The Beaver Ar L %MAN D, Sulro6 AND PUOrlUrrOft Bowyer. Pa m Magma $, 1870. REPUBLICAN TICKET. 1870. .I.br Congress : EL ND, • Subject to MICHA District C oWEYA f erees'. rtitni.nition For Assembly: ' WILLIAM C. SHIMLOCK, DEMAS LETIIER3IAN, WILLIAM A. MICKEY. - - - For Prothopiotary: JOH CAUGHEY. SA Fur Cbmu4seimier: SAMU TORRENCE. For Jury ifbinotis.giouer: JAMES WARNOCK.. For Ptwir knU.ge Direrinr. EURAM y2RED. Fur Auditor; FOP Vl . U.lter.t Icr Aeadnim: It EV. 71 C. CMG!! LOW, M. DARRAGH. Pr is the shame of the nation to have it said that on account of the pumber'of of who contin ually annoy the President at Long Branch with their 'applications, he has given notice that he will see no elle there in private but his personal friends. • A COIMESPONDENT of the London heyty Nein says that Dr. Evans. an Amerfean resident of Paris, is auth orized to reject the offer of General Sheridan and other Americans, who were said to have been anxious to servo in. the French army against Prussia. It seems almost needless to say that General Sheridan has offer red to do no such a thing. Like all tither Americans, the Hero of the Shenandoah will remain neutral, but hoping for Prussian success. • CoNonkssainx. who were startled by the mnixpected appennince of the transcript from the records of the Ilia's(' showing their presence and absence, as indicated by the milt:tills, will do well to remember a little old stale of last session. This episode was the Tariff discussion,. Which last ed for six or eight weeks.. During it the nventge daily attendance of mem bers was 115, out of n total member ship of 2.l3l.—Aieto Ybrk Tribune. Tut: New York Tribune had an in quiry made of it last week touching the relative magnitude of the public debt of Fiance and of Prussia. It an swers that the national debt of Fratim is more than eight times greater.than that of prass/a.' Thedebt of Prussia may be represented, In round num bers, as #3•26,000,000, while thati;Of Franee-is as high as $2,707,1)00,000. The administration' of the Prussian tioyernMent Is cheaper than that of any other 'government in Europe, proportionately to the population and the service rendered. THE Michigan Legislative tomml tee to whoiu was referred the Civer nor's message made a report to the I louse on Friday last, recommending two amendments to the State Consti tution to be submitted to the people. The first amendment validates all railroad bonds issued previous to May .27th, (sm. ,The other amendment provides, hyreference to future aid that a majoiity of taxpayers in any township, village or city may vote aid to railroads to an amount not ex ,eved ng ve per CC4li. of their assessed !valuation, the 'amount to be paid within live years of the completion of that part of time road lying in the municipality. NUMEILOVS Ms are the shock's of earthquakes in California, it is doubt , wlietherrhe theories whiCh un dertake to explain thorn do not out. i nuMber them. (Me of the corms -pondents of tiA, New York 'Tribune is quite confident that they are sim ply discharges of electricity ; stfliter ranean thunderstorms. Ile proposes experiment with a view to a. rem eilY. It is to sink iron rods into the earth, lee feet or more,uarrying them above the earth to aeonsiderable /height. thinkslthat on the.)text approachp of an earthquake these'con ',.(lnetiirs would be seen discharging the riperlitiotts electricity which octal sjaa4 the earthquake, into upper air . There tna yet be a stock compan • 'undertaking to insure against cartii. quakes, and a guarantee to disperse the shocks may pass 'with titles of Californialeal eState. A. Saratoga correspondent of the New York th'mnereial Advertiser, gives this picture of the mends of Saratoga, one of the fatuous summer resOrts of this country: "There are more than one hundred 'disreputable houses conducted openly and more conducted slyly. Twell4 hundred "soiled doves"—soiled in every degree—pursue their calling. Pickpockets and thieves of nil kinds ply t heir trade, and beggarly hives :tors haunt the public walks. Panel !liaises carry on a successful business, several eases of robbery having occur red within the past week. The ex edlent police system at the hotels of excludes all these characters. The village police, however, is sin. gularly ineffective, and the general mismanagement of corporation af . fairs has induced a general expreasien of feeling for the recall of Mr. John White to the presidency. This gen. tleman is onoof the most wealthy and. popular citizens of Saratoga. While he was pmsident all such characters were effectually banished." ,SOME two or three weeks ago it was 'represented that all Fnmee vas Isla blaze of entlitts:asua over the war with Prussia, mid that ,the whole arms-bearing population Vere anx• 1041 S to go to _the front.' Betymitly, 'however, lids "enthusiasm'.' 'seems to have been, Manufactured for Bloom sion, for. mi-the lith of July the ape dal correspondent of the New' York Tribune gi-es the public this insight of the feeling in Paris: "Never has war been unartaken by Fnmee: with 1643 enthusiasm or more distrust of success. The crowds on the Boulevard ready to (lie for thelieountry havedisappeared. The troops marching ',through Paris to take trains for the seat of war traverse the streets without eliciting n single I cheer. Soldiers Joining their regi inents.walk about in groups, almost all drunk. The bourgeois stun! at I them au rug their shoulders. The .mpeet of Paris could not be more melancholy If the Prussians were at the gates." U. \V. S. TUE special correspondent off the tribune, under date or 24th inst., writes from Berlin that the Prussilin headquarters were still in that city. Prince Frederic Charles is at , present col 1111 l and Of t he a rmy of the Rhine. It is.tonsldered as certain' in Berlin . that Napoleon, countingbn disloyal ty on the part of Southern Germany; had planned a , sudden movement across the Rhino before Prussii could Concentrate a onsideraWathrtel that he was bitterly dissapPoltited_hy the unanimity of all of. Germany, and not daring to risk a movement north wlth'the South German army op his flank, has certainly backed, and per haps altered the original plan of the campaign.. I 6 is believed that no ad vance pin now be made at any point without bringing on a general etigage meat. Prussia, though not ready for attack, - Is ready everywhere for . de- 1 Tense._ MI The prolonged stay of headquar ters, including the King and General Moltke, at Berlin, shows confidence that the Prussian ling cannot any where be suddenly forced. Later intelligence from the seat of war leads to the belief that the Prus sians will assume the offensive and that the first great battle will be fought on French soil. A collision hetween the two armies cannot jie delayed much longer, if it has not.aiready ta ken place. A MONUMENT erected over the grave of the,inte Hon. Joshua R. Gid dings, in Jefferson, Ashtabula county Ohio, was publicly unveiled last Monday one week ago: Tho monu ment Ls a massive block of granite, with a medallion bronze likeness by the late Joseph Crew of Boston. j The Hon. J. A. Garfield, Mr. Gid dings? present successor in Congress, delivered an address. He first re viewed the life of Mr. Giddings, who was born Oct. 6, 1775, nt Athens, Bradford County, , Pennsylvania.— His ancestors mime froM England, in IMO. 'When he was, ten years old he came to Ashtabula County, where he •resided during the remainder of his eventful life. His edmutional privi leges, were only those afforded by the log school house of his district during a portion of the winter months. His father had fought in the battle of the Revolution,and at his father's fireside young - Giddings learned to twpect the rights of man, and that human liberty was worth dying for. In ISit he studied lawwith the Hon: Elisha Whittlesey, was admitted to the Bar In VW, and elected to the Legislature in 181 hi. , He declined a re-electirtn, and practiced law until elected to 1 Congr ‘ss' i n ism, where he was con tinu, until the cud of the XXXV Cong ss. in lsq - 03. "Mr. Il killings' works are still green in th meuititTekor tuony,(if the Ml ' zens of this county, nil of whom will be glad fo learn that his neighbors have erected a suitable monument to his Memory. . Tut: readeN of newspapers In this country 1 1 just now, will not fail to no tice that, while almost everybody in the nori hem litotes wishes Prussia to succeed in her contest with France, in the ifouthern States public sentiment , if not in the opposite direction, am ounts to practical indifference. A lit- 1 ,tle relle6tion . ex plains why this is so, During our own troubles the French Government was in sympathy with the South, and went as far as It dared to promote our disruption. It not only threw its moral influence against the Union during our struggle, but sent Maximlllian 'to Mexico to found an Empire thereto Imperil our Inter-, estsand at a time when we were pow erless' to prevent it. Prussia, on the other hand, was with us in sympathy from the beginning to the close of the siruggle.- In 1801, while lion. Joseph Wright, was representing the 'United States in Prussia he wrote 1114 'follows to Mr. Seward, our Secretary of State: • "Prussia will take efficient steps to sustain the Governmetit of the United States in the protection of property and ommeree, and will do all she can, consistently with her obligations to other governments, to sustain the vigorous action of our govern MOH t in maintaining law and order. The government•and pmple are in spirit and feeling with us. I our in receipt of hundreds of letters and per sonal calls, seeking positions in the 41merimnartny,and asking for ileums fif conveyance to our shores. So nu merous, indeed, are the applications, that. I have been compelled to place on the door of the Legation a,notiee, to the purport that, 'This is the tuition of tim United States, nor a re cruiting (Ohm. " I Rearing: these filets in mind it •is not strange that public sympathy in e United Static is in a divided state —the northern ileoplo espousing the muse of Prussia and the ex-rebels hop ing, for the SU Milli of the French 'arms, or like the wctern. woman who was watching her hushaud and a. beer lighting, • not curing particularly which came off "first best." .• • A ricorouxo impression was crea ted in Europe h& week. by the pub lication In 11w London Tiines ot' a proposed •soeht !runty submitted by France to Prussia some time in tgaa, bt4t Which aites declined by the Prus. sian Government. The Hulse! this treaty are as fidlows : The prentrible sets forth • that the King o 1 Pros and the Emperor of tini 'French iti order to strengterc the ties frktidi hip between the two Gore_ nments and peoples, &e., here. by co :lode the subjoined treaty: In the that article Napoleon mitnits and recognizes the late acquisitions of Prussia from Austria. In the second the Prux+ian King engage ; to facilitate the French acqui sitions Of Prussia from Austria. • • In the third the Emperor acquiesces in the union of the North and South German States, Austria excepted. In the fourth, Prance Ilndingit ne cessary -to absorb Belgium, Prussia lends her assistauce.te that measure. The t!ftlt article Is the usual one of offenshe anti defensive alliance iw tw•een the two nations. Immediately atter the publimtion of this trolly hi the Times, the French papers pronoutictsl it a heras, but the Prussian 'papers, on the eontrary, that it is filed among the ar— chives of , that Goverhutent anti is in the hand writing of the French 31in -lAter.• Thelieeret attempt of Fmneu to ahsprGLMteinbouisgand Belgium, hams aroused Enkland's Ire; iii partic ular, and we will wonder but little, If hefOre the atruggle Is over, that that nation is Involved in it. The town of qauphin, eight mites above Ilatillhhrg, on the 'Susque hanna, is, situated at the hise of a tnountain eight, ituntked feet high, anti seems to he wailed it with moun tains. The ittmospherie phenotitena in this gorge is very remarkableotud recently threedistinctihunderstorma . broke over the town during the night. !The electricity, it is !fluted, darted along the railroad track, anti the teicroph wires gave out a multi tune of spurks like thet.o from a forge. The lightning continually strut* the mountains, itud laruu rocks 4 were intodim plared and withii loud stelae Mir! dvvitlhe riWr. Ollll* REPIEEKEIIITAIIION The meeting of the members of the BePublksMStale Centnd CoMmittee representlni Republicii :minority counties, met at the Girard Hosse,ln phlladefrilds, on Wednesday, July 13 1870. Thirty-two counties wereheard front by letter, all of whom heartily endorsed the object of the meeting. The following members of the Com ro itte were; present: • Wm. LHle, of Carbon; E. .1. More, of Lehigh; ANTm. Albert,ofelearflehl, Theodore Schoch, of Monroe; E. F. Torry of Wayne; J. Whit. Wood, of Northampton; A. IC. Stauffer, and J, ll. Jacobs , of Berksf Geo, B. Colo, of Cutnberlandi IL L. Rankin,of West moreland; 11. K. Wleand, of Mont gomery; A. A. Barker, of (Atmbria; M:Whllmoyer,of uolmnbla; T. Oar retson, of Schuylkill; Wm. Baird , of Elk. ! , &Mei the menthers of the Com mittee present there Were a good number ofltepublicans from difihrrot counties present, who sympathized with the movement. During the morning Wonted. meetings were held in room 4il, of the Cirard House for consultation. At one o'clock, the meeting assem bled In the!ladies' parlor, the above named members of the committee, a few Republican friends, and repre sentatives Of the press were present. Mr. E. J. More, of Lehigh, was chosen Chairman ' and J. Whit. Wood of Northampton Secretary. Mr. More on taking the chair stated /a a few wends that the Object or the meeting was to inaugurate such steps as would secure minority representa , tionin the State of Pennsylvania. It is a fact known to all citizens not connected with a party in the major ' ity in their respective districts and counties were unable to obtain legts lotion simply because they represent ed minor-Rim. In CHSei when thenid of the merriber of the Senate or As sembly weS asked, his refusal to as sist would Virtually kill the bill since the members of the Legislature had combined, end agreed not to consider and pass any bill not endorsed by the representative of the majority. In' carrying out this provision many needful laws were oftentimes defeat ed for no other reason. In many districts men voting with the minor-' ity were greatly interested in the legislation of our State and country, and to thenrit had become a question of vital interest. The speaker refer red to the number of voters in the State, the number represented, and those not represented. The question Of representation fin.: minorities was not a new One. It idis been tried in many different countries, and was now receiving a thorough test in ,Illinois where the law picseribca that'it be Made applicable not only to State elections, butqo the election Of of lin corporations of all kinds. 1» Pennsylvania minorities were represented in the election ,o( Jury eummi.ssioners, and the conse quent choice of jurymen, a system that had worked satisfactorily. • Mr. William Lilly, of Carbon county, moved that this Convention call a convention of 'delegates from the several counties of:the State, and of such irersons only nr sympathized with the movement, and that said convention Consist of three delegates for each representative in the Lower Howe of the State Legislature, pro vidul that each county be repre,ent ed by at haat one delcigate.-- Mr. H. IC; Wicand, of Montgomery county, noVed to amend by inserting after the word movement "to consid er the propriety of minority repre sentittion.": The amendment was ac cepted. Mr. A. R. Stauffer, of perks coun ty, moved to amend by ehunging the number, of representatives from "three to "two." The amendment was accepted after considerable dis cussion. The resolution of Mr. Lilly was then passed as amended. Mr. A. K. 'furry, of Wayne coun ty, roved that a ounimittee of five with the chairman 'ho appointed to draft a call; for the convention, and that the Republican press of Peun sylvania be respectfully asked to publish thecull. Carried. The Cominittw appointed accord. ing to the above motion are as fol lows: Mr%iirs E. J. More, E. F. Torrv,Williain Lilly, M Whitmoyer, A. K. Stauffer, and 11. K. Wicand. Mr. T. clarrettson ' of Schuylkill county, moved that the committee appointed be authorized to provide fur the election of delegates iu the several counties. Carried. The meeting after listeuing to re marks from S6veral of the members and others present, anti after arrang ing for the Convention to be held in Reading, Pa., on Weducsday August 31, the meeting adjourned. Fs J.!Mare, President. • Allentown, Pa. J. WIIIT. Wow), Sec. Easten,Pa. The editors' of Republican papers In Pennsylvania are respectfully re quested to publish the above, or nn almtnict of the same, and to send a marked cony to The Free Press, EMS - to n , Pa. An editorial on the ques tion of minority representation is also asked for. - THE GALLOWS An Breiting Semen/. • Illi • nois—The Hanging of Jos. Amor and ammulalion of (hr. Sentence of Holden-41mi. Palmer. Vehement henotinced 6yan Indignant Pop trkm6e. . St. Lotti, July 29.—The Times has a long account of a riot at lThelby ville Illinois, on the occasion of the execution of JIM. Myers for the mur der of Plelxisso Calhoun, about two years ago.! Hubbard Malden who I was to be hanged with Myers hr the same crime, hail his son te.nee commu ted yesterclay by (Joy. Palmer, which created great indignation, as it ismaid 'Leiden planned the murder and ac tually did the shooting.. It was row ed on Thursday night that tho popu lace would. attack the jail and release Myers, unities Gm Palmer surren dered Hoiden to the gallows: but through the agency of some influen tial citizens, better counsels prevailed and there was a lull in the storm till this morning, when it broke outagain with greater violence. The ineTtle mantled that both men be hung or Myers released. Hoy. Palmer was vehemently denounced on every hand. The jail was guarded by upwards of an hundred armed men, and while preparations were making to hang Myers, several attempts were made to tear down the foram Increasing the scaffold, but the assailants were re pulsed etteletieue by the guards. My ens \mummies!, and lu less than ten minutes after the' mob charged the fence in force, and emutneneed tear ing it down, but when,tiaekdlscover edit was text late to save Myers, they dispersed, i swearing eternal entalty to tlov. Palmer. had it not been fur coneilliutory speeches by several laud ing citizens, a frightful scene of blood shed might have resulted. —The Qmrrolton„Mismi i , Consiirra. tire says: I "We have htaglt stated several, times th/11, Mr. f3munizel Dry- I ant, who heretofore half been bowe -1 faced on the top of hiss head, had by the use of coal oil, grown a thick I coating of; hair on the aforesaid bald head. • We saw Mr. Bryant on Mon day lost, and, on examination found the stateenent to be .cotreet. Mr. B. told us' that the way; he found out :this new property of coal oil wassien .ply this: Ho had alarge'boll on the bald phial on his head, which gave Win mud) pain, and,,ln the absence Of anything else, he :rubbed cool, oil on it. Ho says it relieved; the pain almost instantly, so he Continued to rub on the oil until the boll was en tirely well. When, to his surprise, he found a thin coating of hair naming out over the bald place. Ho continl• 114 A the use of time oil fora month or two, and now his a heavy coat of hair on his hind. This is no iunbug,but the simple truth, and we advise our baldheaded friends to try, the experi 'neut." . THE NVA.II.. Foreign OMeere Moot not Fellow the Army. . PARIS, July having been reported hero that several American Officers desire to follow the _French army in the campaign against Prus sia, for the purpose of making obser vations for the use of the American government, petitions were lately flied with the government for -the necessary permission. The request was declined; the highest Military authority of • the . empire repeating that no foreign officer, however high his rank, will be permitted near the French army. The Emperor Arrives at,Meta r Mum, July V.—The Emperor ar rived at 4 o'clock Alibi afternoon at Meta, wherethe Imperial headquar ters are established. The proclama tion of the• army will be lamed to monaw. • - Rattle - LoNhOzt, July 29.-Everything in dicates that an Important engage' nei t must take place within three days. The Prussians are concentrating be tween Troves and Merseig, on the river Saar. - They have four hundred thousand men, and rather too much -cavalry to forage. The. opposing force - of French numbers about three hundred thousand. The Feeling to Spain. P . Lommx, July 28.--LA special ccir- - respondent writes from Madrid on the lirith that the feeling of the Gov ernment is secretly in favor of France based on satisfaction _because Prussia and , not Spain was"attached. The Republican newspapers denounced this tendency, and warricit the Gov ernment that the people will not en dure base submission to a French al liance .under such circumstances. The same sentiment is partly shared by the army. The order expelling Don Carlos from France was purcha sed through Intrigue by plozaga and .with humiliating concessions. 'The Spanish parties each regard the war with reference to their dynastic inter ests. Montwnsieristti hope that . France will be too busy, to oppose their candidate. Geo. Prim keepssi knee. The Republicans are immov able for a Republic., 1, The Fretcll Fleet. A Tribune special writes from Cher bourg, 28th inst., that the second di vision of the Baltic fleet was still in that port. More ironclads will ar rive from Brest, and the Mediterra nean fleet under Vice Admiral Four ishon,comprising sovenships. -Prince Napoleon will command the Baltic Expeditionary Corp+. All troops for that corps will not be in Cherbourg for a week, by which time the two main divisickps of the fleet will begin an attack, at some polid on the Prus sian coast. French troops to leave Rome: 'Roars, July 28, Via PARIS Reptirts come from Civita Vecchia that Renend Dumont, commander of the French troops, had received orders to coralmtmte his men and be ready to em b ark at a moment's no tice. Needle Gun,:vL C'h,iusepot. The_reported skirmish of the 211th gave some Idea of the comparative merits of the needle gun end chew pot, though owing to the shortnmf of the affair the test was not complete. The Prussians commenced to lire at a distance of eight hundred metres,and their tire fell short one hundred nu:- Tres. The French fired alurst sim ultaneously and some Prtmans were killed. Germou Troops in grout 'strength Prussian and Bavarian troops are Asti' to be flustering in great strength In every town in this district. Neuen lirchen Is spoken of as the headquar ters. Ms supposed that if the French army does not enter Germany with in three or four day's, the war will be carried into France. Neubnkirchen is admirably situated for the cgneen tmting of forces from every part of Germany. The country about here Would be very rough for fighting,ilut fthe armies eon Id be pushed forward it little way over the frontier they would be protected on the right by the fort ress of Saar Louis and on the left by the Vosges mountains. Fighting on the Outposts. A regiment of cavalry is expected hero to-mortow. There was wood deal of tiring to-day between our out ponts and those of the French. (Inc of our men had his horse shot under him, and an'adventurous eivtlnn had been impren.:Qcsi with the good shoot ing of the chassepots at 1,•200 to I,rboo yards. " " Itniamtant Railway Demtruellosi A correspondent writes that the railway destruction at Bitsch was extremely important. The order to destroy it was given on the 18th, to prevent a sudden concentration of the French from thesouth. Accord ingly it small number of picked men of the 40th lThlans started under the command of Lieut.,. Von Voigt fur Zweibrneken, the nearest . German .town to the French viaduct. At Zweibrucken the engineers, with miners and workmen, awaited the atvalry. On Tuesday. they set off, thirty cavalrymen and mined, and carts carrying the necessary mate rials, but on this night, and alSo the following one, the Fiend, ,outposts were too active, and they hail to re tire ,unsucceisful. They made up their minds that the timer/materials which accompanied them must b% reduced to the smallest possible compass ' and that every man who took part in the expedition be mounted. The next two days were given up to riding Ift.ons. After two days instructions the miners and workmen were able to keep on hor.4- es and on Saturday night the whole lady vrassed the French 'frontier. The mounted miners, and workmen were' charged to push on with all possible haste to the viaduct, while the Uldans engaged the French out posts, who Were surprised. They accomplished their task with the mast perfee Intelligence and success. The country was roused .from sleep by the explosion. which sent the great viaduct Into the air. The min ers rushed out again upon the rail way from the spot to where they had retreated, after lighting the end of the train and succeeded in tearing and blowing up some length of line on both sides of the viaduct. They then mounted their horses again and returned safely into Bavarlrn territte • 17- Account of tiktfullsh. The heaviest skirmish that has taken plans In this. district was re ported this morning. A party of •French infantry had crossed into Prussian territory, about half way between this and Saariuuis. Forty .men of the garrison of &menials and some infantry weut out to meet them and werewthlug up with them be tween the villages of Ludweiller and tteisitudertn, about six miles west of this plate, when a squadron of French cavalry suddenly ntppeared. The Prussians tired away as hard - as they (mid at the cavalry with needle guns and disposed of them be -fore the. infantry, could come up. Then. an. Infantry tight followed, which' ended in the French throwing oft their • kits and, running away, } leaving one officer and 'eight men' dead on the Held.. Three Prussian soldiers wore , severely,- wounded. According • to report, no less than three French companies of infantry were engaged. • —That there was a nuts nacre of the Christians in l'okin seems to be an assured fact.' That we are about to be burdened With the horrors and ex pense of an Indian war is another fact. Yet these, which °tatty other time would suggest profound thought and claim much ofthe general atten tion, are altogether overlooked; with many other matters of importance, in the interest taken in the troubles of Europe: The Chlia%e massacre will probably not receive the attention it deserves from 'civilized powers until it out be dragged into some scheme of national aggrandixtnnent. 'RANCE AND GEllitAN., We receive such a prpffigioits mass of dispatches from EttroO relative to the i ranee German War that it Is difficult to separate the wheat from the chaff. Bola as we am make out the French appear to be using these foreign news dispatches to manufac ture sentiment abroad fhvorable to their own cause and unfavorable to PniSSln. It seems to ho one univer sal and king continued brag of what Franco is doing, what she is going to do, what she, expects to do, what she feels sure of dding, and what no one need calculate to prevent:, her doing. It is an odd commentary MI this sort of vaporing that, while the dispatches are •filled with statements of the preparations made alai Making by the French to Invade Germny, and it was even announced In the Corps Legislatlf that aver must be declared right off, to prevent Prussia being allowed time to arm, there conies along it quietelispatch :amount-leg that the Prussians had destroyed all railroad and telegraphic communica tion with France, and that a Prussian corps had marelesl into Lorraine, in the direction of the great French fortress of Metz. The French dis patches try to make light of this, and to treat it merely as a detachment sent forward to-ilestrow the railroad, which, nevertheless, would he highly important, as it cuts off the French (kitties for approaching the frontier, and renders it more likely that' the war will commence in France titan in (Jemmy. It - had been the calculation of Napoleon, it is said, to get into Rhenish Vrttaila in advance of the Prussian prefarations,and commence the war thereby tm :Meek on the Prussian fortress of Mayence, and we wereertreffilly hit formed by the French dispatches that the French engineers 'had obtained ' , full plans of all the German fortrotses proving the pre meditated character of the war. The i l l i i n h o lin of the advance 11fSscllo is ntunhl 'cstty to anticipate and prevent this invasion ; and as Bisinitrck and Moltke 'seldom undertake stlch movements without ample preparations, it is not probable Mint the advance toward Metz MN merely a feeler. Indeed, the French dispatches admit that the Prussians will move upon Metz from two di rections, one body by way of Thiele. silk and the other by way of Kiel, and that they will make a combined and general attack upon the fortress. This surprise to the French seems to have been effected by the Prussian corps nntrehing. through Rhenish Bavaria, by the line of the Nancy and Mannheim railroad, It seems that Nopoleon had calculated on the neutrality of Bavaria ; a most prepos terous idea, as Bavaria was bound by treaty to'follow the Prussian standard in war. The French preparations were made for crossing into Rhenish Prussia, and Moltke takes the French by surpriseby means of a flank march., We have previentAy pointed out how 'the possession of the South German States by Prussia, enables Moltke to dank the French °pentanes constant, ly, and this movement upon' Metz illustrates the force of our *okserva- dons. From Mctz two railways diverge into Germany, and if the Prussian ears get to that point in advance •of the French they can de stroy these .line completely and isolate Metz. lake French persevere in operating along the line of the Meselle, it will be netvisary for them to save Metz and restore the railways, and drive out the Prussians. 11', however, they should wake a false attack by the Moselle 'route, and concentrate their strength to pierce through the heat of ( termany by the Strasbourg route, they could be cut oW in two directions; iiNt, by the obvious southernwtml march of the Prussians along the Mus Ale, and second, by a flank march on t he sent') German twiny from the neigliborins m of haste. The haturlititthe French po.i don, however, glvis the French common- alas the advantage of interior lines, so that, again our own civil war, theirforeLN can be shifted from one colutian to another UM necessity de mands. This may be rendered nu gatory by the magnitude of the Prussian operations, and it would certainly -be lost the moment the Freud' should enter t;ertuany upon any distinct and well defined line o f invasion. :Should the I'russian:4 sue teed in obtaining the initiative, and invade France in three separate col umns in 'great force, by exterior lines, the Follett plan of eituipaign would have to be rearranged entirely to suit the defensive, which has ob viously not thus far been contem plated by Napoleon or his advisers. The only way •by which Napoleon could have prevented the flanking operation's we have above pointed out would have been to imitate the strategy of Moltke, and invade tier many in three strong columns, thus oecupying the liermans on the whole of the available lines of operation. Ills only chance of success 1,4 to push straight ahead for Berlin aas fast as possible, and tight all the forces on his route. If the war gods into France he is Ink. Wo must here call the attention to a statementjust Made by the London Times to the effect that the object of war, on the part afros - silt, is to re cover for Germany the provinces of Alsace and Lorraine. We have al luded to this before, but simply as a remote contingeneyi for, In fuel' France has held these provinces so tong that nothing but the most'bu initiating defeat wouid compel - her to surrender them. The true aim of the Prussians is, perhaps, not fairly stated by the Times. The luission of the French fur the Rhine boundary has4x4:ll such an ince6aut trouble to Germany, that Bismarck tle,:ires to have melt a :-ettleatent of it as shall nit am end to the gan...stion; that is, th - Wing the French entirely Way fr the Maine, alai making t more wholly a German . river. The rtoivery of Al:4we would sullice for this. I,i however, both provinc es should be recovered, they would not ho Ailed to Prussia, but re- CeiVe independent print~; and' be ad ded to the States of South (lertuany, as a flank protection to Bismarck.-- lle wants to get clear of the everlast ing Rhine boundary and of the MI- Stant threat of French invasion. As to the possibility of the Prussian tir ades reaching Paris, it is just as like ly as that the French should reach Berlin. There foreesare welt niatch ed and everything will depend upon the commagcling generals. We rain hardly think that the war will be a short one, unless the other great Powen4 should intervene, and En gland and Russia are the only ones that tun do so to advantage. It is al ready known that they will interpose to save Prussia in case of danger, but it is not known what tidy will do if, on the other hand, the danger should he greatest to France, although we prestune that in that ease England and Austria would combine to save Prance, RIVER DIMAP4TEIL ketnnhont Dan Able totally ilex/roger/ by Fire—Aiwa ,S'peelarle—Narrynr ifAmpex; but Na Lira , ' Lost. C Auto, July 31.—The fine idea r.cr 'Dan Able,ruhning between Calniand Columbus to connect the Illinois Cen tral and Mobile and Ohio railroads, was totally destroyed by tire at Co lumbus last night. The tire origina tett in the mac room and spread, so rapidly that nothing could he done to nave the boat, In filet few, if any, saved anything but the clothes they were in. Tie boat had Steam up,and the levers of the engines were siis 'winks' by ropes with steam escaping through the cylinders, when:cut ad rift to save the Wharf - boat. As Si)011 aIS the ropes burned off the wheel , be gall to revolve,and there was presen- ' tel the novel spectacle .of a steamer precutting u p streim without human guidance. She had progressed but a few hundred feet, when Mei steam pipe burst, and the wreck floated to Wulf Island, where it, burnt to the water's edge. Theugh there were , . many narrow escapes, no lives were last. .The boat was valued at £46,000; inSurance unknown. Another boat will he secured in place of the Able tomorrow; and there will be no de tention to pamengers. r ---- The Beauty of Penmanship. The following little Joke qn Mr. Greeley, whether founded on fact or not, is.good enough to be true. A lecture committee up in Illinois hati been in pursuit of knowledge under greatditliculties—to wit, the penman ship of Hemet: Greeley—with the following result: bear Sir—l am overworked and growing old. 1 shall be sixty next h'ebruary 3. On the whole It seems that I must decline to lecture hence forth,except in this hnmediate vicin ity, ICI do at all. I autnot promise to visit Illinois on this errand—cer tainly not how. Yours; . lionAcr. itEr.r.rn Jr. B. orsge,•SandwiPh, l it. . And this Is the way that Mr.eastle answered it: Sandwich, 111., May 12 —llorace tireeley, New York Tri bune—Dear Sir: Your acceptance to Imture twain, our association next wititecoma t to bumd this morning. Your penmanship not being the plainest, it took some time to trans late it, but succeeded, and would say your time—":kl of February"—and terms—" sixty dollars" L-are entirely. satisfactory. As you suggest, we may be able to get you of her engage ments In this immediate vicinity; If so, we will advise yeti. Y.ours respectfully, ' • M. 11. eAsTr.E. The Vnr and Petroluau. The Philadelphia Gazdte says:— The Immediate loss to,Pernisylvania, in consequence . of !his' war, will be very serious, us a ,urge part of 4ur export of pe;trolemn went to the German ports hnd although it is true we can ship the oil intended for Germany to Holland 'and Belgium, yet the expense of the interior trans portation will openito against the trade ; and it is altogether uncertain how lung the neutrality of the low countries may continue. It is' possi ble that the English will overcome the difficulty by importing our pe troleum in larger • quantities, and smuggling it frunt their own ports through the French blockade into Germany. This business of running blockades is reduced to an art In England, and thoroughly understood there.— Vessels are built expressly to run blockades. no expense being put up on their internal arrangements and lilting up, beyond the safety of et,.'irgo and the management of the engine fur great speed. These vessels are, in fact, mere iron shells, and the loss of one of them w6bid nut be serious ly felt by-her owners, Theealculation usually Is that the profit on the cargo more than pays for the ves sel. , iscitoEs or , istri.i. RUN. = fonght the battle of Bull Rum and in !rerulling the. fact, and the grat chan ..ges that have since occurred in the condition of die country, it is singular to! note that of all the conspicuous inen on both sides who figured on tliat field, but two or three survive, or now take any part in public affairs. (Iva. Irvin Mel who emu inaniksi the lion fores, remains still in the army of the Vnitisl States. I len. Sherman, who led a brigade of Tyler's division, is commander-in chief at Washington, and tr:en. Burn side, who in the earlier part of the engagement t%its in the van, Is now t iiiverntir of ithode Island. (len. Tyler, commander of t he first division, whose baptismal mune, strangely ounigh, given- as Daniel by one historian of the war, and as liobert 0. by another, lives in Con necticut, in the prosecution of private business tnterprisits. Gen. David I (miter, who counium- ded the second division, and who' lieVer sustained Minsk' moregallant iy, than on that day, lives in retirti . nient in Washington. t;en. S. P. lleintadinan, the third division commander, 14 on hall=pap•, filter forty-four sears' service, is idea of'n New York insur,ine coin paiiy, and ii\•is EligleW .1 )1 I, in N.•w Jer,:ey. ikbn. 'l•hivuturr, 1 lltl f lnl, conimati tliipg t kV fourth (livi , ion, ii runt of lives iii \c•.ivurk. (74,1. E. S. 31iles, %rim led Mir filth diviNion, it will be reeolltteteil, under went the humiliation of surrendering Harper's Ferry, anti NVIIS I:MC(1111mM thi! (if (kit. Sherman's volnratles brigade vonsmatitters in Tyler - 4 KuS - vs is tic ItV 11 colonel in the regular ! tinny, Chyn. (1,1p 4 r,--. and jciehankon \y:l-4 Stlit4.- (itit•Htly hillett in battle. Of the brigade commanders of Gen. Fninklin fz: now .uperintentient of Colt's ripe work:. at Ifart ford ; Ceti. 'toward bet-ante the head of the Freedmen's-Burma, and t ;en, NVileox, after serving , to the (gel of the war, and ratiteirratin g in the asstult on Petersburg, was kdlt d if We are not mistaken, in the recent tlistreAng cusualty-of the fall of the court-room in the thpitol at itieh mend. Gen. l'atterson,of Pcnnsylvuuia,isa pro pi cotton inanufinturer in his liatiVe State. Generals Johnston and Iteunregard of the rebel army, are now railroad presidents, and Jetrerfton I /ay . 's. who rode over the field after the battle had been won, is the president, not of a republic, but ofan insurancemniptiny at 31emphis. Gen. D. It. Jones of South Carolina, who bore a amspictr ous part in the light, died of con suMption'Auring the War In Rich mond. Gen. Ewell, who afterwards lost a. leg, is now in private life, and Longstreet is surveyor of customs at -Now i: Orlcons.• Wade .11au whom is 4 tilitntihg cotton. Bee and Johnson, of South Carmine, tool Ilartow of ( la. (the last named oneof the best soldiers and one of the truest gentlemen of the South, eminent. at the bar and *lse in council), were all killed on the field. Stimewall Jackson; and Jell Stuart, the sirplut h of74he South ill t two arms of thu ser %lee; survived hull limn to fall nit other fields. .I.lirly, kuutru its Jubi lee, inn. d %Yeller in the rural districts of Virginia, which he finds, after all, more congenial than the cold exiles of the ranadfts. • 111 path or a IN olneer The death of Judge Isaac Dunn. at Lawrenceburg, Ind iana,a t I lie ad van mil age Of eighty-eight years, is an nemaxsl.- He teas a genuine pioneer and- his flirty was fall . of adventure, We find in a Western paper the lid lowing istragraph . einwerning him: "In making trips to Saw 4 irleans, he traveled several times home on-foot through Indian nations. And in pur chasing and laying in their stock of gpods„ 1/42 Mat) several horseback trips to Phil:0004100 haat:. 'rile gOods at that day were NW hY 1 in wag ons to Brownsville, then put on keel I or flat boatsand brought here. It usu ally took three months in going East in purehasing the stock of gotta: anti getting them safely delivered at Law renceburg. Those three months were months of toil and privation, and ex ' JuLlKie of every kind. The cost per hundred of hauling goals from Phil adelphia to Pittsburgh, or Browns ville, was from six to ten doll ars _ then frontl three to six dollars per hundred from Pittsburgh here. After the receipt bf the gOods here the dilli culths were by no nmans.overeotne. 'Co sell their goods they had to lieetane produce merchants, to take the farm ers' produce—wheat and corn, pork and hoof--and pack it; manufacture' the u• teat into flour; have barrels flunk; build or buy flatboats, anti with g eat expense and risk of prop. arty co remit the whole to a dangerous voyage doWn the Ohio aim Mississip- Tpi rivers to New Orleans—for they had no other market. And this, too when Mason and his hand of robbers infested the lower rivers from his 'Cave .iii the Rock,' on the Ohio, to 'Natchez, on the .11assisaippl. In CoedlNoa •iirriasee A Paris correspondent of the .1300- ton Journal writes;,The peaspect in Fnince is very blac Indeed has nev er been darker since the commence ment oftheNapolenle dynasty. A warcertainly seems kominent; in a short time it nnist Couto Am „Prance must lose her pnsent position among the nations. But never was a nation in reality, more ill prepared for war. The crops of France have failed this year, and the manner in which sup. plies would require, to be <reticent's ted for an immense and rapidly mov ing army would cause the greatest trouble not to say positive famine, in certain parts of the country. The misery now existing in 80111esections of Southern France. because the crops have felled is quite frightful.— Where would It littisti If war came on ? And them the reverser!? It ht by no means certain that Farms! would , Sho has at any rate lut ,Ims melts(' amount of pres.L,M to lost! by goinVi) war with PruAtt. You will . m.! how. Much of the rumored Invincibility of I ' r nee on the field of battle Is, bash, and when once the French come in contact with the Prussians this will he proved.— Wherever Saxon blood has met French blood In the way of battle it has triumphed.. Let u 4 !.et! how • it will he with the Teutonic. Napoleon evidently thinks that there is nothing to fear from Prussia's arms, for he Is, ready and eager for battle. Offly the disturbed internal eondition of his country has kept him front precipitating a campaign which must certainly alter the map of Europe. You will see the chart changed very considerably on one side or the other of the It hinejust as soon as the battle begins, whether it be to-morrow or twenty years away' If an actual war como4 on the pres ent dynasty at the Tuileries runs the greatest danger. In caAt of failure in a campaign it would surely fall tbrever. Even Jules Favre now-a days seems anxious to see the . Or leanists back, preferring to see a fatally in which 'all the sons are brave and daughters chaste, supplant a court of parvenus and Spanish grandees. There is an old gentle man down in a malaria-smitten cor ner of Italy, too, whew tentporal power is sure to fab through if the Prussian people get their way and whip France. Rochefort ou the War .Nlr. lleuri !tixliefort atlilrevied the following letter lib, consti tuent.: SA NTE PELAGIE, July lith. DEAn ELttc-rotts: I hardly know which of the recent ministerial pieces of bragglulcio should be received, and which taken no notice of, but had I occupied my seat as Deputy on the Occasion of the warlike declaration of government, I should certainly, have protested against that unwar ' nmtable right whleh the executive power assumes of unchaining another scourge' on our country, already menaced with famine. The dynastic conflict, which is at present troubling business and the public minds, is the most terrible condemnation 'of the monarchical principle. lf, instead of expelling the Spanish republicans who had taken refuge on the French soil, the Cabinet had favored the es tablishment of a republic in Spain, we should not now Lave had to upset k whose dethronement will perhaps cost oceans of blood and years of misery. Nor should we either have had' to fear the sodden formation df those secret alliances the, combination of which is repug nan t to the straight forward character of republican institutions. And it is at the moment when the interests of all nati7s are fused together and mutuall conjoint ; when, from one end of Europe to theother, the work ingmen are trying to meet and coals-co, without distinction of lan guage or eountry, against that other evil which Is (sidled eipital---it is this conjuncture which is iii:deetod to dispense with grape shot those who are only anxious to make common vallsotOgetlier. Every war the object of which goes beyond tile strict de fiance of life (bailie: is but a series of murders. To reel empire of Charles V., to restore that or :Cll.' puicun I. May be tine fancies fur monarch.; but we who are aware what f-overeigns cost 0., know also what their day dreams brine . us as profit. ;Mat is What I should have said in the Chamber, or rather what I should have attempted to say, for toy y dee ‘‘ °Mil have been drowned, as usual, by the laughter or voeifera tion-: of the majority who soot your leputy to Ste. l'elagie.. Ifut here or elsewhere it is to yon alone that 1 fahlress myself, to yell NOR) sec the (More of the population , elsewhere than in their extermination, ami who hnew, ale:! to day the true value of 110.4 e crowded philanthropists who lake the thitruction of the poor for the extinction of pauperism.' Ike Late French 3iilthiliCr The death by his own hand of 3f. l'cevost l'aradol is profoundly de plored by the American people. As showing his elaitn on the aulminition of Americans, we repeat here a part of his language on the death of Abra ham Lincoln : "Nothing could shake him. He supported both patiently and ably the ill will of Europe; he saw with out alarm the armies of the Republic losing courage or (livening ; he saw without fear and danger his capital filled with traitors; he carried on recruiting in the middle of New, York when the city was on tire, lie repelled all idea of a dictatorship ; S Wan itied himself, at the period fixed by law, to the popular election, and taking bra burden' willingly upon him, set out upon his road, and took no account of otstaelcs. A wake of duty has this extraordinary advan tage—it is, that the clumees of life cannot affect it. Ile could display with some degree of pfitle alert and triumphant that 'Mon flag which had been twice in trusted to him; and which he had )re-served through so many perils. It is at the moment that he is struck that the unforseen blood resounds so grievously in the hearts of all limiest men iu the clldas in the New World. Bin his work was done, and the spectacle of n SIMLA Republic wus what he could lhok upon With COILSII4 lation when his eyes were closing in detith. Moreover, he has not lived alone for his country, since lie leaves hi every one in the world to whom lilwrty P and justice are dear a great remembrance and a pure example. The ettiviency of the present ad ministration of the Interkal !ten:c one Bureau is ifolleated by the com parative statisties which we publish ed yesterday. The rcvl'i 4 for the first fifteen months .of Mr. Delano's management were more than sfi4 ,- .1o41,o41(1 greater than air the last IV t4VII mouths of Mr. Rollins's dire' lion of the Bureau.. It should be remembered further that this in eretved sum WllSderivell from greatly reduced taxes. These figures show that a Pr'esident's promise that there should be a faithful andlionest collec tion of the revenue has been 'fully redeeunsl. But the head of th? Treasury Departmenr does not Rtem to be contented with what 11:14 been :11 . 14)111pikhell. Re Mots at even greater (411601(7; and insists, in a letter to the agent 9 of the Internal Revenue and'Custorns, on the vigor ous prosecution of all violaters of the law. 'rho real of all the subordinates of the Treasury Department ought not to be Ie than' that of its head. They ought to recognize that on the complete suecess of Its financial poli ey more than on anything else - ' de pends the success of the Atimlnistrit tion.---N.- Y. Tribune. —Chief Justice Chase, who has been gone two weeks at St. Paul, intends to leave for the east via of Lake Su perior on the ftrst through train to Duluth, which the Superintendent expects to send through on Wednes day or Thursday next. The Vail Electlimos. The following Is the list of the all election:3Bnd the dates on which they occur: • Alabama, August 1; Arkansas,Au. gust 1; Kentucky, August I; North Carolina, August 4; Tennessee, Au. gust 11; California, September 11; Florida, October 8; Indiana. October 1; Maine, Septemtxx 12; Vermont, SepWmberd; lowa, October. 11; Miss issippi, October a; Ohio, October 11; Peonsylvania..oetober iii West Va., October '27; Delaware, November I; Illinois, November 8; Kansas, Nov. 1; Louislana,November 1; Maryland, November 8; 31talsachusetts Nov. 8; Michigan, November 8; Minnesota, Novembar 1; Mimouri, November 1; New Jersey,Novetnix•r 8; New York November 8, • South Carolina, Nov. 7; Wisconsin, November 8. Beecher in Petticoain Mrs. Elizabeth Cady ti tan ton relates In the/lead:dim the following story concerning the Plymouth Pastor: "It seems that once on u visit to Mrs. Stowe, some great OCIL4IOI/ 12111. ing for an extra curling and frizzing among the ladies of the. household, Mr. licceher was imbued with the spirit of decoration, and Urged his nieit to curl and friz his hair also. This novel request so amused the young fry that all promptly • entered Into the fun with the greatest zest. He was accordinaly seated to u largo arm chair in the centre of the town, where, for the space of one hour, he remained t 64 patient RSA lamb, while .with hot irons fairy fingers curled and fizzed those venerahte locks into *most generous dimensions. 'With the addition of a bet; 11l i l bonnet, skirt, and mantilla, and a fan he presented so huly Mean appear 'knee that he was quite unwilling to return to the sombre garb of man hod. Alternately reclining on the sofa, talking with true feminine affec tation, promenading -up and down the parlor with the Grecian bend, and surveying himself in the glom with the greatest satisfaction, ever awl anon, he exclaimed, 'I do wish Bruce or seine of those Hartford people would come in.' Prof. Stowe was so convulsed with the whole proceeding that it was fear ed he might share the fide of the poor man in I lohnes"Height of the ltulie ulous.' However, as. no one came in, Mr. Beecher at last 'imposed they should' go out and visit certain friends, so Mrs. Stowe (aliened the carriage, and they went first to Mrs. Hooker's. She being much occupied, de•linef seeing the granger, but MN. Stowe insisted on her coming down, US the lady wished to talk to her about the woman question, RS she thought of lecturing on that subject. On entering the parlor, one glance at those mis chievous eyes satisfied her TO to the identity of the strange lady, and sho exclaimed, 'I know you! you wolf in lamb's clothing."' 1'1t1Y5..41.1 AND TUE UNlON.—illWri Bismark, said to an American: '.' In our relatiOns with the rutted States I never had a doubt. if he Tory par ty in Prussia. to which I am suppos ed to belong, at theoutbrertk of your. war besought the King to recognize the South. I opposed It inflexibly. To me it Witi clear that the North only could be the true ally of Prussia; With the South we had nothing in common. Thegovern went of PrusAtt never wavered in lb friendship for yours. It is a traditional policy with us. Frederic the great wits, I think, the first European sovereign to recognize your independence. I am heartily glad to know that Amer ia understands and reciprocates the friendly feeling we have steadily maintained." Chiueme in the Kitchen Reliable servants for housework have long been a pressing necessity of;the Amerh2m people. The min ing of docileJuhu Chinaman has been hailed ier.vor MAiremnee from the domination of the extravazint and wasteful Biddy and Kattina. and it would seem as though the hope NV:LS to be gratified. It is stateil upon reliable authority that about one hundred gentlemen„ homseholders of it. Louis, have completed arrange ments fur the introduction of Chinese house servants into their families. The necessary negotiations have [wen consummated with the Chinese emi gration .;zociety in San Francisco, and the first instalment of Chili-s.: for St. Loci. will number about three hun dred. There will be no IVV for any stir or commotion over their advent ; they simply 11111 a vacum which le, long :I Wa Red their coming. —Phi/ode/him amount of money paid dur ing the Forty-first Congres.s to tun testants \V11: S , .12,11110; th e e x_ pen-e attending the conte-ts three times' as much. The Democratic pass are endeavoring to make polit ical capital out of the abtwe exhibit, and eharge that it is all owing to Republican extravagance. l'hey denounce the whole ..y.tem of con tests and demand reform in it. Thu reform should commence with the Democracy. Nine-tenths of the con tests before the Muscat its last ses- Kion originated iu Democratic fraud or Violence. Let that party purge itselfe and there wilt be an end to eontested election Pre.m. Canal Tollls on the Ohio The President and Directors of the Cincimaiti Boiled of Trade are invited to call a meeting in fletober, inviting rePrescatatives of ' the chamber or l'unimerce of that city, Pittsburgh and Wheeling, and all the boat own ers doing business on the Ohio river between Pittsburgh and New /Owns to take the proper steps to abolish the toil which is levitsl on every boat passing the Loufiiville and Poilland ('anal. which is not hss than the enor mous sum of fifty cents per estimated tonnage. —Taylor's saw mill at Morrisville Pa., %vas burned on Saturday. I.o' ten thousand dollars, partly in,,ured --.. sewer being ontstruetell it Broad street, Newark, N. J„ awed Saturday, burying three laborer.; Two were reseed alive. New .I(leertimements. Ai r els 10 CODA Val, tor: 4 . Q . l•iftLF.l) 1 . 11.01 . 0.,ALS will lie remived hy the S. rot.. it Chlpilawn School lii•trirt mail the w, h cit.:hi of Augatit, at 1 p. 111., for the builtillw id a , t 1 1 ,4.1 /1011.elltStil,.111.4TICI No. /, near kis ail•lt t, • . The hew hotoio lu located at or neat the ti:il Ai howl haute. Illd• will be ny. t deed for a •toile aloo.for a bilck Mae. 19 tos and ?Tor ideation.. can he by calllng .Ith the secretary of the St hoot 'leant tr' The School Hoard wit! meet at the above nt uaeil plane tat the of • at t o'clock, ISO declare till the cvutrucr. trug.3;:tw JUIIN McCARTEII, Sky . copy. THE 111111.1: And the Public Schools. Wanted, _Veit and Women pf Chrtnrr•tes', 4"..3‘etetr. '; • • '. Melirrol Teaelli.r.i, knit ilmilk`d, to wt 11.4 neral ytit* WM that twigs:id u4 iingio , :1 4 1 ; 100k , r i liT . l ts 4 144 he if Uta 4 by • j ih; r *jai Berg, 9.1). , wort ben , great ruip t• and readily recalling iho earni heirtrellthier . e . of all oilkkgilicit d,nuiolkstiOpe. 11 -, 1 •ze LU irc•rk preterite greater attractions u. kniul•ter. Ivnil it their .upport in"'the work Air the time e ttply for e circa tar and Wente. Stoic the territory )gin tt i.h. Pru,purlii• n fr, of clot. J. R. rtioTLIC Lick Dna Till ra. ik: ANTI AfNISL-To eel the orrAcoN TFE‘vtio m.%i-nrt.n.ig mat. the ••EPtallc Lock and la ',waddled fur 5 .I . rlco $l-1. othar oiaallikaa vilth an unilar•feed fold for sl:i ur leas aro l.friug..m,.„,„ 0/"I'AGON SEWING 51.WIIINY. L0n1a.310., Chicago, Iltiebar-u • or law ton. Mum. . PAY-111.tneop entirely new and houora- Su) tee. Liberal luduceultvu. Domnplive CI, culAtio 11 . 0 e. .I.lktrvol J. U.%:41) ford. Mr.).l‘...;ftta • - ROME WIV " aT T o ' the IVLIt IKidAs ,E. mak,. the -Leek Stitch," (alike lon bout end Is the only . licensed under•feed Shuttle Machine rold for lees than PO. Lacerated by tVlteeler Wilsou. (hover A Raker, and Singer the. All other underfeed !Shuttle Machines sold (or Le ss than ffa) are tafriugementa. attd the *elkr and user liable to prosecution. Address JUIIN• sON, CLARK a CO.. Roston. Maas.; Ihttmbiugtt; Chkago,llll., or St. Louts, Mo. (Je2l43m .34m) Advertisement*. _ . AGENTS EARN $2OO A MONTH *fila gl etta 8.0. Abbott', last great worit.th e LIVES ow ALL Tux ranstos nu. ~,,GOO v pw., wan, Shy Des/ and wood as in. Hells .at sight. Wore agents witat e d . Sir . &mic IL ron and 'Dm. is. hibrid4; iph Derttt $16,500 : W wwir illenallitasb. ' ts Agent A te g u t 17, MEN Or PROGRESS Dy Junco Parton, Greeley dad other pr nhtaeat writers. It Is the most complete and tom literary and artistic work sem published.pe Its 4 toe tains skatebee at Charles Dktens. Berlin sae. ee , t LA other promlnent Americans. 1.1,31,011,:titw YORK AND lIA itTYOND ITBLI3II3it ertht. PAY',, 203 to 713 East Ilth sweet. 3t. Y sail it E 4 CARBOLIC TABLETS. The Great Healing Ilalsonne I ? ., edy for Cbtighi, (this, Sore Ty„.,,,; Asthma, ffe,, he. i'br Wormy oar: dreg they are Int:altaAlei For Kid, Dlffleully a Speetile. Try iht m . r. cent* per Box. Sent by 1114111 nu rer,p, „ price, by.f. rt. K ELIA Pun.,,,,,. *gent far Um OA. Mill/ BY LIFE IN-UTAR MYSTERIES OF MORNpI~gI Icy d. 11. lA.:Ain't:. Eilion Ilt:ING an EXPuiib:r l / er.itE.VONIA'S 17;1 iht • 4 ' Willi a fall and authentic liotnry or 1'„1,,.. awl the 310/IMn b. et, trim i aut Odd: Agent. me ni , 1111,4 Pacieve, one report • tod i another 71 In two data. Aftlf.VlN H. ad (or Circul.tee. Addria. NATIIINALIa a. Lisft ING Co , Ira TMS Is Nil 1111111 W ' :fir) y, , age, bright, color of e)es and Lair. temu .by return cu.dl, a rem - it picture al torehu ,, Tiand W it ith aim , aid dale Addreav W. 10X, I' U Dry., Pallid:tad le. N. V. THE GREAT MEDICAL DISCOVERY Dr. VI ALSIEIII , 4 CALIPORNIA VINEGAR BITTERS. More than 500,000 MOM fq!. l . 1!t .r kat W d t s' :Mfg C o Hrlgr. " - WIIAT ARE THElli!V:il Eli 11; Agt X ilk 11; 7 , i, r.-Z".. MI 1E L :[ Wn Lau LE Yids.,.casual. Ito. and lateittata Liquors, doctored, and sweetened to plea se the tette, raged 'Tee tut," Appetizers, "Reatorera.” ac„ thatitht the tippler on to drunkenness and rale, tat int into medicine. made from the native lbw. tr.d Herb.. of Caltfornle, free from all Alcoholic atinaulanta. They are thetilllllAT BLOOD* r 4.; VIBIII and Life Giving Prisnlpn, a perfect, 114aluvalOr and In rl4urator Or rte •• tern, cOlTyMit O ff ail pOOlolloW. Matter, sue r , rt . r lnic the blood to a healthy cuod.tloo pr., cut take the. Bitters second ti 4; remain lung waned $lOO still Leglten fur.. IDClletb:. ed the boo.. atU nut drotr..),l t alluend y. .040, or other m.o. : and the v.:44 te,:etts e to . be and tire {unit of repair For luilananantory d. chronic labor sua 'Loin and Gout, ay oprpola, or grottos', Billion., Remittent, and to termlttent revers; Disease. of On Illood,Llver,Kidue)o and Blodder,e, - Bitten, have born moot tucceteful noes the ease* arc mooed by Vitiated Wood, to gettcrally prOOOCOrt by the tkrall,rett.or of 4... Dlgeslaire liegatiat. t. mauve the ‘IUJI.ed NANA .L. - :le, Ise ImpunUr . burette; tliroul.;Ei. the ,L:.4. k..ftlptl4.l“ll it w6.n f It otr*trUCted and ottigilett h. the wet., Cram, r: veLan it la holl,M4ll)uur teeno••• Keep the .blood pure uod the Cetuth 4.1 Le: mt.:, tt ill follow. PLS. til'E and wit, WVltllzt, eyetetu of our muuy ttwustuelit. a.rt, nroyed ur returned. In Billion.. ltenditeut acid IniemHurd for. thuie Bitter. have CO equal. Fur tu:i dirn•:. r• read rarefull• the circular around cad; printed to four landun. - :wauli.n. J. WALKER, Pruprici.: ZS CUM. Y H. H. NIcIUON A LIJ . 10 11rug0 , 18 a. San Francisco and 8.1 . . .WO, , a3l Corturx.rre YL N F. - rifr SOLD BY ALL DUI - BOIS - Vs rt ) uci ELLS. -^ A ITE , , sp ; c ,. f , rost krala qp - IV• 11EHOUS DISUSES. %Li; 640481 It 14 nu unfalltrei rowdy in V.1:1 FACinti, ultrarift•Clitl7.. • 44 , 6 than ezity-tour tom,. In 15 t• =itiIIiCIENSIMIZZI IZEISMICEMI MEI 1111. I err.ol Rom —IA! ..• I:orn 6t th, ~ l t A r. —4n , .I , t •577.•••07, 7 t* .•' 1.,. • •3(1. • I 1..: 07 , • n(7, •rt•r. • forf.„t d, alieny• attord4 the r, i• 7 r•tentitahz 1.! ery rarely LW. to 1,7 ntA ;. • min.,. cure. IL COtitilt , ,o risk to the allgitirat stunt delicate nyrtenl..4 , l , l , c.. ..1,r1,4 be k , rrrci .4/%IY. Les long been to he many of - meet eotiatt.l PAysici.l,.s, who ;:tvr It their or..r mow and Unqualified approval. Tie Ml~lfc c: among maur of our twat culucto. t,ttly '• trotters! Vasney: slimy in; used Dr. Turuer's rt.icsrs.st Neurtrigio Alt pers.mslty nil ruerous I ustaucmt rscommeuttstl it to p.moth f. ring with neuralgia —1 Lave fowl It, J szetption, to accomplish off the 10 , 4' , . Wt . claimed..l it. IMI.LINGIIALY' O ".' Winter boatoa, Frio. 1 , 10. PS,7 Mr. J. U. it. Slt/itt . . fur talu) p.ars m &pod. my in Ibk city. and for thre , car. Sono: c war, In dm Ilusional Den,trtru , m und,r the I • Government. thus .1A..0,, of tc •• 1 have known Or. Turto.r . . Tic-1/..aloarr“ Univental Neural:Li 1 . 111 for to 'ears. 11:7 sold It and 11,31 If p. r.t.13.1/1,. 433 d hone g ,, known of 4 or .10.1 not ::I , e teller. 0. touter* halr ntld mt. not In' without If each (on t hu d t: no. nowt milli and Val 1./ 4 1,; O.• 1 11•nir,!4111mol nor., 111,. t too, p .111,1, illy family ha. •- tennl N..rmhzt3 The p ain r a•J twelehtrable. We Weil sane. meth it !Mout fr. mouth* Once, w. the ii.e 14 .our 1111 It it. pro, ell restrel.att;l re.ltuees 11( the thoe.ve rent., 1.. e auk! gkv.anturn4 max 1,1111 . •.' fr.* Nun:al:As. titnip..dlalty °ant, w. I.EuroN. (uwarlic, lk.ton, March V., bkall by moll un rr.•Rlpt ofprin• (ha. p0c1,12(.. ....1 111 Po-I.lr SIN 3.01) Cu . •'' It i• /.1,141 I.y .11 dealer. to dru,.7., aad 11,1 , ‘ and by TUItNEIt. & Suk Prvpr rt. Tntont Street 1i0r.1013.. i• It at Wire relltree. anti iii. nzorate. ALL alt •• TAL leCNi.3lOl , lll, d'ltAnrof ,I , ••• , 4, at any Il2a. • rtretturstancer, the cloy of then. The Initet coupler , and undara.•. test. has for many year. attend,d u.e it,: and in some portions of the United Nee. I. 110 W uttered to the aelteralinthil , •.' , /' ahaulute et in teflon that It can het, to. ~ • pilala alt that la claimed for It. ft Is tuttlau.s IY Till LaTtiCtect And undeent I eirenmilance.: and k by any remedy yet knot. 1. , the 0,,r1.1 , :t ; ittlelratiVe is iMGi atria. it r U.< In ate op.rtillood ; .. r ' u free from treitalloll. and 1. 11. the gen e , ttierlaXee or eicite,, We u, tt In 111110, De•Latoa., el,i. ir i•r....r.tha.E. or •rittlltmoo. and hence canton I WI Inns t • r) atonal (.41/4,...11/11 ColaAoror nurdar , o ,4l4 f i•;lic i r • Br,,orrAll.y. (Warr . 11,r/er./01.01. tinter and ititAo - tit0n,0,, , ,, '..? and sAmttieotffr the ,eatolifeo ; orhmol, rI, P ql • ''a4 p ll.ncliofiooluattr.• InA.l 1: ,, 0ar0 6 • - Owe , And all kliolred illee.lan, can .• ' tiettoi..r t I,to ue greatly b yet powerful mmetly. to 1111.0. 11E11471. with Ila lll•eharatole panintelite--Illetitill and ; hyalt.al , " owthrsd, lassitude of mind :AO! teal,. • Indriapnal/Inla to rXercia,, /ma /,,14ofOle 1 • • • trust—al it/ ileoponikory. trool--01l dol.:true. under It• notpc lotto.] It regulates mot tnslt:orates the hew' •L. i. a t‘, 1, •MT11101.11t for e7atioctie von re WV. ind joi••:•: , . • renewed rigor to the ernowA; rink , . th e at the LIVKIft dieolpatea the tellow d), of /, DICE and erudirates from the ;Ain. ln.(1//. iiititfrvekles. it cxcit , the h. to rani cat, viiptrotra and healthy/tenon certain to, blip; prompt relief In AU '• fMora and Ille”totery. tri• ernl urnNy ~(/manual In The core et At..t ..nr it utit UDLa, however Infantile. fur colic. leopoiii, and Irritation Alta ter'l..• Satire ter/Ala'. Asa rosmot rut, On Plutt , lltn, It ta a•Vue • none tither.-taten w nth the food It opet-d , " t ' t general rilterolice, uhereby the entire trupoe'l ninm 4 sthunbted to ranewett energy, sad healthy vt::or and vitality. It la esteted,.,! Lr at inn FACI'LST as a torgentent old cathartic having no action Othex thin the etc tended. &ST Sent by mall on rrcelpt pn, portage, vta.: I Box 10.115 pottage. 6 etc Bois LOU t. IS ry It I. Fold he all dreier. In drags and m odletor..! by TURN glt .Ih. Nole Proprietor , . /1 0 1 ' moot Pl., Matron, rasa. ' A GENTS WANTED.-I.IU PElt by the AMERICAN KNITTINO X'tt Ill' CO, BOSTON, MASS. or ST.LOCIS, Ya tldi 1 1
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