WESTEffl EESEIWE HRONICLE.chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn84028385/1867-12-04/ed-1/seq-1.pdf ·...

1
WESTEffl . 0 - . EE SEIWE HRONICLE. VOLUME .5MST0. 16. WARREN, OHIO., DECEMBER 1, 186T. f BUSHTESS DIEECTORY. usun.(Mncu w.v:ui ValHtlifMnni. Ia m- - t.rrRlek.Mi-kt8t,Wrrn- . WM.Rrrtzat, RditoraadProwrleter. n. 3lMJtXI. dt CO. n)l..nfuiiwi.uj dealer h Hoc., ud 61mm. at MC;ii stead. et .. sin, mem et, ataxia eew v i Sot. (. LaO- -r ' mm. A. CU IOM, M.Ma'nlSaim. . - BU.0lu tret, Li. litjT. tt ,. .J.B.UUC9K, . - end Sore". OSee at Mtww. Kris. idefMrkt Street, tweorat of . tMitite Wiw pud t Cbroaic f 1QT. 1 Oaeeatte If hoing Depot, Warren. Ohio. Ino ioi Proprietor. I Bit Boon. the lxret U northern Ohio, eaet of CI r eland, lu re- cti. -- .ieen tbcronshly end r-- r oeniadeBUnd u o Mtr tel. ana uVimt. - aJalvW.lSo.. . , iimnin.iiiM. ranee Arent. Wn,0nle MsMhhidie. other property MmrS ' JbSftrnaVanie. faTarebl '- -: J VSyTKiSi Iw.li. art Uaa JT . tnrnrd for on, three and T W.B.EAU. . V.J.BaCXrV, t MACKKT. s. w.rax. UK ok r ATCH, Whole! dealers U Iron endNailB, Carriage and aaddlery auwii Tkct . Muiil 6c W una. 0. -- S7 A. K. LTKAX, 0. Km, kiw IddiBrs Morgan lad! Btii Son Store. Market ritreet. ar- - , aws -- w. - r - , W. mKTBKB, Attorney at Law. yntrr Publio. avyaaccr Oft at OraagerilJa. ejambail oo. 0. apU.y - - " .m.rTcro. ' HUTCHlJ uuuuiiJi Lew. off oe ever Smith McComb Forr-rd- f Main ud Market Street. Warren. Ohio. tapm . -- u. - -. JfcLAIS dk WA1B, VuibaUrtn at LfkiAw. Mi StrMt, Jr- - JAXESOX dk WHIEUK, MurMtnrorf of StoTM. Plowi.Cmtiatf.TiB-w- r Mot FrBitar. 6toT Pip,dM. Ji. A Mark tiK, arru. u. AJmiAk'a. J. IITCB1BB. - B. W-- mTTJT. J. C BUTIHIM. KTTCIUSS. aVATUVF A H CT HIH . Attomr. 01 sUcad to w huiaaH istnutod totBoaiB tXM acd adjoininc oontna. sad bt Baracaiaf Bttaatioa to appiiomuou in torn C. 6. oart at Cloreteed. for tlio benefit af taa Saakrapt umea over rrwua Baat'l Bankiu HJe. a Market btreot. Warrta.Obio. IMarek B. mol. DR. F. MYEH, LstaaT TaniactoB. ICBden hit pTofaarioaal . pon me t tae poopw m t exrca mm wiuii, b&ea for the prwoat. at randenoe, corner of . Uick A CkeKBat w waaawBITH. FapaiaUsa sad 8arfot!Jafioeoror , on' Draa fitara. Main knd, Warren, Ohio. Ofie aarnn froBt t B.B. an, and ro lu I .,Bi .::;:.i T.' jjaajH.tooi. , A, BrKAJt, M. BV, Kc!ectSPkytrUl d SlTot-oo- e irrer Btlloi biore. karket Street, Warrea, pbio. auenuoa irraa to Cbtobm XHim. arrwa DeatirtB. Ofie mr HeUia Boai aakiaa Otsaa, bore tier are prepared at ail taa te Baanebetar end rasanteaia B IailaUaBaBaeaadtdMBAatak. Mar 4,--tf. -- - Votary TabUe; Aorkient, Fir and Life Inra-- pBif nl ; aaa renaion wm wwwmw-FeanHT- e Iteket. eold t and from, and Monoy u Maim ftltha loareetcnr- - raat rate. Ofaoa ia WaabB BJock. Mn straab wacm.0. January . iac. Br F. A. BIERCK. . HoaterpatU Phytidaa and Sarraoa. Ofio and Beaieeno ia Satliif'i Block, Bortk of the Pub-li- e Sgoare. 0e BP (tain, raudaaa aaat and oftkeiueck. . toam LOT. - .v BBxaot. .. LOT db lIUvI, Payaletaa and Bj leonx, eBe atrt al tk Bant MarkM&oa arraB.Oaio. ALBEIT I1IMI. Attaraay at Law. Ofio an aat tid af p all eqaare. Warren. Otoio. ia baitding recent ly a njd by U. & WtX Callaetor. liT l tf . - c..BrcAtr. Lktuu. - MXTCAXr dk CLAU, FhyrieUaJ aod Sorreou; Oflee en Hih Street mi the Bjaad abmtzly aocuid by Dr. Har-aw- a JaaafoSlyr B. , TiTLOB. . a MBA. ' TATL4B dk IOH ., Attoney at Law, OCoa aact od af Tni r watreawUBM. - VI.T. BVTEAK Attaraer at Law, ka retnrned toWarrraasd nmaied praotie, - CKe ia hi former room, ever Iddian A Margas'iStorajOB ktarkdOl. Jaly tt, leo-2- y. . - - - . amtm. rsx. acuBT. AUTBUrT at ACKUT, Bij.eifirtJ. VatttrMACo. Dralenll Waiei e. Jewelry sad DiaaienU. Market Street. Warm. Oaio. (Matcblnt. ' ' a. b. rBos. m. raos. rKCK dfc 11QTHU, WlieleeaJeand Eetai? Sealar ia Poreira Bad iHaieeti Dry wood, blik and Straw Boaaeu Triamma, Varietiea, Jr,at tt tigu of the - Wam.7r Store- .- Ptaajni Slock. Tama. Oki W. At J. A. rACKAU, Dual en ta Hard wars. Iron, Sails, LaKbor, Saaa, Blisd, loot. A, Xaaasatawa. bhia. Ib.QwUU-t- f V. b. iwcna. W. P. PBBTBB. - W. B. dk W. r. rOBTEB, : Scalar b School and Hjenaaea Book. Wail Paper, f ariodioalj, Pamsklau and Xaa-axi- at thKw lorkBookotora, Mala bweet. Warrea. Okie. . BJEXB dk ABABAV KaaBfaetBran and Wholwala Daalen ia Rea--7 pladlothinc,Eata,Capend6esU' For. Binkisr Good Mala street. Warres,0. JaaU'iS - B. K. babxttb: dk CO. Wfhelarale and Katai dealer, ia American and PorciCB Bardwara, Iron. Kail. ias, Ac Vaaftoriar'f Block. Markat SuWarraa. 0. HeCOMJBS. S3UTUS A AD ABU. Wh.lneln .nil Retail Dealers in Ponica and Amencaa Dry rood. Orooeria. Crockery.. Comet af MaU awl Market fitreeu. Wama. Vaia. - - ioDixes a Me bo Al. ; : Sealert ia Etapl aad Paacy Dry Good Car-- pet. Mstuufi aaa riaor OH Vloth. w rndow Ekade aw tztaree Tee. Co fie. Bpicee, Ac Tkey keep aoa aaily ea kaad. a bvrr and fall artmnt of food ia their line, of food : aaality aad faekioaabi striae, and offer them tor cal at the toweat pneee ia th market, Jan.. 17. - ' A BTTBK. er Attaraer c Law aSe aver Park A P. iiardwan 8tore, W arrea. Ohio, are aaikorlaeoV t ee preparea te attend ta all cue ander the hue BaaJtrapt Law ia U United states Voan. MareaUlsa, a. a. ran. , TABU A wm. IeeJers ia Paresca aad Doaiestie Dry fiends. Crockery, Boot, Shoe aad Leather, Carpet-i- n. Paper Bearing, Window Shade. Beady Mad Clothin. Ao alwk7s ehcan for mJ. pay at the Sew York Store. Market Street. Warrea. Okie. ajrr t i t nv e nnnni f v t.ma. JHWrl AI HAUVUAllXilVa Ixlvery steals le TS ONE OF THE LATE Instila J.tlOB. Owretoek n all bw aad of the mteai tyi. Panoa waatia aaytbiai ia the Lirery line, anil pica tire a a eau. otasie ia at raaref theS awal House. Warrea. Jaiy T. 167 -- tt. , CONCORD GRAPEVCIES. TTVjB SALE AT MY FRUIT tt J? TfeaeUad lFam.CMBrdarpTiosby the Laie er by the thoeaaad ia any qaaatlty to sit perehaaara. rf ais the difemt Tarie-tle- e r that I am new grewinc ia my Yiaarard. Ul voweora aena at un. au order prompt- ly attended te. P. 0. Address, Girard. Oh io. H. 8. ADAMS. Weatbaraiaid. Ber. , lMT-- tf SHOE BLACKING k BRUSHES XrMMfcMaia St, Warrea 0 EXCHANGE BANK 7 : : V. FEEEMAN & HUNT. Warren, Obio. BULEBS IS Government Bonds. Vob RoeoiTtd m Nt MlW ronpUy auwiM t. KETEATE STAJIFS FOR SALE. Trumbull KattoMl fiaak! Warrca. Paid up Capita $150,000. I. maw Brmred to 4a tk rani kojieow 1 Dimul, Dopant and KUcknr bar ud Mil CH AILbJ0MlTa. rnrt. J. S. EDWARDS. Ouhior. Ikictn. : CaiiLn Surra, Eiudi Ararou Winn PiClito. K. 6. H. W. Emra.' C A. Baaiioi, lirra Balbwib. Oflt.lO,lM6-tt Dr. S. R. BE0KW1TH, Surfle&l V Hecaiiicftl Deitlst, OrriCt TITH DR. A. JOTtKM. EHUAI, HI. TO INSERT fan ISPKBPARED teeth. P th BMtapprorea mm. am io Hnora m tv ration, ob tk teh. npos tk. boK BPproTwl ud Miostific prineiplw. . IMiJW 330033LS I JTJST RECEIVED. AT TBI Warren lews . Depot J j YJXEJS BBOOK This popn- - L Iar book, by home aathoraa. i mtt- - itif with a ready rale. W hart joat reoeirod s r arprr. rnce ji.ou. EAIHRISA Sy Dr. Holland. Thai new n. by the asthor of "Biurreet." J I art out, and i inpreat demand. AU Ih admirer nf "Timothy Titcomb" most hare a oopy. Prio B1.SU. WBmr COMPLETE POKMa-T- hi i the Diamond Edition, eampleta in oaa vol ae. Prier 11.50. . RECORD of th TTH OHIO RBQIMENT. Br Major Score L. Wood. We bare a few eopiea of thi popular War Bacord oa hand, and a it will uoa a ot of print, thoaa wUaisB one. hould call aooa. Prio tU5Q. All aaw book receired a ooa at rnblUbai. W.B.A W. P.POaliH. WBmn.Oei.lfi.1867. NEW ABR1TAL or STAXDAED HSCELLWEOCS BOOKS RECEIVED A NEW JUST MiasellsjMoaj Book, Bmoaf which ax thlouowinsi . , , Preacott' Work 15 Tola, ' Life and Letter of Waihtnrtn Trrlne I el. Wararley Berai OTOla. Imirt Work. iipwibora' Work. Spark'. Lin of WaahiaftOB. Gil 8 toI. an edition. Doa UaLxsUe d Tale LoskkarfeTmaela. ttea. Liabi Cemplata Chamkrtry. . Charla Dkhen Work all d'tiorj. Tbaekaray' Work Diamond Edition. Lookinc Taward. Saneet by Mrs. Cbiid.' , BeaadKita by , Chavita Child, - LaeyAriyn bp Trow bride. (. Katanaa by t.ii. KoilaBd. ' K cyclopedia of Relinoo Kaowladce. Weeaur'a Unabridftd Dictionary. Woretrt " - ' " ' yra.Molb.oi'.E'oriealjroTaU. EaaTcan oar Heme. Ac. We will order as Beak ana an mt thai weaaToaoieaaaoe, a w are reccrnac pack' are from iiew V ork twice a week. uetio - w. fl.A W.1T.FOBTXB. BEAIIS PAPER. 200, We kar ?nrt repaired from the Holr- - oae at lHa a noerior lot or Wntinc Faoer. which w offer at whlal or retail at low pri- ce. fOOLSCAP . . : 1 (XlMMKRCIAL NOTS. - - LADIU UOT UUOtUAr-- . Ui4L CAP, BKBM05 PAPBK 5?CH SOTS. Ala a tare rapplyof Baff and Whit Enrel- - pa. W.li.AW I. P0KIE&. QAA ( BOLLS WALL PAPER, ' QJjyj ALLHJWSTTLBa Jnt reeeiTed from Kew Terk. and bow open. aall aad examine 9vr atyle sad price before PuoaaaiaK. Brown JBlBnk, . . " Wilte STavnti, , Eatin Papen, . GUtPasert. Alao bbbw aapply ef Border to match. w.n.ei.i.rukua.'. BLOEDE'S ELEE SITED IKPEOVED EUCIUGE IS AN ENTIRELY K E W at THIS efMaci! a, made from the eele-- krataa kwrialin una, aaa m warrantee to nick t)id or tariaed Paper, which no ether af acilace wiH de. It ie indianeeaabl in arar awpaper offloa, doinf away with th BMity el water, er pata, in tucking anauaa paper. Alio ia erery bank, ater. eouBtina hoana, erne, tastily ia inort, erery place where Maeilare of ajiT kind ka been heretofore Deed. It warranted not to oar, mold, ferment or decay ana u aiwey ready tor aaa. It one ucuy aod thoroaskly, aad bernc thinly applied will to farther than any ether kind. One trial will oonrinee all of the extraordinary properties of Blood' Maeilac. TlftMBtk Street, WuhinctoB. Kay 28. 167. We have aaed the Mealaaa Daunted br Mr. Bloeda, .ample of which wa tarniahed a by 70, and tnd ittobenarpaaed by aayrimilar preparation : Indeed It woald-b- e difficalt to lay in what particular it eoeld be improved. lean Haipeouiiiiy. Jit (Jooil uo. Firaal.by W.5. A W.P. POUTER. Not. 4. laST, ' Warren. Ohio. at Hair Jewelry, Sraidiiif, &e. 23 H. 0. TAYLOR, MaBufaetarer and Dealer ia Hair Jewelr. firaidin. Carta. Watfaila. rhirniw. a. eanitb afeCamb'f Block. Main Suwat. War- ren, Ohio U. Hirheat Prio paid for dark hair, 6P 18 DJ67 tf at SCARLErS COAL DEPOT TEE BEST GOAL IN THIS rappHed to order, at retail or whole- sale, at lowest market price. Call at the Ma. homnc Depot. 6 KU&QK 6CARLEI, n arrea. Uot. s, Ub7-Sn- a. ' TO FARMERS, - Stable Keepers and Qthers- - ALE'S COPPER STRIP FEED YJ CUTTER i the nutert, eaaiert everated. UBplcet. avoetdarabi and ehaapeat Sblp Pibo- - ie nay. eraaw ana seLC cdttbb tbb Woxo IK.00 nofc0,aOacMrdin(to tie aad capoiv-- w bin para tot nniu tried eaUHac torily. For illustrated daacripaiT Circa iar, aad SlUa SHHMMIIi ew.li J. X- - BROCK WAT. er 9. B. Old Cattail takea in xchan fcr new 1Mb M, 1M, TJANCY DRESS GOQDS ia all th. . ohvm mw TCuiiniis piaun eoa ran AlaaaAfia. Poo It DepMiia. war aaed Plauta. Gburhama. Lawn. Pvplin. As oaay of them lower prio than th tame elaa of goods koacht beforethe war. Gold and Silver. The Great Decline in Gold T7NABLK3 n to offer SoUd SUrer ea Spoea at ealy a small advance ea old pri la ce, new im urn tor the wa hare been a waiting so Durar le OOZHI3 ZOXV33' To bay. film a pleadid stock mak from coin, and warranted para and fall weirbt. We do sot chart extra for engraTing Surer foods, and doit ia a good ttyl a it oaa be done La New Tork, er any of the Easier viu. MimMr tn place. . VAUTR0T A ACKLXT. Market Street, Warrea. 0. BOOTS 1 BOOTS! FOR SALE CHEAP, VrrORK MADE TO ORDER ON 1 f short aotice. Mend in done ia teed ere ee m reaeonai prieee, ueii en EDWARD BENKETT, er &?.tm,'?po'l'MAmmk Attic's Store. Dept. giT OOALi OOAlil RICHMOND STILL CON Coeju tinea t tarnish the beat .1,1 . bibck n uie ma kmi ev hm.k..j .4. Scarlet, at the MahotUag Depot. n arrea, oepu i-- n U. tULUMOSD. HARDWARE AHOTBIB "WEZZLBIZROW LOAD," or HARDWARE, AT PARK & PATCfl S Where tpenaX leJenenen tDl b offered to nayanoi i IRON I, NAILS, SASH AND DOORS, WINDOW GULSS. : ' ' DOOH LOCKS tt HIITGES, Roggen's Latches. HoiisaTruniim BUTTS. SCREWS, &c, XabraeiBC all kiadi tt BUILDERS HARDWARE Generally ia a. PAEK&PATCH, - aad warrant fbir Doort aad Saik of dry lum- ber." and Mperior iik which w are aaUinf tew.-aj- larr uck i HAND SAVS, cross err saws. BUCK SAWS. BLTC1LKES' 6AWS. Ci&CCLAJL SAWS. JACK PUKES, S IK COTHIKG PUSES Moulding Planes, " - r : Matching Planes, IRON BENCH SCREWS Wooden Bench Screws, STEEL SQUARES, , TKT SQUARES, IRON SQUARES, SQUARES TEAT ARE ROT "SQUARB." Shinrling Hatcheta. Shea Ei l.athinc de a de Hnntar do Tack ' do Boy , do Uaydolai de FEAffllC CHISELS, -- A. tj o m n. s. BRACES & BITS, BLACKSMITH ., DRILLS, BLACES2HTH HAniaERS, .W ' j!fcJ "mm' " BROAD AXES. iraam ittq BOVSAXluJ, BENCH AXES. ' Plumbs and Levels. Plumb Bobs. . QRINDSTOITES,-- . GRINDSTONE FIXTURES, FAMILY GRINDSTONES, aaoie vauerr,. , maiiam. PooketCuilery.. MeanrnxTapa. Itaaors. Mopiiaadlal. : Raaur btrape. Ac An. Includ int general stock of Hoaheld aeed. which hay beea selected with are iaoa th decline ia prio, aad will be cold extremely low lor earh. at PAKK k FITCH'S HARDWARE 8T0BK. Markat St. epposit Coart Heua. rAA BUTPALO ROBES Joat ree'd. from th UJJ f lain and tot sal, by the Bale or Kobe, - PARE. A PATCH'S. HORSE BLANKETS 1500 for the Jobbinc Trade wholes! erreUU-fram- tlto $ffl.at " PARK A PATCH'S. LAP ROBES ELEGANT FINE from $5 to ta). at PARE A PATCH'S. N: OW; IN STOCK k FOR SALE Ow Pair TamnereJ Barrr Ptrrinrs. SO cHMjras', fciraunahaai A Bostoa Taper 10w Pie Enameled Cloth. Ow do llaauk, a do Broadciolh. M de Backram. torn Bide Bnamel aad Dash Leather, wkiok will be sold lower tbaa city rate to cash borers, PABJl A PATCH'S. PALL AND SEE J TBOSX SUPEBIOJt OIL CtOTWt. at PARK A PATCH'S. TRUNKS! TRUNKS! TRUNKS! Bom down stairs, cord of 'em aud cheaper tbaa erei Bar. Valises. As. PARS. A PATCH'S 33 33 X 33 33 2hT r s Stem ; Carriage Factory. SOUTH OF CANAL, WARREN, with all kinds of machi nery edasrted to th basin, by which a treat (anas ef material, time and labor are affected, thereby attordinr facilitiee for maaafaetoriag aod sellint a BET1E& artiele for the same LESS soney than can be afforded without each advent, iiavinr larr Dumb ol th aery beet workmen in tb ocuntry am now praparea meseane tarn ea a xsuutti ran DAY. At my Repositories may be found the beet assortment ef iniahed work in th Cona- kry; all ef which for aaality. workmanship, durability aad isish. i aet rareaased ta thi CMMmtrr. or by eaatam aanuXscturers. Cl,OSIS COACrJ-b- h CHARIOTKbS, . CARRIAGES. Jenstlinds. . SULKIES. Bftnuivnu, u 1. w iir.". TROTTIKQ BUO0IE8. . .. DROP FROST. BOX BUOOTXS. PAST0NS.1 and I seat, top standing and tailing, etc. etc. Ala. LUMBER WA00NS. best article, for aad two horaa. Parson wwaing aaythtat my line ef bnjineas. an MaBettedtaC call and for themselTea. Especial atteotsoa te Caste m Work aad le pairin. Paiatiu and Trtauaing doa n rboK pvviw. im siriea to eeit toe moat raeruioa il.Il.-a- Ll, WUlaa. WAsULAAliSU. 0L 17. 10. H.C. BELDI3 . A.aeia a. p. suoza a. a aocaa. TREES, . TREES, TREES THE ATTENTION OF FRUIT is called te oar steniT toek bow oserealor in sen uaae eonsuting ef APPLE, PEACH, and Dwarf Pear. Black Walnut. Erarrreena. Gra perinea, arc. A. Oar stock of tree are the unset erer grewa brought m this pert of the oanty. Thote wishing te ret a tcoa Bargain snouid net fail te a a call before parehaeint eltewkere. Promntandearefal attention tirnto all or. aar. eAunr. snue. a xtl sorunrmniflan Sept. U, lS7-t- f , . Briatolrill.O ALEXANDER Kid eaJeby Glove., the rsvaasauiaua. 8ETTLF.KEBTS ORDERED TO BE ADYERTISED. TT IS ORDERED THAT THE Mf folrowinc accoaat at Kxecntor, Adraia- - niiniatratore. and flnardiaaa. which hare beea lied ia th Probate Court of Trnmball Ceanty, be adTrtid foareonMoatiT week, aecordint te law. aad that they remain on file for laapee- - tlon anil iiMiiiu. nnttl Dec 2a 1867. when they wiU be examined and orderei to record if ao exceptions appear thereto. Honrr L. Wood row. dee'd snail Tctuard B. DWolf do do do John Vannoat do do do Ursula Case do do do Alcoa Trunk er do do de Joahna K. Bentl . do do do Daniel Caooae do do do Mary J- - Stewart do do do Jama Moor do do de John A. Use hart . do do do B.A.t)rar do do do Seldea Joaas do do do James (Jroaier do do do Robert Moore do do do a de do de Seymoar A, Cox i do do do Tonaard R. De Wolf do partial do Benjamin Laae 'do de do Samsel Wei t do do do J. A. WUdmaa do do do Thomas Cawfieli do do. do Wm, MeM array do do do Joba Rood do leal set 'ml of Adtn"t Elisabeth Foe Ik do do do Elisabeth Carlton do do do Aaa Harris do do do Jacob Piper ' do do do Jadjo liar is do de do Ftar Sally Whltfnrd -- James do do T. Cannincham do do do Samael Chaaney do do do Samaai Mo do de de Rchael Dun lap do de do Wm. N. 6mith do do do Matthias Christy de do do John Marlow de de do Sarah Drake de do do Ijeonerd uebora. do do do Jacob Coffmaa do do do Edward B.Fitts de i do ' do Samuel C. Price ' do do do Oeraham P. Bisalow . do .do do Wm. raander do do do John MorrisoB do do do Mans txewart do do do Leonard Eila do partial d Benjamia Polaifet do do do Alfred Button do do do Saner Clark de do do Moon C Bradley do do do Ned Clinton do do do VilUeE.Coltoa. minor fin kalatttleatar Soar, 'orrester E. Marry do do do la M. Moore do do do AaaCTibbit . do, do do Rtnben Clark , d . do do WUber Aldrioh do de do Martha A.Amas do do do- do AhiraSislet do do : t. tt.uoz ao do do Addia M.Clark ' do do ..do Clara Lao do do 'do Simon Colton de , , do do Matthias B. Ball do do. , do Mary A. ChaUord de do do Saml Qaaccenbaahdo do do Henry ai: Finney do do de Jan Drennao do do do Sarah A. PhUlips do do do Jam es 3. Shout do .do do Frederic Beck. Idiot do do Charles J.Bowell minor do do A. M. A J. 0. Treat do .. partial do Samael P. Hotiaad do da do Hilar muyer ao do do Rhode Curtis . de 'do do WmF. Rkr : do db do J. A. Stewart do do do Florae c A Chancy Howley, do do do Peter. Nathan and . " Mary Moyer, da "do ; do. Andrew, James, Wil liam t Man talk do do "do- do Willis rf.Smith do do Braces Lee StJoha do do ' do oma, kuyroa. ana a . Charles Pettit do , do . do Jehial aad Damiek Pettit, d do 'do Florence aad Chan- cer Bawley. do de do r EUa M. Falrehild do do do Ada M. Moon do do v do Elnor C. and Homo , A. Bo-r- er do, , 77 do" do Maria, Adalin and tieorse Phillips de . do do Maria Stewart do do , do ' Electa Ann Hsdson. Idiot do do Oaarre Kin do do Tenamrd K. UeWoIL nartlal settem t or Trustee. ALBJkita XUMAJ(S.JBd, WOT. 2D, lSbT.-t- t . WESTERN RESERVE Carriage Factory rjr,rpHE PROPRIETOR deeire te say te the Dahlia. that teera oaa besaea at hi Be-- aoaitory. oa Liberty Street, a few rod soatk at thawanera lleserre aaa. the largest asaert- - Curlsaf ea ud Battle, ' That h ka Tr exhibited aad offered for sal in this market. Biiatock eenssU ef AM 11.11 CARRIAGES and SLIDB SEATS, of Tarioa. attorn. One-he- n sarta ot nearly erery em iptiea. all of which are of the latest and most approTd Easter atyl, which for quali- ty of material, substantial workmanship and ltcaao of anisa, cannot be surpassed by any thr establishment in the State. Harin in suooearful operatioa a STEAM EN0IKX with all thcaeeenary machinery lor aaaaoiactannc his Spokes, Hub. Felloes, aad Trythint that can be dona ad ran tax o all T by machinrr. Being a praetioal mechanic himself, supria-tandi- n and CTenvain? all the Tariona hraneh ea, h at prepared to furnish a Tehicle la first rata style, lor taa. money una say otaer snana- - factarar in th waet. HACiaS, rx.DLf.H S W1W.1S, OUACHKS BAROUCHES. If act oa kaad. will be made to order, ea short notice, Trimmlnr and Paintins' don wlta aataem ana aispetoo. Mar Ail work done at my Bvaauiaotory wama. to Ta additJoa te the aboTa. T am irreoared ta furnish Carriare-make- r and other with the best aaality of Turned Spoke. Best Aims. Bow. Shafts. Poles. Seat-ar- Hobs, As, at as Low nrice a at any ether establishment. C rs desiring to famish, th.ir wb timber, can ret their Spores aod Hub. be tamed onsaort aoaoe. and at tair pnea. OSI'l loos Mm a. Tl 1SAKJ. C. BRELDENBACH, t UPHOLSTERER an aurrscroMa op Sofas, Lounges 0 hairs Tete-a-Tete- Sf . jr iu xuraa op UPHOLSTER WORK in KING'S NEW BLOCK, at Balm Street, Warm, OkJe). so QPECIAL ATTETTI0II IS CALLED TO the or aj newmyieot bkii, wttieh 1 am now makinr. known a Webb's Patent, ft ia anew be neat and eery comfortable bed. aad oaa a fold- ed tocetharendarin it eery to handle aod to keepsleaa. The sprints are differently arrao red at the sides, matins the bed aniformely elastic and ysaidiac, which reader the sprint le liable to rec eat of order. Cell and s.e the new style betor perehuini any other kind. to I won Id also stale that i eontinu to mn factnre th nicest Sofa. Loans, Chair, Teta-a-Tt- e. and to de all kind of Upholster work t order. Repairing done aeauy and at fair price. IbaTaea hand affneenortmeMof nice iioenses. Jtemmberlhplaee.oBMninStreet, in King's aw block. MPS,!. 1904. ISlUalllAXIBACil FRESH ARRIVAL OF FALL & WINTER GOODS. a Every tail tfc.t ErerybHy waits in IT thi . DRY GOODS LINE, AT AMES tt LITTLE'S MAIS STREET, WABBES', And at or old Stand, ; NEWTON FALL-S- , O. TTAV1NG JUST RECEIVED A 1 1 GENERAL STOCK of all kinds of Goods for Fall & Winter Trade, ty cossnmKosr Cloths, Cusimeres, Cloaking!, Bilks, DeLaines, Prints OATt3P33a? S , SHOES, HATS, to And a treat ranety of SOTIOXS, GROCERIES, le, be AU of which we will sail as oheee a the ehaa. est. Plaaseeall aad examine for yoortelr. A treat rariety of Good, tome ei which am As Cheap as before the war. Cask barer will tnd it to their interest ta tall on as At Amderowa'a Bow Black, Bala St, nia WABBEI.sad HE WTO w FAIXS.O. Oct. 11867 AMES A LITTLE. 000 rpHE GAME OF COURTSHIP I AND MARRIAGE, also th Gam of Great ETeotv Game ef Greet 1'ratha, Gam ef Ae-th- r of aad other gam, both lnitraatire aad amusing. Jnetrcc'd at . aw a mo sWk oivaa. The W. R. Chronicle. RIGHTS OF MINORITIES. Cumulative Voting-I- ts Origin and History. Its Adoption in the United States Advocated. At the inyitation of a number of citi-- mdb of Philadelphia, irretpcctiTa of party, the Hon. Charlaa K, Buckalew. one of the United Statos Sens tort for Pennsylvania, delivered an addrest on the true principlaa of voting for under a aoTernment like ourt. Uayinc opened the subject by reference to the theory of popular gov- ernment hft patted onT to the fact last under our present system of election it u only Ui moMntM ia any electonai district that has a voioe in the legisla- tive body; the minority, although it may be within one vote aa numerous as the majority, being entirely cut off irom any voioe whatever, ao iar at the election ia concarried. , This hat always been fait vo oe aa evil, and accordingly tne auteamea of tnie aaa otaer coun tries have been eneared toe a cootid arable time in trying to God the proper and just remedy for it- - In thi city acd State a partial remedy had been attempted in the choice ef election officers, echool director, jury commis- - uosera. Ac., by what ,nutb.i be called the "restrictive" or ' kBiiUtion" sys tem. 1 bat is where tvo lBupectore are to be choaen. tha elector votee for bnt one and thus the majority and the mi' noritr are sure - to have- - a rapTetenta- - tion. In the choice of school direo- - tora, where four are to be chosen, the vote it restricted to three, end the mi nority ia thus enabled to make tare of the election of one, and that secure a voice in the board. Thit "is the "ree- - trucuve" or "limiUtrdbT system. It has lately beea used ott a targe scale'in chooeine deletste to the CODtutution al Convention in the State of New York, and was embodied in the Reform bill passed at the last Cession of Parlia ment in .Lnciand. AAother plan, for sectoring representation to tae tekol bodv of the people ia kbit known aa the personal representation" system of AUr. litre, of H,ngland,.and advocated by John btuart Alills aad other liiber- - ala in Parliament. This, Mr. Bucka lew said, would occupy more tune v examine than could be given to tt in one evening. And he then pasted on to. the more simple ana praottcal plan known as . CUMULATIVE VOTING. this alto securing a representation of the whole bodv of the water, while it preserves toe just proportion ot power to the majority. What then ia "cumu lative voting t" I propose that what ia known by that tAna iri be -- applied to the the selection ot Sepresentativee in lODgress and in the euoice of lee- tors for President and .Vtoe Pretideart of the United Statta, It admits of application in the choice ot Senators, and Representative in be State Legis lature, and aooce other officers.- - This reform can be introduced by Congress without any oonttitu tonal amend- ment, ao far as Congressional represen- tation is concerned, and the plan can be applied to the choice of Presiden- tial Electors by the Leidslatures of the several Mates, who have power to pres cribe tne mode in wnica toeae iuectors shall be chosen. Cumulative- - voting.- - then, ia, that where more than one ofSoer it to be chosen, the elector taall poatess at many voters aa there are persona to he choaen, and he may bcuw toeae votes hit discretion, opon the whole num- ber or upon any lest number, accumu lating, if he choose, upon one two or three persons, or any number leas than the whole. The result of this would be, that any political interest in a com munity, if it can ascertain about, the relative proportion of its strength to the whole vote, may cast its votes in such a manner thai they will tell in the reiult. and it will then happen that every man who votes will vote for some candidate or candidates who will be certain to be chosen. Corruption then will no longer exist, for there will be no necessity for u. iar be it from me atk that minorities shall be armed with powers which we know t even the majorities abuse. The proposition it not that there shall be a majority and minority representation, but that men who vote will vote tor thoee who will certain to be chosen, and who will represent them according to their views. Take the case of Vermont as an illua- - ration.. There are 60.000 votvrt there. 40,000 are Republican and 20,000 Demo- - cratic. The State it entitled to three Representatives in Con great, What would take placer Tne majority would. get two of these Representatives and the minority one. "Now, the majority elect the whole three. Under the present tyttem it ia a matter of chance the choice, for the Legislature can in any time the Slate, and provide for a continuation of power the control or a party, .by the cumulative vote the 20,000 cotes would represented: each of these 20.000 In could give his three votes to one can 28 didate, giving him ou.uuu votes. . t he majority can elect two in the same manner. If the majority should prefer vote for all three, they could only give them 40,000; if they voted for one they would give him votes, and they would not be . likely to. throw away their strength in this way. The tame result would apply to all other Slate. In each State the Freeman would vote for a Representative in fJongretswno would speak bis voice, obey his will, and we would thus ob 20 tain an factual representation of the whole masa of the people upon both sides; and then in fact there would be representation of the whole mass of the people upon both aides : and then fact there would be a represents tion of the majority, for it would be representation of the whole. Ap- - piause,j ihe legislators would no lon bv ger "gerrymander" the atate and con- coct schemes of injustice. The speaker referred at length to the frauds and corruptions growing out of the present system, in which it was the- interest of candidates, or their friends, to secure "the balance of pow er," and ao carry the election. er He continued: The system of cu in mulative voting secures the govern ment to the real majority of the peo ple. Instead of striking ott a part. they are all represented in the repre sentative body. It is not a system of minority representation it it a plan if for the representation of the whole people a device by which the majori shall rule, and shall pronounce its voice in a fair and honest manner, of The system of cumulative voting would he secure in representative bodies men of high abilities, and secure tnem for a long time; lor elections conducted un- der this system would not be subject the abuse that now prevail. Un- - dea this system the minorities would content. They would be heard ical and. although the decision might be against them in the legislative body. they would have fair treatment and there would, ol necessity, be less lia bility to revolt. Under the cumulative tyttem of vo- ting, how would it stand in Pennsylva t. There would be twelve Repre- sentative for each party. There are about 600,000 voters, with about 300,- - voting for each party, and each would secure a just and equal repre in sentation. So in Kentucky instead nine Democratic .Representative, ing there would be about three Republi the cans. So, too. with aery lana instead of of only one Republican, as now, there would be two; and in Connecti- cut there would be two Republicans and two Democrats, instead of only one Republican. So in all the States. You can not name one where this in justice is cot found entering into your present system. I need hardly say that if any part of it,;. tt-- :- i . ,i .uw wuivu "o ,io ivuiis iwu viaase of voters distinguished by race or color, a very great part of the evil that may arise by arraying one race or color against another would be removed by thit system of cumulative voting. In- stead of the cry that one race out-vote- s the other, each would obtain that rep- resentation which its numbers entitled it to, and there would be no war of ra- ces. This, however, is an argument for gentlemen who occupy a different party position from that to which I am as- signed, and it should be a reason for their rendering a support to the plan I submit. Now, aa to the application of the plan in the selection of Presiden- tial electors. General Jackson pro- posed that the people of the United States should vote directly for Presi- dent of the United States, and this proposition at several times has been brought forward in Congress. - At tbe last tenion, it was again introduced by Senator Wade, of Ohio. Great com- plaint has been made that the people are not heard directly in the choice of President; that tbe Electonai College ia a mere form. As a substitute for all this, the system of cumulative voting by tbe citixens of the several' States would secure every practical ' object sought by the friends of that particu lar retorm. - The result in Pennsylvania, for ex ample, would be that each of the poli tical parties would select as many elec tors as they .would be entitled to, accor- ding tb their numbers. How isTt nowT There are six hundred thousand votes to be polled in Pennsylvania- - Each party has three hundred thousand in round numbers. From Lake Erie to the Delaware this State next year is to be convulsed by aa: exciting election campaign for the Presidency; a thous- and disagreeable things are to take place; men of property are to have their attention-turne- d to the security of that which they own, and every device will be resorted to' by the par ties in the canrtts. And why T Be- cause each will have an interest in ob taining a of one vote, perhays,' will elect twenty-fou- r repre- sentative and two Senatorial electors for President of the United States. And the struggle will be for the little majority that turns the scale. Now, as parties ataod to-da- each party is erf- titled to thirteen of these electors, ac cording to their numerical proportions. Thataswult, however, cannot take place. The whole twenty-si- x electors must be given to on aide caly, and that result may determine the destinies of the nation; not for the ensuing four years only,-hu- t perhaps for generations. The result of our electioct is, there fore, an accident a matter of chance. On the other hand, take a fair and honest mode of voting ; let each party have the number of electors it is entit- led to, and let the people of the other States have the same, and let the voice of American freemen be pronounced fairly, and then let the majority telect that high officer who is to preside at tbe head of the nation. fApplause. In the last place, this plan of repre- - se native reform is convenient in the highest degree ; it is practicable. It requires only legislative action to per- mit k the citizens in this state, which has twenty-fou- r Representatives in Con- gress, to cast these twenty .four votes ad he pleases. 'He may give two votes apiece for twelve candidates, or foul votes apiece sta Just let him alone to exercise his own will Here there is no complex system, no great scheme of reconstruction. Just trust tbe people, and let them vote at they think bast. Aad if we can nave that law next fall, I will go to the polls and vote for twelve Representatives out of the twenty-tou- r to which Penn sylvania is entitled, and if I think the political interest to which I belong is growing in strength, and is entitled to more than tbe hair. 1 will vote lor thirteen. If I should be mistaken I get nothing more than my proportion. There would be no buying op votes. for it would be too difficalt to go thro' the Stale and attempt to eBect tbe re sult. I must point out one special aot of injustice of majority electiana. Observe that the party which prevails at an election does not merely carry the day; doea not merely get its own votes counted, but counts all the power that belongs to the other. Suppose the two parties in Pennsylvania are divided. that one has 300,000 and the other 301,000. The 301.000 in prevailing in the Pretidential election does cot get merely their own votes counted, but they get counted the vo.es of the other 3UU.UU0. That a what sharpens tbe injustice. Take the elections of 1SG6 what was known as the "Free States." Two millions of Republican voted for members of Congress. Tbe party polled in these States a little over one million six hundred thousand. Congress, the 1,600.000 voters had representative only ; the 2,00,000 had 143. The proportion between the two great masses was 20 to 1C votes actually polled in the states; the rep- resentation in Congress, instead of standing in the same proportion, stood 143 to 2s Why T Because under the majority rule in these States, the ma jority not only obtained representation is its own votes, bat obtained, that which belonged to the other side. By cumulative voting the representation would hare stood in the proportion of to 16. Do you not see now the whole policy of the Government can be or affected under a system in which you are told that "the majority rules?" Air. JDUCKaiew men went into a con- sideration of some of the objections to the plan, all of which he met by forci ble argument, but that we have not ace to enlarge upon. He continued saying that one of the strongext ob jections to the present system of voting fresidentivi electors in a oiaie uko Pennsylvania is, that the 300,000 vo- ters who may concentrate upon twenty Presidential electors, will not only wield the cower to which they are lustlv entitled, but also wield the pow and weight they are not entitled to any manner whatever. He said that he had not accepted the invita- tion to speak in Philadelphia through any desire for display, but from a busi- ness is and public motive to have the subject examined by the people ; and he could enlist the powerful aid of the press and the people of the city of us fniiaoeipma id saving me auujec in- vestigated with a view to the adoption tbe system of cumulative voting, would feel amply repaid. ly At the close he was greeted with pro- longed applausevand many of the audi- ence went up to the platform to thank him and offer their congratulations. Ckodp CuatDBr SoLfKca. The Med Gazette oj Pari states that M. ie we of Paris, after observing the in effect of suipnur on tne ouiura oi grape vines, u led to administer it in cases of croup. He mixes a of sulphur in a glass of water, gives a teaspoonful of this mixture every Hour, me enect is aeecnoea as wonderful. The disease is cured in days, the only symptom remaining - Keinc a couch ariaicB from the pres ence of loose piece of false membrane the trachea. Mr, L. says he has fol- lowed this plan in seven eases, all be severe, especially the last, in which child was cyanotic, with protruded rolling eyes and noisy respiration. and The Office of the Preacher. There are two ways of regarding a sermon, either as a human composition or as a Divine message. If we look op- on it entirely as tbe first, anrk require our clergymen to finish it with their ut-- moit care and learning, tor our oetter delight, whether of ear or intellect, we shall necessarily be led to expect much formality and stateliness in its delivery, and to think that all is not well if the pulpit have not a golden fringe round it, and a goodly cushion in front of it, and if the sermon be not fairly written in a black book, to be smoothed upon the cushion in a majestic manner be- fore beginning, all this we thall duly come to expect; but we ahall at the same time consider the treaties thus prepared as something to which it is our duty to listen, without resUessness, for half an hour or three-quarter- but which, when that duty has been deco- rously performed, we may dismiss from our minds in happy confidence of be- ing provided with another when next it shall be necessary. But if once we begin to regard the preacher, whether hi faults, at a man sent with a mes- sage to us, which it is a matter of life or death whether we hear or refuse; if we look upon him as set in .charge oyer many spirits in danger of ruin.and having allowed to him but an hour or two in the teven day to speak to them; if we make some endeavor to conceive hOwJprecious these hoars are to him; a small vantage on the side of God after bis flock have been exposed for six days together to the full weight of the world's temptation, and he has been forced to watch the thorn and the thistle spring- ing In their hearts, and to see what wheat had been scattered there, snatch- ed from the way tide by this wild bird and the otheranifatlast, when breath- less and weary with the .week's, labor, they give hiri this interval of imper- fect and languid hearing, he has but thirty minutes to get. at., the separate hearts of a thousand men, to convince them of aU their .weakness, to . shame therri far all their sins, to warn them of all their dangers", to try! hy this way and that tostir the "htr J fastenings of those doors where faster Himself has stood and. knocked acd yet neoe open- ed, and ta call at-t- he ope win 2 ef these dark ' streets'! whwer--Wlsrm- ' hath stretched forth her- - hands and ' nePone regarded, thirty mmuteevto raise the dead in, let ut but once understand and feel this, and'we shall look with changed eyes Opon the frippery of gay furniture about the place from which the message of judgment mast be de- livered, which "either1 breathes upon dry bones that they 'may live, or, if ineffectual, ramains recorded in con- - .dfmiiapiojB, perbAp- - gainst the utt erer and listener alike, bat assuredly against one or them. we. shall not so easily bear with the silk and gold upon tbe seat of judgement, nor with ornament of oratory in the mouth of the mes senger; we should wish that bis words may be simple, even when they are sweetest,' aa the' place from which he speaki likea maiblA rock in the desert about which the people have gathered in their thirst. "Slorut of Venice," voL iu pp. 23, 24. Color of the Stars. "'Prof. Ennis, of Philadelphia, the au thor of a recent work on "The Origin of the Stars," writes to the Hartford Time: "I have no doubt but that the entire community .learned and unlearned, wilt see iv uod ere tan d perfectly and familiarly bow the stars originated, what caused them to move aa they now move, and what makes them shine. The appearance of a star in the East.as deseribed by the) Rev, Itff Mill, throw. mg out, in succession, red, bitre and white light, is entirely an atmospherio effect, and called Scintillation. It ia seen - by - good eyes wnen careiuuy directed to all the larger stars, especial- ly when near the horizon..-- It is caused by the refraotion and decomposition of the exceedingly delicate pencil of tbe ttars, light by the intermingling strata of air of different densities. Those moving and irregular strata separate the colors as the dew-drop- s, or as the ram-drop- s, when they form the rainbow. All the stars, however, are naturally of various colors some red, some blue, some green, and some orange, with many different shades of these, at may be seen by any one with good vision and careful observation. It will here after be a pleasing exercise for people generally to note and record these col- ors, and thus to see how front year to year they change th-i- r per- manent colors. Some change often, and others again are still red, as they were recorded by the ancient Greeks and Romans. The cause of these changes of color 1 have given in my volume." . . . What Breaks Down Young Men. It is a commonly received notion that hard study is the unhealthy ele- ment in college life. But, from tables of tbe mortality of Harvard University, collected by Professor Pierce from the last triennial catalogue,- - it ia clearly demonstrated that the excess of deaths for the first ten years after graduation is found in each portion of that class inferior in scholarship. Every one who has been thro' tbe curriculum knows that, where Sichylus and politi- cal economy injure one, late hours, rum and punch kill dozens, and the two lit tle fingers of Morpheus are heavier than the loins of Euclid. Dissipation a sure and twin destroyer, and every young man who follows it is as tbe ear ly nower, exposed to untimely frost. Those who have been inveigled in the paths of view are named "Legion," for they are many enough to convince every novitiate that he has no security that be snail escape a similar fate. A few hours sleep every night, high liv ing and a plenty ef seiMhe make war upon every function of the human body. The brains, heart, lungs, liver. spine, limbs, the bones,- - the flesh every part and faculty are overtasked. worn and weakened by the lerrinc en ergy of passion and appetite loosened from restraint, until, like a dilapidated mansion, the earthly house of this tabernacle falls into ruinous decay. Fast young men, right about! Two Pictures of Death. In a scantily an old Scotch minister with tbin, grey hair, and wrinkled skin. But his brow high and broad; his deep set eyes are bright and piercing ; a smile plays round his lips ; and though feeble and dving. he looks calm and happy. Let speak to mm and say "Do you think yourself dying, my dear sir: ' He fixes his eye npon you, and slow he replies "Really, friend. I am not anxious whether I am or not; for if I die, shall be with God ; If I live. He will be with me." Now let us step into yonder mansion. Entering a richly furnished chamber. find a dignified personage enfolded warm robes, and seated in a large easy chair. He too, is feeble and dying; but the light in his eyes it unsteady, and he looks like a man ill at ease with himself. Let us also ask him a ques- tion as "Mr. Gibbon, how does the world ap- pear to yoa now t" The eloquent historian of the Roman be Empire for he it is closes his eyes a moment, then opens them again, and with a deep sigh replies "All things are fleeting. When I look back I see they have been On ; when I look forward, all ia dark doubtful,'' Chnttia Churchman, for Measuring Distance by Sound A bell rung under the water returns a tone as distinct as if rung in the air. Stop one ear with the finger, and press the other to the end of s long stick or piece of dead wood ; and if a watch be held at the other end of the wood, ticking will be heard, whatever be the length of the stick or wood. Tie a poker on the middle of a strip of flannel two or three feet long, and press your thumbs or fingers into your ears, while yoa swing the poker against an iron fender, and you will hear a sound like that of a church beU. These prove that water, wood and flannel are good conductors of sound, for the sound of the bell, watch and tbe fender, pass through the water and along the deal and nannel to the ear. It must be observed, that a body in the act of sounding is in a state of vibration, which it communicates to the sounding air the undulations of the sound affect the ear, and excite in us the sense of sound. Sounds of all kinds, it it ascertained, travels at the rate of fifteen miles in a minute; the softest whisper travels aa fast as the most tremendous thunder. The knowl edge of this fact has been applied to the measurement of distance. Suppose a thip in distress fires a grin. tne light or which is seen on shore, or by another vessel twenty seconds be- fore the report ia heard, it is known to be at a distance twenty times 1.142 feet, or little more than four and a half miles. Again, if we tee a vivid flash of light ning, and in two reeondt hear a tre mendous clap of thunder, we know that tbe thunder cloud a not more than 760 yards from the place we twe, and we should instantly retire front an exposed situation. . An Exquisite Story. In the tribe of Neggdeh, there was a horse whose; tame bad spread tar and near, and a Bedocin of another tribe. by name Daner, desired to possesi it, II : .r 1 - r t - iiaviug vuemi III tbiu lor IS OlS C&Xu e.s ana bis whole wealth, he hit at lecgtii upon the following device, bv which he hoped to gain the object of nis aesire : - - - Ha resolved to staid his face with the juice of an herb, to clothe himself in rags, to tie bis legs- and neck to gether, so as to appear like a lame beg gar. Thus equipped, he went to wait forNater, the owner of the horse, wnom ne knew was to pass that way. When he saw Naber appoachiog on ui oewuiui steea, ne cried out in a weak voice: ; : ". . ,,a. "I am a poor stranger ; for three days I have been unable to move from this spot to seek food, I am dying; help me, anu neaven will reward you." The Bedouin kindly offered to take him npon hia horse, and carry hint noma. , Hut tbe rogue replied : "I cannot rise, 1 have no strength left," Naber, touched with pity, dismount ed, led bis bone to the spot, and, with very great difficulty, set the seeming beggar on his back.- But no sooner did Daher feel himself in the saddle, than he set spurs to the horse, and galloped off, calling out as he did so : "It ia I Daher have got the horse, and am off with it." Naber called for him to stop and list- en. Certain of not being pursued, he turned, and halted at a short distance from Naber, who was armed with a spear. "You have taken my horse," said the latter. "Since heaven has willed it, I wish yon joy of it,, but I. do conjure you never to tell one how yoa obtain- ed it." "And why not?" said Daher. l"BecausV , said the noble Arab, 'another man might be really ill, and men would fear to help him. You would be the cause of many men re- - rusing to periorm an act of charity for fear of being duped aa I have been." Struck with shame at these words, Daher was silent for a moment : then springing from the hone, returned it to its owner, embracing him. Naber made him Bcoompany him to his. tent, where they spent a few days together. and became fast friends for life. La-- narune. Gentlemen Farmers in Prussia. sia. A Paris' correspondent says: M Emile de Laveleye, haa just contribu ted an article to the i&tme- - de Monde, in which an interesting account is giv en of the progress made by Prussia du ring w year oi peace, iv riling on Agriculture, ne point out that nearly all the landowners cultivate their own estates, except for detached portions. renting is the exception. Ihey are, therefore, retained in the country by the care of their own interests, for nothing more imperiously requires the eye of the master than rural industry. It is true that they aided by a class of employe who are not found in any oth er country. Iney are educated young men, belonging to families in a good position, olten juat leaving an agricul- tural college, who remain for a certain time on some large estate to initiate themselves in the practical direction of one of their own. 1 his is a novitiate is an ancient custom, still preserved in many trades. Ihut frequently the son of a rich hotel-keepe- r will not hesitate to enter another hotel as butler or waiter I Kt liner), to be initiated into all the various details of the ser vice over which he will one day have tc preside. When any one visits the of farms Hittergutter), he is astonished to see as superintendents the sons of a banker, a baron or a rich landowner. These young people drive a cart, or guide a plow. At noon they return, groom their hones, and then go ' and dress themselves, and dine at the owner's table, to whom they are not inferior, either in instruction, birth or tt manners. After the meal they resume their working dress and resume, with- out any false shame, their rustic occu- pation. Thus we find in feudal Prus- sia a trait of manners suited to the democratic society of the United States and which will hereafter become gen- eral, in France, in England especial- ly, a young man of the upper class on his would believe bis dignity compromised in performing the work of a day labor er. Succias. The successful man is not necessarily the man to be envied not always the happiest man. Haman na ture cannot have its own will long with becoming deteriorated by it. We are appointed to struggle, and in strug- gling oar highest life is developed. The time will come when the laws ot mg our present condition will cease, and when we shall be able to bask in the sunshine of success without lots of vi wa tality, or enervation of our virtues. Till then, it is wis lom to accept our wa lot, and make the best of it to seek for our enjoyment in our work rather than what tbe work produces to till the soiL and dismiss all needless anxi of ety about tbe harvest to be more con cerned that we should be right than to old that we should succeed ; in a word to bear ourselves like sol diers with whom strict obedience ia the most sacred of obligations, and who are thereby absolved from responsibility to the results. Then, so far a, suo s is vouchsafed us, it will be grate its ful ; so ear as it a aeniea, it will not ais- - ooncert us. Thus living, our life will its own success. An editor in Marshall, Illinois, has said become ao hollow from depending np- -j in tbe printing business alone lor r4oxn bread, that he proposes to sell himself) stove pipe, at three cent a foot. wr Work of the Spirit. The mightiest forces in the universe are silent forces. Who ever heard the budding of an cak? Who was ever deafened by the falling of the dew ? Who was ever stunned by a solar eclipse? So it is with the august phe- nomenon of a change of heart. So far as we know, it ia the most radical change human heart can experience. It is a revolutionary change. Disem- bodiment by death, morally speaking, ia not so profound. Still a change of heart is not an unnatural change. It is not' necessarily even destruction of God employs In it an instrument exquisitely adjusted to the mind of man aa aa intelligent and free being. Truth may act in it with an equipoise of forces as that of gravita- tion in the orbits of the stars. No, it is not of necessity a tumultuous expe- rience to which God calls us when he invites us to be saved. By what em- blem have the scriptures expressed the person of the Holy Ghost f f s it an eagle? "And John bare record saying, 'I saw the spirit descending like a dove."' "Come," is the select language of inspiration ; "come, and I will give yoa" what? a shock, the rack, a swoon t No ; "I will give you rest." "Come, and you shall find" what? struggle, terror, torture? No; "ye shall find peace." "Come ye," come who? "Let him that thirstetb come; and whosoever will, let hint take the water of life freely." What caw at Doxa with Tiat It ia a mistaken idea, and a somewhat ob- taining one, that a young person can accomplish nothing, in any point of view, unless he has plenty of time. The miser lays away one penny after another, and in time his cofiers are full. It was only a penny at first ! So with any other faculty of the mind. Life is but many momenta. The gold- en moments of thoughtless childhood are passing rapidly away, and soon the responsible and weighty duties of an active, busy life overtake him, acd, unlet?, like the practical economist, a right disposal is made ot his time, he goes on in irresolution and procrastina- tion, till the misspent moments whiten his locks, and reproach him for his ne- glect to sow early the right kind of seed in the garden of life. Webster filled up his dictionary with one word at a time. A knowledge of all lan- guages aod sciences ia acquired by finding one fact after another. The time that is nsed in amusements, be- yond what is necessary physical exer- cise every day, if rightly husbanded, would be sufficient for the acquisition of that knowledge that we, in after time, think would get, could the flow- ery path of youth be once more trod- den. Every misspent moment tells fearfully against him who will surely be found inadequate to the task, which he for others has undertaken to per- form. As sorely as one moment fol- lows another, does old age creep on. and the cheerful and happy, or wretch- ed and miserable mind is the faithful account of the stewardship of life, Dklsk. Young man. did yoa ever stop to think how terrible that word sounds? Did you ever think what misery and woe yoa brought upon your friends when you degraded your manhood by getting drunk ? Oh, it ia a fearful thing thus to trample under foot the high claims that God and man' have upon you. Drunk 1 How it rings in the ear of a loving wife! How it makes the heart of a fond mother bleed 1 How it crushes out the hopes of a fond father, and brings reproach and shame upon loving sisters. Drunk I See him as he leans against some friendly house. He stands ready to fall in the open jaws of hell, uncon scious as to his approaching fate. The wife, with tearful eyea and aching heart, sits at the window to hear her , husband's footsteps, bat alas, they c ime not ! He is drunk. The husband, the parent, ia drunk, spending his time aad money, when he should be at home, enjoying the comfort and pleasures of the family circle. Drunk! He is spending the metns of support for liquor, while his family is starving for bread, his children suffering for cloth- ing. Drunk 1 His reputation is going, gone! His friends, one by one, are re- luctantly leaving him to hia miserable fate. .He goes down to the grave "un- - honored and unsung." Drunk 1 A Fact roa Fabstias. It may not be generally known that the seed of sun- - ' flower is the most infallible remedy yet discovered, for the speedy cure of founder in horses. The directions which we glean from a brief article on that subject in the Commonwealth, but credited to the Essex Banner says : "immediately on discovering that your hore is foundered, mix aboat a pint of , tbe whole seed in his food, and it will effect a cure." We are gravely informed by one of the Charleston papers, that in South Carolina many "men of gentle blood" hare actually gone to work that they are holding the plow and towing teed, that they may have bread. If these specimens of the "gentle blood" could only live in "nigger quarters," subsist on two pounds of meat and a peck of meal a week, be occasionally treated to the lash, have a child or two apiece sold away from them, and be generally subjected to tbe diabolism the old time, we should find that South Carolina was one of the most reliable Republican States in the Un- - ion. As these things are not in the Republican programme, we can only encourage the experiment which these sons of chivalry have inaugurated, by shouting at this distance, "Go it, 'gen tle blood ! Hotter men than you are work, and think it no discredit' Chicago Tribune Had His Doubts of tux Futtbk. The day after my arrival at Yittori, says a tourists, I went to a shoemaker's to get tome repairs done on my boots. There was nobody in the shop. The master watt the opposite side of the street, smoking cigarette. His shoulders were covered with a mantle, full of holes, and he looked like a beggar, but a SpanUh beggar, ap- pearing rather proud than ashamed of bis poverty. He came over to me and A ex- plained my business. "Wait a moment," said he ; and lmmediatly called his .wife. "How much money is there in the pane?" "Twelve picetas" (14 francs, 40 centimes-- ) "Then I shan't work." "But," said I. "twelve picettas will not last forever." "Who has seen tomorrow ?" said he, turn-- , his back on me. other day, a stout old Republican farmer asked by a Democratic friend why he hadn't "gone op Salt River V The reply to tha point, thus : "It won't pay u Kake the voyage; I couldn't stay king. enough would have to come right back. ISesidee, tha other fellows have used up a i the provisions they've beea there so lone; and then they have mau toe piece dirty that I don't wanr to go." That farmer was a cheerful philosopher. The Boston Transcript asks: "What would be the verdict of history npon a po- litical party that carried the Republic safely through a civil war, and theu lost influence in the nation by attempts to regulate lb sale of cider and lager bear?" . ... , , i I - l "- la the village ox r BTeriy, a. a., us An eminent physician, lately dacea!. of the achievement of msdical science hit day: "When 1 graduated I had a remeuio ijt every uuease ; wubo. a retired from practice a had dozen diseases every remedy." .

Transcript of WESTEffl EESEIWE HRONICLE.chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn84028385/1867-12-04/ed-1/seq-1.pdf ·...

Page 1: WESTEffl EESEIWE HRONICLE.chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn84028385/1867-12-04/ed-1/seq-1.pdf · el water, er pata, in tucking anauaa paper. Alio ia erery bank, ater. eouBtina hoana,

WESTEffl. 0 - .

EESEIWE HRONICLE.VOLUME .5MST0. 16. WARREN, OHIO., DECEMBER 1, 186T.f

BUSHTESS DIEECTORY.usun.(Mncu

w.v:ui ValHtlifMnni. Ia m- -t.rrRlek.Mi-kt8t,Wrrn-. WM.Rrrtzat,RditoraadProwrleter.

n. 3lMJtXI. dt CO.n)l..nfuiiwi.uj dealer h

Hoc., ud 61mm. at MC;ii stead. et..sin, mem et, ataxia eew v iSot. (. LaO- -r 'mm. A. CU IOM,

M.Ma'nlSaim. .- BU.0lu

tret, Li. litjT. tt,. .J.B.UUC9K, . -

end Sore". OSee at Mtww.Kris. idefMrkt Street, tweorat of

. tMitite Wiw pud t Cbroaicf 1QT. 1

Oaeeatte If hoing Depot, Warren. Ohio. Inoioi Proprietor. I Bit Boon. the lxret

U northern Ohio, eaet of CI r eland, lu re-

cti. -- .ieen tbcronshly end r-- r

oeniadeBUnd u o Mtrtel. anauVimt. - aJalvW.lSo..

. , iimnin.iiiM.ranee Arent. Wn,0nleMsMhhidie. other property MmrS 'JbSftrnaVanie. faTarebl '- -: JVSyTKiSi Iw.li. art UaaJT

. tnrnrd for on, three and T

W.B.EAU. . V.J.BaCXrV,t MACKKT.

s. w.rax.UK ok rATCH,

Whole! dealers U Iron endNailB, Carriageand aaddlery auwii Tkct .

Muiil 6c W una. 0. -- S7

A. K. LTKAX,

0. Km, kiw IddiBrs Morganlad!Btii Son Store. Market ritreet. ar- -

, aws --w.

- r - , W. mKTBKB,Attorney at Law. yntrr Publio. avyaaccr

Oft at OraagerilJa. ejambail oo. 0. apU.y

- - ".m.rTcro.' HUTCHlJ uuuuiiJi

Lew. off oe ever Smith McCombForr-rd- f Main ud Market Street.Warren. Ohio. tapm . -- u.

- - . JfcLAIS dk WA1B,VuibaUrtn at LfkiAw. Mi StrMt, Jr--

JAXESOX dk WHIEUK,MurMtnrorf of StoTM. Plowi.Cmtiatf.TiB-w- r

Mot FrBitar. 6toT Pip,dM. Ji.A Mark tiK, arru. u.AJmiAk'a.

J. IITCB1BB. - B. W-- mTTJT. J. C BUTIHIM.

KTTCIUSS. aVATUVF A H CT HIH .

Attomr. 01 sUcad to w huiaaH istnutodtotBoaiB tXM acd adjoininc oontna. sadbt Baracaiaf Bttaatioa to appiiomuou intorn C. 6. oart at Cloreteed. for tlio benefitaf taa Saakrapt umea over rrwuaBaat'l Bankiu HJe. a Market btreot.Warrta.Obio. IMarek B. mol.

DR. F. MYEH,LstaaT TaniactoB. ICBden hit pTofaarioaal.pon me t tae poopw m t exrca mm wiuii,

b&ea for the prwoat. at randenoe, corner of. Uick A CkeKBat

w waaawBITH.FapaiaUsa sad 8arfot!Jafioeoror, on' Draa fitara. Main knd, Warren, Ohio.

Ofie aarnn froBt t B.B. an, and ro lu I.,Bi .::;:.i T.' jjaajH.tooi.

, A, BrKAJt, M. BV,

Kc!ectSPkytrUl d SlTot-oo-e irrer Btlloibiore. karket Street, Warrea, pbio.

auenuoa irraa to Cbtobm XHim.

arrwa DeatirtB. Ofie mr HeUia Boaiaakiaa Otsaa, bore tier are prepared at

ail taa te Baanebetar end rasanteaia B

IailaUaBaBaeaadtdMBAatak.Mar 4,--tf. -- -

Votary TabUe; Aorkient, Fir and Life Inra--pBif nl ; aaa renaion wm wwwmw-FeanHT- e

Iteket. eold t and from, and Monoyu Maim ftltha loareetcnr- -raat rate. Ofaoa ia WaabB BJock. Mnstraab wacm.0. January . iac.

Br F. A. BIERCK. .

HoaterpatU Phytidaa and Sarraoa. Ofio andBeaieeno ia Satliif'i Block, Bortk of the Pub-li- e

Sgoare. 0e BP (tain, raudaaa aaatand oftkeiueck. .

toam LOT.- . v BBxaot.

.. LOT db lIUvI,Payaletaa and Bj leonx, eBe atrt al tk Bant

MarkM&oa arraB.Oaio.

ALBEIT I1IMI.Attaraay at Law. Ofio an aat tid af p all

eqaare. Warren. Otoio. ia baitding recent ly anjd by U. & WtX Callaetor.

liT l tf . -

c..BrcAtr. Lktuu.- MXTCAXr dk CLAU,

FhyrieUaJ aod Sorreou; Oflee en Hih Streetmi the Bjaad abmtzly aocuid by Dr. Har-aw- a

JaaafoSlyrB. , TiTLOB. . a MBA.

' TATL4B dk IOH .,Attoney at Law, OCoa aact od af Tni

r watreawUBM.- VI.T. BVTEAK

Attaraer at Law, ka retnrned toWarrraasdnmaied praotie, - CKe ia hi former room,ever Iddian A Margas'iStorajOB ktarkdOl.Jaly tt, leo-2- y.

.- - -

. amtm. rsx. acuBT.AUTBUrT at ACKUT,

Bij.eifirtJ. VatttrMACo. Dralenll Waieie. Jewelry sad DiaaienU. Market Street.Warm. Oaio. (Matcblnt.

' 'a. b. rBos. m. raos.rKCK dfc 11QTHU,

WlieleeaJeand Eetai? Sealar ia Poreira BadiHaieeti Dry wood, blik and Straw BoaaeuTriamma, Varietiea, Jr,at tt tigu of the- Wam.7r Store- .- Ptaajni Slock.Tama. Oki

W. At J. A. rACKAU,Dual en ta Hard wars. Iron, Sails, LaKbor,

Saaa, Blisd, loot. A, Xaaasatawa. bhia.Ib.QwUU-t- f

V. b. iwcna. W. P. PBBTBB. -

W. B. dk W. r. rOBTEB, :

Scalar b School and Hjenaaea Book.Wail Paper, fariodioalj, Pamsklau

and Xaa-axi- at thKw lorkBookotora,Mala bweet. Warrea. Okie.

. BJEXB dk ABABAVKaaBfaetBran and Wholwala Daalen ia Rea--7

pladlothinc,Eata,Capend6esU' For.Binkisr Good Mala street. Warres,0.JaaU'iS -

B. K. babxttb: dk CO.Wfhelarale and Katai dealer, ia American and

PorciCB Bardwara, Iron. Kail. ias, AcVaaftoriar'f Block. Markat SuWarraa. 0.

HeCOMJBS. S3UTUS A AD ABU.Wh.lneln .nil Retail Dealers in Ponica and

Amencaa Dry rood. Orooeria. Crockery..Comet af MaU awl Market fitreeu. Wama.Vaia.

- - ioDixes a MeboAl. ; :

Sealert ia Etapl aad Paacy Dry Good Car--pet. Mstuufi aaa riaor OH Vloth. w rndowEkade aw tztaree Tee. Co fie. Bpicee, AcTkey keep aoa aaily ea kaad. a bvrr andfall artmnt of food ia their line, of food :

aaality aad faekioaabi striae, and offer themtor cal at the toweat pneee ia th market,Jan.. 17. -

' A BTTBK. erAttaraer c Law aSe aver Park A P.

iiardwan 8tore, W arrea. Ohio, are aaikorlaeoV tee preparea te attend ta all cue ander thehue BaaJtrapt Law ia U United statesVoan. MareaUlsa,

a. a. ran. ,TABU A wm.

IeeJers ia Paresca aad Doaiestie Dry fiends.Crockery, Boot, Shoe aad Leather, Carpet-i- n.

Paper Bearing, Window Shade. BeadyMad Clothin. Ao alwk7s ehcan for mJ.pay at the Sew York Store. Market Street.Warrea. Okie.

ajrr t i t nv e nnnni f v t.ma.JHWrl AI HAUVUAllXilVa

Ixlvery steals leTS ONE OF THE LATE InstilaJ.tlOB. Owretoek n all bw aad of the mteaityi. Panoa waatia aaytbiai ia the Lirery

line, anil pica tire a a eau. otasie ia atraaref theS awal House.

Warrea. Jaiy T. 167 -- tt. ,

CONCORD GRAPEVCIES.TTVjB SALE AT MY FRUIT ttJ? TfeaeUad lFam.CMBrdarpTiosby theLaie er by the thoeaaad ia any qaaatltyto sit perehaaara. rf ais the difemt Tarie-tle- e r

that I am new grewinc ia my Yiaarard.Ul voweora aena at un. au order prompt-ly attended te. P. 0. Address, Girard. Oh io.

H. 8. ADAMS.Weatbaraiaid. Ber. , lMT-- tf

SHOE BLACKING k BRUSHESXrMMfcMaia St, Warrea 0

EXCHANGE BANK7 : : V.

FEEEMAN & HUNT.

Warren, Obio.BULEBS IS

Government Bonds.Vob RoeoiTtd m Nt MlW

ronpUy auwiM t.KETEATE STAJIFS FOR SALE.

Trumbull KattoMl fiaak!Warrca. Paid up Capita

$150,000.I. maw Brmred to 4a tk rani kojieow 1

Dimul, Dopant and KUcknr bar ud Mil

CH AILbJ0MlTa. rnrt.J. S. EDWARDS. Ouhior.

Ikictn. :

CaiiLn Surra, Eiudi ArarouWinn PiClito. K. 6.H. W. Emra.' C A. Baaiioi,

lirra Balbwib.Oflt.lO,lM6-tt

Dr. S. R. BE0KW1TH,Surfle&l V Hecaiiicftl Deitlst,

OrriCt TITH DR. A. JOTtKM.

EHUAI, HI.TO INSERT fanISPKBPARED teeth. P th

BMtapprorea mm. am io Hnora m tvration, ob tk teh. npos tk. boK BPproTwl

ud Miostific prineiplw. .

IMiJW 330033LS IJTJST RECEIVED. AT TBI

Warren lews . Depot J

j YJXEJS BBOOK This popn--L Iar book, by home aathoraa. i mtt- -

itif with a ready rale. W hart joat reoeirod sr arprr. rnce ji.ou.EAIHRISA Sy Dr. Holland. Thai newn. by the asthor of "Biurreet." J I art

out, and i inpreat demand. AU Ih admirernf "Timothy Titcomb" most hare a oopy. PrioB1.SU.

WBmr COMPLETE POKMa-T- hii the Diamond Edition, eampleta in oaa volae. Prier 11.50. .

RECORD of th TTH OHIO RBQIMENT.Br Major Score L. Wood. We bare a few

eopiea of thi popular War Bacord oa hand, anda it will uoa a ot of print, thoaa wUaisBone. hould call aooa. Prio tU5Q.

All aaw book receired a ooa at rnblUbai.W.B.A W. P.POaliH.

WBmn.Oei.lfi.1867.

NEW ABR1TALor

STAXDAED HSCELLWEOCS BOOKS

RECEIVED A NEWJUST MiasellsjMoaj Book, Bmoaf whichax thlouowinsi . ,

, Preacott' Work 15 Tola,' Life and Letter of Waihtnrtn Trrlne Iel.

Wararley Berai OTOla.Imirt Work.iipwibora' Work.Spark'. Lin of WaahiaftOB.Gil 8 toI. an edition.Doa UaLxsUe d Tale LoskkarfeTmaela.

ttea.Liabi Cemplata Chamkrtry.

. Charla Dkhen Work all d'tiorj.Tbaekaray' Work Diamond Edition.Lookinc Taward. Saneet by Mrs. Cbiid.'

, BeaadKita by , Chavita Child, -LaeyAriyn bp Trow bride.(. Katanaa by t.ii. KoilaBd. 'K cyclopedia of Relinoo Kaowladce.Weeaur'a Unabridftd Dictionary.Woretrt " - ' "

' yra.Molb.oi'.E'oriealjroTaU.EaaTcan oar Heme. Ac.

We will order as Beak ana an mt thaiweaaToaoieaaaoe, a w are reccrnac pack'are from iiew V ork twice a week.

uetio - w. fl.A W.1T.FOBTXB.

BEAIIS PAPER.200,We kar ?nrt repaired from the Holr- -oae at lHa a noerior lot or Wntinc Faoer.which w offer at whlal or retail at low pri-ce. fOOLSCAP . . : 1

(XlMMKRCIAL NOTS.- - LADIU UOT

UUOtUAr-- .

Ui4L CAP,BKBM05 PAPBK

5?CH SOTS.Ala a tare rapplyof Baff and Whit Enrel- -

pa. W.li.AW I. P0KIE&.

Q A A ( BOLLS WALL PAPER, 'QJjyj ALLHJWSTTLBaJnt reeeiTed from Kew Terk. and bow open.

aall aad examine 9vr atyle sad price beforePuoaaaiaK.Brown JBlBnk, .

.

" Wilte STavnti, ,

Eatin Papen, .

GUtPasert.Alao bbbw aapply ef Border to match.

w.n.ei.i.rukua.'.BLOEDE'S

ELEE SITED IKPEOVED EUCIUGEIS AN ENTIRELY K EW at

THIS efMaci! a, made from the eele--krataa kwrialin una, aaa m warrantee tonick t)id or tariaed Paper, which no etheraf acilace wiH de. It ie indianeeaabl in ararawpaper offloa, doinf away with th BMityel water, er pata, in tucking anauaa paper.Alio ia erery bank, ater. eouBtina hoana, erne,tastily ia inort, erery place where Maeilareof ajiT kind ka been heretofore Deed. Itwarranted not to oar, mold, ferment or decayana u aiwey ready tor aaa. It one ucuyaod thoroaskly, aad bernc thinly applied willto farther than any ether kind. One trial willoonrinee all of the extraordinary properties ofBlood' Maeilac.

TlftMBtk Street, WuhinctoB. Kay 28. 167.We have aaed the Mealaaa Daunted br Mr.

Bloeda, .ample of which wa tarniahed a by70, and tnd ittobenarpaaed by aayrimilarpreparation : Indeed It woald-b- e difficalt to layin what particular it eoeld be improved.

lean Haipeouiiiiy. Jit (Jooil uo.Firaal.by W.5. A W.P. POUTER.Not. 4. laST, ' Warren. Ohio.

atHair Jewelry, Sraidiiif, &e.

23 H. 0. TAYLOR,MaBufaetarer and Dealer ia Hair Jewelr.firaidin. Carta. Watfaila. rhirniw. a.eanitb afeCamb'f Block. Main Suwat. War-ren, Ohio

U. Hirheat Prio paid for dark hair,6P 18 DJ67 tf

at

SCARLErS COAL DEPOT

TEE BEST GOAL IN THISrappHed to order, at retail or whole-

sale, at lowest market price. Call at the Ma.homnc Depot. 6 KU&QK 6CARLEI,

n arrea. Uot. s, Ub7-Sn- a.

' TO FARMERS, -Stable Keepers and Qthers- -

ALE'S COPPER STRIP FEEDYJ CUTTER i the nutert, eaaiert everated.UBplcet. avoetdarabi and ehaapeat Sblp Pibo- -ie nay. eraaw ana seLC cdttbb tbbWoxo IK.00 nofc0,aOacMrdin(to tie aadcapoiv-- w bin para tot nniu tried eaUHactorily. For illustrated daacripaiT Circa iar, aadSlUa SHHMMIIi ew.li

J. X- - BROCK WAT. er9. B. Old Cattail takea in xchan fcr new1Mb M, 1M,

TJANCY DRESS GOQDS ia all th..ohvm mw TCuiiniis piaun eoa ranAlaaaAfia. Poo It DepMiia. war aaed Plauta.

Gburhama. Lawn. Pvplin. As oaay of themlower prio than th tame elaa of goods

koacht beforethe war.

Gold and Silver.The Great Decline in GoldT7NABLK3 n to offer SoUd SUrer ea

Spoea at ealy a small advance ea old pri lace, new im urn tor the wa hare been awaiting so Durar le

OOZHI3 ZOXV33'To bay. film a pleadid stock makfrom coin, and warranted para and fall weirbt.We do sot chart extra for engraTing Surerfoods, and doit ia a good ttyl a it oaa bedone La New Tork, er any of the Easierviu. MimMr tn place.

. VAUTR0T A ACKLXT.Market Street, Warrea. 0.

BOOTS 1 BOOTS!FOR SALE CHEAP,VrrORK MADE TO ORDER ON

1 f short aotice. Mend in done ia teedere ee m reaeonai prieee, ueii enEDWARD BENKETT, er&?.tm,'?po'l'MAmmk Attic's Store.Dept. giT

OOALi OOAlilRICHMOND STILL CON

Coeju tinea t tarnish the beat .1,1 .bibck n uie ma kmi ev hm.k..j .4.

Scarlet, at the MahotUag Depot.n arrea, oepu i-- n U. tULUMOSD.

HARDWARE

AHOTBIB

"WEZZLBIZROW LOAD,"

or

HARDWARE,AT

PARK & PATCfl S

Where tpenaX leJenenen tDl b offered tonayanoi i

IRON I, NAILS,

SASH AND DOORS,

WINDOW GULSS. :

' ' DOOH LOCKS tt HIITGES,

Roggen's Latches.

HoiisaTruniimBUTTS. SCREWS, &c,

XabraeiBC all kiadi tt

BUILDERS HARDWAREGenerally ia a.

PAEK&PATCH,-

aad warrant fbir Doort aad Saik of dry lum-ber." and Mperior iik which w are aaUinftew.-aj- larr uck i

HAND SAVS,cross err saws. BUCK SAWS.BLTC1LKES' 6AWS. Ci&CCLAJL SAWS.

JACK PUKES, S IK COTHIKG PUSESMoulding Planes, " - r

: Matching Planes,

IRON BENCH SCREWSWooden Bench Screws,

STEEL SQUARES, ,

TKT SQUARES,

IRON SQUARES,SQUARES TEAT ARE ROT "SQUARB."

Shinrling Hatcheta. Shea Eil.athinc de a deHnntar do Tack ' doBoy , do Uaydolai de

FEAffllC CHISELS,

--A. tj o m n. s.BRACES & BITS,

BLACKSMITH ., DRILLS,

BLACES2HTH HAniaERS,.W ' j!fcJ "mm' "

BROAD AXES. iraam ittqBOVSAXluJ, BENCH AXES. '

Plumbs and Levels.Plumb Bobs. .

QRINDSTOITES,-- .

GRINDSTONE FIXTURES,FAMILY GRINDSTONES,

aaoie vauerr,. , maiiam.PooketCuilery.. MeanrnxTapa.Itaaors. Mopiiaadlal. :Raaur btrape. Ac An.Includ int general stock of Hoaheld

aeed. which hay beea selected withare iaoa th decline ia prio, aad will be cold

extremely low lor earh. atPAKK k FITCH'S

HARDWARE 8T0BK.Markat St. epposit Coart Heua.

rAA BUTPALO ROBES Joat ree'd. from thUJJ flain and tot sal, by the Bale or Kobe,- PARE. A PATCH'S.

HORSE BLANKETS1500 for the Jobbinc Trade wholes!erreUU-fram- tlto $ffl.at "

PARK A PATCH'S.

LAP ROBES ELEGANTFINE from $5 to ta). atPARE A PATCH'S.

N:OW; IN STOCK k FOR SALEOw Pair TamnereJ Barrr Ptrrinrs.

SO cHMjras', fciraunahaai A Bostoa Taper

10w Pie Enameled Cloth.Ow do llaauk,a do Broadciolh.M de Backram.torn Bide Bnamel aad Dash Leather, wkiok

will be sold lower tbaa city rate to cash borers,PABJl A PATCH'S.

PALL AND SEEJ TBOSX SUPEBIOJt OIL CtOTWt.at PARK A PATCH'S.

TRUNKS! TRUNKS!TRUNKS! Bom down stairs, cord of'em aud cheaper tbaa erei Bar. Valises. As.

PARS. A PATCH'S

33 33 X 33 33 2hT rs

Stem ;Carriage Factory.

SOUTH OF CANAL, WARREN,with all kinds of machi

nery edasrted to th basin, by which a treat(anas ef material, time and labor are affected,thereby attordinr facilitiee for maaafaetoriagaod sellint a BET1E& artiele for the same

LESS soney than can be afforded withouteach advent, iiavinr larr Dumb ol thaery beet workmen in tb ocuntry am nowpraparea meseane tarn ea a xsuutti ranDAY. At my Repositories may be found thebeet assortment ef iniahed work in th Cona-kry; all ef which for aaality. workmanship,durability aad isish. i aet rareaased ta thiCMMmtrr. or by eaatam aanuXscturers.Cl,OSIS COACrJ-b- h CHARIOTKbS, .

CARRIAGES.Jenstlinds. . SULKIES.Bftnuivnu, u 1. w iir.".TROTTIKQ BUO0IE8. . .. DROP FROST.

BOX BUOOTXS.PAST0NS.1 and I seat, top standing and

tailing, etc. etc.Ala. LUMBER WA00NS. best article, for

aad two horaa. Parson wwaing aaythtatmy line ef bnjineas. an MaBettedtaC call andfor themselTea.

Especial atteotsoa te Caste m Work aad lepairin. Paiatiu and Trtauaing doa n rboKpvviw. im siriea to eeit toe moat raeruioa

il.Il.-a- Ll, WUlaa. WAsULAAliSU.0L 17. 10. H.C. BELDI3

. A.aeia a. p. suoza a. a aocaa.

TREES, . TREES, TREES

THE ATTENTION OF FRUITis called te oar steniT toek bow

oserealor in sen uaae eonsuting ef

APPLE, PEACH,and Dwarf Pear. Black Walnut. Erarrreena.Gra perinea, arc. A.

Oar stock of tree are the unset erer grewabrought m this pert of the oanty. Thote

wishing te ret a tcoa Bargain snouid net fail tea a call before parehaeint eltewkere.

Promntandearefal attention tirnto all or.aar. eAunr. snue. a xtl

sorunrmniflanSept. U, lS7-t- f , . Briatolrill.O

ALEXANDER KideaJeby

Glove., the

rsvaasauiaua.

8ETTLF.KEBTS ORDERED TO BEADYERTISED.

TT IS ORDERED THAT THEMf folrowinc accoaat at Kxecntor, Adraia- -niiniatratore. and flnardiaaa. which hare beealied ia th Probate Court of Trnmball Ceanty,be adTrtid foareonMoatiT week, aecordintte law. aad that they remain on file for laapee- -tlon anil iiMiiiu. nnttl Dec 2a 1867. whenthey wiU be examined and orderei to record ifao exceptions appear thereto.Honrr L. Wood row. dee'd snailTctuard B. DWolf do do doJohn Vannoat do do doUrsula Case do do doAlcoa Trunk er do do deJoahna K. Bentl . do do doDaniel Caooae do do doMary J- - Stewart do do doJama Moor do do deJohn A. Use hart . do do doB.A.t)rar do do doSeldea Joaas do do doJames (Jroaier do do doRobert Moore do do do

a de do deSeymoar A, Cox i do do doTonaard R. DeWolf do partial doBenjamin Laae 'do de doSamsel Wei t do do doJ. A. WUdmaa do do doThomas Cawfieli do do. doWm, MeM array do do doJoba Rood do leal set 'ml of Adtn"tElisabeth Foe Ik do do doElisabeth Carlton do do doAaa Harris do do doJacob Piper ' do do doJadjo liar is do de doFtar Sally Whltfnrd --

Jamesdo do

T. Cannincham do do doSamael Chaaney do do doSamaai Mo do de deRchael Dun lap do de doWm. N. 6mith do do doMatthias Christy de do doJohn Marlow de de doSarah Drake de do doIjeonerd uebora. do do doJacob Coffmaa do do doEdward B.Fitts de i do ' doSamuel C. Price ' do do doOeraham P. Bisalow . do .do doWm. raander do do doJohn MorrisoB do do doMans txewart do do doLeonard Eila do partial dBenjamia Polaifet do do doAlfred Button do do doSaner Clark de do doMoon C Bradley do do doNed Clinton do do doVilUeE.Coltoa. minor finkalatttleatar Soar,'orrester E. Marry do do dola M. Moore do do do

AaaCTibbit . do, do doRtnben Clark , d . do doWUber Aldrioh do de doMartha A.Amas do do do-

doAhiraSislet do do :

t. tt.uoz ao do doAddia M.Clark ' do do ..doClara Lao do do 'doSimon Colton de , , do doMatthias B. Ball do do. , doMary A. ChaUord de do doSaml Qaaccenbaahdo do doHenry ai: Finney do do deJan Drennao do do doSarah A. PhUlips do do doJam es 3. Shout do .do doFrederic Beck. Idiot do doCharles J.Bowell minor do doA. M. A J. 0. Treat do .. partial doSamael P. Hotiaad do da do

Hilar muyer ao do doRhode Curtis . de 'do doWmF. Rkr : do db doJ. A. Stewart do do doFlorae c A Chancy

Howley, do do doPeter. Nathan and . "Mary Moyer, da "do ; do.Andrew, James, William t Man talk do do "do-

doWillis rf.Smith do doBraces Lee StJoha do do ' do

oma, kuyroa. ana a .Charles Pettit do , do . do

Jehial aad DamiekPettit, d do 'do

Florence aad Chan-cer Bawley. do de dorEUa M. Falrehild do do do

Ada M. Moon do do v doElnor C. and Homo ,

A. Bo-r- er do, , 77 do" doMaria, Adalin and

tieorse Phillips de . do doMaria Stewart do do , do 'Electa Ann Hsdson. Idiot do doOaarre Kin do doTenamrd K. UeWoIL nartlal settem t or Trustee.

ALBJkita XUMAJ(S.JBd,WOT. 2D, lSbT.-t- t .

WESTERN RESERVE

Carriage Factoryrjr,rpHE PROPRIETOR

deeire te say te the Dahlia.that teera oaa besaea at hi Be--

aoaitory. oa Liberty Street, a few rod soatk atthawanera lleserre aaa. the largest asaert- -

Curlsaf ea ud Battle, '

That h ka Tr exhibited aad offered for salin this market. Biiatock eenssU ef AM 11.11CARRIAGES and SLIDB SEATS, of Tarioa.

attorn. One-he- n sarta ot nearly ereryem iptiea. all of which are of the latest and

most approTd Easter atyl, which for quali-ty of material, substantial workmanship andltcaao of anisa, cannot be surpassed by anythr establishment in the State. Harin in

suooearful operatioa a STEAM EN0IKX withall thcaeeenary machinery lor aaaaoiactannchis Spokes, Hub. Felloes, aad Trythint thatcan be dona ad ran tax oallT by machinrr.

Being a praetioal mechanic himself, supria-tandi- n

and CTenvain? all the Tariona hranehea, h at prepared to furnish a Tehicle la firstrata style, lor taa. money una say otaer snana- -factarar in th waet.HACiaS, rx.DLf.H S W1W.1S, OUACHKS

BAROUCHES.If act oa kaad. will be made to order, ea shortnotice,

Trimmlnr and Paintins' donwlta aataem ana aispetoo.

Mar Ail work done at my Bvaauiaotory wama.to

Ta additJoa te the aboTa. T am irreoared tafurnish Carriare-make- r and other with thebest aaality of Turned Spoke. Best Aims.Bow. Shafts. Poles. Seat-ar- Hobs, As, at asLow nrice a at any ether establishment.

C rs desiring to famish, th.irwb timber, can ret their Spores aod Hub. be

tamed onsaort aoaoe. and at tair pnea.OSI'l loos Mm a. Tl 1SAKJ.

C. BRELDENBACH, t

UPHOLSTERERan aurrscroMa op

Sofas, Lounges 0hairsTete-a-Tete- Sf .

jr iu xuraa op

UPHOLSTER WORK inKING'S NEW BLOCK, at

Balm Street, Warm, OkJe). so

QPECIAL ATTETTI0II IS CALLED TO the oraj newmyieot bkii, wttieh 1 am nowmakinr. known a Webb's Patent, ft ia anew beneat and eery comfortable bed. aad oaa a fold-ed tocetharendarin it eery to handle aod tokeepsleaa. The sprints are differently arraored at the sides, matins the bed aniformelyelastic and ysaidiac, which reader the sprintle liable to rec eat of order. Cell and s.e thenew style betor perehuini any other kind. toI won Id also stale that i eontinu to mnfactnre th nicest Sofa. Loans, Chair, Teta-a-Tt- e.

and to de all kind of Upholster workt order. Repairing done aeauy and at fairprice. IbaTaea hand affneenortmeMof niceiioenses. Jtemmberlhplaee.oBMninStreet,in King's aw block.

MPS,!. 1904. ISlUalllAXIBACil

FRESH ARRIVALOF

FALL & WINTER GOODS.a

Every tail tfc.t ErerybHy waits inIT thi .

DRY GOODS LINE,AT

AMES tt LITTLE'SMAIS STREET, WABBES',

And at or old Stand,

; NEWTON FALL-S-, O.TTAV1NG JUST RECEIVED A1 1

GENERAL STOCKof all kinds of Goods for

Fall & Winter Trade,ty

cossnmKosrCloths, Cusimeres, Cloaking!,

Bilks, DeLaines, PrintsOATt3P33a? S ,

SHOES, HATS,toAnd a treat ranety of

SOTIOXS, GROCERIES, le, beAU of which we will sail as oheee a the ehaa.est. Plaaseeall aad examine for yoortelr.

A treat rariety of Good, tome ei which am

As Cheap as before the war.Cask barer will tnd it to their interest ta

tall on asAt Amderowa'a Bow Black, Bala St, nia

WABBEI.sad HE WTO w FAIXS.O.Oct. 11867 AMES A LITTLE.

000

rpHE GAME OF COURTSHIPI AND MARRIAGE, also th Gam of Great

ETeotv Game ef Greet 1'ratha, Gam ef Ae-th- r ofaad other gam, both lnitraatire aad

amusing. Jnetrcc'd at. aw a mo sWk oivaa.

The W. R. Chronicle.

RIGHTS OF MINORITIES.Cumulative Voting-I- ts Origin

and History.

Its Adoption in the United StatesAdvocated.

At the inyitation of a number of citi--mdb of Philadelphia, irretpcctiTa ofparty, the Hon. Charlaa K, Buckalew.one of the United Statos Sens tort forPennsylvania, delivered an addrest onthe true principlaa of voting for

under a aoTernment likeourt. Uayinc opened the subject byreference to the theory of popular gov-ernment hft patted onT to the fact lastunder our present system of electionit u only Ui moMntM ia any electonaidistrict that has a voioe in the legisla-tive body; the minority, although itmay be within one vote aa numerousas the majority, being entirely cut offirom any voioe whatever, ao iar at theelection ia concarried. , This hat alwaysbeen fait vo oe aa evil, and accordinglytne auteamea of tnie aaa otaer countries have been eneared toe a cootidarable time in trying to God the properand just remedy for it-- In thi cityacd State a partial remedy had beenattempted in the choice ef electionofficers, echool director, jury commis- -uosera. Ac., by what ,nutb.i be calledthe "restrictive" or ' kBiiUtion" system. 1 bat is where tvo lBupectore areto be choaen. tha elector votee for bntone and thus the majority and the mi'noritr are sure - to have- - a rapTetenta- -

tion. In the choice of school direo- -

tora, where four are to be chosen, thevote it restricted to three, end the minority ia thus enabled to make tare ofthe election of one, and that secure avoice in the board. Thit "is the "ree- -

trucuve" or "limiUtrdbT system. Ithas lately beea used ott a targe scale'inchooeine deletste to the CODtututional Convention in the State of NewYork, and was embodied in the Reformbill passed at the last Cession of Parliament in .Lnciand. AAother plan, forsectoring representation to tae tekolbodv of the people ia kbit known aathe personal representation" system ofAUr. litre, of H,ngland,.and advocatedby John btuart Alills aad other liiber--ala in Parliament. This, Mr. Buckalew said, would occupy more tune vexamine than could be given to tt inone evening. And he then pasted onto. the more simple ana praottcal planknown as .

CUMULATIVE VOTING.

this alto securing a representation ofthe whole bodv of the water, while itpreserves toe just proportion ot powerto the majority. What then ia "cumulative voting t" I propose that what iaknown by that tAna iri be -- appliedto the the selection ot Sepresentativeein lODgress and in the euoice of lee-tors for President and .Vtoe Pretideartof the United Statta, It admits ofapplication in the choice ot Senators,and Representative in be State Legislature, and aooce other officers.- - Thisreform can be introduced by Congresswithout any oonttitu tonal amend-ment, ao far as Congressional represen-tation is concerned, and the plan canbe applied to the choice of Presiden-tial Electors by the Leidslatures of theseveral Mates, who have power to prescribe tne mode in wnica toeae iuectorsshall be chosen.

Cumulative- - voting.- - then, ia, thatwhere more than one ofSoer it to bechosen, the elector taall poatess atmany voters aa there are persona to hechoaen, and he may bcuw toeae votes

hit discretion, opon the whole num-ber or upon any lest number, accumulating, if he choose, upon one two orthree persons, or any number leas thanthe whole. The result of this wouldbe, that any political interest in a community, if it can ascertain about, therelative proportion of its strength tothe whole vote, may cast its votes insuch a manner thai they will tell in thereiult. and it will then happen thatevery man who votes will vote for somecandidate or candidates who will becertain to be chosen. Corruption thenwill no longer exist, for there will beno necessity for u. iar be it from me

atk that minorities shall be armedwith powers which we know t even themajorities abuse. The proposition itnot that there shall be a majority andminority representation, but that menwho vote will vote tor thoee who will

certain to be chosen, and who willrepresent them according to their views.Take the case of Vermont as an illua--

ration.. There are 60.000 votvrt there.40,000 are Republican and 20,000 Demo- -cratic. The State it entitled to threeRepresentatives in Con great, Whatwould take placer Tne majority would.get two of these Representatives andthe minority one. "Now, the majorityelect the whole three. Under thepresent tyttem it ia a matter of chance

the choice, for the Legislature can inany time the Slate, andprovide for a continuation of powerthe control or a party, .by the

cumulative vote the 20,000 cotes wouldrepresented: each of these 20.000 In

could give his three votes to one can 28didate, giving him ou.uuu votes. . t hemajority can elect two in the samemanner. If the majority should prefer

vote for all three, they could onlygive them 40,000; if they voted for onethey would give him votes, andthey would not be . likely to. throwaway their strength in this way. Thetame result would apply to all otherSlate. In each State the Freemanwould vote for a Representative infJongretswno would speak bis voice,obey his will, and we would thus ob 20tain an factual representation of thewhole masa of the people upon bothsides; and then in fact there would be

representation of the whole mass ofthe people upon both aides : and then

fact there would be a representstion of the majority, for it would berepresentation of the whole. Ap- -piause,j ihe legislators would no lon bvger "gerrymander" the atate and con-coct schemes of injustice.

The speaker referred at length to thefrauds and corruptions growing out ofthe present system, in which it wasthe- interest of candidates, or theirfriends, to secure "the balance of power," and ao carry the election. er

He continued: The system of cu inmulative voting secures the government to the real majority of the people. Instead of striking ott a part.they are all represented in the representative body. It is not a system ofminority representation it it a plan iffor the representation of the wholepeople a device by which the majori

shall rule, and shall pronounce itsvoice in a fair and honest manner, ofThe system of cumulative voting would hesecure in representative bodies men ofhigh abilities, and secure tnem for along time; lor elections conducted un-

der this system would not be subjectthe abuse that now prevail. Un- -

dea this system the minorities wouldcontent. They would be heard ical

and. although the decision might beagainst them in the legislative body.they would have fair treatment andthere would, ol necessity, be less liability to revolt.

Under the cumulative tyttem of vo-

ting, how would it stand in Pennsylvat. There would be twelve Repre-

sentative for each party. There areabout 600,000 voters, with about 300,- -

voting for each party, and eachwould secure a just and equal repre insentation. So in Kentucky instead

nine Democratic .Representative, ingthere would be about three Republi thecans. So, too. with aery lana instead

of of only one Republican, as now,there would be two; and in Connecti-cut there would be two Republicansand two Democrats, instead of only oneRepublican. So in all the States.You can not name one where this in

justice is cot found entering into yourpresent system.

I need hardly say that if any part ofit,;. tt-- :- i . ,i.uw wuivu "o ,io ivuiis iwu viaaseof voters distinguished by race or color,a very great part of the evil that mayarise by arraying one race or coloragainst another would be removed bythit system of cumulative voting. In-stead of the cry that one race out-vote- s

the other, each would obtain that rep-resentation which its numbers entitledit to, and there would be no war of ra-ces. This, however, is an argument forgentlemen who occupy a different partyposition from that to which I am as-signed, and it should be a reason fortheir rendering a support to the plan Isubmit. Now, aa to the application ofthe plan in the selection of Presiden-tial electors. General Jackson pro-posed that the people of the UnitedStates should vote directly for Presi-dent of the United States, and thisproposition at several times has beenbrought forward in Congress. - At tbelast tenion, it was again introduced bySenator Wade, of Ohio. Great com-plaint has been made that the peopleare not heard directly in the choice ofPresident; that tbe Electonai Collegeia a mere form. As a substitute for allthis, the system of cumulative votingby tbe citixens of the several' Stateswould secure every practical ' objectsought by the friends of that particular retorm. -

The result in Pennsylvania, for example, would be that each of the political parties would select as many electors as they .would be entitled to, accor-ding tb their numbers. How isTt nowTThere are six hundred thousand votesto be polled in Pennsylvania- - Eachparty has three hundred thousand inround numbers. From Lake Erie tothe Delaware this State next year is tobe convulsed by aa: exciting electioncampaign for the Presidency; a thous-and disagreeable things are to takeplace; men of property are to havetheir attention-turne- d to the securityof that which they own, and everydevice will be resorted to' by the parties in the canrtts. And why T Be-

cause each will have an interest in obtaining a of one vote,perhays,' will elect twenty-fou- r repre-sentative and two Senatorial electorsfor President of the United States.And the struggle will be for the littlemajority that turns the scale. Now, asparties ataod to-da- each party is erf-titled to thirteen of these electors, according to their numerical proportions.Thataswult, however, cannot take place.The whole twenty-si- x electors must begiven to on aide caly, and that resultmay determine the destinies of thenation; not for the ensuing four yearsonly,-hu- t perhaps for generations.The result of our electioct is, therefore, an accident a matter of chance.On the other hand, take a fair andhonest mode of voting ; let each partyhave the number of electors it is entit-led to, and let the people of the otherStates have the same, and let the voiceof American freemen be pronouncedfairly, and then let the majority telectthat high officer who is to preside attbe head of the nation. fApplause.

In the last place, this plan of repre--senative reform is convenient in thehighest degree ; it is practicable. Itrequires only legislative action to per-mit

k

the citizens in this state, which hastwenty-fou- r Representatives in Con-gress, to cast these twenty .four votes adhe pleases. 'He may give two votesapiece for twelve candidates, or foulvotes apiece sta Justlet him alone to exercise his own willHere there is no complex system, nogreat scheme of reconstruction. Justtrust tbe people, and let them vote atthey think bast. Aad if we can navethat law next fall, I will go to the pollsand vote for twelve Representativesout of the twenty-tou- r to which Pennsylvania is entitled, and if I think thepolitical interest to which I belong isgrowing in strength, and is entitled tomore than tbe hair. 1 will vote lorthirteen. If I should be mistaken Iget nothing more than my proportion.There would be no buying op votes.for it would be too difficalt to go thro'the Stale and attempt to eBect tbe result.

I must point out one special aot ofinjustice of majority electiana. Observethat the party which prevails at anelection does not merely carry the day;doea not merely get its own votescounted, but counts all the power thatbelongs to the other. Suppose the twoparties in Pennsylvania are divided.that one has 300,000 and the other301,000. The 301.000 in prevailing inthe Pretidential election does cot getmerely their own votes counted, butthey get counted the vo.es of the other3UU.UU0. That a what sharpens tbeinjustice. Take the elections of 1SG6

what was known as the "Free States."Two millions of Republican voted formembers of Congress. Tbe

party polled in these States a littleover one million six hundred thousand.

Congress, the 1,600.000 voters hadrepresentative only ; the 2,00,000

had 143. The proportion between thetwo great masses was 20 to 1C votesactually polled in the states; the rep-resentation in Congress, instead ofstanding in the same proportion, stood143 to 2s Why T Because under themajority rule in these States, the majority not only obtained representation is

its own votes, bat obtained, thatwhich belonged to the other side. Bycumulative voting the representationwould hare stood in the proportion of

to 16. Do you not see now the wholepolicy of the Government can be

or affected under a system in whichyou are told that "the majority rules?"

Air. JDUCKaiew men went into a con-sideration of some of the objections tothe plan, all of which he met by forcible argument, but that we have not

ace to enlarge upon. He continuedsaying that one of the strongext ob

jections to the present system of votingfresidentivi electors in a oiaie uko

Pennsylvania is, that the 300,000 vo-

ters who may concentrate upon twentyPresidential electors, will not only

wield the cower to which they arelustlv entitled, but also wield the pow

and weight they are not entitled toany manner whatever. He said

that he had not accepted the invita-tion to speak in Philadelphia throughany desire for display, but from a busi-ness

isand public motive to have the

subject examined by the people ; andhe could enlist the powerful aid of

the press and the people of the city of usfniiaoeipma id saving me auujec in-vestigated with a view to the adoption

tbe system of cumulative voting,would feel amply repaid. ly

At the close he was greeted with pro-longed applausevand many of the audi-ence went up to the platform to thankhim and offer their congratulations.

Ckodp CuatDBr SoLfKca. The MedGazette oj Pari states that M. ie we

of Paris, after observing the ineffect of suipnur on tne ouiura oi grapevines, u led to administer it in

cases of croup. He mixes aof sulphur in a glass of water,

gives a teaspoonful of this mixtureevery Hour, me enect is aeecnoea aswonderful. The disease is cured in

days, the only symptom remaining -

Keinc a couch ariaicB from the presence of loose piece of false membrane

the trachea. Mr, L. says he has fol-

lowed this plan in seven eases, all besevere, especially the last, in whichchild was cyanotic, with protruded

rolling eyes and noisy respiration. and

The Office of the Preacher.

There are two ways of regarding asermon, either as a human compositionor as a Divine message. If we look op-

on it entirely as tbe first, anrk requireour clergymen to finish it with their ut--

moit care and learning, tor our oetterdelight, whether of ear or intellect, weshall necessarily be led to expect muchformality and stateliness in its delivery,and to think that all is not well if thepulpit have not a golden fringe roundit, and a goodly cushion in front of it,and if the sermon be not fairly writtenin a black book, to be smoothed uponthe cushion in a majestic manner be-fore beginning, all this we thall dulycome to expect; but we ahall at thesame time consider the treaties thusprepared as something to which it isour duty to listen, without resUessness,for half an hour or three-quarter- butwhich, when that duty has been deco-rously performed, we may dismiss fromour minds in happy confidence of be-ing provided with another when nextit shall be necessary. But if once webegin to regard the preacher, whetherhi faults, at a man sent with a mes-sage to us, which it is a matter of lifeor death whether we hear or refuse; ifwe look upon him as set in .chargeoyer many spirits in danger of ruin.andhaving allowed to him but an hour ortwo in the teven day to speak to them;if we make some endeavor to conceivehOwJprecious these hoars are to him; asmall vantage on the side of God afterbis flock have been exposed for six daystogether to the full weight of the world'stemptation, and he has been forced towatch the thorn and the thistle spring-ing In their hearts, and to see whatwheat had been scattered there, snatch-ed from the way tide by this wild birdand the otheranifatlast, when breath-less and weary with the .week's, labor,they give hiri this interval of imper-fect and languid hearing, he has butthirty minutes to get. at., the separatehearts of a thousand men, to convincethem of aU their .weakness, to . shametherri far all their sins, to warn them ofall their dangers", to try! hy this wayand that tostir the "htr J fastenings ofthose doors where faster Himself hasstood and. knocked acd yet neoe open-ed, and ta call at-t- he ope win 2 ef thesedark ' streets'! whwer--Wlsrm- ' hathstretched forth her-- hands and ' nePoneregarded, thirty mmuteevto raise thedead in, let ut but once understandand feel this, and'we shall look withchanged eyes Opon the frippery of gayfurniture about the place from whichthe message of judgment mast be de-livered, which "either1 breathes upondry bones that they 'may live, or, ifineffectual, ramains recorded in con- -

.dfmiiapiojB, perbAp- - gainst the utt ererand listener alike, bat assuredly againstone or them. we. shall not so easilybear with the silk and gold upon tbeseat ofjudgement, nor with ornamentof oratory in the mouth of the messenger; we should wish that bis wordsmay be simple, even when they aresweetest,' aa the' place from which hespeaki likea maiblA rock in the desertabout which the people have gatheredin their thirst. "Slorut of Venice," voLiu pp. 23, 24.

Color of the Stars."'Prof. Ennis, of Philadelphia, the author of a recent work on "The Originof the Stars," writes to the HartfordTime:

"I have no doubt but that the entirecommunity .learned and unlearned,wilt see iv uod ere tan d perfectly andfamiliarly bow the stars originated,what caused them to move aa they nowmove, and what makes them shine.The appearance of a star in the East.asdeseribed by the) Rev, Itff Mill, throw.mg out, in succession, red, bitre andwhite light, is entirely an atmospherioeffect, and called Scintillation. It iaseen - by - good eyes wnen careiuuydirected to all the larger stars, especial-ly when near the horizon..-- It is causedby the refraotion and decomposition ofthe exceedingly delicate pencil of tbettars, light by the intermingling strataof air of different densities. Thosemoving and irregular strata separatethe colors as the dew-drop- s, or as theram-drop- s, when they form the rainbow.All the stars, however, are naturally ofvarious colors some red, some blue,some green, and some orange, withmany different shades of these, at maybe seen by any one with good visionand careful observation. It will hereafter be a pleasing exercise for peoplegenerally to note and record these col-

ors, and thus to see how front year toyear they change th-i- r per-manent colors. Some change often,and others again are still red, as theywere recorded by the ancient Greeksand Romans. The cause of thesechanges of color 1 have given in myvolume." . . .

What Breaks Down YoungMen.

It is a commonly received notionthat hard study is the unhealthy ele-ment in college life. But, from tablesof tbe mortality of Harvard University,collected by Professor Pierce from thelast triennial catalogue,- - it ia clearlydemonstrated that the excess of deathsfor the first ten years after graduationis found in each portion of that classinferior in scholarship. Every onewho has been thro' tbe curriculumknows that, where Sichylus and politi-cal economy injure one, late hours, rumand punch kill dozens, and the two little fingers of Morpheus are heavierthan the loins of Euclid. Dissipation

a sure and twin destroyer, and everyyoung man who follows it is as tbe early nower, exposed to untimely frost.Those who have been inveigled in thepaths of view are named "Legion," forthey are many enough to convinceevery novitiate that he has no securitythat be snail escape a similar fate. Afew hours sleep every night, high living and a plenty ef seiMhe makewar upon every function of the humanbody. The brains, heart, lungs, liver.spine, limbs, the bones,- - the fleshevery part and faculty are overtasked.worn and weakened by the lerrinc energy of passion and appetite loosenedfrom restraint, until, like a dilapidatedmansion, the earthly house of thistabernacle falls into ruinous decay.Fast young men, right about!

Two Pictures of Death.In a scantily

an old Scotch minister with tbin, greyhair, and wrinkled skin. But his brow

high and broad; his deep set eyesare bright and piercing ; a smile playsround his lips ; and though feeble anddving. he looks calm and happy. Let

speak to mm and say"Do you think yourself dying, my

dear sir: 'He fixes his eye npon you, and slowhe replies

"Really, friend. I am not anxiouswhether I am or not; for if I die,shall be with God ; If I live. He will bewith me."

Now let us step into yonder mansion.Entering a richly furnished chamber.

find a dignified personage enfoldedwarm robes, and seated in a large

easy chair. He too, is feeble and dying;but the light in his eyes it unsteady,and he looks like a man ill at ease withhimself. Let us also ask him a ques-tion as

"Mr. Gibbon, how does the world ap-

pear to yoa now t"The eloquent historian of the Roman

beEmpire for he it is closes his eyes amoment, then opens them again, andwith a deep sigh replies

"All things are fleeting. When Ilook back I see they have been On

; when I look forward, all ia darkdoubtful,'' Chnttia Churchman, for

Measuring Distance by SoundA bell rung under the water returns

a tone as distinct as if rung in the air.Stop one ear with the finger, and

press the other to the end of s longstick or piece of dead wood ; and if awatch be held at the other end of thewood, ticking will be heard, whateverbe the length of the stick or wood.

Tie a poker on the middle of a stripof flannel two or three feet long, andpress your thumbs or fingers into yourears, while yoa swing the poker againstan iron fender, and you will hear asound like that of a church beU.

These prove that water, wood andflannel are good conductors of sound,for the sound of the bell, watch andtbe fender, pass through the water andalong the deal and nannel to the ear.

It must be observed, that a body inthe act of sounding is in a state ofvibration, which it communicates tothe sounding air the undulations ofthe sound affect the ear, and excite inus the sense of sound. Sounds of allkinds, it it ascertained, travels at therate of fifteen miles in a minute; thesoftest whisper travels aa fast as themost tremendous thunder. The knowledge of this fact has been applied tothe measurement of distance.

Suppose a thip in distress fires a grin.tne light or which is seen on shore, orby another vessel twenty seconds be-fore the report ia heard, it is known tobe at a distance twenty times 1.142feet, or little more than four and a halfmiles.

Again, if we tee a vivid flash of lightning, and in two reeondt hear a tremendous clap of thunder, we knowthat tbe thunder cloud a not morethan 760 yards from the place we twe,and we should instantly retire front anexposed situation. .

An Exquisite Story.In the tribe of Neggdeh, there was

a horse whose; tame bad spread tar andnear, and a Bedocin of another tribe.by name Daner, desired to possesi it,II : .r 1 - r t -iiaviug vuemi III tbiu lor IS OlS C&Xue.s ana bis whole wealth, he hit atlecgtii upon the following device, bvwhich he hoped to gain the object ofnis aesire : - - -

Ha resolved to staid his face withthe juice of an herb, to clothe himselfin rags, to tie bis legs- and neck together, so as to appear like a lame beggar. Thus equipped, he went to waitforNater, the owner of the horse,wnom ne knew was to pass that way.When he saw Naber appoachiog onui oewuiui steea, ne cried out in aweak voice: ; : ". . ,,a.

"I am a poor stranger ; for three daysI have been unable to move from thisspot to seek food, I am dying; helpme, anu neaven will reward you."

The Bedouin kindly offered to takehim npon hia horse, and carry hintnoma. ,

Hut tbe rogue replied : "I cannotrise, 1 have no strength left,"

Naber, touched with pity, dismounted, led bis bone to the spot, and, withvery great difficulty, set the seemingbeggar on his back.- But no sooner didDaher feel himself in the saddle, thanhe set spurs to the horse, and gallopedoff, calling out as he did so :

"It ia I Daher have got the horse,and am off with it."

Naber called for him to stop and list-en. Certain of not being pursued, heturned, and halted at a short distancefrom Naber, who was armed with aspear.

"You have taken my horse," saidthe latter. "Since heaven has willed it,I wish yon joy of it,, but I. do conjureyou never to tell one how yoa obtain-ed it."

"And why not?" said Daher.l"BecausV , said the noble Arab,'another man might be really ill, and

men would fear to help him. Youwould be the cause of many men re--rusing to periorm an act of charity forfear of being duped aa I have been."

Struck with shame at these words,Daher was silent for a moment : thenspringing from the hone, returned itto its owner, embracing him. Nabermade him Bcoompany him to his. tent,where they spent a few days together.and became fast friends for life. La--narune.

Gentlemen Farmers in Prussia.sia.

A Paris' correspondent says: MEmile de Laveleye, haa just contributed an article to the i&tme- - de Monde,in which an interesting account is given of the progress made by Prussia during w year oi peace, iv riling onAgriculture, ne point out that nearlyall the landowners cultivate their ownestates, except for detached portions.renting is the exception. Ihey are,therefore, retained in the country bythe care of their own interests, fornothing more imperiously requires theeye of the master than rural industry.It is true that they aided by a class ofemploye who are not found in any other country. Iney are educated youngmen, belonging to families in a goodposition, olten juat leaving an agricul-tural college, who remain for a certaintime on some large estate to initiatethemselves in the practical direction ofone of their own. 1 his is a novitiateis an ancient custom, still preserved inmany trades. Ihut frequently the sonof a rich hotel-keepe- r will not hesitateto enter another hotel as butler orwaiter IKt liner), to be initiated intoall the various details of the service over which he will one day havetc preside. When any one visits the offarms Hittergutter), he is astonished tosee as superintendents the sons of abanker, a baron or a rich landowner.These young people drive a cart, orguide a plow. At noon they return,groom their hones, and then go

'and

dress themselves, and dine at theowner's table, to whom they are notinferior, either in instruction, birth or ttmanners. After the meal they resumetheir working dress and resume, with-out any false shame, their rustic occu-pation. Thus we find in feudal Prus-sia a trait of manners suited to thedemocratic society of the United Statesand which will hereafter become gen-eral, in France, in England especial-ly, a young man of the upper class on

hiswould believe bis dignity compromisedin performing the work of a day laborer.

Succias. The successful man is notnecessarily the man to be envied notalways the happiest man. Haman nature cannot have its own will longwith becoming deteriorated by it. Weare appointed to struggle, and in strug-gling oar highest life is developed.The time will come when the laws ot mgour present condition will cease, andwhen we shall be able to bask in thesunshine of success without lots of vi watality, or enervation of our virtues.Till then, it is wis lom to accept our walot, and make the best of it to seekfor our enjoyment in our work ratherthan what tbe work produces to tillthe soiL and dismiss all needless anxi ofety about tbe harvest to be more concerned that we should be right than to

oldthat we should succeed ; in a word tobear ourselves like soldiers with whom strict obedience ia themost sacred of obligations, and who arethereby absolved from responsibility

to the results. Then, so far a, suos is vouchsafed us, it will be grate its

ful ; so ear as it a aeniea, it will not ais--ooncert us. Thus living, our life will

its own success.

An editor in Marshall, Illinois, has saidbecome ao hollow from depending np- -j in

tbe printing business alone lor r4oxnbread, that he proposes to sell himself)

stove pipe, at three cent a foot. wr

Work of the Spirit.The mightiest forces in the universe

are silent forces. Who ever heard thebudding of an cak? Who was everdeafened by the falling of the dew ?Who was ever stunned by a solareclipse? So it is with the august phe-nomenon of a change of heart. So faras we know, it ia the most radicalchange human heart can experience.It is a revolutionary change. Disem-bodiment by death, morally speaking,ia not so profound. Still a change ofheart is not an unnatural change. Itis not' necessarily even destruction of

God employs In it aninstrument exquisitely adjusted to themind of man aa aa intelligent and freebeing. Truth may act in it with anequipoise of forces as that of gravita-tion in the orbits of the stars. No, itis not of necessity a tumultuous expe-rience to which God calls us when heinvites us to be saved. By what em-blem have the scriptures expressed theperson of the Holy Ghost f fs it aneagle? "And John bare record saying,'I saw the spirit descending like adove."' "Come," is the select languageof inspiration ; "come, and I will giveyoa" what? a shock, the rack, aswoon t No ; "I will give you rest.""Come, and you shall find" what?struggle, terror, torture? No; "yeshall find peace." "Come ye," comewho? "Let him that thirstetb come;and whosoever will, let hint take thewater of life freely."

What caw at Doxa with Tiat It iaa mistaken idea, and a somewhat ob-taining one, that a young person canaccomplish nothing, in any point ofview, unless he has plenty of time.The miser lays away one penny afteranother, and in time his cofiers arefull. It was only a penny at first ! Sowith any other faculty of the mind.Life is but many momenta. The gold-en moments of thoughtless childhoodare passing rapidly away, and soon theresponsible and weighty duties of anactive, busy life overtake him, acd,unlet?, like the practical economist, aright disposal is made ot his time, hegoes on in irresolution and procrastina-tion, till the misspent moments whitenhis locks, and reproach him for his ne-glect to sow early the right kind ofseed in the garden of life. Websterfilled up his dictionary with one wordat a time. A knowledge of all lan-guages aod sciences ia acquired byfinding one fact after another. Thetime that is nsed in amusements, be-yond what is necessary physical exer-cise every day, if rightly husbanded,would be sufficient for the acquisitionof that knowledge that we, in aftertime, think would get, could the flow-ery path of youth be once more trod-den. Every misspent moment tellsfearfully against him who will surelybe found inadequate to the task, whichhe for others has undertaken to per-form. As sorely as one moment fol-lows another, does old age creep on.and the cheerful and happy, or wretch-ed and miserable mind is the faithfulaccount of the stewardship of life,

Dklsk. Young man. did yoa everstop to think how terrible that wordsounds? Did you ever think whatmisery and woe yoa brought uponyour friends when you degraded yourmanhood by getting drunk ? Oh, it iaa fearful thing thus to trample underfoot the high claims that God and man'have upon you. Drunk 1 How it ringsin the ear of a loving wife! How itmakes the heart of a fond motherbleed 1 How it crushes out the hopes ofa fond father, and brings reproach andshame upon loving sisters. Drunk ISee him as he leans against somefriendly house. He stands ready tofall in the open jaws of hell, unconscious as to his approaching fate. Thewife, with tearful eyea and achingheart, sits at the window to hear her ,

husband's footsteps, bat alas, they c imenot ! He is drunk. The husband, theparent, ia drunk, spending his time aadmoney, when he should be at home,enjoying the comfort and pleasures ofthe family circle. Drunk! He isspending the metns of support forliquor, while his family is starving forbread, his children suffering for cloth-ing. Drunk 1 His reputation is going,gone! His friends, one by one, are re-luctantly leaving him to hia miserablefate. .He goes down to the grave "un- -honored and unsung." Drunk 1

A Fact roa Fabstias. It may not begenerally known that the seed of sun-- '

flower is the most infallible remedy yetdiscovered, for the speedy cure offounder in horses. The directionswhich we glean from a brief article onthat subject in the Commonwealth, butcredited to the Essex Banner says :

"immediately on discovering that yourhore is foundered, mix aboat a pint of ,

tbe whole seed in his food, and it willeffect a cure."

We are gravely informed by one ofthe Charleston papers, that in SouthCarolina many "men of gentle blood"hare actually gone to work that theyare holding the plow and towing teed,that they may have bread. If thesespecimens of the "gentle blood" couldonly live in "nigger quarters," subsiston two pounds of meat and a peck ofmeal a week, be occasionally treated tothe lash, have a child ortwo apiece sold away from them, andbe generally subjected to tbe diabolism

the old time, we should find thatSouth Carolina was one of the mostreliable Republican States in the Un- -

ion. As these things are not in theRepublican programme, we can onlyencourage the experiment which thesesons of chivalry have inaugurated, byshouting at this distance, "Go it, 'gentle blood ! Hotter men than you are

work, and think it no discredit'Chicago Tribune

Had His Doubts of tux Futtbk.The day after my arrival at Yittori, says atourists, I went to a shoemaker's to gettome repairs done on my boots. Therewas nobody in the shop. The master watt

the opposite side of the street, smokingcigarette. His shoulders were covered

with a mantle, full of holes, and he lookedlike a beggar, but a SpanUh beggar, ap-

pearing rather proud than ashamed of bispoverty. He came over to me and A ex-plained my business. "Wait a moment,"said he ; and lmmediatly called his .wife."How much money is there in the pane?""Twelve picetas" (14 francs, 40 centimes-- )"Then I shan't work." "But," said I."twelve picettas will not last forever.""Who has seen tomorrow ?" said he, turn-- ,

his back on me.

other day, a stout old Republican farmerasked by a Democratic friend why he

hadn't "gone op Salt River V The replyto tha point, thus : "It won't pay u

Kake the voyage; I couldn't stay king.enough would have to come right back.ISesidee, tha other fellows have used up a i

the provisions they've beea there solone; and then they have mau toe piece

dirty that I don't wanr to go." Thatfarmer was a cheerful philosopher.

The Boston Transcript asks: "Whatwould be the verdict of history npon a po-

litical party that carried the Republicsafely through a civil war, and theu lost

influence in the nation by attempts toregulate lb sale of cider and lager bear?"

. ... , ,i I - l "-la the village ox r BTeriy, a. a., us

An eminent physician, lately dacea!.of the achievement of msdical science

hit day: "When 1 graduated I had aremeuio ijt every uuease ; wubo. a

retired from practice a had dozen diseasesevery remedy." .