Newspaper Page Text
Enquirer.
K WESSELS, {
■publisher roi
THE PROPBIMi
CQMMBUS, GEORGIA, TUESDAY, JULY 14, 1874.
VOL. XVI.—NO. 163
Tsxi*cs
Of TH1
H.Y, WEEKLY, AND SUNDAY
8ar*
Tw.1t. months, in ilngw 98 00
«• * 00
i month,, ** 8 00
On. month, “ 75o.
Vnui Enwnmm, one yrer 2 00
,Immi btnw, on, ;w 2 60
Midai and Vhzlt ExQCiax* to
gether, on. yut 8 00
Mh.
Han.
1 W W> * 00
S " “ 6 60
• “ “ 17 00
T ' ' 26 00
» HWijt*" *2 00
pesxttevu t» vita tb. pnum«» .r . change
mij ilirut moaih*. ,« jwli uiti. liberal dis
count wlltte H..
Tb. Wtehly mtte will Invnrlnbly be one-third
of the Dolly.
,e Mm •> adrnmssnsnt is cheated ware than
o.o. I. thro, months tbs adeertteer will be cbnrg.
od with the coat of composition. Foreign edeer-
titefu at. pae ee do fine, et horn..
OUR WESTERN LETTER.
INTO MORMON LAND.
A Wonderful People and Country.
3-JBMC OJUMjOr Mtr ndJEJC,
•ALT LAKK A BKATIPUL CITY.
1ECUII* no, SHHU-l mi-
hid BEITON.
Monmott churches, ummii,
ORUAS, ETC.
Interview with Irlfkw, and
nn Interenttn* Cenv.ren-
tlen with Hint.
OMMIA KIWI.
if —Tha DamooreU of Atlanta bnd n rous-
/ ing meeting Saturday night, Mid chose a
! new Executive Commit tw (or Fulton
county. The Newt aayn that • “ring”
formed to ooutrol the nomination, of
county officer, wag overwhelmingly de
faated by the notion of thi. meeting.
—The Gainesville KagU mys : Wo un
derstand that Ur. L. 8. Lombard, of New
York, will aoon oemmaoee working for
gold and diemoadl-oo the Glade Mine,
near this olty. lie la a banker of Broed-
wny, New York city, and a practical man,
. w|)P ban pnrohaeed the principal part of
tna mine. ,
—The grand jury of Floyd oonnty have
E stented the late exonrsion party from
lma, Ala , for it. “ahamalaaa licentious-
nasa, druukennem and debauchery, "which
to pnmounoed “without a parallel and a
diagram to civilisation.” The jury com.
plain of the Selma, Borne A Dalton Bail-
read'for allowing a “drinking ear or ca.
booae 1 ' to aeoompany the axonraion train.
—The abooting of the negro tbiaf Jack
Harvay, of Uacon, promises to result in
fracing that community of a number of
rogues who have been depredating on
hoc cat people for some time. Jack is
communicative in bis prraeut prostrate
condition, and bag already disclosed the
name, of two of hla gang, one of whom
haa been arrested in Uiiledgeville, and
"th> poliea are after the other.
—The Democrats of Bandoiph county
here restored to hold District meetings
throughout the county on the 23th of
i duly, to eeleet delegatee (dee for eech
District) to the county convention to be
held in Onthbert on the 4th day of Au.
. gust, to nominate a oandideta tor Be]
tentative and appoint delegates to a I
storial District Convention. An Execu
tive OemmlHaa for the county was also
—The Thomas villa Bieterpriie hears the
news from aU quarters of a aplendid oorn
crop now-mads. Tha constant rains may
hava injured tha cotton, hot they have
uiurtd the provision orop. The whole
dQMdtyttaa been aooured for sweet potato
vines, and thia is another orop that may
baaat down aa unusually largo. Coro,
oats and potatoes hava bean, or wUl be
made in abundanoe. Fifty oeote per
bushel will Boon be the maximum price
for oorn in thia seotlon.
—Six respectable citixena of Newton
county ware arrested on Friday and
oarriea to Atlanta •* Ko-Klnx.
Tha charga wax conspiracy to maltreat a
negro named Simon Hardeman, and their
“maltreatmant r coDsisted in tbeirarreatof
thi. negro on a charge of robbery. They
were bouad over for trial on Tuesday. As
thia i. an important oleotion year in Geor
gia, we may expect to hear of more each
arrests as u means of intimidating the
people.
ALABAMA IIWIl
—The Montgomery 1 Advertieer boasts
that the market of its oity oau’t be excell
ed, except in one rrepnot—people c
keep comfortable in it when it rain*.
—The Mobile, fieyirterthiuka it hi|_
probably that Chancellor Adam Felder wi
be the Radical candidate' for Governor
the next election in Alabama.
—Tha Evergreen Star reports that
negro woman in Goneonh oonnty was,
last week, delivered of twins, qn* of Whom
was a vary blaok negro child, end the oth
er white.
■ —M. Busies, President of the South
and North Alabama Railroad, baa resign
ad, to taka effeot on the 13th Inst. Ha ic
to be succeeded by Robert Meek, late 8u
perintendent towns branobof the road.
—The Savannah Ic Memphis Bailrosd
has reduced ferae to four cent, per mile,
whieb, the Opelike Newt says, ie the hist
reduction by any road running into that
oity.
—Tha Democratic Exeontire Commit
tee of Lee oonnty here appointed Satur
day tha 8tb of August as the day for the
emembling of the County Convention
to nominate candidates. Esoh beat
the County !• Invited to send six delegates
to this canvsntioa.
—The Selma Timet says: A. Fomin
candidate for Criminal Judge, and
peasant Justice of the Peace, was deed
• gtS yesterday morning by Mayor H trdy,
' for going for eume potato vines in the
garden of Mr. Carter. As Mayor Hardy
i j. to a Radical, it oan hardly ba said that
this is a political persecation of Fomsn
because be to a oMididate for judicial hon
or*. Tb. worst feature of the ease i. the
3
" itroug probability of bie eleotion
w - —Tallapoosa county, tha banner white
man’s oonnty, resolves that “the issue as
to whether this government shall be ad
ministered by white man ot by negroes
end carpet-baggers, has been mode and
foroad upon no by tho party in power, and
that we now engage in the contest under
the white mini banner, and oatl upon
white men everywhere to be true to their
manhood and to rally to the standard of
Democracy and Conservatism.”
Tha naasylvwls Child Abductors.
Fbudhtnu, July 13.—No fresh de
velopments in tha child abduotion case—
unfortunately. Tha father, in a Ledger
this morning, oigniAes Unit
got the money required, and is
willing to pay. The abductors arc be
lieved to be a gang of English profenion-
al* aceaetomed to this nefarious business.
U. B. marshal* it I lie a DleUller.
OouixmA, S. 0., duty 13.—Deputy
U. B. Oaileetor Melttooa kUled John De.
vie, a Seeing distiller, in Anderson ooan-
ty, on Saturday.
Salt Lake Cnx, July 3, 1874.
The most novel of ail sensations was
my introduction into Mormon land,
•hived at Ogdeo by a woman—a Mormon
woman at that. With the natural commu
nicativeness of all barbers, and tha addi
tioual tongue of a woman, it is not hard
to begin a talk with her. She to No. 2,
and perfectly happy in thna being second
choice. These Mormons, it they are ever
unhappy, rnuke it a rale to hide it from
Gentiles.
The Utah Central' Railroad, over which
we uow go to reaoh Belt Lake Oity, to a
Mormon enteprise—Brigham Young pres
ident and chief stockholder. Now, fairly
entering this great Salt Lake Valley, we
see on overy baud the wonderful effects
of this wonderful people. A valley shot
in between the mountains, which on
eithor hand rear np their hoary heads and
shat it in—a valley which onoe was a sage
bush wild, now literally blossoms at the
rose. You scarcely leave Ogden—the ter-
iniuns of the Central Pacific end North
ern Padfle Railroads—a thriving town,
by-the-«ay—when Mormon Tillages and
settlements are seen on every hand. Soon
the renowned 8 .It Lake comes in view—
this iulend set with no visible outlet,
eighty miles long and forty wide. The
water looks green at first; and now, aa
the clouds fly from before the eon, whet a
glorious, beantifni sight! Sait Lake by
sunset is worth the trip. The fairest dia
mond never reflected flashes near ao
bright, norsparkled with half the splen
dor, as tbis mirror of Nature, whose sur
face, moved by gentle winds, shows the
giant shadows of mountains and tha face
of the God of day oommingied in glori
ous beauty. The lands of this valley are
filled with teeming orops; bnt how back
ward everything seems—oorn soaroely
eighteen inches high; small grain, very
little headed. Twenty-four hundred miles
from the Sunny South makes a difference.
Everything is watered by irrigation. The
reins are too light and noreUable to make
orops by. When these pioneers,
filled with a religion to
incomprehensible, following the
oommands of their leader, who
olaimed to be aoting under revelation,
came here; they found a barren wild—
no rain, little water, no timber. Irriga
tion successfully applied has cheated the
fickle cloudB of thoir mission. The moun
tain streams run bolder aud stronger lhau
they did years ago. The delicate shrnbs
planted here and there hava made bloom
ing hedges, fruitful orchards or towering
groves.' With the desolation, the erick-
ets and grasshoppers oan ao foroibly make,
these pioneer agriculturists had eddfc] to
their ooutest with nature and the ele
ments, an apparent enemy in Providenoe
itself. Bat they struggled on, and baoked
by Briyli*iu Yunng's long head and their
own fan itie faith, they have aorquered.
S ilt L ke City is different from what I
expected to see it, and it generally un
hinges tha precuueerted expectations of
most visitors. My first impressions—after
arrival—of the piaco were pleasant sad
ooul 1 only be so. Iin igine a town naatly,
precisely and couveuiontly laid out; wide
streets and all in good order ; rippling
brooks of dear, acid water running doyrn
either aide of the street; good sidewalks;
many elegant ston- sod brick houses, end
you see Sole Lake City. Scow-covered
mountains are right above you, the beau
tiful lake oDly a few miles to the weal.
IVgbt here—wouldn’t it bo advisable for
our City Fathers to import n Mormon or
two to show them thut streets—e-pecially
the Imsiuuaa streettof a town—should have
the ditches on the sido, nut in the middle,
and learn them that the oentrs of a street
should be a ridge, not a ditch bejewelled
with bridges ?
The thermometer was 83* the day we
arrived here. The hotel we atop at—the
“Walker House,” is new, elegant, roomy
and luxurious. The landlord, D. R. Pat
ten, a San Franoisconlan, knows a aeotet
rarely found out, viz: hew to rna a hotel.
The breezes were oool and constant; the
water, molted enow. Snrely thia is a de
lightful terminus of a most enjoyable,
trip.
Our party of Georgians, whieb had been
reduced to ten, was roioforced by Mr.
J. H. Kstill, proprietor Savannah Newt,
and Messrs. Casey and Hamilton, ot Sa
vannah, all California bouud.
In looking at the Wuhsateh mountains,
from the oily, ono unacquainted with tho
pure, clear sir of this country and the
deceptive flit prairies, guesses it to be
two miles off. In reality the distance is
about tweuty miles to their snowy peaks.
Illustrative of this is an anecdote of an
Englishman who wa3 “doing” the West.
He looked over at these tempting hSto,
and observed he “would take a walk ever
to them as an appetiser before breakfast."
This industrious Briton walked vigorously
until 10 o'clock, and being still nearer
the hotel than the mountains, began to
return. Talrieg jn lightly different way,
he aoon came upon an irrigating ditch
aoroes the path. He looked inquiringly
at M, and th4h proceeded to take off
shoes, soaks and pants. A native teeing
this altthgo oendutt, ventured to ask,
“whet are you going to do ?" “Wade
this creeps aAid tW Sugtkhman. “Whv,
jump U, stranger i it to only two feet
wide.” “No! yon oan’t deceive me
again' with; then* utegnifteent dietan
the blunted thing may be a mile wide (or
ell I know, and I shall wade it."
A ride through the town ehowe it to ba
• oity of about twenty thoueeud inhab
itants. Tha i ‘T*tterneole" ie the grand
house of oongregatioual worship. Eeoh
ward iy*e ite pwtRjaeetjyg bonne, where
the Bishopa preach often end earnestly.
The ‘ ‘YM>ertMM r IMIMMiteeu thousand
people, -and■: is made of red tend atone.
The ehspe of this reniatkabU house to
like that ,of ,e/^uge turtle, the rtxrfof
which etrongly resembles tha back of a
tremendous sea turtle. This to where the
Apea$«!»qC ttfefftytftot fttm Ike peo
ple <Ji matte. ,The acoustic prineiplec of
the Taberdsdle are Amt el see, aad Ml
stood io the pulpit of the medsra Prophet,
of ,J*.
house could easily hear scything said in
the natural tpnW I TbU eteude in a large
aqnare, completely anrrounded by a high
rook waj|, ,,In <be same enoloeure to the
foundation end half first story of the
great stone-(ample .now being ereoted.
The organ of tho Tabernacle to second in
size in the tfhitisd States, it being larger
than Mr. Beecher's organ in Brooklyn.
Yon will, be surprised to know
that this elegantly carted, grand and
delightfnlly-toned instrument was made
right in the Louse. The trees were felled
here. Tha instrument wee manufactured
A .re. This orgdh Is now Complete enongh
for ell preciidel purposes s bnt to eelipee
anything ever expected, of them, nine
hundred additional pipes an now being
added. The Temple to to be finished-
well, some lime in the futnre. One
hundred workmen are engaged on it now.
This magnificent granite building will be
for the naa of tbe^Friesthood. The ordi
nances end observations of the Gbnreh
and religions affairs.' We have a surplus
of maohanias end artisans, aad desired to
diversify our pursuit!. ”
Some Western ladies visited Brigham a
few days ainoe, and asked to tea and be in
troduced te his wives. B. Y. very properly
answered that his wives were sot oa ex
hibition. Leaving our Autograph is B.
Y.’s book we bid them adieu. Hie execu
tive ability is wonderful. Hit Judgment
to sound, end to him diene to due the pro
gram of hie followsts.
In the next we wUl tell of the mineral
wealth of this laud.
Youts truly,
WmrwauD Hot!
WAinrani.
fellamt — levy liiartsiset—For-
Throe Howe
m(
Locum**, July, Osurtor-
Journal publishes a uop repmL, from alt
parte of Ai'JMa. 1 Fof three months
past, in Southern and Western Kentucky,
not doomgh min baa fallen at any one
time lo lay the duet. Crops are almost
entirely destroyed, aad 1 even with an
abnndaaos of rain hauosforth, they can
not be saved.
Of tobacco there will be soaroely may
crop. Corn sod cats Are very a us all, but
wheat to the best orop for many years.
Muoh destitution is already reported,
end the Governor hue been petitioned to
contend the Legislature itH the purpose
of devising some means of relief.
Rains have fallen in Eastern and Cen
tral K-ntutky during tha last two days,
but too late (o afford muoh relief. Ia tha
meantime actual oases of itarvatka era
reported.
M AMACHWim.
will be performed in it, end when the 8on
of Man acmes, agajo, ibis will be the
literal Temple of the Living God.
Pmiitpnr Vni^ng .granted 4te eu inter,
view. It may be interesting to know
sontot^^y^h^ pferital arrangements of
the Prophet Brigham. He bee fifteen
genuino wives of hto own, end four proxy
wivery These |e«t ar f e tie relicts of Jo
seph Smith, late’ Priest, Polygamist and
Prophet. One of these was sealed to Joe
after hto death. Arriving at the private
bu-icesa office of President Yonng, we
were kindly aud courteously received by
him. ponpaeUor, Geo. A. Smith,
and bis Secretary were both present. This
office is neatly finished. Conspicuous
among tb#.pictures on the walls to a life-
size photcijrapn of Brigham Yonng. On
either aide, tit a vie, ate six portraits of
the Apcatlee. ,Tbto takes in the Prophet
and iid Tw»l4e AyOaflss. Dowu near tbo
door are fine portraits of Joseph Smith
end his brother Hyram, both of whom
were killed by the mob io Illinois, This
killing.w’as the Miration of Mormonism.
Place the fonnder’of a religion in the
eapaoity of s martyr snd you hare no
trouble iu getting plenty of followers,
Ttt his faith with his
blood" is the magic sentence which touches
to copyjqtiofs of bearers.
II waa hard, very hard to get anything
bnt general iuformetion from these dig-
nitsrica. They profess a protound reli
enqa upon ProjJdenoe. Tha following to
abonHine UeJw'jf ttosi interview:
“When you first came to Utah, PreBl
dent Yonog, it being a part of Mexico,
did yon amioipate it ever being in lie
;W*!tW)94§M% iffl^&> ua ( 'Subjecting your
people to renewed persecutions, such as‘
younesikotl iA Miaiouri aad lUiuoia 7”
“God's people eon never hope to evade
their aoetuies. We did expect the Uni
ted States to own Utah. Revelation di
rected ns here, end we oame. Persecu
tion. martyrdom and religion go hand in
hand.”
“Do you remember the Gbarob roll of
membership ,ef ,Mormons in this Terri
tory ?"
“No, I do not. The population of tha
Territory is'abint 73rf,ocO.”
feet?"
reasonably hope
for. New accessions are constantly
oom Ha^UPClO) Gospel is taking hold of
(ho
. ‘ Jltoto i laatiuueNty to the majority
among youl-converts?”
“The A ifiifMAito probably, though wc
hove ngVeetpiahy English, many Danes
aLd Heeslee-’’..
"Have 1 you any negroes in your
cwVkit" "
“A'few.'"
i ‘lUtgh.to isapableof producing moat
any regetaAioo, I believe. Oan you make
cotti-d'Sere?*' 1 1
. ’. Oil !,^fa.j 1 ^)Jyn in ^Pizie,' down South
(southernpart.-id Ul*L), we have raised
oottenfoe Jtokia.v-' him
“I sec vbu have seversl woolen mills;
have you any cotton mills ?"
“Yes, sir, I own a cotton mill myrolf.
;n the Territory,"
till end when wat
built ?"
“It has sixty looms—built several yeans
aiaae.5 \VeV«"wJ>4 4ba machinery over
land 1,100 miles, in wagons.”
“Did ycwevft- expect a trens-oontinen-
tel railroad to thne enoroaoh on your do-
mains
“Our record is tbe beat answer to that.
Fourteen years ago we petitioned Con
great to biild oaeb a railroad. If it had
net; baa* for the Mormons, this railroad
would never have been here. Our motto
has ever been, ‘Pragreaeioa in material
KENTUCKY CROPS.
» Yorjr Bmall—Peopto BwBUr-
ApptlcaUM tor MfUtaUn
"t-iJWWuwLeUwJ vV; i»,
Wiammoe, July 13.—Secretary Bris
tow ia expected to return oa Wedaeadey.
Flak to also expaeted to return that day.
The Navy Depart aa ant wUl not order
North thia aummar tha vessels now ia the
Gulf of Maxtoo aad oral sing la the waters
adjacent to the Weet Iadlaa. They will
ell rrmeln et a fort the preernt eaeeoa, eo
that iu caw of u uecamity for their prom
eooe ia Cuban waters or elaewhetu ia that
latitude, it srill not be neoeowry to fit out
aad eeadout v email from Urn North to
that quarter.
The Court of Oommiaeioaem of the Al
abama claims will oaeupgr Nome la the
Department of Jolt ice boiUHag, aad ex
pert to be la working ooadltlna early ia
OhM Jaatlaa Watte hsa jml p«m>—d
a lot ia the northwestern pert of the City,
aad ia the aelghhorhood where Altoraay-
Geaetol WUUama, Sir Edward Thoratou
and Senator Stawert hava ereeteddeaU-
lag ho urn, and will baild owe for hto
(easily rertdeaee.
The United Steteasnd Mexican Com-
mission eoatiaee ia aeasioa, dismiaelag a
a am bar of easaa, paeaiag o tiara, and ta-
tarring thorn oa which than on diviatou
of opialoB to tha umpire. Them •
oontolo no poiate of generel interest.
Man. W. B. HUIyar Emto.
WamnaoMK, July ll.-Gau. William 8.
Hillyar, of New York, formerly a member
of Grant's staff, aad recently nominated
General Appraiser, died of congestion of
the laagj.
T too-Proa Meal Wilson Wont Bo-
FOREIGN INTELLIGENCE.
F1AYCE.
Why the Figaro wssa Eaepoadod.
Naw You, July 13.—The HtraMCt
apoolal from London says the Figaro waa
anaponded by the Government for quot
ing from President MaoMahon's message
the declaration that he wonld retain the
power conferred upon him, and then
apostrophizing the Aiaembly, aa follows:
“By your oiden the Marshal becomes the
■uprome baud of State. The army' knows
only him, follows but him, obeys him.
The army haring a horror of a faction*
Parliament will defend tjie oommfnder to
whom you intrusted the. power. If any
party faotiou seeks to overthrow your to-
rovoeabla deeree, the army must enforce
the dectoion of theAaeembly. 1 ’
SPAIN.
Cavitate Ehanaiwg Comapowdeate-
MARKETS.
■T nUMAPE TE ENEUIBEK
■may aad oeeeh Kavkoto.
Lowdo*, July li—12:80 T. sc—The rote
Another Eeeovvntr Slvae Wnr-Lana
at Kidd lane Id.
SrsmoriBLD, Mass., July 18.—Details
e coming to hand of a eaooud flood in
Hampshire oonnty, Mmeachueelto, cauead
by the giving-sray of the reservoir of a
factory at the village of Middleflald.
Freshet In WaaMuM Blvev-Erld
■wept Away—hnllmadn Era.
ken-Preperty Bwept
Away.
Bostoz, July IS —Thera wee a great
flood Saturday night and Sunday in West
ern Massachusetts, caused by the rapid rtoe
of the Westfield river.
A dispatch from Cheater says tha mil-
road urch bridge, the highway bridge and
two dwelling* at Middleflald Switch Sta
tion, arc gone. ’ «*' ,j oi
At Gheater, West's dam and Shandy
mill, four highway,. budgef, 8. W. Bhl-
mev’s barn, ‘ and Samual Otis' shop ar*
swept sway, beeidaq two mil road bridges
partially destroyed! ‘
The dam of Hampton, in Nnmry aeon-
ty, at Cheater, ia alao,oerried away ud a
large amount of Emery with it Every
one of six or seven bridges on the Boston
end Albany Railroad, between Middlefleld
sod Huntington, are either wholly or
partially destroyed.
The emery on the railroad to also badly
washed out in many places, and there to
very seriona breaks between Beoket and
Washington.. Railroad travel batweeo
Springfield and Albany will he interrupted
for several days.
Latest team the need-year ■ridge*
Cone—Greet Bamage fcwt
Nw Liven Lent.
Spbingfiedd, July 18.—The details of
the flood, oanud by the bunting of a fac
tory reservoir at Middletowq, show that
tbs water swept over booses, barns, and
roads, causing great damage In nearly all
Lhe valley. Residents in the vicinity of
Cheater have Buffered more or lees in
damage to farms and gardens. Four
bridges were serried off, to repjuce whioh
will coat several thousand dollars. No
lots of life is reported.
NEW ro*K.
Mayor Mavemoyorto Prehehle tom
July II.—Tha tumor from
Waaktngtoa of tha intended reoignation
ot Vioe-President Wiluoa ha* ao founda
tion in fart. Hto health to batter than
rtnc* hto tllnam.
rhe Ui
1
Wosnntarow, Jnly 18.—Th* Pcatsl
Convention hatween the United Stale,
snd Japea will go into ape ratios Jan nary
lat, 1878, agreeably to notice Jart given
by the Japanese Government through ite
Unman, July 18,—The Timet' .oqrra^-
pandent with t(te CarjiBU telegraphs that
they w* liyiaa to 9'iy* f«W8o «»■
raepoedenla, kgr abooting some aaaptog.
Many Germans have *|f»edy witbtjiawfl'
(> m1m!i> T , 1 BepubUoan*
have again been tuoaeufal in an eoi
■ iBu
■mat with tb* ^artiste near Bilbo*.
' MEBKANY. '
■aaewy, Cnwses Uneaslnep*.
Losdok, J uiy.ltf. —if. apeeial di«patch to
th* I’tmw, from Berlin, *V» *1 ia ue* >4
parted that Prinoe Biamarck a journey to
Ktaaiugan bee uo political aigniAetnea.
Th* friendly attitude of the King of .Ba
varia gives mash Mtiafaetioui but. th*
aeperatista tendency of Saxony g|Vc rise
to a feeling of uoeaaiueeq.
to Em BSamnvck — ■*!»
Ernaea HI* Wa4eL
July .18.—White Priaee
Bismarck was driving in the ouantry to
day he waa shot at by a yoeageman, the
MU gtoaiag hto vratot. Tb* woe ml waa
ffif money at ft* Stock Exobang* on Gov-
ernment aecuritto* to f per cent. Bom*
’•3’a, rtd, lOflft ’dTto, lOTf. Iris Nj.
Fnanoenr, Jaty 18.—U. 8.
’«*'*,«*.!'
-Nnw You, Ji
Honey 2 percent
—long 4871, abort 4U,.
daifl. Sum bead* quirt.
Naw Tons, July 18.—Money easy et
2*2} par oant Brehroga dnU at 487k.
Gold 109|al0D}. Gwvetamenta dull and
. *AlAAAe.loe
NEw Tome, July lil^Flour steady.
Wheat aad Omn ie. batter. Peek Area—
mass 912. lend quiet -steam ll i-lfi.
Lotaarju* July 1
Qswr*
Mira?
“Iivour Church grVKtMg f
(j)^)ajOa(j yV.g!> d rea
Naw You, Jnly 12.—Shortly before
nooo, on Saturday, Gov. Dix'a Private
Secretary waited upon Mayor Hsvmneyer
ud presented him with the ebarges mad*
to tha Governor against him by John Kel
ley and other*, ud requested hto immedi
ate attention to the oame.
THE 4IBEAT OIL PIKE.
meneed-70,800 Barryl* Earned
'i'-'-lieto graw.ue.
NxW Yoax, July-f3. : i-Tb* J Are io th*
oil tanks at Wehswku was extinguished
7 o’olock yesterday morning. Two
bandied men were immediately pat to
work laying the tracks and 'bnilding e
temporary dock for tbs shipment of oil.
It ia expepted to be able to rcu trains to
tbs doek by Wednesday. It to ..estimated
that the total loss will ba 91,888,000.
New Ygbk, Jnly 13.—It to officially re
ported Ihie morcitif that thdrioes by tb*
Wehawfen oil Are fail* little ihort of
1700,000. -TotaP'humbar- of- barrels
of oil burned, 70,000.
The Tlffen-Baeeher InvaellareUen
Hew You, July .10.—The Committee
appointed by Beecher to investigate the
charges against him, are progressing with
the euemiatoton, and wW pretably make
knowo the result of their deliberations in
a few dtya. The proeeediage of th* eom-
mittee are eondurted in a strictly private
manner.
THE WEATHEE.
Uirunun or Waa,
WseHiEOTon,. July 18, 1874.
ProbabUitiet. —For tho South Atlantia
ud Gulf State# generally dear ud warm
weather, except on tb* immediate coast,
southeast winds, high barometer in th*
South Atlantio region*.
WaanruoTox, July 18.—TM War De
partment ta in doily receipt of report*
from army officer* of preparation* to re-
lirtllMiffiikMkMIidiiB IftfvfclMk Hi
lndteetloM an that a guard wet
the Kiowa*, OamanaMa a
to imminent.
CLEVELAND, «EIE
AmemataM Bain Ereahe Den n
Eteeh of BnlMlnna-Ons re
sms KUled—Eevernl HwvL
flunum, Jaiy 12.—A heavy r*to has
Mu failiag nearly sU day. HebMU’i
block, ia last Otovelaad, fall in this
morniag. TM oalaotropM waa oauaad
by u Booumulatioa of a large quuEty of
rain water upon the roof, the gutter pipaa
being choked. Several persons wars ia
tM bar bar shop on th* ground floor of
the blook when it f*U, of whom pop war
killed ud several injured—two seriously.
Jaka Hltohell will EeUrm ta toe.
ed nh emit, -t.— -JA— want ffirtJ.
IV WJ fro IWffiT Mb Iwnr WM*
My firm MUM. „• ,
fir. Loan, Jaiy 11.—Flare quirt ud
Baaeu flrtu aad toaree, \
-ntear rib l(% stoat
andtof^dmund,
The would-ba aasaaain waa promptly of 0 .
arrested, ami, with difficulty protected I ,u4ddUn L
from lyodiiagH-hy tite pupte. He haa | tember, do.,
Ml Ink MmIMMnI. >nd October, 8§#
and ffAIAIA.
BrttM rifM to RwmN>t«m TNH
. 1> W—■ «Qctlon
y>«k*reedi eelaa U,«» bales,
inolodlng 2,000 for speoulatun anfi *x-
1:80 f. el—Saks of upluda, nothing
Mtow lew middliogh daiivarabie iu July
^3 rT-f alu to-day 6,900 were
8:80 r. m. Balae ef upluds, nothing
below goodoedinery, delieembl* Iu July,
4*iii*i*M*l* July aad August,
Mlow tow
sadfiep-
Panaits, Ja?y 3.—A ■peoial-dtopateh by
•AMs from tha Xnfellah AdmhwUy Ms
haw reoalvad lin Puama, anuoanstog
that tM Vs mi to eumportug tM Mirth
Naval fieet aa th* Paetflo-'eto ordered to
Nafidavoua forthwith aiFeuama, for spe
cial reasons wbtoh have not aa yet been
The United States eta* maklp Niohmead
ha* arrived Mrs from OJHtornia. -
The Govern etc at of Oautemet* will
eoatribute toward the ertebnllioa 'of tM
centennial in the Unltrd Stalee.
Havasu, July 13.—Dr. jl B«y, u Auieri-
au, Mr Mm tried by* Aoart-mertlal aad
mmtenedd to d-s'll, bill the jadgment of
tMeeert toad be r pproved bytheGov-
ernor-Ctonsral -before it I* carried out.
Nope* ero eutertained that 6* will aot
confirm iM am tease, but oodmot* it'to
Ilf* Impritoomut.' 1 ’
New You, Jnly anOottondall; ml**
Au-
8-16;
SSL npiud* 17|, Ot leans 17)-.
Future* opened quiet, aa follow* i
oust 16110 15 18; gaptember 174*17
October 16 26-81*16 81-82.
Naw You, July 18.—Futuna dosed
steady t selaa 16,660 Mi**, aa lollew*:
Jnly (1619-12 ; August 16 16.12*11 Sep-
mpbar 16 26,8|talM6 , October 16 21-ia
11-16 ; Noveaeber 164*17-32; December
Hto* 864 bales at 17*17J;
* Beerow, July' tt.—Dull and nominal;
middling* 17jt eel** I80i a to ok esoo.
fisntMHEri My. Afi.—Nominal; mld-
dUaje.ieirttrtropeiyta JTl mim l7; atoek
Naw OaiESEto July 18.—Cotton doll;
* eartsrj mMdUam 17, low
rtrirt good ordinary 148;
Ifiti wet nmipie fisn- mtos
i,6oa
Moneim, July th—Cettu dull ud
etey; middUnge 164; raoaiyt* 76, astoe
100; stock 6,836. ,
etoek»,lM.
Maw Yana, Jaiy IE—In oonseq:
of latter* roeslved from Intend from
■oam of IM teadarq of tM national party,
John Mitchell, the famous axil* and put>-
Hetet, haa determined on returning to
Intend, with n view to oonleet tM elec
tion of some aonatitauey oa adeaaeed
national priaoiptes. An aaanruo* from
oa* of th* Home Bate mem bare of Par-
liamant that oa* of tha aittieg msmbera
for Loath will rmtga in faror of Mitchell,
he* decided tM tetter to take this step.
MiteMIl will tear* for Liverpool Oa th*
lttbinat. [Mitohellud hi* eon* fooght
for the Sonth ia tM late war ]
Indian Chism im Cwllmetem—Treepe
■eemtlmg.
fit. Louie, July 18.—A gentlemu from
Port Sill mys 4M Indiu ehtefe Sutanta,
Big Tree ud Lon* Wolf an in oollueion
against th* whites, ud eerioas trouble
may M expected. .Col. Cerium, with
on* eompuy of the 16th Cavalry, era on
s scouting excursion through th* Chey
enne agency. Mejor Upturn, with on*
ipuy of tM 6th, has goo* to Medicine
Lodge, end thru com panto* of tM 6th
Infantry, from Leavenworth, hive gu*
■soaring along tM troll from IM Washita
through tM OMjuns aganey.
■uth ot Eoverno* Caldwell wf
Naw Ton, July 10.—The Herald baa a
apaetel from. Assay whtelr says:
“Tha Japanese war oprta'-Uwi ara.rlr-
ly .ended. A ooofeteocu, he* b
■ Formosa. Oulu* agree* to
Ahm.
bald it Formosa. Oulu* agree* to pay
the expeueee o? tht expedition, and gnar-
aateae Hto safety of meigueral' Japan
isqepta, ud retires."
Buhm, Jnly 11.—Qorernor Caldwell,
of North Oerolina, died at Hillsboro',
Saturday evening, of obolera morbus. He
waa a Radieul, end alerted Ooveraor by
tM aegroea.
Hla Fmaernl.
Rat.mom, N. O., Jaiy IS.—The remain*
of Governor Tod B. Caldwell, brought
here from Hillsboro Sunday, remained ia
state at tM capital throughout to-day,
sod will M carried to hto residence to
morrow for interment
Delegations of eiiiseu ud the military
will aooompany them.
THE OBANUEMEN.
They Have Eramd Precessions.
Boston, Jnly IS.—About 200 Orsnge-
mu paraded her* to-day witheut dis
turb an o*. They earried baunar* ud
wore regalia.
Pnn.anBLMia, Jnly 18.—TM Orange
lodges mads a grand parade today. Than
waa a grand axhibition along the Una of
Orange ud *«Mr flag* ud bun ere, and
numbers wore foil regalia. TM streets
war* thronged with speotatore. AU Ms
paaaad off quietly so far.
Oar. Kemper had 64a. Eeheae Ke-
v««w the Oarrleek et rortrees
n -riii- ■d’^mnhia-'i' ! ■
te^EMto HP"«>a, v,a„ July. ii-Gjr
Jkoim L. Kemper paid a ?i#it to the Fort-
this afyypqpn, end **«,reoeired with
a mint• from the water battery. After,
ward* , he reviewed *f)d. it^ipealoI the.
troop* gerrtopued ifare, He was acoom-
puiedby OeB. Mahoue end Col. John
Bpbin«m- i'Wft qu^teooe attepd-
wltn|8*qd th«Review qn^jgol/ look
at t))* Wovitopr. The qereuiyniea ' were
PTiSSHSSSSS
msssessssss
Thomas Gilbert
JOB PRINTER
BOOK-BINDER
Blank Book Manufacturer,
’ (Old Bun Offie* BuiUiag.) .
EADMLPE WJ, OOLDHHUh, «A,
I A if now prepeihd tc execute with eeeteen
aad dlapeueonlan fer rniNTWO et ev
ery deawlptloe, via:
LETTFB HEADS, NOTE BEADS,
BILL HBAM, STATEMENTS OF AO’T„
.BUSINESS AND VISITING OARD&
LABELS AND SHIPPING TAGS,
HAND BILLS AND CIRCULARS,
SOCIETY BY-LAWS, PAHPHLETS He.
LEGAL BLANKS.
ttaltrtta&t 1 ltedelptk, Bflls'Lading, 1 Ac in
book or teoes, Blank Books of all
kinds, with ot without printed
Mads, mads at short notice.
Qlrttg *7 retire personal attention to Job
Frinttag aad Btodlsc,lam*oaM*d teflii pU
dare premprip at LOW CASK PRICES,
gaaraatertag mtWketlea, -
Order* Mm atoead roeetv* mm* attretien a*
If partial were premnt. Sand for Price List.
SM A fall steak of Georgia ead Alabama
legal Haiti always an kaad.
200 Pienotw* Organs,
Sew sat 6re*ad<
ill he mvol.l -
rmn^SiM
s; ' '
nw.
Ferewarned,)
•rued ww «rll
hIIbmI* *8iai
n*t vidrd <* li
nm-ClMw liken,
- tap Install-
, uifrtwjr this
|oU% ffiblUnbffi
Bfi»rum#fit. 11-
Mhffifilfi Igfifil ftir
TSfguldlgTCT, 1 .TvL
arned, Perearrepd. le te.fare-
«kn yap are pimatoart, with aU the
eased by daUfitatlaffliMkgaiid liim-
1 mjqn
*6
■juitufinua
S!*r»r* 9MSSVS.-WE
•o* e'rtoafremaatftwdparrta tha hyrstem, tad
isp
■* . M.f , J . Mwr VMk.l
U%SAmteUs*pM*>a.
aa par tieqlar state steea. tot. »> all dem; to
_ >n sod woman ef all prof teioae, erwdi, occups-
Metedadeelltftef ePtatoae—le'Ereim. iswrera,
baainsm mva. hsakaatw, phydSlaa., p -Utlolsu.,
wsgsoKsyfem
■ naa,. aa* w prsterva for thsir afedld me s '
THKmir " J 1
Mufioog** tnfirlff tal*.
VTltJa to wU 4« tto ftm TffiMday \u August
” wit, to«99i «to ktol hsan to affito, b •
fore thaauctieehear*at aula* Harrioco. Broad
stttet. Col aw haa. go, tea Mlewlag doscrii rd
P X tfaamhes luam Ptaalaj MUh, illoelod oa
latedtahd teas parted lei ftm,ta the cur or Co-
laat-ao, he., teettear with too htoohlaory twloea-
lag to raid wilU levied oa M.tho prop»rt> of B.
n. Ooatthlas aad B. E. Xashod, Mivivor* to.al-
hry ith looted Item Eaaeopoo Superior Court
Iu favor el Meet Bodgos. adatoHlratrix, ve said
Oouichlur * Maf'aam Prepo'IJ P"lai«i ear la
X' ret a.O. ITMT, IhusMf.