The Cleveland Leader and Morning Herald from Cleveland, Ohio (2024)

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The Cleveland Leader and Morning Heraldi

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Cleveland, Ohio

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2

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tj'SPECIAE NOTICES Scrofula Cured by Bra nd reth's Pills penetrate the whole nasi of bloodrcausiogjtlie expulsion of Impurities! The body feels relieved from a single dose what then may be expected from twenty By continuing their use the whole of the blood In time? becomes pnfi lled and the body reconstructed from good mate rial and a new lease of life secure 2 SItfG Stb'C Match 151S3 pM 15 KA Sin My daughter Alli thirteen years O1L has been completely cured of that horrlUe dis ease Scrofltla which for years rendered Ule a tor ment after all medicines arid many physicians had been tried and failed 1 commenced giving her your pills bhe took them almost every day for three months constantly Improving bbe has now en tirely recovered yours truly JArTr DANIEL luther J11ON llJlRAKPRimr a Jyis eod oow A Standard SUCH ARTICLE IS VENETIAN L1n' it lias stood before the public for years and has never railed giving satisfaction in a single instance Every drop of this valuable compouml Is mixed by Dr Tobias himself therefore it cau al ways be relied upon It Is warranted superior to any otlier or thecure of CJuoulq fKUeumatlnu Toothache Headache bore Throat Vomiting' rosted aPeet Humps" CWnK Burns Cuts Sickness insect blings sprains Cholera Chile Spaltus Dysentery Bruises Colds Coughs py Sores Swellings "Pains in the Limbs Back su4 Chest There Isxio medicine in the that stands feiore on its owp morits'tliati the 'Venetian Thousands of Certificates can bescej at the office attesting to Its rare virtues Sold by all Drugf Sts and Storekeepers throueh int the United States 5U is and one ivllr per bottle Depot 10 Park New York jyi Veod eow Eternal Vigilance Is j' price of aith as well as of liberty Be on your lard against pels onons hair CRISTADORO'S EXCELSIOR BAIR DIE (s the only onethat has striod the test of chemical analysis At the store of the proprietor 6 Aslur House New York may be seen the certificate of that able analytical chemist pnoEssoit cniLTox testifying that IV contains Irgredk nt on the other hand in tbeJonrnl ruayjx found thf stap iricnt that tiiereare upwards thirty poisonous hair dyes before tliepubde Choose sae auq sure uae CliRISTADOKO'ri HAIR PKEriKK VAT1 VE as a dressing acts chatjQon the Hair after Lhe ingTrylt jyl3 eod eow 'Tlie Imperishable Perfume As a rule tbejfuuics yy to use have uopermancy 4n hour or two after their use there is no trace of perfume left How different Is the result succrct ng the use of MURRAY A LAN LORIDA WATER Days after its application fhe handkerchief exhales a niost delightful delicate and agreeable fragrance j14 3Q eod Hair Dye This splendid Hair Dye is the best In the world the only true and perfect Dye harmless reliable Instantaneous: no disappointment no ridiculous tints remedies the ill effects of bad dyes invigorates and leaves the Hair soft and beautiful black ok brown Sold fy all Druggist and Perfumers and properly apphadt Wig actory No 16 Bond ur? New YbCiu JtC Well Placed Eppays for Yapng Men on the happiness of well placed affection early life and the propriety of early Marriage as a protection against the fearful abuses aud socia evils of the day bent free in sealed envelopes Ad dress HOWARD ASSOCIATION Box Phila delphia Pa my27 37 Ar MANHOOD jHCcnow Lost How Restored I JuiljniiAisiscl a Mjtti tnwjooc Brice 8 ctmt A LECTURE ON THE NATURAL TREAT MENT and Radical Cure of Spermatorrhea ot Seminal Weakness Involuntary Emissions Sex ual Debility and Impedimenta to Marriage genually Nervousness Consumption Jtpfieiwv 4 its Iteauii and Riiysicst JucapacUy vtaiUtu from Salt Abuse St byutobt Culverwell author of the Green Boon toThouiaudi of Sent under seal in a plain' envelope 'to any ad dress postpaid on receipt of six cents or two postage stamps by CHAS KLINE A CO lf Bowery New York Postofice box 4J3J AUo Dr Cuivet AiarJag'e price Kc my 3:268 daw" iti mu i LEADER PRINTING COMPANY I OICIAL PAPER THE CITY tem senes pulsations mrougu a tune uicu pulsations are inadexo work upont he re ceiving instrument with au effect corre PolLsi Dili ty I dAtk' POLITICALS DRY COOPS ra I a Cresari ment of Hpwer Higbee 1 In order to close out all SUMMER GOODS Now offer Plaid Colored OPTICIANS i Iw (not even in one of Blind Itching are afflicted'thou A Rocherter Romance COAL White Colored Duck Vests I a Mea I (Successor to James Jb Co) IJ dividual or Society may donate funds to tainment was another important feature of leudovt specific ProfeMsurshtp xnious the dj Mr Su wart took for Jjjs Ujene literest from ths (JateofeachM deposit ccm ptrtHuledwtik ''iii I fiis SAVINGS i LOAN ASSOGIAT1ON oot of Swiorw ATWATER BU1LDIN3 WADE Pres CW LEPPKR Treasurer A vew valve slide has been invented bv a Hudson man which it is said will greatly increase the power of locomotive It will draw an ordinary passenger train at the rate of eighty miles an hour and save jweaty per cent la fuel au The bill for the reduction ot the5 tRx? ft nd the tariff contained a section repealing the tonnage tax on vessels engaged in the coasting trade ami fisheries and the special internal rev enue tax on boats barges and fiats It wa supposed that this provision did not go into effect until the first of Oc tober But this la a mistake The treasury department has issued a cir cular announcing that it should have gone into effect on the fourteenth of July and that the tax could" not be legally exacted until after that date The circular also that the ton nage tax collected since that time should be refunded The music furnished by a fine glee club of male and female students assisted by the fine band of Professor Leland was one of the leading features of the entertainment and the evening was on the whole one which nd one could well help enjoying TUB ISJlTUL ADDRESS delivered by Hon I Stewart of Balti more at the close of the afternoon enter S1 HYMAN fitkCO Corner Superior Bt Sr Public Square iyia Celebrated Spectacles Ts Our Present Jal! Insecure The gentlemen Who are urging "the necessity of constructing a new jail and ot buying land at fancy prices for the purpose of locating it claim that the present jail is insecure The fact that so far as we are a ware no person has ever broken through the Jail and es caped is a sutlicieiit answer to this ar gument As a matter of fact we be lieve that our present jail is more se cure than nine out of ten in the state No person could ever workliis way un discovered through walls Jf there i any insecurity it Is in the gratings ot the windows and doors and this could readily be amended at very slight expense If necessary a watchman could be employed in the interior of the jail day and jiight Thia would be cheaper than putting up a new jail The argument that the present jail Is insecure will not gaunt for much in view of these facts Late 'tv Na cartoon lit the last'numbcr of on the affect of pro claiming infallibiJy tells the story with unsurpassed force 'TJ1C is rep resented sitting on the limb )fa tree whose trunk is marked Nineteenth Century Busily engaged in sawiug ott" the limb between himself aud the trunk the venerable functionary ia about falling to a piece of ground label led the NIiddle Ages The most elab orate comment could not so effectually illustrate the result of the per sistent devotion to hi favorite sognia Nast has also" furnished a very com ical cartoon to IT Hazaar illus trative of the 'declaration of the tele graph that theUmperor would take the field in person with the Prince Imperial attached to his' staff The Hmperor is represented beforea look waxing his with a box labelled war pain the bureau before him The Prince is seated in a chair dressed In full uniform pulling on a boot about as big as lie is while the Empress is wiping his nose carefully and lustily' Nast is alive to all the ludicrous elements of the situa tion il Cor Seneca A Cliamplaln stx Dealers will find it to their advantage to call and see our new styles of UNITED STATES ORGANS AND MELODEONS before purchasing elsewhere Band fnr rf TJip tftcrnoon began promptly aipne jtpd were(c)prlpge'l with out disturbance to the jflbse jt)f" the ejer gjsej it ja ppt too mgeh to say that they Wbrp tjm ftpst py ef fy fry a class in this college tj vhole they haye OBERLIN Exhibition ot the Senior Preparatory lug both legs cut og" by a mowing machine but try every way he knew how he was only able to exist boyt four froijrs The absent minded lady on record lives at Aiattawan bhe recently put her baby tJ SOftk in a tuli filter carefully ln tn the prsllp find I This Co nfAny pre senu nil miaranlovc fTlO vtntn and fr a capital oT ONE MILLiONjith the Indi vidn i liability of Jere (etxiracingthe sub utantift! men CivveiRnfur axiotbar tail lion making a tots! i i I Security of $2000006 teat Savings Danko Progress of a topic well nigh exhaustless and made from it one of the most stirring and eloquent discourses which we have listened to for months There was a very large attendance of the old students of Mount Union who came up as alumni always do with hearts full of love for the old college halls full of rever ence for the familiar faces of the faculty' and warm with pride that their Alma'Mater had added another to the years of her hon orable useful life ji v(Sbrislin July 27 th 1870 Dear Leader: Those who come to un dergo all the pleasure and pains all the re unions and anniversaries and the oppres sive heat that i by the logic of probabil ities so severe an au attendant upon them that It should be noticed upon tlie pro gramme" take particular interest In the Senior Preparatory Exhibition or here are young men with eager faces just Step ping ot er the charmed line into that mys tical land which they liave seen 'Afar of! from tops ot tbeireastles in Spain And where is the old boy or the old girl I use theworda in no irreverent sense Dbar Leader but tenderly thankfully of those Old bodies that are still overflowing with young those pearls that may be frayed and scratched by the servfce they have done but are still brimful of light at the heart Adhere I say is the old boy or the old girl that does not love to seethe enthusiasm of these young boys and That is per haps why we go to the Senior Preparatory Exhibition and with those not personally interested in the speakers it is perhaps thelreason or these young men tell us nothing new nor do they offer us any charming ityle of oratory that would repay us for the time spent in listening to them We do not expect it In fact we go in spite of the oratory and old tnoughts so often before harped upon by other senior jreparatorys to look at the confidence In their faces the light in their eyes as they cross the threshold of college lite i To one who has become dyspeptic" who begins to doubt hopes realized in this world of success this enthusiasm is like a glass of sparkling wine and the old croaker comes away just a little better for a time because he has bein' reminded that ho was once just as coniidmt just as firm a believer in truth ere he had learned' to croak There are twenty eight gentlemen and two ladies in the ass that comes into col lege this year Lt is not the finest class that ever stood at the door ami knocked nor the smartest If it is members are to be pitied for every senior preparatoryclas withih thq recollection of your correspon dent lias been far superior to any that have preceded it and what a degree of fineness or of smartness must the poor fellows stag ger under But they are probably like all the senior preparatory classes that have gone before them no stronger no weaker but just as strong just as weak They have their drones and their workers as has every hive If should say that out of these "Syorkers were chosen the eight orators to Htepaj I would slate the thing as it ought to be' Out pefbaps not as it is for wire pulling will sometimes do more in this world than merit But it i to be pre sumed that the majority at least of those elected for senior pteparatory5 honors de serve the place The chosen eight gave us yesterday in irst church the following i ORDER 1 1 O3r the Janus open? Ji Painter of Weymouth Tha KrgUsh pnima a rV Music Night Out the Stars A Ewalt it Howland The Noeda of Our Age Wood of Brownsville Pa A Music and Its real Masters Kooue of Sulphur Springs The Contest of Agee Hunsberger of Inland Music OkatioX Church Architecture Wolcott of Cleveland Trials that irst Com A Swing of Bethel 4J Music BrvEnrcnox The merit of the Salutatory was that it was fit for its purpose but it was very teuces were broken without regard to sense or punctuation just where the speaker de sired to take breath This fault is so com monin Oberlin one feels it his duty always to notice it A The oration English was in a dramatic air which it is sad To see iu a young man Be natural and sim ple at 'Jeajt yhen young for mannerisms gome all too soon and It ia sorrowful to see the tone ami action of worn out axhorter in a suppje youth The third speaker marred his oration by imperfect enunciation The chief fault was a harshness ot voice asit came through teeth not sufficiently patted as was natural Iroin the subject the oration was a little like the word but the shortest way to say what 1 mean Air Wood used a conversational tone" jyljieh pleased the ear and recited an ora tion which ia taajterwc would rank next to the salutatory and valedictory' or the third upon the list in point of merit The fifth speaker was troubled with an un pleasant tone which greatly lessened the force ot his words nnd prevented a Tull en joyment of the oration Contest of bore marks of care ful thought ut the best oration loses half of its effect if the speaker forgets' and is obliged to stand before bis auditors dnmb Mr oration was a plea for just a little ornamentation in our churches and in matter was good Air was hurried or embarrassed and for the first two or three minutes divided his sentences badly 1 1 is good to see sueli subjects taking the place of the high sounding ones that are too common at college anniversaries The most difficult thing in the world is to praise a pan tg his face before a crowd and do it decently and jn order Iwiehaye never seen it done yet but that first was a very good specimen of a valedictory The pleasant words of parting were not too sentimental and the allusions jto teachers withip the biynnda of good tasteThat is if th'cre be any good taste In the idea of a vale dictory at all jn so far as it oilers a man publip pyaise as a manifestation of tender Jegarff ap4 for ini Let the pupils tell it to the teacher byt jp hfg own room then "ws n)eao NJinctliiDg Alany an instructor as he tening to the praises of himself with au belf consclounes manifest to the throng would gladly abolish the inucii abused vale dictory Carl MOUNT UNION COLLEGE Conimenceiuenf History of the College Its Origin and jta at Commencement A Literary A fSyc cessful Year Special Correspondence of Cleveland Lbadkr) Alliance July 28 Two miles southwest of this busy aud growing town and ierowning with its group of Quiet shady lawns and cottages theLigbest summit in Ohio lies the little collegetown of There is nothing there that does not in some more or Jess remote way pertain 'to the college and" crowds of people pass along the railroads which center here or eyen live within fiftyi miles of the place without knowing thateh a village as Aiount Union exists That there aT very many who do know of it however and feel a blfitlipg In terest in its welfare is amply this commencement week ef which has seen the culmination Before "entering upon an account ot the exercises a brief sketch ot Afount Union College its HISTORY" and a glance at its present condition and prospects may be appropriate The insti tution had its birth in the mere accident of a poor student of Allegheny College "being drawn hither during the autumn vacation in 1M6 by the illness of a risterla While awaiting the progress of her disease he was besought to open a subscription school with the proceeds of which he was enabled to further make his way in college Other vacations came and the "student now a junior came to resume his teachings" A select bchoot was the result and as it grew beyond the capacity of a single teacher classmates of the original founder came to add their assis tance to the work Here they have re malned ever since here they have given the work of their livesj calling round them from time to time new brains 4and hands to assist in their constantly growing task un til we find here to day a fully organized college with a faculty of fourteen tutors professors and lecturers Endowed chairs and graduating i thfs year twenty eight students in its acsdetnfe department and twenty five in the scientific The insti tutlon passed through all the 'grades of select school semipary and Nor mal school finally' fin obtain ing a charter and entering fully upon iu new and larger field of useful nens Its charter provides that its object shall be to acquire and supply the means of a liberal and practical education to persons of both sexes irrespective of their religious orpolitical opinions that Its: trustees are the legal agents ot the college to transact in its corporate name the business of the college and are to confer no degrees unless the persons receiving them are first recom mended by the faculty that the faculty shall possess and exert the requisite author Jtyto establish and administer all the neces sary regulations for the Internal government of thecoliege pertaining Jto students that the 'college shall be conducted in accordance with the principles oft he Christian as revealed in the Bible that the literary tfocieties1 or any other organization com posed of stpdenu shall be under the supervi sion of the college authorities that moneys dr property shall be fi tn fully and safely appropriated by the Board to the respective purposes for which they were: donated or procured witboutinfringing upon tijeprjn cipal of any endowment'fund that any in Current Topids of the Long Branch girls will not dance in the same set with Jimphisque' Consequently his bowed and he rest nights Ona Kansas City gentlcmin cast some aspersions ujxrn the veracity of a friend and the latter inCicted forty eight carefully se lected stabs ujion him and then rested his case it I a Dr Mary "Walker complains that after looking at every face in a railroad car In Tkompson (L) Carrollton Musk CAstr (A) Te Crumb Gatherer LizrieTorrry (R) Philadelphia Pa OrcJietlrOu IdicaL TbeLInnjran Marne Cox wblOD Choir (A) Rwlutlon: The SacrtHgfotu MiteheU (K) New hilaSelptxlau BsnL 1 Recitation The A Orr IU) eat ewton Pa Orciesira Loa Blackman (K Parkman Chow (L R) other provisions pertaining to the practical manftgement of the institution Thue or ganized Mount Union has achieved a steady constantly growing success and may be now justly said to be in a more promising condition than everbefore Ite average at tedance during the past year has been con siderably more than two hundred its re ceipts from tuitions alone more than eleven thousand dollars and its financial condition is easy independent and secure from mis haps of any kind Its first commencement tnnlrplarH nnlhe IGth of June ISAS during which month the College year closed until the new schedule of oui: TERMS was adopted brings commence ment week Into midsummer This change was made for the especial behoof of the large class of students whose necessities oblige them to devote three or four months of the year to the work of teaching It seemed necessary to provide that such stu dents eould teach during the winter with out being thrown back a term In their col Jegej course: and the new schedule was therefore so arranged that thero should be four terms during the i three of spring summer and autumn should constitute the regular col lege year and the fourth or winter term should be of an elective character in which the remaining might go on with their course or review and bring up outside studies which hod 1 een previously neglected The plan has proved a complete success and has added greatly to the use fulness of the college 1 (COMMENCEMENT WEEK which began with the Bacchalaureate ser mon i on Sunday last has been continued through the intervening days by the meeU ings of trustees and alumni and the annual address to its culmination Jn the regular commencement exercises of to day There i being a large senior class with a prospectl of heated weather and a large crowd ar rangements were 'made in a fine grove near the 'college where ample seats and a large platform were provided with the additional provision that a grand basket picnic should be provided at noon for nor the draperies of attendant femininity bore so threatening an aspect that at the hour of assembling the grove was deemed too risky and the fine'large college hall ale ready prepared for the literary contest of the evening was resorted to and here with every seat and aisle filled with an eager crowd the exercises began At ten the sun having come out most propitiously and the crowd becoming clamorous for ad mission the exercises were adjourned to the seats in the grove and all went on happily until noon when another dark cloud angry with thunder came looming up from the causing an immediate juspjnion gf exercises and a general I rrct I Cru oo A Azl 1 AfVA 1 1 AV ft rtrt ha 1 tin nil vrac UDd Oimoil vuo VUUCkL line triJVf suo JUUVD This is taking i a high brought and in the chapel the museum the library and the recitation rooms was Arab Toilets (rom All the 'Year Round JI Arab good manners require that a man shall be decently dressed and pious in everv action of his Hie He to begin with be careful in all the ablutions required bv his religion he must have his head shaved 'once a week keep his beard not cut but vuciuuy inunieu auu tnat to a point he must keep also his moustaches clipped to the level of bls upperjip except at the corners so that he may not soil his dress in eating and he must not omit to keep his nail in good order never biting thATn hnt norin ihrm 1 1 uxitiA! vAktauiiy ana even the parings are not to be thrown carelessly away but they must be thrown into the fire or buried in the earth for the nails are in fact sacred according to the Arab suoer sittion Jaw A Rochester paper tells a romantic story of a young dressmaker who became infatu ated with a young murwithout his "knowl pdge To make herself worthy of him she look to study and after a severe course of rench I taUan and piano during which she worked al her occupation and onlv slept three ffiotiro out of the twenty four the young man married another girlauThe blow was too much for the young lady's reason and she is now an inmate of an in sane asylum" 4 jailila at The second son of the King of Portugal Alfonso Henri Napoleon Louiaa Alcantara Charles ILumbert Amedeu er dinand Antonio Alichael ltaphaei GabHelJ GozagaNavier rancisco nan A guste uha Volfando Ignacius Savole Bourbon saxe Coburg et GothaDuke of Oporto who is now five years of age is spoken of os a candidate for the Spanish tUryae Scared His Whisky A few days ago a well to do citizen of New Orleans entered a drug store near his resi dence and seeing a bottle of whisky near the water cooler he proceeded to take a drink The druggist (an old friend by the way) saw him trom an inner room and sauntering leisurely into the store said to his clerk: be very careful about the whisky I have just put some corrosive sublimate intn it as a preparation for a ewol len cried the excited citi zen his face turning pale and his eyes al most protruding from their sockets did you say taking it up he repeated just been medicated for a rllnuln A Mnv a Livutai puipvev UU L0U the citizen ids knees bending under him until he fell helpless on the floor have just drank some of "it and al ready I felt the fiery stuff burning me say so" cried the druggist in well feigned surprise got here plied if got a stomach pump hurry and putit to work oh I'm suffering and his body shook and trem bled as if iu the extremity of anguish you feel able to sit he demanded indignantly do you take me for? Do you think I can sit up with a cartload of corrosive and the poor fellow looked atrif he were ready to expire inally he was told that the mat ter was a jest He straightened up and looking into the laughing faces around him saw that he had been imposed on I cn mow KA a 11 a JV 4 1 AA4AJ VC BU UUh A BUVUiU have never found it out If the liquor you make your prescriptions with! am not surprised that so many patients and with thisretort be was content to acknowl edge himself flow Sixty pae Bottles of Champagae Were Won The following little incident comes from Saratoga: fc A young gentleman who had never made a public display ot his pedestrian riowers last week rode out with Warren Lelazxi to Caleb Mitchell's newhotel and race track near Saratoga The subject of the visit was to see Mr Alitchel 's fast horses but unex pectedly there was talk about fast walking Mr Leland insisted that no one who was not a professional pedestrian could walk a half mile In less than four minutes and as th yc gentleman wh had ridden out with him had said that he could walk a half mile in time that Air Leianu turned to him and said be would give him a bottle of champagne for every second he might eave on the specified time for making the half mile walk The young man walked and Mr Leland Joat sixty one bottle ot eham i i the best aktificial help to HUMAf SIGHT EVER INVENTED Which can only bo obtained at the old establhbed and well known Optical Inftitnte of Mr Solomon son 130 Superior street under the American Erench Artificial Eyea inserted without pain jr Deware of travelers claiming to be Mr Sc fimnnann ow nfa irronf MpO renchhiChambrey Ginghams 4j 1 At twelve and a half cents Striped igured and 'tb Plain i tv I tiRKJi 7 HOl Iu) Jicu'I'IU I intll Offer Linen Printed Lawns at: 25 cent ayard whjch Is just half value for thciq Printed Piques at 25cents price piain and Checked Lenos at 12X cents a yard and Checked Lb le Grenadines at 25 cents and an other Dress Goods will be told conforming with the above rates at about oneialf their value Onr Black Grenadines and Hemanis have been reducedin price and a better opportunity to pro cure these fabrics at such Jow prices has never been presented In this city i The White Corded Marseilles at 25 cents for which many of our customers have been waiting have been received! "1 TELEGRAPHY An Atmospheric Telegraph Designed to Kiva! the Electric rom the London Telegraph nly 12 A novel kind of telegraph tlie inyen tloci ofUSignor Guattari an Italian was sBbniit ted to the inspection of a party of seimnific gentleman yesterday at a private hdtie it Glouster street Warwick square The inf ventor aims at obtaining the use of atmos pheric power the same or better results than those obtained by electric and magnetic forces To this enil he charges a reservoir with compressed air and Jjy the operation of valves worked the same manner those ue in the ordlnarf telegraphfeyfc tpm nnlj'itinn thrniifrii a tube which Bltnik in onAnthraeite NaUnle vile filaaailloii Brier Hill jv bnrKlt Nut Slack aud co*ke ftso GENUINE BLUE CHIPPEWA 141 SCEXIOIi ST eTJp WKDDaLLVVS 1 MANCTACTUBER of 3JMPROVED WIRE ENCES Of all Stees suitable for Parks Graves Buildings 320 Ibley street Cleveland Uilo Sold at one dollar per foot These ences irtAV be seen in all parte of the city aud if the cheapest fence in nsc and when the wood work the Hflmp Urpran Hft naaA fM a CLONIM'OliTSALE bniimh'I White Goods I Jj I STRIPED JACONET jaconetejj 1 A PLAID JACONET iff it imil 11 PLAID SOT INJSII JACONET PLAIN NAINSOOIC BROCADE NAINSOOK NAINSOOK PLAID NAINSOOK SATIN CHECK SWISSy'1 PLAIN WHITE yiqUREDANDDOTTJ) SSi ORQANDIESN strife QRd Andies 1PLAIN ORO ANDIESr nd I riB1: INDIA TWllL LONG CLOTH UA TR CORD CAMBRIC CAMBRIC 5'kUWa Jiwol 5 4 dsoft inish cambric i CAMBRIC L0NU CLOTHE m5 WHITE MJBALIA si VICTORIA LAWNis TUCKED PUED MUSLINS WHITE COLORED TARLETONS 1) C01M11T CO convent! JL A Republican Conventionwill ba held in the City of CLEVELAND on the 30lhdayof JULY IfflO al 10K o'clock A for the purpose ofsulcctiug nineteen delegates to represent the Republicans off the County tn the Stete Conven tion to be heldMn Columbus August 10th lb 0 That each Ward nnd Township is entitled to dele mtcs thhtrthe mectiugto select them wilrbe beld'in each Ward and st the usual place of holding electioift at hah past VVednAedav July 2th lb0 JteWill be rreUe 5 IlUSsLL Chairman HuirAN aiATrsScerbtary Clev rn July IStlt ISTtr ivl 2o there was here to day on this college plat form a full and satisfactory answer to the vexed question whether better future to which we all look forward shall grant a collegiate education to women The full programme was as follows: ANTHEM ATBB Music flreek Mnrdock Newark Jj jyaljenljajgh Natrona The Ajnericsn Star in Philosophical rseverance is Armstrong (Sc) North Bentou Music What We Tillie Davidson (Sc) MLPnin I Ltye for a A 'gJcouer (CL) Wells yjlle Jepplc SI Ruller jUc) Bea 'fhe oundation Gallagher (Sc) facey ville0 Musts The Golden Mary Hambleton (So) lush Ing The Moming Holtz (Sc) air view Hamb'rton (Sc) lushing j'hcOpeu Hueston (Cl) orest i fothe John Jordan (Sc) Bedford I IJglit O' Judd (Sc) ML I nionO Human KalleubadghCl Natrona Pa Kindness an Element of it Wilson(Sc) Mapleton Music flics ry of Political Kenne dy (Sc) Orangiwilte (L Thfi Man for the I ijf Kjrjjey (Cl) Can Tolerance of I) Lewis (Sc) Au rora Study of Murdock (Cl) NewarkMo Music Beilna Lctters Oration: Conservation ot Niesz (Sc) Canton internal stui A Orr (CL) West Newton Pa Struggles ior Roach (Sc) Lirnau yille Liberal Tendencies of the Age Criss (CL) AuamkiUe IV Ya ifusjc A btijtzman ISC) Smithville Latter Day I JL Taggart (Sc) Woos ter Thyscff a If Weaver (Sq) Eudora fl yv Yoke Sc) Canton I Unity of Hlfijcp Bovyefs It jy'ilsqn fCJ)lliiriiuro Ifusie ValedictoryB (CJ) Maband a Music BACCZLAVRE ATE BY THE mESimcrf Cvnfemng Degrees I BBXDICTI0X If thereis anything in a Mount Union commencement more absorbing than the commencement itself it is the 1 LITKRARY CONTEST which takes place on the evening of com mencement day between the Linnean and Bepublican literary societies which togeth er eomprtsqall the leading talentof the col lege The exercises are competitive only in being equally divided between the members of the two societies Each prepares with great care and does his very best It remain ing with tlucaudience to decide who of the performers or which of the societies wins the honors The evening's performance has been in all re jiects a capital success and gives the visitor a still higher opinion of the scholarship of Mount Union than could be derived from the exercises of today The programme was as follows: Music Choir A fi A) RXTtn 1 etrehestns I Josie Hillennau (L) ML Union Ob'o Choir A) Jacol (R) New Philadelphia 1 'MusicoOrdustm Oration: The Entire A Gallagher (1) Laceyville Choir (R) Debate: Resotwd That the reading of the Bible In the public schools should not be established by law Affiratlve James McCIoy (IL) West Hebron proposed A correspondent sends us the fbBow i To the Editor of Lbadkr would be greatly obliged if you inform me what per ceatage is paid to County Commissionero ou money's expended by them? Are any of the Commissioners interested in stone quarries Not to put too fine a point upon it these queries have special reference to the pro posed new jail CUBlUdlTY answer to the first query we will say that the County Commissioners re ceive no per ceutage uon money ex pended by them They are paid a nominal salary we believe three hun dred dollars a year As regard the second question we can give no answer whatever It is but jtisty however to say that "wo do not believe mat any im proper or Interested motives have in ffuenccd the CommiRsloners in their action on this subject They have taken a different view of the question than that taken by ns but we are sure that they are willing to be inffuenced by popular opinion on the Subject and to give that opinion a full expression It is stated that the war department! nas Deen uiugvxuijr North Carolina troubles and finds that ihe accounts from that state have not been exaggerated The departmenj I however is almost powerless to act owing to the fact that they can only interfere In special cases when called upon by the state authorities ami also because the outrages and mur ders occur at night and the oll'enders are thus enabled to easily place them selves out of reach before help can be obtained from the troops It is well known that the courts only give Holden a half support and this fact causes much trouble and discouragement jn the Stttepts to enforce the laws Ac cording td reports from army officers Kirk the militia cdlonpl has undoubt edly been excessively severe in hie at tempts to bring to punishment the Ku Klux assassins and midnight Thugs and in carrying out the orders of Gov Holden but such rimes as have late ly committed in North Carolina canndt be wittl much se verity The proclamation of the rench gov ernment announcing the sonrsc which itwill pursue toward neutrals aud neu tral trade iu the present war will allay the apprehensions of those persons who have telegraphed across the Atlantic that rance would disregard the dec laration of Paris She abides strictly by that compact Indeed no other course was open to her since she would have provoked the hostility of Great Britain Dussia and the oflicr great powers by violating that fatuous treatyAlthough the rench government still refines fo follow therenlightened exam ple of Prussia 7 exempting from seiz Ulto Oil pUjatO OUS UIU XC one concession in extending heppovj slons of the treaty of to America and Spain Although those EtntftS have not acceded to the treaty and can claim notw of its benefits the Emperor will make nd discrimination against them ZThe Bepnblicans have completed their nominations of Congressmen in Maine and they are as follows: irst District John Lynch of Portland Seen ml rye of Lewiston Third James Blaine of Augusta ourth John A Peters of Bangor ifth Eugene Hale of Ellsworth Deraoerats have not nominated and in several of the districts they will hardly take the trouble In only one of these districts can they have auy hoje of sue eeu A bitter opposition is manifested to Mr Lynch in the irst 'District and many Depubijcans threaten to support anothea candidate There can be no doubt that his vote will be redwmd from that of ISOS when he received li71 votes to lt5CU for Charles A Shaw of Saeo' As he cannot afford a serious defection tlie Democrats are casting about them for a popular can didate who can draw away the dissat isfied Republicans With Which Side ShouldTwe Sympa thize! rom the Nation July 2L There could hardly be a more striking: il luKtratioir ot the shallowness of our civilize tion than the fact that one of the foremost nations in the world should at this moment be placing its blood and treasure at the dis posal of a Bonaparte of all men in the world to carry eu a jvari of succession The reappearance of a Bonaparte on the throne of rance was an express assertion and vindication on his part and on that of the nation of twodoctrines viz: that every nation has a right to choose anybodjt il pleases for sovereign and that no choice it can make gives any other good reason for either fear or complaint The will of the people oeing the supreme law the blood or antecedents ot the person it chooses for its chief could nut we were told ailed its foreign policy it was only Bourbons and other im becile adherents Of divine right and of the theory of royal ownership of who would see iu family alliances any necessary disturbance of International relations 1 he other powers of Europe frankly accepted this preaching in Krol They remained perfectly tranquil while the hesui of a fam ily wnieh had been proscribed by the pub lic law as dangerous to its peace put him self on the throne of rance by a bloody revolution and admitted that if ranee was satisfied nobody qlse had any right to com plain It is this man who Is now plunging into jtn armed conflict first of all in demal of the right of the Spanish people to choose their king and secondly In' assertion ot the old monarchical theory that the foreign policy of governments is regulated by the blood relationships of its sovereigns in short we are witnessing in the nineteenth century a war of sucpciion in whicluthe principal ac tor is an elected delator Tlie week endeavored wih a good deal of ingenuity to show that so far as any claim to the sympathy of the Ameri can people is concerned is on no better jootiPS than rance owing to the despotic Lemper and thoroughly feudal ante cedents of the reigning king But it must not be forgotten that he has inherjted both bis temper and hia pobltiun and tuat lie is a very old man to whose vagaries the rus 1 siau people submit partly because they en tertain a traditional aflection for his house and partly his reign must at best be short In fact he is bkt rpliQ pf the old regime the last surviving monaiuh whe believes in the Divine origin of his own au thority His heir is a liberal and if not a in our sense of the word is suiliciently so i for 11 the purposes of Prussian progress which if not rapid IS one of the surest and strongest things the modern world has to show Nothing else certainly has ottered Europe thus rar so comfortable an escape frqipjeudalisiD noth ing else has been so successful in populariz ing the government while upholding tha claims of knowledge and skill to the control of human attairs and in stimulating industry without creating a vast proletariat Ihe arrogance of the Prussians there is no use deny ing and the foreign policy of Bismarck has certainly kesn thoroughly unscnipulous but this unscru5ulJu6nes has ppen dis plaved iu the execution of schemes to which every lover of his kind must wish success in the deliverance of a great people from being the prey of desnloablo and voracious prince kings andxin the infusion of ac tivity largeness of aim and noble ambition into their national life King William and his minister will pass away: Tho work of their hands will last and the 1 russia they have aggrandized must certainly to ng re main that community of the Old World to which those who are interested in the im provement of human character through politicabiaition Wil wth There is no enemy staiiuing armif too nobody who feels thfe magnitude of the evils which these vast Isolated hordes of idle men inftict Ifie world but must wish that wnen ftn composed as the Prussian army largely is takes the field In a good cause victory may perch on its banners army in whose ranks plowmen fresh from the field fresh from their professors fresh from their 12 der must always be an object' aVtopatny to those of whatever countrywho look for ward to the time when the soldjerwillnevei be anythlng plse tiian an armed man defend ing his home andfeust wherever it 3 lied thunders' llyiqakd the spYiad oCjpsar ism impossible That tne present government Of rance that is a guv ern isu iv time and uicus ui Drum lurvc uimauu unSupnartM by traditions or sentiment and that it Saq neyep '3 anything else we suppose is now fully demonstrated nothing can be clearer than that the late concessions to liberalism were only a'siam and a snare intended to pxtyact from rance the vote which has cncouragefl the dpsperate gam bler who occupies the thrope to engage in another and unprovoked wur in the hope of securing his son the succession There is no longer a vestige of conbtltutlonallsm in policy or his methods Unfortunately he qtbervervsurestpieans dard They would not bd ot the Qayls if any regard for political free dom caused them to hesitate seriously about following to the field anybody whom either law accident or usurpation had committed the national flag? Nevertheless in spitc of their antecedents we are still loth to believe in the accuracy of the telegraphic stories of the enthusiasm with which this wicked war has been greeted We may be sure that however the ministerial pres? in Parismay shriek for battle the cause of national pro gress of political freedom and of humanity has not been left without plenty of eloquent witnesses in rance as well as elsewhere and if they do their duty manfully and the Prussians hold German soil stoutly it may be that this will be the last time we shall see the rench army doing the bloody work of reckless and unscrupulous adventurers (Nobody who knows anything of its many great qualities of the courage the science the self devotion which it al ways has to shoW or of the almost pathetic worship of the point of honor of which even the rank and file are capable can see it wasted in these wild forays without the deepest sym pathy and regret Brides and Grooms at Niagara I A letter to the Titusville Herald from Niagara dated July 21st IT The season is at its height and busy notes of preparation are heard upon every side for coming balls Unlike Saratoga which varies in popularity as a summer resort according to the caprices of fashion Niagara is always popular and to conclude the season without at least a brief sojourn at this point shows lack of op appreciation of the beautiful unpardonable faults among the better class dii And to those to whom age aud experience have brought the stern realities of life and destroyed the sweet passion of youth for caramels and cream this month affords bet ter facilities for enjoj ment than the honey moon mouth of Jue fop pipe bridal parties that mark tnat month nave nearly or quite passed away and an old bachelor or young widower cab now live without having his feelings harrowed pp )y tjie exhibitions of neyly jparried putri'Jo 9f Chicago fcvcrablc month for to take the Ampl have the hotel nrourietors become Ihe influx bf subjects for future divorces during this mouth that they make mauy changes in their general rules and bill of fare for that month which are of course obnoxious to him who has been through the mill and arrived at that period of life where roast beef goes further towards satis fving appetite than a dozenkisses on 1 thehalf shell I One veteran landlord informs us that the expenses of the hotel during the month (June) are much less than at any other time during the season for said he little sponge cake and a few lemon drops serve as a square meal for a newly married couple and it make any difference whether the waiters are attentive or not while one chambermaid can attend to all bell calls during the But are a few who come here iu July that bear i the tell tale marks of new wedded bliss It is easy to detect them however in spite of tne assumeu uoiuuess ot cue unuegroom I saw a couple enter the vestibule of the Cataract House last evening who hoped to escape the criticism of but the disguise was too thin and in five minutes both stood revealedin all their de ceitful imagery True was an absence of white dimity and feathers of silk hat and too tight gloves and boots the usual sivna Of and when the lady 'snappishly exclaimed my fan Mr the delusion seemed com plete for the usual remark would have been dear have you seen my fan But I was not to be deceived by appearances and stepping to the clerk's office awaited the arrival of this traveler under false pretences He bold as a sheeji seized the pen and wrote with a trembling hand George Glidden and wile Allagoozlum you wish a suit of said the urbane clerk as he turned the Koh i noor upon his shirt bosom so as to blind the un suspecting Glidden with its rays thundered the latter thhrried one room will do got through paying for two rooms right sir" said the clerk him to the bridal chamber next' to the divorce As he stepped into the eleva tor previous to going up to the aforesaid chamber 1 heard him say: told you so Emetine it was that blasted perfuniery you put on by handkerchief that did 1L The minute that hotel clerk got a sniff at that ha I said he Show up to the bridal by which we were left to Inter that Patchouly and bridegrooms are linked together in some mysterious manner known only to hotel clerksl is talk in Republican jircles of bringing out Hon Aaron erry a promi nent lawyer of Cincinnati for Congress in the irst district of Ohio General "Joe Lewis 4s announced as a candidate for re eleetioolo Congress in the Third Kentucky district 'j? Golladay also wants the place Ruduclcian thinks that Hendricks of Indiana and John Quincy Adams of MassachuettswoulJ mokea strong "Democratic ticket for The Prcsi dencyX 1 J1 Governor Palmer has ordered a special election on tlie lOttToftAugust LfthtSEightli Illinois judieiatdutriet to chvoot a uetesor to ude Scott who hs juot Lecu elected to the supreme court bich Major Packard DepubllcanoArs himself us a candidate The Republicans ot the ilth Maine dis trict have nominated jDugcne Hale for re election to Congress 'Mr Bale is now oerving Lis first terp lie was elected in ISGS by a majority of 2 COO and per sonally popular and "liberal in his views of revenue reform he will' undoubtedly be re elected fiy a good majority 1 IV Hl Jioreau Democratic candidate forCorgress in the Eighth Indiana District was dismissed from service in the Third Indiana Cavalry for having tendered his resignation while under charges for ob taining money under false pretences and other conduct unbecoming 'an officer aud a gentleman and having twice absconded from the Department of the Cumberland to avoid atrial GeorgixAlab'arnaMouisiana and Ar kansas slightly below an average in the lorida Texas and Tennessee Neither the caterpillar nor the boll worm has ap peared and there arc few drawbacks which a few weeks of favorable weather cannot repair With an average season the present acreage should give nearly' three and a halt millions of bales with one of the extraordinary length of the the product would be little abort of lour which was of so re tnarkablo a character jor growtland late picking that thcQcto her estimate areasonablcpne time of 2700000 bales 'wuH idvancc1 at the close the season to thretuniL lioni PIAMO i WHITNEY SLAYTON Successors to Klnnari Manufacturer UNITES erTES Tle Cotton Crop According to the recent report of the Department of Agriculture for Jul re tire increase of acreage of cotton in the South averagiR twelve per cent bind aggregates million of The says that it is 'almost literally true that people are devot Ing all their eneftrk? to the culture of He states the condition of the crop Js safar favorable a good yield full ayepage jn I I I PUBLISH BD 2 hoi iiLT Tri Wee mi 'and Weekit by rai I 11 Juti A ttl i ilrfoice or thoBB double breasted JAMES WwCARSbN Jtfl Mr Motley is suggested as successor to Senator Wilson upou tlie theory that Massachusetts may thus like to show her assumed displeasure at the former's removal But Massachusetts will think of nothing of the kind much less carry it into execution Whether Mr Motley has failed as a diplomat or nou he certainly would not be a suc cess as the successor of Mr Wilson in the Senate Massachusetts knows this full well She may be justly proud of the scholarship and talents of her favor ite historian but she is no less proud of the sturdy aiul practical statesman ship of her Senator That he will hd re elected next winter there can be no question I pHon Jolm A Smith was yesterday renominated for Congress by the Re of the Sixth Ohio district1 There was considerable excitement in' the convention and a bolt is talked ofj We hope our friends in the Sixth dis trict will not throwaway the chances of by dividing among themselves Any serious division will ensure the triumph ot the dpjxyoition and that is an event which all must deprecateMr Smitli been but One term in Congress but his service has placed him in the frout rank of neful taithful There is some deling among the friends of the disap pointed candidate jatfpresent but we look to see it disapiear in the course of the 1 n' I Democrats of (the Thirteenth Congressional bav nomi nated their i present representative General George Morgan lor Con gress The "district is pretty surely Democratic and ArDrDofl am $0 a ah a eiecjiva which" be was traveling recently she could! attendance The weather however not feel at all confident that one single soul I which heeds not the hopes of college orators was present that was just tho one to blend with hers and hold sweet converse 1 A Meadville juvenile amendment Was! injudicious enough to drink a cup full of concentrated lye and he of any use to anybody now unless he Could bo Worked over Into sofLsoap I At a Sabbath school concert a speaker asked a small boy which he would prefer to do: a or have a dollar stolen trom But the wretched child of sin forgot his cue and candidly answered: sir I'd rather steal a ip the last exploit of the "White Chicago proposes tq give up base ball and devote her unqualified attention to moral and intellectual games like parlor rJnfrtrminsl mHV5 savs thumbs un? mnr'il noaiHoiu Indiana ffiar hs feepn experiment spread the feast that had been prepared for ingto see howjong he coijld liye hav? the fresh turf and the cool shadows of the pon Ung with that of an elec tric burrenl passed along insulated wires? The jy ven tion lias been so fully recognized oy the Royal institution of Naples that they have paid Signor uattari the rare compliment of awarding him ra irrold rnejal Jtjis further reported that the is to be generally adopted un board the Italian ships of war for the transmission of orders from the comhianding officer to partmeuta At the there were present the Italian Ambassador Count Mai felt a gentlemen from the engineering department of the Postal Telegraph a rep resentative bf the Kensington Art Depart ment and contributors to scientific journals and the general press The working ap paratus was all contained in a stand or table about cightfeet long by five wide and lour deep Air pumps (worked (by agrank are used to charge the reservoir' The amount of pressure is sbown on tbe dial The tele graphic instrument is worked by hand in the ordinary 'way A Very considerable coil of gutia percha tubing half an inch in diameter and said to be about a mile in length 'was connected with tLe instrument at the battery and with two other instru ments in the room' The experiments be gan by the charging of the reservoir to about one sixteenth of its actual capability tliip being ut the same dime a compara tively rude though not unsighly machine The method adopted for the working of the Guattari is the Morse or printing cipher system Sig Guattari at the transmitting end sent through this message: pThis ap paratus Ills' already expert merited Th thg 'Pho words were recorded in cipher at the receiving! end and were read 6if by gentleman from the Post Office who Remarked however A or Imore instances the letters had rnn into each othert The same authority found the valve at the transmitting end difficult to work and requiring a manual pressure of something like seven pounds instead of the mere touch required by the regular Morse instrument In operating on it himself he sent' through the alphabet correctly And transmitted all the messages attempted with was done through a line of tubing partly wound round a drum and partly lying in an irregular heap on the floor 1 In actual service lead tubes might be used rExperimente were never tried on the aparatusfor teominunieation with various parts oT shipand biibseiuciitly witlil what may be called thejlome'stic telegraph In this case Signor Guattari dispensed with the use of the reservoir and by merd manipu lation of an air ball at the end of a tube re corded true characters on tne long strip of paper which runs over the small wheels of the receiving instrument' This is the kind of telegraphy to which the Guattari apparatus will probably prove to be best adapted In large ships of war in communication from factortes to counting houses trom private resdenes iw places 01 business and in town communicar tion generally the" 'ystem promises to be advantageous It is independent of foreign aid is less lively tp got oirt ol' order than wites conducting ele'etrffi ciirreYitsind will not be more expensive or longer dis tanccs on regular public lines the inven tion would probably not apply so well or work so rapidly as the present telegraphs The inventor is however equally sanguine in this 'as fn siruilarLraucies jnd'Cfmc not without reason that his apparatus will be leas expensive than electric batteries and will be less subjeet to the influence of those atmospheric tormc which sometimes put the telegraphic (system bf a vholf fioijutry out of order Signor 'Guattari was lieartpy congratu lated on the performance of his 'apparatus he new telegraph certainly reflects high genius of its orig honor on tne iuw inator A I The Kies and 'M JieneueiiiTA Ctiffi mary Close of Tfie Jti suit to tlie rench Ambassador I Erom Menqer ju'y 151 M'e regret to say Jia the ranpo Prussjan difficulty which was believed to have calmed down inconsequence of Prince Leo renunciation now tends to become infinitely more serious than said CC LCi Ufjf LHAb LUC A'iLlVkA Ur cepted that solution but at the salne time that the withdrawal should be placed in some shape Other under the guarantee of King William The Prussian monarch howeyer seems to think that enough has been done for rance in not oi posing the retirement of the Prince and he refuses to engage his responsibility in the manner required' by the cabinet of the Tuileries The following is the telegraphic dispatch sent round by the Havas agency to announce that grave result: from Ems states that after tLe re nunciation of Prince Leopold had been offi cially communicated to the ienchfegoyern mcntby Spain the ambassador of rance applied to King "William to authorie him to telegraph to Paris that bis Majesty prom ised never to give Lis consent afresh in the event of Prince Leopold again becoming a candidate The King refused to receive the ambassador and communicated to him by his adjutant on service that he hod nothing further to communicate According to other information from Ems the King is reported to have let Mr Beuedetti ipnow that he highly approved of the withdrawal and that he considered hence forward all cause of a Conflict as disposed Thiscourse of proceeding onlhe part of the King certainly does not seem very courteous but let us hope that it be in some manner explained away' What can not be questioned is that its publication in has produced the greatest sensation and that nothing buts warfid spoken of in all classes of society In reference to the present difficulty we may state that the diplomatists of the vari ous powers have during the last two days appeared in the salons of the Prussian am bassador Baron de erther does not con ceal from his visitors that he found his sov ereign in by no means a conciliating dispo sition as the declaration of the rench cabinet in the legislative body had much ir ritated him as aggressive against him and his kingdom But after several conversa tions with his ambassador lie softened down and the first reception granted to Bene detti was most gracious rom the begin ning the King declared that hp did not wish to mix hiffiself up in the Spanish' question The state of the affair is at present this: The King gaye Jfripce I Leopold an official authorization to accept a foreign throne rance judged that this act was a provoca tion aud she demands an official retraction Z' royal authorization for the present and the future Iaron Jo Werther is of opinion that she should be content wiijl) the young Prussian colonel's personal renun ciation A letter from Ems gives the fol lowing account of an incident on which the above telegram was probably founded: A review took place here to day on the ground near the As His Majesty was aliout to move on Bene detti Approached the King and seemed on the point of addressing him on the subject apparently ot certain papers which he held in his hand King William who did not seem in a very amiable mood' replied very briefly and making a polite movement as if to excuse himself for not bearing the Am bassador at the moment went on rapidly followed by his staff That scene cast a dis agreeable feeling on the Tninds of many standing by 1 but ithmedirtely after hi's Majesty Li other Prinpe JLlbrecht sepa rated himself from the group foufid the King and conversed with Benedetti most affably amesW Carson i i 'tp more SKELETOV COATS I 1 17 the balance of bls 5 REMEDY Pilo 'Ht uvrm ntro 1 hsaccf cure me very worn nr ftrtWlzI xuuuvNAiaLci jr 7311 OJ1 luCJr uZUa pt and gcjjt arDenrePile Remedy It i expref5 ly for the Piles nnd Is not recommended to cureny other diocae It has cured many caes of over thirty year rtandincr Ppce One rui bale by everywhere STRONG ARMSTRONG EDUCATIONAL Miss Mary Aertsen and Miss Mary Stevens Wifi re open their BOARDING AND DAY SCHOOL for Yoang Ladies at JG Tulpehocken StreeL GKIOIANTOWN Pa or circularelpply To the Piincinals Jn 12th 1870 j2( 2SK CIUMBERLAIN 1XSTIT0TE Handolpli Cattaraugus to 1 The al Tenn opens TUESDAY AUGUST Parente we invite your inquiries ad dress tor circulars BLV EDWARDS (Western Reserve College PREPARATORY SCHOOL Is henceforth restricted to the studies pre paratory to College Itis under the direction ot the College aculty pledge them selve that the instruction and government shall be thorough aud faithful The pupils will study five hours each day under the eye of their teacher Next Term be ins beptember let 1870 or further information aadrees HENRY Li HITCHco*ck BHKLDON Principal Hudson Ohjo Reserve College Offers a thorough Classical Scientific and Philo sophical course of study There are six Professors besides Lecturers increasing funds and apparatus the latest aud best Text Books and Methods of In atrnctious A kind personal supervision of each sludenL Expenses are at the lowest Tuition made free for all who are worthy and need assis tance Next Term begins THURSDAY SEP TEMBER 1st 1870 or further information address a er HENRY HITCHco*ck Jy2 2f4 1 1 nd son Pereals Cambrics rench Prints ll I At fifteen cctts toiff Ifit itoWi Grey Mixed Suit Poplins Xl ij fluiX' if ormer prices 125 and 30 at'twelvewjda ls half cents lot of Mixed Plaid Striped 6 4 Poplins Real value 50 60 and and5c at 25c Extra Plaid Striped 6 4 Poplins iJ UJ? '0 ormer prices COc 75c and 1 at thirty se ven ADd a Kaff cents Grey'Mixd Cottume d1 Voyage I in' i jWMik iVHj Pure 'Mohair Suiting nt A lotbite day 75ci at fifty cents Xntbiasale wilLbe luu ad oil btuckaof Plain Striped aud igured tjcii nr 1 Moaiubiques Lenos I At twelve and a half 'cents one bale ilto i AT I 1': of Stark A Twilled Crash I A i I At twelve and a cents i Hojro de Higbee n239 jy 25 i i i NEXT4 TO POST OICE it I I i fv 7 9 wv i a ftv Our 4 1 A Yx ft ft 6M iMt iiinfiAft I ra Ta (Y its cIoZ2nC Xn ine crame ana wcu uwiwuw onyffiSovereiWTstake when she It' west The orations were wU written dertoofc to pin tk Child Isff 5ofl the Roughly committedand delivered with clotUnekreby causing 'it T10 vociferously waudad by ths iftortt vu? A Boston wag fixed up a graduates and to the fairly disponed mind Tester consisting of a cigar box with a paper dial and tin indicator At the bot of the box was'a rubber tube to'blow through A colored gentleman nearly burst a blood vessel trying to best a white man who had just blown yjOO cubic Inches A movement is being organized fy the best women pf America against the horri ble chignon wuish baa all opr sympathies Women have discovered that the chignon cannot be worn during the summer without entailing upon the wearer me moo ccaseonences Aside from the uncleanliness of the aJjojnjn tion fteadaches constant and IoHqw naturally abej ratjqns of tbh fninj have been' traced fo the loading down of the hand with masses of thp hottest kind of material A number of liffies of Toledo have within the week discarded the chignon and cut their hair short as Anna Dickiuaon Laura Ilallaway lorence Nightingale and Gail Hamilton wear theirs aud not one of thege po jld je induced to go back to the old styje yfcghold paglail to believe that thudiy a of the horrible Ugly waterfall were numbered i 39 Merwin street wij 7 BLOCK I CLOTHING? I DA YyJ LY 20 1S70 TLe United and the nrepean ft naturaf query Mr hieh has probably occurred to the tnind of every readetiiof Jthe Deader in disCuinc the ranco Prussian war what effect 'will be'uiibn the people of the United States War ia al ways ti tional Ite loss a dead loss to the aggregate wealth of the world And though there maybe moral result which make ita losses worth bearingUnd Its risks worth it cannot but be a terrible drain uHn the re sources and vitality of the nations which engage in IL But while this is true it is also true that is an ill wind which blows nobody some While the material loss of a war is heavy still nations larorably situated may profit and often do profit while the whirlwind of war is sweeping away the accumulation of others In resject to tlie war now threatened In the very center of the garden of Europe no nanon in tne worm i bv ruvurauiy situated as the United1 States The ambition of European governments affords the first opportunity ot repair ing the consequences of the folly and the misfortunes of our own Tlie purely financial complications growing out of the return of our securities the fluctua tion of the metals and the failure to puL the machinery of our new funding policy Into operation will be £ilt within a comparatively limited cir cle and may preVEUt us from taking the furf'advantagea of the opport uni ties now thrown open to us On the other hand the season promises abun dant lerop and tlie exigencies of Europe insure an eager market The stock holding over from last year and the products ot the present year will be in active demand and every' inducement is ottered to husband them with greater care thaxi has been shown since the close of our war Thegreatent Obstacle in the way Of successfully carrying out this idea if nd profiting by the results of the war ha? been occasioned by the weakness and folly of Congres in adjourning without carrying out the suggestion of the Pres ident and taking steps to regain otir supremacy in tUa carrying trade of the Atlantic It' the war goes on itwill almost inevitably involve evary mari time power in Europe and leave tlite country as the only great neutral mari time power in the world Of couree the whole carrying trade of civil ization wilt be thrown into our hands Had we a nHTuhant marine worthy the name this wOldd be made to re dound immediately and to the national benefit But the late war made American vessels so insecure that nine tenths of our ships pasted into other and a law of Congress which the ship building monopoly' in Congress refused to allow repealed prohibits these vessels from being re purchased and added to American register Were this law gejealed or busended our merchant marine a'CuLJ at once retake its position as it was iu 1S00 and would become the first in tin: woiiu ZLtitl alavuto ikuivjA as now appears inevitable become a encounter of the great iowers engaged it willbe the duty of the President to summon an extra session of Congress for the purpose of suspends lawund allowiug'our merchants to vessels Tn a national view of the situation there is nothing which' is "hot encour aging However warm patriotism and national feelings may be such senti ments still exist aud we cannot deem Them improper In those who feel them tlie prospect is full of encourage ment Great sectional quettioiw no longer seriously disturb us The old quarrels are over and we are entering upon a nobler and more generous ri valry We have unsettled disputes with various nations but they will be settled without appealing to arms We liave chronic disputes among our selves but they do not interfere with the forces of nature which after all in spite of ourselves steadily work to gether in our behalf Stock nof 'Linens prices J' 'S A ri dusterstpants ttrLOuR fl '7 hWp fr I MILL EED 1 Ji: utuio I 1 i £0 Tons Mill eed rnrsaleluloteaa watitetTby i WP wW' Bf? 'j sU ichli i irj li'3W eo fr.

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About The Cleveland Leader and Morning Herald Archive

Pages Available:
20,165

Years Available:
1858-1873
The Cleveland Leader and Morning Herald from Cleveland, Ohio (2024)
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