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date (1881-09-24) topic_African_American newspaper_issue Adams Brothers im m pint aei aa Mna VOLUME V Devoted to the Interests of the Colored People OLM wwsmaaaBBa LOUISVILLE KY SATURDAY SEPTEMBER 24 1881 Sole Proprietors NUMBER 17 know said the old lady Well 1 t shouldn t said Mrs Larabee S I havej been fearing and expecting it all morning Grandma said Ellen there ie bad news i 18 he dead asked the old lady tremulously He is The quick tears started in the sensi 1 tive eyes There was a violent paroxysm ol grief No expression of frenzy told of the anguish within Is it trueV be asked v with trembling lips Then the Lord help me for if he is dead what v4il do jShe was rendered weak and lit tit nervous the announcement and was ol u d once or twice to repair to her room where in the solitude she might begin to mpr heudl the awful truth but she was not Contented to remain there and soon retured to the I sitting room About half past 9 o clock Mrs Garfield was found sitting in a rocking chair Bwaiting for news The morning aper she read with eagerness It can uot be that James is dead she murmured _ V I can not understand it I have no further wish to live I can not live if it is so DEAD And the Nation Weeps as a Nation Never Wept Before Last Scene of all in this Strange Event ful History H Closing Scenes in the Last Struggle for Life The Noble Chieftain at Last Yields to the Grim Monster And Peacefully Passed in the Unknown Realms of Eternity The death of our beloved President James Abram Garfield while it has not been entirely unexpected is a sad blow to this great nation There is no language in which to express the profound grief it 1 rings upon us It seems incredible that a man of such noble qualities so inoffensive so amiable so large hearted so pure and so true should lay down his life at the hands of a couardlycur a vagabond an unspeakable wretch But it is true James Abram Garfield onr Chief Magistrate cruelly shot on the 2d of July last while starting off for a pleasure trip after lingering seventy nine days between life and death suffering untold agony but without a murmur died peacefully at 10 52 p m Sep tember 19 and the Nation sitting shrouded in awe covered with blackness as with a gar ment testifies in the silence of its sorrow that a great calamity has fallen upon it For the wretch by whose act we have been plunged into this terrible abyss of grief we can give no adequate expression The heart of the nation is wrung to its innermost depths torn and bleeding and there is nothing to appease The life of the villian who is author of our sor row cannot atone and even that is protected by law and the people may bewail their fate in 1 sadness and in silence grieving only that they may grieve again When the President was removed to Long Branch it was hoped the ocean breeze would have a beneficial effect and aid nature and medical skill to restore him to health again and that seemed to be the prospect the first few days after the removal but on the 15th inst we were informed by bulletin that there were various septic accideuts and new com plications were showing themselves On the 16th there were no marked changes in the President s condition and his symptoms were not reassuring and there was therefore a sensible increase of anxiety and devoted friends and attendants The car No 497 which carried the body to Washington had its sides and roof covered with crape A soft dark carpet covered the floor and in the center of the car stood a catafalque also covered with crape and black rosettes at the sides and ends In the car eat the military escort commanded by Lieutenant Patterson a former cadet appointed from Steubenville Ohio The next car continued the members of Cabinet and the following the last was President Robert s private car Gen eral Grant and President Arthur who had been escorted to Mrs Garfield s car remained until the train started The incidents en ront were solemn and touching As the train moved slowly through Trenton the students of Prince ton College ranged on either side strewed the track with flowers Just before the train entered the depot at Washington the plat form was cleared by the police and the officer of the Army and Navy to the number of 13C formed in single rank upon the left facing thel train As the train slowly rolled into the depot every head upon the platform was uncovered On the 17th the President had a chill lasting about twenty minutes after which he vomited and perspired freely The pulse ran up to 137 and the pationt was delirious On the 18th the President had an other chill of less duration than the former but sufficient to increase the very great anxiety already existing He was very slowly growing weaker but very perceptibly On the 19th the fatal dav all arrangements for the dressing of the wound were completed and the President was about to be turned on his side where the wound could be reached when he said I feel cold at the same instant lie turned liis face and vomited Prior to tliiH he had eaten two spoonfuls of milk porridge but had not completed his breakfast when the rigor seized him and held full sway for over ten minutes The extremities were blueand cold There was an intermittent spasmodic con traction and relaxation of the muscles Onemo j meat the frame would appear to be drawn to gather as tightened with ropes after a short time the system would be relaxed and with a shiver and sighing respiration the body would resume its normal condition The strain upon the overtaxed and prostrate form of the man was intense The physicians wondered howj bJe i ouid endure i They stood around IheToed watching the attack they had been powerless to prevent and which they could not relieve The moments seemed as hours for it looked as though every spasm which racked the patient dr gged him down irresistibly towards death The pulse of the patient ran up to 143 or pos sibly higher it was so indistinct and uneven the physicians could hardly keep track of it The respiration it is said was not t ken but according to the descriptions of his difficulty in breathing it must have increased to 28 or 30 After the rigor had ended the President called for a hand glass and looking at himself said I can t understand Doctor how it is I am so weak when I look so well and he dropped the glass on the bed unable to longer hold it up And now while we are mourning the death of our illustrious Chieftain reader think you of Mrs Garfield that patient woman whose endurance has been the talk of the world Dr Boynton who told her in Washington several weeks ago that her husband could not live after the rigor on the last day had passed off told her that the chances for re overy were poorer than ever She understood the gravity of the case and was not surprised at the hopelessness of her friends and the phy sic ns but still she had hopes hoping against hop As the day drew to a close so the life of the President grew fainter like the dying ember still glowing but consuming its own substance and going out in darkless The bulletins were Eagerly read an I as each came forth the sad news only became sadder and death made to appear closer upon its illustrious victim At the President s bedside holding his poor emaciated hand in her own and watching with anguish unutterable the fast vanishing sands of life sat the faithful devoted wife during the closing hours of the President s career Around him were other weeping friends and physicians lamenting their powerlessness in the presence of the dark angel of death Toward the last the mind of the sufferer wandered He was once more back in Mentor amid those scenes were the happiest hours of his life were spent He sat in the dear old homestead again with loved ones around him the aged mother so proud of her big boy the faithful wife and beloved children It was a blissful dream that robbed death of its terrors and rendered the dying man for a moment un conscious of the cruel rending of his once vigorous frame that was constantly going on The moan of the restless ocean mingled with sobs of loved ones as the lamp of life flickered and went out forever Nearly every one around the President clung to hope to the last and refused to credit the approach of death until the shadow deepened and the destroyer s presence could be no longer uufelt The President was dead l Thb news of the President s death waa broken to his aged mother by Mrs Larabee her daughter and Ellen her granddaughter The following is related Grandma said Ellen would you be surprised to get bad news this morning Whv I I don t 15 The death of President Garfield is deeply mourned by all nations Says tb Pall Mail 1 Gazette There is scarcely one Englishman jin 4 000 who has not read the vs of the j death of President Garfield withjttgrefc as real land as deep as if he had been a ruler of our Sown A communion of sorrov unites the jocean sundered members of the English race j to day more closely than it ever been united since 1776 The London Evenir I Standard says The deep grief is shown bv jail the English speaking population Says the j London Globe Grief is nowhere more poig Inant than in England and it intended to Ihire one of the largest and most important j halls in London for a demonstration of sym I pa thy Says the Loudon Times The death I of President Garfield is regarded as hardly less than a national calamity In all ranks from the Queen to the peasant tpft is a most 8 General and Airs James Secretary Kirkwood At 28 Re was principal of Hiram College At 29 he was a member of the Ohio Senate the youngest member of that body At 31 lie was Colonel of the Forty second Ohio regiment At 31 he was placed in command of a brigade routed the rebels under Hum phrey Marshall helped General Buell in his light at Pittsburgh Landing played a prominent part in the siege of Corinth and in the important movement along the Memphis and Charleston railroad At 32 he was appointed chief of stall of the Army of the Cumberland partici pated in the campaign in Middle Ten nessee and in the notable battle of Cliickaraauga and was promoted to the rank of Major General At 33 he was in Congress the succes sor of Joshua R Giddings At 48 having been continued in Con and a stillness as of the grave pervaded tlitHS 1688 sb ice he was 33 he was elected te vast throng which for more than an hour hadHthe United States Senate been patiently waiting by the roadside 8ood Mrs Garfield assisted by Secretary Blaine de scended from the car and taking his ami upon her right and that of her son Harry upon her left she walked directly to the carriage in waiting Her face was completely concealed by a heavy black veil which hung nearly to the ground andj whatever emotion she may have experience were sacred from sight of those who gazed npo her She entered the State carriage and wa followed by her daughter Mollie Garfield hei At 49 he was nominated for the Pre dency of the United States At 50 he was elected President and Tulv 2 1881 was shot bv Guiteau heartfelt sympathy for the bec od widow and injured nation The career oP Tl esident Gar field is of a kind which appeal to the best feelings and most cherished traditions of our I people THE AU J PSY The statement that the ball was found in the rogion of the heart has been verified and it is stated on authority that the developments of the autopsy prove that death was inevitable and the President s life was only sustained by the most excellent nourishing and constant care The following official bulletin was prepared by the surgeons who have been in attendance upon the late President By iprcyiotfe Mrratfgdmem tU pjei mom m examination of the body of President Gar field was made In the presence and with the assistance of Drs Hamilton Aguew Bliss Barnes Woodward Reyburu Andrew IL Smith of Elberon and Acting Assistant Sur geon D S Lamb of the Army Medical Museum Washington The operation was performed by Dr Lamb It was found that the ball after fracturing the eleventh rib had passed through the spinal column in front of the spinal canal fracturing the body of the first lumbar vertebrae driving a number of small fragments of bone into the adjacent soft parts and lodging just below the pancreas about two inches and a half to the left of the spine nd behind the peritoneum where it had become completely encysted The immediate cause of death was secondary hemorrhage from one of the mesenteric arteries adjoining the track of the ball the blood rupturing the peritoneum and nearly a pint escaping into the ab dominal cavity This hemorrhage is believed to have been the cause of the severe pain in the lower part of the chest complained of just before death An abscess cavity six inches by four in dimensions was found In the vicinity of the gall bladder between the liver and the transverse colon which were strongly inter adherent It did not involve the substance of the liver and no communication was found between it and the wound A long suppurating channel extended from the external wound between the lion muscles and right kidney al most to the right groin The channel no v known to be due to the burrowing of the pus from tfce wound was supposed during life to have been the track of the ball On ex amination of the organs of the chest evi dences of severe bronchitis were found on both sides with bronchial pneumonia of the lower portions of the right lung and though to much less extent of the left The lungs contained no abscesses and the heart no clots The Lver was enlarged and fatty but free from abscesses nor were any found in any other organ except the left kidney which contained near its surface a small abscess about one third of an inch in diameter In reviewing the history of the case in connection with the autopsy it is quite evi dent that the different suppurating surfaces and especially the fractured spongy tissue of the vertebra furnish sufficient explanation of septic condition which ex f ed Signed D Y Bliss J J Woodward Frank H Hamilton Andrew If Smith J K Barnes Robert Reyburn D Hayes Agnew D 8 Lane REMOVAL Ortho Kemaini of the I re l lent to Wash 1 Bi fir ton The body of the late President Garfield was removed from Long Branch to Washington on the 21st inst It was embalmed and encased in jj an elegant casket with suitable inscription and handsome floral decoration The account says those who knew him in life and robust health were shocked by the fearful change that had taken place only a faint resemblance of his former self remaining Before the remova of the remains from the cottage to the train funeral services were read and prayer offered by the Rev Mr Young pastor of the church at Long Branch The services were simple and unostentatious and no persons were present except General Garfield s family members of the Cabinet and their wives and two or three gentlemen who had been constant The Unexpected Colonel Rockwell is quoted as saying that General Garfield once remarkedthat _ o _ _ _ M the unexpected things in this life were son Harry Mrs Rockwell and Miss Rockwell B he things which were occurring to him Others of the Presidential party were President m Many men of strong will and well de Arthur who leaned upon the arm of Senatorlfined purpose have been impelled or Jones of Nevada General Grant and GeneralP v m Jwi n L r i 1 A t Beale General Swaim and Mrs Swaim Colonel to abandou P lai s matured Rockwell Colonel Corbin Dr Bliss and dangh ffiy ears of consideration for oth ter Dr Reyburn Dr Agnew Dr Hamilton sprung upon them at a moment s Attorney General MacVeagh _ wife and twe warning When it was proposed in 1859 that Garfield enter political life as a candidate for the Legislature of Ohio he declined because he did not want to enter the House but the Senate The way to the Senate was not open because the Repub licans of the three counties composing the district had agreed that the nomina tion should go to a Mr Prentiss a vet eran in the service Garfield considered the matter settled and went East to de liver the Master s oration at Williams College During his short absence Mr Prentiss died and on his return Gar field was nominated for State Senator and elected Scarcely had he entered upon his career in the Senate when the war broke out He organized several regi ments but refused to accept the Colo nelcy of any because himself fit for such a post Finally he agreed to become Lieutenant Colonel of the Forty Second Regiment if Captain Hazell of the regular army was de tailed to act as Colonel It was expected that this arraugement could be made without difficulty but much to the sur prise of the Governor of the State Gen eral Scott refused to order the detail Thereupon the officers of the regiment took the matter in hand in such a way that Garfield consented to take com mand Scarcely was Garfield in the field when General Buell gave him command of a brigade and ordered him to attack Hum phrey Marshall in Eastern Kentucky The man who so distrusted his own mili tary capacity and who had hoped for time to gather knowledge found himself pitted at once against a shrewd and ag gressive rebel General This w as so en tirely unexpected as to startle Garfield into what he afterward described as a rash and imprudent mood He was or dered to drive Marshall out of Kentucky and he dashed forward and did it That made the hesitating Colonel a Brigadier General Later Garfield wanted to go to South Carolina with General Hunter and asked the President to send him there His plan was to go with Hunter to the hot bed of the rebellion as much to study the situation as to do service He openly exulted over his appointment when an unexpected thing changed all his plans In the battle of Stone River Garesche General Rosecrans Chief of Staff was killed The appointment of Garfield to South Carolina was revoked and he was selected to take the place of Garesche as Rosecrans Chief of Staff He didn t want the place but once at work lie liked it and won such distinc tion that he was made Major General Rosecrans Buell and others compli minted him as a strategist and organizer and his experience at Chicamauga con vinced him that he had the sort of cour age that sustains a soldier in times of difficulty Garfield s military career seemed in a fair way to be rounded out in accordance with his ambition when the Republicans of Joshua R Giddings old district nominated him for Congress His first knowledge of the movement in his favor was the announcement of his nomina tion and after consultation w T ith his military friends he accepted In the fullness of time he became the leader of the House and at his own re guest was transferred to the Senate Then at Secretary Sherman s request he consented to become one of the Ohio delegates to the Chicago Convention He went to the Convention the leader of the Sherman faction of the Republican party and unexpectedly to even the shrewdest politicians was nominated for President sons Secretary and Mrs Hunt Secretary and Mrs Lincoln and son Poetmasteif The first three carriages received the ladies ol the party who did not accompanv the proces sion to the Capitol After they had moved on a short distance from the entrance the coffin appeared borne upon the shoulders of eight soldiers of the Second Artillery detailed from the Arsenal barracks On the right single file and headed by Adjutant General Drum were officers of tlio Navy under the lead of Rear Admiral Nichols Ab the coffin was borne to the hearse the Marine Band stationed across the street played Nearer my God to Thee while every head was bowed and many eyes were dimmed As tbe procession moved up the avenue scarcely a sound was heard save that from the feet of moving men and horses Bats were removed and heads bowed as by common im pulse of deep and unfeigned grief as the procession moved on toward the Capitol k t the officers of ifche firm and navy deployed in parallel lines on either side of the nearse and the Marine Band played again with much sentiment Nearer My God to Thee as with solemn tread the remains of President Garfield were borne into the rotunda and placed upon the catafalque At 5 25 the lid of the coffin was opened and the face of the late President was exposed Noise lessly President Arthur and Secretary Blaine approached and gazed upon the face of the dead and then slowly and sadly passed out of the hall A liue was formed by Sergeant at Arms Bright and one by one those present advanced and glanced at the emaciated and discolored face l ne public at large was then admitted and hundreds of persons testified by their reveren tial conduct and mournful countenances the sorrow which they experienced in looking upon the features of their murdered President The remains laid in state at the Capitol two days The oath of office was administered to Vice President Arthur at 3 15 a m September 20 Says a dispatch from New York 44 In accord ance with a dispatch received from the Cabinet in regard to taking the oath of office messages were sent to different Judge of the Supreme Court The first to put in an appearance was Judge John B Brady who was closely followed by Justice Donahue The party consisting of the Vice President and the Judges named be sides District Attorney ftollins Elihu Root and the eldest son of the now President assembled in the front parlor of No 123 Lexington avenue General Arthur s residence where the oath of office was administered and he became President of the United States He declined to be interviewed as to his future course Respecting Guiteau and his cowardly crime a Washington dispatch under date of Sept 20 says It is the opinion of the District Attorney and his assistant that under the laws of the District Guiteau can not be tried for murder here but the greatest pm ish ment that can be given him is such punishment as is incidental to a simple case of assault and battery In case such a conclusion shall be definitely arrived at it may become a puzzling question as to how the State of New Jersey can obtain jurisdiction over the person of the assassin In the opinion of some lawyers he can only be brought within the jurisdiction of the laws of that State by means of the extradition laws and as they simply re fer to fugitives from justice unless some local technicality can construe Guiteau to come un der that category it is a difficult matter to see in what manner New Jorsey can obtain juris diction Garfield Record At 14 he was at work at a carpenter s oench At 16 he was a boatman on the Ohio janal At 18 he was stuying in the Chester Ohio Seminary At 21 lie was teaching in one of Ohio s common schools pushing for ward with Iris own studies at the same time At 23 lie entered Williams College At 26 he graduated from Williams with the highest honors of liis class At 27 he was tutor at Hiram College The Bulletin A I A VT S ZBZE CDTIEti IHjIR S Sole Proprietors large experience a good lawyer a patriotic citizen and a friend to the shores there is but a narrow sea I colored American If he has the yet we catch never a sound from the courage to say NO when the time Editor Horace Morris Associate Editors Rev T B Caldwell Rev D A Gaddie W H Steward Rev R G Whitman I I C McKinley J M Ferguson Reportorial Staff W H Perry J H Moody C M Miller George Talbott oseph T Taylor W P Annis i C Weeden T C Brown W L Gibson E C Wood Horace Pearce OFFICE No 256 W JEFFEESON STREET comes we have no fear but that we moods we sometimes get very nearl will all grow to admire him the veil and realize that we are un j der the influence of the ministration f angols but soon that spell is broken and we realize that mor tality is tut t yet swallowed up of life Often when the material sun has just set it will happen that we Though between us and the eternallless in the autumnal breeze andj fears of sincere sorrow flow froml ympathetic hearts Fifty millions Spirit Land In our more spiritualSof people mourn his death as was The assault upon Mrs Ed Smoot by a conductor upon the Kentucky Central Railroad the other day was an infamous outrage The facts in the case as we understand them are that Mrs Smoot had purchased ZF u bllsIb ecl E rerjr Saturday TEEMS Single Copy per year 2 Of Three months 61 Single Copy s 05 Marriages and deaths to be announced at all must come in season to be news Marriage and Death Notices fifty cents Pay ment strictly in advance Advertising rates seventy five cents per inch first insertion fifty cents per inch each subse quent insertion We do not hold ourselves responsible for the w iews of our correspondents Reading notices 10 cents per line Special rates for advertisements for a longer time than a month A blue cross mark opposite your name denote that vour subscription has expired You wii onfer a favor by renewing the same If this paragraph is marked with a blue pencil we wish you to be our agent in your vicinity Write for particulars Communications to receive attentiou must be newsy upon important subjects plainly written first class ticket and attempted to nter a first class car but was re Ifused admission by the brakeman who ordered her to smoking car She very properly refused and demanded admission into the car to which she was en titled by her ticket The door was stand and gaze into the still glowing Capitol until Monday when they only upon one side of the paper mu3t reach us not later than Thursdays ancl bear the signature of the author No manuscript returned Special terms to agents who desire to place the paper on sale Entered at the post office at Louisville a second class matter locked upon her and she remained standing upon the platform The conductor also ordered her into the smoking car calling her attention to the notice upon the door Pas sengers are not allowed to ride upon the platform She demanded her rights and insisted upon going into first class coach and persisting the conductor stopped the train and iput her off It is a high handed outrage robbing a passenger of money for which no accommoda tion is given Mrs Smoot is as fair in complexion as nine out of ten ladies of Anglo Saxon origin is well educated refined and withal is a West and slbwly there rise pale almost mojjonless clouds like curtains to shut out or shut in the crimson go into the hues and then in that u death pause of the day an unspeakabl feeling will come over us In such moment tJie secrets of life seem more open to us mysterious things flit over the soul life itself seems holier more wonderful and fearful How much more this feeling now Iwhen our sunset is of a living sun and its bright countenance and shining return to us no more forever What a time for meditation To Him who alone can see the end from the beginning commit we the future destiny of our bereaved country LOUISVILLE KY SEPT 24 1881 Garfield President is dead Arthur is God reigns and the Government at Washington still lives With hearts nation mourns citizen Washington Lincoln Garfield the three most prominent characters in American history fide darkie waiting on old Mass r servant Mass r lady in every sense of the term but were she as black as Egypt it wouldr as still remain an outrage mean sneaking and contemptible We are much mistaken if her husband does not fight the case to the bitter end n the courts and we urge the peo ple of the blue grass region to hold bowed down the for the foremost U P his hands to the limit of theirl ability and if they need assistance we know our people here in the Beargrass section will respond lib erally GARFIELD When Pericles stood on the open ing threshold of eternity and in the Gone back tojirst principles A duck is at home in a mill pond a hog in the gutter and yonr bona T ey 77 T calm solemn twilight of life s setting a rfCLviriA wainnor nn nm M nao i 0 sun reviewed the events of his ad ministration he consoled his parting TTEIP Dunlap a colored man in spirit with the thought that by no Scott County Ky said to be over official act of his bad any citizen of Athens ever been caused to shed a tear Whatever consolation come to the dying from the con sciousness of a well spent life it was one hundred years old claims to be the father of seventy five children Who says the negro is dying out President Arthur has by proc lamation set apart next Monday as a day of humiliation and mourning On that day the remains of the late President Garfield will be interred Divine services will be held at all the Churches certainly the privilege of our The Nations Loss Never b foro in the history of the human race has the death of any ruler so affected the nations of the earth as has the death of President James A Garfield Crowned heads well as lesser dignities have waited and watched for the latest bulletin from the sick chamber and the common people have manifested the same concern for the poor suf ferer This man of human orig lone of the people a noble product of our free institutions has fastened all eyes upon the land of Washing ton and Lincoln What is there in the atmosphere of this country to pro duce such men as Garfield Every man who labors with his hands for his daily bread can claim him as a brother every man who toils over the midnight lamp can claim him as of kin every earnest patriot can claim him as comrade and every man who is pursuing any noble ob ject in life can claim Garfield as his never man mourned for before AS Igood man a noble man a great raanl has fallen in the prime of manhood and loaded with honors honestly earned The arrangements for the funeral are not perfected at this writing butl hie remains will lie in state in thee will be conveyed to his own loved Ohio where will close the sad cere mony A nation s tears will be shed and a nation s heart offering be laid upon his tomb Farewell brave toiler thy warfare is over and the pearly gates have closed upon thee forever How are You My Old Friend Asked a bright looking man Ob I feel miserable I m billious and can t eat and my back is so lame I can t work Why in the world don t you take Kidney Wort that s what I take when I m out of sorts and it always keeps me in perfect tune My doctor recommends it for all such troubles Kidney Wort is the sure rcure body for Torpid Liver Headaches Jaundice Don t for billiousness and constipation fail to try it Long Branch News WANTED Wanted Purchasers for old papers at twenty five cents per hundred Wanted E very reader of the Bulle N to know that they can make theii w its known in this column free of charge Wanted Two boys about fifteen years old to collect bills for the Bulletin Call at our office at 7 o clock Monday morning Come well recommended Wanted Those who wish to employ Help servants laborers etc to know that they can let their wants be known in the Bulletin free of charge Wanted All business men who wish to have colored customers to advertise in the Bulletin the best medium in the city to reach the colored people Wanted All those who are receiving the paper to pay for the same There are several hundred who owe us We want them to pay Please pay what you owe or we may be compelled to adopt the motto No pay no paper Wanted Our friends to know that any one wishing a situation may insert a notigej of the same in the columns of the Bulletin free of charge We wish to do all the good we can for our people and we hope they will take advantage of our offer W anted Gentlemen correspondent by a young lady eighteen years of age i bright mulatto weighs one hundred and ten pounds is five feet seven inches in height and wears a No 1J shoe None but gentlemen of good business standing need reply Address Lottie Lee Ports mouth Ohio Wanted A ll the readers of the Bul lamented President to share when weary worn and full of pain th Angel of Peace the messenger oi eternal life whispered to his strug gling soul Arise and depart for this is not your rest He is gone That melodious voice with its win ning tones which took captive ear and heart is now silent Stillness these laborer scholar patriot ma y statesman a true and noble man In its broadest sense he was an American and bad faith in our fre institutions under which he wai nurtured and for which his best ef forts were expended to enlarge and The leading Scientist of to day agree that most diseases are caused by disordered Kid neys or Liver If therefore the Kidneys and Liver are kept in perfect order perfect health will be the result This truth has only been known a short time and for years people suffered great agony without being able to find relief The discovery of Warner s Safe Kidney and Liver Cure marks a new era in the treatment of these troubles Made from a simple tropical leaf of rare value it contains just the elements neces sary to nounsh and invigorate both of these great organs and safely restore and keep them n order It is a Positive Remedy for all the iisease9 that cause pains in the lower part of the Dizziuess Gravel Fever Ague Malarial Fever and all difficulties of the Kidneys Liver and Urinary Organs It is an excellent and safe remedy for females during Pregnancy It will control Menstruation and is invaluable for Leucorrhoea or Falling of the Womb As a Blood Purifier it is unequaled for it cures the organs that make the blood This Remedy which has done such wonders is put up in the LARGEST SIZED BOTTLE of any medicine upon the market and is sold by Drug gists and all dealers at 1 35 per bottle For Diabetes enquire for WARNER S SAFE DIA BETES CURE It is a POSITIVE Remedy H H WARNER CO Rochester N Y Miss L M Weiss 194 MILLINERY Twelfth St bet Walnut and Grayson Hats Bonnets Hutching Ribbons Flow ers Lace Collars and all fancy goods at lowest prices caching 85 cents i i 11 letin to patronize those business houses companion because be was all oljthat advertise with us Those who adver J T ENTKTIS Dealer in all kinds of Hew and Second Hand Furniture CLOTHING ETC Highest prices paid for second hand Clot dng Furniture Boots Shoes etc Furniture repaired at low prices Highest cash price paid for feathers E Corner Gray and Preston Streets George Arnold has been bounced in Virginia because he had the au dacity to differ as to the policy to be pursued by the Republicans of that reigns to night in Francklyn cottage State George can sling pretty vig and the murmur of the ocean waves orous English and if he don t make as they dash against the shores is them regret the bouncing we very much mistake the temper of the man We re with you George It was thought that the bell punch was a sure preventative from pecu lations by dishonest conductors but in that wicked city of Chicago they have found a way to beat the bell punch by using a thing called a little joker that has a bell in ii that sounds like the one in the punch Chicago can not be beat for wicked ness There is a place in Georgia where there are four white schools and one colored school The school fund will only pay seventy cents per scholar per month The whites are only using the seventy cents but the colored people have gone down into their pockets and made up money enough to pay one dollar per scholar per month Don t say that the colored people do not appreciate education It is the duty of all earnest Ameri cans to give Gen Arthur their confi dence We trust and believe that he will not betray the rich inheri tance he has fallen heir to but will do all that in him lies to make an acceptable President a worthy suc cessor of Garfield He is a man of expressive of the anguish of the hearts of millions of people Those long and anxious watches by the bedside so patiently endured so faithfully performed by the heroic wife are now ended The end What solemn meaning lies in that sound as it peals mournfully through the soul when a living friend has passed away More solemn still when that friend stands at the head of a great nation We believe in the doctrine that all men in a cer tain sense are equal but the lives of men do not seem to be equally im ortant Yet so short is human life and so insignificant in the eyes of the Infinite and the All wise are all the achievements of the noblest of maintain Combining the statesman with the politician his patriotic heart acknowledged all Americans as his f r th benefit of our readers they will profit by it countrymen and one of the most beautiful aspects of his sickness and death was the earnestness shown by political opponents for his welfare and the deep solicitude of the peo ple of the South equaled that of his own of the North Divided as we may be in time of peace as to State polity yet when any great calamity befalls any section of our country we are all Americans and ourhearti beat responsive to the welfare of all our people Up to last Friday we were hope ful that he would be able to pull through but when on that day his figor gave evidence of some new complication we recognized the alarming gravity of the situation and saw the end was close at hand Vigorous as was his constitution and stout as was his heart he had been fighting for seventy odd days against fearful odds with the grim tyrant death who had wrested from him one after another all ofihis weapons th sons of men that with Him the and he stood a poor emaciated frail SSf S differences among men are very small With Him what is man s wisdom or station Even his right eousness is as filthy rags But blessed thought Garfield passed not up to the Judge clothed only in his own righteousness In the bloom of his noble manhood he clothed himself by faith in the righteous ness of Christ and so the end is but he beginning of life Only his earthly years are numbered his leternity has just begun What his experiences now are we can not tell human being weak and naked con tending against the grim monster armed at every point and clad in mail Death was victorious and all of Garfield there is left to us lies in the casket yonder The sad event occurred last Monday night at 10 49 o clock The bells tolled at the mid night hour and each stroke of the hammer smote the heart like clods falling upon the coffin of our own loved kin From Maine to Califor nia from the lakes to the gulf the able weeds of mourning hang list us tise with us show that they desire your custom and you will therefore be treated well when you go to their places of busi ness By purchasing your goods from those who advertise with us you will help us very much Let them know you wert induced to buy by seeing their advertise ments in the Bulletin Too Poor to Take a Paper The following extract from the Sunny South contains some statements that speak for themselves so well that we publish it We hope Now and then we receive a letter or card with the above statement and asking us to stop the paper but is the statement true in a single instance Those who say so feel that way no doubt and believe it to be true but they are mistaken No man or woman is too poor to take a good family paper no matter what his or her circum stances may be A good weekly only costs 8 15 or 20 cents a month or an average of only cent a day and who is there on earth that can not afford an investment of one half a cent a day for intellectual recrea tion Any person owning only one laying hen can pay it from this resource alone If the man or woman be a confirmed and jhelpless invalid there is not a benevolent person in the land who would not gladly gratify a desire on their part to have a good paper to read It cost so little and then the pleasure it brings to the helpless one is so great This is one of the fatal mistakes which our people always made and it is time they were set right on this subject It is not poverty as we have shown but the trouble is simply a lack of appreciation and taste for reading The great mass of our people do not read at all It is a bore to them They are absorbed in making cotton and selling goods and the man who tells you that he has no time to take your paper or is too poor to take it will fight his way to the ticket box to pay 3 to see a theatrical humbug and will think nothing of paying 5 or 6 to take his family into a circus as often as one comes around And more H WEIRICH MANUFACTURER OF Boots Steittrs Wo 108 FIFTH AVE Evan s Block IjOUISYILIjE ky All orders promptly attended to CHAS POSLEY Manufacturer of and Dealer in Regalia and Lodge Supplies No 340 Linn St Cincinnati 0 G U O O F regalia I O I regalia Masonic supplies U B F and K F out fits K T uniforms pins financial cards memento charts certificates diplomas printed blanks and all other society goods ESTAB LISHE D 1848 I P PATOIS 165 Fourth Avenue Now Receiving the Most Complete Stock of PIAUOS AND spend day after day around a village or city grog shop and any one day s expenditure for whisky and cigars would more than pay for the paper a whole year But this is not all He is not too poor to pay 2 or 3 for a hat to place upon his boy s head nor is his wife too poor to pay any amount for one for her own cranium but they are entirely too poor to pay only a dollar or two for something permanent and lastingly beneficial to go on the inside of their poo empty heads These facts are very dis couraging to publishers and the Vholel press should endeavor to correct this fatal trouble among our people Loose wristed gloves will be worn morel than ever Black bonnets like black dresses are recognized as necessities 03R C3 A_3SrS Ever Seen in Louisville Only Instruments of the very flrst class and of known standing sold from this house Every style of furniture matched Orders by Bell Telephone N B Bargains during the next ten days in good second hand Pianos and Organs Outfit furnished free with full instructions for conducting the most profitable business that anyone can engage in The busi f 88 18 80 eas y to learn and our i instiuctions are so simple and plain that anyone can make great profits from the very start No one can faf who willing work Women are as successful as men Bovs and gins can earn large sums Many have mahe at the business over one hundred hollars in a single week Nothing like it ever known before All who engnge are surprised at the ease and rapidity with which tlfey are able to make money You can engage in this business during your spare time at great profit You do not ha e sZ i HOME NOTES Mrs Ida Barnett of Chicago is in the city Mr W H Wilson has returned from St Louis Rev E Evans of Elizabethtown was in the city Monday Miss Sallie Wo d has returned to her home in St Louis Mrs Mary Starks left for Brandenburg Ky last Saturday Mr W H Stewart left the city for a short business trip to Princeton Ky Mrs Win H Steward has gone to Lex ington to the fair and to visit friends Umbrellas have not suffered very much by wet weather during the past few weeks Mr and Mrs James Claggett of Eliza bethtown Ky was in the city this week On Thursday night of last week there was not a single arrest made by the police erf this city Mrs Samuel Kelson of Lexington is visiting her children who are attending the Baptist Institute Rev A Heath was absent from the city last Sunday attending a council in Bards town He has returned Mrs Mary Murphy of Wyandotte Kan sas yassed through the city this week to visit friends in Lexington Tuesday Miss Annie Higgins who lives on Roselane Street fell down stairs and dislocated her shoulder bone Mr T T and Miss Narcissa Scrivner ar rived from Chicago last Saturday morning They left Tuesday for the South The Misses Rickman Miss Carpenter Miss LaForce of New Albany Ind was in the city last Sunday visiting friends All the places of amusement in the city closed out of respect to the President when the fact of his death was made known Mrs Win H Steward and daughter are visiting Mrs Maria Taylor in Lexington They will be absent until after the Fair It is rumored that the Executive Com mitte of Fifth street Church will furnish pillows for the young men who sleep on the stairway The latest slang for a hot day is I should rejoice to shiver The time for rejoicing or at least for shivering will soon be at hand It is now assured that the new bridge will be built Col Bennett H Young is the prime mover in the undertaking and has made it a success Last Friday the residence of Joseph Smith on Broadway near Twentieth was burglarized and James Wright colored was arrested as tlffe robber Miss L James has returned from her visit to Murfreesboro She brought a little niece with her for the purpose of putting her in one of the schools here Joe Ross dropped his pistol near the cir cus Monday It went off and the ball struck him in the wrist making a painful though not dangerous wound Rev B W Arnett Financial Secretary of the A M E Church was in the city Wednesday en route to Nashville Tenn He gave The Bulletin a call Rev N H Eusley a recent graduate from Newton Centre Mass was in the city last week en route to Raleigh N C to take a position in Shaw University In respect to the death of the President the Baptist Normal and Theological Insti tute held no session on Tuesday The building is deeply draped in mourning Moses Beil John Robinson Louis Price and policemen Howard and McKinney had a little matinee at the corner of Seventh and Grayson Monday morning Nobody hurt John Malone who shot Sallie Reed was tried in the City Court last Tuesday and was held without bail to appear before the Circuit Court and answer to the charge of murder t John Malone who killed little Sallie Reed with what he supposed was an un loaded gun had his case brought before the Grand Jury Wednesday and the case was dismissed Remember the concert for the benefit of the Baptist College at Fifth street Church next Friday evening by the University Ju bilee Singers Admission adults 15 cents children 10 cents Rev D C Granderson of Natches was in the city this week He is proprietor of a fine panorama which he exhibited at Jacob street Tabernacle Monday and Tues day nights to fair audiences Mr J W Brown Jr formerly of this city but who has been in Chattanooga for the past two years spent a week in this city visiting his old friends and left Fri day evening for Chattanooga Mr Eugene He Grery the famous French cook has opened a cozy little restaurant on West Green Street next door to Warden s saloon Eugene knows how to cook and all who patronize him will be fully satisfied Mr W H Perry s address at the Orphans Home meeting Thursdaa night was par excellence the subject being Early Train ing It was indeed a masterly effort and it is a pity that the house was not crowded Why the colored people will go in the hog hole set apart especially for them at the Novelty Lunch on Green Street when they can go into Milt Thurston s next door and get meals in a respectable man ner is a mystery to many Knox Presbyterian Church Madison Street between Eleventh and Twelfth streets Rev J R Riley pastor Services Sunday to morrow night at 8 o clock Subject Lessons from the life of Presi dent Garfield All are invited Last Friday a little boy named Peter Madden who lives on Marshall Street was playing on the floor when his mother was washing and seeing a box of concentrated lye proceeded to swallow some of it A doctor was called in time to save the little fellow s life John Rucker was found guilty of com mitting rape on Lizzie Fuchs last summer and on Monday last was sentenced to twenty years in the penitentiary Had the color of the parties been changed Rucker would now be a free man Such is justice in Kentucky George Harrison colored in the employ of Louisville New Albany and St Louis Railroad Company went to sleep in the third story window of the Company s building at Bullitt and Main before noon Wednesday and feel out to the payment on Bullitt Street breaking both arms and badly injuring himself otherwise The Metropolitan Theatre will be opened next week It has been newly renovated painted and papered throughout and is as pretty as a picture The managers are from Philadelphia and promise a first class 3how See advertisement on eighth page Let them have a rousing opening night They show by their liberal advertisement that they desire your patronage Last Saturday night as Mr Norrel Brooks assistant night engineer at the Nel son House of the Newcomb Buchanan Dis tilling Co was going home from his work about 9 o clock he was attacked by two white men on New Main Street near the bridge They knocked him down with some sort of a blunt weapon cutting an ugly gash near his right eye They robbed hijn of his week s wages twelve dollars and left him lying insensible on the ground After a while he recovered and went home He does not know his assailants It is evi dent that there is a need of more police men in that portion of the city Steward Reception On Friday evening Aug 16th the par lor of Mr and Mrs W H Steward East Chestnut Street was beautifully and taste fully decorated and was the scene of gayety and pleasure the occasion being a reception tendered Prof Chas Dinkins and bride Mrs Pauline E Dinkins nee Fears is a res ident of Mobile Ala and a graduate of the Baptist Normal and Theological Insti tute Nashville Tenn and the professor is a recent graduate of Newton Theological In stitute New Centre Mass They were married at the former institute on the 15th inst and arrived in the city on the 16th The reception was of an informal nature and probably a surprise to the professor and his amiable bride As early as 8 o clock the guests had nearly all assembled After the usual introduction to the bride and groom the company enjoyed them selves and entertained each other as only such a silent party can Among those present we noticed Misses Georgie Gad die M 8 Spradling M F Cox C B Price the Misses Waters Mesdames M L Mead F G Fowles J M Maxwell J M Fer guson Messrs Jordan Fowles Maxwell Hutchison Moody Bullitt Gibson Profs Simmons and Harvey Mass Meeting A mass meeting of colored citizens was held at Plymouth Church Wednesday evening A temporary organization was effected by the election of N R Harper as President and J H Moody Secretary The object of the meeting was then stated by the Chairman to be that of setting apart a suitable time to hold memorial ser vices in respect to the death of President James A Garfield A committee to nominate officers com posed of E C Wood D D Sebree and W T Peyton was on motion appointed and they reported the following officers N R Harper Cnairman J H Moody Secretary Messrs Horace Morris H Fitz butler T B Caldwell J B Smith J H Taylor Wm Rankin W H Steward J Alcorn A J Bibb J Merriwether R C Conrad J L H Sweres M F Robin son Vice Presidents A Committee on Programme was nomi nated Messrs W T Peyton J J C McKinley and E C Wood A Committee on Resolutions was nomi nated Messrs J H Moody Horace Mor ris W T Peyton J M Maxwell and J A Brown It was decided that the memorial meeting be held on Monday September 25 at 3 p m The meeting then adjourned Habitual Costiveness is the bane of nearly every American woman From it usually arises those dis orders that so surely undermine their health and strength Every woman owes it to her self and to her family to use that celebrated medicine Kidney Wort It is the sure rem edy for constipation and for all disorders of the kidneys and liver Try it in liquid or dry form Equally efficient in either Boston Sunday Budget Coward Culp the Clubbist Tries His Uttlc Club on a Woman Magazine Street between Sixteenth and Seventeenth was the scene of considerable excitement last Sunday afternoon The circumstances are about as follows A war rant had been issued for the arrest of Isaac Blew and Officer Culp was sent to make the arrest but Blew skipped out His wife afterwards came out on the street when the intelligent officer undertook to arrest her we suppose he considered man and wife one she resisted stating that she had done nothing whereupon the brave of ficer struck her on the head three times cutting her head in two places and knock ing her senseless She was taken into the house and after considerable exertion was brought to consciousness Would Culp have been so free with his club where a white woman was the party he was trying to arrest New Albany Ledger Standard Speaking of Governors suggests the men tion of an item we received from Mr Henry A Knight Foreman at Chas Waters Co s Governor and Valve Works Boston Mass I have used St Jacobs Oil among our employes and find that it never fails to cure The men are delighted with the wonderful effects of the Oil as it has cured them of bruises burns etc U S Court Notes Judge did not hold court Tuesday on account of the President s death Mr S B Crail Clerk of the Circuit who for the past week has been very sick is convalescent and will in all probability be out in a few days Mr Abe Mukes of Lebanon will be in attendance at the regular October term of courts as a grand juror and Messrs Geo W Reynolds and Cain Bazel as petit jurors The Circuit Court room is most beauti fully and elegantly draped in mourning in honor of the President I 0 G S D S The thirty fourth annual session of the Grand Council of the I O G S D S met at the hall on the corner of Spring and Chestnut streets Jeffersonville Tuesday at noon the Rev D P Seaton N G C pre siding and J A Seaton R W N G act ing as Secretary The session was opened by devotional exercises by E M Tilden after which the roll was called The President appointed 1 the following Committee on Credentials J D Oliver Mrs A S Carty J L Sweres A resolution approving the report of the Committee on Delegates was oarried The Council then considered some incor rect credentials reported by the committee and disposed of them The following brethren were appointed as the committee to prepare resolutions on the deceased President J D Oliver D P Seaton C C Vaughn J L H Sweres Dr D C Granderson The following were appointed a Commit tee on Condolence relative to the deceased P G Chiefs Brown and Vanbrakle E M Tilden Julia Arthur J D Oliver A S Carty J A Seaton The Council adjourned to meet Wednes day morning at 9 o clock SECOND DAY A request was received from the Coun cil of Maryland that Union Lodges be organized and that some changes be made in the constitution A discussion followed in which J A Seaton of Baltimore Dr Sweres of Louisville and Rev C C Vaughn of Russellville spoke in favor of the resolution and of Union Lodges Thereupon the following were appoint ed a Committee on Union I D Oliver J A Seaton A S Carty J L H Sweres Julia Arthur The Council then adjourned to meet at 2 o clock p m EVENING SESSION The Council assembled at 2 o clock p m The Committee on Eulogy not being ready to report Dr D P Seaton delivered the annual address The N Grand Secretary made his report Mrs Julia Arthur Juvenile Superin tendent made her annual address The Committee on Eulogies reported J D Oliver of Baltimore addressed the Council and very impressively and elo quently spoke of the venerable Vanbrakle one of the most untiring workers of the Order but who was now resting in peace Dr D P Seaton of Washington City very feelingly eulogized the remarkable ability of the deceased Vanbrakle The resolutions regarding the death of the President were received and adopted E M Tilden of Maryland delivered a very appropriate eulogistic address I I P Seaton also spoke of Presi dent Garfield s character as a scholar statesman Rev Sweres also delivered a very im pressive address as did also others The Natiomil Grand Officers of the Or der present are Rev I P Deaton R W N G Chief Washington D C Rev J L H Sweres R W N G Deputy Louisville Ky J R Scurry R W N G V Chief Spring field O J A Seaton R W N G Secre tary Baltimore Md Amelia S Carty R W N G Treasurer Wilmington Del E M Tilden R W N G Orator Micfieals ville Md Julia A Arthur R W N G Superintendent of Juveniles Louisville Kv Chas Allen R W N G Outside Sentinel Jeffersonville Ind Charles H Johnson R W N G Inside Sentinel Louisville Ky Mahala A Thompson L H S to N G t Chief Jeffersonville Ind Laura B Hamilton R H S to N G Vice Chief Louisville Ky The following delegates are present D C Granderson Natchez Miss Susan Minor Natchez Miss Louisa Hill Mad ison Ind S Claybrook Madison Ind Wm T Blake Wilderness Miss Mahala Thompson Jeffersonville Julia Allen New Albany Chas Allen Jeffersonville I D Oliver Baltimore Md Mary S Blakemore Indianapolis Ind James P Brooks Indianapolis Ind Patsey Hart Indianapolis Ind The Gliding Bell Club The party met at Miss Eulalie Reels on First and Green streets last Friday and then proceeded to Mrs Howard s on Wal nut Street where they found Prof John Weet s Band of Music and a room elegantly furnished for the enjoyment of the same The ladies were elegantly dressed all in the latest Fourth avenue styles and did much in making the gathering both brilliant and agreeable The club however was in no ways sparing as far as means were con cerned as fine wines and other delicacies of the season were served lavishly and the cups of joy were filled to the very brims This party will long be remembered in the society circles of Louisville as one of the most enjoyable entertainments which has been under the auspices of the Gliding Bell Club The guests present were Misses Bettie Davies Mary Dobley Alice Thomp son 8 E Miller Mollie Smith Fannie Hitover Patsey Johnson Belle Crane Liz zie Bennett Anna Cooper Anna Smith Lizzie Johnson Rosie Allen Ella French Jane Cranshaw Maude Thomas Sallie Wil hite Amanda Johnson Mrs L N Taylor Mrs Sallie Johnson Mrs Julia Wilkerson Mrs Josephine Russell And of the gen tlemen Messrs Chas Williams N D Bennett Wm Bennett J May weather Wm Hammond Jr II Hill Talbot Jor dan Judge Allen Hay Taylor Lewis Mar shall J P Higgins Preston Talbot J W Lewis Jas Mathews H Foster Geo Blankenship Geo Crane A Reals J Clarke Wm Rankin A Payne dictator Nath Mathews assistant dictator W R Perty secretary Orphans Home The Orphans Home Society met Thurs day night at the Jacob street Tabernacle The meeting was not very largely attended but the programme consisting of music by the Church Choir Addresses by Rev Mr Johnson Profs Maxwell and Perry was up to the standard and every one went away well pleased The congregation be ing small the collection was rather slim receiving only 3 The next meeting will be on next Thursday evening at the Lamp ton street Church It is expected that the people of the East End will turn out in full as there will be a very interesting pro gramme Mr G W Talbott will deliver one of his famous addresses while Mis l n E Wise will read and Miss Maria Ilenryp will entertain the audience with an essay Come out and come early Taylor Jackson Tuesday evening Mr Joseph T Taylor I and Miss Emma T Jackson were united in holy matrimony by Rev J R Riley at the residence of Mr Richard Moore No 1822 W Madison Street The following j persons were present Mr and Mrs Win chester Mesdames Sam Curry Susan Tay I lor Belle Hogan Sinclair Mr and I Mrs H Wrightson Mr and Mrs S O Fox Mr and Mrs Alf Hedges Misses Lulu Stockdale Bettie Grigsby Fannie Cutter Amanda Sweeney Teresa Kay Mrs Lowrey Messrs John Henry Snead Thompson J Stockdale J Webb Rev E M Cypress and many others Presents received were Silver castor Hampton Booker glass tea set Mrs Hogan glass pitcher Mr Grigsby pickle dish Mrs Susan Taylor bronze lamp wash bowl and pitcher Mrs Sam Curry large glass lamp and butter dish Mrs Susannah Wal ker counterpane Mrs Nancy Moore quilt Mrs Bridwell Bible Mr W Wil son set wine glasses Mr Horace Moore After the ceremony refreshments were served The happy couplenow reside at No 69 West Street I Could Never Have Done my household duties had I not been strength ened and sustained by Warner s Safe Kid ney and Liver Cure Mrs C Y Calhoun New York Notice Drafts of the Freedman s Saving and Trust Co have been received at this office for Phillis Crockett Kitty Williams Chas Bowens Belle Barfield Ann Mitchell Henry Williams Eliza Slaughter Geo W Towson Ranney Curry Hanson Bailey Cary Duncan Berry Bowles Harriett Stew ard The persons named can obtain the drafts by calling at Bulletin office All persons applying must be identified Notice The Board of Directors of the Orphans Home will meet next Monday evening at 8 o clock at the Knox Presbyterian Church The regular monthly business will be trans acted Members are requested to meet promptly J M Maxwe ll Y P Notice There will be a Card Reception and Fes tival at Knox Presbyterian Church Tues day evening Sept 27th Admission 10 cents CSducaHonal BRANCH NORMAL COLLEGE OP THE Arkansas industrial University PINE BLUFF ARK Address prof j c corbin Principal Kentucky Normal Theological Institute LOUISVILLE KY This Institute is designed to meet the wants of students who desire to secure a liberal education The following depart ments are in operation Primary Nor mal Academic and Theological Students received at any time Tuition 1 per month Vocal music room rent coal and lights free Those boarding in the Insti tute pay 7 per month board Attention given to the religious as well as intellectual training of students Rev Wm J Simmons A M President Eureka College The next session will open on Monday August 8 1881 Expense 31 00 per term of ten weeks including tuition board and room in College Board ng Halls furnished with stove bedstead tame and chairs Send for catalogue Address A S FISHER Sec y Eureka College Eureka Illinois A LIVE SCHOOL Wide awake and up to the times Practi cal course practical teachers and practical methods Large attendance from all parts of the land Location cheaper safer healthier than any large city Jacksonville Business College and English Training School The standard school of its class Send for the college quarterly to W BROWN Jacksonville Ill LINCOLN UNIVERSITY Is on the Baltimore Central Railroad half way between Baltimore and Philadelphia Tickets should be bought to Lincoln Uni versity Bills for the year including everything needed are In the Collegiate Department 121 50 In the Theological Department 81 00 Address Rev I N Rendell D D HOWARD UNIVERSITY Washington I Fall term opens September 14 1881 Tuition Free in Normal Preparatory Collegiate and Theo logical Departments and in Medicine and Law the fees are very low For other particulars address Secretary Howard University Washington D C FAIRFIELD NORMAL INSTITUTE Winnsboro Fairfield County S C It is designed to give a thorough normal educa tion that will train pupils for the industries of life for teachers lay a solid foundation for professional life and to fit out a band of trained workers that will help to solve the problem of the present Who shall regenerate Africa Rev W Richardson Principal Jewelry Palace FOR BARGAINS 572 and 574 Fourth Avenue Near Walnut Street j BRAINERD INSTITUTE Chester S C Normal and Industrial Departments Bible studios a specialty For particulars address Rev 8 Loomis A M Principal Brainerd Institute Chester S C _____ _ CLOVES iinnHii iii niiiliw OTNHT K EDDItEMAN NS 136 MARKET ST BET4 asii s ItOOISYILLE KY TUTTS PILLS INDORSED BY PHYSICIANS CLERGYMEN AN0 THE AFFLI CTED EVE RYWHERE THE GREATEST MEDICAL TRIUM PH OF THE AGE SYMPTOMS OF A TORPID LIVER Lo ss o f ap p etite Nausea bowels costive Pain in theH ead witha dull sensation in the back par t Pa in under th e shoulder blade full ness afte r ea ting w ith a ciisin clfnation to exertio n of body or mind IrriLa bility of t em per Low s pirits Loss of memory with afe eling of having neg lected some du ty weariness Dizziness Fluttering of the Heart PotB before the eyes Yellow Skin Headache Restless ness at night highly colored Urine IF THESE WARNINGS ARE UNHEEDED SERIOUS DISEASES WILL SOON BE DEVELOPED TUTT S PILLS are especially adapted to such cascs onc dose effects suchachange of feeling as to astonish the sufferer They Increase the Appetite and cause the body to Take on Fiesli thus the system is nourished and by theirTonic Action on the IHgcfttivc Organs Regular Stools are pro duced Price 25 cents S5 Murray St N Y TUTT S HAIR DYE Gray Hair or Whiskers changed to a Glossy Black by a single application of this Dye It imparts a natural color acts Instantaneously Bold by Druggists or sent by express on receipt of 1 Office 35 Murray St f New York C Dr TUTUS MANUAL of Valuable Information and h Useful Receipt will be mailed FREE on application Card Collectors 1st Buy seven bars DOBBINS ELECTRIC SOAP of your Grocer 2d Ask him to give you a biU of it 3d Mail us his biU and your Ml address 4th We wiU mail YOU FREE even beautiful cards in six colors and gold representing Shakspeare s Seven Ages of MaD I L CRAGIN CO 116 South Fourth Street PHILADELPHIA PA WILLIAM WHITE Manufacturer of and Dealer in Cigars Tobacco SMOKERS ARTICLES ETC Third and Jefferson Sts Louisville Ky Louie P Hunsfer PHOTOGRAPHER No 15 East Main Street Springfield 0 All kinds of work known to the trade promptly and satisfactorily done 8 13 NO PATENT NO PAY Finns obtained for mechanical devices medical or other com pounds ornamental designs trade marks and labels Caveats Assignments Interferences Infringements and all matters relating lo Patents promptly attended to We make preliminary examinations and furnish opinions as to patentability free of charge and all who are interested in new inventions and Patents are invited to send for a copy of our Guide for obtain ing Patents which is sent free to any address and contains complete instructions how to obtain Patents and othe valuable matter During the past five years we have obtained nearly three thousand Patents for American and Foreign inventors and can give sat isactory references in almost every county in the Union Address I ouia Bagger Co Solicitors of Patents and attorneys at Law Le Droit Balding Washington C HflE JE35 3E O O Zj 3C T A KT THEATRE ROBERT FOX Manager W GOOD MOW Jr Busines s Manager HARRY FENNER Stage Manager GRAND RE OPENING OF THE OLD ESTABLISHED AND FAVORITE PLACE OF AMUSEMENT l L Dl riDJL Yr 7 SEPTEMBER 26 FIRST APPEARANCE IN THIS CITY OF THE CELEBRATED Miss FANNY LUCILLE In her Refined and Artistic Songs and Dances etc MISS ADA MOHTIMOHE The Petite and Bewitching Serio Comic Vocalist DVCISS IID A ZBTJDER T Th Brilliant Vocalist and Danseuse MISS LILLIE WOOD JOE IR EILLlECY First appearance the Greatest Comedian of the Age Wm Tracy Fred Goldsmith First appearance the Great Celtic Team CLARK GIBBS The Beautiful and Dashing Serio Comic Vocalist MORTELLE HOIDGE First appearance in this city the Great California Team in their Italian and Irish Specialties In their Great Song and Dance Specialty Ladies Matinees Wednesday and Saturday Sunday Nigh t Performances POPULAR PRICES OF ADMISSION Orchestra 35 Cents Parquette 25 Cents Private Boxes 5 00 Seats in Boxes 75 Cents GALLERY lO CE3NTTS WHAT SHE SHOULD DO A Few Suggestions of Importance a Subject of Interest to the Ladies on And Certain Facts Which Should be Known by all Women Home Journal New York A short time since an article appeared in the columns of this paper being a synopsis of a lecture delivered by a prominent wo man before a well known New England So ciety This article dealt so directly with the needs of women and contained so many hints which were valuable that it naturally attracted no little attention and has we learn been a subject of comment in social circles in nearly every part of the land Realizing that no subject can be of more vital importance as well as interest to all readers than the condition of the women of America we have collected and prepared with considerable care additional facts bear ing upon this same subject The ladies of this country have been more observed and talked about than those of any other land and Europeans always notice their characteristics usually with admiration Sara Bernhardt declared she did not see how any one could resist falling in love with 4i those pretty American ladies She might have added that even her far famed Erench Nation would find it difficult to equal much less excel American women in quickness of perception and brilliancy of intellect The minds and manners of American women are all that can be de sired but it is a lamentable fact that their physical frames are far inferior in compar ison with their social and mental character istics The women of England are noted for their florid health those of Germany for their strong constitutions and the la dies of France for their exuberance of spir its but American women possess no one of these qualities in any promineuce and all of them only in a slight degree The reason for this must be plain to every care ful observer Sedentary ways devotion to fashion but above all and more than all carelessness and indifference to daily habits and duties have rendered the women of this land far less strong and healthy than it is either their duty or privilege to be This irregular and indifferent manner of living brings about the most serious results and is directly and indirectly of untold injury to the race The cause therefore being man ifestly under the control of the women themselves the power to remove it must naturally be under their control also Amer ican women can possess just as charmed lives as though they lived in Europe or any foreign land if they only desire and deter mine to do so The primary cause of suffering from dis ease is impure blood The performance of the natural functions of womanhood and motherhood is not a disease nor should it be treated as such and to maintain one s health the organs which make and purify the blood must be preserved in or restored to their normal condition These organs are the kidneys and liver It is the office of the kidneys to take from the blood the poisonous matter which has been collected from all parts of the body and pass it oil from the system If they are impaired in their action they can not do this work the poison accumulates all the organs in the body which are sus tained by the blood are weakened and give way and finally the kidneys and contiguous organs become the source of great pain and without prompt relief death is certain It is the office of the liver to extract other impurities from the blood and utilize a portion of them for digestion If the liver is disordered all forms of dyspepsia occur the bowels can not expel the waste matter and the most distressing inconven ience follow This is especially true in the case of women And if the bowels are thus inactive and overloaded the neighbor ing organs which are particularly depend ent for their right action upon the state of the liver bowels and kidneys become dis placed and the consequences which ensue are too well known to require restatement in a suggestive article of this kind The secret however of preventing these mani fold disorders is to keep the kidneys and liver in perfect working condition This is which reference has already been made is receiving as it certainly merits the most careful attention and the trial of the wo men of the land It is a pure and simple vegetable remedy which is now doing more to bring health and strength to the Ameri can women than any one thing which has ever been discovered It acts directly upon the liver kidneys and adjacent organs soothes any inflammation allays all pain and places those organs in a condition to bring health to the body and happiness to the life The manufacturers of this great remedy as we learn from the lecture have the written thanks of thousands of women many of them of great prominence but these letters are very properly regarded as too sacred for publication No true woman is pleased to have her physical troubles flaunted in the eyes of the world The unquestionable value of Warner s Safe Kidney and Liver Cure is all the more manifest from the fact that heretofore no adequate remedy for the ills of women has ever been discovered nor have the medical profession ever been able to assist women in her troubles as she deserves This is perhaps largely due to the presence of so much bigotry and intolerance in that profession The history of medicine is a history which illustrates to the fullest the blighting effect of bigotry and intolerance Harvey who discovered the circulation of the blood was driven out of England Jen ner the father of vaccination was oppressed and scoffed at Thompson the founder of the Thompsonian theory was the victim of a hateful conspiracy Morton in Massa chusetts who introduced the use of either in surgical operations was charged with witchcraft and yet the discoveries of these men are to day recognized as infinite bene fit to the race It is the solemn duty of every physician in the land to take advan tage of every opportunity which is within his reach not to promote the interests of this or that school but to heal the people of their infirmities All have witnessed death bed scenes and felt that if skill were equal to disease death might have been postponed many years that science if use were made of all the agencies she has revealed was equal to a cure v How many a time in the experience of all has this been illustrated A cold is con tracted it refuses to yield to a fixed form of treatment the physician may not be candid enough to call in the aid of other schools or of independent agencies and the dear one dies because the doctor will not ex haust every expedient known to the world for relief If he have the courage of his convictions and employs outside agencies he is visited with expulsion from the soci ety of his fellows and forsooth becomes what they choose to call a quack When they have exhausted all the agencies ap proved by their schools they shirk the responsibility of the death of their patient by advising a trip to Colorado or Florida or a voyage to Europe Such treatment may be in accordance with the code of ethics but in the view of the unprejudiced public it is down right cruetly if it may not be even more strongly characterized There is no reason however why the women in this land should not possess the best of health and spirits The character of the country the activity of her surround ings and the opportunities afforded for re covering lost health and retaining the same are greater than those of any other land on the face of the globe By a careful obser vance of the plain and simple laws of health by a watchful care over daily hab its and duties and by a regulation of the life with the remedy aboved named which has become so prominent and valuable there is no reason why all the desirable things we have mentioned may not be se cured in their highest degree It is there fore a matter of importance that all women give this subject the attention which it de serves and the care which they are able to bestow conscious that their efforts are cer tain to bring them perfect health and long and happy lives The Cadetship John Stark a Colored Youth Among the Competitors Although Flipper and Whittaker are both under clouds of suspicion and despite the hardships they Suffered while in the National Military School there are other young colored men who are willing to en dure the same indignities insults and out rages to asceiid the ladder of fame Last Saturday there was a competitive examina tion for a cadetship at West Point held in this city and for the first time in the his tory of Kentucky one of the applicants was a colored youth Master John Stark an attache of the Bulletin He has gone through the colored public schools as far as he can go and as he is not allowed to enter the High School he was examined for a cadetship at West Point There were twelve applicants and the one who made the highest general average was to receive the appointment The examination was a written one there were ten questions in ten different studies Stark made the very good average of 76 9 which was not the lowest made by considerable Master E S Wright aged seventeen a son N of Maj M H Wright was the successful candidate John Stark says he was treated courteously by the young men who were with him in the examination Although Stark did not succeed in outstripping his fellow com pletely he has made a start Some of our smart youths must follow his lead and the day may come when Kentucky will have a colored cadet at West Point Stranger things than that have happened John Stark deserves great credit for undertaking the experiment as well as for the good aver age he made He exceeded several of his competitors of the more highly favored race Let us keep moving on We will accomplish something after awhile Elgin Ill Daily Leader The subjoined opinion we perceive is by J A Daniels Esq of Messrs Stogdill Daniels attorneys La Crosse Wis and appears in the La Crosse Chronicle Some time since I was attacked with pain in and below my knee joints A few applications of St Jacobs Oil quieted the pain and re lieved the inflammation I regard it as a valuable medicine The Place Restaurant 439 W Green Street next tloor to Warden s Saloon Meals at all hours LI GEXE DeGRIY Proprietor mueements MACAU LEY S THEATRE John T Macfculey Proprietor and Manager MONDAY SEPTEMBER 36 1881 For Three Nights Only The Lingards STOLEN KISSES POPULAR PRICES Whallen s Buckingham Theatre Jefferson Street bet Third and Fourth J P Whallen Lessee J H Whallen Business Manager Col Savage Treasurer Prof Max Sturm Leader of Orchestra MONDAY SEPT R 26 1881 And During the Week VENUS POPULAR PRICES Parlor Chairs 35 cents Dress Circle 25 cents Gallery 15 cents Private Box 5 Single Seat in Box 1 Central Coal anil Iron Co No 63 Third Street The Louisville Fancy Guards met in their regular drill and continued business meet ing last Thursday evening at their hall on Third Street between Market and Main Called meeting Monday evening Sept 26 All members are requested to be present at 8 o clock sharp New members will be received also Albert Martin Captain in Command Albert Thomas Secretary 5 Outfit sent free to those who wish to engage in the most pleasant and profit able business known Everything new Capital not required We will furnish you everything 10 a day and upwards is easily made without staying away from home over night No risk whatever Many new workers wanted at once Many are makiug fortunes at the business Ladies make as much as men and young boys and girls make great pay No one who is willing to work fails to make more money every day than can be made in a week at any ordinary em ployment Those who engage at once will find a short road to fortune Address H HALLETT CO Portland Maine ap91y THE NEWS As Reported by Our Own Correspondents All Over tlie Country and Boiled Down For Hasty Readers Portsmouth Ohio Mrs Smith of Jackson Ohio is the guest of Mrs B Lewis Mrs Purdom we are glad to learn is much better Mrs Geo W Williams had a very pleasant reception last Tuesday evening The Social Circle was nicely en tertained at Mrs Lewis last CHAHLES LAITDRE DEALER IN Imported and Domestic Cigars Newspapers Periodicals and Stationery 111 EAST HARRISON STREET CHICAGO The Bulletin always on hand Hew Custom House Dining Rooms 227 MAIN STREET Between Fifth and Sixth CINCINNATI OHIO Best meals in the city for 15 and 25 Cents Oysters served in every style Caterer for public and private parties 8 13 EOYD JOHNSON Prop r week Im reason this i3 science and it appeals with mediately upon the receipt of the news of the President s death the public bells corn force to the suffering women of America When the body is in a healthy condition then come beauty of complexion elasticity of step hopefulness of disposition and corn fort and happiness in the duties and respon sibilities of a family There is therefore every incentive to secure and preserve buoyant health Warner s Safe Kidney and Liver Cure the remedy described in the lecture to menced tolling The mournful sounds con veyed the sad intelligence throughout the city creating considering the lateness of the hour considerable stir and excitement The city throughout is draped in mourning It is rumored that Sara Bernhardt will start a newspaper in Paris soon Crinolets is the new name for bustles The Undertaker J H TAYLOR No 1481 Ninth Street All orders promptly attended to at prices lower than the lowest KENTTrCZY COAX Lump per load JNut per load 3 00 2 50 Tony s Paradise TONY LANDENWICH Prop JEFFERSON STREET Between Second and Third COOLEST PLACE AND COOLEST BEER IN TOWN Dr E S PORTER Ninth St bet Walnut fe nd Madison Office hours from 8 to 10 o clock A m to 4 p m and 7 to 9 p m Dr J A Octerlony Has removed his office and residence to Mo 373 FOURTH AVENUE E S bet Broadway and York sts Office Hours 8 to 9 a m 2 to 3 and 7 to 8 p m je 83m N SID PLATT Gents Furnisher FINE SHIRTS NECKWEAR UNDERWEAR FOURTH AVE near MAIN Screened Goal MAIN OFFICE No 139 Jefferson Street BELOW FOURTH HELP Yourselves by making money when a golden chance is offer ed thereby alwavs keeping poverty from your door Those who always take advantage of the good chances for making money that are offered generally become wealthy while those who do not improve such chances remain in poverty We want many men women boys and girls to work for us right in their own localities The business will pay more than ten times ordinary wages We furnish an expensive outfit and all that you need free No one who engages fails to make money very rapidly You can devote your whole time to the work or only your spare moments Full information and all that is needed sent free Address STINSON CO Portland Maine ap91y A NEW TREATMENT For Consumption Asthma Bronchitis Dyspepsia Catarrh Headache Debil ity Rheumatism Neuralgia and all Chronic and Nervous Disorders It is taken BY And acts directly INHALATION upon the 3 0 TO Lawson s Gallery 614 NINTH STREET For the latest novelties in Photos and Fer rotypes Prices reasonable and satisfac tion guaranteed Enlarged Pictures a specialty Zion s Banner OFFICIAL ORGAN OF THE FIFTH EPISCOPAL DISTRICT OF THE A M E Zicxi Church PUBLISHED BI WEEKLY Terms 1 50 a Year INVARIABLY IN ADVANCE great nervous and organic centers and cures by a natural process of revitalization REMARKABLE CURES Have been made in a wide range of diseases which are attracting the attention of the medical profession throughout the whole country HAS BEEN USED BY A ev John J Keane Bishop of Richmond V n Hon Wm D Kelly T S Arthur Wm Penn Nixon ol the Chicago Inter Ocean and many others who have been largely benefited and to whom we refer by permission IS STRONGLY ENDORSED bare the most unequivocal testimony to its curative power from many persons of high character and Intelligence Lutheran Observer The cures which have been obtained by this new treatment seem more like miracles than cases of natural healing Arthur s Home Maqa zine There is no doubt as to the genuineness and positive results of this treament Boston Journal of Commerce SENT FREE A Treatise on Compound Oxygen giving the his tory of this new discovery and a large record of most remarkable cures Write for it ALSO SENT FREE Health and Life 5 a quarterly journal of cases and cures under the Compound Oxvgen Treatment Nos 1 and 2 now ready Address Drs STARKEY PALEN 1109 and Ml Girard Street Philadelphia Address all communications to II C 1VEEDEN Editor Louisville Ky Specimen copies sent free to any address COOK 8z SLOSS 154 Fourth Ave Louisville Ky Manufacturers of Masonic Jewels And all kinds of SOCIETY BADGES AND MEDALS Masonic and other Society Regalia furnished to order Lmdon Newspapers F B Wilkie the Chicago Titties resident correspondent in London gos sips as follows about the great dailies of the British metropolis There is a queer system of advertis ing among the London journals in which there is an effort to convince the world that each of them is exception ally gigantic in some particular direc tion In every section in England and on many of the fences called hold ings in the vernacular is to be seen the legend Daily Telegraph Largest Circulation in the World which by the way is false as the journal in question admitting its claim that it has a circulation of a quarter of a million copies has only about one half that of the Petit Journal of Paris The Standard bases its claims to be im mense by advertising itself as The Largest Daily Paper which it figures out from the fact that it prints a morn ing and evening edition and by counting the two as one it concludes that it is the largest newspaper The Daily News which is not at all the en terprising sheet that it was during the Russo Turkish war and which is ap parently running under the impetus which it then acquired announces in huge letters all over the country that The Daily News Has the Largest Circulation of any Radical Paper in the World There is some other paper which demands the support of the British public on the ground that it has the largest number of columns About the only journal which has nothing to say is that ponderous octavo the Times Its circulation is about 65 000 but it is just as oracular just as much addicted to the ex cathedra style of utterance as if it were omnipotence in place of simply being the shadow of its former self when its destinies were wielded by statesmen and thinkers To day it does not control the same amount of public opinion that does a little but vivacious half penny sheet known as the Echo f or the Referee a sporting journal but one which always has an able and intensely radical leader on the local situation Midnight at the Sanctum It was past midnight and the lights in th e Hawk Eye sanctum shone brightly on the brave men of the staff there as sembled The news editor reached over for the brush to fasten a paragraph down over its credit It paste to be honest he mur mured Especially when you are acscissory to the act said the city editor But this said the editor lifting the old stove polish out from a pile of loose manuscript is what gives the paper weight And this said the associate hold ing an original poem on winter in the gas jet lends it an airy lightness Nary lightness it is said the news editor for there s pounds and pounds of it in the drawer Take care of the pounds said the city editor and the pencil take care of itself I should re mark said the proof reader as he called for a revise And I should dollar said the busi ness manager coming in with a hatful of manuscript Now you re shoutin sang the chorus say your piece I have come to co operate with you said the business manager See these are the neAv adze Put a pica head on him said the foreman And longer had they sung but with a frown the funny man impatient rose and remarking that this was a noose paper joked off all further debate and the forms went down Burdette What the World Owes Printers Editor Seals of the Atlanta Ga Sunny South p this deserved tribute to the much abused compositor To its waiters the world does not stand as a debtor It has given to them largely of what it had to bestow True it has allowed some whose words will be potential so long as truth can persuade the human intellect or eloquence touch the human heart to live unhonored and die neglected But in the main it has awarded them no unjust share of fame and fortune To that class of toilers however without whose patience and skill the pen of the ready writer were but a slow means of communicating thought it has been less liberal A large army of men and boys and young women are now engaged with busy fingers and nerves under continued tension in fur nishing the reading public Avith the printed sheet In the morning they be gin their tasks with the early dawn that the business man may have a fresh sheet when he gathers around ins nresiae at evening But when busy crowds have left the streets and reunited families are enjoying the luxuries of home the print er still toils by lamplight that the morn ing paper be not wanting These are not ill paid as far as dollars and cents go The composing stick is a pretty sure but not an easy means of winning one s bread But they receive little of honor considering how much they do for the pleasure of individuals and for the progress of society When we feel the happiness of our lives enhanced by the perusal of some charming work we cherish gratitude for the genius that so fittingly set the thoughts to words that they elevate us with emotions of beauty But we scarcely think of the patient toil that is required to print those words that the reading of them would be a pleasure If the only way of learning an author s thoughts were by deciphering his cramp ed and crooked chirography full of eras ures and interlineations few would be inclined to undertake the task Yet the printer must do this He must too bear the blame of the writer s bad spell ing and bad grammar though he is al lowed to share none of his praise for sound logic or brilliant rhetoric The world cannot honor its printers too much Their composing sticks come nearer than anything else of being that lever of which the Syracusan dreamed Age of the Earth The age of the earth is placed by some at 500 000 000 of years by others 100 000 000 years and still others of later time among them the Duke of Argyle place it at 10 000 000 years None place it lower than 10 000 000 knowing what processes have been gone through Other planets go through the same proc ess The reason that other planets dif fer so much from the earth is that they are in a so much earlier or later stage ot existence The earth must become old Newton surmised although he could give no reason for it that the earth would at one time lose all its water and become perfectly dry Since then it has been found that Newton was cor rect As the earth keeps cooling it will be come porous and great cavities will be formed in the interior which will take in the water It is estimated that this process is now in progress so far that the water diminishes at about the rate of the thickness of a sheet of writing paper each year At this rate in 6 000 000 years the water will have sunk a mile and in 15 000 000 years every trace otf water will have disappeared from the face of the globe The nitrogen and oxygen in the atmosphere are also di minishing all the time It is in an in appreciable degree but the time will come when the air will be so thin that no creatures we know could breathe it and live the time will come when the world cannot support life That will be the period of age and then will come death Richard A Proctor Rapid Reading The number of new books is almost countless How can one keep up with the age and master the great works of the past It is important therefore for literary and professional men to ac quire the power of rapid reading by paragraphs and sentences instead of by syllables and words The eye may be trained to large and quick action The child painfully picks out each let ter combines them into syllables and forms w T hole words It is a slow and tedious process By degrees the eye acts more rapidly and takes in whole words at a glance without any conscious separation of the letters But here the progress generally stops as one is satis fied with the mastery of words But the eye may be trained to greater achievements It may take in a sen tence at a glance as it takes in all the letters of a word Rapid readers ac quire this power The late Chief Justice Parsons of Massachusetts Lord Ma caulay and Thomas Carlyle had ac quired it They could go through a chapter while most readers were getting through a page Care of Carpets To make sweeping an easy task get carpets of a kind that are easily swept then save them from unnecessary litter by care about scattering fine chips or crumbs of wood cloth paper or food Eating should be done in rooms easily cleaned with carpets of oil clotli or similar material or with bare floors or with a linen crumb cloth spread upon the carpet underneath the table Chil dren should not be allowed to run about the house with pieces of food in their hands If their food is not all taken at the table the child should be obliged to sit still somewhere catcHnor his crumbs upon a napkin bib or apron msieaa oi dropping them upon the floor Chil dren who learn to save mamma trou ble and so get at least a smile of grat itude from her for their thoughtfulness are far happier than those who are not trained to care but are allowed to make themselves a general nuisance among orderly people If they wiai to whittle or to cut paper or dolly things in your best rooms you need not necessarily re fuse them Spread a large cloth or newspaper down to catch the chips or clippings and see that it is safely emp tied as soon as the child s wdrk is done Grown up people are sometimes very annoying because of their lack of this kind of training They pull flowers to pieces in your presence whittle on your smoothly shaven lawn scatter fruit peelings and cigar stumps about the yard scribble on the covers of your magazines and margins of newspapers and scratch matches on the walls of the house or leave disagreeable marks of some kind in every possible place jKwteJ Regret Ah how sad and vain a thing is re gret when too late some past wrong doing Avill burden the memory and the bitter truth we tiled to veil even from our own hearts is revealed in all its undis guise Who has not to repent some slight thoughtless omission of kindness toward those they love Perhaps twas only an unanswered letter but the days went by and matters of more pressing importance crowded out that trifle or in gathering the gay summer s blossoms one poor little faded floweret was flung aside unregarded And I never wrote again will be the reflection should death clasp your friend s warm hand Avithin his icy grasp and you read again that neglected letter and every kindly word will breathe a silent yet a keen re proach But what even is that regret to the anguish of having parted from friend perhaps our best beloved with unkind and cruel words It may have been those words were uttered carelessly lightly as the wild and wanton breeze sweeps by but they leave a pain as the breeze left some scattered rose leaves to mark its track Or it may have been they wer6 purposely spoken prompted by pride and passion and imagined wrong Such has been an episode in many a life The cause we know not any more than that of the little frag ment from which we quote whose act ors and whose story are alike unknown But what a fitting place and time was that for such a parting 1 By the seething main While the dark wrack drive overhead And one is drifted out into the mist and storm the other left to mourn the em bittered past pleading from the far spirit land for that forgiveness earth cannot accord The Brooklyn doctors examined man to see if he was insane and as they found six letters from other men i wives concealed in the lining of his coat where his own wife had never found them con eluded that he was able to transact bus ness _ Maggie dear if I should attempt to spell Cupid why could I not get be yond the first syllable Maggie gave it up whereupon William said Be cause when I come to c u of course I cannot go farther Maggie said she Thought that was the nicest conundrum she had ever heard KIDNEY WORT THE GREAT CURE FOR RHEUMATISM As it is for all diseases of the KIDNEYS LIVER AND BOWELS It oleansss the system of the acrid poison that causes the dreadful suffering which only the victims of Rheumatism can realize THOUSANDS OF CASES of the worst forms of this terrible diseaae have been quickly relieved in a short time PERFECTLY CURED KIDNEY WORT has had wonderful success and an immense sale in every part of the Country In hun dreds of coses i t baa cured where all else had failed It is mild but efficient CERTAIN IN ITS ACTION but harmless in all cases tWlt cleanses Strengthens ami gives New I lfe to all the important organs of the body The natural action of the Kidneys is restored The Liver is oleanBedof all disease and the Bowels move freely and healthfully In this way the worst diseases are eradicated from the system As it has been proved by thousands that KIDNEY WORT is the most effectual remedy for cleansing the system of all morbid secretions It should be used in every household as a SPRING MEDICINE Always cures BIUOU8NES3 CONSTIPA TION PILES and all FEMALE Diseases Is put up in Dry Vegetable Form in tin cans one package of which makes 6quarts medicine Also in Liquid Form very Concentrated for the convenience of those w ho cannot readily pre pare it It acts with equal efficiency in ciiher orm GET IT OF YOUli DRUGGIST TRICE 1 00 WELLS RICHARDSON A Co Prop s Will send the dry post paid lU KI lSKTQX YT KIDNEY WORT THE FIRST SEMI ANNUAL LOUISVILLE FAIR OPENS TUESDAY SEPT 27 A INTiD Closes Saturday October 1 1881 The Most Attractive Programme Ever Offered to the Public The Louisville Fair Association will hold its first semi annual Fair from Sep tember 27 to October 1 both days included The first Fair will be confined to an exhibition of Horses and Cattle for the accommodation of which seven hundred stalls will be prepared The managers have effected arrangements which will make this the great Stock Fair of the world No entrance fee will be charged for ex hibition of stock and only five per cent will he charged for entries in the speed ring9 Very low rates for stock and passengers have been agreed on with all rail roads having lines to Louisville The beautiful grounds of the Association are accessible by railroad and street cars and well made roads for carriages The accommodations for the comfortable seating of visitors and for their refreshment will be ample Betting pool selling and gambling of every description will he prohibited and no sale or use of intoxicat ing liquors will be permitted on the grounds Catalogues will he ready for distribution by August 20 and may be had on application to the Secretary JOHN B CASTLEMAN Pres SAMUEL J LOOK Vice Pres J M WRIGHT Secretary PICTURES The New Testament Illustrated 11 From the Manger to the Cross This is the name of a set of large bright colored and beau tiful pictures of the following Bible scenes 7 PETER WALKS ON THE WATER 8 JESUS RAISES LAZARUS 9 JESUS BLESSES LITTLE CHILDREN 10 JESUS RIDES INTO JERUSALEM 11 JESUS IS CRUCIFIED 12 JESUS ASCENDS TO HEAVEN 1 THE WISE MEN WORSHIPPING JESUS fc JESUS TURNS WATER INTO WINE 3 JESUS HEALS THE PARALYTIC 4 JESUS RAISES THE SON of THE WIDOW 6 MARY ANOINTS THE HEAD OF JESUS 6 JESUS HEALS THE BLIND AND DUMB These Pictures are taken from the designs of a celebrated Artist id have been prepared in bright and beautiful colors with great care and at large expense Each picture is 18 inches wide and 15 inches high and is on a separate sheet All of them are bound together in a walnut rod at the top so they can be turned over and looked at one after the other Under each picture is printed in large letters a description of it written by the author of the book called Story of the Bible These pictures look pretty on the wall either at home or in the school The roll can be taken apart if preferred and each picture hung up separately thus making twelve bright colored and beautiful pictures to ornament the room Send Two Dollars In registered letter to The American Baptist Publication Socie ty 1420 Chestnut Street Philadelphia or to The American Tract Society 1512 Chestnut Street Philadelphia and you will receive this set of 12 pictures by mail without any other charge jaaki A GOOD BOOK The Story of the Bible Is a book of 700 pages and 274 pictures It is easy to read and understand and is all about the Bible both the Old and the ______ New Testaments The Hon Wm A Courtenay Mayor of Charleston S C writes The Story of the Bible impresses me most favorably and must attract many readers I have called attention to the book at the High School J The Colored People Like to Read It Mrs Buford of Brunswick Co Va uses it largely in the colored Sunday schools under her care This is what she writes about it If you could only know how many of my teachers and preachers come to me constantly and tell me I have forgotten them and not given them The Story of the Bible you would be glad as I am that you sent me the books One of my best men an old preacher said to me the other day Ml tl I am an old man and mighty poor but I wouldn t take one hundred dollars for that blessed book it does mako things so plain Two brothers white men who were traveling about selling it in South Carolina bought more than a thousand of these books last year There has been such a saie for this book that over 80 000 copies of it have been punted and the 62d thousand is now selling If there is no bookstore near send One Dollar In registered letter to The American Tract Society 1512 Chestnut Street Philadelphia or to The Baptist Publication Society 1420 Chestnut Street Philadelphia and you will receive the book by mail without other charge SELLING AT WHOLESALE In the northern and western States a great many persons are sell ing books and pictures all the time They go from house to house and from farm to farm with them And they make money by it Now if white men can do this why cannot colored men Let them try it They can buy a few of these books and pictures at a time at wholesale prices if they want them to sell again Send postal card asking prices to THE AMERICAN TRACT SOCIETY 1512 CHESTNUT STREET PHILADELPHIA PA or to THE AMERICAN BAPTIST PUBLICATION SOCIETY 1420 CHESTNUT STREET PHILADELPHIA PA HAPPENINGS iil Dvdf the Country Gleaned Gathered and Com piled for the Benefit of Our Readers The Historv of a Week in This Busy World r 4 1 The Pennsylvania State fair was a financia failure _ MemphU Rm jiOiid Memphis has raised 1 500 for the Michigan sufferers _ h iiK4 8 Mite Chicago has contributed 7 000 to the Michi gan sufferers _ Forest Fire Extensive forest fires near Carthage N Y on the 18th 19th and 20th White Front A white frost occurred in the vfcinity of St Louis on the night of the 17ih inst Ohio Water Drinker An Anti Liquor Allianco has been organized in Ohio with a capital of 50 000 Women Lover and l rn her The steamship Wyoming last week landed at New York with 650 Mormons en route for Salt Lake _ Dying by Ihoniand The telegraph reports that children in South ern Russia are dying by thousands of diph theria __ Cincinnati flight Do Better Cincinnati has contributed something over 3 000 in aid of the suffering people of Michi gan _ Drouth In Ontario Reports from Ontario say that in conse quence of the scarcity of water much of the stock is dying _ Snow Storms A general snow storm prevailed in Iowa and Southern Minnesota on the 16th of September snow falling to the depth of six inches Dlihount Clerk M B Stedheimer a clerk in the banking house of J W Seligman New York is in jail for stea ing coupons to the amount of 43 000 to which he confesses A Five Cent Subscription A five cent subscription has been started at London Ohio to raise a fund with which to defend Sergeant Mason who attempted to kill Guiteau _ Liberal Contribution Up to the 17th inst Boston had contributed 26 177 to the relief fund for the Michigan suffeiers and New York up to the same date had raised 44 230 Annihilation Thomas Stinson residing at Chester Pa while drunk killed his wife and then fatally tabbed himself He was aged fifty three and his wife sixty two years Senator 11 ill s Affliction A second operation performed on Senator JBLilj for an affection of the tongue while it af forded temporary relief it is now feared will destroy the power of speech Five Men Drowned Ten men employed on the railroad along Columbia River Oregon while crossing the river in a boat were swamped and five of the number were drowned Names are not given Chi nee man One thousand Chinese are en route for this country on the steamer Oceanic being brought here by two agents on contract They are to work on the New Mexico Railroad at 1 25 per day Boiler Explonlon A boiler explosion at the Dunbar Furnace Hill Farm near Uniontown Pa resulted in two oaths Jim McDonough and Geo Mc Nally and the serious wounding of flvs others A ew York Democracy The Jeffersonian Democracy of New York will hold a State Convention in New York City October 10 John Kelly thinks Tammany has an even chance of being recognized by th convention Killed by a Collision Engineer Fuller and two brakemen named Bornt and Pomeroy were killed by the collision of two freight trains near Elmira N Y Jones a conductor and Asa Dunham an employe were fatally injured The Crops The crop report of the Agricultural Depart ment for September 1 is out The showing foi spring wheat and corn is bad The condition of the corn crop July 1 was 90 August 1 wag 77 September 1 it is put at 50 This decline is attributable to drouth Byrne s Predicament Charles A Byrne formerly editor of the Now York Truth has been arrested at the in stance of Joseph Hart executor Qf his wife i estate who claims that Byrne embezzled 1 835 while Superintendent of the Dramati Aews Wholesale Wardering At Rockland Maine Charles Smith a labor er whp was jealous of his wife shot a nd killed her killed his infant son his mother in law ind attempted to kill an old lady living in the house with them named Metcalf but she for tunately escaped He then gave himself up to the authorities Forty Ladles of Chicago While the Liquor Men s Convention was in session at Bloomington Ill a few days ago forty ladies of Chicago spent two hours in prayer asking the Lord to bring their labors to grief Their prayers perhaps have not been answered The liquor men appear to be mak ing money as usual Belter Than Prayer The Young Men s Christiau Association of San Francisco met to pray for the Michigan sufferers when some one suggested that money would do more good to all practical purposes The wicked members agreed and 100 was im mediately raised and telegraphed to Mayor Carleton of Port Huron They will send 400 shortly One More Ohio Man Sergeant Mason who attempted to take the fife of Guiteau was born in Virginia but with his pareuts moved to Ohio when he was aged five years and at the age of sixteen enlisted in Company D Seventy eighth Ohio Regiment His company was commanded by Captain J D Robinson and his regiment by General M D Leggett late Commissioner of Patents What a Dog Wonld Do Wheeler the editor of the Quincy Ill Hej ald states in a circular that his reason for defaming the President and lauding Guiteau was to make money He announces that he has the entire series of dirty articles assailing the President now printed on one sheet and he hopes to receive a great many orders by mail Some evil disposed person should yes they should The Flection in Maine An election has been held in Maine to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of Senator Frye The Democratic candidate withdrew from the race in favor of the Greenback candi date and many Democrats refused to go to the polls Ex Governor Dingley the Republican 3 andidate was elected by a majority of 5 173 The largest previous Republican majority in the district was 3 000 AfttBHlnaled Houston Parish a negro aged eighteen years at Okolona Miss at a late hour of the night called at the house of General W S Tucker and woke him up The moment the General opened the d or without a word Parish shot him dead and fled but was afterward captured General Tucker was a prominent citizen of the State having commanded a brigade during the rebellion Indignation is high Boasted Alive Near Dyke s Mill La near the line of Columbia County Ark a negro woman named Jane Campbell became angry with her two children for disobeying her and beat them to death with pine knots This fact was developed at the inquest over the remains of the children A mob consisting of whites and blacks gathered seised the woman and building a fire of pine knots she was placed over it and roasted to death The Apacliei The restive spirit of Indians of le San Car los Reservation forbodes troubles and Ac ing Governor Gosper a Tucson Arizona dispatch says has secured organizations of minute men in all the outlying camps All Indian that a e found off their reservation will now be treated as hostiles As the agent has hereto fore given the Indi m full liberty this will doubtless br ed trouble as it ls thought they w 11 not obey orders in this instance The Land Slip in Switzerland A dispatch from Geneva says that it is feared the land slip near Elm destroyed the lives of forty victims not mentioned in former dis patches They had come from a neighboring village when the first slip occurred in the even ing and just prior to the second slip and were overwhelmed The river on which Elm situated has been turned into the lake and it is feared the valley below will be flooded An other land slip is momentarily expected Labor Troubles In Yew Orleann A dispatch of the 13th inst relates sad con dition of the labor troubles in New Orleans Several riots occurred and a number were injured by stones thrown and pistols discharged On the Natchez press twenty men work with double barrel shot guns at their sides Men loading the ship Callego with cotton were driven away by the mob who boarded the ves sel and fired through the hatchway at the crew men in the hold Acting Governor S D Mc Enery called out the State National Guards to assist in preserving the peace and two brigades of militia were placed under arms Blot on a Train When E G White s Comedy Company boarded a train at Middletown Ohio south bound a young man named Livingston and a gang of roughs also boarded the train and assaulted the company a young man named Burnett of the company being the chief ob ject of their hatred Livingston made two fforts to shoot Burnett but the weapon re fused to be discharged Slug shots brass hor s knuckles and canes were used indis criminately and the greatest confusion pre vailed Not less than twenty persons were engaged in the melee The train was stopped ind the assaulting party finally routed and put off The cause of the trouble a young lady of the town Miss Zilloit sat In a rear car trembling with fear Livingston had hereto fore been her suitor but she had rejected him and was going away with Burnett Hanged or Murder At Cambridge Henry County Ill Payman Gabon was hanged on the 16th inst for the murder of Mr and Mrs Thomas Dilley of Briar Bluff the 10th of last December Galion bad been employed as a farm hand by the Dilleys and having been paid off after the sea son s work he lingered in the neighborhood until the night of the 10th of December when be entered the house through the cellar and murdered his benefactors Dilley he shot dead Mrs Dilley was awakened by the shot and springing from bed fought the murderer desperately He pounded her about the head with the weapon until she was insensible and taking two watches and other valuables de parted The woman lingered for days before she died but never recovered consciousness Galion sold the watches at Leclair la the day if ter the crime and that led to his arrest and conviction x aiionnl Soldier and Sailor Reunion The event of the National Soldiers and Sail ers Reunion at Cincinnati on the 14th 15th md 16th of September was largely attended oy veterans and seemed in every particul r to je highly enjoyed Camp Garfield Carthage I Fair Ground was enlivened by a varied and entertaining programme and the veterans many of theta not having seen each other for jrears entered into the spirit of camp life with ill the vim of the olden time Addresses were lelivered by prominent men who marched at Dhe head of the column during the war and many of the old scenes were recounted The rain storm o the second day matei ially inter fered with the programme but did not stop the general enjoyment of the reunion The parade 3 ii the last day through the streets of the city witnessed 3 000 men in line of whom perhaps 00 were veterans of the Mexican war The streets were packed with spectators numbering over a hundxwi thousand persons The eveu g was spent at the Exposition and in sight seeing and the reunion disbanded for the fear Dcatli ot tenoral A E Burnside General A E Burnside United States Senator from phode Island died suddenly at eleven o clock on the 13th inst at his resi dence in Bristol R I The immediate cause of his death was spasms of the heart from which source he had beeu having trouble for several days Tlie only persons present at his death were Dr Barnes his family phy sician and his family servants General Burnside wfcs one of the conspicious figures looming up from the war He was born at Liberty Ind May 23 1824 graduated at West Poiiit jn 1874 and was subsequently stationed at Port Adams Newport R I and in Mexico He resigned in 1853 to go into the niirrmfacture of a breech loading rifle which he had invented and with which he was successful He was for a time Presi dent of the Illinois Central Railroad He wen into the war in 1861 as Colonel of a Rhode Is land regiment and rose to the position of Major GeneLaJ He succeeded McClellan as Con rnander of the rmy of the Potomac which po sition he resigned in 1863 after the reverses at Fredericksburg In May of the same year hs took command of the Department of the Ohio He afterward appeared in East Tennessee and his last military effort was in the siege of Pe tersburg West Virginia After the war he served three terms as Governor of Rhode Is land and was twice elected to the United States Senate in which body his death leaves a vacancy Want to Mlioot It seems that Dr French Lugenbell a brother of Mrs Qhristiancv does not like the course pursued by ex Minister Cliristiaucy The followingwfcespondence has taken place between the twtiw Thursday I on II P Christicincy Sir UnleBs you prefer to confiue yourself to assaults upon women to warfare in print and to similar methods involving no physical dan ger you will please meet me at any Bpot in Virginia which you may designate within twenty miles of Washington Any communi cation addressed to me in the care of J Eich ols 316 D street North Washington will reach me It will be wise to accept my proposition Respectfully F Lugenbeel Mr Christiancy replied with the following to the address given above National Hotel Washington D C September 16 1881 J Sir I have had the honor of receiving your pohte note wiJhouVdate but lqftv for ma last evehfng at this hotel Having no special am bition to acquire notoriety by assassination in which it seems I have the misfortune to differ with you and not believing that the mode you propose is the best for ascertaining the truth though perhaps as some methods of procedure recently adopted in this country it occurs to me that the best manner of an swering your letter is in an emphatic silence so far as relates to the special matters therein set forth but without admitting the truth of your charges and leaving you to carry out at your own time and in your own way the implied threat contained in the last sentence of that note the wisdom of which I cannot accept even on your assurance seeking on my part only such protection as the laws of my country afford I am truly yours J P Cbistiancy Topics of the Day Vennor predicted rain in September It came Wedding cards are out of date in En gland High prices seem to be ruling stronger Parnell s influence is said to be od the wane A new City Hall in San Francisco L to cost 5 000 000 The Ohio State election occurs on the 11th of October Cincinnati is striving for the estab lishment of a Union Depot We do not like to see people suffer but Guiteau has neuralgia France is not bothering much about Egypt Tunis keeps her pretty busy Governor Wiltz of Louisiana is said to be dying of consumption Delaware turns out 300 000 baskets of peaches this year against 4 000 000 last year King Kalakaua is en route for Amer ica Undoubtedly he enjoyed himself while here before Gov Roberts of Texas is aged sixty years wears a very plain suit and smokes a clay pipe Thtjrlow Weed gave 500 to th Michigan sufferers Fanny Davenport gave 100 That was Lind of Fanny Mrs Mary Clemmer the well knowD W sliington correspondent is compelled by order of her physician to rest from all literary labor TnE destitute in the burnt district ot Michigan should be remembered by those who have a surplus and are able to give Here s a chance to do good The Egyptian troubles are over The j Khedive has reconstructed his Cabinet and the dissatisfied army officers have relinquished all ideas of rebellion and accepted the situation The Kansas City Times mentions the 1 birth of a baby mule on the public square in that city and adds that it at tracted a large crowd of spectators A society event we suppose It is a fact that Rev Henry Ward Reecher recently jumped seven feet ac tive man you know but now ev6ry pa per in the land is wanting to know from what window he jumped It s a dirty fliug _ _ A portrait of Columbus has been discovered in the Spanish Colonial Of fice at Madrid It was painted when he was forty years of age showing a face devoid of wrinkles a brilliant eye and dark luxuriant hair If there is any one thing on the face of the globe that is despicable it is a thief It is now suspected that the cof fins of seven at least of the royal per sonages lately discovered near Thebes have been robbed of their royal occu pants and less distinguished mummies placed in their stead The alleged 3orpse of Thotmes is said to be that of x child or dwarf Such changes are not uncommon in Egypt but if they have taken place in the present instance the inscriptions on the coffins and still more the long rolls of papyri still remain to reward the investigations of scholars trade b MARJv Pet dogs occupy reserved seats at places of amusement in New York by the side of their owners They applaud by barking and then the critics go into ecstucie about the enthusiasm shown by the intelligent audience The California Tichborne claimant loath to learn from others experience is ou his way to England to claim the Tich borne estate He will possibly land in the same receptacle occupied by Orton the English Tichborne claimant for the past several years The various lines of steamers carried to London and Liverpool during the months of April May June and July 12 065 cabin passengers These for most part were pleasure seekers and the number is greater than for the same period any previous year r ort RHEUMATISM Neuralgia Sciatica Lumbago Backache Soreness of the Chest Gout Quinsy Sore Throat Swell ings and Sprains Burns and Scalds General Bodily Pains Tooth Ear and Headache Frosted Feet and Ears and all other Pains and Aches No Preparation on earth equals St Jacobs Oil a a safe sure simple and cheap External Remedy A trial entails but the comparatively trifling outlay of 50 Tents and every one Buffering v ith pain can have cheap and positive proof of ita claims Directions in Eleven Languages SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS AND DEALERS IN MEDICINE A VOGELER CO Baltimore Md V 8 Ju The result of the recent French elec tion will constitute the new Chamber of Deputies as follows 459 Republicans 17 Bonapartists and 41 Monarchists The Republicans comprise the Left Cen ter 39 the Left 168 Republican Union 206 and Extreme Left 46 A dispatch from New Mexico says that the Indians are not all dead yet This is bad for the white man The French began their picnic in Northern Africa with 16 000 men but now they want 100 000 more before they can straighten matters out They have been meeting with reverses The wild Arab cavalry have beaten their opponents n the field and cut off the water supply of the city of Tunis Grace Greenwood Mrs Lippincott writes from London that she is a sad invalid suffering severely and very fre quently from attacks of acute bronchitis She says she can bear pain prostration danger everything better than inability to write in her old way that grieves her Mason who shot at Guiteau may have been emotionally insane and his trial by court martial will result in light punishment as a consequence but if Guiteau was permitted to come in con tact with the people generally there is uo doubt but that thousands would prove themselves emotionally insane A colored preacher in Louisville Ky has found in his church a daughter from whom he had been separated at the auction block twenty odd years ago He was much rejoiced but was a prey to conflicting emotions when he learned from her that her mother is still living he having been legally married to an other woman after becoming a freedman There is a prospect of a duel without a collision between Buffalo Bill the Hon Mr Cody and Wild Harry an In dian scout who is starring it with a dramatic troupe Buffalo Bill calls this particular Wild Harry a fraud and a liar to use mild language and Wild Harry is keeping silent but there is an awful glitter in his eye They travel in differ ent directions Crow Dog has been indicted at Dead wood for the murder of Spotted Tail but will not be tried until January It is stated that there are a hundred or more men in jail at Chicago on the charge of murder A third of them have been incarcerated in the last nine months What do the authorities oi that city propose to do with these fel lows In the far West they hang men for murder and are not very long about it either ive men were hanged in a bunch at Fort Smith Ark the other lay and the country feels the safer for it Chicago seems to be trying to get a good crop on hand before they begin to harvest MARKET REPORT rjawliinjm AIT FLOUR Fancy 87 25 7 75 family 86 80 7 10 spring family 86 75 7 25 su perfine 85 35 5 75 Rye flour 85 60 6 15 Grai v Wheat No 2 red 81 47 1 48 No 2 amber 1 47 choice Mediterranean 81 50 Three carso No 3 red sold at 81 40 and two cars of No 2 red a J1 47 Corn No 2 white 76c No 2 yellow 70 3 71c No 2 mixed 69 70c No 3 mixed 63 c Ear corn 75c Oats No 2 white 46c No 3 45c No 2 mixed 44 44 c Rye No 2 in elevator J1 15 Barley Extra No 3 fall 81 05 and No 2 51 06 prime fall 81 10 Hay Timothy 813 00 a 20 00 and loose pressed 819 00 2l 00 Hogs Conimon 85 00 5 90 light and medium weiglits 56 35 6 75 heavy packing 86 40 6 90 butchers selections 86 90 7 10 Provisions Mess pork 520 50 21 00 Lard 12 12 10c Sugar cured hams I3 14c and shoulders 9 9 c Whisky 81 11 Fruit and Vegetables Peaches Prime t choice 82 00 3 00 and fancy 83 75 per bush Ap ples Common to prime 81 25 1 75 and choice 82 00 2 50 Quinces 81 50 1 75 per bush Grape Concord and Catawba 4 6c per lb in bassets and 8c for Delaware Pears Prime to choice Bart letts 3 00 3 75 per bri and 81 50 per bush Lemons Are scarce at 811 00 per box Orange 84 00 5 00 per box Potatoes Early Rose 83 Ot 1 per brl Sweet potatoes are scarce and 84 50 per bri Cabbage 82 75 per nrl Onions 83 25 3 50 pet brl NEW YORK Cotton Quiet at 12 12 c Flour Good to choice Western and State 86 70 i 00 white wheat extra 7 00 8 00 fancy do 88 10 9 00 Ohio extra family 86 30 7 50 Grain Wheat Ungraded spring 8 1 10 1 26 No 2 Chi cago and Milwaukee spring 1 38 1 39 hard No I Duluth 81 46 ungraded red 81 20 1 46 No 3 red 8 1 vr j ggL I red No j iACU ff vSici ll n _ 8 53c Mess Pork New 820 00 Lard Prime iteam 12 c CHICAGO Flour Common to choice Western ipring 84 25 6 50 common to choice Minnesota 55 00 7 50 Minnesota patents 87 00 9 00 fair to choice winter wheats 86 50 8 00 fancy 87 25 Grain Wheat Unsettled No 2 winter red 81 35 bid No 2 Chicago spring 81 28 ai 28 cash and September 81 30 October 81 32 1 33 Novem ber No 3 Chicago spring 81 20 Corn 64 c caah Gats 40 c cash Rye 1 04 Barley 81 08 Mesa pork 819 50 Lard 12 15c Whisky 81 16 BALTIMORE Flour Western extra 6 25 7 00 Western family 87 25 8 00 Wheat No 2 Western winter red 81 44 on spot and September 51 46 1 46 October 81 50 1 50 November Corn Western mixed 69 6 c spot and Sep tember 72 72 c October 76 76 c Novem ber Rye 81 05 1 08 Mess pork 820 75 Hama Sugar cured 14 16c Lard Refined in tierces 12 c Whisky 81 19 LOUISVILLE Cotton ll c Flour Extra family 85 75 6 25 A No 1 87 00 7 25 choice fancy 87 25 8 00 Wheat Steady at 81 40 1 42 Corn No 2 white 77c No 2 mixed 70c Oats No 2 white 46c No 2 mixed 44c Rye No 2 81 14 Sugar cured hams 14 c Whiuky 81 14 ST LOUI8 Flour Family 86 85 7 00 choice to fancy 87 15 7 75 Wheat No 2 red 81 44 ft 4 XI No 3 red 81 32 1 32 Oats 42 42 c Rye 81 07 1 07 Barley Medium to choice Wisconsin 90c 1 15 Mess Pork Lower at 819 75 Lard 12c Whisky 81 16 INDIANAPOL Wheat Strong at8l 42 1 43 Corn 64 66c Oats 40 43c LIVE STOCK CINCINNATI Cattle Common 82 00 2 75 fair to medium 83 00 3 75 good to choice butch ers grades 84 00 4 75 good to choice heifers 84 25 4 65 good to choice shippers 85 40 6 00 good to choice oxen 53 75 4 75 stockers and feeders 2 75 3 50 yearlings and calves 81 75 2 50 Hoos elected butcuers and heavy shippers 86 90 7 10 fair to good mixed packers 86 10 6 90 stock hogs 84 00 4 75 light pigs and trashy stuff 3 50 3 90 SHKEP Common to fair 82 25 3 50 good to choice 84 00 4 50 extra wethers 85 00 culls 81 50 2 00 stock ewes 82 25 3 00 LAMBS Common to fair 3 25 4 00 good to choice 84 25 4 75 culls and tail ends 82 50 3 CO EAST LIBERTY PA Cattle Common or be low prime to extra 85 00 6 25 fair to good butcher stock 84 75 5 85 bulls cows and stags 82 75 4 00 stockers and feeders 83 50 4 75 Hogs Phtladei phias 87 10 7 30 prime Yorkers 86 50 6 75 fair 86 25 6 50 Sheep 83 50 4 80 CHICAGO Cattle Export cattle 86 20 6 70 good to choice shipping steers 85 60 6 00 Hogs Common to good packing 6 35 6 85 good to choice do 86 90 7 40 light bacons 86 40 6 90 culls and grassers 83 50 6 25 Sheep Choice muttons 84 15 ST LOUIS Cattle Good to choice shippers 5 75 6 25 native butchers steers 83 25 4 50 grass fed Texans good to choice 3 25 4 00 Sheep Fair feu choice muttons 3 00 4 15 INDIANAPOLIS Cattle Shipping cattle 4 25 A6 00 butchers 83 00 4 65 Hogs Packers and shippers 86 50 7 00 common grade f4 50 36 00 Sheep Common to choice 3 Q0 4 60 I i Society itrcctvrg FREE AND ACCEPTED MASONS Under the Grand Lodge of Kentucky MT MORIAH LODGE No 1 Meets first Monday night in each month in hall corner Seventh ami Grayson Moses Lawson YV M E W Marshall Sec 15 Newton St 8T THOMAS LODGE No 2 Meets in hall corner Seventh and Grayson second Monday night in each month P T YYhite YV M John W7Brocks Sec 722 YV Green St KEYSTONE LODGE No 3 Meets in hall corner Seventh and Grayson third Mo nday night in each month Horace Morris YV M Geo YV Evans Sec 1008 Eleventh St UNITY LODGE No 12 Meets first Tuesday night in each month in hall corner Seventh and Grayson Nelson L Neal YV M E C Wood Sec 1707 Maple St MOUNT HOREB CHAPTER R A M No 1 Meets in hall cor Seventh and Grayson fourth Monday night in each month Horace Morris M E 11 P Geo YV Evans Sec 1008 Eleventh St ENTERPRISE CHAPTER R A M No 4 Meets in hall corner Seventh and Grayson third Thursday in each month N Lonaparte M E H P Geo Taylor Sec 193 Centre St CYRENE COMMANDERY K T No 20 Meets in hall corner Seventh and Grayson second Tuesday in each month Geo Sutton E C Geo Taylor Recorder 193 Center St JEPTHA COURT Meets in hall corner Sev enth and Grayson first Monday night in each month Mrs E Morton M A H Mrs Julia Spradling Sec 192 Tenth St MASONIC YVIDOYVS AND ORPHANS SO CIETY Meets in hall corner Seventh and Gray son third Monday afternoon in each month Mrs M Goff President Miss L Thrift Sec 238 Grayson St Under the Grand Lodge of Ohio PARHAM LODGE No 26 Meets in hall cor Ninth and Market first Tuesday nights in each month Samuel Buckner 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corner Ninth and Market first and third Monday afternoons in each month Mrs M Harris Teacher Mrs E Tevis Sec 1016 Eleventh St UNITED SISTERS AND BROTHERS OF FRIENDSHIP Meets at No 175 Eleventh St Mrs Annie Montgomery President Mrs L B Hamilton Sec 257 YV lVTadison St SONS AND DAUGHTERS OF AARON Meets at Twelfth st Church first Saturday afternoon in each month Mrs L B Hamilton President Miss Bettie Frazier Sec YOUNG SONS AND DAUGHTERS OF THE MORNING Meets at Centre Street Church fir t Thursday in each month Mrs Sly President Miss Emma Watson Sec 324 Lafayette 1 YOUNG INDEPENDENT SONS AND DAUGH TERS OF HONOR Meets in hall corner Ninth and Broadway first and third Thursdays in each month Mrs Susan Bullitt President Miss Fannie Tarrants Sec 196Twelfth St CHILDREN S BENEFICIAL SOCIETY Meets at Green Street Church third Tuesday night in each month Mrs Nellie Kellv President Miss Lavina Gray Sec 88 E Green St KNIGHTS OF WISE MEN 1 GODFREY LODGE No 24 Meets in hall cor Seventh and Grayson first and third Thursday nights in each month A J Bibb E A Daniel Brown G S 181 W Chestnut PIIILOSOPHIAN LODGE No 187 Meets in Gray s Hall second and fourth Tuesday nights in each month Geo YV Reynolds E A E S Porter G S 714 Ninth Street Newman U IKUVO tax vww i w _ _ oseph Bynam Sec 269 Second MOUNT CALVARY COMMANDERY No 12 K T Meets in hall corner Ninth and Mar ket second and Fourth Thursday evenings in each month George Garrett E C L Overton Ree 632 Kentucky GRAND UNITED ORDER OF ODD FEL LOWS UNION LODGE No 1341 Meets in hall No 540 W Green first and third Monday nights in each month A D Black P S 69 Fourth St ST JOHN LODGE No 1364 Meets in hall No 540 YV Green second and fourth Monday nights in each month W H Ward P S City Hall ST LUKE LODGE No 1371 Meets in hall No 640 W Green first and third Thursday nights in each month John H Kean P S Second and Main UNITED FELLOW LODGE No 1496 Meets in hall No 540 W Green first and third Tues day nights in each month James Harris P S 309 Thirteenth St ADAM LODGE No 1514 Meets in hall No 540 YV Green second and fourth Thursday nights in each month N N Newman P S Custom LOUISVILLE LODGE No 1635 Meets in hall No 540 W Green every Friday night Wallace Robinson P S 706 YV Market St STAR OF LOUISVILLE LODGE No 1719 Meets in hall No 540 YV Green second and fourth Monday nights in each month A A Cox P S Room 14 Evans Block WEST UNION LODGE No 1757 Meets in kail No 540 W Green second and fourth Tues day nights in each month S W Jordan P S 102 W Main St DECORA LODGE No 1795 Meets in Gray s hall first and third Monday nights in each month W P Annis P S 1024 Eleventh St P G M COUNCIL No 26 Meets in hall No 540 W Green second Friday night in each month YV P Annis YV M 1024 Eleventh St PATRIARCHIE No 13 Meets in hall No 540 W Green fourth Friday night in each mouth V P Annis Recorder 1024 Eleventh St HOUSEHOLD OF RUTH No 24 Meets in hall No 540 YV Green first and third Wednes day nights in each month Mrs Lou Hedges W P S Mrs Laura B Hamilton Sec 257 W Madison St HOUSEHOLD OF RUTH No 60 Meets in hall No 540 W Green first and third Wednesday nights in each month THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS OF ODD FEL LOWS HALL meets in hall No 570 W Green Street the first Tuesday in each month W H i ibson Secretary 1331 Fourteenth St UNITED BROTHERS OF FRIENDSHIP FRIENDSHIP LODGE No 1 Meets in Gray s Hall first and third Tuesday nights in each month YV H Lawson W M Jesse Montgom ery Sec 259 Sixteenth St CALIFORNIA LODGE No 12 Meets in hall corner Ninth and Market second and fourth Monday nights in each month John Gaddie W M Lulie Gibson Sec 403 Fourteenth ST JAMES LODGE No 21 Meets in hall corner Preston and Broadway first and third Monday nights in each month Wesley Day W ML Charles Hale See ST PETER LODGE No 22 Meets in hall corner Ninth and Market first and third Monday nights in each month Z W Lindsey YV M Elias Wilson Sec 381 Second Street ST MATTHEW LODGE No 32 Meets in haH corner Seventh and Grayson second and fourth Thursday nights in each month Silas Calvert W M W H Leonard Sec 188 Tenth St FALLS CITY LODGE No 41 Meets in hall corner Seventh and Grayson first and third Mon day nights in each month Nathaniel Mattingly Jr W M I Price Sec HAZELTON LODGE No 45 Meets in hall corner of Seventh and Grayson first and third Friday nights in each month 1 Thomas W M John Doleman Sec GREEN LODGE No 47 Meets in hall corner of 8eventh and Grayson first and third Friday nights in each month Moses Green W M Thomas Wilson Sec 245 Green SUMNER LODGE No 62 Meets in hall corner of Preston and Broadway first Tuesday night in each month Loney H Wolf W M C S Jackson Sec _ ST JOHN LODGE No 54 Meets in hall cor ner of Seventh and Grayson first and third Thursday nights in each month Govey Hood W M Robtfo Johnson Sec 429 Third CAMP No 1 K F Meets in hall corner Nioth and Market first and third Wednesday nights in each month YV L Johnson K C Richard Hamilton K B JEPENDENT ORDER OF GOOD SA MARITANS AND DAUGHTERS OF SAMARIA Under National Grand Council T CALVARY LODGE No 4 Meets in hall ner Ninth and Market second and fourth sdav nights in each month Lud Johnson C W H Lawson F S 814 W Walnut St ISING SUN LODGE No 13 Meets in hall ner Ninth and Market second and fourth day nights in each month Mrs Ann May P D Mrs Sallie Bell D of R 434 LamptonSt UREKA LODGE No 41 Meets in hall cor Ninth and Market second anc fourth YVed day nights in each month Miss Florence nharn VV P D Miss Florence Venable Sec r Fourth St Under the National Grand Lodge OUNT MORIAH LODGE No 4 Meets in 1 corner Ninth and Market second and fourth dnesday night9 in each month Mrs Mary le W P D Mrs Mary Johnson D of R O Fox See 234 Preston 8t SISTERS MYSTERIOUS TEN ZI DN TEMPLE No 1 Meets in hall corner Seventh and Grayson first and third Wednesday nights in each month Mrs Alice Roberts M W P Miss Lizzie Jones Secretary No 536 Laurel Street ST MARY S TEMPLE No 2 Meets in hall vomer Preston and Broadway first and third Thursday nights in each month Miss Tina Taylor M W P Miss Amelia Johnson Sec U S F TEMPLE No 4 Meets in Gray s Hall second Tuesday nights in each month Miss Lutitia Hopkins M YV P Mrs L B Ham ilton Secretary 257 W Madison Street STAR OF THE WEST TEMPLE No 13 Meets in hall corner Ninth and Market second and fourth Friday nights in each month Mrs M V Harris M YV P Miss Mary Smith Sec 142 Roselane GOOD SHEPHERDESS TEMPLE No 16 Meets in hall corner Ninth and Broadway first and third Thursday nights in each month Mrs Annie j Montgomery M W P Miss Laura Beech 8ec 623 Newton ST ROSE TEMPLE No 17 Meets in hall corner Preston and Broadway first and third Thursday nights in each month Mrs Frapces Claykt W P Miss annie Fines Sec 429 TEMPLE OF FRIENDSHIP No 25 Meets in hall corner Ninth and Market second and fourth Wednesday nights in each month Mrs Jane Talbert M YV P Mrs Sarah E Craig Secretary DEBORAH TEMPLE No 28 Meets in hal corner Ninth and Broadway first Wednesday night in each month Mrs Mary Clay M YV P Miss Fannie Russell Sec 190 Tenth St STAR OF ESTHER TEMPLE No 30 Meets in hall corner Seventh and Grayson second and fourth Friday nights in each month Mrs Jane Webster M W P Miss Martha Webster Sec retary 730 Tenth Street EASTERN STAR TEMPLE No 31 Meets in hall corner Seventh and Grayson second and fourth Wednesday nights each month Mrs Susan Becquenny M YV P Miss Mollie French Sec CHRISTIAN MUTUAL ASSOCIATION ASSOCIATION No 1 Meets in Green Street CHURCH second Thursday night in each month Mrs W Y Clinton President Miss Julia Ballard Sec CHRISTIAN MUTUAL ASSOCIATION Meets fourth Thursday evening in each month Mrs Maggie Frye President Miss Joicie Gaddie Secretary No 563 Clay Street INDEPENDENT ORDER OF MMACU LATES LOUISVILLE STAR LODGE No 100 Meets in hall corner Ninth and Market first and third Monday nights in each month Thos H McEwen W M F P Cooper C S 531 Sixth Street KENTUCKY LODGE No 188 Meets in hall corner Ninth and Market first and third Tuesday nights in each month Preston McClain YV M C H Johnson Sec 1302 Magazine Street QUEEN ESTHER COURT No 12 Meets in hall corner Ninth and Market first and third Thursday nights in each month Mrs Belle McKoin Queen Miss Bettie Heath Sec 1313 Magazine Street GRAND PRINCESSES ThoNOR Meets in hall corner Ninth and Broadway first and third Wednesdays in each month Miss Fannie Hedge W D William Dorsey K of R 141 Centre CENTENNIAL LODGE No 8 Meets in hall corner Ninth and Broadway first and third Tues day nights in each month Mrs Julia McAtee YV D John Frank K of R 242 Sixteenth PORT D LODGE No 11 Meets in hall on Water J eet Portland first and third Thurs days i onth Miss A Dorsev YV r D Miss Lizzieq K of R Thirty fifth St independent sons of honor JAMES OWEN LODGE No 1 Meets in hell corner Ninth and Broadway first and third Mon days in each month George Aikens President T J M Dunlop Sec 238 W Madison LOUISVILLE LODGE No 10 Meets in hall corner Ninth and Broadway first and third Mon day nights in each month Tut Lewis President KNIGHTS OF BETHLEHEM ST LUKE COUNCIL No l Meets third Mon day night in each month H Wade M David Bell R MESSIAH COMMANDERY No 1 Meets first Monday night in each month G W Lewis E C G B Taylor R MT OLIVE CHAPTER No 1 Convenes third Friday night in each month at 9 o clock YV H Wilson W H P Wm Rankin R AARON LODGE No 1 Boys of Bethlehem Meets every Wednesday night W H Wilson C G Kellar R ST ANDREW S LODGE No 1 Meets in Third Street Hall second and fourth Tuesday nights in each month W H Wilsou YV C David Bell F R ST JOHN S LODGE No 2 Meets in Third Street Hall second and fourth Thursday nights in each month H Houston YV C W H Wil son F R ST PAUL LODGE No 3 Meets in hall on Third Street between Market and Jefferson first and third Thursdays Squire Madison W C G B Taylor F R SISTERHOOD KNIGHTS OF BETHLEHEM REBECCA LODGE No 1 Meets on fiist and third Tuesday nights in each month Angeline Cooper YV M W H Wilson F R VIRGINIA LODGE No 2 Meets second and fourth Friday nights in each month Clora Alexander YV M YV H YVilson F R RUTH LODGE No 3 Meets second and fourth Mondav nights in each month Sarah YVeaver YV M W H Wilson F R ST MARY S COURT No 1 Meets first Friday night in each month Mildred Dickerson P D YV H YVilson R MT MPRIAH TABERNACLE No 1 Meets third Monday night in each month Caroline Brown P P D W H YVilson R HAGAR LODGE No 1 Girls of Bethlehem Meets first and third Monday nights in eacn month Della Page M Miss S Sanders R MISCELLANEOUS DAUGHTERS OF CALVARY Meets in York St Baptist Church first Monday night in each month Mrs Joanna 81y President W W Tay lor Secretary Sixth and Kentucky sts NAOMI LODGE No 1 U S and D of I Meets in hall Seventh cor Grayson second and fourth Tuesday nights in each month E A Lemerrada W S S Mrs Mary Austin YV S M GOLDEN GIRDLE SILVER STAR LODGE No 101 Meets first and third Mondav nights in each month Shelby Collins G M Miss Jennie Ballard Secretary UNITED SISTERS OF FRIENDSHIP Meets at Green street Church first Thursday and second Tuesday in each month Mrs Mary Jane Carter President LADIES UNION BAND Meets in Centre Street Church secohd and fourth Monday nights in each month Mrs M Guest President Miss Mary Robinson 8ee 1231 W Green St LADIES TABERNACLE No l Meets first and wthird Friday nights in each month in Gray s Hall Mrs Jane Gray President Mrs Jennie Nickerson Sec 1004 W Walnut St DAUGHTERS OF AARON Meets in Twelfth Street Church first Monday night in each month Mrs Mary L llv President Mrs Laura B Hamilton Sec 257 YV Madison St DAUGHTERS OF ZIoN No 1 Meets at No 189 Tenth first Thursday night in each month Mrs Ann Garrett President R C Fox Sec Tenth and Chestnut Sts SONS AND DAUGHTERS OF THE MORNING No l Meets at Center Street ChuCh first and third Monday nights in each month Mrs Mary Gihson President Mrs Jennie Nickerson Sec 1004 W YValnutSt SISTERS AND BROTHERS OF FRIENDSHIP Meet at Green Street Church first and third Tuesday nights in each month Mrs Hopkins President YV Y Clinton Sec 532 Lampion St M U S HOST OF ISRAEL Meets first and third Wednesdays in each month at Gray s Hall Sixth Street Mrs May Neal M M Mrs Eliza F Hays Secretary No 127 Eighth SONS AND DAUGHTERS OFJ BETHEL Meets in Quinn Chapel second Monday after noon in each month Mrs Lou Morris Pres ident SONS AND DAUGHTERS OF CHARITY Meets at Jacob Street Tabernacle first Tuesday night in each month Mrs Sallie Owsley Pres ident Mlsa IVfruv E Smith Sec 142 LamptonSt GOOD SHEPHERDS Meets at Jackson Street Church second Monday in each month Mrs Julia Arthur President Mrs M Mansfield Sec TRUE BROTHERS AND SISTERS Meets in hall corner Preston and Broadway second and fourth Thursday nights in each month rJ SL W 5 F H ant RAILROAD TIME TABLE Lou and Nash Railroad Time Card Depart from Arrive at Arrive at Louisv Louisv Destin n Depot cor Ninth and Maple sts N Orl ns via Nash ll 35 am 3 25pm 9 42 pm N Orl ns via NasK Oam 11 35pm 10 27am Mobile via Nash 12 40 am 1136 pm 4 60 am Mobi e via Nash 11 35 m 3 25 pm 3 50 pm Mobile via Humb t oopm 7 40am 1 50 Sm Pensacola 11 35 am 3 25 pm 6 00pm Montgomery 12 40 am 11 35 pm 9 45 pm Montgomery 11 35 am 3 25 pm 7 50 am Na hvi e 12 40 am 11 35 pm S 30 am Nashville 11 35 am 3 25 pm 7 25 pm Nashville Ac 6 00 am 8 36 pm 7 00 pS B Green Ac 5 00 pm 11 15 am 9 50 nm Atlanta fe Chat i2 40 am 11 35pm 8 15nm Atlanta tfc Chat 11 35 am SMpm 12 40 Em Memphis 12 40 am 11 35 pm 4 30 pS Men phis n 35 am 3 25 pm 6 20 am Hopkinsville 12 40 am 11 35 pm 8 25 pm Hopkinsville n 35 am 3 25 pm 12 14 pm Richmond Ky 8 25 am 6 20 pm 4 55 p p t Q wn Ac 4 pm 8 40 am 6 55 pm 6 60 am 8 16 P m 5 30pm Cecilian Br ch Ac 4 00 nm 9 00 am 8 00 pm Lou Cin Short Line Time Card Depot First St and the River Dep t from Arr at Arr at Louisv Louisv Desti n U A 5pm 12 20 am 3 50 am Cincinnati 7 05 am 7 45 pm 11 45 am 3 25 pm 11 35 am 7 50 pS PUwfianH 12 20am 10 50 am Cleveland 11 45 pm 11 45 am 2 45 pm Cleveland 3 25 pm 11 35 am 7 10 am 11 45 pm 12 20 am 3 40pS grttoburg 3 25 pm 11 35 am 7 50 m Baltimore 11 45 pm 12 20 am 7 30 am Baltimore 3 25 pm 11 35 am 6 30 pm Washing on 11 45 pm 12 20 am 9 02 pm Washington 3 25 pm 11 35 am 7 52 pm PJ 1 a defphia n 45 pm 12 20 am 4 15 am Philadelphia 3 25 pm 11 35 am 6 45 pm New York 11 45 pm 12 20 am 6 53 am NewYork 3 25 pm 11 35 am 9 30 pm Mt Sterling Mail 7 45 am 11 05 am 1 20 pm ai t i S vf er f lg XJ 2 40 pm 6 00 pm 8 45 pm S byvi e Mail 7 30 am 7 50 am 9 30 am ShdbyyUJe Ex 5 00pm 6 00pm 6 15pm b rankfort Acc 5 00 pm 10 00 am 8 10 pm Lagrange Acc 5 00 pm 7 50 am 6 30 pm Church Acc 4 00 pm 10 15 am 5 45 pm Sleeping car on 11 45 pm train will be open at 9 00 pm in River front depot Trains leave Southall street depot 15 minutes later than above time _ Jeff Mad Ind R R Time Card Depot cor Fourteenth and Main sts T T No l No 3 No 5 Lv Louisville 8 15 am 2 10 pm 7 05 pm Lv New Albany 7 56 am 1 00pm 6 00pm Lv Jeffersonville 8 25 am 2 20 pm 7 15 pm Ar Seymour 10 12 am 4 02 pm 8 51 pm Ar Columbus 11 50 am 4 40 pm 9 25 pm Ar ShelbyviHe 5 45 Ar Rushvdle 6 40 pm Ar Cambridge City 7 40 pm Ar Franklin 11 30 am 5 20 pm 10 06 pm Ar Indianapolis 12 10 pm G 20 pm 10 50 pm Ar Kokomo 3 04 pm 1 30 am Ar Logansport 4 25 pm 3 26 am Ar Chicago 8 60 pm 7 30 am Ar Lafayette 2 40 pm 2 25 am Ar Kankakee 5 10 pm 4 50 am Ar hlca SO 7 25 pm 7 00 am Ar Terre Haute 2 50 pm 2 25 am Ar St Louis 8 15 pm 8 00 am Ar S le J e land 7 10 am RETURNING T r No 2 No 4 No 6 Lv Indianapolis 4 05 am 7 10 am 6 10 pm Ar Jeffersonville 7 15 am 11 03 am 10 18 pm Ar New Albany 7 44 am 11 61am 11 06 pm A k P puI svl e 7 25 am 11 16 am 10 30 pm Train leaving Louisville at 7 05 pm has Palace Sleeping Cars to Chicago and St Louis without change daily Train leaving at 8 25 am has Chair Car t o Chicago daily exc ept Sunday Lou N A and Chicago R y Time Card r Depart Arrive Louisville 7 05 a m 8 44 p m Bloomington 11 32a m 3 48 p m Greencastle 1 33 p m 1 38 p m Crawfordsville 2 11 p m 12 19 p m Lafayette 3 49 p m 10 65 a m Michigan City 7 10 p m 7 15 a m Chicago 9 10 p m Train No 3 leaving at 4 16 p m goes only to Bloomington P E R R Time Card Depot cor Tenth TRAINS GOING WEST Lv Louisville 6 00 am Lv Elizabet n 7 35 am Lv Cecilia 8 10 am Lv Nortonville 12 50pm Lv Princeton 2 36 pm Ar Paducah 5 00 pm Ar Hopkinf v le 3 10 pm Ar Nashville 7 15 pm Ar Henderson 3 10 pm Ar Owensboro 5 00 pm Trains run daily and Maple streets TRAINS GOING EAST Lv Paducah 8 15 am Lv Princeton 10 43 am Lv Nashville 8 30 am Lv Hopk ville 10 22 am Lv Hendersonll 50 am Lv Nort Bvillel2 50 pm Lv Owensboro 8 40 am Ar Cecilia 5 45 pm Ar Elizabeth n 6 00 pm Ar Louisville 8 16 pm Ohio Mississippi Railroad Time Card Depot cor Fourteenth and Main sts Cincinnati 7 00 am tl2 05pm 212 25 pm Cincinnati 2 05 pm 7 10 pm 7 35 pm Cincinnati 23 60 pm 211 40 pm St Louis t 8 10 am 6 56 am St Louis g7 45 pm 5 50 pm Umbrellas White Ve u Neckwear Underwear t1r a de mark SHIRTS MADE TO ORDER AND GUARANTEED TO FIT 321 FOURTH AVE LOUISVILLE Five Brothers Tobacco Works LARGEST I3ST THE STATE JOHN FINZER BROS 66 MANUFACTURERS OF THE 5J OUR GUEST AS YOU LIKE IT Brands and many other of the best Brands of Plug and Smoking Tobacco Corner 24th and Main Sts Louisville Ky The Cosmopolitan Restaurant LATE BUCKINGHAM Oroon Toot Tliircl and Fourth Meals at all Hours 15 Cents MIIjTON THURSTON Proprietor KENTUCKY CASH STORE 106 Fourth Avenue Stock is complete with all the latest Novelties and prices guaranteed the lowest Dress Goods Ginghams lawns Prints Woolens Coltonades Hosiery Gloves Underwear Laces Notions Etc etc MOURNING GOODS A SPECIALTY Some great bargains in Black Silks Cashmeres etc No trouble to show goods You can be certain of courteous treatment Payments can he made weekly if desired EDWARD HART Late Hart Fuldger 106 Fourth Ave W S bet Market and Jefferson IMIIRjS JYAIbTIE GRAY S No 151 Sixth Street bet Walnut and Grayson Restaurant i Boarding House REGULAR MEALS 15 CENTS Board and Lodging at low rates Meals at all hours Parlors for rent to clubs and private parties JBBBY ZNd QTTIlTICTIE r S Ice Cream Saloon and Confectionery Cor WEST AND WALNUT STREETS Good Ice Cream and Sherbet always on hand Ice Cream furnished in quan tities for parties festivals etc ALBRECHT RUTH Successors to James Deally Lock Manufacturers And Dealers in BUILDERS HARDWARE and CUTLERY 68 Jefferson St bet Second and Third BOOK AND JOB T HE BULLETIN is prepared to do fine Job Printing in all styles at lowest rates Satisfaction guaranteed 11 40 pm 7 00 am 7 35 pm Trains marked daily f daily except Sunday Narrow Gauge R R Leave Louisville 8 20 am 2 30 and 5 20 pm Arrive at Louisville 3 00 and 10 45 am and 5 01 pm SUNDAY TRAINS Leave Louisville 8 20 am and 2 00 and 4 20 pm Arrive at Louisville 10 25 am and 4 05 and 6 25 pm __ Louisville Cincinnati Mail line Leave foot of Third St For Cincinnati and other points 3 00 pm daily POSTERS DODGERS PROGRAMMES BILL HEADS RECEIPTS LETTER HEADS LABELS PAMPHLETS BOOKS _ETC ETC N B All orders for printing must be left with J A WILSON at BRADLEY GILBERT MALLORY S Cor Third and Green Sts YOU LIE Under a mistake if you think you can not get your Holiday Goods Confections etc of F Hokfer Son cheaper than any where else Try them F HOEFER A SON Corner Seventh and Jefferson JOS GOLDBACH DEALER IN Goal and Coke MAIN OFFICE Wo 31 Fifth Street JOHN COLGAN DRUGGIST Cor Tenth and Walnut LOUISVILLE KY I am adding to my large stock daily and as I buy in large quantities I am enabled to offer bargains in all kinds of Toilet Goods I wi9h to call particular attention to my fine Handkerchief Extracts which I sell in any quantity desired Be CRETAN Topics of tV z d liAiNE is a sufferer from Prof Huxley reaps salaries to the amount of 150 000 a year Prohibition was defeated in North Carolina by a majority of 100 000 The crop prospects of this country are just about as poor as any one wants to aee them Stanley is charged with using chain gangs of slaves in making a road in Africa The Cincinnati Commercial is author ity for the statement that opium kills 160 000 Chinamen every year England gave the cold shoulder to the International Money Conference England ought not to be disturbed The New Hampshire Legislature Bpent several weeks trying to codify new railroad law but gave the thiug up in disgust The President has been doing so well Bo long according to the doctors that there are some people who think he ought to be up but he is not ESTABLISHED 1868 INCORPORATED 1880 The J Hale Powers Co 170 Race St Cincinnati O THE Colson Apron FOR G U O ofO F Nellie Grant we scarcely ever hear of her now She and her husband and the little Sartorises of course are liv ing on an income of 10 000 a year YVe have just executed on satin by a new process in eight rich oil colors the most splendid apron for the G U O O F ever offered to the fraternity The design is the most happy conception of the Rev Allen Allensworth Most Venerable Patriarch of Kentucky and one which every brother will find by close study to give the complete emblematic work of the Order The design was applied to its present use by Wallace Colson P N F of Cincinnati Lodge No 1883 and the manufacture of this elegant adornment has been awarded to us by Mr Colson thus securing to the Order the finest specimen of chromo transfer work ever produced upon silk or satin There is no filling in with transparent colors upon this apron The colors are opaque and regularly finish ed in full chromo style and will not be affected by water or exposure The Queen of a band of gypsies en camped at Erie Pa owns stock in the New York Pennsylvania and Ohio Rail road a farm near Dayton O and horses worth 60 000 Her name is Amelia Wells and her age is sixty years The front doors of the new house of William H Vanderbilt will cost includ ing settings 25 000 They are of ibronze and fac similes of those of the Church of San Angelo at Rome Many a man would be glad to put up with a house that didn t cost more than that ImnnK The Governor of Texas refuses to issue a proclamation for a day of prayer and thanksgiving in celebration of the recovery of the President because he says it is the State interfering with the church and he is opposed to mixing church and State Thebe seem to be so many instances of persons being shot through the back and liver and surviving that when the President gets well enough to read the newspapers he will be astonished to hear that such things are rather common American complaints 1 There have been more fatal sun iStrokes and deaths from overheat at 1 Cincinnati this year than at any other ipoint on the continent and the New York Graphic therefore concludes that 4 the Devil must be an Ohio man There are lots of fellows in Ohio that have been called that many a time There is trouble about Pharoah ol old Among the mummies discovered in the cave near Thebes m Egypt one of them is said to be the identical Pharoah who oppressed the children ol Israel Doctors of Divinity have preached for centuries that Pharoah and his host were drowned in the Red Sea At the w r ord of command Moses stretched forth his hand over the sea the waters returned and overwhelmed all the Egyptians so that there remained not so much as one of them Those are the Scripture words Christians and others will wait with some anxiety for further revelations concerning the iden tity of the mummies discovered Financial Card READY RECEIPTS for DUES AND ASSESSMENTS For the use of Lodges wishing to keep their accounts in an orderly and systematic manner at a very trifling cost saving much trouble and an noyance This Card enables a member to see his financial standing at a glance without troubling the Receiving Officer and as every payment entered on this Card is a perfect receipt showing wheu and by whom the payments were received there can no longer be a misunderstanding or dispute The Card explains itself showing the advantages so readily that fur ther comment would be unnecessary B ED O CED PRICES Printed to order with Name etc SINGLE CARD Tinted Bristol DOUBLE OR FOLDED CARO Very Tough and Bnratle 50 00 50 100 50 100 9 200 2 25 200 0 KA 300 00 300 A Rft 500 00 500 1000 6 00 1000 Parties wishing the Cards sent by mail should add stamps to prepay postage as follows 1 J SINGLE 50 cards 3 cents 100 cards 6 cents 200 cards 12 cents 300 cards 18 cents DOUBLE 50 cards 6 cents 100 cards 12 cents 200 cards 24 cents Larger numbers may be sent by Express Member s Financial Pocket Book of Ready Receipts FOR DUES AXD ASSESSMENTS Substantially bound forming a neat and convenient size for the pocket This book will answer 11 years Those belonging to different Lodges or Societies will find this book indispensable as the different accounts can ali be kept independent of each other in this one book Price 25 cents sent postpaid 2 00 per dozen MONFV may be 6ent at our risk b y Registered Letter Post office lUV ll Ll I Money Order or Draft on N York Cincinnati or Louisville John H Welle s Keady Receipts for Dues and Assessments are secured by Copyright all rights reserved For sale by ADAMS BROTHERS GENERAL AGENTS 256 W Jefferson St Louisville Ky Our Set XTo 5 165 Terms One half with order the balance in notes payable in three and 6 months or installments of 10 per month or 10 per cent dis count for all cash Our cheapest set is 125 on same terms The Lawn aui Grounds Most front yards have some attempt at ornamentation but taste is too often outraged by the indulgence of whims The rich green of the grass plot is bro ken up and frittered away by numerous ingle plants or small beds scattered all over the yard In some instances ever greens are planted in the immediate front of houses and so near to them that although they had obtained only a partial growth the branches are already intruding themselves into the veranda thereby not only inconveniencing the residents but presenting anything else rather than a handsome appearance and threatening in the course of a few years to almost entirely exclude the sunlight from that portion of the premises This is a grave error Trees however beau tiful should never be planted so near the house as to bar out the sunshine There is no more effectual method of destroy ing their beauty nor a better plan for introducing disease I have known houses thus crowded upon by trees of dense foliage that became so unhealthy as to be regarded almost untenable Large trees are out of jfface in small yards they should be in keeping with the plat they are intended to beautifv Lodge Swords Jewels Lodge Furniture EMBLEMS IN WOOD AND METAL Banners Badges Robes Turbans Caps Funeral Rosettes HI S SEALS AND ALL LODGE PARAPHERNALIA Emblematic Vest and Shirt Pins Watch Chains Exchange Cards Etc Canvassers wanted in every Lodge of ODD FELLOWS and MASONS for our elegant Emblematic Pictures Diplomas etc Terms and descriptive circulars on application BEWARE OF INFRINGEMENTS The great popularity which these Ready Receipts for Dues and Assessments have attained will doubtless lead unscrupulous persons to infringe upon our rights and we hereby notify the public that any in fringement in whole or in part or by varying the main design with intent to evade the law will be prosecuted to the fullest extent WELLE CO Manufactured by Dick Middleton Co Successor to JEWELL BEDDO Manufacturing Jeweler and Silversmith 140 Four lit Avenue Louisville Ky Fine Jewelry Society Badges Emblem Pins Masonic Jewels Knight Templar Crosses made to order Good material first class workmanship and reasonable prices PRICE LIST OF REPAIRING Cleaning Ordinary Watch 1 00 Fine Watch 1 50 to 2 00 Main Spring 1 00 Case Spring 1 00 Pivot 1 25 Hands each 25 Glass 25 Joint on case 50c to 75 Bevel silver 75 Gold 2 00 to 3 00 Warranted for One Year Engraving Monograms 50 cents coin extra CLOCK REPAIRS Cleaning 1 day time 0 50 1 day strike 75 8 day time 75 8 day strike 1 H Main Spring 1 day 60 8 day 1 00 CLEANING MUSIC BOX 1 50 to 3 00 Warranted lor One Year REPAIRING JEWELRY Pin Tongue comp 0 15 r ld 25 to 35 Reducinj Plain Ring 25 Enlarging 1 in in Ring 35 to 1 00 ReducmgSeo Hing 25 to 75 Enlarging Sea ing 25 to 1 00 All work done at as low rates as possible for good work F KIRTLAND JOHN W McCRAW The J HALE POWERS COMPANY 170 Race Street Cincinnati Ohio KIRTLAND CO Merchant Tailors 151 Fourth Ave Courier Journal Building A large line of Foreign and Domestic Goods always on hand None but fir3t class artists employed in Cutting Department Good workmanship moderate prices and promptness our motto apr231m