Findlay Jeffersonian (Findlay, Ohio : 1870). (Findlay, OH) 1872-03 … · 2017. 12. 19. · E. G....

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E. G. DE WOLFE 4 CO., Proprietors, Let vs have Faith that Bight makes Might, and in that Faith let us to the end dare to do our Duty as tee understand it. Abraham Lincols. TEEMS Two Dollars Ter Annum VOL. XVIIMNO XLIII. FINDLAY, HANCOCK COUNTY, OHIO, FRIDAY MORNING, MARCH 8, IS72. WHOLE NUMBER 671 The Jeffersonian OK WirE, . . mdtukSfrr Pint Door East of Post Office. rune xp.v, on year- - till TIttJta:ix nwnuw.. 1 00 (.Turn months JOB PRINTING. Ma vinarmadelara- - addition toon restablish- - ment in the unapt) of material of tbe latest style, and having emploveU experienced and careful workmen, we areprepared to execute order for every variety of Flais and Fancy JoBPsrirrnto with neatness and dispatcn. The addition 01 Bieam rower to oar eslanusn-me- nt affords us great advantages over moat eoantrronieeain vne way 01 low pneea and ai wora uaii wiiu ns ana oscon vineea. Religious t 1RST PRKSB FTF.RIA.N CHURCH A ' B, Fields, Pastor. Services every Sabbath at 1US o'clock. A. M., and? o'clock, P. M. Sab Dain acnooi u o'clock, A. M. Prayer Meet-in- s 7 o'clock P. M Thursday evening. Cor ner 01 Mia buu ""jin aireeia. riRSTVOtiUREQATTmvAT.orrrmnmia - WPeterson,Pasur.ServiceaeverySabbaUi , at 1UX o'clock, A. at, and 7 o'clock, P. M. Sabbath School z o'clock, P. M. Prayer Meet--' ln 7, dock Thursday evening. Broadway, vi auun-rus- s street. "T ODZ8T EPISCOPAL CHURCH, Eev. . Oliver k.nnedy. Pastor. Services every Bab- - , bath at 1(1 o'clock. .A. M., and t o'clock, P. M. Sabbath School 2 o'clock, P. M. Prayer, " MeaUa; T o'clock Thursday evening. San-- 1 dasfcy street, west of Main street. ... ENGLISB- - LUTHERAN CHURCH, Rev. P. S. Hooper Pastor. Services every Sabbath - at 10X o'clock. A. M and 7 o'clock. V. M. . Sabbath School at o'clock, A. M. Prayer Meeting 7 o'clock Thursday evening. Craw ford etxest west ot Main street. UNITED BRETHREN IN CHRIST, Rev.T. I. Harbaugh,Pastor. Services every Sabbath at IU o'clock, A. M., and 7 o'clock, P.M., Sab- bath School at o'clock, A. M. Prayer Meet-n- g 7 o'clock Thursday evening. Corner of Crawford and West streets. CHURCH Ot WUD.Kront streeUwestorMain. . Rev. J. W. Awkerman. Pastor Services on Sabbath at 104 o'clock. A. M and 7 o'cloc. P. M. Babbaib-oehoo- l at P. M- - Prayer meeting every Tnurs day evening at 7 ociock. r. MICHAEL'S CA THOLICCHURCH.Ker. J. r. yooNO. Pastor. Every other tsaboatn. First Mass at s o'clock, A. M High Mass at 10, A. M Catechism at 2, P.M. tservlcesin (j-r- mu and French. Mass every morning at 8 o'clock. A. M. West end ol Main-Cros- s street. (J ERMA NL UTHERAti SLjohn's)CHURCH, Rev. M. Bnerkle, pastor, eervicea every other Sabbath at 10 o'clock, A. M Sabbath School at o'clock, A. M. Singing Society at 7 o'clock Friday evening. Corner of West and Front streets. ESGL1BH REFORMED (SL, PatWs)CHURCH, Rev. Josiah May, Pastor. Services every other Sabbath at 10 o'clock. A. M. ast end of Main-Cro- ss street. GERMAN REFORMED CHURCH, Rev. J. Q. Kuhl, Pastor. Services every other Sabbath at o'clock. A. M. Sabbath School at In o clock, A. M. Prayer Meeting at 7 o'clock weanesoay evening, feast end oi Main Cross street. EVANGELICAL C URCH, Rev. E. B Croase, Pastor. Services every Sabath at 10 o'clock, A. M- - and 7 o'clock, P. M. Prayer meeting Wednesday evening, San- - tL' dusky street east of Main. flNDLAT COUNCIL. NO. 50 R. & M. Regular Convocation second Monday in each :nonth. Jakfs Wruux, T. L G. M, B. B. ' BkAjtneXEr, Recorder. F1SDLA T CHAPTER. NO. 58. R. A. M. Regular Convocation, First Monday in each month. B. F. KutK0K8,H. P, D. B. Beabds let, eecretary. FINDLAY LODGE, NO. 2Z7, F. A A. M. Regular Communication First and Third Wednesdays in eacn montn. ai. u. pattek- - 8ox W M,0. J. 1e Wolfe, Secretary. B LAN CHARD LODGE NO. tOS. P. A. X. Regular Communication Second and Fourth Wednesdays In each month, B. F. Kia- - woxs,W. M, F. W. Frjuus, Secretary. GOLDEN RULE ENCAMPMENT, NO. 92, I. o. O. F. Stated neetines on tbe second end fourth Fridays ot each month. 7 o'clock, P. M, m Odd Fellows' HslL D.C,Fihee C P, and U. 1. wixoEKS. Scribe. 3ANCOCE LODGE NO. TZ, I. O. O. P. Ktated meetings every Tuesday evening at 7 o'clock, P. M-- . in Odd Fellow's Hall. J. V. BrrskET,, N. J. C Poweli, Sec'y. I Danartnra and Arrival of Malls at the days r i o Findlay Post Office. I in DEPABTtTKE. Can Brameh C.S.AC. HR- - &30 a-- m rmmiU Branch L.JCtL RK-- ; 1:30 p. m. AKBIVAtS. CUre Bnmck C 8. CRR--r&- y. M. JvsmhU Branch L. L.R&J UM a. m. DtPABTDKE. nce Faw Bmtn, Portage, Mmgeu and Bowling Green Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday, at 8am. ML Slanehard, Hourktovn and Ewing's Comer Tuesday ana Baturaay, at l p. nr. . Arlington, Williamlomnand Dunkirk Tuesday ana saturaay, at l p. m. . Oi a wow io Mi p, Haaan and Raumon Tuesday In and Friday, at 8 p. m. Co Ridge, ouowa, Roanoke, Belmore and Sif the ts Tuesday ana rnaav, at i a. m. Smioa Xnr. fiumley and Pendleton TtiAmj, ding atSa.m. Street, McCotnb and tttags Center Wednesday and Baturaay, at 1 p-- n. OmCK BOUSa. Open at 7 a. m. and dose at p. m. Wheel Persons holding boxes must pay rent on the same within the first ten dayso leach quarter. Quarters commence Jan- - April, July and Oct. Int. Persona taking papers through the office W. must pay the postage in advance, or they will oe uiaoonunuea. ine loiioviag w uieuuw I tAriTrauaafDodtam: Paoers DUblishea sev f I OT en times a week. Jj cents : times, 30 cents ; uned S times, 15 cento ; twice a week, 10 cents; once a week, 6 cents ; monthly, over 4 ounces, 4 ounces and leas, 3 cents. cents; A- - BALLOTJ, P. IC Business Directory. CsraawT Sevea iasMSt fswertotf 1st this 1esarCsMBtwl the paper at Six. DeUan frr AaHna. Attorneys at Law A. F. ANDERSON. AT LAW, will attend ATTORNEY Special attention given to collections, office an Schwartz's Building, Main Street, Findlay, Ohio. C. . BABND. Jim AT LAW COLLECTION A ATTORNEY In Carlin'a Block, oppo- site the Court House. Special attention giv- en and to collection in town and country. Loans negotiated on lavorahle terms. Get. 20, 1871. JAMES A. BOPE, AT LAW. jTTORXEY of umce over W. L. Davis & Co.'s Store, Main Street, Findlay. Ohio. apr. 14, "71) BKHBT BBOW3T. .I.DDHS. BBOWN 4k DTNN. a TTORNEYB AT LAW. Findlay. O. W1U always be in attendance at tuelr office, over "Old White Corner," nrst door South of i no Conn House, and will Etve promnt oer- - no sonal attention to all legal business entrusted cure ly. to their care. TO JACOB F. BUBJLET, a TTORVKY AND COUNSELLOR AT LAW A and Notary fubllc Will attend prompt-i- . or , il business entrusted to his care. Par the ticular attention given to Collections, Parti- tioning ol lands, and business in Frobate OFFICE on Main Street. East of tbe Court House, in room formerly occupied by Brown M Burket. Imav7. Moaaaji itBHim. AABoa b. SHIFEB BKOA-- , In I AVING formed a for the land practice oi uw, wui pracuos in owe and unltea twates uwna sn wm aivv nmmnt aUADUOD w all easiness oiaceu i" their bands. Otuoein Wheeler's Block, Find This lay, omo. imay a. a TTORVF.Y AT LAW and Claim Aeen the A Will practice law in State and U.S. Courts dy aiud attend promptly to business Intrusted to his ears. As Justice of the Peace will attend to Conveyancing and taking depositions. Office and Boom No. U Melodeon canning, Findlay, o. JOHN M. HAIUI. AT LAW and Notary Public, ATTORNEY in all Stale and Federal Court. Office in Patterson's Block, Corner Main and Sandnaky earat. ring lay. Obto. EO. F. FESIDLETX. a COUNSELLOR AT LAW. A. Uffioe over the Bed Corner Drug store. North f Court House. Jan Sfc, "72-l- y CITIZEN'S BAH it. 1ARLIN3 A CO BANKERS. Banking I i Houae in Bawson's Block. No. Main street, Findlay, Ohio. Banking Homrt from S to 13 o'clock, Mand from I to 4 o'clock, P.M A veneral banking buslneasdone. Interest on special deposita. h. r. aob. raju.ee casus. Johs A. Mecks, Cashier. HABCOCK BABTst, 1 N HENDERSON'S BLOCK, Findlay, Ohio, I Sella Drafts on Enaiand. Ireland. Germany, and all principal cities of Europe, In sums to suit purchasers, and do a general banking bus- - ln XI. r. uauc m IAS. FIBST ATIOSAL BASK OF FINDLAY AUTHORIZED CAPITAL HOODOO. of the United States. Bankini s to u tn JLSisn-JxJ0- 0 w?HrVhSw ag,tM JSm A . am, C.E.N Hotels KABT1N BiOCBE. CORNER MAIN AND CORY STREETS. J flrst-cla- ss nouse in every partlcolar. wm.aarfiB v. aui in Brandies, wines, liquors, and Rye Whiskies, Etc. AKEKICAH HOUSE, SRENN1NOER, Proprietor. Corner Main Streets. Findlav. Ohio. Xhe central location of this House makes It he moat aesiraui i w vop at in nnaiay tabels are always supplied with the besl he arkeu Good stanias and hostlers. Roots and Shoes JOHM EK ING T. H. BE DICK IN HOOTS A.NU SHOES, Hats Md C.t'lotliing,Len.thernd Findings. im w, kwioci diock nam oireei. r iiifiiny. rtiii. Dentists 1UL. U. A. K4MESBCKU, . . I ENTA L XVBM EON. Partlcnlar attention 1 f HI veil To Hi. t r.-- uifti! itl natural it leeta nlied cold-lol- l, tin-lo- ll ana silver. Satisfaction guaranteed in all esses. Office over w eLsh's Shoe Store, Main Street Findlay CCKIUL, OPERATIVE AND MECHANICAL DEN J Ust, Cromley's Block. Ail operations pertaining to the profession, earetnlly and skillfully performed. Residence, No 23, West lunun street. SB. J. CASK, CJ URGEOJf DENTIST, havine practiced twen O tv-ti- veara in Findlav and vicinitv. will Insert teeth In all the different styles. Diseas ed Teeth and Gums treated in a scientific man ner. Teeth extracted without pain. Office in Henderson's block, over Hanoock Bank. Druggists S. A J. M. HCBEK A CO DEALERS IN DRUGS, Stationery, School PrescrtpUoiisaoctirately com pounded at all hours day or niehu Perfectly ure Drugs guaranteed. Corner Main and ialn Cross Streets. Dry Goods J. J. HUEUtK O- - . DEALERS In Staple and Fancy Dry 'Goods, Boouand Shoes. lLhind I'nt. eus etc, Kos. 81 and 6, Main street, Findlay, S. BAU.ENTCIE. . W.S.P08T J. 8. BAX.1.EXTIXE A CO., DEALERS IN FOREIGN and Domestic Dry Goods, Yankee Notions, wmieiaooua. urniamnff uoous, .no. ,v. Alain street. BARNEY, HXIDEB A CO. THE GREAT CASH HOUSE, "Old White bv Court House. A complete Drv Goods Store. Clothing Store. Boot and Shoe Store, Hat and Cap Store, Millinery Store, Fur Dtore, carpet otore. rue piaoe wnere close ouyers Dtiy. r ouow tne crowa. PATTBOai WlSIilKs, DEALERS IN DRY GOOD8.MillinervGo J Ladies' and Gent's Furs, Clothing, Car pels, ns iaps, etc, .nun. vt ana w aiain fet. Groceries D. LINE SONS, TTHOLE8ALE AND RETAIL DEALERS II in Grooerels. Flour. urn and a General variety in tbe Grocery and Provision line. Good prices paid for Butter, Eggs, and Coun- try Produce generally. East side of Main SU, nrst aoor noruioi uoit nww oiotk. r tnoiav. niiin rAnpil i; :(L(n ISAAC DAVIS. HXNET B GREEK DAVIS GREEN, I T HOLES ALE AND RETAIL GROCERS II and Commission Merchants and Dealers Flour, Salt, Fish, Wooden and Willow Ware sec, see, corner oi aiam ana oanausKy streets. . I BATB. J. W. DAVIS, JC. X, nXTWILKK ' DATIS BROS. CO, IfTHOLSSALE AND RETAIL GROCERS IT and dealers in rlonr. Provisions. Wooden liw .nil KlAn. U'.M r(UlbMinn 1.' . t . Notions and general variety. Goods at Whole Benevolent at Cleveland and Toledo prices. Nos. 21 u, sub duwu Hardware St'THBIFF Jk CORT. the to stock of Shelf Goods. No. 65. Ewing's Block, Main Street. Physicians and Surgeons F. W. FIRMIN. X. I PTWCIAN AND SURGEON. OFFICE Block, over Crystal Front Drue Store. Residence on East Hardin Street, 8d bouse East of Presbyterian Church. CHAS OESTEKXIX. W. M. DXTWILER OE8TEBLIN A DETWILEB, in PHYSICIAN A HOMfEPATHIC and Residence Main Kt. opposite the "Goit House." Findlay Otiio. EN TRIM IX A II.I.EB, PHT8ICIAXH SURGEONS. Surgical and desirinK to consult Dr. Kn. for trikln will And him in the office on Wednea- - and ssturdays from 10 o'clock .m. toi A ciock p. m. ur Miller can be consulted on those Tuesdays and Fridays at same heurs. Offioe term room formerly occupied by Dr. Entrikln. AKBOH BUS. H. D. EALLAKD short HC(A ABA 1LAEO, PHYSICIAN'S AND to practice Medicine and Surgery will promptly attend to all calls. Of- - over rrey a iuinser s urui store. Millinery HKJt.A.r. E.IXDSAT, THE ATTENTION OF THE INVITES fresh and desirable stock of Goods, Hats, Bonnets and Trimmings: fact, a eeneral assortment ot Ladies' Fur nishing Goods of the latest styles, bought al late decline, and will be sold atcorres non- - prices. Lannert's Block, East side Main Findlay, Ohio. (April 5, 70-- tf 1 KISS JULIA A. PAKKEE, to call attention to bar stock ol DESIRES Goods. Hats, Bonnets and Trim. which she Is receiving at W. H. A J. J v'a Store. Main Street, Findlay. Ohio. 1 j. S. OS BOEN, I.. A. BALDWIK and OSBOK9 BALDWIN. of ENERA L PRODUCE M ERCHANTS, Deal ers in Butter, Eggs, Lard, Feathers, Seeds, Fruits, Beeswax, Pelts, Hides and Coun CirjaMaai Eohsute. TOTTES BSOSU, AND RETAIL DEALERS in WHOLESALE Snuff and Pines. A splendid stock ol Fine Cut, Short's Plug and Smoking Tobacco,. A full line of Bale Goods constantly on band. No. 75, Main Street. Special Notices. A LECTURE Old VTO YOUNG MEN. Published in a Sealed Envelope. Price 6 eft. Lecture oi tbe Katnr, Treatmeat Radical Cure of Spennatorrbaa, or Weakness, Involuntary Emissions, DebiUty, and Impediments to Marriage generally. Nervousness, Consumption. Epil-- To jsy, anu r lis ; enuu ana rnysicai resulting from Self Abuse. Ac, By OBERT J. CCLVERWELL. A. il Author the -- Green Book," Ac. ine woria-renown- minor, in i n is Lecture, clearly proves Irotn his own ex- perience that the awful consequences of may be effectually removed without medicines, and without dangerous surgical operations, bougies, instruments, lings, or ooruiais, point ing out a moue oi cure at once THE certain and etlectual by which every sufferer. matter wnat nts condition may ne, may himsell cheaply, privately, and radical THIS LECTURE WILL PROVE A BOON With THOUSANDS AND THOUSANDS. the Seat under seal, to anv address, in a Plain sealed enve ope, on the receipt of six cents, two postage stamps. Also. Dr. Cnlverwell's and of Publishers, and VHSN. J. - HUXK CO., 137 Bowery. New Tork. a Post Office Box 4.54S. the TO THE SUFFERING. The Bev. William H. Norton, while residing Brazil as a Missionary, discovered In that the of medicines, a remedy for Comrxp. tios, scboftla, sore taboat, coughs, Colds, Asthma, ash Nekvocs Wxakxess. remedy has cured mysell after all other medicines had failed. Wishing to benefit the suffering, I will send recipe for preparing and using this reme to all who desire it FREE OF CHARGit. Please send an envelope, with your name address on it. Address, Rev. WILLIAM H. NORTON, C7C Broadway, New York City, nolt-l- y. WEDLOCK. The Basis or Civil. Socirrr. Essays for Young Men on the honor and happiness ol Marriage, and the evils and dancers of Celib Bankers with sanitary help for the attainment ol 'a true position In life. Sent treejnaealed envelopes. Address, HOWARD ASSOCLA TION, Box P. Philadelphia, To . hot k NEW BOOK every shasild pea. FIRST HELt IN ACCIDENTS AND IN SICKNESS. A Guide in tbe absence of Medical Assist ance. Published with the approval of the . nest aieuicai Auinomy. The following are some ol its subjects: Bites, Bleeding, Broken Bones, Bruises, Barns, Choking, Cholera, Cold. Contusions, jLnsiocaiioni Drowning. Dysenlery. Fevers, Fractures, Hanging, Nursing, Poisoning. Scalds, Small-po- x, Sprains, BuUocallon, Sun stroke, ete, etc This volume, written by eminent Physi- cians, has been prepared for the press by the bdllorsoi GOOD HEALTH MONTHLY MAO- - ZINE, 12mo- - 26S paces, with 2S Illustrations Bound, tlM, Stitched. tljH, pi Sold by all Booksellers, and sent by mail. postpaid, on receipt or price, oy no2Sl PubUt her , Motion. as SUTTON'S ACADIBT OT MUSIC, in (Cor. Main and Backers Slav,) Ada, Obi. IPrinclpa - tb USE SEELY'S ' Victoria Regia For the Handkerchief. SEELY'S " POMADE OIL," For the Hair. SEErY'S FLAVORING EXTRACTS. LEMON, VANILLA, Etc. "Donqnet of Ohio," For the Handkerchief. SEELY'S COCOA CREAM. As a Hair "Dressing. In fact all toilet and culinnrv preparations bearing the name of J. M. SEELY, are guar- anteed strictly pure and reliable. For sale by all 11 rst class dealers everywhere SLICER & McMMESS, Eincllay, Olkio, Agent Jor J. HL Seely & Co's navoring Extracts. J. M. SEELY & CO. DETROIT MICH. Dec 1871.3m Northwestern Ohio NORMAL 00 L The second Term of this flourishing Institu tion, AT ABA, WILLOPEX Monday, Nov. 27, 1871, AND WILL Continue SIXTEEN WEEKS It Is the ohieel of the Tnslilntlnn to nrAvi.le to best means of obtaining a thorough and 'nu-uca- i euucauon lorait wnowisn loatieuu. Neither pains nor ex Dense have been snared make the Institution all that narentamtiihl wish as a Dlace for the education of Mielrctitl. aren. ine curriculum embraces, beside the common branches, Greek, Latin, P. German, Prench. Higher Mathematics, Natural Sciences. Book Keeping, and Penmanship: for No extra chanre lor an v branch advertised tbe curriculum. TUITION For common branches, 60c per week; lor higher, ooc wwo ooani can be ootainea at irora c- - --t to he to per week- - Room rent from to isle ner his week. Normal class will be formed each term tliespecial instruction of thoMe desiring to to leacn. of Normal Term of six weeks is Intended for act who cannot be In attendance A lull in at any season of the year. Particular attention will ItA Hven in the Aneorvana t'racuce oi 'Aeacnina- annua Lne session. Jiasie tnaKht in all its departments. who CA LENDAK FOR 1871-- 2. Winter term beetns Nov. 27. Spring term lei.l March 'Jti. .1.. .Kiiiuai h i i.i "ryim 10. For further information send for catalogue. sola H. K. LKHK, Is. t: J r.l- - Oct. 1 1.1 871 6m. J.G.PARK. NEW GROCERY ! A- T- BENTON RIDGE. ADAMS A CO. would say ts the citizens ol Benton and vicinity that they have es tablished a Fnmily Gp-cer- in their midst, will keen Flour. Fish. Salt, and all kinds Groceries, which will be sold at lTincllay Prices They will pay Findlav nrices. In CASH, for Produce of all kinds. Cash paid for Hides and Felts. May 13. liCO-l-f. Wood-Sawin- g Machines, and Hcrse Powers. AM NOW MANUFACTURING HORSE POWERS, adapted to the running ot CinKTl"llLLS. WOOD ANU CIRCULAR and other purposes requiring similar power. Call and see me before purchasing elsewhere, at the Jackson Foundry," near Warehou JESSE WOLF AGENTS WANTED EVERYWHERE, tell the most popular work ever bef-tr- e intro duced le uie American jruouc, THE GREAT CONFLAGRATION. CHICAGO. Its past, asd fctcrc ORIGIN. PROGRESS A"D RESL LTS OFTIiU GKKAT tHU ADU graphic scenes, incidents, and details or disaster. Lists of the principal Bankers, Manufacturers, and Merchants who are A complete picture of Chicaco before after the lire. The Trade and Commerce Chicago. Dotailsof its Municipal Allaire, the Great r iresoi tne worm. The statistics ol tne fire iiepnnmeui. wuu dtscription of the A'onderful Water Works. Description oi ineMewerage.pavingaau materials. The extraordinary marvel ot River running up stream. The number. location anu moueoi operating uie unu .'- A evators. History and description of tne la- - mous Stock Yards. The number oi iiauroaus, Lake Trade and Commerce. From personal observations by GEORGE P.TTFTOIN". (Peregrine Pickle) Literary Editor Chicago Tribune, ASD JAMES W. SHKAHAX, JZlilorof Chicago Tribune. A tmnk of 330 nnires. illustrated by the best artists, aud will be worthy of the confidence ofaJL '.t Price in extra Cloth and Gilt, ELM. W ill be enl bv mnil fln rpcetnt of nrice. This worn can only oe obtainea irom un Publishers or from their resular authorizea aeents. as it is sold exclusively bv subscrip tion, and cannot lie obtained from any book stores tn the in Ilea Mates. AUUress UNION PUBLISHING CO.. as (n wi i lui Twenty-secon- d St., Chicago. it FOUTZ'S CELEBRATED Horse This prepaimtioa, ton asd fftTormbly known, will tboraaKbljr reHnviKorate broken down and Lanes, by strengthening and cleansing th riomsca and intestines. It is a sure prer entire or an dlwaw ineid-n- t to this antnial.snchas LL'XG WATER, HEAVES, COUGHS, PIS-- 4&K . . aA s bit, r a v 1. i r V as l'f.n, LOSS OP APPETITE ASD TITAL EN'ERGY, Ac Its an improves A uie win a, increases iu appeute u rives a smooth and tVx, akin aad f transforms the a,i,rTahhi altAa i ' into s and spirited horse. tgLnWf&3mfZr To keeper of Gov this prepan tioa is icTaltuble. It is m sore against Rinderpest. Hollow Horn, etc It has been prorea bj actoal experiarat to increase the quantity of milk and cream and make the butter firm a and sweet. In fattrainc cattle, it res them an appetite, loosens their hide, and makes themthxire much faster. Xn all diseases ot Sarins, such as Coughs, rieers ia Lonm. Layer, cc, uus arucieacis a specific By putting from ooe- - . bair a paper ua pptr w mrra av a "l :u ... Si. ma will h. eradi. flan If' cated or entirely prerented. Ifriren time, a certain preventive and cure for tbe Hoc Cholera. DATID Es FOUTZ, Proprietor, BALTIMORE. Hi. For sale br DratTaists and Starekerpcn throaghoul I'nitcd States. Canada and South Xstma. HUMPHREYS' Homeopathic Specifics. A FxinLT Midicise Chest U a Jamil nr ecuily. You must have soiuethinK to K've for a com, lora neauacne,aiarrnea,rneumatism neuralgia, toothache.eroup, whoopinK-coue- h orotiierof the hundred ills that are sure to come, rorwamed is forearmed. You have it 1 ll a case of HUM PH REYS' HOMEOPATH IC hPECIFICM. eiiuiple so you make no mistake; ready o you need not wait; safe so you may act fearies&iy ; eracient so you may feel confident. Medicine that cure but do not kill; they save, but do not destroy, Price in No. Cures Hoxes. FeTera,Conzestlon,Inflamations 2 M onus. Worm Fever, Worm Colic Irylasr.couc.or leetlilng oi in- - Iiarrbem,of Children or Adults-- . fsSKK,!!;!!E "i rKKiSlfcs! Heataelie,.SIck Heada'lie.Verligo Si frr'iuiTF 1 W liitea,too I'rofiiHe Periods 25 . - ' .u.v ... n t 'i k 1 f,. r li ......... il..nlt .... .... If r.... .. 1 . i p,. ) . i:ruptions,tiiUt Hheuni, Krjslpe- - IttrnmatUra, Rheumatic Pains lii 1 irr anil Ague, Chills, Fever, f lesf Blind or Bleeding irlithalmy,ana bore or Weak ;yes 19 - Influ- - w hooplns-Cwiiic- h ViolentCouglis 50 Astbniav,Oppresiied lireathhip 60 Kar Uischarges, Impaired Hearing SM Nerof ailawKnlaived tilandsJjwell- - iccs Ml General Debility .Physical Weak- - nropsy and Scanty Secretions Sea-Sic- k atess Sickness from Hid ing. 27 " Kldaey Disease, Gravel 23 Nervous Uebilltv. involuntarv. Discharges, and Seminal Emission 1 00 29 " No re Mouth, Canker 80 30 " 1 rinary Weakness. Wet' lug Bed. (mj 31 rainini rerious, Mysteri8.. oo SJ " Nnrrerina; at Change of Lite 1 00 Z psm-s.nt- . viius i ce , 34 IHptueria Ulcerated Sore Throat 501 in viais, targe size...ioc. and 1 00 FAMILY CHESTS, in Morocco, with 35 lanre.'idram vials, containing the above and Book of Direction complete S10 00 buu SOLD BY AW. DRUGUIHTS. Sent by mail ok express free, on beceipt or 4KICE. Address liUM PrTREYS' SPECIFIC HOMEOPATH IC M EDICINE CO., Office and Depot, No. btsi Broadway N. Y PONDS' EXTRACT C'nres Pile's. Xenraljria. TootSiacbe. Blee4linr of the LnncN. .Meniarb. Mame r other Organs, itaras. Brntaes, Lnnw cm, Kpratina, sniiMiin, sore Ihroat, ssrpKyM BloiH. 4'ornw, 1 Irers. Oltl SorCH. The best Family Medicine 14 now n. Price, liox.-Mr- .; Pints, SI ; Quarts. JI.75. SOLD BY ALL DHlitiULSTS. June 1G IS71. 1 y. For sale by W. L. Miller & Co., Druggists, Findlay Ohio. in ed To any person producing any Medicine anie show one-thir- d as many liviinr. permnnent cures as Dr. Fitijck s Veuictaiii.e Kiikumat- - icKkmeky : and a Jurthrr rtHardnl illio lor aucase of C hronic or Iu tlamiiiator) Itlieu ina-tiii- n. Neuraluia. Khetimalic Auue. tScialica. and Klieuniaiiuu of the Kidneys ( trill nut cure. ThiKHlieumnlic Syrup utucd tniranfy only, pleasant to tne taste, and KUaranleeu Ol tree from Injurious It IS noi a H Meliciue, but the prescription olJos. Filler, XL I)., Proleworof Toxicology and ChemlKtry, graduate of the celebrated Uni- versity ol A. !., INCt, whose en in tire proiessiouai uie nas oeen uevoieu JS to tliisiliwae. ThUpreparatlon undersol- - emn oath is conscientiously believeit to be tbe only positive, reliable hieci nee ver discovered. The prool that no other specific ever exists Is a found in every community in nelsons alllicted many years past end still sutterlue. ll phuneuiuM could cure it. if a tttecitic did eziM. muwouia sot oe o, a tact mai mul ie uni versally auniuieu. ineoit ueceivei suerer msy wisely ask, whatsecurily orevidence has that Dr. Filler's RheumaticSyrup will cure case. The protection otlered to inttlents aiaiiiHt imposition is in a legally siitned con- tract ed which will be forward d without cluinte any sunererseuuine by letter a uefcriutlon alllctioiiK; this guarantee will state the ex number of bottles warranted to cure, and case of failure the money paid will be re- turned to the patient. No other remedy has ever lieenollered on such liberal and terms. Medical advice, with certificates from prominent Physicians, Clerevmen. etc. have been cored after all other treat ments failed, sent by letter, eratis. Afflicted the cordially invited to write lor advice to the principal nmce.ss south Fourth street phiia- - of !..!.... I . ... Til- - . . . . . .. I uy tfruggisis. W. L. MILLER CO.. Jane 10, 71-- ly Sole Agents, Findlay, Ohio. KOSADALIS the er The ixc v.v.v. that iCOMPOSE r.)-- . '1.:5 are a published on every . ' there fore it is not a secret p ejuralion, an consequently rOTSICIASS PEESCBIBE IT It is a certain cure for Scrofula, of Syphilis in all its forms. Rheuma tism, kin Lhseases, Liver com plaint asd ail diseases of the Ulood. iir A will do nxire good tlian ten Wiles the ttf ihm Syrur oC baraapanlla. THE UNDERSIGNED PHYSICIANS are used Rosadalis in their practice for the past three years and freely endorse it as a reliable Alterative and Blood Purifier. DR. T. C. PtJGH, of Baltimoio. DR. T. J. BOYKiy, " the PR. B. W.CARR. DR. F. O. DANXF.LLT. - tlie DR. J. S. SPARKS, of Nicholuville, DB.K"l. McCARTHA, Columbia, to DR. A. B. NOBLES, Edsecomh, N. C. USED AND EITDOESED BY J. B. FRENCH k SONS, FaU Hirer, Alass. F. W. SMITH, Jacksnn, Mich. A. F. WHFXLKR. Lima, Ohio. B. HALL.Lima.Ohio. CRAVEN A CO Gordonsrille. Va. ' SA.M'L. G. McFADDEN, Murfrecs-- 1 boro, Tcnn. it Our space will not allow of any ex- tended remarks in relation to the irtuesof Rosadalis. Tothe Vedical Profession we guarantee a Fluid ct superior to any they hare ever jucd in the treatment of diseased jlilnod; and to thealflirted we say try was lUiKaUalia, and you will be restored arm la health. I:a;a.!.Uii is sold by all Drnprists, jpritj IJI-O- per bottle. Address j 13. & CO. 2Ianlifacturina . firm - - - , tQ I ' I BalTtsosx. is. July 21 1871 ly. Tbe and Complete Piclorial History of the Times." had by The Best. Cheapest and most ecess- - was I nl tauiliy raperia ine s. ailoss. ' Harper's Weekly. SPLISniDLT 1LXCSTKATED. Notices of the Press. all The model newspaperof ourcountry. Com- plete in nil Uie departments of an American Family Paper. Harper's Weeklu hasearned for for uf Clvm- - xot,ii-Aiourna- l The best publication of Its class in America, not to permit of any coniparixou between and any of their number. Itscoluranscon-tni- n tbe finest collections of readiinc matter that are printed. eelt illustrai ions are numeron end beautnui, being furnished by the cbief artists of Uie country. Boston Trav Harper's Weeklu Is the best and most Inter- esting illustrated newspaper. Nor does its value depend on its illustrations alone. Its reading matter is of a higher order ot literary np merit varied, instructive, entertaining and unexceptionable. A'. F. Sun. SUBSCRIPTIONS. 1872 TERMS: Harper's Weekly, one year. An extra copy of either the Magazine, or Bazar, will be supplied (rails for every old club of five Subscribers at $4 UI In one re- mittance; or, six copies for &U UO, without an extra copy. tiubsenptionn to Harper's Magazine, Weekly, and Bazar, lo one address lor one year, lu uu; or, two of Harper's Periodicals, to one ad- dress, for one year, 17 00. Hack numbers can be supplied at any time. The annual volumes of Harper's Weeklu, in neat cloth binding, will be sent by express, free of expeir-e- . for (7 00 each. A complete set, comprising Fifteen Volumes, sent on re- ceipt of cash at tne rate otto Xi per volume," freight at the expense of the purcluuer. The postage on Harper's Weeklu is 30 cents year, which must be paid at the subscriber's fislollice. Address HARPER BROTHERS. N. Y. Great Western Gun Works. Rifles j Double aad Single Baxrel. BbotGuns: Revolvers: Ammunition: as Sporting Goods. Rifle Barrels, Locks,Monnt-ings,iu- n liaterials.tc (Send fora Price List. Atidress J. H. Johnston, Great Western Gun Works. 179 Hmlthneld Street. Pittbureh Pa. N. H. Army Carbines! Kiflea aud Revolver bought or traded lor. aoao-m- o Miscellaneous. WILD WESTERN LIFE. A Colorado of Ten Years Ago. Tue passage by tbe Legislature of a bill appropriation; Cve hundred dol- lar to Thomas T. Tobio for tbe kill ing ,f one ot the E'piftOSas 10 1863, recalls to mind oneo. the most ro-- mantic, and,8tthe same time terri Die, incidents in the history Of SOUtb and which, in connetion with the Kevriolds rmprrilla raid, a Vear I r , 1 l.lt 1. 1 ! a 1 unci, wicw a suauvw VI terror nuu iear over that eecliou of country m which the bloody scenes were enacted. After a lapse of nine fcara the whirli- gig of time again brings this affair to light,- - and at this diatace from the actual occurrence of the tragic event. tbey ec-cr-a but as the memory of a dream. The Espinoe a were cou ics Span- iarda outlaws from old Mexico, who came up into Colorado m the year 1SG3, rnd before the strong arm of justice red reached them succeeded in assassinating between twenty and thirty of the hardy pioneers and mi ners Of that day.wbo WCtC Struggling Q aeveioi) mis wonder ,l '""J rich country, The elder EsDinosa w.m a large. coarse, Dara-viaage- villainous looking rulhan, while his companion was a small lellow, of no particular individuality, possessing every thing but tlie elements of a law abiding citizen, , despe rate, 6ly and treacherous. The story goes that the older Espinosa was a rdi"ir.us monomaniac.impressed with the idea that for some fancied wrong lor some unconscious tieea whereby the sins or tne tatiier had been visit ed upon his head, or as an atonement for his own shortcomings, ho was commanded by some patron saint. some ruling and guiding spirit, or Nemesis, to avenge the crime against conscience, to go forth into the world, slaughter indiscriminately the whites, In olfer a prayer whenever he set a soul free, and thus hope to merit and at tain the smiles and gracious favor of his ruling spirit. ith this task be fore him he enlisted the services of er his cousin, and together they journey northward and entered into Colo rado. On this trail of blood the trip was diversified by 'the killing of two men in SautaFe.and a soldier at Conejcs. It wss in March 1863, that tbey ai rived in tbeviciuity of Canon City. There ILey lurked three weeks ,,! l.onon in roalitir t lio miir.Wniu r . iect OI lue:r II11S31UU. -- MD8 men were assassinated, and tho news of the terrible scourge became circulated otucr portions of the Territory. o one was lei t to tell tbe tale oi ho these dread events occurred, and for tuse the tlebtu ot various parties it was wrapped in an impenetrable mystery. The people of that vicinity were ar palled, stiicken with fear, scarcely daiing to venture beyond the rraclicl immediate aid. It seem like a mysterious visitation of Providence if Providence ever sends bullets through men's hearts and no odc could tell 'Irom what conceal' ment the messenger of death, which had never missed its mark, might reach liim.'' The dread despair, the feeling of uncertainty, tho reign terror, the fear of an unseen and ' uokrriwn foe pervaded tbe hearts oi me thoee eturdj pioneers who dared face any clanger open and known. The assassinations became more and trequect Men would leave their cabins, their camps or the cities of mountains, destined for another section, only to be found a few days later by somo more fortunate travel stark and dead with a bullet through thei- - hearts. Under thcsecircumstances not company of twenty volunteers was raised in Park county, and headed by energetic leader, all lully deter- mined to solve the mystery. The first gocd work dooe was to punish a gang thieves ; but this did not reach the cause of their trouble, and the mur- ders continued. At Ued Rock Riae. neir Fairplay, me immeiiate vicin- - ho cr me ueoessee nouse, an along as trails, murdered men were found singly and in pairs. Ere long, a trail in the lower part of the the park leading toward Canon City, this c troops of twenty men followed it and ous. finally came to a pot where two fort wero feeding. Concealment was work of an instant, and ere long hunters were rewarded by the the appearance of two men, who proved be the Kspinosas. In tbe fast re cesses of the mountains they had halted to divide their fpoils and tore fresh their wearied frames, and were Pcq probably planning their immediate It future operations, me sight ol these men were as exasperating as was the memory of their fiendish deeds, and and was but a few seconds before rifles were drawn upon their forms and bullets went speeding on their deadly errand. The elder Espinosa fell, but not killed raising himself on one he fought like a wounded and bloodthirsty tiger against his adver saries, i be contents ot two revol- vers were disehargtd by his hand, wkhout doing any injury to the sol dicrs, and be Cnslly fell and died the young Espinosa was unharmed, with the agility of a goas be the sprang into the rocks, scrambled er away, and made his escape. tbat UpDn examining tbe dead fiend who been thus summarily disposed ot the mountaineers, a horrid sight made manifest. There was the blood-stain- ed clothing ot a dozen was victims of his murderous bullets, was to dear friends away back in tl e ico East, memorandum books, personal use trinkets, ot little intrinsic value, but But going to sbow that the assassina the tions were carried on, not so much gain as for tbe mere pleasure and the gratification of murder, or else, as we have SUooeBted above, to appease the ing wrath of some offended spirit. Tbe head of the Espinosa was decapitated and sent to Canon City, where we The believe the skull remains to this day. But here the depredations did not cease. The escaped Espinosa picked a companion, called a cousin a Mexican finds a cousin in almost any but corner of God's footstool and im- buing him with the spirit of despera- tion, or inculcating a feeling of re- venge for some fancied wrong, they continued the bloody business of the firm though on a much less scale. They drilled into the southern por- tion of the Territory, ravaged Cone jos, Saguache, Costillo and other counties, until finally they were d by troops and several citizens from Fort Garland. A reward bad been offered by the Governor of the Territory for .the apprehension of the remaining murderers, and various efforts had been made to capture or kill them. The party had been search- ing for several day, when they were ambushed by the circling of several crows in the air, which old mountain- eers declared a good sign of the vi- cinity of the object of their Eearcb, no other beings besides themselves were known to be in that neighbor hood. And, snre enough, the sign proved infallible, and the murderers were discovered and both killed. On the body of one was found a book of prayers and and a quantity of ic sane rabpsodies the latter written by tie elder Epinosa, One of these rahpsodies ended thus, "The Virgin Mary will be sitting on my head until i die in her arms Amen. Jesus! A large amount of like ejaculations seem to show that it was probably a religious monomania that led to the deeds committed. However this may be, tbey were the worst bandits that ever crosed the borders of the Territory, and the end of their lives was but iu consonance with their daily acts. The older Espinosa had addressed a paper to Governor of the Territory stt'iDg forth that he bad killed twen ty two men, and on that account de manded that his property be restored to him although what bis property might have consisted of is not very clear! v shown. FUN AT WINTER SCHOOL. BY. C. D. WARNER. I never knew a boy farmer who was not eager to tro to tbe district school in the winter. There is such Chance for lealnino'. that he must D, oe a dnll hoy, who does not come out in me spring a fair skater, an accu rate snow-bail- er, and an accom plished slider-dow- n hill, with or with ont a board, on his seat, on his stomach or on his feet. Take a mod erate hill, with a foot slide down it worn to icy smoothness, and a "cro round" of boys on it, and there is nothing like it for whittling away boot leather. The boy is tbe shoe maker's friend. An active lad can wear down a pair ot cowhide soles in a week so that the ice will scrape his toes. Sleddinz or coasting is also slow fun compared tothe 'bareback' sliding down a steep hill over a hard, glistening crnst. It is not only dan- gerous, bat it is destructive to jacket and pantaloons, to a degree to make tailor laugn. If any other animal wore out his skin as fast as a school boy does his clothes in winter, he would need a new one once a month a country district school, patches were not by any means a sign of pov erty, but of the boy's courage and adventurous disposition. Our elders used to threaten to dr.ess us in leath ana put sheet iron scats in our trousers. The boy taid that he wore out bis trousers on tbe bard seats in the school house, cipheiing hard sums, t or that extraordinary state' ment ho received two castigations, one at home, that was mild, and one from the school master, who was careful to lay the rod upon the boy's to sliding place, punishing him as he ocoscly called it on a slidmi; ecile. according to the thinness of his pan laioons. What I liked best at school, how to ever, was the study of history, early istory, the Indian wars. We studied mosly at noon time, and we hal it illustrated as the children now have "object lessons' though our ed object was not so much to have les sons as it was to revive real history men oi tue scuooi nouse rose a round hill, upon which tradition said bad stood in colonial times a block house, built by the settlers for de fense against the Indians. For the Indians had the idea that the whites were not settled enough, and used to camo nights to settle them with a tomahawk. It was called Fort Hill. was. very steep on each side, and river ran close by. it was a charming place in summer, where one could find laurel, and checker berries, or sassafras roots, and sit in the cool breeze, looking at the mountains across tbe river, and listening to tbe murmur of the Deerfield. The Meth the oduts built a meeting house there ftcrwards, but the hill was so slip ha pery in winter that the aged could climb it, and the wind raged so fiercely tbat it blew nearly all the young Methodists away (many of tee horn were afterwards heard of in the West,) and finally the meeting bouse snd itself came down into the valley, and grew a steeple, and enjoyed itself to ever afterwards. It used to be a est in New England that a meeting ase ought to stand as near heaven possible. Tlu Unym. nL mm. .a.ul-sW- tJ it themselves into two parties; one was Early Settlers and the other tbe and quota, tbe latter the most numer- - a . . swJ, - as t 1 I ne ariy semers oum a snow on the hill, and a strong fortress the was, constructed or snow balls, rolled up to a vast siza (larger than Cyclopian block of stone which tbe form the Etruscan walls in Italy,) piled one upon another, and tho whole be cemented by pouring on water which froze and made tbe walls solid. The iots helped the whites bnild it. bad a covered way under tbe snow, through which only could it be we and it bad bastions and towers well openings to fire from, and s great was many other things tor whi?h there e no names in military books. by And it had a glacis and a ditch out- side. by When it was completed, the Early tbe Settlers, leaving the women in tbe school house, a prey to the Indians, to nsed to retire into it and await the and attack of the Fequota. There was only handful of the garrison, while Indiacs were many, and also bar barous. And it was in this light that and great question was settled, wheth tbe a boy might snow-ba- ll with balls and he had soaked over night in and water and let freeze. They were as hard as cobble stones, and if a boy should be hit in the head by one of them, he could not tell whether he a Fequot or an early settler. It tbe considered as unfair to nse these balls in an open fight, as it is to poisoned ammunition in real war. by as the whites were protected by fort, and the Indians were treach his erous by nature, it was decided that latter might use tbe hard missiles. of The Pequots used to come swarm np tbe bill, wun niueous war-whoop- s, of attacking the fort on all sides with great noise and a shower of balls. garrison replied with yells of de- - R. Dance and well-direct- snots, burling back tbe invaders when they at- tempted in to scale the walls. Tbe set- tlers hsd the advantage of position, bis they were sometimes overpow- ered by numbers, and would often have had to surrender but for the tbe ringing of the school bell. The Pe- quots were in great fear of the school bell. al I do not remember that the whites ever hauled down their flag and sur- rendered voluntarily, but once or twice the fort was carried by storm the garrison was massacred to a boy, and thrown ont of the fortressJ for having been first scalped, lo take a in boy's cap was to scalp him, and after that he was dead, if he played fair. There wexe a great many hard hits given and taken, but always cneer- - fully, for it was in tho cause of our early history. The history ot Greece and Borne was stuff compared to this. Samuel Goodkidgk, of Canaan, Me., is the oldest man in New Eng land 105 years. His last farm labor was performed in bis ninety ninth year. His wife lived to be ninety-seve- n, and their oldest child is now living at the age of eighty-on- o. BRIBERY IN KANSAS. HOW SENATORS POMEROY AND CALDWELL GOT THEIR SEATS IN THE U. S. SENATE. Elections with Money in Them- -- How the Pacific Railroad Got Their Agents Into the Senate. Official report of the Investigating Committee of the Kansas Legislature. Mr. President, the Smaieand House of Repre-- mwira . The committee appointed by the foregoing resolution met on 2lith of January, 1872, and organized and issued subpoenas for witneses, and adjourned until Tuesday, the 30th of Jsnuaty, and on that day met and lirWraueu iu i iub iBumooy ui witnesses, and continued from day to iav asVa1 siasiaaii tfin tntr! t . t ro s 1..1 i r I rnony we ue Jc-roary-, iS,z e summoned to appear before ns persons within the State, of whom it lm aDarroil f hair Lrnnw oamvtliinr t ""J" mal":r ol wqry, ana uie weamnoujr t inubo wag appeared uuu mo mo suiuoiiH ui me wiicurreut. reaoiuuou uie committee employed James Chew as mcir citra, nuu reuueeu tu wr,l,nS all the testimony taken, which testi many is herewith submitted and made a part of our report: rrom me testimony taken your committee lind : 1 bat at tuo senator ial election ot 1867 , , , , , IV i u: .1 : ... v.:u. I 8 F !r and influence the members the Leg islature to secure the election of S. C, Pomeroy, E G. Boss, and Thomas Carney, Perry Fuller, and others in their employ. See the report of a committee sp pointed in l8Gi, in How Journal of 1877. from page 957,971, inclusive; I also see testimony herewith submit to ted of George A. Reynolds, I. S. Ksl locb, K. D. Mobley, S. D. McDonald, Thomas D. Ortine, Joshua Wheeler, William Skruggs, D. R. Anthony, bd. liussel et al. lt also appears, in reference to that election, that S. C, Pomery and Sidney Clarke, in March I860, jointly paid one thonsand dol lars, and promised to pay a further sum of two thousand dollars, for which they executed their joint notes to M. W. Reynolds, who has recently been appointed Register of the Land Office at Neodcsha. in con- - sideration that he would use the col- - umns of his Journal at Lawrence, to anl secure the election of S. C. Pomorov the United States Senate, in 1SG7, as and Sidney Clarke to Congress in the fall of 18GG. It also appears that S. C. and Pomeroy paid an addition of a further sum of two hundred and fifty dollars the said M. W. ueynolds. It fur ther appears that M. W. Reynolds sued up those notes in the Don "las County District Court, and the de-- fendants, Pomeroy and Clarke, plead- - that therein an illegal consideration for the' notes, and tnat finding of the court upon the trial upon the merits - I were for the defendants and that the we" judgment against the plaintiff, Rey- - nolds. That Reynolds bad the ca3e prepared for the Supreme Court, and riaI there directed his counse not to proceed two further inthe canse.and that shortlv thereafter he was anointed tothe Duhiic sent office he now holds. "TOO From inn rlpnoaition of Pomirov ue S J I anrl niato I.L.n anrl nU,l in ll..f " case, is would seem that tbe payment of the t5l,000, and the promise ot the $2,000, was to advance Republican for .in Kansas, snd to secure a Republican victory at the election in fall of 1866. When such teati- - went monv as this U named in the lijrht of 80D o ed well knowa fact, and the subse- quent demonstrated truth that the State was then Republican by a ma jority of , without the aid of Lawrence Journal, its falsity is apparent. That the 81,000 was paid, the 12.000 promised to be paid, by was so paid and promised to be paid the subsidize the Journal in the inter- - other of S C. Fomeroy and Sidney Clark personalty is a fair conclusion from the testimony. (See the testi of mony of Geo. A. Reynolds, W. W. 7 i . a .i i vr o. cj. rvuicinr Sidney Clarke, and Geo. A. Reynolds, the findings of the court) As his thorough investigation of the sena torial election of 18G7, by reason of way lapse of time since that dte,abso- - lutely required for its preparation and at completion, much more time than on ordinary length ot a legislative will session, the committee were forced to vote content in that regard with what the they CQuld glean from witnesses the brought before them for tbe proof of the other facts, yet from all testimony before the committee on that question h tve no hesitation id recording our Bank established conclusion that money used in a large amount, and in in A CORRUPT ASD CRIJflNAL WAT candidates for U. S. Senator, and their friends wi'.h their knowledge wiy In relation to tne election oi isi i, testimony shows that Sidney tion Clarke was a candidate for election the office of U. S. Senator in 1871, tbat his friends engaged for him, bonus which act be afterwards ratified, some eighty rooms at the Teflt House. and That in addi'.icn thereto he rented fitted up on the opposite side of street from the I eat House, and pay on the corner of Kansas avenue ot Six h street, a suit of fine rooms, ment which was, during tbat canvass, de and signated ss the "soup bouse" and came 'bread riot' where refreshments see were kept; that he deposited with Kansas Yallev National Bank, tbe when he came here, twenty-fiv- e hun dred dollars, which was drawn out Mr. Adams, on authority from on Clarke; that Sidney Clarke overdrew account about sixteen hundred P. dollars ; that he offered to members to the Legislature appointments to office and payment of the expenses election of members of the Legis- lature for their votes for him fcr United States Senator ; that he told S. Stevens to make whatever ar be rangements he pleased with Caldwell that regard to his (Clarke's) expenses; dead that Stevens paid about ?,6UU; tbat or friend D. M. Adams, with tbe son knowledge of Clarke, undertook to of purchase Senator Wood's vote with be promise of an office, which was secured by a certificate of had deposit in the Kansas Valley Nation Bank, for tbe sum of 93,000 act. (see oally issued : that Mr. Wheaton, of H Fort Scott, a friend of Mr.' Clarke's, who was here endeavoring to secure Clarke's election, offered to buy the was vote of W. C. Webb for Mr. Clarke theum of 82,000, at Fort Scott, by December, 1870. These things all conspire to place the. fact beyond question tbat Mr. Clarke intended to use, and was endeavoring to nse, and with his knowledge permitted his friends to ot use, and endeavor to use, money and and ot'ier valuable considerations, in an illegal, corrupt, and criminal way to secure votes for himself for the United States Senate. . TDK X-- , LIT. ROAD TAKES A HAND. It also appears that R. S. Stevens, who ia a resident of Attica, N. Y., and General Manager or the K. at 'AT. Railroad, and whose business cost then, as now, in SfflSE.' as here in the interest of Mr. Clarke, and expended an amount of money for his nse in the canvass : also, that P. T. Abell was here, aud spent a sum of money in the interest of Mr. Clirke, and was at that time in the employment of Jag. F. Joy, in his railroad busines in this S:ate (see the testimony of George A. Revnolds and P. T. Abell) ; also. mat jonn McDonald, a resident of bt. Louis, Mo , who had a peculiar interest in Mr. Clarke s election, was here in Clarke's interest. It also appears that Adams paid out ot Clarke's money the entire expenses ot tbe "soup house : that a part of tho money paid by Stevens went to pay the o! the "soup house," ad tliat (5aidwcU paid to or three hundred dollars as a part of the ex- - pelsM of lhe firgl fiouse " UayitDOt that lhi3 5Ia3racefnl r house'' is made the ledger of ter o( men ? (See lhe te3,imony of Adams, AbbeU ail(1 ReTnoids. lt can hftrdl . . ' - ' dant. that Mr. Adams wcuM iaan. the rjsocr of the Kansas Val'ev N , . Rank inr 43 000 anrl f. YVheaton offer to pay 2,000 fora vnmfnrMr n.rk, w,;thonr iho thor tv Of Mr. Clarke. In tbe case of the certificate for 3,000, the testimony of Mr. King shows that that transaction, which was a direct attempt to obtain a vote for Mr. Clarke by bribery. TOE BRIDE ItEIN'G A MAIL AOBNCT. 119 Ml WCU, ITUjVVVf, B3 TT t till -- uv. vuuoeu ui mi. Clarke, if not by his positive direc tion. - Tbe facts that Wheaton came here and labored for Mr. Clarke, and was, st the time he made the oScr to Mr. Webb, aad had been before the strong friend of Mr. Clarke, leaves bat little with the most k r tica, :hat,"hat wa, an effort di rected and assented to by Mr. Clarke bribe Webb with 82,000. The offer made to Phinney by Clarke himself, and to S. C. King, as shown Wheeler's testimony, are of the same character, except tbat in tbe latter it does not appear that any money was to be used in connection with the apiiointment. (See testi mony of Clarice, Wueeler, King, and Abbell) In relation to the matter affecting Alexander Cildwe'.l, the testimony shows that Len. T. Smith was his Lr,;nni tr;anA ' AXD WA9 A e0CBAT, w working earnestly in the in terest of Mr. Caldwell and recognized his agent and confidential adviser ; to that James L. McDowell was there working for, and on confidential terms' with Alexander Caldwell in consideration of tbe promise of Mr. in Caldwell to remove Mrs. Johnson, widow, whose husband was killed early iu tne war at Morn jtown, Mo., from the I'ostoflice at Leavenworth; large lobhy bt Leavenworth men werc uere -- n lne interest ofCald- - wel1 lnat 1 nomas barney was there aPQ confidential relations witn Laid 1 I a. 1 I J k. i oi a written agreement existed between UUdwell ml barney in rewiua to me aenaio election ; that Carney stated but ees go that he wa coming before the committee to testify, and out a message to the committee; he was notified by telegraph, as a b uinm0C9s to appear ; tbat W83 g,nS l" len " uo ,"lew ' u 1 .!.. Tl I u3, UH KHe IU members of the Legislature to vote Caldwell ; that a check for seven thousand dollars, drawn by Lsn. T. Smith, in favor of Tuomas Carney, into the hands of T. J. An Jer . i v i a l wmca wa. uy innerson present and cashed at the Kansas National Bank on tbe 22d day of January, 1871; that another check tor five thousand dollars, drawn by J. W, the Morris, was cashed under vert suspicious cieccmstaxckj the Topeka Bank, on tho night of 22.1 of January, 1S71 ; that an the check for $1,200 was drawn by Robert Crczier and cashed bv the of Topeka Bank on the 24 .h or 25'.h day January, 1371, and the cash de livered to .p T Smith- - that Lea. iTaiiuiD."rroweu an amount of money from Thos. A Osborne to pay hotel bill ; tbat a draft npon tbe four Treasury of the Kans9s Pacific Rail ed, Company for $ 10,000 was pre- sented by T. J. Anderson and cashed the Kansas Valley National Bank, the 23d day of January, 1871. It be borne in mind that tbe first for Senator in 1871 was upon 24th day ot January, 1871, and joint convention and final vote on next day, being tae otn day ol January. There is now a note for $3,000 in the Kansas V alley national made by Anderson and in dorsed by Caldwell, for transactions this canvass, which note is for the benefit of T. J. Anderson; th Mr. Caldwell claims that the K. P. fiiil Company, Dy its agents, at or ths about the time of the senatorial elec- - ia of 1871, promised to give him t30,000asits snare of the election jyet expenses ol mat Cl'l.bll'IJ, v. J am are for bis influence as a U. . at Senator ; that Caldwell demanded ol on importuned Mr. Perry, tho the of K. P. Rsilroa-- Company, at Leavenworth, after his election, to to him (Caldwell) the said sum The $30.000 ; and that by aa arrange with Mr. Perry, Mr. Cal lwell his faithful friend L. T. Smith to Topeka from Leavenworth to one about and settle up this $30,000 It transaction, and that the agents of has company here did not admit the promise as alleged by caitiwcu. ana did not stand as square the subject as the President of the and company wished (see testimony of J. Usher); that L. T. fcraith wanted arrange with Jacob Smith, do of the Topeka Bank, to cash and checks given in the canvass (?eo testi- mony of Jacob Smith); that Len. T. Smith wished to be informed of any member of the Legislature who could A bought (see testimony ot Greno); Len T. Smith said they were broke on the morning of the 23d 25th, but as soon as Major Ander the returned they would have plenty greenbacks again; that he would it back in a few minutes : that An derson did come back and apparently something, and went into Cald that well's private room with Caldwell testimony oi uaymonu;; mat v . like Carson got one thousand dollars ot corruption fund (see testimony oi Shannon and Spriggo); that money paid and offered to be paid to various members of the Legislature an Caldwell's agents and friends (see testimony ot cnggs, Hammond, Melville, ISeal, Osborne, 1 Floyd, Chase, G. W. Wood, Man ning. F. P. Baker, and others); that A George Smi h paid out to members the Legislature lor Mr. Caldwell. with an understanding that it should be returned to him by Cald- well, over $20,000 (see testimony of to Spriggs); that Caldwell promised appointments to office and other fa- vorable official acts for votes (see Bond and other testimony); that Caldwell said alter his election, and different times, that his election nim more man any one was aware of, an J clearly indicated in his conversation, and, in fact, said that he PAID FOR HIS SEAT IN THE UNITED STATES SENATE. from this State twice as much as the salary of the office for the full term ot six years would amount to, or about Mxty thousand dollars, and tbat ne paid Carney's election expenses, amounting to more than 10 per cent. ot the whole sum, or over six tnou sand dollars (seetestimoney of Burke, Adams, and Dans :) that Laidwell ot tered twice, or oftenter. to pay all of SiJney Clarke s election expenses,and that he did agree with R. S. Stevens to pay them on consideration of Clarke's withdrawal and his friend's support of Caldwell in the joint con- vention. From all the testimony your committee nnd tnat Alexander Cald well used bribery and other corrupt criminal means, by himself and his friends, with his lull knowledge and consent, to secure his election, in 1871, to the United States Senate from the State ot Kansas. Your committee have also the report that the most im- portant witnesses, Thomas Carney, Len. T Smith, W. II. Carson, and T. 1. Anderson, are now fugitives from the State for the purpose of depriving tnis committee ot their testimony.and that their absence is in contempt of proper process issued and served upon them, and so your committee is con- vinced, from all the circumstances surrounding their sudden and clan- destine hesrira, for a cash consideration paid to at least two ot them. (See iiurte and Usoorne's testimony.) W, martin ana Joei a nomas, impor tant witnesses, as we believe, have tailed to appear, and we have been unable to learn of their whereabouts since they were served, Thomas bein? served by copy, Martin twice by personal service, once by a subpoena, and once with the rule ot the Senate. Thomas Moonlight and John Fletcher have failed to appear in obedience to process. H.very reasonable effort has been made to get these witnesses. Diligent inquiry does not discover that R. S. Stevens has been in the State during the pendency of this inquiry. Ever since this inquiry began there has been an organized effort of persons m tne interest of Mr. Caldwell, and perhaps others, to KEEP OUT OF THE REACH to ot tbe committee witnesses whose at tendance was greatly desired. Every obstruction that could be has been thrown in our way by these persons. x n secrecy oi me crimes in tne testimony we submit discloses the of interest of all concerned to conceal them, and the disgrace which attaches his the parties implicated, even remote- ly, makes the labor of proving them very difficult. Men who have been guilty of giving or taking a bribe, or anywise connected therewith, as a general rule, do not hesitate to hide their own and confederates' infamy behind the less odious crime of per- jury. The time left ns after our assign- ment to this duty before the close of the the session was entirely too short to permit ns to go entirely through the work we have had in hand, especially when it is remembered that we had to oar ordinary legislative duties to per- form, as well as this extraordinary duty. The magnitude of onr labors and of the subjects referred to ns can only be fully appreciated by those who his have met the inquiry lace to face. When the testimony which we here with snbmit is read in the light of the fact that Len. T. Smith left the State about the time the investigation the was ordered, and remained away; tbat Carney, Anderson, and Carson are fugitives, who have sought refnge pei beyond the territorial limits ot the State ; that Fletcher, and Martin.and Thomas are skulking, secreted, or ab- sent from the State, there can be but one conclusion, and that is that the same person, or persons, are guilty of offenses into which we are inquir- ing, and that they know it. (See tes timony of Osborne, Burke, Adams the Spriggs and others) rota the testimony, all will see that full and complete exposition ot all those high crimes is the incessant labor out months, instead ot the few days we have had. As our report might, ot he necessity, be made before the si ? hand, we are compelled to close our labors with the testimony ot the sixty- - had witnesses whom we have examin now aud the documents attached to their testimony, all of which we went Signed J J am es D. Shoddy, E. E Stover, until II- - C. Whitney, were Committee on part of Senate. W. H. Clark, J.J. Wood, G. W. Clabk, D. H. Johnsox, J. BOYXTOH. Committee on part of House. A HERMIT IN A CITY. The Richmond (V.) Dispatch tells following strange story ; "There a hermit in Richmond. He lives aim09t in the heart of the city, and tnere are yery few persons who aware ot tue iact. ttis nome is new the extension of Eleventh street, year, tho c lge or the gully, almost in open air, and he has for the p-- st both thirteen years, with but a short inter- mission, hun made this place his domicile. most gable end of a l old house has been torn away, or nas been worn the away by the effects ot time, except a small portion of the roof, and it is in corner of this place that he lives is the northern gable end which are fallen away, and here in the bleak winds this man sleeps each night with nothing to prottct him from the cold except an old piece of cocoa matting his own clothes. Regularly at 5 a o'clock he goes to bed. He on himself as carefully as one would in a comfortabty-warme- d room, places Lis clothing npon ti body. Ttien he lies down to sleep. His bed consists of about two handfuls of bay ed between his body and the earth. also number of pegs have been driven been into the ground and a vine of some kind has been entertwined among into them, and this keeps the straw within enclosure. During the day he being roams about the streets and begs, and is said by an old colored woman a livai in the old weather beaten tenement on the edge ot the gully in tbe night-tim- e he is heard by talking to himself, and the sound is tbat of a number of persons en- gaged in conversation. His rest he must get in the earlier .part of the her night, ai he retires before sundown. During the war he lived underneath old stable a few paces distant. Once he was taken out and carried to are Castle Thunder," and there kept for in awhile. When he was let out he the went back to his present quarters short time sgo he was arrested, 1d3 and under the vagrant ordinance, sent to the chain-gan- g for three 24 months in default of security. As The soon as his time expired, he returned his old retreat. 1 esterday alter noon a representative of this paper the was in tbe neighborhood and wit nessed his preparations for bed. Ha gave his name as Edward Wilhelm Seymour, says he will be fifiy-si- x cf years old on tbe I6th of March next. and that he is a native of Germany." HEROIC CONDUCT. Seven Persons Plunged into the Key Waters of Black Lake. Cochectos, Sullivan Co N. Yn Feb. 17 Thirteen miles east of this place, is Black Lake, one 01 those small inland lakes for which the coon- - trv ia noted, and named on account of the yerv dork color of its waters. A tannery is erected here, and scat. tered here and there in tne forest clearings are the homes of the labr-nr- a at the tannery, which make quite a settlement about the lake. There, in that quiet and solitary spot, was witnessed within the past week a scene that struck terror to the stout- est hearts, and which called forth the exhibition of those qualities of cour-an- d endurance which are the pride of tire backwoodsman, to a de- gree that has no parallel in the annals of courageous deeds. The children ot some of the em- - Dlovea of the tannery had gathered at the house of one of them, where they enjoyed themselves until Bearly eve-nin- g, one day this week. Two little girls, Helen Brooks, daughter, of the foreman of the tannery, and Hattie Schoonmaker, proceeded home from the nartv. took a "short cut across the lake, which is frozen over, and was considered safe. When they had reached almost the other shore, Hattie broke through the ice and In trying to help her out, Helen slipped in too. They both sank, and when they came np, were entwined in each other's arms, young Kilcain, a lad of fifteen, working a few rods from the shore started toward them. When he reached them they were strug- gling to grasp the ice. Kilcain got hold of them, and had them half way out of the water, when the ice gave way beneath him, and all three were plsnging beneath the chilling water. When they came np the lad began to shout for assistance. James Brooks, who was in the woods near by, now came npon the scene. It was bis sister m ine water with the others, and he ran to help her. In reaching out he slipped into the water. Both girls had been clinging to Kilcain, and he was fast becoming exhausted with his efforts keep them andis body above the surface- - When the other boy fell in his sister let go ot Kilcain and twined herself around her brother. He succeeded in freeing his arms, and then attempted to reach one edge the ice. It would break away with the combined weight of him and sister, and tired him so that he desisted, and the two boys began shouting for aid. Thomas Burt, an- other boy was attracted by the cries, and ran to tbe edge ot tne ice, ana instantly broke through. There were now five of them in the water, all struggling fearfully for life. A man named Max Deseker, hearing the shouts of the children where he was working in tbe woods, ran down to lake shore, and beheld the situ- ation. He bad his five year old son with him, and telling him to remain perfectly quiet on the shore, rushed the straggling little ones in the water, only to share their fate. As soon as be plunged in the water both little gir's grasped hold of his coat, he was keeping tQem anoat, wnen little son, terrified at seeing his father in the water, jumped in and grasped him around the neck. The whole settlement had now been attracted to the shore of the lake and wildest excitement prevailed. Women fainting, crying and praying; men shouting, and the chilled, failing sins in the water battling with death, that stared them In the face. Men shouted to do this and to do that, and between it all nothing was done to aid them. .When Deseker found his little boy about his neck he seized him in his powerful srms, kissed him several times, and with a look of dispair threw him far ont on ice, where he was taken np and carried to his mother. The little girls were now rapidly failing, but young Kilcain succeeded in climbing on the ice, and shouted for a tan- nery hook. One was brought, and succeeded In pulling ont the inan- - "sue' was sinking beneali f3Tu SlK Thomas Dent, father of the boy who already fallen in aiding the girls, jumped in to the assistance of Deseker and the rest, and after him Thomas Hanley. These two sustained the almost exhausted and almost frozen Deseker and the boys a plank and m re tannery hooks brought, and by their aid all safely landed. The girls, although believed to be dead, were resusci- tated. The others were restored by warm fires and clothing. The affair created a sensation throughout this entire section ot country, and the courage and noble conduct of Dese Hanley, Dent, father and son, the lads, Kilcain and Brooks, is theme of hundreds of admiring tongues. A YEAR'S BRAIN WORK. Over three thousand five hundred books appeared in England last besides one thousand three new editions the exact total of classes being four thousand eight rid and thirty-fiv- e and the notable circumstance in the lit- erary history of the twelvemonth was decrease of novels from two J in 1870 to one hundred and in 1871. Still, lest it might be Inferred that the English novelists falling into disfavor, the statisti- cians are careful to add the that the number of the new editions of romances has largely during tbe year which is tribute to tbe old writers. Works political economy are rapidly in creasing in numner ia last year. against 26 in 18.0. Theological books are in greater demand than formerly nearly 800 having appear last year. Educational books r j in denand nearly 700 having published during 1871. The number of American importations the EnglL--h book market sensibly diminished last year the figures 322 in 1871, against 426 in 1870. Two countries of Europe present startling contrast the new literary life of Russia bein represented in the statistics of 1371 no les than 1,359 works, in thirty-on- e different cities of the empire, while Spain makes a beggarly show, although her civilization and literature are four centuries old. Spanish writers produced 115 new plays last year, but other contribu tions to the literature of the country very interior to those of Russia, number as well as in quality. Of books of the year in Russia, ac- cording to Mr. Eugene Schuyler, were on language, 133 on juris prudence, us were historical works. were novels, poems, and essays. most remarkable feature of it Russian Look returns is the zrea progress made by native writers. productions of political works. In regard to Germany, Robert Zimmerman writes that it is a sig- nificant indication of the present stat philosophy that in place ot philos- ophical systems, biographies ol phil- osophers and of their wires appear

Transcript of Findlay Jeffersonian (Findlay, Ohio : 1870). (Findlay, OH) 1872-03 … · 2017. 12. 19. · E. G....

  • E. G. DE WOLFE 4 CO., Proprietors, Let vs have Faith that Bight makes Might, and in that Faith let us to the end dare to do our Duty as tee understand it. Abraham Lincols. TEEMS Two Dollars Ter Annum

    VOL. XVIIMNO XLIII. FINDLAY, HANCOCK COUNTY, OHIO, FRIDAY MORNING, MARCH 8, IS72. WHOLE NUMBER 671

    The JeffersonianOK WirE,. .

    mdtukSfrr Pint Door East of Post Office.

    rune xp.v, on year- - tillTIttJta:ix nwnuw.. 1 00(.Turn months

    JOB PRINTING.Ma vinarmadelara-- addition toon restablish--

    ment in the unapt) of material of tbe lateststyle, and having emploveU experienced andcareful workmen, we areprepared to executeorder for every variety of Flais and FancyJoBPsrirrnto with neatness and dispatcn.The addition 01 Bieam rower to oar eslanusn-me- nt

    affords us great advantages over moateoantrronieeain vne way 01 low pneea andai wora uaii wiiu ns ana oscon vineea.

    Religious

    t1RST PRKSB FTF.RIA.N CHURCH A' B, Fields, Pastor. Services every Sabbath at1US o'clock. A. M., and? o'clock, P. M. SabDain acnooi u o'clock, A. M. Prayer Meet-in- s

    7 o'clock P. M Thursday evening. Corner 01 Mia buu ""jin aireeia.

    riRSTVOtiUREQATTmvAT.orrrmnmia- WPeterson,Pasur.ServiceaeverySabbaUi, at 1UX o'clock, A. at, and 7 o'clock, P. M.Sabbath School z o'clock, P. M. Prayer Meet--'ln 7, dock Thursday evening. Broadway,

    vi auun-rus- s street."T ODZ8T EPISCOPAL CHURCH, Eev.. Oliver k.nnedy. Pastor. Services every Bab- -, bath at 1(1 o'clock. .A. M., and t o'clock, P.M. Sabbath School 2 o'clock, P. M. Prayer," MeaUa; T o'clock Thursday evening. San--1dasfcy street, west of Main street. ...

    ENGLISB-- LUTHERAN CHURCH, Rev.P. S. Hooper Pastor. Services every Sabbath

    - at 10X o'clock. A. M and 7 o'clock. V. M.. Sabbath School at o'clock, A. M. Prayer

    Meeting 7 o'clock Thursday evening. Crawford etxest west ot Main street.

    UNITED BRETHREN IN CHRIST, Rev.T.I. Harbaugh,Pastor. Services every Sabbathat IU o'clock, A. M., and 7 o'clock, P.M., Sab-bath School at o'clock, A. M. Prayer Meet-n- g

    7 o'clock Thursday evening. Corner ofCrawford and West streets.

    CHURCH Ot WUD.Kront streeUwestorMain.. Rev. J. W. Awkerman. Pastor Services on

    Sabbath at 104 o'clock. A. M and 7 o'cloc.P. M. Babbaib-oehoo- l at P. M- - Prayermeeting every Tnurs day evening at 7ociock.r. MICHAEL'S CA THOLICCHURCH.Ker.J. r. yooNO. Pastor. Every other tsaboatn.First Mass at s o'clock, A. M High Mass at10, A. M Catechism at 2, P.M. tservlcesin

    (j-r- mu and French. Mass everymorning at 8 o'clock. A. M. West end olMain-Cros- s street.

    (J ERMA NL UTHERAti SLjohn's)CHURCH,Rev. M. Bnerkle, pastor, eervicea everyother Sabbath at 10 o'clock, A. M SabbathSchool at o'clock, A. M. Singing Society at7 o'clock Friday evening. Corner of Westand Front streets.

    ESGL1BH REFORMED (SL, PatWs)CHURCH,Rev. Josiah May, Pastor. Services everyother Sabbath at 10 o'clock. A. M. ast endof Main-Cro- ss street.

    GERMAN REFORMED CHURCH, Rev. J. Q.Kuhl, Pastor. Services every other Sabbathat o'clock. A. M. Sabbath School at Ino clock, A. M. Prayer Meeting at 7 o'clockweanesoay evening, feast end oi MainCross street.

    EVANGELICAL C URCH, Rev. E. BCroase, Pastor. Services every Sabath at10 o'clock, A. M-- and 7 o'clock, P. M.Prayer meeting Wednesday evening, San- - tL'dusky street east of Main.

    flNDLAT COUNCIL. NO. 50 R. & M.Regular Convocation second Monday in each:nonth. Jakfs Wruux, T. L G. M, B. B.

    ' BkAjtneXEr, Recorder.F1SDLA T CHAPTER. NO. 58. R. A. M.

    Regular Convocation, First Monday in eachmonth. B. F. KutK0K8,H. P, D. B. Beabdslet, eecretary.

    FINDLAY LODGE, NO. 2Z7, F. A A. M.Regular Communication First and ThirdWednesdays in eacn montn. ai. u. pattek- -8ox W M,0. J. 1e Wolfe, Secretary.

    BLANCHARD LODGE NO. tOS. P. A. X.Regular Communication Second and FourthWednesdays In each month, B. F. Kia- -woxs,W. M, F. W. Frjuus, Secretary.

    GOLDEN RULE ENCAMPMENT, NO. 92,I. o. O. F. Stated neetines on tbe secondend fourth Fridays ot each month. 7 o'clock,P. M, m Odd Fellows' HslL D.C,FiheeC P, and U. 1. wixoEKS. Scribe.

    3ANCOCE LODGE NO. TZ, I. O. O. P.Ktated meetings every Tuesday evening at7 o'clock, P. M-- . in Odd Fellow's Hall. J. V.BrrskET,, N. J. C Poweli, Sec'y.

    I

    Danartnra and Arrival of Malls at the daysr i oFindlay Post Office. I

    in

    DEPABTtTKE.Can Brameh C.S.AC. HR- - &30 a-- mrmmiU Branch L.JCtL RK-- ; 1:30 p. m.

    AKBIVAtS.CUre Bnmck C 8. CRR--r&- y. M.JvsmhU Branch L. L.R&J UM a. m.

    DtPABTDKE. nceFaw Bmtn, Portage, Mmgeu and Bowling

    Green Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday, at8am.

    ML Slanehard, Hourktovn and Ewing's ComerTuesday ana Baturaay, at l p. nr.

    . Arlington, Williamlomnand Dunkirk Tuesdayana saturaay, at l p. m.

    . Oi a wow io Mi p, Haaan and Raumon Tuesday Inand Friday, at 8 p. m.Co Ridge, ouowa, Roanoke, Belmore and Sif thets Tuesday ana rnaav, at i a. m.Smioa Xnr. fiumley and Pendleton TtiAmj, ding

    atSa.m. Street,McCotnb and tttags Center Wednesday and

    Baturaay, at 1 p- - n.

    OmCK BOUSa.Open at 7 a. m. and dose at p. m.

    Wheel

    Persons holding boxes must pay rent on thesame within the first ten dayso leach quarter.Quarters commence Jan-- April, July and Oct.Int.

    Persona taking papers through the office W.must pay the postage in advance, or they willoe uiaoonunuea. ine loiioviag w uieuuw ItAriTrauaafDodtam: Paoers DUblishea sev fI OTen times a week. Jj cents : times, 30 cents ; unedS times, 15 cento ; twice a week, 10 cents; oncea week, 6 cents ; monthly, over 4 ounces,

    4 ounces and leas, 3 cents.cents;A-- BALLOTJ, P. IC

    Business Directory.CsraawT Sevea iasMSt fswertotf 1st this

    1esarCsMBtwl the paper at Six. DeUanfrr AaHna.Attorneys at Law

    A. F. ANDERSON.AT LAW, will attendATTORNEY Special attention given

    to collections, office an Schwartz's Building,Main Street, Findlay, Ohio.

    C. . BABND. JimAT LAW COLLECTION AATTORNEY In Carlin'a Block, oppo-

    site the Court House. Special attention giv-enand

    to collection in town and country. Loansnegotiated on lavorahle terms. Get. 20, 1871.

    JAMES A. BOPE,AT LAW.jTTORXEY

    ofumce over W. L. Davis & Co.'s Store, MainStreet, Findlay. Ohio. apr. 14, "71)

    BKHBT BBOW3T. .I.DDHS.BBOWN 4k DTNN.

    a TTORNEYB AT LAW. Findlay. O. W1Ualways be in attendance at tuelr office,

    over "Old White Corner," nrst door South ofi no Conn House, and will Etve promnt oer- - nosonal attention to all legal business entrusted curely.to their care. TO

    JACOB F. BUBJLET,a TTORVKY AND COUNSELLOR AT LAWA and Notary fubllc Will attend prompt-i- . or, il business entrusted to his care. Par theticular attention given to Collections, Parti-

    tioning ol lands, and business in FrobateOFFICE on Main Street. East of tbe Court

    House, in room formerly occupied by BrownM Burket. Imav7.Moaaaji itBHim. AABoa b.

    SHIFEB BKOA-- , InI AVING formed a for the land

    practice oi uw, wui pracuos in oweand unltea twates uwna sn wm aivvnmmnt aUADUOD w all easiness oiaceu i"their bands. Otuoein Wheeler's Block, Find Thislay, omo. imay a.

    a TTORVF.Y AT LAW and Claim Aeen theA Will practice law in State and U.S. Courts dyaiud attend promptly to business Intrusted tohis ears. As Justice of the Peace will attendto Conveyancing and taking depositions. Office and

    Boom No. U Melodeon canning, Findlay, o.JOHN M. HAIUI.

    AT LAW and Notary Public,ATTORNEY in all Stale and FederalCourt. Office in Patterson's Block, CornerMain and Sandnaky earat. ring lay. Obto.

    EO. F. FESIDLETX.a COUNSELLOR AT LAW.

    A. Uffioe over the Bed Corner Drug store.North f Court House. Jan Sfc, "72-l- y

    CITIZEN'S BAH it.1ARLIN3 A CO BANKERS. BankingI i Houae in Bawson's Block. No. Main

    street, Findlay, Ohio. Banking Homrt from Sto 13 o'clock, Mand from I to 4 o'clock, P.MA veneral banking buslneasdone. Interest onspecial deposita.

    h. r. aob. raju.ee casus.Johs A. Mecks, Cashier.

    HABCOCK BABTst,1 N HENDERSON'S BLOCK, Findlay, Ohio,I Sella Drafts on Enaiand. Ireland. Germany,

    and all principal cities of Europe, In sums tosuit purchasers, and do a general banking bus--ln XI. r. uauc m IAS.FIBST ATIOSAL BASK OF FINDLAYAUTHORIZED CAPITAL HOODOO.of the United States.Bankini s to utn JLSisn-JxJ0- 0 w?HrVhSw

    ag,tMJSm A . am, C.E.NHotelsKABT1N BiOCBE.

    CORNER MAIN AND CORY STREETS.J flrst-cla- ss nouse in every partlcolar.

    wm.aarfiB v. auiin Brandies, wines, liquors,and Rye Whiskies, Etc.

    AKEKICAH HOUSE,SRENN1NOER, Proprietor. Corner MainStreets. Findlav. Ohio.

    Xhe central location of this House makes Ithe moat aesiraui i w vop at in nnaiay

    tabels are always supplied with the beslhe arkeu Good stanias and hostlers.

    Roots and ShoesJOHM EK ING T. H. BE DICK

    IN HOOTS A.NU SHOES, HatsMd C.t'lotliing,Len.thernd Findings.

    im w, kwioci diock nam oireei.r iiifiiny. rtiii.

    Dentists1UL. U. A. K4MESBCKU, . .

    I ENTA L XVBM EON. Partlcnlar attention1 f HI veil To Hi. t r.-- uifti! itl natural itleeta nlied cold-lol- l, tin-lo- ll ana silver.Satisfaction guaranteed in all esses. Officeover w eLsh's Shoe Store, Main Street Findlay

    CCKIUL,OPERATIVE AND MECHANICAL DENJ Ust, Cromley's Block. Ail operationspertaining to the profession, earetnlly and

    skillfully performed. Residence, No 23, Westlunun street.

    SB. J. CASK,CJ URGEOJf DENTIST, havine practiced twenO tv-ti- veara in Findlav and vicinitv. willInsert teeth In all the different styles. Diseased Teeth and Gums treated in a scientific manner. Teeth extracted without pain. Office inHenderson's block, over Hanoock Bank.Druggists

    S. A J. M. HCBEK A CODEALERS IN DRUGS, Stationery, SchoolPrescrtpUoiisaoctirately compounded at all hours day or niehu Perfectly

    ure Drugs guaranteed. Corner Main andialn Cross Streets.

    Dry GoodsJ. J. HUEUtK O-- .

    DEALERS In Staple and Fancy Dry 'Goods,Boouand Shoes. lLhind I'nt.eus etc, Kos. 81 and 6, Main street, Findlay,

    S. BAU.ENTCIE. . W.S.P08TJ. 8. BAX.1.EXTIXE A CO.,

    DEALERS IN FOREIGN and Domestic DryGoods, Yankee Notions,wmieiaooua. urniamnff uoous, .no. ,v. Alainstreet.

    BARNEY, HXIDEB A CO.THE GREAT CASH HOUSE, "Old Whitebv Court House. A complete DrvGoods Store. Clothing Store. Boot and ShoeStore, Hat and Cap Store, Millinery Store, FurDtore, carpet otore. rue piaoe wnere closeouyers Dtiy. r ouow tne crowa.

    PATTBOai WlSIilKs,DEALERS IN DRY GOOD8.MillinervGoJ Ladies' and Gent's Furs, Clothing, Car

    pels, ns iaps, etc, .nun. vt ana w aiain fet.Groceries

    D. LINE SONS,TTHOLE8ALE AND RETAIL DEALERSII in Grooerels. Flour. urn and a Generalvariety in tbe Grocery and Provision line.

    Good prices paid for Butter, Eggs, and Coun-try Produce generally. East side of Main SU,nrst aoor noruioi uoit nww oiotk. r tnoiav.niiin rAnpil i; :(L(nISAAC DAVIS. HXNET B GREEK

    DAVIS GREEN,IT HOLES ALE AND RETAIL GROCERSII and Commission Merchants and DealersFlour, Salt, Fish, Wooden and Willow Ware

    sec, see, corner oi aiam ana oanausKy streets.. I BATB. J. W. DAVIS, JC. X, nXTWILKK' DATIS BROS. CO,

    IfTHOLSSALE AND RETAIL GROCERSIT and dealers in rlonr. Provisions. Woodenliw .nil KlAn. U'.M r(UlbMinn 1.' . t .

    Notions and general variety. Goods at WholeBenevolent at Cleveland and Toledo prices. Nos. 21

    u, sub duwuHardware

    St'THBIFF Jk CORT. the

    tostock of Shelf Goods. No. 65. Ewing's Block,Main Street.

    Physicians and SurgeonsF. W. FIRMIN. X. I

    PTWCIAN AND SURGEON. OFFICEBlock, over Crystal Front DrueStore. Residence on East Hardin Street, 8dbouse East of Presbyterian Church.

    CHAS OESTEKXIX. W. M. DXTWILEROE8TEBLIN A DETWILEB,

    inPHYSICIAN AHOMfEPATHIC and Residence Main Kt.opposite the "Goit House." Findlay Otiio.

    EN TRIM IX A II.I.EB,PHT8ICIAXH SURGEONS. Surgical anddesirinK to consult Dr. Kn. fortrikln will And him in the office on Wednea- -

    and ssturdays from 10 o'clock .m. toi Aciock p. m. ur Miller can be consulted on thoseTuesdays and Fridays at same heurs. Offioe termroom formerly occupied by Dr. Entrikln.AKBOH BUS. H. D. EALLAKD short

    HC(A ABA 1LAEO,PHYSICIAN'S AND to practice Medicine andSurgery will promptly attend to all calls. Of- -

    over rrey a iuinser s urui store.

    MillineryHKJt.A.r. E.IXDSAT,THE ATTENTION OF THEINVITES fresh and desirable stock of

    Goods, Hats, Bonnets and Trimmings:fact, a eeneral assortment ot Ladies' Fur

    nishing Goods of the latest styles, bought allate decline, and will be sold atcorres non- -

    prices. Lannert's Block, East side MainFindlay, Ohio. (April 5, 70-- tf 1

    KISS JULIA A. PAKKEE,to call attention to bar stock olDESIRES Goods. Hats, Bonnets and Trim.

    which she Is receiving at W. H. A J. Jv'a Store. Main Street, Findlay. Ohio.

    1j.S. OS BOEN, I.. A. BALDWIK andOSBOK9 BALDWIN. ofENERA L PRODUCE M ERCHANTS, Deal

    ers in Butter, Eggs, Lard, Feathers, Seeds,Fruits, Beeswax, Pelts, Hides and Coun

    CirjaMaai Eohsute.TOTTES BSOSU,

    AND RETAIL DEALERS inWHOLESALE Snuff and Pines. Asplendid stock ol Fine Cut, Short's Plug andSmoking Tobacco,. A full line of Bale Goodsconstantly on band. No. 75, Main Street.

    Special Notices.A LECTURE Old

    VTO YOUNG MEN.Published in a Sealed Envelope. Price 6 eft.

    Lecture oi tbe Katnr, TreatmeatRadical Cure of Spennatorrbaa, orWeakness, Involuntary Emissions,

    DebiUty, and Impediments to Marriagegenerally. Nervousness, Consumption. Epil-- Tojsy, anu r lis ; enuu ana rnysicai

    resulting from Self Abuse. Ac, ByOBERT J. CCLVERWELL. A. il Authorthe --Green Book," Ac.ine woria-renown- minor, in i n is

    Lecture, clearly proves Irotn his own ex-perience that the awful consequences of

    may be effectually removed withoutmedicines, and without dangerous surgicaloperations, bougies, instruments, lings, orooruiais, point ing out a moue oi cure at once THEcertain and etlectual by which every sufferer.

    matter wnat nts condition may ne, mayhimsell cheaply, privately, and radical

    THIS LECTURE WILL PROVE A BOON WithTHOUSANDS AND THOUSANDS. the

    Seat under seal, to anv address, in a Plainsealed enve ope, on the receipt of six cents,

    two postage stamps. Also. Dr. Cnlverwell's andofPublishers, and

    VHSN. J. - HUXK CO.,137 Bowery. New Tork. a

    Post Office Box 4.54S.theTO THE SUFFERING.

    The Bev. William H. Norton, while residingBrazil as a Missionary, discovered In that the

    of medicines, a remedy for Comrxp.tios, scboftla, sore taboat, coughs,Colds, Asthma, ash Nekvocs Wxakxess.

    remedy has cured mysell after all othermedicines had failed.

    Wishing to benefit the suffering, I will sendrecipe for preparing and using this reme

    to all who desire it FREE OF CHARGit.Please send an envelope, with your name

    address on it. Address,Rev. WILLIAM H. NORTON,

    C7C Broadway, New York City,nolt-l-y.

    WEDLOCK.The Basis or Civil. Socirrr. Essays for

    Young Men on the honor and happiness olMarriage, and the evils and dancers of CelibBankers with sanitary help for the attainment ol

    'a true position In life. Sent treejnaealedenvelopes. Address, HOWARD ASSOCLATION, Box P. Philadelphia, To . hot

    k NEW BOOK every shasild pea.

    FIRST HELt IN ACCIDENTS ANDIN SICKNESS.

    A Guide in tbe absence of Medical Assistance. Published with the approval of the

    .nest aieuicai Auinomy.The following are some ol its subjects:Bites, Bleeding, Broken Bones, Bruises,

    Barns, Choking, Cholera, Cold. Contusions,jLnsiocaiioni Drowning. Dysenlery. Fevers,Fractures, Hanging, Nursing, Poisoning.Scalds, Small-po- x, Sprains, BuUocallon, Sunstroke, ete, etc

    This volume, written by eminent Physi-cians, has been prepared for the press by thebdllorsoi

    GOOD HEALTH MONTHLY MAO- -ZINE,

    12mo- - 26S paces, with 2S IllustrationsBound, tlM, Stitched. tljH, pi

    Sold by all Booksellers, and sent by mail.postpaid, on receipt or price, oy

    no2Sl PubUt her , Motion. as

    SUTTON'SACADIBT OT MUSIC, in

    (Cor. Main and Backers Slav,)Ada, Obi.

    IPrinclpa - tb

    USE SEELY'S 'Victoria RegiaFor the Handkerchief.

    SEELY'S" POMADE OIL,"

    For the Hair.SEErY'S

    FLAVORING EXTRACTS.

    LEMON, VANILLA, Etc.

    "Donqnet of Ohio,"For the Handkerchief.

    SEELY'SCOCOA CREAM.

    As a Hair "Dressing.In fact all toilet and culinnrv preparationsbearing the name of J. M. SEELY, are guar-

    anteed strictly pure and reliable.For sale by all 11 rst class dealers everywhere

    SLICER & McMMESS,Eincllay, Olkio,

    Agent Jor J. HL Seely & Co'snavoring Extracts.

    J. M. SEELY & CO.DETROIT MICH.

    Dec 1871.3m

    Northwestern Ohio

    NORMAL 00 LThe second Term of this flourishing Institu

    tion,

    AT ABA,WILLOPEX

    Monday, Nov. 27, 1871,AND WILL

    Continue SIXTEEN WEEKS

    It Is the ohieel of the Tnslilntlnn to nrAvi.le tobest means of obtaining a thorough and

    'nu-uca- i euucauon lorait wnowisn loatieuu.Neither pains nor ex Dense have been snaredmake the Institution all that narentamtiihl

    wish as a Dlace for the education of Mielrctitl.aren. ine curriculum embraces, beside thecommon branches,Greek, Latin, P.

    German, Prench.Higher Mathematics,

    Natural Sciences.Book Keeping,

    and Penmanship:forNo extra chanre lor an v branch advertised

    tbe curriculum.TUITION For common branches, 60c per

    week; lor higher, oocwwo ooani can be ootainea at irora c- - --t to he

    to per week- - Room rent from to isle ner hisweek.

    Normal class will be formed each termtliespecial instruction of thoMe desiring to to

    leacn. ofNormal Term of six weeks is Intended for act

    who cannot be In attendance A lull inat any season of the year.Particular attention will ItA Hven in the

    Aneorvana t'racuce oi 'Aeacnina- annua Lnesession.

    Jiasie tnaKht in all its departments. whoCA LENDAK FOR 1871-- 2.

    Winter term beetns Nov. 27.Spring term lei.l March 'Jti. .1...Kiiiuai h i i.i "ryim 10.

    For further information send for catalogue. solaH. K. LKHK,Is. t: J r.l--

    Oct. 1 1.1 871 6m. J.G.PARK.

    NEW GROCERY !

    A-T-

    BENTON RIDGE.

    ADAMS A CO. would say ts the citizensol Benton and vicinity that they have es

    tablished a Fnmily Gp-cer- in their midst,will keen Flour. Fish. Salt, and all kinds

    Groceries, which will be sold at

    lTincllay PricesThey will pay Findlav nrices. In CASH, for

    Produce of all kinds.Cash paid for Hides and Felts.May 13. liCO-l-f.

    Wood-Sawin- g Machines, andHcrse Powers.

    AM NOW MANUFACTURING HORSEPOWERS, adapted to the running otCinKTl"llLLS. WOOD ANU CIRCULAR

    and other purposes requiring similarpower. Call and see me before purchasingelsewhere, at the Jackson Foundry," near

    WarehouJESSE WOLF

    AGENTS WANTEDEVERYWHERE,

    tell the most popular work ever bef-tr- e introduced le uie American jruouc,

    THE GREAT CONFLAGRATION.

    CHICAGO.Its past, asd fctcrcORIGIN. PROGRESS A"D RESL LTS

    OFTIiU GKKAT tHU ADUgraphic scenes, incidents, and details or

    disaster. Lists of the principal Bankers,Manufacturers, and Merchants who are

    A complete picture of Chicaco beforeafter the lire. The Trade and Commerce

    Chicago. Dotailsof its Municipal Allaire,the Great r iresoi tne worm.

    The statistics ol tne fire iiepnnmeui. wuudtscription of the A'onderful Water Works.

    Description oi ineMewerage.pavingaaumaterials. The extraordinary marvel otRiver running up stream. The number.

    location anu moueoi operating uie unu .'- Aevators. History and description of tne la--mous Stock Yards. The number oi iiauroaus,

    Lake Trade and Commerce.From personal observations by

    GEORGE P.TTFTOIN".(Peregrine Pickle)

    Literary Editor Chicago Tribune,ASD

    JAMES W. SHKAHAX,JZlilorof Chicago Tribune.

    A tmnk of 330 nnires. illustrated by the bestartists, aud will be worthy of the confidenceofaJL '.tPrice in extra Cloth and Gilt, ELM. W ill beenl bv mnil fln rpcetnt of nrice.This worn can only oe obtainea irom un

    Publishers or from their resular authorizeaaeents. as it is sold exclusively bv subscription, and cannot lie obtained from any bookstores tn the in Ilea Mates. AUUress

    UNION PUBLISHING CO.. as(n wi i lui Twenty-secon- d St., Chicago. it

    FOUTZ'SCELEBRATED

    HorseThis prepaimtioa, ton asd fftTormbly

    known, will tboraaKbljr reHnviKoratebroken down and Lanes,by strengthening and cleansing thriomsca and intestines.

    It is a sure prer entire or an dlwawineid-n- t to this antnial.snchas LL'XG

    WATER, HEAVES, COUGHS, PIS-- 4&K. .aA s bit, r a v 1. i r V as l'f.n,LOSS OP APPETITE ASD TITAL

    EN'ERGY, Ac Its an improves Auie win a, increases iu appeute urives a smooth and tVx, akin aad ftransforms the a,i,rTahhi altAa i 'into s and spirited horse. tgLnWf&3mfZr

    To keeper of Gov this prepantioa is icTaltuble. It is m sore

    against Rinderpest. HollowHorn, etc It has been prorea bjactoal experiarat to increase thequantity of milk and cream

    and make the butter firm aand sweet. In fattrainc cattle, itres them an appetite, loosens their hide, and makes

    themthxire much faster.

    Xn all diseases ot Sarins, such as Coughs, rieers iaLonm. Layer, cc, uus arucieacis

    a specific By putting from ooe- -.bair a paper u a pptr w mrra av a "l:u ... Si. ma will h. eradi. flan If'

    cated or entirely prerented. Ifrirentime, a certain preventive and

    cure for tbe Hoc Cholera.

    DATID Es FOUTZ, Proprietor,BALTIMORE. Hi.

    For sale br DratTaists and Starekerpcn throaghoulI'nitcd States. Canada and South Xstma.

    HUMPHREYS'Homeopathic Specifics.

    A FxinLT Midicise Chest U a Jamil nrecuily. You must have soiuethinK to K've fora com, lora neauacne,aiarrnea,rneumatismneuralgia, toothache.eroup, whoopinK-coue- horotiierof the hundred ills that are sure tocome, rorwamed is forearmed. You haveit 1 ll a case of HUM PH REYS' HOMEOPATHIC hPECIFICM. eiiuiple so you make nomistake; ready o you need not wait; safe

    so you may act fearies&iy ; eracient so youmay feel confident. Medicine that cure butdo not kill; they save, but do not destroy,

    Price inNo. Cures Hoxes.

    FeTera,Conzestlon,Inflamations 2M onus. Worm Fever, Worm ColicIrylasr.couc.or leetlilng oi in--Iiarrbem,of Children or Adults-- .fsSKK,!!;!!E "i

    rKKiSlfcs!Heataelie,.SIck Heada'lie.Verligo Sifrr'iuiTF 1W liitea,too I'rofiiHe Periods 25.- '.u.v... n t 'i k 1 f,.r li.........il..nlt.... ....If r...... 1 . i p,. ) .i:ruptions,tiiUt Hheuni, Krjslpe- -IttrnmatUra, Rheumatic Pains

    lii 1 irr anil Ague, Chills, Fever,f lesfBlind or Bleedingirlithalmy,ana bore or Weak

    ;yes19 - Influ- -

    w hooplns-Cwiiic- h ViolentCouglis 50Astbniav,Oppresiied lireathhip 60Kar Uischarges, Impaired Hearing SMNerof ailawKnlaived tilandsJjwell- -

    iccs MlGeneral Debility .Physical Weak- -nropsy and Scanty SecretionsSea-Sic- k atess Sickness from Hid

    ing.27 " Kldaey Disease, Gravel23 Nervous Uebilltv. involuntarv.

    Discharges, and Seminal Emission 1 0029 " No re Mouth, Canker 8030 " 1 rinary Weakness. Wet' lug Bed. (mj31 rainini rerious, Mysteri8.. ooSJ " Nnrrerina; at Change of Lite 1 00

    Z psm-s.nt- . viius i ce ,34 IHptueria Ulcerated Sore Throat 501in viais, targe size...ioc. and 1 00FAMILY CHESTS, in Morocco, with 35

    lanre.'idram vials, containing the aboveand Book of Direction complete S10 00

    buuSOLD BY AW. DRUGUIHTS.

    Sent by mail ok express free, on beceiptor 4KICE.Address

    liUM PrTREYS' SPECIFICHOMEOPATH IC M EDICINE CO.,

    Office and Depot, No. btsi Broadway N. YPONDS' EXTRACT

    C'nres Pile's. Xenraljria. TootSiacbe.Blee4linr of the LnncN. .Meniarb. Mamer other Organs, itaras. Brntaes, Lnnwcm, Kpratina, sniiMiin, soreIhroat, ssrpKyM BloiH. 4'ornw, 1 Irers.Oltl SorCH. The best Family Medicine14 now n.

    Price, liox.-Mr- .; Pints, SI ; Quarts. JI.75.SOLD BY ALL DHlitiULSTS.

    June 1G IS71. 1 y.For sale by

    W. L. Miller & Co., Druggists,Findlay Ohio.

    in edTo any person producing any Medicine anieshow one-thir- d as many liviinr. permnnentcures as Dr. Fitijck s Veuictaiii.e Kiikumat--icKkmeky : and a Jurthrr rtHardnl illio loraucase of C hronic or I u tlamiiiator) Itlieu ina-tiii- n.

    Neuraluia. Khetimalic Auue. tScialica.and Klieuniaiiuu of the Kidneys ( trill nutcure. ThiKHlieumnlic Syrup utucd tniranfyonly, pleasant to tne taste, and KUaranleeu Oltree from Injurious It IS noi a HMeliciue, but the prescription olJos.

    Filler, XL I)., Proleworof Toxicology andChemlKtry, graduate of the celebrated Uni-versity ol A. !., INCt, whose en intire proiessiouai uie nas oeen uevoieu JSto tliisiliwae. ThUpreparatlon undersol- -emn oath is conscientiously believeit to be tbeonly positive, reliable hieci nee ver discovered.The prool that no other specific ever exists Is afound in every community in nelsons alllictedmany years past end still sutterlue. llphuneuiuM could cure it. if a tttecitic did eziM.muwouia sot oe o, a tact mai mul ie universally auniuieu. ineoit ueceivei suerermsy wisely ask, whatsecurily orevidence has

    that Dr. Filler's RheumaticSyrup will curecase. The protection otlered to inttlents

    aiaiiiHt imposition is in a legally siitned con-tract edwhich will be forward d without cluinteany sunererseuuine by letter a uefcriutlon

    alllctioiiK; this guarantee will state the exnumber of bottles warranted to cure, and

    case of failure the money paid will be re-turned to the patient. No other remedy hasever lieenollered on such liberal and

    terms. Medical advice, with certificatesfrom prominent Physicians, Clerevmen. etc.

    have been cored after all other treatments failed, sent by letter, eratis. Afflicted thecordially invited to write lor advice to theprincipal nmce.ss south Fourth street phiia- - of!..!.... I . ... Til- - . . . . . .. I

    uy tfruggisis.W. L. MILLER CO..

    Jane 10, 71-- ly Sole Agents, Findlay, Ohio.

    KOSADALIS theer

    The ixc v.v.v. thatiCOMPOSE r.)-- . '1.:5 are apublished on every . ' therefore it is not a secret p ejuralion, anconsequentlyrOTSICIASS PEESCBIBE IT

    It is a certain cure for Scrofula, ofSyphilis in all its forms. Rheumatism, kin Lhseases, Liver complaint asd ail diseases of theUlood.

    iir

    A will do nxire good tlian ten Wiles thettf ihm Syrur oC baraapanlla.THE UNDERSIGNED PHYSICIANS

    are used Rosadalis in their practicefor the past three years and freelyendorse it as a reliable Alterativeand Blood Purifier.DR. T. C. PtJGH, of Baltimoio.DR. T. J. BOYKiy, " thePR. B. W.CARR.DR. F. O. DANXF.LLT. - tlieDR. J. S. SPARKS, of Nicholuville,DB.K"l. McCARTHA, Columbia, toDR. A. B. NOBLES, Edsecomh, N. C.

    USED AND EITDOESED BYJ. B. FRENCH k SONS, FaU Hirer,

    Alass.F. W. SMITH, Jacksnn, Mich.A. F. WHFXLKR. Lima, Ohio.B. HALL.Lima.Ohio.CRAVEN A CO Gordonsrille. Va.' SA.M'L. G. McFADDEN, Murfrecs--1

    boro, Tcnn. itOur space will not allow of any ex-

    tended remarks in relation to theirtuesof Rosadalis. Tothe Vedical

    Profession we guarantee a Fluid ctsuperior to any they hare ever

    jucd in the treatment of diseasedjlilnod; and to thealflirted we say try waslUiKaUalia, and you will be restored armla health.

    I:a;a.!.Uii is sold by all Drnprists,jpritj IJI-O- per bottle. Addressj 13. & CO.

    2Ianlifacturina. firm- - - ,tQ I 'I BalTtsosx. is.July 21 1871 ly. Tbe

    and

    Complete Piclorial History of theTimes." had

    byThe Best. Cheapest and most ecess-- wasI nl tauiliy raperia ine s. ailoss. '

    Harper's Weekly.SPLISniDLT 1LXCSTKATED.

    Notices of the Press. allThe model newspaperof ourcountry. Com-

    plete in nil Uie departments of an AmericanFamily Paper. Harper's Weeklu hasearned for for

    uf Clvm- -xot,ii-Aiourna- lThe best publication of Its class in America,

    not to permit of any coniparixou betweenand any of their number. Itscoluranscon-tni- n

    tbe finest collections of readiinc matterthat are printed. eelt illustrai ions arenumeron end beautnui, being furnished bythe cbief artists of Uie country. Boston Trav

    Harper's Weeklu Is the best and most Inter-esting illustrated newspaper. Nor does itsvalue depend on its illustrations alone. Itsreading matter is of a higher order ot literary npmerit varied, instructive, entertaining andunexceptionable. A'. F. Sun.

    SUBSCRIPTIONS. 1872TERMS:

    Harper's Weekly, one year.An extra copy of either the Magazine,or Bazar, will be supplied (rails for every old

    club of five Subscribers at $4 UI In one re-mittance; or, six copies for &U UO, without anextra copy.

    tiubsenptionn to Harper's Magazine, Weekly,and Bazar, lo one address lor one year, lu uu;or, two of Harper's Periodicals, to one ad-dress, for one year, 17 00.

    Hack numbers can be supplied at any time.The annual volumes of Harper's Weeklu, in

    neat cloth binding, will be sent by express,free of expeir-e-. for (7 00 each. A completeset, comprising Fifteen Volumes, sent on re-ceipt of cash at tne rate otto Xi per volume,"freight at the expense of the purcluuer.

    The postage on Harper's Weeklu is 30 centsyear, which must be paid at the subscriber's

    fislollice. AddressHARPER BROTHERS. N. Y.

    Great Western Gun Works.Rifles j Double aad Single Baxrel.

    BbotGuns: Revolvers: Ammunition: asSporting Goods. Rifle Barrels, Locks,Monnt-ings,iu-n

    liaterials.tc (Send fora Price List.Atidress J. H. Johnston, Great Western GunWorks. 179 Hmlthneld Street. Pittbureh Pa.

    N. H. Army Carbines! Kiflea aud Revolverbought or traded lor. aoao-m- o

    Miscellaneous.WILD WESTERN LIFE.

    A Colorado of Ten YearsAgo.

    Tue passage by tbe Legislature ofa bill appropriation; Cve hundred dol-lar to Thomas T. Tobio for tbe killing ,f one ot the E'piftOSas 10 1863,recalls to mind oneo. the most ro--mantic, and,8tthe same time terriDie, incidents in the history Of SOUtb

    and which, in connetion withthe Kevriolds rmprrilla raid, a Vear

    I r ,1 l.lt 1. 1 ! a 1unci, wicw a suauvw VI terror nuuiear over that eecliou of country mwhich the bloody scenes were enacted.After a lapse of nine fcara the whirli-gig of time again brings this affair tolight,- - and at this diatace from theactual occurrence of the tragic event.tbey ec-cr-a but as the memory of adream.

    The Espinoe a were cou ics Span-iarda outlaws from old Mexico, whocame up into Colorado m the year1SG3, rnd before the strong arm ofjustice red reached them succeededin assassinating between twenty andthirty of the hardy pioneers and miners Of that day.wbo WCtC StrugglingQ aeveioi) mis wonder,l '""Jrich country, The elder EsDinosa

    w.m a large. coarse, Dara-viaage-villainous looking rulhan, while hiscompanion was a small lellow, of noparticular individuality, possessingevery thing but tlie elements of a lawabiding citizen, , desperate, 6ly and treacherous. The storygoes that the older Espinosa was ardi"ir.us monomaniac.impressed withthe idea that for some fancied wronglor some unconscious tieea wherebythe sins or tne tatiier had been visited upon his head, or as an atonementfor his own shortcomings, ho wascommanded by some patron saint.some ruling and guiding spirit, orNemesis, to avenge the crime againstconscience, to go forth into the world,slaughter indiscriminately the whites, Inolfer a prayer whenever he set a soulfree, and thus hope to merit and attain the smiles and gracious favor ofhis ruling spirit. ith this task before him he enlisted the services of erhis cousin, and together they journey

    northward and entered into Colorado. On this trail of blood thetrip was diversified by 'the killing oftwo men in SautaFe.and a soldier atConejcs. It wss in March 1863, thattbey ai rived in tbeviciuity of CanonCity. There ILey lurked three weeks,,! l.onon in roalitir t lio miir.Wniur .

    iect OI lue:r II11S31UU. --MD8 menwere assassinated, and tho news ofthe terrible scourge became circulated

    otucr portions of the Territory.o one was lei t to tell tbe tale oi ho

    these dread events occurred, and fortuse the tlebtu ot various parties it

    was wrapped in an impenetrablemystery. The people of that vicinitywere ar palled, stiicken with fear,scarcely daiing to venture beyondthe rraclicl immediate aid. It seem

    like a mysterious visitation ofProvidence if Providence ever sendsbullets through men's hearts and noodc could tell 'Irom what conceal'ment the messenger of death, whichhad never missed its mark, mightreach liim.'' The dread despair, the

    feeling of uncertainty, tho reignterror, the fear of an unseen and'

    uokrriwn foe pervaded tbe hearts oi methoee eturdj pioneers who dared faceany clanger open and known.

    The assassinations became more andtrequect Men would leave theircabins, their camps or the cities of

    mountains, destined for anothersection, only to be found a few dayslater by somo more fortunate travel

    stark and dead with a bullet throughthei- - hearts. Under thcsecircumstances not

    company of twenty volunteers wasraised in Park county, and headed by

    energetic leader, all lully deter-mined to solve the mystery. The firstgocd work dooe was to punish a gang

    thieves ; but this did not reach thecause of their trouble, and the mur-ders continued. At Ued Rock Riae.neir Fairplay, me immeiiate vicin- - ho

    cr me ueoessee nouse, an along astrails, murdered men were found

    singly and in pairs. Ere long,a trail in the lower part of the the

    park leading toward Canon City, this ctroops of twenty men followed it and ous.finally came to a pot where two fort

    wero feeding. Concealment waswork of an instant, and ere longhunters were rewarded by the the

    appearance of two men, who provedbe the Kspinosas. In tbe fast re

    cesses of the mountains they hadhalted to divide their fpoils and torefresh their wearied frames, and were Pcqprobably planning their immediate Itfuture operations, me sight ol thesemen were as exasperating as was thememory of their fiendish deeds, and and

    was but a few seconds before rifleswere drawn upon their forms andbullets went speeding on their deadlyerrand. The elder Espinosa fell, but

    not killed raising himself on onehe fought like a wounded and

    bloodthirsty tiger against his adversaries, i be contents ot two revol-vers were disehargtd by his hand,wkhout doing any injury to the soldicrs, and be Cnslly fell and died the

    young Espinosa was unharmed,with the agility of a goas be the

    sprang into the rocks, scrambled eraway, and made his escape. tbat

    UpDn examining tbe dead fiend whobeen thus summarily disposed ot

    the mountaineers, a horrid sightmade manifest. There was the

    blood-stain- ed clothing ot a dozen wasvictims of his murderous bullets, was

    to dear friends away back in tl e icoEast, memorandum books, personal usetrinkets, ot little intrinsic value, but But

    going to sbow that the assassina thetions were carried on, not so much

    gain as for tbe mere pleasure and thegratification of murder, or else, as wehave SUooeBted above, to appease the ingwrath of some offended spirit. Tbehead of the Espinosa was decapitatedand sent to Canon City, where we Thebelieve the skull remains to this day.

    But here the depredations did notcease. The escaped Espinosa picked

    a companion, called a cousin aMexican finds a cousin in almost any butcorner of God's footstool and im-buing him with the spirit of despera-tion, or inculcating a feeling of re-venge for some fancied wrong, theycontinued the bloody business of the

    firm though on a much less scale.They drilled into the southern por-tion of the Territory, ravaged Conejos, Saguache, Costillo and othercounties, until finally they were d

    by troops and several citizensfrom Fort Garland. A reward badbeen offered by the Governor of theTerritory for .the apprehension of theremaining murderers, and variousefforts had been made to capture orkill them. The party had been search-ing for several day, when they wereambushed by the circling of severalcrows in the air, which old mountain-eers declared a good sign of the vi-cinity of the object of their Eearcb,

    no other beings besides themselveswere known to be in that neighborhood. And, snre enough, the signproved infallible, and the murdererswere discovered and both killed.

    On the body of one was found a bookof prayers and and a quantity of icsane rabpsodies the latter written bytie elder Epinosa, One of theserahpsodies ended thus, "The VirginMary will be sitting on my head untili die in her arms Amen. Jesus!A large amount of like ejaculationsseem to show that it was probablya religious monomania that led tothe deeds committed. However thismay be, tbey were the worst banditsthat ever crosed the borders of theTerritory, and the end of their liveswas but iu consonance with their dailyacts.

    The older Espinosa had addresseda paper to Governor of the Territorystt'iDg forth that he bad killed twenty two men, and on that account demanded that his property be restoredto him although what bis propertymight have consisted of is not veryclear! v shown.

    FUN AT WINTER SCHOOL.

    BY. C. D. WARNER.

    I never knew a boy farmer whowas not eager to tro to tbe districtschool in the winter. There is such

    Chance for lealnino'. that he mustD,oe a dnll hoy, who does not come outin me spring a fair skater, an accurate snow-bail- er, and an accomplished slider-dow- n hill, with or withont a board, on his seat, on hisstomach or on his feet. Take a moderate hill, with a foot slide down itworn to icy smoothness, and a "croround" of boys on it, and there isnothing like it for whittling awayboot leather. The boy is tbe shoemaker's friend. An active lad canwear down a pair ot cowhide soles ina week so that the ice will scrape histoes. Sleddinz or coasting is alsoslow fun compared tothe 'bareback'sliding down a steep hill over a hard,glistening crnst. It is not only dan-gerous, bat it is destructive to jacketand pantaloons, to a degree to make

    tailor laugn. If any other animalwore out his skin as fast as a schoolboy does his clothes in winter, hewould need a new one once a month

    a country district school, patcheswere not by any means a sign of poverty, but of the boy's courage andadventurous disposition. Our eldersused to threaten to dr.ess us in leath

    ana put sheet iron scats in ourtrousers. The boy taid that he woreout bis trousers on tbe bard seats inthe school house, cipheiing hardsums, t or that extraordinary state'ment ho received two castigations,one at home, that was mild, and onefrom the school master, who wascareful to lay the rod upon the boy's tosliding place, punishing him as heocoscly called it on a slidmi; ecile.

    according to the thinness of his panlaioons.

    What I liked best at school, how toever, was the study of history, early

    istory, the Indian wars. We studiedmosly at noon time, and we hal it

    illustrated as the children nowhave "object lessons' though our edobject was not so much to have lessons as it was to revive real history

    men oi tue scuooi nouse rose around hill, upon which tradition saidbad stood in colonial times a blockhouse, built by the settlers for defense against the Indians. For theIndians had the idea that the whiteswere not settled enough, and used tocamo nights to settle them with atomahawk. It was called Fort Hill.

    was. very steep on each side, andriver ran close by. it was a

    charming place in summer, where onecould find laurel, and checker berries, or

    sassafras roots, and sit in thecool breeze, looking at the mountainsacross tbe river, and listening to tbemurmur of the Deerfield. The Meth theoduts built a meeting house there

    ftcrwards, but the hill was so slip hapery in winter that the aged could

    climb it, and the wind raged sofiercely tbat it blew nearly all theyoung Methodists away (many of tee

    horn were afterwards heard of in theWest,) and finally the meeting bouse snditself came down into the valley, andgrew a steeple, and enjoyed itself toever afterwards. It used to be a est

    in New England that a meetingase ought to stand as near heavenpossible.

    Tlu Unym. nL mm. .a.ul-sW- tJ itthemselves into two parties; one was

    Early Settlers and the other tbe andquota, tbe latter the most numer- - a

    . .swJ, - as t 1I ne ariy semers oum a snowon the hill, and a strong fortress the

    was, constructed or snow balls,rolled up to a vast siza (larger than

    Cyclopian block of stone which tbeform the Etruscan walls in Italy,)piled one upon another, and tho whole becemented by pouring on water whichfroze and made tbe walls solid. The

    iots helped the whites bnild it.bad a covered way under tbe snow,

    through which only could it be weand it bad bastions and towers wellopenings to fire from, and s great was

    many other things tor whi?h theree no names in military books. by

    And it had a glacis and a ditch out-side.

    by

    When it was completed, the Early tbeSettlers, leaving the women in tbeschool house, a prey to the Indians, tonsed to retire into it and await the andattack of the Fequota. There wasonly handful of the garrison, while

    Indiacs were many, and also barbarous. And it was in this light that and

    great question was settled, wheth tbea boy might snow-ba- ll with balls and

    he had soaked over night in andwater and let freeze. They were ashard as cobble stones, and if a boyshould be hit in the head by one ofthem, he could not tell whether he

    a Fequot or an early settler. It tbeconsidered as unfair to nse theseballs in an open fight, as it is topoisoned ammunition in real war. byas the whites were protected byfort, and the Indians were treach his

    erous by nature, it was decided thatlatter might use tbe hard missiles. of

    The Pequots used to come swarmnp tbe bill, wun niueous war-whoop- s, of

    attacking the fort on all sideswith great noise and a shower of balls.

    garrison replied with yells of de- - R.Dance and well-direct- snots, burlingback tbe invaders when they at-tempted

    into scale the walls. Tbe set-

    tlers hsd the advantage of position, bisthey were sometimes overpow-

    ered by numbers, and would oftenhave had to surrender but for the tberinging of the school bell. The Pe-quots were in great fear of the schoolbell. al

    I do not remember that the whitesever hauled down their flag and sur-rendered voluntarily, but once ortwice the fort was carried by storm

    the garrison was massacred to aboy, and thrown ont of the fortressJ forhaving been first scalped, lo take a inboy's cap was to scalp him, and afterthat he was dead, if he played fair.There wexe a great many hard hitsgiven and taken, but always cneer- -fully, for it was in tho cause of ourearly history. The history ot Greeceand Borne was stuff compared to this.

    Samuel Goodkidgk, of Canaan,Me., is the oldest man in New England 105 years. His last farm laborwas performed in bis ninety ninthyear. His wife lived to be ninety-seve- n,

    and their oldest child is nowliving at the age of eighty-on- o.

    BRIBERY IN KANSAS.

    HOW SENATORS POMEROY ANDCALDWELL GOT THEIR SEATS

    IN THE U. S. SENATE.

    Elections with Money in Them- --How the Pacific Railroad

    Got Their Agents Intothe Senate.

    Official report of the Investigating Committeeof the Kansas Legislature.

    Mr. President, the Smaieand House of Repre--mwira .The committee appointed by the

    foregoing resolution met on 2lith ofJanuary, 1872, and organized andissued subpoenas for witneses, andadjourned until Tuesday, the 30th ofJsnuaty, and on that day met andlirWraueu iu i iub iBumooy uiwitnesses, and continued from day toiav asVa1 siasiaaii tfin tntr! t

    . t ro s 1..1 i r Irnony we ue Jc-roary-, iS,ze summoned to appear before ns

    persons within the State, of whom itlm aDarroil f hair Lrnnw oamvtliinr t

    ""J" mal":r ol wqry, anauie weamnoujr t inubo wag appeared

    uuu mo mo suiuoiiHui me wiicurreut. reaoiuuou uiecommittee employed James Chew asmcir citra, nuu reuueeu tu wr,l,nSall the testimony taken, which testimany is herewith submitted andmade a part of our report:

    rrom me testimony taken yourcommittee lind : 1 bat at tuo senatorial election ot 1867

    , , , , , IVi u: .1 : ... v.:u. I8 F !rand influence the members the Legislature to secure the election of S. C,Pomeroy, E G. Boss, and ThomasCarney, Perry Fuller, and others intheir employ.

    See the report of a committee sppointed in l8Gi, in How Journal of1877. from page 957,971, inclusive; Ialso see testimony herewith submit toted of George A. Reynolds, I. S. Ksllocb, K. D. Mobley, S. D. McDonald,Thomas D. Ortine, Joshua Wheeler,William Skruggs, D. R. Anthony,bd. liussel et al. lt also appears, inreference to that election, that S. C,Pomery and Sidney Clarke, in MarchI860, jointly paid one thonsand dollars, and promised to pay a furthersum of two thousand dollars, forwhich they executed their jointnotes to M. W. Reynolds, who hasrecently been appointed Register ofthe Land Office at Neodcsha. in con- -sideration that he would use the col- -umns of his Journal at Lawrence, to anlsecure the election of S. C. Pomorov

    the United States Senate, in 1SG7, asand Sidney Clarke to Congress in thefall of 18GG. It also appears that S. C. andPomeroy paid an addition of a furthersum of two hundred and fifty dollars

    the said M. W. ueynolds. It further appears that M. W. Reynoldssued up those notes in the Don "lasCounty District Court, and the de--fendants, Pomeroy and Clarke, plead- - that

    therein an illegal consideration forthe' notes, and tnat finding of thecourt upon the trial upon the merits- Iwere for the defendants and that the we"judgment against the plaintiff, Rey- -nolds. That Reynolds bad the ca3eprepared for the Supreme Court, and riaIthere directed his counse not to proceed twofurther inthe canse.and that shortlvthereafter he was anointed tothe Duhiic sentoffice he now holds.

    "TOOFrom inn rlpnoaition of Pomirov ueS J I

    anrl niato I.L.n anrl nU,l in ll..f "case, is would seem that tbe payment ofthe t5l,000, and the promise ot the$2,000, was to advance Republican for

    .in Kansas, snd to secure aRepublican victory at the election in

    fall of 1866. When such teati- - went

    monv as this U named in the lijrht of 80Do edwell knowa fact, and the subse-quent demonstrated truth that theState was then Republican by a majority of , without the aid of

    Lawrence Journal, its falsity isapparent. That the 81,000 was paid,

    the 12.000 promised to be paid, bywas so paid and promised to be paid the

    subsidize the Journal in the inter- - otherof S C. Fomeroy and Sidney

    Clark personalty is a fair conclusionfrom the testimony. (See the testi ofmony of Geo. A. Reynolds, W. W.

    7 i . a .i i vr o. cj. rvuicinrSidney Clarke, and Geo. A. Reynolds,

    the findings of the court) As histhorough investigation of the sena

    torial election of 18G7, by reason of waylapse of time since that dte,abso- -

    lutely required for its preparation and atcompletion, much more time than on

    ordinary length ot a legislative willsession, the committee were forced to vote

    content in that regard with what thethey CQuld glean from witnesses thebrought before them for tbe proof of theother facts, yet from all testimonybefore the committee on that question

    h tve no hesitation id recording our Bankestablished conclusion that moneyused in a large amount, and in in

    A CORRUPT ASD CRIJflNAL WATcandidates for U. S. Senator, andtheir friends wi'.h their knowledge wiyIn relation to tne election oi isi i,

    testimony shows that Sidney tionClarke was a candidate for election

    the office of U. S. Senator in 1871,tbat his friends engaged for him, bonus

    which act be afterwards ratified, someeighty rooms at the Teflt House. andThat in addi'.icn thereto he rented

    fitted up on the opposite side ofstreet from the I eat House, and payon the corner of Kansas avenue otSix h street, a suit of fine rooms, ment

    which was, during tbat canvass, de andsignated ss the "soup bouse" and came'bread riot' where refreshments see

    were kept; that he deposited withKansas Yallev National Bank, tbe

    when he came here, twenty-fiv- e hundred dollars, which was drawn out

    Mr. Adams, on authority from onClarke; that Sidney Clarke overdrew

    account about sixteen hundred P.dollars ; that he offered to members to

    the Legislature appointments tooffice and payment of the expenses

    election of members of the Legis-lature for their votes for him fcrUnited States Senator ; that he told

    S. Stevens to make whatever ar berangements he pleased with Caldwell that

    regard to his (Clarke's) expenses; deadthat Stevens paid about ?,6UU; tbat or

    friend D. M. Adams, with tbe sonknowledge of Clarke, undertook to ofpurchase Senator Wood's vote with be

    promise of an office, whichwas secured by a certificate of had

    deposit in the Kansas Valley NationBank, for tbe sum of 93,000 act. (see

    oally issued : that Mr. Wheaton, of HFort Scott, a friend of Mr.' Clarke's,who was here endeavoring to secureClarke's election, offered to buy the wasvote of W. C. Webb for Mr. Clarke

    theum of 82,000, at Fort Scott, byDecember, 1870.These things all conspire to place

    the. fact beyond question tbat Mr.Clarke intended to use, and wasendeavoring to nse, and with hisknowledge permitted his friends to otuse, and endeavor to use, money and andot'ier valuable considerations, in anillegal, corrupt, and criminal way tosecure votes for himself for the UnitedStates Senate. .TDK X-- , LIT. ROAD TAKES A HAND.

    It also appears that R. S. Stevens,who ia a resident of Attica, N. Y.,and General Manager or the K. at

    'AT. Railroad, and whose business cost

    then, as now, inSfflSE.'as here in the interestof Mr. Clarke, and expended anamount of money for his nse in thecanvass : also, that P. T. Abell washere, aud spent a sum of money inthe interest of Mr. Clirke, and was atthat time in the employment of Jag.F. Joy, in his railroad busines in thisS:ate (see the testimony of GeorgeA. Revnolds and P. T. Abell) ; also.mat jonn McDonald, a resident ofbt. Louis, Mo , who had a peculiarinterest in Mr. Clarke s election, washere in Clarke's interest. It alsoappears that Adams paid out otClarke's money the entire expensesot tbe "soup house : that a part oftho money paid by Stevens went topay the o! the "soup house,"ad tliat (5aidwcU paid to or three

    hundred dollars as a part of the ex- -pelsM of lhe firgl fiouse "UayitDOt that lhi3 5Ia3racefnl

    r house'' is made the ledgerof ter o(

    men ? (See lhe te3,imony of Adams,AbbeU ail(1 ReTnoids. lt can hftrdl. . ' - 'dant. that Mr. Adams wcuM iaan.the rjsocr of the Kansas Val'ev N, . Rank inr 43 000 anrl f.YVheaton offer to pay 2,000 foravnmfnrMr n.rk, w,;thonr ihothor tv Of Mr. Clarke.

    In tbe case of the certificate for3,000, the testimony of Mr. King

    shows that that transaction, whichwas a direct attempt to obtain a votefor Mr. Clarke by bribery.

    TOE BRIDE ItEIN'G A MAIL AOBNCT.

    119 Ml WCU, ITUjVVVf, B3 TT t till--uv. vuuoeu ui mi.

    Clarke, if not by his positive direction. - Tbe facts that Wheaton camehere and labored for Mr. Clarke, andwas, st the time he made the oScr toMr. Webb, aad had been before thestrong friend of Mr. Clarke, leavesbat little with the mostk r tica, :hat,"hat wa, an effort di

    rected and assented to by Mr. Clarkebribe Webb with 82,000. The

    offer made to Phinney by Clarkehimself, and to S. C. King, as shown

    Wheeler's testimony, are of thesame character, except tbat in tbelatter it does not appear that anymoney was to be used in connectionwith the apiiointment. (See testimony of Clarice, Wueeler, King, andAbbell)

    In relation to the matter affectingAlexander Cildwe'.l, the testimonyshows that Len. T. Smith was hisLr,;nni tr;anA '

    AXD WA9 A e0CBAT,w working earnestly in the in

    terest of Mr. Caldwell and recognizedhis agent and confidential adviser ; to

    that James L. McDowell was thereworking for, and on confidential

    terms' with Alexander Caldwell inconsideration of tbe promise of Mr. inCaldwell to remove Mrs. Johnson,widow, whose husband was killedearly iu tne war at Morn jtown, Mo.,from the I'ostoflice at Leavenworth;

    large lobhy bt Leavenworthmen werc uere -- n lne interest ofCald- -wel1 lnat 1 nomas barney was thereaPQ confidential relations witn Laid

    1 I a. 1 I J k.i oi a writtenagreement existed between UUdwell

    ml barney in rewiua to me aenaioelection ; that Carney stated but

    ees go that he wa comingbefore the committee to testify, and

    out a message to the committee;he was notified by telegraph, asa b uinm0C9s to appear ; tbat

    W83 g,nS l" len " uo ,"lew ' u1 .!.. Tl Iu3, UH KHe IU

    members of the Legislature to voteCaldwell ; that a check for seven

    thousand dollars, drawn by Lsn. T.Smith, in favor of Tuomas Carney,

    into the hands of T. J. An Jer.i v i a lwmca wa. uy innerson present

    and cashed at the Kansas NationalBank on tbe 22d day of January,1871; that another check tor fivethousand dollars, drawn by J. W, theMorris, was cashed under

    vert suspicious cieccmstaxckjthe Topeka Bank, on tho night of22.1 of January, 1S71 ; that an thecheck for $1,200 was drawn by

    Robert Crczier and cashed bv the ofTopeka Bank on the 24 .h or 25'.h dayJanuary, 1371, and the cash de

    livered to .p T Smith- - that Lea.iTaiiuiD."rroweu an amount ofmoney from Thos. A Osborne to pay

    hotel bill ; tbat a draft npon tbe fourTreasury of the Kans9s Pacific Rail ed,

    Company for $10,000 was pre-sented by T. J. Anderson and cashed

    the Kansas Valley National Bank,the 23d day of January, 1871. It

    be borne in mind that tbe firstfor Senator in 1871 was upon

    24th day ot January, 1871, andjoint convention and final vote onnext day, being tae otn day ol

    January. There is now a note for$3,000 in the Kansas V alley national

    made by Anderson and indorsed by Caldwell, for transactions

    this canvass, which note is for thebenefit of T. J. Anderson; th Mr.Caldwell claims that the K. P. fiiil

    Company, Dy its agents, at or thsabout the time of the senatorial elec- - ia

    of 1871, promised to give himt30,000asits snare of the election jyetexpenses ol mat Cl'l.bll'IJ, v. J am are

    for bis influence as a U. . atSenator ; that Caldwell demanded ol on

    importuned Mr. Perry, tho theof K. P. Rsilroa-- Company, at

    Leavenworth, after his election, toto him (Caldwell) the said sum The

    $30.000 ; and that by aa arrangewith Mr. Perry, Mr. Cal lwellhis faithful friend L. T. Smithto Topeka from Leavenworth to one

    about and settle up this $30,000 Ittransaction, and that the agents of has

    company here did not admit thepromise as alleged by caitiwcu. ana

    did not stand as squarethe subject as the President of the and

    company wished (see testimony of J.Usher); that L. T. fcraith wantedarrange with Jacob Smith, do

    of the Topeka Bank, to cash andchecks given in the canvass (?eo testi-mony of Jacob Smith); that Len. T.Smith wished to be informed of anymember of the Legislature who could A

    bought (see testimony ot Greno);Len T. Smith said they werebroke on the morning of the 23d

    25th, but as soon as Major Ander thereturned they would have plenty

    greenbacks again; that he would itback in a few minutes : that An

    derson did come back and apparentlysomething, and went into Cald that

    well's private room with Caldwelltestimony oi uaymonu;; mat v . like

    Carson got one thousand dollars otcorruption fund (see testimony oiShannon and Spriggo); that money

    paid and offered to be paid tovarious members of the Legislature an

    Caldwell's agents and friends (seetestimony ot cnggs, Hammond,

    Melville, ISeal, Osborne, 1Floyd, Chase, G. W. Wood, Man

    ning. F. P. Baker, and others); that AGeorge Smi h paid out to members

    the Legislature lor Mr. Caldwell.with an understanding that it

    should be returned to him by Cald-well, over $20,000 (see testimony of toSpriggs); that Caldwell promisedappointments to office and other fa-vorable official acts for votes (seeBond and other testimony); thatCaldwell said alter his election, and

    different times, that his electionnim more man any one was

    aware of, anJ clearly indicated in hisconversation, and, in fact, said that hePAID FOR HIS SEAT IN THE UNITED

    STATES SENATE.

    from this State twice as much as thesalary of the office for the full term otsix years would amount to, or aboutMxty thousand dollars, and tbat nepaid Carney's election expenses,amounting to more than 10 per cent.ot the whole sum, or over six tnousand dollars (seetestimoney of Burke,Adams, and Dans :) that Laidwell ottered twice, or oftenter. to pay all ofSiJney Clarke s election expenses,andthat he did agree with R. S. Stevensto pay them on consideration ofClarke's withdrawal and his friend'ssupport of Caldwell in the joint con-vention. From all the testimony yourcommittee nnd tnat Alexander Caldwell used bribery and other corruptcriminal means, by himself and hisfriends, with his lull knowledge andconsent, to secure his election, in 1871,to the United States Senate from theState ot Kansas. Your committeehave also the report that the most im-portant witnesses, Thomas Carney,Len. T Smith, W. II. Carson, and T.1. Anderson, are now fugitives fromthe State for the purpose of deprivingtnis committee ot their testimony.andthat their absence is in contempt ofproper process issued and served uponthem, and so your committee is con-vinced, from all the circumstancessurrounding their sudden and clan-destine hesrira, for a cash considerationpaid to at least two ot them. (Seeiiurte and Usoorne's testimony.) W,

    martin ana Joei a nomas, important witnesses, as we believe, havetailed to appear, and we have beenunable to learn of their whereaboutssince they were served, Thomas bein?served by copy, Martin twice bypersonal service, once by a subpoena,and once with the rule ot the Senate.Thomas Moonlight and John Fletcherhave failed to appear in obedience toprocess. H.very reasonable effort hasbeen made to get these witnesses.Diligent inquiry does not discover thatR. S. Stevens has been in the Stateduring the pendency of this inquiry.Ever since this inquiry began therehas been an organized effort of personsm tne interest of Mr. Caldwell, andperhaps others, to

    KEEP OUT OF THE REACH toot tbe committee witnesses whose attendance was greatly desired. Everyobstruction that could be has beenthrown in our way by these persons.

    x n secrecy oi me crimes in tnetestimony we submit discloses the ofinterest of all concerned to concealthem, and the disgrace which attaches his

    the parties implicated, even remote-ly, makes the labor of proving themvery difficult. Men who have beenguilty of giving or taking a bribe, or

    anywise connected therewith, as ageneral rule, do not hesitate to hidetheir own and confederates' infamybehind the less odious crime of per-jury.

    The time left ns after our assign-ment to this duty before the close of thethe session was entirely too short topermit ns to go entirely through thework we have had in hand, especiallywhen it is remembered that we had tooar ordinary legislative duties to per-form, as well as this extraordinaryduty. The magnitude of onr laborsand of the subjects referred to ns canonly be fully appreciated by those who hishave met the inquiry lace to face.When the testimony which we herewith snbmit is read in the light ofthe fact that Len. T. Smith left theState about the time the investigation thewas ordered, and remained away; tbatCarney, Anderson, and Carson arefugitives, who have sought refnge peibeyond the territorial limits ot theState ; that Fletcher, and Martin.andThomas are skulking, secreted, or ab-sent from the State, there can be butone conclusion, and that is that thesame person, or persons, are guilty of

    offenses into which we are inquir-ing, and that they know it. (See testimony of Osborne, Burke, Adams theSpriggs and others)

    rota the testimony, all will see thatfull and complete exposition ot all

    those high crimes is the incessant labor outmonths, instead ot the few days we

    have had. As our report might, ot henecessity, be made before the si ?hand, we are compelled to close ourlabors with the testimony ot the sixty- - had

    witnesses whom we have examin nowaud the documents attached to

    their testimony, all of which we went

    Signed J J am es D. Shoddy,E. E Stover, untilII- - C. Whitney, were

    Committee on part of Senate.W. H. Clark,J.J. Wood,G. W. Clabk,D. H. Johnsox,J. BOYXTOH.

    Committee on part of House.

    A HERMIT IN A CITY.The Richmond (V.) Dispatch tells

    following strange story ; "Therea hermit in Richmond. He lives

    aim09t in the heart of the city, andtnere are yery few persons whoaware ot tue iact. ttis nome is new

    the extension of Eleventh street, year,tho c lge or the gully, almost in

    open air, and he has for the p-- st boththirteen years, with but a short inter-mission,

    hunmade this place his domicile. most

    gable end of a l old house hasbeen torn away, or nas been worn theaway by the effects ot time, except asmall portion of the roof, and it is in

    corner of this place that he livesis the northern gable end which are

    fallen away, and here in the bleakwinds this man sleeps each night withnothing to prottct him from the coldexcept an old piece of cocoa matting

    his own clothes. Regularly at 5 ao'clock he goes to bed. He on

    himself as carefully as one wouldin a comfortabty-warme- d room,places Lis clothing npon ti body.

    Ttien he lies down to sleep. His bedconsists of about two handfuls of bay edbetween his body and the earth. also

    number ofpegs have been driven beeninto the ground and a vine of somekind has been entertwined among intothem, and this keeps the straw within

    enclosure. During the day he beingroams about the streets and begs, and

    is said by an old colored woman alivai in the old weather beaten

    tenement on the edge ot the gullyin tbe night-tim- e he is heard by

    talking to himself, and the sound istbat of a number of persons en-

    gaged in conversation. His rest hemust get in the earlier .part of the hernight, ai he retires before sundown.During the war he lived underneath

    old stable a few paces distant.Once he was taken out and carried to areCastle Thunder," and there kept for inawhile. When he was let out he thewent back to his present quarters

    short time sgo he was arrested, 1d3and under the vagrant ordinance,sent to the chain-gan- g for three 24months in default of security. As Thesoon as his time expired, he returned

    his old retreat. 1 esterday alternoon a representative of this paper thewas in tbe neighborhood and witnessed his preparations for bed. Hagave his name as Edward WilhelmSeymour, says he will be fifiy-si- x cfyears old on tbe I6th of March next.and that he is a native of Germany."

    HEROIC CONDUCT.

    Seven Persons Plunged into the KeyWaters of Black Lake.

    Cochectos, Sullivan Co N. YnFeb. 17 Thirteen miles east of thisplace, is Black Lake, one 01 thosesmall inland lakes for which the coon- -trv ia noted, and named on accountof the yerv dork color of its waters.A tannery is erected here, and scat.tered here and there in tne forestclearings are the homes of the labr-nr- a

    at the tannery, which make quitea settlement about the lake. There,in that quiet and solitary spot, waswitnessed within the past week ascene that struck terror to the stout-est hearts, and which called forth theexhibition of those qualities of cour-an- d

    endurance which are thepride of tire backwoodsman, to a de-gree that has no parallel in the annalsof courageous deeds.

    The children ot some of the em- -Dlovea of the tannery had gathered atthe house of one of them, where theyenjoyed themselves until Bearly eve-nin-g,

    one day this week. Two littlegirls, Helen Brooks, daughter, of theforeman of the tannery, and HattieSchoonmaker, proceeded home fromthe nartv. took a "short cut acrossthe lake, which is frozen over, andwas considered safe. When theyhad reached almost the other shore,Hattie broke through the ice and Intrying to help her out, Helen slippedin too. They both sank, and whenthey came np, were entwined in eachother's arms, young Kilcain, a lad offifteen, working a few rods from theshore started toward them. Whenhe reached them they were strug-gling to grasp the ice. Kilcain gothold of them, and had them half wayout of the water, when the ice gaveway beneath him, and all three wereplsnging beneath the chilling water.When they came np the lad began toshout for assistance.

    James Brooks, who was in thewoods near by, now came npon thescene. It was bis sister m ine waterwith the others, and he ran to helpher. In reaching out he slipped intothe water. Both girls had beenclinging to Kilcain, and he was fastbecoming exhausted with his efforts

    keep them andis body above thesurface- - When the other boy fell inhis sister let go ot Kilcain andtwined herself around her brother.He succeeded in freeing his arms,and then attempted to reach one edge

    the ice. It would break awaywith the combined weight of him and

    sister, and tired him so that hedesisted, and the two boys beganshouting for aid. Thomas Burt, an-other boy was attracted by the cries,and ran to tbe edge ot tne ice, anainstantly broke through. There werenow five of them in the water, allstruggling fearfully for life. A mannamed Max Deseker, hearing theshouts of the children where he wasworking in tbe woods, ran down to

    lake shore, and beheld the situ-ation. He bad his five year old sonwith him, and telling him to remainperfectly quiet on the shore, rushed

    the straggling little ones in thewater, only to share their fate. Assoon as be plunged in the water bothlittle gir's grasped hold of his coat,

    he was keeping tQem anoat, wnenlittle son, terrified at seeing his

    father in the water, jumped in andgrasped him around the neck.

    The whole settlement had now beenattracted to the shore of the lake and

    wildest excitement prevailed.Women fainting, crying and praying;men shouting, and the chilled, failing

    sins in the water battling withdeath, that stared them In the face.Men shouted to do this and to dothat, and between it all nothing wasdone to aid them. .When Desekerfound his little boy about his neck heseized him in his powerful srms,kissed him several times, and with alook of dispair threw him far ont on

    ice, where he was taken np andcarried to his mother. The littlegirls were now rapidly failing, butyoung Kilcain succeeded in climbing

    on the ice, and shouted for a tan-nery hook. One was brought, and

    succeeded In pulling ont the inan- -"sue' was sinking beneali f3Tu SlK

    Thomas Dent, father of the boy whoalready fallen in aiding the girls,jumped in to the assistance of

    Deseker and the rest, and after himThomas Hanley. These two

    sustained the almost exhausted andalmost frozen Deseker and the boys

    a plank and m re tannery hooksbrought, and by their aid all

    safely landed. The girls, althoughbelieved to be dead, were resusci-tated. The others were restored bywarm fires and clothing. The affaircreated a sensation throughout thisentire section ot country, and thecourage and noble conduct of Dese

    Hanley, Dent, father and son,the lads, Kilcain and Brooks, is

    theme of hundreds of admiringtongues.

    A YEAR'S BRAIN WORK.

    Over three thousand five hundredbooks appeared in England last

    besides one thousand threenew editions the exact total ofclasses being four thousand eightrid and thirty-fiv- e and thenotable circumstance in the lit-

    erary history of the twelvemonth wasdecrease of novels from twoJ in 1870 to one hundred andin 1871. Still, lest it might be

    Inferred that the English novelistsfalling into disfavor, the statisti-

    cians are careful to add thethat the number of the new

    editions of romances has largelyduring tbe year which is

    tribute to tbe old writers. Workspolitical economy are rapidly in

    creasing in numner ia last year.against 26 in 18.0. Theologicalbooks are in greater demand thanformerly nearly 800 having appear

    last year. Educational books rjin denand nearly 700 having

    published during 1871. Thenumber of American importations

    the EnglL--h book market sensiblydiminished last year the figures

    322 in 1871, against 426 in 1870.Two countries of Europe presentstartling contrast thenew literary life of Russia bein

    represented in the statistics of 1371no les than 1,359 works,in thirty-on- e different cities of the

    empire, while Spain makes a beggarlyshow, although her civilization and

    literature are four centuries old.Spanish writers produced 115 newplays last year, but other contributions to the literature of the country

    very interior to those of Russia,number as well as in quality. Ofbooks of the year in Russia, ac-

    cording to Mr. Eugene Schuyler,were on language, 133 on juris

    prudence, us were historical works.were novels, poems, and essays.

    most remarkable feature of itRussian Look returns is the zreaprogress made by native writers.

    productions of political works.In regard to Germany, Robert

    Zimmerman writes that it is a sig-nificant indication of the present stat

    philosophy that in place ot philos-ophical systems, biographies ol phil-osophers and of their wires appear