldozer BrLack- BURN {8 called the Demo-Confed, grab for the gavel. Among the Demo-Confeds the dor thinks it ought to be ullowed to wag the tail, and not the tall the dog, *. —————— PERSONALS, The Bpenker.ship rivals in intorest H, AL 8, Pinafore, 2 Our friend the Duke of Connaught writes us that he I8 very happy. Tho gate-money sootheth tho sore Leel and anolnteth the lame joint, The prayer of the Washington Ilandlady : Glve us this day oue daily Congress, ‘Weo suppose that Archbishop Purcelt’s fail- ura wns for the glory of the Church, A frivolous Eastern paper would like to sca Mina Kellogg dance a Kellogg-danco, 3Ir. Rowoll, who,mukoes §26,000, doubtloss thinks the walking 1a good in this country. Mr, James G. Blafne bolioves that Maino ts about to become the mother of Presldents, In view of Mr, O'Leary’s failuro Mr. Weaton thinks 1t is high timo to look to his lourels, Tho horso that lays its hoof on Haury Bergh oxcapt in tho way of Xinduess {8 no gentle- mian, Mr, Tilden hins bogun to run nowspapers, nnd ha will oresently wish that his bariel Lad beon a hoguhead, ‘T'he coming preacher, wo learn, will bo a woman, Not, however, If tho women have thelr own way about it. The story that Oarl Bohurz will marry is denfed. Tho denlal, we presume, procecds from the lady in questlon, Nobody can mnke anything out of Arch. bishop Purccll’s bouks; and there's no janitor to give the combination, There must be no oporatio war in this city tho present week, Wo shall call en 1L, A1, 8, Pinaforo for protection. Mrs. Elizaboth Cady Stanton fondly ex- pects to becomo o grandmother; and that, wa be- lievo, 18 woman's nropor sphere, The New York World says that Mr, Tal- mago hehaves himsolf hiko a chimpanzeo, This Is o mean thing to say of & chimpanzoe, The Zulus have boon so badly whipped recontly’ that Cetywsyo can't bo convinced that 1ittle Napoleon Liad not alteady arrived, A 8t, Louis man proposes to opon a kano- room forladles. Arewa to bellova from this that tho 5t. Loula Iady 14 not an oruament Lo her sox? The winner of tho pedostrian contest fell far ahort of O'Leary’s recprd, and tho lattor 18 so dlsappointed that ho wishes he novor had a stom. ach, "I'he last hanging In Michigan, an exchange tolla us, taok piace in 1830, Justico appoars to bo blinder fn Michigan than in any other Stato in the Unfon. i Bt, Louls i3 a groat mule market, but among tho poopla of thatcity tha mule loscs the pro-eminence s to cara which ke holds in other places, Aftor ronding soveral oxchanges wo are convinced that the Speakeralip will be between Sam Randatl, Samuol J, Randall, and tho Hon, 8, J, Raugall, . The ladies wero 8o mad hecauso the cold wenther Interfered with tho wearing of the now apring bonnot that churches wore ratbier thinly at- tended yosteraay, Thero is not much enconragement for art in Germany. A poor baker haa Just been thrown Into privon for ‘making & ginges-bread statue of Prince Bismarck. . Mry, Croly (Jennie Junmo) has just been elected Prosident of tho New York Soruals fora third term,—from wnioh we Infer that the Croly movemont haa boomed, % ‘The Prosbytery charges Mr, Talmago with deceit aud falichood, We are really afrald that Mr, Talinago practices what {n taughs by the Bible a4 little as he proaches It Tho nutobiography of ox.President Davis will not ba ready until next August, By that time Jot us hope he will have Gulshed his Iifo in all that the phrase Implios, According to one of Nast's racent plotures, the Donioceatic party fa about tofire into Fort Sum- ter azain, It would, perhaps, be safer sud cheapor togive Mr, Davis his vonslon, ‘Tho religious editor of the Buffalo press has ovorhaulod the original tablets, and duscovered an cleveuth commandment: Thou shult not Wit iy hat and baw to Clara Morrls. Dr, Caswell, of Philadolphia, says the moderate uso of alcohol fs good for the Lealth, Tle troublo sppesrs to bo thut no one Is satlstivd with & mudost quart or two a duy, < Lively fighting is expcoted on the Poto. mag, Kate Chase Spraguo vows by all thut la good. sod holy that whe will protect Senstor Conkling from the attacks of Mary Clommer, An old schioolmaster, who once taught Mr, Tildon, baa Just died. Tho poor man dlod of & broken bourt because ho didu’t apply tho rod olten. 95 L the cuve of Lis dlutingulshed uoll, 'nIBUN. ¢ mUNDAx; MARU 14, K. L. Or a Palace to Be Had for Only Five Dollars, Or the Unrivaled Four-in-Hand of the World for the S8eme Bum, A Bcheme Which Would Com-~ mend Itsolf to All, If the Taxes Were Only Pald on the Land, i i And if the Enterprise Had Soine Blight Flavor of Legulily, Thera came into the hands of & reporter the other day the circular of what at first sight ap- peared to bin a charitable und relfef assaciation, known among men, or to the Leglslature of Kentucky at least, by e name of (e Ken- tucky Land Company. According to the cle- culor In question, this corporation, which was created by the State whose pawme it bears, is the owner of some of the best property fn the Uniled BStstes, and fts Directors hava decided to distribute among sharcholders, In accordance with the provislons of the chiarter, some very valuable part of thelr posscssions, situatod chiefly in Chlcago, and partly in Mionesota. Therefore, 120,000 sharea of stock were to be sold at 85 a share, the hold- ers to be entitled to cgual chances. GAZING OK THE TITLE-IAGE, the reporter rend about $000,000 worth of prop- erty to bo distributed. He read of a pal- ace, 8 Home~B8weet Home—a farm, o United Btates bond, a fortune, the fastest four-in-bund {n the world—all {o be had for 86 each, Baid the scductive title-page to the reporter, * Put ju 85, draw out $225,000.” “ Large return for little outlay,” suld this Poor Richard of apage. “No risk nogaing small tisk large gain,” contlnucd the scnteutious cir- cular. ‘This bxelted the avarice of the reporter, und algo a wholesale greed for particulara; so he dove deeper into the shect which told him Low the wealth of Californis and Peru and Leadville was to be distributed at $5a chunk, aud be glanced over the list of THE CINICAGC PROPERTT, which mnight at some futurc day, by the ex- penditure of $5, pass foto his hands. Omitting real estate descriptions, which simply confuse, he found that the first prize or palace, valued at $225,000, was a five-acre lot frouting on Drexel boulevard, at the corner of Forty-fifth street. On this lot stood a palatial residence, bullt of Miwaukeo brick, with a commanding tower, Dbllllard-room, handsomely bound books, COUBCIVALOLY) extended view of Lako Michigan, outbuildings, ‘Curkish baths for borses, nnd all readv to he oceupled by the most luxurious or fastidious. In oraer to give an uir of reality to this, a cut of the buflding, which 18 a genuine structure, adorns ono pazo of the prospectus, * Drexel boulesard,"” sava the story-telier, * s acknowl- edged to be the fluest-strect fn the world, nnd Is under the m:\,nnacmeu! of the Bouth Park Commisstongra.” s ‘Il sccond prize, valucd at 880,000, was lund in the same block, fronting 200 feet on Drexcl boutevard. il Prize No. 8, yalued at, 850,000, fronts 100 feet on Dresel boulovard, [ Prize No. 4, put In at 24,000, was ** the finest and fastest four-in-hund: {n the world, wity the wagon and harness fiqn)v h they trotted over Dexter Park ouc mile 50. ‘Llicse horses are of the best blood. ‘Ihey obey the lnes with human Intelligeace;r hey seare at nothing. They know no lupvrfon fu form or fleetuess.” Prizes No. 5 to 104 cdneisted of 100 lots, each 2Ax125 fett, in Block: 13, 10, 89, 14, which, being lnterpreted, llsfl:llPu between Thirteentl) und Fourteenth und Blucoln and Rovey strevts. The prizes from 100 to 154 consisted in Blocks 15 und 17 of thpgame section, lying cast of Block 13, The Jots Igl Hlock 18 are valued at $750 each, und those {1i 15 and 17 ot $1,000 each, Then turning over the paze ho found forty-six farm in the State of Jinnesuts, valued ut 8500 o tract, but to each of which, in order to ennble the person who gets {t°to build a house and co to work, 4 $200 4-per-cdnt bona 18 added, thus ralslng the valuation q{,.em:h farm to §1,000, I'he prizes from 201 £6 1,200 were 1,000 850 Goverument bonds, v each fortunate share- holder between those pumbers was cntitled to one of these. Vi "tiery wore alsosomd incidental remarks about the enormous rise of property in Chicago. The new Custom-House log, for {hstance, which was Vought by Benjamin Jones In 1833 for 505, was sold In 1873 to the Govérnment for 81,850,000, It ocenrred to the reporter, if ho were to draw ong of thesn lots, 1t wlght also, If Lo held ow to it for forty-Lhrea years, undergo a simtlar In. creaso in value, i Having made up his mind at once, &8 o mat- ter of couree, to purchnse a8 many shares as ho could borowerfives, he went a littlo further Into the pamphlet to tind o1 WIEN AND WHERR the dfstribution of wealth was to take lflm.una discovered thut it would be ina publle wall n the City of Loulsvllle, In the prescuce of uil who wished to witness 1t, the day to be an- nounced beforc-hund in the Loulsyille Courier- Journal aud the Assoclated Press dispatehes, No dny was fixed, becauso 1t was more honest tosell the shares first and then #ix the day than to set- tleon o dayand then buve to postpone it bo- causy the shares wero not sold, To gy shares, ull that wns nccessary ‘as to send an order, with the money of course, to the Kentueky Lund Company st Loulsville, But the reporter deeided that, before ho dis- posed of his §5, he would get alittle more In- formation, i possible, about those ?r(zuu, which were taneible things; to wit, the Chicugo prop- erty. 8o, belng humble-minded, und with® not’ mueh expectation of = draw- g the $225,000 laco, with o viow of Laka Michigan and the Turkish baths for horses, nnd concluding that his fortune would probubly give bim ouo of the lots in Blocks 134, 15, ur 17, he went to thy Recorder's oflica to flad what the status of that property was; und he discovered that, & short time ago, it hod been deeded by Jomes Stinson to the Kentucky Land Company; but he also dis- covered there und at the” County Clerk's oflico that there had been a backwardness on the part of somebody in PAYING UP THE TAXES on the property, He found that Block 18, for Inutunng. u\\'ud’n back-tax bitl of 81,658; that it bad been forfelted for the city tax of 1874, for- felted for the State und county tux of 1877, und for fnnumerablo other taxes.” iy discovored that Block 16 owed §1,100 taxes, and Block 17 2,700, makivg u total on the thres blocks of 5,543 all of which showed great inditference aun the part of somebody, who bad allowed tiis valuable property to go by defuult, Being o Mttle dlscournized by thlé—n vory little, not wuch,—le went In scarch of o irlend of his, a real-cstatc man, who knows the West Bido with unpuralleled thoroughnoss, und asked him whut would be the value of s twenty- four-foot Jot fu Block 13, On nis map the block was not marked as subdivided (It has beon, how- aver, lately), und bo sald o would not give® $2,000 an dere, which would make a ot worth about §200, Then the reporter reflected that, aftor baving paid bis §5, aud baving drawn one of these lots, it was just Lorely possiblo that, before ho could sell {t, he would have to pay up the back taxes on it} und um] atter o had paid thosy back tuxes, It would bu doubtful It he could flud- anybody who would pay him nore for the lot than he nind fuvested Iu taxes. He also found thut rizo 1, 9, und 8, thu paluce und the fiunm wera overwholined with taxes: und he was afso saddened to Lear it the valuation of 235,000, 80,000, und $50,000 were apparontly made grior wlF ptember ol 1878, und scarcely held zood to: uf present momeut. But bis thoughts riverted to TR BORSES Ho saw bimself thetr posscssar, and he fancled Imsclf the rival of nmlurfil; st Bonner, speoding along Droxel peulevhry, udhuestionn- bly the finest stroot In the 'wordiifs with lake Michizan on ouo side -pdy him and the $225000 paluco on Lhe” off xir" wud ho fancied how, If lie drew those hoéd,! valued at 824,000, ho would se!l them within o) weul, prohuh[y for, saz, 10 per cout off, for he would not stici ut i tritle 1Ko that, uud then re- tiro into the awncrsblp of o country newspaper, He huntod up g horse-frlcud,—a miin who kuows the pedigreo of every horse thut ever made o record fn Chicaizo, “1 waut to fiud," eafd be to the expert in horse, matters, **ubout the value of some horsea, —about the finest and fastest four-in-hand In the world, Yhey aro calicd * Voluuteer, *Sat- axunu'."' ‘David,’ aud *Tom.' Do you know hein £ f‘Y&'l I koow them, They beloog to Btin- son. e hag biad thew for seven or eliht years, Feaess, *Hatluette? wag o protty wond ‘horeo Y=L wliLVE 1 AGLUB. oW, ' ¢ Well, what ahould {nu value her ati” ‘‘Not over $500, P price,”” ! And how about * Volunteer? “0h, about the same." are worth $24, ybars aga,” 1 don't thivk 1o the value of the tilifig, In-hand, that would do it them Int*ficed,’ ( 500, worlb over $1,500. That §s a big estimate.” (The_reporter was too far from Minuesota to at the tall- ho hentucky 'investigate the farms, and, secin, end of his circular o potlee that Land Company had & branch office at N0, 0] DEARDORN STREET, CHICAGO, hed aud ace w made by bls {riends In the Rezorder’ the real-cstate busincas, nificent schemo to changa for aimost nothing occuples its grund and lofty designe, Utiea for the lucal habitation of the Kentucky Lund Company, and, were it not for the dlssein- Inution of those fearful und wonderful circulars, be apt to conclude that the promoters of the scheme were hiding thefr lirht undlcr a there lanothing sugeestive of Government bunds, sub- urbau residences, * fast steppers,’? oraoy other of the valuable things to be given awayto the lucky bolders of * prize ticketa. A half-lozen one might bushel, Once Inside ihe basement, real-estate men and speculators {n pateuts which ore bound to revolutlonize the world own the rlent, title, und {oterest ju the several desks and chalrs with which the oflice fs furnished, and uppear for the most part to be lndusmuml{ cn- e or eaved o the pleasing task of dolng el nothing. K. 1t was into this below-the-street home of the K. L. C, that reporter for this paper ventured a day or Lwo ago, bent on ascertafuing one or two things about the Company not set dm:n o ornamonted with he Btinson nan thut the intruder had reasun w about the scheme, und he ac- d found the o the cireulars. In rear of mom was n stunding-di o tin sign whereon appeared {n gilt letters nune, *James Btivson.” Now “Mr, was just to belleve kne cordingly steered for that desk, an wentleman he was in search of. DO YOU KNOW ANTTHING * the about the Kentucky Land CGompany?* sald the sceker after nformation, in the casnal mauner assumed by the rural youthwho has 85 to lnvest fu ascheme where the returns will be speedy und remunerative. *0h, yes. posal, “I have called to lesrn something in regard toit,)” jnsinuated the visitor. “Yes, For whom do you want the informa- tion " “For myself." Had My, 8tinson been a mind-reader he might have fathomed far enough to sce that there was a mental reservation fu all this. But apparently be wasn't n second Brown, for ho scemed rather lm.lsflm..!, »}_xlnl responded with another mechaoleal * Yes, Then on the tableand handed 1t to the reporter, who uceepted it as thouyh it were o priveless boon,— = chart poluting out some roval road to wealth, —something he bad never seen bofore. He pro- ceeded to mentally devour it,—as he wou‘ld [ lust vear's almanac. “ Are you the arrent of the Company1” asked the alleged Intendlng fnvestor, as be grlanced at the magnificent prospectus of glitterfug prom- Ises belore him, *No, I nm not the agont exactly." * Represent the Company {n somo way, ch1"? “ Well, L may say 1om intercsted g it." * Hold some of the stock i 4 Yes,! ** Of course, before deciding to invest fn the scheme, 1 should like to kuow something more about it, you know." Anothier nod from the man on the interview- Ing gridiron. s fi‘ur instance, then, hero is BOME CIICAGO PROPERTY in the lst of prizes.” * Yes, some very deslrable propurty most ad- vantagcously situated,” ete., ete., nccording to the elreular, ¢ Buck taxas pald1” ‘There was a monentary pouse then, as if Mr. Btinson were deliberating whether bis young man with a posalblo 85 to invest wasn't alto- wather too knowing about some things, ““Oh, there 18 o little somethisg due for taxes,"" was the careless roply, after this brief panise; but, of course, fected before the property s transferied.” ‘Futs was sald with the loftv air of the man on the street-corner who tells you that the 95-cent knife {8 Rogers’ make, and warranted to last you till you lose it. s Then there aro other lands advertised? “ Yes, some In Miuncsota and some in other States, aud 1 the peovle take hold of it well, und the shares £o off caslly, we will add otlier laud prizes,—lands {n sevcral other States,” “ Iow about THE Honsest Not much of 8 horse-man myself, but you sea T mleht druw one of the stebpers, and I like to kuow ail about Wi, you know.' Mr. Biinson expatiated at somo length ou the merits of the steeds.. They were nis, he safd, ond connolsscurs latt spoken ml;hly of them, The bigli-steppers had gone in 2:50 some time ago, und o certnin horseman (nume not given) had sald he'd give §1,000 to have fem Just for o week fn New York, mercly to show the peoplo there what they could do, Much more did Mr. Btiuson say on the subject of horse-fiesh, und all ot it quite us complimentar: to the stecds 98 the foregoing. They were soun as a dollar, in good order, and the fellow that uu]l. ‘et would have o good thing,—in fact, a big thing. 5 how do the peoptotake hold of thaschemel" ‘'Ihe shares aro belng takeu vyry well,— quite vumerously, I may say,—und when we put in the other prizesTtold you of, we ex- peet they'l! o off even better,” “WIHEN DOKS THE DISTRIBUTION TAXE PLACE]" “*Well, that bus not been determinud yot, but it wlll probubly be sumo time {n May, 1 imogine. 1t will all depend, ot course, on the way the sharcs are taken,” ‘I'ie_reporter pointed to the “elegant resl- dence™ In fuli view on tho cirenlar, and asked i that was one of the prizes. Mr. Stinson suid it was, nud o very good {dea the cut gave of it too, 'Theé property in - question, he ndded, was situated on Drexel boulevard,—a most cligiblo und fashiouable location,—it would go for #5 to the lucky man, ‘The subject of GOVERNMENT BONDS was broueht up, and the holder of stock in the K. C. L. explained how that corporation could ufford to put one of Johin Sherman's lttlo pleces of paper futo the pot und wive to the lucky fol- low out a great many unlucky fellows who e;mullhulcd 85 avlece. Nothing was easier or simpler, Iu ahort, Mr. Stinson took the most roseate view of thinge, und insisted thet everything wos as represented fn the clreular, wud thut thers was no mistake nbout it, ‘I'ie reporter held on to his possiblo pussvort to fame and lortuno,— viz,, the elreular,—reverently put it in bls insldo veat pocket, noar bl girl's” plcture, and, afier telling the philanthroplst with hares und reals estatyon his hands that Lu'd think about i, come uway, nnd headed for a saviogs-bank which pava a low rate of nterest, and in which hedeposited the price of a ticket fn the K, U, L. 1n bis own heart of hearts—or his owa pocket of pockets—ha thourht ho made the better choice, even if savings-bauks bave rather fallen futo disrepute. And thew, finally, some kind friend diroctod the roporter's attention to a clauso fu TUE CRIMINAL CODB which says that if any person drawa any mongy or other valuably thing as o ‘prize In o lotlery, such prize shall bo forfefted, and may bo recovered by sult brought by the Atterney-Qenoral or the State's Attornoy In the nanio of the psople of the Btate, 8o that, oven if he wore to et a prize, it would be doutful whother b could rotaln ft. ‘The same soction regurding lottorics alsa provides, by the way, that any person who publistics, Qis- tributes, or clreulatos any advertisoment of nn(: lottery-ticket or scheme shall be tined for oac olfonss not exceeding $1005 that whoever sCts up or promotes any luuury. arn, y way of lottery, dlspoics of any vroocrty of aiye, real or persandl, or who aids by flfluv.lm: or_writing i manuging the lotter; o all, fur cath oilwhue, bo fned not oxceeding 33,000 'that whouevee adlis.or offors for eale, or bus o his [)uurnmn.gr wile or uesista fu selling, nego- iating, or ulvmln of uny tickut in any such lottery, shall, fUreach offeuse, be fined uot ex- coudlug 32,000, ] Monteligrd! ‘The Moutenegrins, those brate {uhabltants of the Black Mountain, who detied the Turk for 450 yours after by had suceceded in ensluving tbelr brethiren of Bervin, Bosutu, und Herzezo- viu, are sayagely discoutentod at the results of the Berliu Treaty, Yhey bay to bear the bruut unce;slx years ggo. Bhe must be abount 13 ‘erhaps $350 18 & falr ‘I lave got a circular here which says that this four-n-hand, whtlr the wagow and harness, . What do you thiok of thati" * Well, If 1L's the samo harness that was used when they trofted wt D,irzur Park five orsix he harness adds nuch A pood team, four- 13 '60, would be worth $5,000. That would be & fancy price, These horges, take them all through (one of baliove), are certainly not ed that he wonkl go there In order to sve what ru&umr he could find on the subject, ethor the statuments of the agunt agreed with the rather dig lrnuln;( statements ' Oftlce and Jle found that the Chicago branch of this mag- bestow something in ex- quarters Which aro all too modest to be In keeping with The Lusement of Nao. 9t Dearborn strect {8 100 inuch of a pent-up I know something of ft,” was Mr. Ntioson's reply, as he stepped back to- wards & table, sat down to it, aud invited his visltor to take the remaining chair at his dls- e reachidd for ong of the clrculars Iying the title will be per- d ex| practically” from the Peninsula; and they have been miserably re warded, upon the exteisfon of its yond the stony mountalus which no weans of Ifvelihood, of progress In the sense of measure of the injustice, mouthful which had been granted it. authority have kept It 1, revolution in Oriental Europe.’’ ng. AMUSEMENTS, GERMAN DRAMA. theatre can cxists omd everybody previous efforts, it fs having, ju New York. it that, Ia spite of t) out. elsewhera was, eated here. copold” und as was to be expe The play s ** Haasctnann’s uultke vrofiizate noblewan, who hund of the Jeweler bflmm pretenses, ) money of received’ but with the hcart fn the right place. for mavaged to turn the young nobleman to the father-fu-law ~ was to ean a wife. und ruined, for living und This is the plot, amusing. tions, waa excelleat. could Mr, Schmitz s :dGriesinger, n playthings for his 2-monthe-uld grandsun, Mr, Ravene os Mux Vou Juden, the son-in- law, ndded another leaf to bis laurel wreath of fame ns o brillant nctor. Miss Kuhu, as Julie, s wife, gave another evidence of ter trreat Probubly the most suc- cessful part was that of Mar.anne, the jeweler's Luusekeeper, by Mra, Horn, who made this com- varatively small part one of the features ot the play. Bnecame in for thelurgest sharcol applause, lece of work was done by tatent and versatality, Aunothier splendid K Mr. Vuls, who, ‘08 Dr. Kiaus' coachman, Lu- bowski, was Intenscly funby and mirth-provok- Mrs, Frida Velgzath, who made her debut ot thns theatre, made o very favorable impres- She had but g, slon as the wilo of Dr. Klius, little to do, but thut little was done well, Mrs, Claussen uiso des ter of Dr. Klaus, berg, as lier lovs also very elle stall, were piv ry the bushtul Zaw! Gerste , was portunce, This1g une of the causes of the su cess of Me. Hoechster's compuuy, that s much attentiou is pald to the minor purts as to the more lmportant oneca. GERMAN RELIEF BOCIETY. ‘The entertafunient of the German Rellef So- clety at MeVicker’s Theatre last evening was a succesy, both fluanclally and musically, Mra, Clara Huck and Mrs. Maria Koclling pave s liberal number of songs, und were much ap- plauded, the former recetving a bearty encore for avery srchly-warbled jodel, ™ Mr, F. Koss suni the Uinfelice,” from **Ernani” with much foreo and expression, and was complimented by arceall. Mr. Kellner was down on the bill for a vocal number, but was excused on the plea of hoarsencss, ¥ Fly, flf, my Soug, by a quad- ruple quartette ~ of the (iermanla Mavn. uerchor, was falrly done; and the chorus, “Qod, Futherlandy, und Love,” by the full Moenncrchor, with orcheatral nccompant- ment, was presented with much vigor, relloved I)Iy guite eflective shading. Oue of the sweetest things on the programme was “O Muaris," o Teello, the accompanl- romauea for with ment of n &t auartette, plano, and hanmonium, 'The hurmony was ex- quisite, nnd Mr, Elchbelm's _bstrumentu- tion was worthy of his theme, Messrs, Pratt uud Clausscutus werw the plano-necompanists of the evening, nud thelr work was well doue, of course. ‘Ihe entertainment concluded with Gumbert's comedy of ** The Love-Potion.” The sonus with which the plece was intenspersed were decidedly unambitious, and thelr execu. tunts could luy no special clulm to melodions excellence; but there was plenty of fun, which, Judelng from the frequent langhter aud nl)~ plause, compensated “tor any deficlencies fn other directions. % PUNISHING AN ELEPHANT, Thrusting & Red-Hot Iron Into the Trunk af Oue 8f the New York Centrul Iark Antinnta, New York Sun, Mareh 14. Emperor is the most viclous,as neds the finest, elophant in this country, During the winter mouths be wul his slx companions ure chathed by their bind legs in an outbuilding i the Cen- tral Park. Boatswain, until the arrival of Ein- peror, was the pride of all the femalo eles phaute, and Gypsy cspeclally loved to carcss im with ber gontle truvk, Bus Boatswaly ouco cricd out under punishment, and from that hour o lust his place in tho reapect of his assoclutes, nnd Gypsy translerred her blandish- monts to the last cumer, ‘I'he dovive of clrcus men for punishing on clephont 18 cruel, To the legs of an unimal are fastened strone pulleys, which are attuclica to levers, Ava sigual the legs aro drawn asunder, und the animol slnks down, a ninss of hetpless, tortured flesht, ‘Then the Keepers, armed with long clubs, appronch nud beat hilin on the legs and bottoms of the fect, ‘I'ie elephant l“"‘“li puuishment curls his tronk beaeath bim und closcs his eyes, Hour atter hour goes by sonie- times, but the keepers only relax when ihe vlos phant elther becomves {nsensible or crics out, which latter 13 4 token of sabwlasion and a con- quered splrit, Boatawain cried _out, nud was never acaln guilty of olfense, Emporor, how- ever, bae stood this terrible punishment several times, uud with such extraordivury werve thut the keopers are afrafd of him, Hu f8 viclous, and whenever u intusile comus within his reuch he discharges it at the nearest keeper straighit- way, 3«1 Monday night Kwperor watched one of the attendmits whom hv purticuturly dislikes, It was bedtime, und the wau was making eyory- thing anug, wnen Emperor suddgenly turied on bl und Knocked him down, The kecper acreamed, as Emperor, with s sbrill cry of rago, was on the polnt of drageing bl beneath his feeb und atemplog bim to death, Help came, und tho keoper was suved, uud then It was do- termined thul Emperor should suffer for what hg bad done, ‘The attendants took the long iron poker with which the tires are atirred, nnd this they beated stivo slege, which lasted sutumn of 1875 untl the spring of "1875; they contributed largely to the downfall of the Uttoman Power In tho Halkan A manitesto recently fssued by the Montenegrin Government—s_ document in which It 18 casy to sec the hund of HRussia—scts forth the causes of erleyanca as follows: * This country, the very existence of which depended frontiers be- furnish aml no possibility culture and civiliza. tlon, lias come out of the Herlln Congress flaved, restrained, and ruined, Even that which 1t had obtafned at the prics of the bloodicat sac- nifices has been taken from ity and to heap the n to-day, long after the L,unzrcu bas adjourned, when al] the other Powers have received whntever was allotted to them, SMontencgro alone fa still to recelve the It 18 with indescribable sorrow that the Montencgrin peo- Dl witnessed such nctions on the part of the European Powers, und only the high wisdom of its Boverelzn and absoluts submission to his rom a course Which would Liave brought sbout a decisive countere ‘This may bo reearded ns the beginning ol a series of protests by Russia azalust” the treaty which Serbs and i\luuvvlu:- allke regard as hatetul and degrad- Among the modern German play-writers, Mr, Adolph L'Arrouge hns undoubtealy been the most successful, A few ycars ago this gifted young author was comparatively unknown out- aide of a limited sphiere, und to-day it needs but to be announced that a new play by this author 18 to be performed anywhere whers o German who will go to wituess the performance. ‘I'he first play brought out by this suthor was *My Leopold,” which achleved an utprecedente cd sutcess, and deservedly so. A year or 80 later ** Hassemann's Tocchter,” by this nuthor, was brought ought out, and Its success was nl- most as great o5 thot of “My Leopold.” Ilis last production Is “Dr. Kiaus," und, like bls or has hud, an {mmense run at all the German theatres in Germany, and st the Germanis theatre "Dr. Klans” wus produced by 3r. Hoechster's Gertwan dramatic company at Hooley's, and so fl(mnt was the auxiety to see ¢ opposition at McVicker's, wacre a benetit was eiven Lo the German Hellef & Aid Socioty, the bouse was completelv sold ‘The success which the play nc{;lcv‘-d ed, re- Nty Toeenter o plot and constructlon, but, like them, It {s full'of terae, skarp huwor, with flne touches of sentiment and pathos, and the characters are well drawn and copled from Hfe, The vlot, though not very intricate, I8 well malntalned, and keeps up the interest of the audience from beginolng 1o end, It fs thestoryof o young the doughter of a very rich He spends the 8 good-hearted father-In-lnw with o lavieh hand, und would bave fmuoverished him had 1t not been for Iis father-in-law's brother- Inelaw, Dr. Kwus, o man with brosque manters, The Joc- right path by representing to him that bis thut he Limsel{ but thero are a large number of side fesucs, which are splendidiy tuterwoven in the main story, und help to make the play interesting as well as The ulnrlnk' with very few cxeep- fr. Meyer us Dr. Klaus bhardly have donc better, and acted the part asif it had Leen cxpressly written for him. the rich {ewu r and father-m-law, wus™ not entirely his clement, but vet his verformance wae not without merit, aid fn some Instances he was quite britliant, cspeclally fn the third act, when the champagne gets the better of him and he learns that ho has become a gramd- father, aud nlso fu the last act, when he nopears at the country-seat of his sou-lu-law toaded down with rovking-horses, drums, and other s credit for her srood rendition of the part of Emnut, the young dangh- No one could lavs cuessed ber agze, 80 young she lovked, and Mr, Roden- e, All the othier parts, though i as consclentivusly and thor- oughly as if_they baa been of the greatest im- red-hot. Emperor was then bound down {a.the fashlon that has hoca described, and, while one I of the keepera held hits trunk, the other ran the ment nearly blinded Emperor, but he did not equeal, Ha looked sullenty afl tho 1fme at his keepers, 8ince then the clephnnt has been une 1t was not atrong enongh to subdne Emperor, —— DYING, Epectal Dispateh to The Trivune, Mirwaokrs, Wis., March 16.—W, B, Hibbard, point of death at the residence of his daughter, Rreater portlon of tho last two years in Chicago, her mother, Mrs, Gov. Ludlugton, In this city, Mrs, Knight's mnlden-name was Allco Tobey, 8ho married Licut. Knlght two years ago. e —— Fun for Britlsh Ofcors at Plovna. sweepstakes,'? sald Capt. Elkington. *There were a lot of old Euficlds at headquarter Russtan sentries. Wea rations, and the one thut popped over the mos Kussiatls took the pot.” peRp . ——— DRUNKENNESS., Dr. D'Unger, dlscover of tho cinchona care for drankenncss, cures all cascs, Room 21 Palmer House. ——— You can't afford to laugh, desr girls, Unless your teotd ara white s pearis— Unless your month fs pink and sweet, * And your two lipa in rosobads mest; And you cannot supply his want, But through the use of Sozodont! BUSINESS NOTICES, 1The wite oll dactor went hls rouna» with Caswell's Slippery Elm Lozenges for hia pationts, Sold in Chicago by Buck & Rayner, Chow Jnckson’s Best Sweet Navy Tobsoco, tEMEDIES, SANFORD’S RADICAL CURE 4& CATF;\)I;RH P Isa never-failing specitic. When every ather remedy bas failed, whon physlclans haye pro- nounced o cure fmpossible, it hos by its power- ful alterative und “resolvent properties acting throuzh the blood, und by its heallng, balsamic properties actiu upon the diseased nasal sur~ faces, lifted the afllicted, as it were, from tho very grave. No other remedy has done this, for 1o ather remedy possesses in'a form 50 pure and simple, yet so powerlully effective, the real cs- sences, s It were, of the barks and shrubs from which It ‘s prepared, References from well-known Physt= cians, Druggists, and Cltizens, Geo. W. Houghton, Esq., Waltham, cured after twelve years of suffering. Dr. Chas. Mafn, Boston, writes: I consider it superior to aoy preparation lald down In any text-book with which Lum fumiliar.” Wm. Bowen, Esq., of Mc- atton, Grant & Bowen, 225 Pine-st., 8t. Louis, serites In the warmeat terms of ft Lo bia friend, A A, Melifer, wholesale drugeist, urging that some more rapld means of introducing 1t to the people of his ity be taken. 8. D. Baldwin & Co., drugelsts, Washington, fnd., say they never #old a reinedy Tiving such ubiversa) satlafaction. Samuel Spinney, Meadow Vale, N. 8., says it operated on his 8ystem fn o way that nothing ever mven him by physiclans had done. Qeo. F. Diuzmure, a Boston druggist, says that the enre effected ip his case was so remoarkable that it reemed to many that it could nat be true. He therefore mnde onth to it before Suth J, Tuoms 03, Esq., Justico of the Peace. SANFORD’S RADICAL CURE # Clears the Iead and Throat so thoroughty, that, taken {n the morning ou rising, there are o unpleasant secretions, snd no disagrecabls hawlking during the entire day, but an unpreceo- deuted clearness of Voles und’ Respiratory On gans.” Price, with lmoroved Inbaler and Treatlse, 81, Hold by all Druguists, COLLINg: VOLTAIC ELECTRIC PLASTERS Xnstantly Annihilate Pain, Strengthen the Wealk, Support the Weary. By {nstantly nffecting the Nervous system, thair influenes fs at onee felt at the farthest extremi- tles. Hence Pain, which arlses from o disturb- nuve of the Nerve Forces, I8 cured in every fue stunce as {f by mavle. Palpitation of the Heart, Inflammatlon of the Lungs, Liver, and Kidueys, Irrltatfon of the Stomach'und Bowels, Indiges- tion, Dyspepsia, Billous Colle, Cramps, and Pain arising from the same eause arcapeedily relleved, The medicnt forees present in these Plastera flnd thelr way nto the syatem in 4 mooner at onee mystertous and powerful, They accom- plish what no remedy ever before hus dane, viz., the restoration of vital electeleity, whenes comes fostant and grateful retfef from Puin und Weakners, nud freedom from discuse, PRICE, .25 CENTS. Bo careful that you are not deceived Into bu{ I somu worthless plaster said to be equal {o Cottans' VorTats PLAsTERS, 0 union of Elecs triclly and Healinr Balsams, us seea fn above cut. “Sold by all Druggia " NEW PUNL TG SEASIDE LIBRARY, Bubscribe for tho Seaslda Lihrary, tho bost Litersry Periudieal, contalning all the Standard Novels. Terms, bastaie frie, $1 per montls, QOut to-doy in Clear, Nold, Handsome Type. TILE SLAVES OF PAIRS (Second Haif), Ty Emile Uaborlsu.... oe aserna0 CODA U h by Unlds L ieay Sl utot, Life v avesaf Plrls(1s0) 474 e I.“d)ltm.;‘\)g\- i, by e, {23Sunblitk th tand, b i $7-Devoutwtive Vw, by Avyelia B, Kdwanis, 71—y ean: A Woman of Fashion. by Anula Fa AT0=The Fortunes vl Glencure, by Charies Loy {HIhipert Godwing by Stss 1, . raddotio.en 4u7—Eddfua, by Strw, Henry Woor 4es—Greut Voyages and tireat Nay Verng (it batfp,.. 480-Grent Voysges and tir Verie (vscond hal 483=Moiisieiie L.dcod. U 163=Gorald Fitn A61—=T 09 Arablun 400=The Arabi 3= ho Ducto , by Churl Ighits, Part I Nights, Pert | A uy K. 3 Mrs. Oliphuit, 32— Au i Couple, by sty siiventalaeNweetheart, by W o ‘or ala by all nuwslualers, oF g0t posting paid, on f pricu, by GRORUE NUNRO, 1710 37 Vaddo- ew York. LAKE VIEW. Grooerios_bought at tho Hong Kong Tea Co, will be delivered in Lake View on Mondays, Wednes- days and Baturdays, Wagons leave store aug.m. The most completa stouk, and lowest possible prices. C. TEVINH, 110 & 112 Madisonsst. red-hot noker up into it. ‘The savaze qnnlnh-. q avle to eat, and stands atone and sullen, slap- piug his horribly-mutilated trank wherover there I8 8 cool spot fn the shed. The mon call thls the extremo puntshment, and say that it has nover been applied before fn this country, 20 old reident and busiuess man, Is Iylogat the Mra. W. 8. Beaman. Mr. Hibbard {s well known in Insuranco and Board of Trade circles, both here and at Chicago, and was at ono time owner of considerablo vesscl property. Ia spent the Tho wife of Licut. Austin J. Knight, of the United States navy, fa dying at the homo of Nroadiray, “The biggeat llum in ”!lln slege was tho which carrled twice as faras the rifles of u.\.u': maae up a pot by put- ting in o few shillings a-picce, or an extra day’s Mags,, - i