1881-04-28; Saline Observer |
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Nepiciwe
0BDRTF0B3I
|"ame Time oa
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.-„e, 1?r^.^.—«>-w,Kr*""r»>t. J
"*S,»t"s!**jera<SK* .3HJSHKS
c^-. .*-^^.1*^"*^!^i*P^=S3
I the natural cleansers
Irk -weU, health -will be
pegged dreadful dis-
rFFERINC.
T/yspepsia. Jaundice,
plney Complaints,
laile Pains or Aches.
blood is uoisoned-with
| expelle& naturally.
'WILL RESTORE
these destroying
Jeglect them and you
ed. Trv it and. you
.amber. "Take it and
Idea your heart.
Ir=i?nt *>f attaching fawlt i
"fi'onstlpnt.on and riles I
"a. Trc it fct once and
Itl-asit." Pri«.v$I.OO.
TegctaMe Form, in
of vfhieh makes six
I, very Coneentrnteot
|>i thosa -who cannot
acts triih eoual
|>S Jss GO., PropTs;
i.i. EVKXrSGTOX, TFTV
* *;
- i
IB BIRM 4 KISSLY, Proprietors.
SALINE, WASHTENAW COUNTY, MICHIGAN, APRIL 28, 1881.
VOL. I.-NO. 24.
FTTrftnilr
(now?
|0 KNOW about K.<m«
;tU'.is. h *r products, her
Ib'.iz inst: anons?
TO KNOW about tha
Wi-niierfa; scenery, the
m&stificeat mines and
liv of Colorado.
16 KSOW aiwnt New
Li a ensue and a mineral
IO KNOW about Art-
ra;:jera. eonatry in tha
btasesof cii'nateaad; soil?
IO KNOW about Cali-
JCiu.den sape, both north
KNOW aboat Old,
J KNOW how to reach
lis- aud qaiciv TV
Vt&£>kntj:c, icriteto
C. S. GLEE1>.
Topetot. Kansas.
forSOX."DX"E"RS.
for Fathvrs, Mothers. Widiyws. Chil-
_ diea.i'tc. Thousands
I'soa^sior disease. Boun-
J'ic is entiiit d io incr« ase
I: -eisiiins. Time limited.
Th tw«v s:atn3s forlsws.
J. FITZGEIi'ALD, TJ. S_
(■ushing^on, ii. 0.
fAXTTAX-S-Practical'
sh. fali, r -Kabl.- and*
s."r. 3t?. "WatehinalCttr
pi Cabinet "Ftaish?r. 50.
Li*.'. B^ker, 30. Candy-
S -;- ."» . H-jK-i-shoiT. 25.
"Woud-Pnsraver. 23-
IJESSS BANEf & CO.,
HAND FARMER
Ifrwa: Monthly. Nopre-
llv a-fs 25 eeius for each
laarsit. Established nine
|: stiEip. Address
t, St. X.ouIs, STo.
.GfO
JFIHE ARTS
Ind Monroe Sts.
; aad Painting..
lir.TI praaress. and Pnpll3
fc:-. ::>.o is siren rcgslarly
I? A-.-.i.*.n\ and from Idfe,
"ir-.-jA"*Drar.-in<j, Fifteen.-
V.i »>:l aatiTVan-r Colors,
Dr.vwltg, aad Etching
ar Three "Slonihs.
trr>-rt"naa. Thetaitionfea
rancLvs, aad also the uses
Ih * t. -achtfrs are:
•y rwBEKTaos, Profess-
_?: J. H. Yaxbeepoel, In-
|cak?es"tek. Instructor to
|th. D.'res-ter and Lecture*
F. X. Boss, Teacher of
, 5*. M. E. FEEXCH.
| Academy oi Fine Arte.
soob:
ARITHMETIC
3EASH.
arner thiongrh Lons UIvi3-
as especially nsefol to the)
hary Bepaxtment in thosa
pat a Primary Arithmetic
fjad street, Elizabeth, 2"". J.
seformailins
GAZETTE.
jANSPORTATIOfJ.
Railroad News.
wlway, »Tr York,
bstase Tree.
CHIsMKlI
Lnted for the
OF THE WAR
i'y complete anti reliable
|r pablisa-id: It a?>onnda in
litar-:-, thriiii^ff in';:d'.-nt3.
I wosfi«TfVu/iseapes. etc.;
fe of loo It-adSngg^nerals.
K *>sfr;i tfnn=; to Agents.
"BjBjLisjaixc- ca.,_
,000
ISKfKf VI'
*.k-'y Farmers'' of the
la'i 'JSwasf ■ of Live S:oc&.
nirpVjn.rr* of that sftctioa.
ot" Clve S;o(;li. lend
li-Jy. Iadors*di-yhv.rgon-
I'liiig Veterinary Sargyon?.
B6"M for fl< scrii» ion.
prills and umii to
• ii. s. mscKuat",
itreet, Chte««o, 111.
QUICK to sell tbe>
TESNKEliT
Ytde'dra'oleedition. X,ovr
leg for it. Gr>W'i hvrrest
\>'ee. Outfit SOc. Act
|U BEOS.. Ciifeagj, I;L
Wanted.
J good Tsxas lane! to sell
Ira'i'ja an1? j r"'*'* f fj
Id Ave., "Sew Tork City.
I March, srr.J.B.C'aus..50o
|"e, ** ** *' ..608
Jaij Instrsrner.'s .......TJe
In receiptor price. Triji'ma.
Is, ISVVinterfc*..,, Boston.
, flPiGANDBnCX
|>n for &»l kinds ^- "Wdl
IAN, 1IFFIH, OHIO.-
ITER SUPPUES.
} asniaar St, Bo j ton, Mass.
I), anywhere, Wholesaia
i-llit/r«. Go^ids guaran-
1157 "Wabash-av-CMcaga
ihy and earn $±<) to $100
Ji traattPd a payins situa-
MCanagers, JanesvUie, Wis.
.«* Additional Homestead
|)ld. Htshfr jirlcf paid.
Jox TM, Wa*h'EKion»i),C.
11 AGBXTS WA\T£D t
Itleles inthe world; g.gam-
|to.vso^r. Detroit. Hick.
Jw the Best and Fastest-
IdBiDles'. Prto;s rfduced
IsVo.. Chicago lit,
76
818
AnvmMtTznmns,
|f*e Advertisement
?m-
( ;'
Ii
NEWS.-.SUMMARY.
Impbrtant Intelligence -frdm All Parts
" Tlie tT. IS. Senate.
The resolutioa lor ihe election of officers
■was presented on tlie 19th; and a motion for an
executive session vras lost. The petitions relative toithe-ease of Boy ton were referred to
•the„'C6iniriittee on "Foreign "Relations. Mr.
Blair offefeda fesblution declaring-that, inthe
judgment of the Senate, public interests require Congress tobe convened in extra session
immediately". In support of the resolution
Mr. Blair stated that a recent decision of the
United.States Supreme Court meant the
rum ,,pf the hosiery and tnit-goosls industry- of "Sew England unless amendatory protective legislation covering
that point is adopted; he also urged in favor of
his resolution the necessity of Congressional
action in, reference to the DeLesseps Canal.
Mr! "Logan took the floor in vindication Of his
course at the outbreak of the war, and emphatically denied* that he had sympathized
with or in any way. aided the cause of secession:;/.'Mr. Brown1 said he took pleasure in saying he:, thought "Mr. Logan's vindication was
full? complete and conclusive. Messrs. Call
and Cameron (Pa.) also made speeches, after
"wMch various roll-calls were had on dilatory
motions. An adjournment for the day was
£nulty etfeeted.
Tiiii "Vice-President laid hefore the Senate
-on the 20th the resolution for the election of
officers, and the debate immediately hegan,
Messrs. Dawj§3^J6*nas, Bro^vh andFrye participating therein. "Mr. Butleir stated that the
real question was: ''Had there "been disgraceful .bargains in,this-Sen ate, by which the offices
of the Senate: were to be turned over to those
to whom" they do not belongV" To this Mr.
Burnside-ieXcitedly responded that there, had
"beeifha bar'^inf aiid that any man'who 'said
there bad been statedthat which was false. Mr.
Burnside several times reiterated the charge
of falsehood against any Senator who said
such a bargain had been entered into, and Mr.
Butler finally answered by saying he (Butler)
had made,no;charge that there was a Ijargain,
'but, iE'h.eidid nop demonstrate it by irrefragable testimony, he would 'resign his seat in the
Senate. Mr. Burnside said if he (Butler) did
prove, sucjd a bargain he (Burnside) would give
up his committee and acknowledge a majority
on the otherside.' Adjourned.
Br unanimous consent on the 31st, the papers on file relating to the subject of bankruptcy* were referred to the Committee on
Judiciary. A motion for an executive session
was pst—20 to 31. Aj motion by Mr. Cameron
(Pa.fthat when an adjournment was had for
the day it be until the 35th was opposed by
Mr. Dawes, and some SDarring occurred between the two gentlemen on the question,
after which the motion was carried by one
majority. Before the' vote was announced
Mr. Groome stated that, as he understood Mr. Daw.e3- to say he would consider
an affirmative vote on this motion: as an
instruction that the policy of the Republican
side would be abandoned, he (Groome) would
vote "aye.:" whereupon Mr. Cameron impetuously^ replied - "Nothing of, the sort,!' and
changed Jiis vote to "nay:" Messrs.'Blai'r,
Hawley and'Harris also changed their votes
to the negative, and the vote was announced
—IS to 25—and the motion was lost. Speeches
were made by Messrs. Cotee, Call and .lonas,
after whichthe Senate adjourried for the day.
Mr. Morrile, addressed the Senate on the
22d, after which there was a running debate,
in which Messrs. .Beck. Sherman, Jonas,
Dawes, Brown- and Hawley took part. Adjourned to the 33th.
"Domestic
,A ^VASHEsrcwoN- dispatch, of the 20th says
the Comptroller of the Currency,, upon examination of the securities held by National
Banks, finds that 475 banks in thirty States
and Territories hold, 6s of 1SS1 to secure circulating; notes amounting in the aggregate to
S45,27o,S50. Bonds for continuing the outstanding '6s of 1SS1 at three and a half per
cent, are similar to, the original 6s, except
that they have an indorsemenb of tne conditions. A number of new bonds had been
issued.
A totctg ladt of Kome, Ga., a few weeks
ago, jSiiie cnattinil with' some, friends, broke
oft a spray "of 'cedar anct thoughtlessly swallowed it. The needles of the twig penetrated
"her lungs, and she had two hemorrhages at
the time, and blood continued to flow at intervals, accompanied by the most acute a?q-
uies. She died in about two weeks after
swallowing the spray.
THB.TiJ.Iage„of..-San Marcial, Southern Cali-.
fOrhia,*;was entirely destroyed by fire on the
niglt o"f"the"*i"9th.'
The Indianapolis Street Railway has averted a strike by'voluntarily advancing wages ten
* to fifteen per cent.
A kozen houses and stores were recently
"burned at Bound Brook, N. J., rendering
thirty families homeless. Loss about $100,000.
~Fj£%M nia.d dogs were recently shot in Jersey* City,, £ik Ji,: -within a few hours. Three
of them bad bitten children.
$£"FBw'dttys* ago*' John McEhtse," a boy of
seventeen, killed his uncle, Peter MeEntee,
an old man of seventy, at Bath, N. T.
Thirtt lodxes of Maricopa Sioux* recently
cm-rendered at Eorfc Keogh, with fifty-seven
ponies and" sixteen guns.
The revenue cutter Corwiti is to sail from
San "Francisco in search of the Jeanne tte.
As xm express-train going south on
theyRock Island Division of the Chicago,
Milwaukee.S**Str Paul Railroad struck the;-
trestle-work over the Meredosia River, near
Albany, 111., about five o'clock on the morning of the 21st, the trestle gave way, and
the engine went through with a crash, taking with it the ba2gage-car and the passenger-coach, and pullinjr the sleeping-car half
over the point where the bieak occurred.
The engineer, ^William Vyest, and the fireman went'dowirwittt the engine; and' were
- drowned. The passenger-car, with its eleven
passengers, floated ofE until it grounded
near an islan 1. , Six of the passengers lost
their lives. The ihree passengers, in the
sleeper got out without injury. The express
messenger, baggage-mau, • conductor and
brakemaii happened to be in the passenger-
car, and escaped by climbing to the roof, as
it was sinking, and leaping thence to the
sree5elf^wMch.r.pmained ou'the bridge;' £ ["
* An order has been issued by the Post-Office
Department declaring that postal-cards with
anything but the direction on the address
s'de are unmailable.
' Through the improper mixture of acids
seme nitre-glycerine in the niter vaults of
theDittman Powder-Works near Bingham-
ton, N. Y., exploded oa the morning of the
21st, and about five m nutes after 10,000
pounds of sporting-powder was i:nited and
exploded with terrific force, demolishing all
buildings in the vicinity, tearing up fences
and trees, and shattering windows in houses
for mitps around. The shock was feltti forty,
miles distant. r/Oa the same morning a- pow^
dextofeaztheJ&baut three milest from Bridget
port, Conn., eon«biniiig 1,000 pounds of
powder, exploded, doing about $*>,000 worth
of damae to buildings in the city. No lives
were lostbj either explosion.
Some months since a monkey escaped from
a museum in New York and bit off fiart of
the nose of alittfe girl. An action for $50,-
000 damages "Was brought by her guardian,
and the jury awarded §3,500.
A vew days ago, while stealing a ride on
top of a passenger coach on the Memphis &
Louisville Road, a man named Lumley had
the u.pper half of his* head taken off by striking a, brdge.
Lt/cijrDA*EovvrivKEs was hnn* at Lunen-
bui'gh, Va.. on the 22d, for the murder of her
hush»nir'g4Sbejya% a negiesS, arid enjoyed
the distinction of being the only woman
"hanged in the* Southern States in twenty
years.
* It was announcedt>n the 22d that the flood
had severed railway edfnectfon at Omaha
with every point. Two dwelling-houses float
ed; past that city on thatsday, and half a* mile
of railroad track took its departure. At
Sioux City four hundred houses were either
submerged or surrounded by water, and communication with their occupants was had by
rafts. Great damage has been done by the
floods in the various rivers of the West and
Northwest. Many bridges have been carried
away.
A disease has appeared in the vicinity of
"Painesville, Ohio, which celebrated physicians declare to be Asiatic cholera.
One of the heaviest storms of rain and nail
ever known in that region fell in the vicinity
of Huntsvffle, Tex., on the 22d. Nearly all
the bridges were swept away.
It was announced from Washington on the-
22dthat the Secretary of the Treasury, in
order that foreign holders of six-per-cent,
bonds of the United States could have their
bonds continued at three and one-naif percent., would establish an agency in London.
This action will avoid shipme nt of coin from
this country, in case any large amount of
bonds held abroad should be purchased here
for continuance.
The total value of expm-ts from this country
of provisions and tallow for the five months
ended March, 1SS1, was $65,S79,269; same
time in 18S0, $46,200,108. Value of dairy
products for the eleven months ended March,
1881, $22,89i,066; for the eleven months ended March, 1880, $15,926,1S6.
Abukglar named Dennis E. Murphy was
fatally shot.in Buffalo a few nights ago, while
robbing a grocery store.
The Hebrew Union Colleje at Cincinnati,
the only one of the kind in the United States,
was dedicated on the 24th. The institution
is designed for the education of young men
to be rabbis. . '
A tire at Salinas, Cal., a few nights ago,
burned the residence of Mayor Ball, and his
wife and two daughters perished in the
flames.
A special train on the Denver ■& Rio
Grande Road jumped the track near 0>:,irr,
N. M., on the 22d, and rolled down an embankment of one hundred* and fifty feet;
Seven men and one woman were killed, and
all the other passengers were injured, some
of them seriously.
THE#tpwn of Greenville, Cal., hag been
destroyed by fire.
Dispatches of the 24th state that all the
buildings on tlie levee at Omaha had been
abandoned, the water 'being twenty inches
higher than during the previous recent flopd.
On the Council Bluffs side the Chicago railroads send their passengers two or three
miles in skiffs to the transfer depot.
The threat to enforce the "Stubbs'.' law
caused the closing' of every theater in Cincinnati on Sunday, the 24th, although one German place gave a free concert. All the theatrical managers had agreed during the
previous week to acquiesce in Mayor Means'
order to close on Sun-lay.
A general strike among the street railway
employes of St. Louis went into'effect on the-
a3d, and no cars were run on the 23d and
24th except on the .Bellefontaine line, which
yielded to the demand of its men for a reduction* of hoursr Several disturbances occurred,
the few cars which were sent out being
ditched or damaged, and those in charge
being obliged to abandon them. Scores of
arrests were made by tbe police. Superintendent Euqua,- of the Eifth Street line,
started out a car, taking charge of it himself
as conductor, but it was attacked by a mob,
the windows smashed, and Mr. Euqua roughly handled. The Presidents of the several
lines held a meeting and decided to make no
further attempts to run cars for the present.
A Washington Associated Press dispatch
of the24th says: ''Official figures show that
the annual pay of ninety-three ' star' routes,
out of 9,225,. was raised between the lettings
of 1S7S and January 1,1880, from §727,119 to
§2,802,214. The regular appropriation for
the 'star-route' service for the year ended
June 30,18S0j was $5,90^,000. Of"this amount
§2,802,214 were absorbed "by the ninety-three
routes noted, leaving §3,097,786 for the remaining 9,132 routes."
At Allentown, Pa., oh the morning of the
23d John Guymphere, a Hungarian who had
been* asleep at the poor-house for seventy-
two days,- and who had the day before
awakened for the first time, arose from his
bed, boltedhis room door and jumped out of
the window, falling twenty-five Jeet. When
picked up it was found that two of his ribs
were broken and his spine was injured so
badly that he was not expected to livej
m*
Personal and Political.
Among the nominations by President Garfield on the 20th were the following: Richard
A Elmer, of New "5"prk, to he Second, and W.
A.■ M. Grier, of Pennsylvania, to be Thrd
Assistant Postmaster-General—the latter vice
A. D. Hazen, appointed Assistant Attorney-
General of the Post Office Department.
President Garfield on the 19th. nomw
nated«General James Longstreet (now Minister to Turkey) to be United States Marshal
of Georg a, and Philip H. Emerson to be
Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of
Utah. «
The extra session of the Indiana Legislature has closed." The Ohio ' Legislature ad^~
journed sine die on the 20th, after a session of
lOo-'dayls. -*=■•-■■-
The Lezislature of Michigan has passed a
bill to establish a State Reform School for
Girls, the institution to be located at Adrian.
Washington specials of "the 21st intimate
that the resignation of Second Assista-nt
"Postmaster-General Brady was owing to the
discovery by Postmaster-General Jamesthat
Mr. Brady was derelict aiid unfaithful in the
discharge of his duty. It was said the records
show that on the 1st of 'January, 188), 'the
pay for carrying the mails on' 100 out of more
than 1,000 so-called "Star Routes" was increased from ,?700,000to §2;800,000, ostensibly
to cover the expenses of shortened time and
add.tional trips. It was .said to be plain,
however, that it was done in the interest of
the contractors and at the expense of the
tax-payers. Other irregularities had also been
discovered.
Mrs. Belva A. Lockwood, the Washington lady lawyer, has filed an api lication for
the appointment of Minister to Brazil.
The ""vlichigan. House has defeated the Senate bill to prohibit pool-selling at races and
athletic contests. •
A Washington Associated Press dispatch
of the22disays "President Garfield had taken
a firm stand in favor of executive session* of
the Senate and confirmations of nominations.
He had, since the day before, sent for and
spoken with eleven Republican Senators,
urging all of them to relieve the Administration of its embarrassment by confirming the
n'omfnatiOrfs. The- Republican Senators
Would hold a caucus in a few days, to deter-
jnjne aline of action in regard to the matter.
Among those who had been pressing an
executive session were Sherman,. HawJey,
Hale and other pronounced friends of the
Administration. *
Tj|E Wpshfngton Nalionttl il'epubttcm of the
22d contains a card signed by ex-Second Assistant Postmaster-General Brady, in which
he declare* that all the charges, direct or indirect, affecting his character for integrity as
a public official are absolutely and unqualifiedly false.
A call to the pulpit of Dr. Chap'n,'s church,
New York, has been accepted by Rev. Charles
E. Eaton, of Palmer, Mass.
A Washington special of the 23d. says Mr.
Grier, of Pennsylvania, had declined the office of Third Assistant PostmasterrGeneral,
to wnich he-was nominated by the President.
Mr. Grier is the delegate who first voted for
Mr. Garfield in the Chicago Convention.
.Foreign.
The National Convention of the Irish
Land League assembled in Dublin on the
21st, Parnell presidingv Resolutions declaring that Davitt should be released; and
thanking Irishmen in America for their support, were adopted. The delegates were
strongly averse to the Land bill, but it was
generally held that the measure sbould not be
rejected unless efforts to amend it failed.
At a recent meeting of the Educational
League in Pan's Gambetta insisted upon the
necessity of developing and perfecting universal suffrage by universal education.
On the 21st the Poersen Courier of Berlin
was confiscated for producing an article from
the Paris Intransigeant approv.n^ the murder
of the Czar of Russia^ notwithstanding the
Courier strongly condemned the article.
A public meeting at Leipzig on the 2lst,,
under the auspices of the Progressionists,
was dispersed by the police under the Socialist laws. , ,
With a force of ten thousand Turks Der-
visch Pasha recently attacked and'defeated
the Albanians near Uskup.
The Powers of Europe have received a circular note from Russia proposing a conference for the purpose of adopting common
measures against anarchists.
John Olive & Son, manufacturers of paper
and railway supplies at Manchester and
Bury, England,- have suspended .payment,
with liabilities of £100,000.
Twentt-five thousand emigrants sailed
from Hamburg for America during January,
Eebruary and March.
So depressed is the woolen trade at Bradford, England, that some of the manufacturers, it is stated, contemplate bringing their
machinery to the United States."
The Canadian Government has reduced
the rates on west-bound freight passing
through the canals nearly one hundred per
cent.
Three children of Mr. Le Due were burned
to death at Hull, Quebec, a few days ago.
The upper house of the Assembly of the
Transvaal has, by the casting'vote of the
President, shelved the address to Queen Victoria approving the terms of peace.
The importation of American pork has
been prohibited by Turkey, and an order
issued that the stock on hand be destroyed
after an appraisal by a committee of Americans.
It was stated from St. Petersburg on the
22d that the Russian Government had decided to grant 9,000,000 rubles annually to aid
peasants to free themselves from the burden
Jaid upon them twenty years ago on the abolition of serfdom.
The London Freihelt of the 23d was published with a black border in memory of the
executed murderers of the Czar. It praised
them as martyrs. The tone of the article was
the same as that which caused the indictment
of Herr Most.
A Erench column has crossed the Tunisian
frontier, and. Were encamped near HefE on
the 24th.
The Greek Government has ordered the
construction o* six ifon-clads to be completed within fifteen months.
Eive servants in the Imperial Palace at
Constantinople nave confessed that they
suffocated Abdul Aziz (the Sultan who died in
1876, and was reported to have committed
suicide,) and opened veins *in his arms to
make it appear that he killed himself. Three
officials are said to be implicated is the
crime.
Erohlqef, the executioner of the Nihilists
in St. Petersburg, has been eriven one hundred lashes because in the. hanging of Mi-
chaeloff the rope broke' twice. .
"LATER NEWS.
The President of the Metropolitan Street
Railroad in Boston on the 25th ordered all
employes who des'red to retain their places
to give notice at once or leave, as the company could not afford to pay increased wages.
James T. Eields, the Boston poet and publisher, died of heart disease while sitting in
his chair on the 24th. He was sixty-one
years of age.
A St. Petersburg dispatch of the 25th
says that ever since the.assassination 'of the
late Czar the Empress had been suffering
from severe hysteric attacks. Threatened
'witlrdeath of the. most horrible description
should Sophie Pieoffsky and Hessy Helfman,
the* two women implicated in the assassination, be executed, she made most strenuous
exertions to ohtain their pardon, and received promise to that effect. She did not
discover the-decej tive character of the promise until alter the execution of Pieoffsky, and
the diseovery threw her into violent paroxysms.
A man named Leyden, in charge of a farm
near Gal way, Ireland, from which the tenants had been evicted, was shot dead on the
25th by nine men who surrounded his house.
Tns Missouri River rose several Inches at
Omaha on the 25th, but fell at Sioux City.
Opposite Kansas City the water broke
through the levee and submej-ged the greater
part of Harlem and the surr^un ling bottom
lands. A break occurred in tlie Sny levee
'south of Quiucy, 111.,, and the region round
about and to the extent of fifty miles south
was flooded. Great .damage was also reported because of floods In other sections.
The strike of the street railway employes
in St Louis continued on the 25th, and no
-cars Were run on the, besieged lines.
One hundred compositors employed on
the English dailies*of Milwaukee, were out
on a strike on the 25th for an adv-mce of-five
cents per thousand ems.
The statue of* Admiral Earragut, in Farra.
gut Square, Washington, was unveiled, with
imposing ceremonies, on the*25thv in the,
presence of thousands of spectators. It was
unveiled by Quartermaster -KnOwles, who
held the position of Quartermaster on Far-
ragut's ilaaship at the time of the battle of
Mobile Bay, and who lashed the Admiral to
the mast. As the covering was removed,
the Admiral's salute of seventeen guns
was fired in Lafayette Square,
troops meanwhile presenting
The President, in behalf of
Nation, accepted the statue in a
speech. Addresses were deli'vend by ex-
Postmaster General Maynard and Senator
Voorhees, after which tlie Marine Band
played "Hail to the Chief," the Admiral's
salute was given, and ti;e procession reformed and marched to -Ore Executive "Mansion. As the troops pas-s^id before the
statue, the marchinir silute w.fs given.. At
the White House, the President, his Cabinet
and the senior officers of the army and navy
reviewed the i. recession.
the
arms.
the
brief
Terrible Railway Accident.
Clinton, Iowa, April 31.
AN appalling accident occurred on the Sock
Island Division of the Chicago, Milwaukee &
St. Paul Eailroad, formerly known as the
Western Union Railroad, eight miles below
this city, and one mile below Albany, 111., at
4:20 this morning. At that,hour the express
train south, due in Rock Island at six o'clock,
was passing along at Its usual speed. It had
just left Albany. As the train approached the
trestle bridge, two hundred or three hundred
feet long, over the Meredosia River, near its
point of juncture with the Mississippi, the engineer gave the usual short whistle; but the
bridge must have appeared all right, as he did
not slow up. When within a few feet of the
bridge the engineer must have then noticed a
Buspicious appearance, as he gave two or three
short, sharp whistles as signals of danger.
Then immediately followed a crash, heard
for three miles in either direction, as
the whole train went down into the terrible
rushing waters. The Meredosia is at a
very high stage from the overflow of the
Rock "River bottoms beyond, and an unusual
torrent had undermined the trestle, so that-
one hundred feet of it gave way as the engine
passed upon it. The train was composed of
the engine, tender and three cars, the forward car containing the baggage, express and
mail; the second car contained eleven passengers; the rear car was the sleeper, and
contained three passengers and the colored
porter. The eneine, tender and the two forward cars went down into the river. The
sleeper went partly: over and* hung on the
verge at an acute angle. -
The engine and tender, with the engineer,
"William West, and the fireman, name not
learned, went down out of sight, and no sign
Of the locomotive or men has since been seen.
The engineer is believed to have bravely
stuck to his throttle, when he might possibly have saved his life by jumping.
Tne express messenger, Daniel Ellithorpe,
and the baggageman* Samuel Flanagan, had
just gone into the passenger coach before the
accident, and they, with the brakeman, Henry
Meyers, the conductor, Thomas Fuller, all escaped by climbing on top of the passenger
car as it was sinking, and leaping thence to
the top of the sleeper. Meyers had his collarbone broken and had tobe helped out. Ellithorpe and Flanagan were both badly bruised'
Three passengers in the rear car escaped by
climbing out of their berths up through the
rear end of the car m their night-clothes, but
afterward recovered all their clothing. One
of the gentlemen ran back to Albany in his
nights-clothes in the rainandrousedtheneigh-
bors.
Meantime, the passenger coach,, with its
-eleven occupants, settledinto the stream, and
floated oif across the water thirty rods to an
island, where it lodged, with only afoot and a
• half of the upper part Out Of the water. Eor-
tunately, the forward end was badly broken,
and out of this one man groped his way, and,
with the help of a train man, pulled out a lady
and girl, who were the only female occupant*
of the car, except another child, a girl two
years old, who was drowned. The mother and
daughter were rescued with great difficulty,
and were in a badly-bruised condition. The
daughter had two or three ribs broken, and
was otherwise' badly hurt internally.
Two men and a lad of" sixteen had, in some
way, climbed out of the car before it floated
•away, and got on top. As it floated by the approach to the wagon bridge, which was carried
out by the Hood yesterday, they jumped
ashore, one man and a boy escaping, the other
man falling into the river and being swept
under the car. Of eleven passengers in the
ear, only five have been found. The others
have been drowned. No one knows thenames
of any one of them, except-, the lad above referred to, who lost his brother-in-la% with
whom he was en route from Pine Uiver, Wis.,
to Omaha, and Dr. Lundy. The boy positively refused to give his name.
Nothing is known of the names or destinations of the live adult passengers drowned,
except of the Wisconsin man and Dr. D. W.
Lundy. The latter got on the ill-fated train at
Albany, and was drowned within sight of his
home. He was a well-known, highly esteemed
physician, whose loss is deeply felt, and he is
widely lamented. He was only going to the
next-station below to see a patient.
Biographical Sketch, of lord Beacons-
Hekl.
A Snake Attacks a Horse.
A terrible runaway of a horse attached
to a spring wagon and driven by a man named
James Coons occurred On the turnpike, near
Mine Hill Gap, yesterday. The horse, generally a well-disposed animal, was jogging along
quietly, when one .of his forefeet grazed a
black snake which was crossing the road. The
snake at once reared its head and sank its
fangs into the horse's leg,' just above the
knee, at the same time coiling, itself around
the limb. The horse snorted with terror ana
dashed off at a terrible pace. The driver was
almost thrown from his seat, hut managed to
retain it and held a firm grip on the reins.
The road was rough and the wagon was
thrown first to one side'and then to the other
of the thoroughfare, as the maddened horse
tried to shake off the snake in its wild race.
The snake clung to his hold, but the race
was brought to a sudden termination by
a sharp curvein the road. The driver was unable to make the turn, and horse and wagon
dashed into a brush fence. The driver was
thrown over the fence, but fortunately alighted safely on his feet. The horse made desperate efforts to extricate itself, and showed sucn
extreme terror that Coons concluded something uncommon must have caused his fright
and subsequent runaway. Catching the horse
by the bridle he endeavored to calm the animal. While engaged in the task he noticed
the snake, which was still coiled.aroand the
animal's leg. Suddenly ca'tching-the reptile
by the tail he pulled with all his strength. The
tip of the tail came off in his grasp, and the
snake at once uncoiled and fell to the ground.
The horse was finally extricated from his unpleasant position and securely tied until he
had become somewhat quiet. The sni'ke was
killed. It measured four feet six inches in
length.—PottsviUe (Pa.) 3fi?iers' Journal.
Extraordinary Exhibition of Strength.
One of the most remarkable feats ever performed in this section was witnessed in the
high road leading out from this town in the
direction of Shoe Heel, tnis morning. A farmer about seventy years of age, named Meredith Gaddy, drove into town iii an ox-cart after a load^pf corn. He got ten bushels pf this
grain, purchased a few articles for .his wife
and children, took a few drinks of mountain
.whisky, and started for his home, fifteen miles
off. The ox, which was a sorry one, a diminutive specimen of that useful animal,- after getting about live miles from here gavo out and
could nOt be forced to move a step, further I
Nothing daunted, old man Gaddy unyoked the
ox, took him out, and puttjng the yoke on his
own neck drew the loaded cart the Test of the
way home, which was about ten miles, up hill
and down lull. The. determined old fellow
trudged along the highway With his burden,
jeered at by the children, and an object of
general interest to the passers-by. Upon
reaching home Gaddy' carried "his "ldad up to
the front portico.. He remarked to.his wife,
that if "that little ox hadn't been so* darned
obstinate I would have put him inthe cart and
drawn him along home, too." Gaddy is the
father of twenty-one children, of whom there
arc two pairs of twins, Although seventy
years of agC; he is regarded as the most powerful man in this county.—LumbertOH(JST. 0.)
Special to Chicago Times.
Benjamin Disraeli was born in London on
the 21st of December, 18D5. His father was
Isaac Disraeli, known as the author of several
literary works, among them thefiimous "Curiosities of Literature." His mother's maiden
name was Basevi, and she was the daughter of
the architect of that 'name who was killed on
the 18th of October, 1845, by falling from a
tower of Ely Cathedral. He received h"s first
education from his father and private tutors.
Then he studied for the bar in,the office of a
solicitor, who took such a fancy to him that he
proposed to make him heir to his practice.
But notwithstanding his bright prospects, he
tired of the legal profession and devoted himself to literature. At the age of nineteen he
visited Germany, where he remained until
1826, when he returned to England and published his first novel, "Vivian Grey," which
created a sensation and wastranslatedintothe
principal languages of Europe. His great ambition was to obtain a seat in Parliament, but
it was not gratified until his thirty-second
year, when he was chosen as a representative
of the borough of Maidstone .to the first Parliament of the reign of Victoria, having "been
twice defeated when running for High Wycombe, Buckinghamshire, as a Tory-Hadical,
and again when running for Taunton as a Conservative. Up to this time he had published,
besides "Vivian Grey," a satire in one volume, entitled "The Voyage of Captain Popa-
nilla," his second society novel; ''The Young
Duke," a novel called "Contarini Fleming,"
a psychological autobiography, a glittering
oriental romauce; "The Wondrous Tale of
Alroy;" "The Rise of Iskander," founded on
Scanderbeg's revolt against the Turks in the
fifteenth century; the political writings,
" What is He?" "The Revolutionary Epic,"
" The Crisis Examined,"- and "A Vindication
of the English Constitution," embolying his
political views; the sarcastic an.d pungent
articles in the Times signed Runnymede, the
love story, "Henrietta Temple," and the novel
'"Venetia," in which Byron and Shelley figure.
His first Speech in Parliament was a failure,
and was shouted down by the members. He
closed with the folio wins: words: "1 am not
surprised at the reception I have experienced.
I have begun Several times many things, and I
have often succeeded at last. I shall sit down
now, but the time will come wnen you will hear
me." And indeed it Was npt long before he yraa
heard, for in 183D already he made a speech
which was listened to with profound attention.
Soon afterward he published a five-act Spanish
tragedy, the "Count Alarcos." The sameyear
he married the widow of Wyndham Lewis,
to whose sweet and noble character he testified by dedicating one of his novels to his
"perfect wife." He was now looked upon its
the leader of the half literary, half political
party then gaining prominence in England, and
his next novel. "Coningsby; or, the New Generation," gained a wide circulation because it
was regarded a3 a statement of the views of
that party, and because several public men
figured in it as characters. " Sibyl" and "Tan-
cred" were published respectively in 1845 and
1817. Of the Three last-named books he him-
seif says in the preface to his collected works
(18T0i: "They form a trilogy, the object of
which was to delineate the origin and character of English political parties."
His savage attacks on Sir Robert Peel for
his free-trade policy now caused Disraeli to be
looked upon as one of the chief members of
Parliament, and in 1S19 he became the leader
of the Conservative party. During'the same
year he published a biography of his father,
and, in 1852, a memoir of his friend Lord
George Bentinck.
In March, 1852, when Lord Derby was at the
head of the .administration. Disraeli was
made Chancellor of the Exchequer and a
member of the Privy Council. The same
year he* went out of office with Lord Derby,
in December. After Lord Palmerston's down,
fall, in February, 1S58, he again became Chancellor of the Exchequer under Lord Derby^
who was succeeded in June of the same year
by the Palmerston-Russell Cabinet. During
this administration, as well as during the following Russell-Gladstone Ministry, he led the
opposition in the Commons. He again became Chancellor of the Exchequer under
Derby, in J86t>, his chief political action being
his, support of the Reform bill, signed
by the Queen .August 15, 1867, extending the right of suffrage to all householders in a borough and to every person
in a county having a freehold of forty shillings. The Earl of Derby" resigned in
•February, 1868. Disraeli then became Prime
Minister, which post he retained until December, 1S68, when he was succeeded by Gladstone. In 1870 he published "Dothair," which
reached a circulation of 80,000 copies in this
country. The peerage ottered him in 1808 he
declined for himself, but he accepted it for his
wife, who became Viscountess Beaoonsneld.
He became Prime Minister again in February,
IS7I, after the resignation of Gladstone, by
whom he -was again succeeded on the 38th of
April, 1S!"0. Soon afterward he was created
Earl of Bc-aconsfleld. His wife died December
83,187*.
The family Disraeli settled first in Spain and
then in Venice. Benjamin.Disraeli came to
England in 1746. He married in 1765 Sarah
Villareal de Seproot, by whom he had one
child, Isaac Disraeli, the father of Lord Bea-
constield.
, < » ■ ■
A Mother's Love.
—The State Agricultural Department
of North, Carolina has been experinient-
irjgrin.the cultivation of jute with the
most satisfactory results.
A romance in real life is exciting this town.
Last evening a Mrs. "Wilson, about thirty-live
years old, stated to the police that three years
ago, while living in * Galveston, her husband
stole her little girl, then six years old, and
since then she has followed her husband and
daughter through Ohio, Iowa, New Tork and
other States. In one of the Western* States
Ehe came face to face with them in a church,
but at the conclusion of the sendees a bystander, at jgj;he father's direction, held her
fast until he escaped with the child before*
she. had a chance to state her case- Since then
ahe has seen nothing of them, but'had traced
them to North. Adams., and here she asked the
co-operation of the police. It was found that
a child answering the description had been
living with a Mmily at Pownal, Vt., and during the day the Woman received notice that it
would be restored to her last night at the
Richmond House. But several hours of waiting were fruitless. To-day the girl was found
with a family living on Church street, where
she was left yesterday. She did hot recognize
her mother at flrst,.havihg been led to believe
her 'dead, but to-hightthey ate reunited. The
father is supposed to haae found work as an
overseer of a lumber-mill across the line.—
North Adains (MOss.) Special.
—The metric system of weights and
measures is advancing in the United
States. Itwas legalized here in 1866,
and has now been made obligatory by
the Marine Hospital Service and the
United States Coast Survey. The
Boards of Education of several States
have introduced it in the public schools,
while a knowledge of it is required for
admission to most of our colleges. The
multiplicity of measures in continental
Europe—an outgrowth of the feudal
system—-Avas long a barrier to commercial intercourse. Until recently there
were more than one hundred measures
there bearing the name of foot, no two,
of which were alike. -
—The alarm twelve years ago in regard to the exhaustion of English coal
lields led to the adoption of various
economical expedients which, in the
making of pig iron alone, ai'e estimated
to have reduced the consumption by
nearly 5,000,000 tons since 1871.
MISCELLANEOUS.
—There left Ireland last year 96,357
emigrants to other lands.
—In the museum of antiquities unearthed at Pompeii is a bowie-knife of
the American pattern.
—A through sleeper for the City of
Mexico and Acapulco from New York
is among the certainties of the next few
years. . .' - ,
—Mr. Wash. McLean, of the Cincinnati Enquirer, has purchased a lot in
Washington on which he will erect a
handsome mansion, to be presented to
his daughter, the wife of General Hazen,
of the Signal Service.
—An exasperated Pennsylvania farmer, who lost a great number of sheep,
placed some poisoned meat where he
thought it would do the most good.
His rage was considerably soothed next
morning on finding the dead bodies of
eighteen sagacious dogs.
—A Cincinnati Justice of the Peace
decided against a dressmaker in a suit
in which she demanded- twenty-eight
dollars for making up a dress the materials of which cost only seven dollars.
He didn't believe in the rule of four.
—The rural newspapers of Canada
complain of a general exodus of young
men to,the United, States. Towns, in
many cases, lose "all their unmarried
males, which makes it bad for the mar-
riageble females and for the future general prosperity of the community. >
—On a farm in the lower San Pedro
Railway, California, the Apache Chief
Es-kim-in-zin has" settled down, and
employs fourteen Mexicans and 'Indians. He has 150 head of cattle, a number of fine horses, some sheep, wagons
and agricultural implements, and will
go iuto stock-raising and the cultivation
of the soil.
—Two peasants of San Eemo, in the
vicinity of the fashionable gambling hell
at Monte Carlo", sold their entire earthly possessions recently and staked the
proceeds on the green cloth. The
dealer having raked in their last cent,
they went out and threw "themselves
under the wheels of an express train
and were killed.
—The oldest fruifc-orchard in California, according to the Sacramento
Weekly Mirror, is at San Juan, in San
Benito County. The pear trees in it
have grown to great size, haying been
planted about 1775," and still bear an
abundance of fruit of excellent quality.
In the same county are some almond
trees that were planted fifty years ago,
and continue to yield plenty of nuts..
—The largest excess of males over females in our population is in Montana,
where it is 158 per*cent., and the smallest excess is in Mississippi, the per cent-
age being four-tenths. Kentucky's male
population is only two per cent, larger
than her female poptilation. In Arizona
it is 130 per cent, larger. In Nevada
128 per cent, larger. Girls* are needed
badly in all the Western Territories.
—A grim picture .of the late Czar is
given by a Erench writer Who describes
him at a brilliant entertainment smiling
and gayly talking wifclia group of beautiful women. Suddenly his eyes become
fixed, his expression is full of gloom.
Then "he turns hastily to seek some
quiet room reserved for him, and there
protected by an armed guard before
the door he remains for an hour alone
"with the horrifying spectres of his fears
and presentiments.
—An army officer, writing to the
Armij and Navy Begister, says that the
late General Upton was exceedingly popular among the subordinates in the Pacific department. He established rooms
for reading, billiards and refreshment,
was social and pleasant in .his habits
and did not appear like a man who
would ever commit suicide. " He conceived the idea," the writer explains,
" that he had met with some insuperable difficulties in his work upon tactics,
and that mistakes which had been made
might involve a sacrifice of life. This,
acting upon a morbidly sensitive organization, probably rendered so by
temporary ill health, caused the tragic
end."
—They had every element for a brilliant catastrophe in Bradford, Pa., the
other day. Tuna Creek runs through
a thicklv populated part of the city.
AboTYt a "mile from Bradford a 30,000
barrel tank sprang a leak and the oil
ran out at the rate of two barrels a minute. Tuna Creek became literally Oil
Creek. All day and night the police
and the firebrigades-watched this dangerous stream. Unfortunately, although
the oil was in sight, the police could
not ."take it up," or ''run it in," or
even arrest its course. The insurance
companies may thank their stars that
the mischievous small boy and the
diminutive lucifer match did not come
in conjunction just then.
Leadville Types.
Of all American cities Leadville might
be expected to contain a number of what
a novelist called types. A list of candidates for city office'has just been published, with biographical sketches, showing that the typical American as he
seems to foreigners, may certainly be
found m Leadville. The candidate for
Mayor was bornin Michigan. He learned
the "rudiments" at the public schools.
In 1858 he became a printer's devil, and
two years later entered a commercial
college, which he left to go into the
pork-packing business. Next he entered a bank as clerk, and then, in 1870,
he studied medicine, graduating from
BeUevue Hospital, New York." Then
he went to Colorado and practiced medicine. Then he became superintendent
of a mine, and now at"the age of thirty-
six, he is likely to be Mayor of Leadville. One of the candidates for Aldermen is thirty-three years of age. He
was born in Maine, went to Iowa as
soon as he was old enough to .go. He
engaged in several mercantile pursuits,
went to the war; engaged in stock-raising, took an appointment in the Portsmouth navy-yard, went to Chicago and
engaged in the commission business,
and then ran two markets; was burned
out in the Chicago.fife; went to Colora-
rado Springs and*engaged in the hotel
business. From there he went to Leadville when the craze started, and is interested in forty mines and is a large
real-estate owner. If these men are
not typical Amei'icans it is hard to say
where they will be found.—Philadelphia
Times.
.■S*i^W^.i**t.T
SCHOOL Aim CHURCH.'
—More than five per cent, of the revenue of Greece is expended for educi">
tional purposes'—The Unitarians of Cincinnati liave
succeeded in removing a debt of $30,000
from their church property.
—Esther Gavazzi, the venerable Ital- :
ian evangelist, is to go to San Francisco,
during his American tour in behalf of
the Protestant cause in Italy.
—Louis Strauss, a wealthy Israelite
of San .Francisco, left large bequests to *-
Catholic, Protestant and Hebrew charitable institutions in that city.
—Mr. Moses Hopkins, brother "of the * ■
late Mark .Hopkins, has given $50,000. «.
for the endowment of the Golden Gate ;
Academy, at Oakland, Cal..s conditioned
upon an equal sum being raised, by
others. ' ' .*
—-The Burmese Bible is so bulky that •
it cannot conveniently he carried about. «
The vernacular is extremely large. It
is proposed to reduce the size of type
and produce a portable Bible like th6se >
of many of the Indian tongues. . t u
—The Episcopalians atManitou, Col,,,
are rejoicing in completion of their new
church. It cost about $1,500 and is
paid for, with the exception of a matter :•
of about $200. It is near the .famous
Soda Springs, and from its window's
commands a view of Pike's Peak. '■■*'*■■'"
—The first Christian church ever
built by the Chinese for themselves and. ••
by themselves was in Honolulu in.. 1879,
when $5,500 Were collected for the ptir- ' :
pose. The chief subscriber, a Chinese.""
merchant and rice-planter,. who gave
$500, came to the island twenty years
before as a coolie in a slave ship. ' •*
—One of the trustees of the Manchester Free Library, says that a long
experience has * taught him " that
school-boys . or students* who took to
novel reading to any great extent never
made much progress in after life. They
neglected real practical life for a sensually imaginative 'one^ and suffered accordingly from the enervating- infm-. -
ence." »
—Charleston, with a white popula-
of 20,000, has thirty white religious congregations and a church for each. A
visitor to the city estimates the average***
size of the congregations "airless than
500, As a consequence the pastors are ^
poorly, paid and are not particularly,*.
able men. There are seven Episcopal :
churches, four Presbyterian, one Con- " *
gregational, four Methodist, three Bap- '
tist, two. Lutheran, one Unitarian, fiver, r
Roman Catholic, one Hugenpt and two]
Jewish. !'*'"' ',
—The Protestant Episcopal Society* '*"
for the Increase ofwthe ^Ministry, makes
an appeal for money. It needs"j$10,000,, f
between now and the 1st of September. "
It is educating about seventy" young**,
men for ministerial work. Sixty .of the -j
men whom this society has helped were .
last year engaged in fields of labor in
this country,.and thirty-five in foreign.■"
work. The Episcopal ministry is-not so
closely crowded as that of some of the
other denominations and there is more
chance for a young man "who enters it
than among some of the others. But
the. salaries are very small for young ,
men who are beginners.
An Unsympathetic 'World.
■" I b'lieve one great cause of disap-* ..V
pointment ah' unhappiness in dis world *
am de f ack dat we expect too much of '**
our fellow-men," began Brother. Gard- ; .
ner, after calling theXime Kiln Club to
order. "We expect "our hex' doah
naybur to be full o' kindness* when he
may have cause tobe full of bitterness.
If we want a favor of anybody^ we7
neber stop to ask if we have eber granfc-, „
ed dem one, or if it will put deni out to,
grant our request. If we feel good ober
a bit o'luck, we look for all men to
feel good wid us, nebber dreamin'.dat.. .
our good luck may be some one else's*
loss. I tell you, dar am a heap d' sor- "
row, an' bitterness, an'- heart-ache, an',
bad luck, in this world of ours, an'he .
who has little "or none of it am apt to"
f orgit what burdens odder people have *
to b'ar. Let none of us sot' out wid de
ideah dat we shall fin' everybody willirt'" „
to make a cl'ar road furus. Onlessf
you have granted favors, -you have now
business to ax 'em. Onless you haye^
sacrificed you have no* fight to expect *
sacrifices from Mends. * If you haven't-.,
sympathized wid' odders when deir sunshine has departed doan' look fur sympathy when your own s*ky am overcast.,
'".De odder day I heard .Uncle Bo!!y
Williams say dat dis was a cold, nnsym-
pathizih' an' selfish, world." Ipuifa '
few queshuns to him an' foun' dafrhe *
had made no effort - to git acquainted
wid his nayburs. He had nebber put
hisself out to do anyone else a favor. *"
When his naybur1 s child lay dead inde
house Uncle Bolly went off to his work „!
jist de same. I could not fin' dat det
world was beholden to him fur deleasS
self-sacrifice, an' ytt he wraf bitterly :*§
complainin' agin de way de. world used. ..
him. It is jist de same in nine cases
out of ten. De folkeses who do de least"
to make de world pleasant am looking
fur de moas' sunshine. Dp unto others" ^.
as you wisli to be done^ by ah' life will"*-
be one long glad day wid you' and J
yours."—Detroit Free Press. . *
A Learned Justice.
A correspondent sends us tlie folio Wring copy, "verbatim et literatimqiie''' (as "
a lawyer of our acquaintance usftd to
say,) ofJustice's judgment in 7 Wend.*
389: " Samuel Gooper against fretfiQk
Browner. This 25 day of november.
1824. Summons redurned bersonal
served in a plea of-—-of fifty dullows
and issue gind, and the parties was rety-
for trial and witness swearn and gudg-
mand fur the plaintiff on a former gudg- .
mand fur twenty-six dullows and twenty-six cents. Damages $26 26. cofstof
suit 72$26,98. 1 hereby sartify that the
above copy is a correckt .and true copy
of my pook. Guveii iindtepmy hand at
seal at Danubs this 18, day of January, :<
1825."t—Albany Law Journal;
-^An enterprising, manufacturer^ of.
optical instruments in Berlin shows' his
appreciation of the wide-s"prea^diexcrte-:'
ment about infected Work in Germany
by advertisina; microscopes, for sale at a
a popular price, with specimens o*fk tri- *|
chihie prepared for examination,'and^
full directions for dete'etihg the presence) •*
of parasites in meat of any kind. .;...-.-, »
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Object Description
| Title | 1881-04-28; Saline Observer |
| Date | 1881-04-28 |
| Publisher | LeBaron & Nissly |
| Description | An issue of the Saline, Michigan newspaper. Published weekly. Began publication in 1880. No longer published. |
| Subject/Keywords | Saline (Mich.) - Newspapers; Washtenaw County (Mich.) - Newspapers; |
| Copyright Permission | This material is in the public domain. |
| Type | Newspaper |
| Format | JPG/JPEG |
| Language | English |
Description
| Title | 1881-04-28; Saline Observer |
| Date | 1881-04-28 |
| Publisher | LeBaron & Nissly |
| Description | An issue of the Saline, Michigan newspaper. Published weekly. Began publication in 1880. No longer published. |
| Subject/Keywords | Saline (Mich.) - Newspapers; Washtenaw County (Mich.) - Newspapers; |
| Copyright Permission | This material is in the public domain. |
| Type | Newspaper |
| Format | JPG/JPEG |
| Language | English |
| Transcript |
Wr* "*> Nepiciwe 0BDRTF0B3I "ame Time oa 10% .-„e, 1?r^.^.—«>-w,Kr*""r»>t. J "*S,»t"s!**jera |
