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The Huron News-Record, 1885-01-14, Page 1
f f WtaiimM. pxruTritmu SU3?See Samples and Prices at the DoorA'SJS Cor. o .uron ■ & Alb ert^S t s eikas. hahilton, ; A UCTIONEER> l&iidfioah And insurance agent Zx. Blj’tli, SaluS attended in towu-and country, >n reasonable terms. A list of farms and village lots for sale. ■ Monoy to: Joan on real estato; at low rates pt interest. 'Insurance effected On all classes of property. Notes and debts collected. Goods appraised, and Sold oil commission. Bank, rupt stocks bought and sold, ... ... Btvth. Doc, 10,1880 1.0.1. No. 710, • b'uCNTON,’ ■ : . Metta .sECOHi.MoNDAv^.ot^tovory 'month. -Hall upstairs, opposite the Town Hili. -Visiting brethjon 'always wads welcome.--.... * ■; ■ ILCANTEtON, W. M. ,A. M.TODD, Secy. 0. TWEEDY, D. M. J. E. BLACKALL, Veterinary Surgeon, Graduate of Hie Ontario Veterinary 'college, To ronto, havlhg opened an olfloe In Clinton, ie . prepared to treat all diseases of domestic animals on the most modern prin ciples. All Operations carefully performed, and calls prompt- ly attended to by day or night. Fees moderate, . > ■ -Office,—1st door West of Kon- ned.y’n Hotel, Clinton, Ont, V-17, COMMERCIAL. HOTEL. Tills Hotel is futulshed throughout with groat oaro to mebt the wants of- the travelling- bubiic. Commodious sample rooms. The best of liquors and cigars arc al wavs kept at the bar.. Good table. Best Situated Hotel iu Clintbii. Give us a call. ' . , JAS. IviOORE, Proprietor. Clinton, JuneVih, 1682’ ' ‘ ....... PRINCE OF WALES HOTtL. Tho above hotil has lately been leased bt" tbo undersigned. Tho promises have hoen reflttod, and the host possible acdomuiodaHort lot farmers and the general travelling public is afforded, stables in Connection, The barls supplied with tho best llijimtsafid cigars. Yodrpatronage solicited. Veterinary Burgo'On in. etfnhodtloh'. - . - CEO, THEOBALD, Proprietor. ’ Clinton, May 3rd, 188*. 285—ly - :\^ - TERMS pey Annum, in Admoe< 1 1 J’T 'W'T^ vot, VHr-m TVT A TTTKm JUUmJEo* JBknJL J^i nieiiced. Large COMEANDSEE The Bargains in iSilks, - ; . _rgains in Velvet, _________ ___ The Bargains in Plushes, - The Bargains in Cottons The Bargains in Dress Goods The Bargains iii Flannels . - - „ , . ; The Bargains in HOSIERY The Bargains in Gloves I COME AND SEE The Bargains in Blankets The Bargains in Comforters The Bargains in Velveteens The Bargains in Mantles 1 The Bargains in Costumes The Bargains in Ribbons The BargainsMHhawls The Bargains in Laces . The Bargains in Millinery The Bargains in Trimmings The Bargains in\Und’rclothing AND DON’T FORGET The Great Bargains in Furs. oh ilF.pp n -I U1TOU111ID . J EDWIN KEEFER, Ate of Toronto, "-Honor Graduate Royal College of Dental Surgoonu, t Odats’s Block, - Clinton.’ AhW|Mi Ilegtotarcd. Charges Moderato. d" I?W irvtt. REEVE. Office, Rattenttury Street, jm- IJ1 mediately behind Hansford’s book store". Rerittenee opposite the Temperance Rail, Huron BtifiHjL., Office hoprs from 8 a.m. to 6 p. m. Clinton, Jon. 14; 1881. T" in lluctra«eerT«|7 H. W. BALL, A UCTIONEER for Huron County. Sales at- . tended to in any part of the County. Ad-‘ dross Orders to GobBaidir PrOr"“ V-17. MONEY TO LOAN At low rates Of interest and u{>on terms to buR “borrowers., ‘ ...... - MANNING <fc SCOTT, . •• Beaver Block, Clinton Clinton, May 17th, 1882. . 20 MONEY to lend In large or small sums, on good Mortgages or pcra msl ccurity, ftt ttjo lowest currant rates, IL DALE Huron-St. Clinton, , - Cl.nton. Feb. 25,1381. , ’ , Mw Si ?' /;••-. > ■t? Kj; IfACiNING &. SO.OTT, UXnll.^ ’ . ■W' Office-^l'owN Hall, Clinton. 1882. 20 forresteb, ' IJfSfflUiitH!, it . Beaver Block, Clinton. V22tf -.'w .... w.1. : -iaiBAbKii * stowon, Barristers, AS., Jk , God- h EjirW» MdrWifl>th*m,C.8e!igcr(Jr.,Go<lariclu MA.Tiorton Wtnghwn. ’l.jy. ViAVfSON a JOHNSTON, Uw,'Chnncory,*n<l «JLJ 8Wet> »"®xt door to y<«t Offlcfl,uGodcrleh, Ont. 67.- • ';2 v 'i:—~" Photographers QO a * . ?.g s a*- sis r# - - -J i *ty & ttAW, Sdttcitor, M Orteo, corner of t , AV OqnM* MM Watt Street, Wii Butlat's Boo& ftoktfcdwfcS, oat. «r. JtF, Money td UWf *t lowest rites of interest. £ W»W t® lo*« »| bnmt •#jr. * -"'a Life Size Portraits a Efoeoialty. TO THE PUBLIC. GotoichMrbloBi’ks /t' ■ * ■ T fiomTGonnoN.is J/ ' MM;FH VANStONfc *' FOR SALE., IN THE village of. B .GRAVE, the dwelling house and store occupied by.-ine. The site is ono ot themost desirable In e villago fdr. busi- .nbss. 'There is a good st.tbta,... thouses, and Ah excellent sofLsyilter®ifltdEh_oh th ireMiseB. Tho !94..9°,5Pri.8es 4 an acrat.^Tlia .ulldlhga.are-. in good repair. Will bo ^ld choap, the pro prietor Is giving bp business.'. Tormseasy. Apply to / . ■ • WM. DUNOAft 6-Tl-tf. ’ Balgraivci, OnK. w z £Lw « |.‘ ft S'gs tO -W jS £ ■ESBCSBH Mt arts gw,'... .9 recent exploniona havj ,be«i) traoW directly to A'“erica as, well as. number of assassinations committed! in England. The headquarters of the Brotherhood is suggested to be at Irwin, a small mining town wM. of Greenbqrg. A resident Irishman has been shadowed to England ant) return by detectives. It ^ascertained that a large number of tickets have been purchased to and from Europe during the past year at Irwin. It is said these secret spies have min gled with the sqspects for over b year and have become, so to speak, of their number. The agents have departed with evidence for Wash* tiugtnn where they will lay the facts , before the English authorities. A coroners jury, in -Arkansaw, . summoncd- to determiiie thc causa \V.hc of t.he death of a well-known drunk*’ _ard;_retunwd_thei fqllq'wing_ygrdict j ‘♦The feller*come ter hir death by switchin’,pff front one kind o’ whi<<<< . ky ter another. The moral o’this hear ye’rdick is, don’t switch. Minnie. Gillett, a prepossessing white girl, Nebraska, of twenty-one ■ was recently marriad by a justice of the peace to Da.vid Little, a coarse negro. Miss Gillett’s father keeps a hotel, and Little had been doing odd jobs about the house. He made the ,girl believe he was. heir to a“ large cattle ranch, and she consent- ted to the marriage. Just as the' ceremony, had been performed Min nie’s father rushed into, the Squire’s .office with a statement that Little had a black wifeand two children in Desellpinos. ^ This disgusted .the bride and she had Little arrested for bigamy.* "V ' i,> BRITISH—FOREIGN. , In a new.:genea!ogical bonk pub- Jishedlby Joseph." Foster, Air.. Pnr- rieff’s lineal descent is traced from King Edwaril’I. • "Ever- sitipe Parnell -pocketed the' testimony fund,-and applied it. to paying off mortgages on liis estate, he. has been gradually losing his grip on the.Irish party. In-Tipper- ary tjie opposition to him'lias taken; .practical shape,1, the • people having subscribed 8500 to support U nation-: al candidate ’iii opposition to tho Parhell.candidate.- . ' ’. The'Pope, replying to the address by a ■ delegation • fron?“~tKev^onng- Alftu’s ” Catholic Societies recently' said that lie feared great dangers to ‘society • .were , impending; ■ Ho impressed upon 'liis. visitors the im perative necessity of guarding the masses. against the insidioug doc trines of. SoUialisun The ' manner and utterances of liisTIoliness. were mournful; It will be regarded ns unlpcky.to get married in India thisxyear. Every twelve years in tlie Hindoo calender occtirs a year during which it is held that no .marriage m ust take place, and' accordingly? within the last few months the inatrimonial .market, has been unusually lively. This custom will greatly affect the Government Registration. Depart ment-which is sometimes used to re gister curious matrimonial provis ions. ■ Thus,, in oner village; a hus band.undertakes by deed neverto beat" or abuse his wife; another bridegroom registers his; promise to 7ive~ajways' with his father-in-law,' or pay a large sum of money. in de fault ; and in another case a low class HindbpT'Avhq *is the son of a -second husband,’, binds himself not to occupy such seats at marriage ceremonies.as are intended for those of his class ‘•who are gons by first ^husbands. Yhb"Registration phpart- ment alsd laiely prepared a deed, .wh'ereby two natives belonging to opposite factions undertook to enter into a certain religious dispute,, the /vanquished side to pay an indemnity and'become the victor’s disaiple. \ friends of hand* how repul»i<|^^^^®® tents of the feet, coffin *v«ry^HHHHB| carefully mashingMQj^ between, their fingHgjgg that not even a trac^M^ ture remains in the 1iH?£ devils. The bones after a fashion, and. if,iRH even.a joint of the atualtl sing, the grave, the coflfl ground are thoroughly they are wrapped iu WH|| Jin, .each pare of the b^ggl and then the whole MBH little zinc lined box, wn^B albly the package which , “China. ’ murderous Socialists* i« partial to the . ~ say*! The retir* ity cbuncil has five Snyders. Tlim in hardly a fair show far the Snyder familv. Tlie electors should SRo'that on the 6th of January at least one or two more are aided to the number. If every man does his duty wo will have at bast nix Snyders niuct year. Finally it may reach nine’, which would Bq equal to one good representative. ’‘It’s. better to Be horn lucky than rich," suvs an , old proverb! A resident of Toronto’ now realizes the trUth of it. His name ia Wm. Churchill, he’is a working carpenter, and lives on Harbard street, between Lippincott and Borden streets. H« has information which leaves him littleroomtodoubtthat-- heisone of the heirs tp a vast fortune amouiiU ing to something like $$5,000,000. The legacy will be divided between Mr. Churchill and his five brothers. AMERICAN. The Manufacturers' Record states that 1,805 manufacturing and., riiin- ing enterprises, with a capital of- $105,269,000, were, organized in the Southern,States in, 1884. ' • _ Week before jast, while, tlie Bap* tist Church'* of Clinton^, - North Caro lina, was'being re covered, one of the workmen, who is a great sinner by nature and much, more so”bv practice, got on' top of the spire, which put him abou 100 feet, above the, ground, and thinking then the most apt time that ever would, pre -sent itself,sang ‘‘Nearer, My God,to Thee.’’-. . “ ,.4 ’ ’ John Furim and wife and two children, and Henry Bradintee and wife, of Youngstown, O., have been eating freely, of/partially cooked pork of their own raising,. .They be-, came ill, und supposing all had rheumatism used i>om,e remedies. Growing worse they senVfor a-.'pby- mean, who. pronounced tho disease trichinie. All are suffering terrible;; with chances slightly favorable to recover .. The last Sunday - night- qf 1884 Win. Pearson, a "'farmer,.', who is a strong believer, in 1 spiritualism, imagined that he had received an order from, a higher power to kill, his. infant. " He,did so with a "ham mer. When lie had finished the work lie showed wliat he hdd done to his wife, w-lfo is also a spirituals ist,1 He then said that^if she would out-, her throat ' he . would do the same. Both were dfomidTyesterday half frosien, with their throats cut, but not yet dead. Pearson revived -uflicieutly to make a statement. Liie pair will' probably die. . ", - Youngstown,. Ohio, papers note the death" op. Monday’ of ' Charles Birch,- the oldest resident of .the State, aged 102. Mr41 Birch was born in Wakefield, Eng., his father.. -being^-aitHtiglisli—soldier; and dying abroad..' Tho deceased entered the English Ar.mv, and’, .wasone iff the soldiers sent to’ America in: 1812; but recalled to resist Napoleon. Mr. Birch was in the famous battle of Waterloo,.where he was wounded, and up to his deatlr received a pen sion from the English Government as a British soldier. - ILis memory of events during the time ot Napo- i—i. -...i• luuir’omu iry virm^vou 'uuir A despatch from San, Francisco, Cal., saysrEdmund Or.t,pn has re. turned from Australia, where* he went at the instigation' of .Georgia!. Baring, daughter ofojte of the .Bar ing brothers, of London, for the pur-, pose of identifying Arthur Orton, confined in.Furamatti Lunatic Asy; turn at Sydueyj as his Brother.' lie states lie did identify him - as such. He is therefore thoroughly convinc ed the claimant, recently discharged from prison iti London,-is really Sir Boger Tichborne,: heir to 'f lie Tich- borne estate. The real. Arthur Or ton; now in Aqstralia, will be taken to Londdn to ■further establish his identity. '•. ■ „ In'the U< S. Seriate Morrill called up his resolutioh declaring that so •possible basis of reciprocity with nations of inferior population and wealth, involving the surrender of enormously^nequalsumsof revenue, involving the surrender of immense ly larger ’Volumes of.'home trade than are Offered to us in return, an^ involving constitutional questinlis of the gravest character, are tin time* Jy, and should everywhere bd Te- garded, with disfavor, Morrill con continued his argument of great length* No action was taken on the resolution; , ‘ Mrs. Lewis. Fedder, *wife of an old German citizen of Bloomington, Indiana, bad an a^ful vision last Saturday night that goes to prove that tlie stuff of dream* is nqt the “baseless fabric” of haliuoihations. While soundly sleeping she dream ed that she saw: her husband lying stiff ami cold, the* viatim of a mur derer. When she awoke the dream fetiil lingered in her mind, and Bo impressed was she with 'its truth that sleep was impossible, She arose, and detorminod tq know the truth, htarted’ for Ryor's factory, where hsv husband has for two years been employed* as a night Watch* man. Hardly had she, entered, the buildingrWhimsheheheJdherbUs^ hand lying on his fafce near the en gine and haltering in -a pooh Of his’ own blood. Throe terrible Blow had Been dealt upon the old man’a head,, undoubtedly with a rough spoke which lay? by Mr.side. The old , man had been tnutdoradrAfi'A the purpose 0< the murder Wai fob* bory. A large reward for thetif rest of the ^rimtoil will j^robably Bi oflferod. ’ ' ■ ij. Tlie armed Socialists in Chicag<r| are said to number 2,000. A prom inent Socialist, in an interview, says they are divided, into sections and drills in halls, the location of which ’is changed each meeting. Within the past year accessions to the socie ty have Vee» extraordinarily large. Each member owns his futfit, in eluding a rifle, whieht. he keeps, at . home. As to a threatening out break, the leader Said, ‘‘If things-go on in tH<? way they have been going - on for some time, it won’t be far off. You may be sure- of one thing, we will ii6t stand idly by and See work ingmen shot down in the streets like wild beasts, as was dolieonce.” At one of. their meetings a speaker nam ed Parsons said the chief purpose of Socialism was to put all men into palaces am^'place on"their"tablesi the bounties of the earth. When Socia lism prevailed every iflan would be a joint stockholder of the entire-e'irfli and-* richer,, than .Vanderbilt. So cialism had become a necessity, "aiuf hue, musVaSgy Itjt, Ah- gust Spiers advocated murder, ba- ’^cause-iby jit murder could be pre vented. He.who upfield the pres- cut order of society was a mjirder- er„ The mission of all goveniments was tb maintain the robbery of*t,he poople. Ho offered n resolution en dorsing tlie alleged-ao-action of the Hocking Valley miners in-destroy ing the property of the syndicate, ‘which" was adop’ed. John Sural,: ■an old man, said lie believed in slaughtering a few thousand.,capita lists. Miss Leer declared herself ready to shoulder a musket in order to kill the capitalists. Mrs. Parsons assorted her ability to throw dyna mite as effectively- as her’husband; She closed with an ex pressed-desire that ministers would in future advise their starviti'g;parisliioners to ' trust in dynamite instead of to trust in God. Comparisons. of cCTuliAu^ri^ only by the operation Act; if all hW appeals will are met by of insolent hatred ; if Lis own and those of hie colleagues have sjilJ to be guarded by aquada of police- k| men against the daggers of a g aleful H and admiring people * if Iri)*h struetjon and vituperation are anu- bated in the House of he is stiff'.persuaded by thoefV who have his ear that the policy, M^ver^, tireless, Is preternatural, wisdom,umL1 ■ Bl that its success would at onie Im apt r parent ifi,t were only carried ont by more docile and faithful ag^itw. He got rid of Lprd Cowper and Nir. B -Forsterj and was prevented from B ratifying the compact, of JCilnmiD- B ’ham only by'tfie Iffiahiiir Eark ihur- *B ..d,«r3,.^which' compelled biuf to Mo B something for the protect ion of htyal.. B life-injrre!and< ancc<*ssor.H c>f Lord CoWper and Mr. Forster,* Lor4fW Spencer and Mr. .Treveiyah,-. J>^vet - J'B governed tn the mildest and. most ||B equitable mantier ; indeed they have ■ protected rebel and diFcouVaged lpy- ’ al demonstrations to an exteht of I which loyalists had not a litde rfMH I son to complain; but they have I enforced the law, and for so doing, - I they have been assatied by, the. His- ■ I jinioniats with, rabid and bestial tl abuse. They accbrdi'ijgfy are to give I place, Mr. Trevelyan to an ultra- I Radical Secretary who .somewhat I ludicrously makes.his del>of in Uhs- I unionism surrounded by-detect7v.es-; ‘ I _aud,.Lord $pencbr, if the. announce- “* ' 1 menf is correct, to the Roman Cinch*.— • I olic Lord Ripon, in whose favor the I law excluding Roman Catholic*front t he office of Lord .Lieutenant is first to be repealed. Tho repeal of any - | religious disability would.in itself b<* welcomed by: all then of-liberal mind; but" the nieaauro. will -wear a- differ ent aspect it it is iutendednsa fresh cpncvHSTOTi^-io vfo'mbtii1,, and hrT^~ same time as a rebuff to the loyal Protestants of the North Of lrelarni, ? who are t he greatest obstacle: to Pis- unicnist machinations,, and. are .ac cordingly tho constant obj'-cls . of ■ Radical hatred • and - abuse. Mr, . CanjpJbeff BannermAn dalks ^in the . usual strain of England governing Ireland and governing *hi-r with injustice. Ireland has not been a . dependency ; she has had more than her share of representation irf Par: ' liament, and there has heen notliiiig to prevent her delegation from ex ercising the same influencMn-everyv- -r-~ thing concerning her local interests’ which- has been exercised. By the Scotch delegation ' in eVerything .. concerning the local - hdeMite of Scotland. Saturated .with . the" ywofnous hatred of England nhd- , the TlritisirUoVenjmehtTwhich'- been instilled by the DisUniohbo. platformsand press, the Dish ‘peoplyX wiiHrecciye these now bribe« lofcr. flatteries they have reveivo aff the .rest. A* a finance minbU i>4nd a legislator Mr. Gladstone holds ti e < highest place : as a Pritnb^tinbler, while nobody, qtteiitirtpti MifF’^ority ■ . of his intentions, lieJms brought the country into a cOiiipifiauon of dang- . ors such as have not het«t it for many ' a-day, ' '•*. x*-" 11,^4r ’> -M .Iiama I a^sl s Some time ago .the' Winnipeg Jj?T>'y>z> Pw<uooVo.l kwl.un wara times« wprse in Canada than at present ?’’ . The Spectator replied that-they were worso in 1878, and gave sumo^rea- sons for thinking so. " ' • To thia the Free Paess makes res ponse— \ . ” 1.. An exact comparison at- the’ present time, with the data avail able, is out of_the question. If a comparison cannot be mad.er whyjdid the Free- Frees ask- fdr a comparison 1 But a fair ' Compari son can .be made. Ir’1884, as we" show in another place,: the business failures were far fewer than in 18.76, '77,.’78 or .’79. Sir Leonard, Tilley showed jn his speech, at Toronto late ly. . that Aho number ;of'peraous cm- ..ployed in manufacturing industryfis vastly grpajef than in 1878. „ The inquiries of the .Spectator two or three months ago showed that much higher wages^are paid, than were paid in 1878. The Toronto \Globe shows that prices hf food are much, lower thuh in 1878- -A-^ottipariton of market reports shows that prices of clothing, cottons, woolens, boots- and shoes,, furniture and most other articles of oidimiry use are much lower than in 1878- Tbps we have the data for1 saving that with morr work, better wages and cheaper goods, ti.mes are very much butter than they Vvero iu 1878. 2. It is a Well known fact that the commercial situation in the trnitfdjStutes indicates very closely the state of business here, * * * If the deprbssion is “ab great Rs ever before” in the jinited State's^-* and it is the general impression among Americans thit it is greater ■—it is as certain as anything can bo, that it either is now or soon will • be proportionately gioat in the l)o minion. BufiincM failures in the United ’States in 1884 exceeded those of 1870 by 4,968, OF nearly 76 per pen t. TliOtWj. in Canlda j h. 1 $84 were less than those of 1879 by "712, or 3| ner c«n>.' Under the J?atiQiiiaLl*nli6y the Oommercial situation does Hot follow that of the Uiiiterl StattW eq cloKely ns formerly. The ICationa) Tolley has saved uM from a larga ahar6 of the disaster for* wmoh wo ihight naturally have looked under tha Old thrift Hamilton J T11E WEED’S DOIXGS. - !. taU- ' '■ ■ . ■ CANADIAN. . . Mrs. Mary Benjdmin, aged 100 years, died on Saturday iii the coU.n*. t£yi near Kingston. .: __:__ The official count on the vote as to the abolition of tax- exemption 'shew§ a majority in favor, of the movement of 1881, in Toronto.,.- Mounted'Policeman Ross wah fat- haJly frozen in attempting to walk froi^ Gohlen City to Third Siding on .j dn-British-Golumbia.^ He wah^oxhaUsted and lay down be- He was a/native of Scotland and has no friends iu Cana da. ' \ Frances Sidney, who was arrest- ycl,at Lindsay some, days ago after returning from the^ta’fes on ,'the charge of setting fire \to the barns of supporters of the Scott Act at Georuqt^Wn, pleaded gV’l^X before Judge Miller at Milieu recently, and got five years in penitentiary?"^ A disgusting dascTof immorality in St. Siiuyor,’ Quebec, has just Some to light. A few days ago a young unmarried woman gave birth to a child) and after vainly trying to olaim an innocent man as father of the Child, acknowledged that her own brother was her seducer. The l\tterhas cleared but, and is thqugnt tO shavo gone to the (7sited States. They are children of ■ respectable parentage. » • Aetlpii was taken at Toronto for "Bialiciohs prosecutlbh Tn plaintiffs arrested and tried for fraud as President and Secretary of the Mutual Marriage. Aid Asemsiatibn because defahdant Gairdner was not paid the policy for which ha had Bubsoribnd and paid; The evidence of the defence ret forth that plan* tiffs the President And Secretary, as offiears had done their duty till the policy holders ceaee^ to pay oaffeji and thsy ware unehle u MtU pel idles edming dnc. The jury awarded a verdict io plaintiffs—ten cents WAVERLY_HOUSE. TpHIS HOTfe’b IS NEW and has all the rfquiro- X ilionts of a ffrst claiiA house. lArge and airy rooms, elegant parlors, boated with hot,alt* In thd immediate, vicinity of the G, T/R, Depot. The bar Is Well stocked, with the choicest brands Of liquors and clears. The travelling public may rest assured of being well cared for at this Clinton, May 16,18M. 237-y Proprietor. - <.. ' Among the Bones. PREPARING DEAD CHINAMEN POR REMOV- AL.TO CELESTIAL EfOlL. ’ _ (San Francisco Chronicle.) ' . new sewing Machine foe SALE. SINGER . SAVING StA- j Su?’. wlJh hsA hWsr boshSA6G Jf •**■ ^tki will be sold f#rim thAfi iteoBt Aot'ly or sddreiyr ’ Tl!te HVftOK NBWR.RWOR’fl, SlM '■ Cnwrox.OKT, rttlNTON Udyo, No. 84,. A. F.-& A M., moon. VMtfng brethf.• N>WMl|y lueitod. J. YOUNG, W. M, * A\ ^bRTHINGTON, tfaj. OHfltdty Jad. 14, 18st. . J.y .......1 1*■■■'............. — ..... A Mx ewft torpohtsi#A P n I / r * eostrybox tfwWs whtoh will help all, ^yramWM m thMr world f’rtrtiihes aw»H the WkerwkbFOlntAfyiinirA, -Al'Onio sddresA Tutt. Au^iuts, Mains. There ate just being exhumed the. bones of several, hundred Mongol ians to bo sent back to the .Celestial Kingdom, in accordance ^with the ’solemn covenant made By'the var ious Chinese companies with each of their members. From Nov. 17, until yesterday,there have been resurrect- ed at the *‘City Cometary about-180 coffins, with their decaying contents,. and this number will probably see a large inoreaue before the year ex pires. Yesterday Ah Sum Was dig ging up the women’s courier in the plot. Five# living Chinese women were ready to welcome ” the planted onesbaok to light, And.whenever a cover would bo knocked off the de caying coffini ,i!»A Celestial-.beauties would ehgerly bend over, the con tents, without* regard to the direc tion of the wind,, tttid begin to search for the jewels aticl money of the late lamented. Generally the bodies proved to be swathed iii so much cloth and blaiiketlng that poking. wl,th a,stick would not reveal the treasures and dn such cMes the Mongol dame's would'dalntily deposit ibeir cigarettes Upon the coffin’s edge and dive into the borribl© mass With their fingers.. The first article looked for was generally the coin which ia, placed in every Chinaman’S mOuth so that ho may. get to heaven's gate with sufficient toll to purchase ad* mission. To svaroh for thia in;th» depth of ^i grinftffig skull and to find it was prouounosd m good luck by the datns’/who tb berst* pecUble married wothOfi M other- wise they wWuld not be huU Last week we referred to the al* leged failure of the Maine paw irt KansiiB. The corroctneas of the statement of ‘‘Eli. Perkina’- having been questioned by ProhibiiionititHj the Chicago Friirtnc'published the official figure, from which it appear^ nd that the number of internal rev* enue liq’inr-tuX licetietni in before prohibition wae put in forew, for th« licemw year l880, ei>(l.ti^ April 150, wax mh follow^! , ’ iNutaW of Number of wholesale dealera......... Retail malttdonlera....95 Number bf retail dealer« (»aloon)lfh‘-i r ' For licenne y^ar 1864, wheu.pr.c»« v - hibitory lava wqr*» Iu full foioe;-^ Number of reoHfiehi..........,A< Number of whtdwwla Ikfior Retaiimalt d»aleta...;..M,.«, Ratidl liquor dealer* (eald6na>.:,liwBi .At, jamor fa mirrent to