VTEONESDAT, " ICoTrmberi.lrt To the Farmers. VT lib mT tfcantt fat the IIWJ patrociT-gs or Um year, uCr r vut urr'!e " Commission Merchants TO THE Dairymen of the Glades. We luvre WI Urj nJ in Teasing BUTTER TRADE, SatisMsi to cur ilpi , selling at higH prices; end U1 always end Sales and Check rKSf"- aU Oiadaa, we remain Respectfully, dc, Kcaaard & Oudeshys. ButlBr" OGEnnssaca Herchants. S3 EXCHANGE PLACE, BALTIMORE, MIX " """ The Trident tasked bis proc lamation siting aside Thursuay.o Tenner 2Cihf aj of national thanksgiving. One of tic infamous cireularsis sued from the Drmocra. office last week, bore the ear-narks so plaiuly that there is no mistaking the owner. Rnrrlr no one but the author of the famous denunciation "doomed to fnrprer consignment amid the defeat cd and distracted cohorts of machina tion," could have inserted this litera ry gem in an appeal totbePeniocra cjBe at the polls next Tuesday and repel such rebuke, such trickery, &c." We thought that Somerset county posted the champion Democratic falsifiers of the district, but we are reluctantlr compelled to admit that the r.edford Gazette IUO ITU I ." v are entitled to the belt. In an editorial article in the last issue of that journal we find the fol lowing: "The Meyersdale Independ- "ent contains a communication which " w'e presume was written by Col. "Yutzy or under his advice which "urges" Somerset Democrats to sup " port him because he opposed Judge "Hall. The many readers of the Independ ent in this county will bear us witness that no tueh article rH appeared in that journal. Therefore the Gazette wiUully, deliberately and with malice prepense coined the lie. We admit that we are not capable of fathoming the depth of meanness and depravity to which a Democratic editor can de scend, but we believe that the man capable of bo gross a moral derelic tion would have, had the opportunity been given him underbid Judas Is carriot. At this writing the work of the nni;il mmnfliirn is over, and all' jrviltivH O that remains to be done is for the electors to cast their ballots to deter mine the issue. It is customary with the close of a campaign to dismiss at once all things counccted with its conduct, save the genert'l results, but so gross, unprin cipled, and regardless of truth has been the actions of the Democratic leaders in this place that we deem an eiposure of it due to the cause of public morals. On Wednesday morning last at 8 o'clock the editor of this journal re ceived a dispatch from the Chairman of tbe Republican County Committee of .Blair county announcing that Reilly Lad withdrawn. So improba ble did this 6eem and so determined were we not to be implicated in the circulation of fake reports, that we forthwith sought out the Chairman of the Democratic County Commit tec and eeveral leading Democratic politicians, submitted the dispatch to them, and inquired as to its probable truth. They all proclaimed U faise, declared that dispatches bad been re ceived tbe previous night denying the troth of the allegation, and charg ed tbaj it was a false report started by the friend of Mr. Blair. Struck by tbe singular fact that dispatches were' received denying a report be fore it, lad obtained circulation, and determined if possible to ascertain the truth, we caused a dispatch to be t-eut to Altoona, asking further infor mation! ' The reply was "There iB no mistake I have seen Reilly'a official declination; Uarrisburg Patriot de nounces him editorially." On the re ceipt :c-f this dispatch U waa admit ted by tbe men who had previously denied itj that they had information the previous niglt that Reilly bad withdrawn but that be would be .tpd for notwithstanding. Here w as an admission that they bad not only grossly lied, but bad wantonly and knowingly lied when tbey charg ed Mr. Blair's friends with telegraph ing tere a false report. Shortly afterwards a email poster was circulated throughout tbe county calling on tbe Totera to ' pay no at tention to tbe last Republican dodge. John Reilly Is still a candidate." Thus it w ill be observed tbe fact ol Reilly' withdrawal was not only suppressed and inferentially denied, but again the Republicans were charg ed with circulating a falsehood, w hen at the very time these men bad in their: pockets tbe evidence of its truth. Thursdays' mail brought in the papers the card of Mr. Reilly finally witbdrawipg from the canvass, the ITarrusburg . Patriot denouncing him for so doing and the Pittsburgh To t announcing, the fact, and suggesting that William J. Baer be substituted as tbe candidate- Knowing- Low wretchedly and shamelessly these men had lied, acd believing deliberate attempt was1 &elagBat tt Impose upon the peo- C U CaDUiUBie WCO Uau W UlHiravtU ; from the canvas tie Chairman .-, ' the republican Committee had print ed and circulated a slip with tbe names of six Republicans of tLis place attached, containing lleilly's dispatch and letter of withdrawal, and the editorial articles from the Patriot and Pod, all Democratic au thority and testimony. On Friday Keilly dispatched from Philadelphia saying: " Tfie conferees having refused to accept my dclina tion, I regard it as a public duty to remain in the field as a candidate for Congress, &c, &c. Then these scoundrels issued an other poster in which they again de liberately charged their Republican neighbors with falsehood, implied that the articles taken from tne i triJ and tbe Pod were forgeries, anu to scree, thewselrea from detection in their former lies, suppressed the first sentence of Reilley's dispatch admitting Le bad withdrawn, viz: " 77, c cor, ferret living refuted to ac cept my declination?1 We submit that sj damnable a record was never before made by men lawyers, church members, Sun day school teachers, in a decent and moral community, and we tuus uoia up to public scorn as bars and slan derers the men engaged in this most disgusting and disreputable charla tanism. OVR SEW TOHK E.KTTER. New YtttK, November, 2, 1874. TDE PAY OF THE PEOPLE WHO AMUSE VS. They who do the w orld the most good are uot ihoMj who get tno beat pay lor it. 1 be clergy mau ft ho gets $J00 a year m the couuiry has to uriag to his profession talent of the liigUeot order, aud is compelled to do an auiount of labor thai would kill an ordmary dray-horee, aud the bauie may bo said ot the couuiry editor, iLts lawyer aud the physician, liui ine popular actors aud oiuger they have ail the good things ol li!e m eiiuied. fcouihern lor lustauce has played Lord Duudreary 5.U0U times, lor which be has received au average o! $lUufor each performance, maa tug the suug sum of UUO.UUU foi the one piece. Joe JeUersou has played Rip Van Wiukle truies, auU has averawd over $500 lor each pertoruiaucc. 'lie has made (aud uas it yei; over a uiiuiou oi uouoio. liooth gets ?0UO a uight wheu he pluye lor a ceriaiuty, but be has re ceived as high as 3,U0O for a single performance. iiui the Upera singers oeai, iuc actors mi eutic:og money cut ol the potkeu of tbe people Milsson does, uot open ber mouth bhort ol $2,000 a uight, aud Lueca aud the other toug- hnds get but lull less, lhey live like Jt'riucessea aud throw away uiouey with both haudi But the writera aud arusts qo cot fare as well; $100 for a magazine article looks rather large, but theu it lakes Paitou weeks to write cue. heu a poet pet hHy dollars for a utile poem, it looki like paying a great deal for a siuall piece ot w ork, out remember that the poet laooreu weeks aud weeks constructing the poem, aud polishing aud finishing the iues alter they were consuutieu l'he Liifhest TaT journalists get lu .New York is paid Wbilelaw Keid, ot ihe Tribune, who gets i,uoo pet annum. BromleV. w bo is the clear er! wit on the Xew York press, Goes his delightful 6arcasni on the l riuune M $5000 a year. there are el- cepiiuoal cases. I' rum w v - week jB considered g"a PJ uu h i. ; are couutcu as ill Vll nni(jvi lUCt-v Th authors of books make but very liule by their work. There is occasionally an Uncle Tom's Cabin, which made a fortune tor iuc and two or three for the puuuoue, and the Lamn-Liffhter 8 just o In mt A3 unci- pssful. But tuese are two out of a million. Out of one hundred books published, ninety are flat dead failures. Of the remaining ten, probablv one may reach a sale of 10,000 copies. The author gets for his convnirht ten per cent oi vue retail price, which on a $1.50 book would be fifteen cents. If be tells 10,000 be gets $1,500. But the rhnnppa urn nn a hundred to one arainst its bavincr any 6uch sale, book that sells $2,500 is considered a fair success, which gives tbe author $375 for his labor. The most of them manase to run their work through paper first, thus getting double pay Bret ilarte makes a good lair nviu by bis pen, but as yet baa saved uothmg. Messrs. Henri Lrown, oi Thomas W. Knox, and that class writers make more money because ther wcrk barded. The women writers do just about ihe same as their brethren Shirley Dare, Nellie Hutcheson, Mrs. Run kle, "Olivia," and the great army of correspondents and magazine writers manage to make from $3,000 to $5,000 a rear, tbouru there isn'i one of them who ouirbt not to have twice that. How these ladies must envy Nils- son with her $2,000 a night. FAST HORSES. This is the season to see fast horsed in tbe parks acd on tbe trav elinir roads in the vicinity. The cool, crisp weather makes driving delight, and I doubt if any city in the world can show so much in th way of speed. Commodore Vender bilt is the heaviest patron of rapi horse-flesh next to Bonner, of th Ledger; but there are plenty of men unknown to fame who keep sloe uuite as progressive as cither of i hem. These is one team to bo seen everyday on tbe road that can make its mile in 2:22 easily. The horses have been driven singly, one in 2:19, and the other ia 2; IS. It was sold to a California speculator last week for $40,000. And by the way there is no busi ness so profitable, that 1 know of, as the raising, training and matching of carnago horses. Any kind ot a matched team that will do at all for a carriage, is worth $1,200; and teams sell any w here from that figure to $5,000. These teams, understand, make no pretentions to speed or any approach to it. They are simply handsome, well-matchea, stylish horses, that have fairlr decent action and look well in plated harness. Tbey must have some blood in then must be well broken and kind, but above ail must look well. To loot, joo tbe lower floors, tbe most of which well in horses is tbe same thing iu j was saved, but in a damaged cotidi Sew York as it is every where else, i tor. The citizens, men and wt men. Most everything goes here by looks. turned cut cu masse, aod worked be The demend for horses of this class; roical'y to fiave property. Mr. John is always brisk, and the market is ! Daiier, proprietor of lie botel, losses always certain. The life of a horse ! about" $40.000, one-balf of a tjcb is in this city is necessarily brief, even J covered by insurance. iuvuu mcj iv o v.i....j . care of aa carriage norses are. iue close stables and card pavements finish them rapidly COOl'ERATIOJt CLUBS. Some of the workinemcn of the citv have made a move in a d:rec tion which I count good, and the re- i suit of wl ;b I shall watch wun m Unwet V i.pm is lorated at 113 West twentio- . street, workingmen s club, n. ,f.-Ied after those so saccess fallr utained in. England. Al though of recent origin it has a membership of one hundred, compos ed entirely of workingmeo. The reading, "game and conversation rooms are not only neatly but taste fullr furnished, thus providing a pleasant, bome-like place in which tbev may spend their evenings, A'l the'daily and weekly papers are on file, not to speak of a library of fair proportions. It must be borne in mind that this is entirely a work'ng men'a movement, that all the mem bers are poor, and hence the success is tbe more of a surprise. Attached to the club in the lower part of tbe building is a co-operative store, where groceries of all descriptions are sold at w holesale prices. This branch, onlr a few weeks old, has been attended itb gratifying results since its iiiaguration. 1 Jn not so certain about tbe co-operative store, but I am entirely sure as to the read ing room and that part of it. Any thing that will keep working raeD out of doggeries, and gire them ra tional amusement combined with in struction, is a good thing and cannot be too much encouraged. It is a succets that is the library and club part of it and there is no earthly reason why there should not be hun dreds of them in this city, and one or more in every city or village. THE BROOKLYN TROUBLE has settled down into the courts, and it is to be hoped it will stay there till it is decided. Beecher has with drawn all his lecture engagements, because he has to give bis whole mind to bis suits; aud Tilton has an nounced that be will accept no en gagements till after the first of Janu ary, for tbe same reason. lie is with his counsel every minute of tbe day, and is as busy as be can possible be. Mrs. Tilton, contrary to exp-ctation, maintains ber attitude of hostility to Theodora, ad 13 co-operating with his enemies. Florence, the oldest daughter of the disunited pair, has taken a position in one of the public schools in Brooklyn as a teacher. Theodore is very poor. His lecture business was ruined by the Wood hull business, and bis enforced quitting of tbe Independent was an other blow from which he never recovered, lie is financially ruined. Beecher is not troubled in that way, for be holds hit pulpit and his salary, and besides he wa3 well off when the trouble began. But Tilton has friends who will furnish htm with the muni- ons of war, and be will make a desperate fight for bis life. Such men on t die easily or quictlr. BUSINESS 3 picking up a little, but it is not what it ought to be at this season of th? year. The merchants from abroad are buying just as little as her can bar, and var anything. Xone of them know what is the mat ter tbey all say there is produce noueb in tbe country, and that times ought to be good, but they arc not ; and they dare not risk anvtbmg. oo trade languishes.. But tbe theatres do not, and the oar-rooms are aoing a rushing business. In fact tbe kind of business that one would suppose bard times would kill, are doing well. The traffic in articles of neccessity is dull, and tbe trade in articles of lux ury is as brisk as it can be. Curious world this I It is eoing to tane tne . . country a year or two to get back to its normal condition. PlETRO. A Great I ire at tireeneamtle. Indianapolis, October 2C Twen ty-fi vc or thirty buildings were burned at Greencistle, lodiana last night. Tbe fire extended over four squares oa tbe east side of Indiana street, destroying all the buildings except the First national bank. The loss is estimated at $400,000, with but small amount of insurance. It is sup posed that the fire was the work of an incendiary. Upwards of fifty business houses and dwellinEr8 were burned, inciu ding the post office, tbe Greencastle Banner, hotels. Odd Fellows' and Masonic halls, express office, etc, Fires were started bv incendiaries in in other portions of the town, but were extinguished before much dam age was done. The losses aggregate $350,000; insurance, $150,000. Kbaollnc Affray. Louisville, October 2G. A fpc cial to the Courier-Journal reports a a fatal shooting affray between two well-known citizens of Mercer Coun ty, Kentucky. Dr. W. A. Eastland and Frederick Norns bave farmB ad joining, and this morning a party of surveyors were at work fixing tbe boundary line, about which there has been a long dispute. Norris and Eastland met while tho surveyors were at work, and engaged in a dis pute, which finally ended in blows. Eastland struck Noris with a switch, and both parties drew pistols. . East land was shot five times and died soon after. Norris was twice wound ed. A Uorrlble Crime. Indianapolis, Oetober 2G. A terrible crime was discovered on Sat urday on a farm near Anderson, Madison county. Tbe body of a young man named Albert Mawson was found in the unused well badly decomposed. Great excitement pre vailed, and after a two days' session the coroner's jury, on Saturday, found a true bill against the mother (a wid ow), the brother Thomas, and son-in- law and wife, named llappfts. Tbe latter two were afterwards discharged from arrest on grounds of informality in the charges, but the proof is ttrong against them. Some years ago a brother of this Uappaa was killed by another brotber-in-law, named White, who was banged for the deed. Hotel Bar aed. Oakland, Md., October 27. The Glades hotel at this place took fire about 12:30 o'clock this afternoon from a defective flue. There being no Ere apparatus in town, with the exception of a Babcock extinguisher, which did good service in protecting the surrounding property, but mile could be done to stay the flames, acd the hotel was entirely destroyed, with 'tie exception of son e cf tbe furniture ? IGTORY! BLAIR AND YUTZY ELECTED. The Republicans Carry The State. THE STATE. It is reported that Philadelphia has given 10,000 Republican majority, and tbe State is claimed by our friends. The returns are yet very meagre aid unsatisfactory. The Legislature is undoubtedly Republican in both branches, thus se curing tbe election of a Republican United States Senator. CONGRESSIONAL DISTRICT. We believe Mr. Blair to be elected. Our despatches warrant ua in pub lishing tbe following statement: j - Blair. Riley-. Bedford, 250 Blair, 400 Cambria, 1200 Somerset, 1300 . 1700 1450 1450 Blair's maj., 250 SENATORIAL DISTRICT. Colonel Yutzy has a handsome majority for Senator. We give be low as near an approximation to the actual result as 13 possible at this hour: Yutzy. ScHELL. 500 550 Bodford, Fulton, Somerset, 1450 1450 1050 Yutzy'a maj. 400 THE COUNTY. The Republican County Ticket is elected by an average majority of at least 1200. Appended are such re turns as are at band: ts J h" ro r 2 E H m C u M ss r S r - r Somerset bor., 152 91 163 7 8 Somerset tp., 329 127 331 118 Stoystown ) Quemaboning j 70 maj. 59 maj. Conemaugh 11C 34 118 34 Stonvereck, 181 61 180 58 Jenner, 239 53 233 59 NEW YORK. ; The returns from New York are not as satisfactory as we could wish. NEW JERSEY. ' We make a similar observation wi th reference to New Jersey. LOUISIANA. The Democrats bave made some gains in Louisiana Massachusetts has elected a full Republican delegation. Inpartaat DlneoTery In Nevada. The Winnemueca Silver Stale, October 19, says: A short time ago David Butler and others discovered what promises to be one of the rich est mining districts in Northern Ne vada, ten miles from Bartlett Creek, and about seventy miles "as tbe crow Dies' northwest from Winnemueca Upon making the discovery, tbe pros pectors organized a new district which they named Snow Creek, and located six ledges, all of which crop out to a greater or less extent, and contain free gold and silver bearing ores. On the largest and most prom ising of the ledges, named Belle of the West, a shaft bas been sunk to the depth of Gfieen feet, and the ore essays from $244 in silver and $94 in gold to $1,500 per ton. Pieces of ore burned in an ordinary fire yield almost pure silver, bo tractable as to be easily amalgamated by ordinary mill process. The formation in which the ledges are found is granits, and bears a close resemblance to the country at Silver City Idaho. There is pleciy of timber and water in the mountains in which the. ledges have been discovered for all practicle pur poses, and tbe valleys, nnlike the deserts of Central and Southern Nevada, are covered with luxuriant grasses. This soil is alluvial and susceptible of a high St a to of cultiva tion. Deer are plenty in tbe moun taius, and 'be streams are literally alive with trout. Tbe whole couu try is represented as being the most inviting in the Slate to farmers and miners. A road from Leonard Creek to the mines is being built as rapidly as tne means oi tne miue owners will admit of and will be completed in a- few weeks. David ' Butler brought 2.500 pounds of ore from the Belle of the West to Gintz & G Mec ca's Reduction Works last Saturday for tbe purpose of giving it a practi cle test, and if tbe result is as gojd as :s anticipated, lively times may be expected at Snow Creek this wiu- ter, aud an express line, for the ac commodation of miners and others in that vicinity, will be started im mediately from Winnemueca. Bnralarjaad Arsaa. PiTTSBUitaa, November 1. Early this morning burglars entered tbe dwelling of Jacob Tell, on Federal street, and after carrying away the silverware and other articles of val ue, set fire to be bouse. Mr. .Tell awoke his family, aud all escaped by jumping from the wiudows except his son Joseph and a servant named Margaret Lynch. Joseph rushed down tiB stairway through the flames and was t"'D8SlT bgrntd while the servant was suffucjled in the third story; and ber body, blade eued and disfigured, was found after the fire was extinguished. tfaj School Caeatlon. Joh.nstow.v, Pa., October 30. The National Lutheran Evangelical j Sunday School Convention, in ses-j sion here. occupied tbe afternoon of j yesterday in discussing Xnu topics ot rublicatioa and i mperancc. it was resolved to increase the capital stock of the Lutheran Publication House at Philadelphia one hundred thousand dollars, and reccommend ttatall the Sunday schools of 'l.o Church encourage this iustiiuiion and aid in endiug forth its "Lesson Leaves," "Augsburg Teacher," and noted "Father Land" series of books. During last night's session the at tendance was very large, many being unable to gain access to tbe church. The closing exercises of the Conven tion took place to-d y, and consisted of short voluntary addresses, inter spersed with 6iogiiig and prayer. Tbe iu'erest manifested in the pro ceeding was very gieat; and it is confidently hoped that great good may result from tbe labors of the Convention. CrtBMlla of Latlj Dilke. Tbe Berlin crrespondent of the London Times writes: "The body of Lady Dilke, who died fiv weeks ago iu London, was rned on the-10th itstant, at Dres den. The ceremony was performed in the furnace recently invented for burial purposes by Ilerr Siemens, and tbe relatives of the deceased ady permitting strangers to be pres ent, a large number of scientific men attended the experiment, u hen tbe conipauy complied with Ilerr Siem ens' request to offer up a mental prayer, the coffin was placed ia the chamber of tbe furnace; six minutes later the coffin burst; five minutes more and tbe flesh began to u ell away; teu minutes more and tbe skeleton was laid bare; another ten minutes and the bones begau to crumble. Seventy-five minutes after the introduction of the cuHiu into the furnace all that remained if Lady Duke and the coffi a were six Dounds of dust, placed in an urn. Tbe brotber- n-Iaw of deceased was present." Terrible Aeeideat While Hunting;. Memphis, Tenn, October 24. A distressing accident occired in Pon ola country Mississippi, last Wednes day, which cast a gloom over tbe whole country. A .party of four young men were hunting deer in Tallahachie bottom, and became sep arated. One of them, Ben. Mitchell, while pursuing a path through the canebreak, observed the cane shaking ahead of him, and thinking it was caused by a deer, fired the contents of a doubled-barreled shot gun, load ed with buckshot,' and bearing screams, rushed to tbe spot, and found Thomas L. Mosely, one of his companions, lying dead, shot through the bead, David White, another, shot in the head and mortally wounded, and the tbrd one, S. W. Johnson, severely wounded. All the parties were very respectably connected, and the deplorable accident has b: ought mourning and sorrow to many homes. Tbe Famine ia Sebraska. Cincinnati, October 29. The committee appointed yesterday re ported plans to-day to the Chamber of Commerce for rendering aid to the ebraska sufferers. Tbey recoin mended tbe appointment of a man in the Chamber to receive contributions, and that the pastors ot tbe various churches be requested to take up col lections for tbe purpose, and that tbe people of neighboring towns desiring to contribute should do so to the President of the Chamber of Com merce. They further recommended that an office be established to receive and store old clothing contributed, and that a committee to solicit dona tions and correspond with General Ord be appointed. Tbe Chamber of Commerce adopted the report and ap pointed the committee. Belief for tbe Western SnflTerer. Cincinnati, October 23. General Brisbon made an appeal to tbe Cham ber ot Commerce to aid the suffering poor of Nebraska, living in the re gion devasted by grasshoppers. A commiitee of five was appointed by tbe Chamber to devise a plan for fie curing aid in the way of food and clothing. A special to tbe Guzeile from New Castle, Indiana, reports great con sternation in that vicinity on account of fires in tbe timber lauds, which are spreading most alarmiugly, and de stroying fences, endangering houses and killing vast areas of growing timber. Bandit Outrage. San Francisco, October 30. Tbe reports telegraphed from here of a revolution in Lower California mis state the facta of tbe case. There was no revolution, but au expediiion organized by outlaws for the pur pose of robbery. Many outrages and robberies were committed by this band until their appearance at Cape St. Lucas, where they were met by the troops and completely overpow ered, several being killed and tbe balance taken prisoners. All the prisoners are now in jail. Tbe troops recovered $9,000 being a part of the booty. daaannmmmmnmnmnnmmn A Kpeeial Train Bun wltb Special; Rapidity. Jersey City, October 29.--A spe cial train on the Pennsylvania rail road, containing Vice President Cas sett, General Manager Thomson and a number of th superintendents of the western railways, was run from Philadelphia to this city, this after noon, 9G miles, iu one hour and fifiy six minutes. The quickest time was between Philadelph;a and Trenton, thirty miles, in thiny-nine minutes. firemen's Kiot. Pottsvii.le, Pa. Noven.tcr 1 Last night several stables burned at Mahony City, aud after the fire was subdued a dispute arose between members of the various fire compa nies which ended iu a rbt. Pistols, billies and all kinds of available weapons were freely used. George Major, Chief Burgee, was shot and is now lying in a critical condition, tbe ball eoteriug near bis heart. Dan iel Dougherty, who u is thoue'Lt 1, , Major, was shotiu the neck by Wax. Major aod dangerously wouudeJ. Others were wouuded, and the x citement throughout tbe town" runs high. Bloodshed la Lower California. 8av Francisco, October 28. News la lcn received of a revela tion in Lower California. The in surgents plundered and mrdf red many persons, apd then proceeded to Cape St. Luea, heu the people arose and gave t'eiu battle, filling thirteen iuturgeuts, including the leade, tys nulling au end lo the revolution. A B1mIj Oalrage. Shelbyville, October 26. A body of masked villains are again at their hellish work in the eastern por tion of sh's countv. They were seen iu Clay village last Saturday night, i at the breaking up of a protracted' meeliBg there, but took their dl epar-i ture without doiuer any acts ot vio . - . ; lence further than balriug various persons who were returning from the church, rromtbe village tbey went j to Tbos. Ford's, a distance of about one mile and a half, where they whipped three negroes, and threat ened Mr. Ford with similar treatment unless he should drive the negroes off and go to work himself. From Ford's tbey went to the bouse of a negro by the name of Barringer, ua- called to him to come out of the hou-e, aud upon his refusal to do so, begau to lire into the doors and windows with pistols and shot guu?. A pistol ball struck Barritigcr's daughter, a girl of sixteen, who was sleeping on the floor, putting itit ber right eye, fract uring the scapula, buryiug ineif deep in her riirht siioulJer. if uot Indeed in her lung. T vo of tbe murderous wretches theu came into the cabiu, cursed aud abued Barringer, aud got ou ibt ir horses and rode off. This was about three iu the morning. Barringer thiuks there were only six or eight of ther.". at bis house, but the woman who keeps the toll-gale above Clay village .says she counted sixteen passing her house in tbe ear ly pert of the night. Dr. Hickman, of Clay village, and Dr. Widuey, of this place, were called to see tbe wounded girl, wjio is still living, but in a precarious condition. - We are sorry to say that, so far a we have been able to learn, nothing has been done to ferret out the perpetrators ol this cruel and cowardly deed of blood. NINE THOUSAND DOLLARS BEWARD. Louisville, October 29. Govern or Leslie to-day issued a proclama tion, offering an aggregate reward of about $9,000 for t he capture of the masked ruffiians who recently shot the young negro girl in Shelby coun ty- Collision Between e. lielloggr and Major Burke. Nrw Orleans, October 29. About bait past three this afternoon a collision occurred between Govern or Kellogg and Major E. A. Burke, near the corner of Rampart and Ca nal Streets. Governor Kellogg, ac companied by Judge Atlocha, was going borne in a cab, which was stopped.at the place above indicated, aud a conversatiou ensued. Burke put his band in bis breast and at tempted to strike Kellogg, when the Governor pulled his pistol and fired, the shot barely grazing Burke, who thereupon drew his revolver and fired three or four shots without effect. The cab ia which were seated Gov. Kellogg and Judge Attocba was then driven off. Governor Kellogg states that when Burke approached the cab he (Kellogg) extended his hand, which Burke took, and at the sadie moment seized him by the wrist with the oth er band, and attempted to pull Kel logg out, but the Governor being the stronger of the two quickly released himself from Burke's grasp, and at once drew his pistol and fired. Gov ernor Kellogg and Major Burke, in conversatiou with tbe Associated Press agent after tbe shooting, did not differ niaierially iu their versions of tbe affair. Burke was arrested and taken to the Central Police Sta tion, but was released at tbe instance of Judze Attocba, who went to tbe station for that purpose by the re quest of Gov. Kellogg. The dimculty arose from corre spondence iu the papers relative to naturalized citizeus. Bulb the Gov ernor aud Burke were congratulated by their friends on the harmless ter ruination of the affair. Outrage npon a Little Girl. Port Jervis, N. Y., October 28 Tbe following are the particulars of a fiendish crime perpetrated near Gibson's, a small miuing village in Peuusylvauia, and as fiendish, how ever merited, a retributinn following it: Martin Groves, au ignorant and dissipated man about thirty-five years old, bad lived for years ou tbe moun tain back of Gibson's. He was in the habit of nukiuir periodical visits to tbe village, where he iuvariably became more or lees intoxicated. Drunk or sober bo was always con sidered a man of brutish and uabri- died passious. Ou Saturday last he was iu Gibson's. He was uot very druuk, and about thu middle of tho afternoon wan missed. This was something unusual, as it was his cus tom to continue orgies late iulo ihe mVht before departing for horned As his absence was of no importance it merely excited a passiog remark. About 2 o'clock ou Saturday af ternoon Mrs. Davis, the widow of a miner, bad sent ber daughter, about thirteen years 61 age, ou an errand about a mile out of the village. She bad not returned until about four o'clock, and her mother began to grow uneasy about her. A few miuutes after four tbe girl was carried into the bouse by two men in au a; most insensible condition. They said they had found her lying near the road in a piece of woods about half a mile outof the village. Her clothing was badly torn, and her face was bleeding from a large but not dangerous cut abjve the left temple. When spoken to she opeued her ejus and essayed to speak, but was too Teak to artic ulate. Recognizing the girl, the men brought her as quickly as possible to her mother's bouse. It was clear that rbe Jiad been violated by some fiend, who had evidently knocked her sensless by the blow on the bead. Tbo mine surgeon was summoned, and, u-der his treatment, about 9 o'clock at night the girl was able to talk. Her story was tbst she was on her way boiue after doing her erraud, aud w hen she reached the piece of Woods near Moon's creek she saw Martin Groves silling by tbe side of the road. She was afraid of him, and stopped undecided wheth erto go through the woods aud come out in the road below him or pass lighten. His bead was hanging down on bis breast as if he was asleep, and she concluded to go noislessly by him in tbe road. When she got about opposite to wnere be sat be raised bis bead and then rose to bis feet. He stepped iu frout of her and said. "Yer afraid of me, are ye?" "Yes, Martin," said the girl;" "but please don't burt me." He made no reply to this, but took hold of her by both shoulders and pushed her toward the wcod.-. She screamed loudly for help, when he struck her a blow with bis fist on the side of her head, aod she remembers nothing nntjl coming to ber senses acme time before tbe men found ber. She knew sj;o s-eajyinj in the woods and her coudition, but was 'too fr eak to moye. i When this s tory was made known jbroughout the village the greatest excitement prevailed. A crowd of twenty-five men gathered and decid ed upon seekiug out Groves aod giv ing hini summary ju3ti'."e. They proceeded in a body up the mountain aud captured him iu tbe wood. They I ben took him down into a ueep ue- Iticmiuil in., n cvu v v. j . .... i i,- th unis. in luai ioocit ic, i light of tbe moon strujrirling through a heavy mist, the infuriated miners executed the sentence they pronounc ed airainst him, which was that he should die. His eyes were bandaged and his bands bound behind him, and tben be was hanged to the liojb of a chestnut tree and left there until he was dead. He was afterwards buried near tbe hut where he bad lived for years. ' ' Tbe outrage on the Daeis girl was uot Groves' first crime of that na ture. The commission of three simi lar outrages was laid at bis door by general belief, which had made him a terror to all women and children. But all thin does not justify his sum mary punishment, although the gen eral feeling in the vicinity i? that the lynching was just as well as merited. Iflsastroaa Flrea. Cincinnati, October 30. A spe cial despatch from Hart fort City., Ind, says that there is a terrible fire raging in the woousjust south of there, fully four miles in lngth, aod a heavy wind is blowing it alone tbe track of the Fort Wayne, Muncie and Cincin nati Railroad, threatening tbe track and bridges with destruction. A Dayton, Ohio, special savs that the woods and fields between Lmon City and Greenville, andDodson and Greenville, are on fire in many places, hundreds of acres being covered with flames. In the forests tbe flames bave climbed to the tops of the tallest trees, and preseut a terribly grand spectacle at night. Forest fires are also raging in the vicinity of Oxford, Logan, Crestline, New Lexington, Cambridge, Kenton, Ironton, Belle- fontaiue, and Delaware, Ohio, Rush ville, lud., and Russell, Ky. There is a treat scarcity of water at all points. Later, Pittsburch, Pa., Oct, 30. Reports from several suburban local ities convey the intelligence of de structive forest conflagrations, threat eninir serious damage to several vil lages. A communication from Ba den, a small town on the Ohio River, below tbis city, reporta a terrible fire raging two miles back of that place. From Connellsville comes the in telligence of similar fires raging in that vicinity. Forest fires are raging from Bainbridge to Bourneville, Rose county, Ohio, a distance of six miles. A Gazette special reporta extensive fires along the Cleveland, Sandusky Cincinnati Railroads. - Tbe most serious are near Kenton Forest, Belfontain and Urbanna. The high wind to-night increases the devastation and danger. The fire in the timberland near New Custle, Indiana, are reported under control. The damage cannot be ascertained, but must be very large. FIRE IN A GREAT SILVER MINI. San Francisco, October 30. At 2 o'clock this afternoon a. fire broke out in tbe Belcher miue in an 850 feet level. Huge volumes of smoke poured out o tbe shaft. An alarm was promptly given, and the fire de partment turned out in force. Hun dreds of women and children assem bled, fearing that husbands and fath ers were perishing in the mine. They were, however, all got out safely. Haif an hour after tbe fire broke out the flames burst out of the main shaft, several one hundred feet in tbe air, hurling fragments of rock in every direction, it resembled a volcano in action. Tbe timbers ot the shaft to the depth of 1,000 feet will be destroyed, At last accounts it was believed that the fire was un der control. No lives were lost. A PENNSYLVANIA TOWN IN FLAMES . Harrisburq, Oct., 30. A large Gre is raging in Selinsgrove. The Sunbury Fire Department started for there at 7 o clock this evening, the fire can be seen from Lewisburg, fif teen miles above. It is impossible to obtain any particulars to-night. Bbort Horn Cattle. Paris, Ky., October 23. The short horn cattle sale of E. G. Bed ford, which took place at . the fair grounds, near this city, to-day, is the largest sale that has ever been made in Kentucky. Twenty one cows and heifers Bold at tbe average of $1,995, aud fourteen bulls at an average ot $1,195 a total ol $58,715. The sale was largely attended by traders from all parts of the Uuiled States and Canada. Tbe principle animals Bold were: London Duchess ninth, to Jobb Kennedy, of Paris at $C,000; London Duchess seventh, at $5,109, nnd'Lon don Duchess eleventh, at $4,400, to T. J. McGibbon, of Cyntbiana, Ky; twenty-first Duke of Airdrie, at $7, 025, to J. II. Spears & Sous, of Illi nois; London Duke nineteenth, six months old, at $3,500, to Wm. L. P. Mier, live stock auctioneer. After the sale of Mr. E. G. Bedford, Messrs. Ull & Bedford sold twenty-seven cows acd heifers at au average of $442, and sixteen buds at an average of $258 total $15,825. Xatioaal Tbaaksclvia;. Washington, October 16 The following proclamation was promul gated to-day, by the President of the Utited States of America a procla mation. We are reminded by tbe changing seasons that it is time to pause in our daily avocations aud offer thanks to Almighty God for tbe mercies and abundance of the year which is draw ing to a close. The blessings of free governmentcontinue to be vouchsafed to us, the eartb has responded to the labor of the husbandman, the land has been free from pestilence, internal order is being maintained, and peace with oiber Powers has prevailed. It is fitting that at stated periods we should cease from our accustomed pursuits aud from the turmoil of our daily lives and uuite in thankfulness for tbe blessings of the past, and in tbe cultivation of kicdly feelings tow ard each other. Now, therefore recognizing tbe.-ie considerations, I, Ulyssis S. Grant President of the United States, do re commend to all citizens to assemble in in their respective places of worship ou Thursday the 20 day of Noveniber next, and express their thanks for the mercy aud favor of Almighty God, and laying aside all political conten tions and alt secular occupations, to observe such a day as a day of rest, thanksgiving and praire. In wituess whereof I have hereun to set my baud and caused the sea of ihe United States to be affixed. Done at the city of Was-binglon a L ? - L .1. - . A . 1 . void zuu uay oi uctooer.m the year 1874, and of the indeperipence of the United iSijp ihp niuety-niitii. By the President: p. . fiiiJ. Hamilton Fish, Secretary of State, A Remarkable Case. Min'Jaut Valley, N. Y., October 26 On Saturday last an itinerate, peddler entered tbe house of James' Toiin, living near this place, and pro ceeded V) display bis wares to Mrs. Tolin. despite ber assertions that she ' did not, wish to buy anything. Mr. . Tolin was conSa-d 4a his bed and : UBS ucru so conunea lor many yearn, beiai so crioDled with rheumatism . . . . i ' , . ., , . that It had been long impossible for him to icave lis oea unless carried from It. After Showing h 3 goods, and Airs, loan not buying auythiag, the peaaier eotnmencea a conversation, in the course of which Le learned tbe helpless condition of Mr. Tolin. Finally, te made an in sulting proposal to Mrs. Tolin, and she indignantly ordered Lira to leave the house. Instead, be approached her and seized hold of her, saying, with an oath, that she was m his power, as ber husband was as good as dead. Mrs. Tolin being a delicate woman, ran screaming into another room. The peddler followed ber, and before she could escape by the door, caught ber again. A desperate struggle ensued between them, and Mrs. Tolin was thrown violently to the floor by the powerful villiau- Mr. Tolin bad been all tbe time a witness of the struggle, lying powerless in his bed. At tbe Bound of bis wife falling on the floor however, and her frantic shrieks for aid, be seemed to be endowed with supernatural power. Under tbe influence of that power he sprang from the bed he had been unable to leave for years, beizsng a heavy crutch that stood near the bed he rushed into tbe room whtre tbe struggle was going on. Mrs. Toliq had succeeded in regaining her feet, but the peddler had grasped her around the waist and was endeavor ing again to throw her. As Mr. Tolin entered the room the singular spectacle of a bedridden cripple hast euiug to the defence of his wife seemed to paralyze the scoundrel, and he stood star ng as if in a trance atjhe approach of the husband. Mr Tolin. nerved by unnatural strength. brouffbt the crutch down over the head of the. peddler atid felled him l.ke an ox to tbe floor. The uext in stant the excitement and superhu man effort that had supported tbe husband left him. With a shriek, that told of the intense agony of the relapse, he clasped bis hand to his forehead and dropped to tbe floor and almost instantly expired, Mrs Tolin succeeded in getting the body of ber husband back in the bed, and then started for assistance. She waa obliged to go over a mile before she was able to obtain any. When she returned with several neighbors tbe peddler wa3 goue. He had re covered consciousness and fled, leav ing his pack in the bouse. When the news of the attempted outrage and the tragic death of Mr. Tolin spread throughout the neighborhood, tbe most intense excitement prevailed. Squads of men started in every di rection, searching for tbe peddler, but as yet be bas not been found In tbe present feeling, if he falls in to tbe bands of the populace, that he will be lynched there is not tbe slightest doubt. Harder and Robbery. Cincinnati, Oct. 2G. A Spring field dispatch to the Gazette says that Saturday midnight Simon Wolf, an influential citizen, residing with bis father near Byron, Greene Coun ty, Ohio, was murdered and robbed by unknown persons of a gold watch and a larire sum of money. Wolf was employed as traveling agent for a manufacturing company in Indi ana, and was known to habitually carry large sums of money on his person. On Saturday night be bad been visiting Fairfield, a village near by, and returning home at miduight alone, was waylaid and sbot several times in tbe bead, robbed, and kit dead in tbe road. Not the slightest clue to tbe murderers has been tound. Excitement is widespread ani in tense, and a vigorous search for some trace of the perpetrators is in progress. Kebrasfca. Omaha, October 27. Information received from southwestern Nebraska shows that thousands of people are in a Btarving condition. One inform ant saw many who for weeks bad nothing to eat but baked squash and pumpkin and salt, and others who bad lived ou baked four and water- one meal a ay lor weens, ieo thousand people ia this State will need aid sufficient to keep tbem from starvation and cold during tbe winter. Hundreds of people are naked and on the virge of starvation and with out means to leave the State. Snow fell at Laramie and Cbeyeune to-day and heavy rain here. A Coo tllet nitb tjlerasaajr E per ted. London, October 27. A Paris dis patch says authentic information has been received there that liussia is fully convinced that she will, in the course of three or four years, be en gaged in a desperate struggle with Germany. Bismarck is determined to demand the restoration of the German provinces of Russia, and Von Moltko has already his spies in those provinces, and it is said the proposed organization of tbe new Landsturm baa been decided upon in viewef these possible events. Sbot for Rteallna. Elmiea, N. Y., November 1. A young man named Benjamine Ilaight was sbot last night, about two miles from tbis city, while stealing turkeys from the premises or Jlou r.umuna Miller. Tbe shooting was done by a son or jir. inner, naigui ueu inn evening. Heavy Snow rail. Salt Laks, October 30. The Un ion l acme express westward was nine hours late in arriving at O'deo last night Passengers reported ten inches oi snow on the road between O gden and Evanston. Kew Adoertisements. KEYSTONE DIX1XQ BOOHS, tS Liberty Street, PltUbarsta. Pa., F. n. SIMPSON, Proprittor. MEALS ATALL HO V IIS. js-THANSIENT cvstom solicited. sep: N JOTICE. Evangelical Lutheran Church of Boinrrss!," on the loth day of November apply to Hon. wi m ti . .... intff Nnllcn t t,AKw ,!rM lk,l :mIii of Th an. m. nail, a law juog oi eiimrii" . , , Pa., for Improvements, amendments, or alterations ft he articles and condition of Uie charter of said corporation as speeinea m in peuuou, by tb BnlrsWnd, to the Court at Common 1" leas of said eoaaty, en the 27U day of Augcs f" . M. w neij?oaw, OUrer Koepptjr, J. J. Bralher, ' W. H. Knpple, V. aicCoy, "'tf and other. I i At so Ad:erliemen(.i. a substitute fok qcLsnr. F'-r Tfr. qniiilM wm rrip!J u only f-tr mlArlons (finraii, ao.i imiurn qoau ti - i f fri lli. tlrutf were annuaHr cifiraniiM thn-ugb out cur rtrii et-ujiir.v. i--re pani: :rlT aicg fii-rr I !;, ni x.i);lmria iw Uwi.. Hh it fnil ax nits tnaUns. la stl in Tirll fan. Jfalks Uk. an -pi.aii ihrrnuh th lr.l, n l whcle .liFiris r .rr;rir.-J wud rhUU ni lrr. t.c fntirr ((" U lion kakir.g wililtgu. bcI- .(,,; u fru-o ir fsiir.1 i.i tnr. t a rare, u to'1 d.--!.-.! u. u marh .io) '. rrr.iifoasu iui!ive rin urn.. r.i to siwa an tx-.em lhal nx-u-l. u; l cr. th nnni. , w-r s mare.i , t&at tt-.e iDtnxiwtios f Mis 1t' H?r! hiit.ra w billed aa s triumph ;a i(Mt.hlBqom!altjWMMBi,hMOf tb .i Urlsl ef- ntec ttaof that ..rug. Iiw.eaJ of asaws'ir.ir. It Uwi H'l iii'ioniM tM K'imwb. so4 whua tperdiir ; Wxpelliuir th kiioii baour. tnrrsatt in apt. , awi larlUtaire .iiirrsi ho. that r?n!rinif Uj j trn r"Kr. acl Deturr S'.Usd to rraiat tbs at- s-K9 ul mst-aa. id liei. a l. ivvmu as oi .Ml-i.ltr Hero liiiteraat thUaea.nof th far, will prvrnt th recttrrew of thia "iwaac. areo in tlh.e who Uara utwrr paw-l an autumn without It. An e!tpfrti.Ticof twenty yar prot It to b the arrau-n akti rtRioiic known to mwiical Thi-re are. irhap. no diarnart to johitct to ell. ' Enttcehaun!' a auctions of th KMuy. Hue. umla of our farmers, merh.inic. and laNirg; men. ?rnfjr asnl hanty In all other rejrt. tarter continual lneirenieno. and urcssiotaiiy eicro-i-aUnir (xtint in the tack ami a.T"M tb iit.f : tiff, rience s Ireiiuent deatre to pan water, pain daring lu uuiraTv, sn.l frrast rtoj.t jrs in Ua B. w. 1 he tro manifest a i bra real!Tia: tvim om atralnorhesrjr lift fpernap Tear e"t. ! ax a;rTate1 by erery chanirs in th. we: her. fcrery iiL'titenlJ Hi" direct lu tai ne wak root, ar.l unieM trimp'ly attended to :! dlea rxtn.raes rhrvnic, an.i th one tf mil a mtaerani wrvrk. Muhler'i Herti Hlttvrs is the iy eertaia renie.1T f.T thisela of disr. It has a peal iar ten'iencr to th kidneys, rimnljui ibem to heal'hT io-'iin, and remoTini the eaae. prrvrma lh (,.r"inati m f brick-law l -posit, whK i( p-r-Eiitted Wi-mtlnoe, wiil by cvel.ai ft -no srTl tone. nerecUaiioir s painful open; loo l. r i; re aviral. Many of the insrredieon enteritis; into its ennjlcon s"r sniveraaliy re'gn!tl as spent!'- for all eoinplalntaof the srinary onrsn. la Liv er Oimplmnt. Dr'nepsl. all lisnrdera of th Bowel", and afle-tl"us of the Thr .at and Lans, it la equally eertaia and eeaci..U'i: while, a remed Jot the complaints parmiar to tbe Icmsla sol, it 'has noe.o:L L.oikm. old aodyminir. mar ried and sinule. In erery condition of h:. will Hod thi obeat rti RKHEOT prompt, tafr. rerlam an rtiKiaif. i ns pal, fiiiuw eompli xion Is re-pi-v ed by s blootrlcir fcenl!hful niaiiienane, and its occasional enables a!creto p.;rtorm ber luni'lion REilt'LAHLY A5t WITHut'T ISCOSVBX- 1E5CK. Sold only In bottle by sU Dnuriciats and general dealers. Oct. iL Save Doctor Bills! Many dollars en b sare-i annually by u.!r.:f SVliniidl'fl Compound railed Man a Vneod or r'amilv txem. wi.ich is a tome wine bitters, prepar. ed by L. r. SCHJUOr, at No. Mi Henn avenue, fituiiurirh. Fa. This compound U eompei ,.f roots and herb, an. I strictly pure wine: It u pleas ant to inke and Invigorates the wb.!e sjscem: 1; is a valuable Uniily uie.li.-ine: it wiii core all i;t. esses of the bowels: it Is preventative of 1 era. and aa a blood puriner it is unexcelled. Tbe jemaud for this popular medicine Is so inn: i.t beretoiore it has been impossible to till aj orlerv. .Mr. Schmidt Uas lately increased the f:.i;;s i,.r preparing 1L The price is SI per bottle. sti Ut:ion xuarant ed Try s bottle and it will need no recommendation to oontinn- its V. have used .he bitters in cor own family and ksuw whe'reof wo speak. . Try it, teadcr, it will do you good. an12 DMINISTKATOR'S NOTICE 1 boiaie of Thomas Listen, late ot Addison Twp., deceased. Letters cf administration on the above estat having; been grunted the undersigned, notk-e Is hereby given to thiae indebted to it to make Imme diate paytneut. and those havingclaims against It, to present thein duly authenticated for settlement, sni allowance. ALFREDS. MITCH I'LL, Ji-ki-illAH L1ST( N. octl4 Administrators. E 7XECUT011S NOTICE. Estate of Samuel C'royle. late of Conemaugh Tp., deceased. Letters testamentary ua the above estat having been granted to the undersigned, notice is hereby given to those indebted to it to make Imme diate payment, and thos having claims axainst it to present them duly authenticated lor settlement on Saturday, .the 'ilst day of November. lbT-t, at the late residence ol deceased. SUSAN CROYLE, KxeeUtrlX. JOSEPH CKOVLK, oct 11 txocutor. J EXECUTOR'S NOTICE, tats of Joseph Miller, late of MUfonJ Twp., deceased. Letters testamentary on th above estate having been granted to tb undersigned by the proper aa thoriiv, notice Is hereby given to those indebted to It to nlake immediate payment, and tbos bavins; elaims against it to present them dly authenticat ed tor settlement on Monday, November as. 1K74, at the honse ol John Welle r. at (jrel harts. in said township. JOHNWlLLtK, octl Kxecutor. A JLsjrai!2tiTi ail Glanuiaii flf ableo Ar Tisie! Prospectus for 1873 Eighth Year. THE ALDINE, THI ART JOURNAL OF AMERICA, Issued Monthly. 'A Magnificent Concep ion, out." wonderfully carried The ncecfsltv of a popular medium fortherw recntaiion of the prouuctlo of oar great artista, bus always been rtOguired. and many attempts bave been m.ide u meet th wont. The successive failures wiik-Ii so invarialdy foiiowl each a touipt in this country to establish an art journal, did not prove the indifference of th people of America to the claims ol bib art. So soon as a proper appre ciation of the waul and an ability to m jet It were shown, the public at once rallied wlih ni.i.asiara to Us support, and th result was a gre t artistic and eotnuiercbil triumph THE ALblNE. Tilt aLLiI.NE, wuile issued with all tne regrj lariiv. has none of ho ta.prary or timely tnten-rt ch. racterlstic of ordinary j.erli.dicals. It is an el egaitv unscdiaiiy ol pure, light, and gracelul liter ature: nn i a collection of pictures, its rarest spec imens of artis te skill, in black ani white. Al though eao succeeding number atfords a frvsh pi eacure to its trienos. the real value aud beauty of TH E ALlilN L will bo most appreciated alter it is bound np at the close oi tne year While other publications may clajut sufterior cheapness, as coii.parei with rivals ut a similar class, T ME ALLl.c Is a unique and original conception alone and unapproaeiieil absolutely wuhbut com petition in price or cfaarjetcr. The possessor of a complete volume cannot duplicate the quantity of hne paper and engravings in any other snap or itumtier ol volumes for ten times its cost; aud men there la th chromo, besides Thenalitnal lealureol THE ALDINE must be taken in no narrow s-ne. True art U cosmopoll. tan. While TH E ALlilN E Is a strict v American Institution, it hx.s not connne itself entirely to the reproduction of native art. its mission is to cnlti va eabroad and appreciative art laate, one that will discriminate ouly on grounds of lntriusie merit. Tims, while placing before the patrons of THE ALDlNE, as a leaoins; characteristic, the productions ot the most noted American artists, attention will always be given to specimens from lorcign masters, giving suiiseri!cra all tbe pleas ure aid instructiou obtainable from home or for eign sources. Vbe artistic illustration of American scenery, original with THE ALDINE. in an important feature, and lis magnificent plates are ol a size more appropriate to the satislaclory treatment of details Loan can be afforded by any Inferior page. The judicious intrrspersion ol landscape, marine, Ogure, and animal subjects, sustain sn unabated interest. Impossible where the scope of the work cm hues the artist too closely to a single style of ul'ject. The literature of THE ALIilNE is a light and graceful accompaniment, worthy of the artistic features, with only such technical disquisi tions as do not iutertere with the popular Interest of the work. PREMIUM FOR 1873. Every subscriber for 1TT5 will receive a beautiful portrait. In oil colors, of the same noble dog whose picture in a former issue attracted so much atten tion. "Man's Unselfish Friend" will be welcome in every home. Everybody loves such a dog. and tbe portrait is executed so true to the lile. tnat it seems the veritable presence of the animal itself. The Kev. T. De WiuTalmuge telis that his own Newloundiand dog (th biiest in Brooklyn) barks at it. Although So natural, no one who sees this premium chromo will have th slightest learoi Deiug bitten. resides tho chromo. every advance subscriber to THE ALDINE fur lsT&ts constituted a number, aud entitled to all the privileges of THE ALDINE ART UNION. TT Union owns th originals of 11 THE AL DINE pictures, which, with other paintings and engravings, are to be distribute.! among tb ; mem bers. To every series ol i. subscrioers. Indif ferent pieces, valued at over 2.S ar distributed aa soon the scries Is lull, and th awards of each series as made, sre to b published in the next uwVjng is-ue of THE ALDINE. This feat tfieoniy app'.k-l th suhscjlbrrs who pay forenj ysar in advance, full particular, m cJVcoJar fen ou application entlosinil a stamp. TERMS. (Hie subscription, eutitlin to THE ALDINE one year, the Chromo and tbe Art Union, $6 00 per annum, in advance. (Noeharje lor p tige.) Specimen Copies of THE ALDD? E SO rents. THE ALDINE wilt hereafter be obtainable only by subscription. Ther will be o reduced or club rate-- cash for fubscMption mast be sent to tjh pat-.ibher direct, or handed to the local canvasser, Ubut f spoostbilliy to tbe-Lutxitheri, exceprta Sust wlf-tt th certificate Is given, bearing tM lac-simile signatare of James Sutton, President. CANVASSERS WANTED. Any person wishing to act permanently as a lo cal et rivasser will receive fuU and prompt Infurroa M by applying to THE AXDIXE COJIPAY, U Maiden Lane, New Tar.
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