Show ua‘ai M1 rT nfvMtmtMatiiiiiiis Pj!f fait §ailj Stlmib Dahr Paper Lil Trims is advakc?: Uifrrtred at residence in the 'J'yKial Cfleprt the Trrjtiry and the Reli- of lle peopl- n ifevared to Home Interest ous iind Politic) rights First Claw Family ieitteinent PUBLISH IS ADVAKClt: NO 28 'pH rH ‘dtp htwj ’pHV® new i? wlwrj 'ub tlSStll he £4 linrcia '? ilf vm m 'hvt i’lliu & lay I® yell rt liMto&j fas! sfeow ra pRlJ:js Unions in Caueokma-of Sun Fran-ii'be Commercial Ihmll hi the following paragraph and truthfully sums up the rtaiihioitlly in absurd doings of the labor longueand State: ijjttt city Ylulreceiving more liberal terms else and were given anywhere all the necessaries ol‘ life as yith pearly than in other heap or cheaper iiistiCalifornia vvoiktucu of the bad men designing men in ltl to follow the mnf Lour tin ir fi licit s iii other jiar Jy dud exist a It hrro grievum-eand uncallu'4 for IdetennlThey actually ipurrclei! with butter 'J'liev uuriip- ir hmad and rli’u el'T' from the yards of oni' lines and had the srratilica-- i t tjj! ‘'i me the places once remunoi foefi' occupied by then: iiiied v ith Hi'" haoics They st:uek at t!:c II1!- and were replaced by ives— a ciuinee wiiieli wire Tier avenged bj J'l uidoir d a large number of paying insisted fipo- - laeausc their employers Giant powder as being r and economical and ("ipiditious a cy riieii banded together to prevent the mineral ihei's from unfolding eidth of the State They crushed out the boot and shoe making business which promised to soon become one of re most important manufacturing of California giving employment to hundreds and promoting the comof the emfort and the independence They revolted at the New ployed quicksilver mines because immethods of working were introproved duced by the proprietors They have insisted that eight hours shall constitute a day’s work at the same rate of formerly paid for ten (ompensatiou although previously satisfied and tacitly admitting that they had been well rewarded They have raised the price t? every article manufactured through their agency in like The ratio cost of building has created proportionally increased rents and the of their inconsiderate conwhile they duct reacts upon themselves jwe steadily and surely losing the They they formerly occupied hive now presumed to dictate what ffieir employers may and may not lo aid have assumed Ho control their affairs This anomalous condition continue It must either culminate in the downfall of our manufacturing industries carrying with it the ruin of or the demands of oiav working classes laW must recede witliin reasonable less Guts nmt lie less intolerant and unscrupulous and must seek a 'Midi's viilcr ami move pvogre— ivc T Calh’ornia-'b- of GOVERNORS e Stockton huh'pendcut says: "twenty years ago” California - had including her present execu ten governors viz: Beter II Harnett John McDougal Bigler John B Weller Neely Johnson S Latham John U Downey Frederick Stanford F Low and Henry 11 Haight It is nut confirmative of the shiftiug character of Ca!i- ib'Liia population that these gentlemen vre all (? still residents of this coast md all but one of them remain in Governor Burnett is president of rhe fViitie Bank in San Francisco and a large land owner in Santa Clare through "Minty John Bigler isengaged fh columns of the Sacramento liqiort in protecting the feeble nud timid f ‘auiasian race against the encroach and truculent ji vts of the vicorous V'dianv J Neely Johnson occupies : oaf oi the bench of the Nevada Court John B Weller is rusti- ii:u in the vicinity of Oakland f?) lenie-- t farmer feasting on the of the “dying Celt” (or as the e might be) upon the ' nf Mexico Milton S ia-- ' on 1ms abiiired inauguration balls ’iidiawu from the “filthy pool of uTs” lias tinned his back on the the bone and yeomanry-m of the land Mr President” — no r wear- - grey shirts or slouch lists e lioneeriug tours bn' :s a stylish silit f “hlarstod British oi tlie b nki lie business at Suu John (1 Downey is still oie'sen teihi in tlie pill and porous plas- ill which s bo bsi' Angeles "i’ty be - a wealthy holder of extui!md"ti interests Leland Stan lord ‘L tlie Central Pacifie id ‘oinpiuy and bis wealth in geld jd di r would we imagine siiilu icni-snl tln of ids locomotives for a !: oni Sn iMineiito to the summit P investing "H lending money o al operating in mines and the imp unions homestead' druo-ev iv other fashionable and method additiomilly feathering diva K w leathered nest Henry jelicves tlie occisionally (Aland rustieiiy by a Hi" State Capital ii " notable foreign or Moiii'oliui or I'ae deid ionof itt olio Mi in m'1 in J noMt Serfr O nr! ilIii' !e0" J idh r says in:’ wi'l pi Wnm: Pine— OGDEN Work of One 1 EAR —The following is the closing paragraph of a carefully written letbr The CITY MONDAY I do BnoKEX— A recent writer the vonerehle Dr 'J apjian is cruel euoualv to cast from the pedestal on Ax which Amerieuu patriotism Hud placed to tlie Sau Francisco IhilhHin : him omof of mil- revoluHaving indicated in brief what we tionary idols ‘‘No man’’ he writes have not got hero ‘‘lias btiwgot m (I wliat been more overruled probably in t bite Pine it may be well He was rich enough than John Dam ink to vive an epitonm of what lias been lived osientati'iiihlv mid was very of a commendable and accomplished Imji !io uis i du and un beneficial kind during this the first Almo' cm rybi'h with whom - a mitring coni lli‘ tiadcil year of our existemo Mv him V)s o’lheed to Tn the first place then we father told me tli n mu ci 'iiid si Id' n munity have trot well rid of the warms of drum s ipiss she com IniU'i' iu ttnston and that infested tf: also m f eouiitiy Inst w!m r t! nt postiiciuiis wlio scckim:t" live by thoir w alone are to ge ui wnne grand oj 110 tiuii "it a rotten bi - e: oil Willi ldess la II tic p'i pel pes oi t'’'' and ere lubius With e an ab tract id our nge ii Jjopulation is of coiiisc redueen below vlmt it was three months ago a aooj many persons of au Hancock Loudon s havuig also fi ft for i els tol'l me in inv vnuth opposite that ndet the operation mg outside (rovemor invited iln ubob Peiiit' ut of tbe'-- ami other causes there are not Miissachii-i-tt- s ti bivakili'i witii him probably at the present time over eight without jibing her any muico Mi or nine thousand people iu the district slid ‘We have tin milk for the coffee against at least thirteen thousand in of so many persons' And he replied the month of May The largo influx of ‘Send the servant' out to milk the the common’ immigration counted on last winter has It was the cutom failed to arrive nor is it likely to do so then for the inhabitants to send their the present season The value of real cows to crop the c ra's on the public comestate has declined here fully mon so that this was one of die most in the last three months the prices of dishonorable tricks imaginable ” lumber provisions ami all other leadThis testimony of our severe old ing commodities having fallen in a much iconoclast will surprise many no doubt The wages of miners and grieve many too who have grown greater ratio heretofore be are to into veneration of tuis illustrions man at $5 likely kept reduced to $4 per day and the milling as one of the fathers of our country 1 of ores for a long time maintained at is not unlikely that Mr Tappan may $ 50 per ton Has come down to $30 In find himself subjected to a fierce persethe way of auvancements and improve- cution for thus exposing the faults of ments made of a less negative kiod we an idolized hero ut the hands of Iris have our three considerable towns with descendants just as Bancroft did when hamlets besides to he ventured to question the military casome However present — the whole having cost not leas pacity of General Green jierhaps than $2000000 Eleven quartz llatieock is not the only man in public mills carrying 122 stamps and costing life who in those days dishonored his in the aggregate — sites and water priv- position It may do those good who are continually ileges included — something over moralizing on tins dehave been erected and set to lim- cline and decay of public virtue inthcse ning two ftv the others of large capaci- degenerate days as compared with the Seven good old times to con the testimony of ty being under way the charachaving an aggregate length of over 200 a true tradition touching miles have been built —the whole cost- ters of the members of our first ConThe late J edge William Jay reTwenty saw mills sev- gress ing :2VmX)ii eral smelting establishments and a lated that while he was a boy lie heard costly system of water works have been Cahncellor Livingstone say to his fathconstructed — and the latter rapiliy ap- er: “Jay vriint n sot ofd rascals while immense there wore in the old ( 'engross I” We proaching completion sums have during the year been expen- may rest assured that there wa about ded in the development of the mines as much ‘‘human nature in man” in resulting in tlie production of two mil- the “good old times” us there is now lion dollars worth of bullion and in the and perhaps we are not so dem as the croakers say — extrin tlon of Kufiieient ore to yield n It ly as much more With this exhibit of progress made and work done the people of White Tin: “Ti rxi K'X ” Tli" reader ma Dine cannot justly bo charged with luite noticed a dispatch in nor can tlie district in ing sluggards That paper in rcaard to a great Herman any sense be pronounced a failure many persons have been disappointed gathering in Chicago soon lolakc place in regard to their purchases there is no The Tntu-- gives an explanation of the doubt true That immigration and capand the object of the new society ital have failed to come in and proper- mine A few week hence anoilier notiibfi is unty to appreciate as was expected deniable The towns have not spread convocation willtheincur in ('fiienru The which 'lie pleased projector by style with that rapid growth that was anticiit is to designate "Tlio NatLe-ilpated and what is still more to be fo't” In the national language the desfewer quartz mills have been ignation would he "The National gretted Festival” It is very proper put up than was looked for and even that (lie inline of the thing fewer than the wants of the district re- however But still the great mineral should appertain to the nationality of quire of the thing Gymnastic sport1' turning wealth of White Bine is sufficiently es one’s body wrong end upward employtablished its capabilities for a large the bands instead of the feet for the and cheap production of bullion being ing of locomotion twisting the purposes unrivalled on the Experience altogether Dody into a double a greased judgment and economy are of course rungs of a ladder climbing of u monthe few with to gyrations executing success these pole yet necessary tail from in itself the key by swinging fields can be found more inviting to capto another and the one ital than this of these and similar noble and exercises ith copioiH draughts dignified It is not unlikely that in our upper ut “la gor’ these are not “na we have exactly the soil and tional” characteristics of America or of The adjective in llm name climate for Leghorn straw which gives Americans “turnfe-tlie cannot of the millions value approaching of to Tuscany an export mean that It of dollar a year It is all cultivated in intondc-- flinttothe was word “national” t 'tiili very lighl soils us our Sierra tended to denote the expmtation only afford-This speciality of barren that gymnastic performers will he pre— mountain lands comes from a peculiar ent from all parts of the nation atieii-- t It is from nil parts where there may he any rariety of wheat thickly sown Hut the public essential that its growth he stunted and gyinnc'tic performer' A that it be cut green — that is before the are not permitted to uppo o that vastly greater sigiioieam e A great deal of care pretension uf berin to till Tlelt Is set lip in till’ Use of the void i' required in curing and blenching it proton'll in is publicly itoebired in 'in and afterwards in sorting it into sizes phrase :i thi: "To ctluento the people for use in bvaidma hats and bomn ts of to risi'iiO them Irom prejudiees alike The fatal to progress and pro penty different ivip" degrii of fineness Miperstilion and ililftise tin- result' Sfli's export from their poorest moun- oat - what th" Turof modern seienee h tain land ibout half as much braiding to nek ners aecouipli'h' It is not so highly straw as Tuscany it thus appealThe better tended "inhering but it pays prized it is true to be sort of ed'ieatiomii from the than any other production to educate Americans into moioiml tl at they now unhappily s There are good reasons for eliuiu same land American- arc plainly told that supposing that in our high Kiel ras we respect- straw they are sadly deficient in row even finer braiding may of llioir prejudices that in than the celebrated article from Tuscaami their sunei'stiu'ous they are t is said that the Tuscan wheat ns of the wonderfully ignorant which is sown by main' fanners m Calbenefits of timiin ifornia is tlie kind which produces the greased pules feet climbing ‘No rare in the orld tlieysay Italian braiding Draw but oven if this in sin'll I:'" d of those nmrvol"U u have ho tree changed the quality may ncl"tiu a the “ ii ugonohs and in yeaof cultivation here f the is the grcni It would probably b bettei for any lurlo Gunn m Tm nei to upp v ibis hi b in' r v o wisbes to tn- the cvpoinnent n need I'nor'i" Mum h seed troiii ldori nc on to "ii o - ui is in (hi oil straw ii) ni'l ill In Dl Tl lie probiblv many ri! I'm' a! w !io ui liimiH'r w of curin' Il'filU'! 'W'Mv d n !'ro r "H (i‘ I'I pl ' n d now e cs ti r id ini r o ikr 'lie- if ii" to'loe JULY 26 ()ck vx "Mor t s —The Wire 11a lwavs — While the subof the London Ttnus on is being so generally ject of railroad board the tJnot iwnM eoutradiefs discussed the following description of a some red inclusions new invention for wrryincr freight and thus 'I'hc biu- rf the cable fast passengers from one point to another start in m iy shallow w unr from ’Min- may la: ’We see no attompt ion bay )mi in liiur or fisc miles to end people by telcgndi nearer Jo 'pen- - from 1' to “o latlenni and yd t'i"ii era dually 'hehc- - hum in to OU than thi' but in the mining and mill:'itd ‘tn fatho'iis adeptn wbi h - prot’y ing region- - of tin mount tin- - we think ner tin- vrliofi ci'iiiiy mtdiitainrd bo wire mu lea great uijwjn milit A 'bis lev"! the Kurii'h ’hatiii' TVC's T c'u on the nil Id u th ciphnn’x-- ' Wtl'i' UV! unit Mow it iiy tl o uiiit in trn hij tl ’ifoGraii i'i ti hy Nit' it! n tn jf 'Ot u r if ami u i Liitkj - ” ut HUJi "I hi tr i riliwuv jU MlhstltUU j'l MT iLlGi't i'ii’in' v Hasten! r h'l''l Ho c to tli ruir p:i' - of look- - alb d liieu 1‘ii jn’ie'’-and which down in the ydm Vr wore hen l confidently believed :) this was mentioned omc months ago ill the 7VW a control id once l are-on these columnmen ur steadily denying the existence of those vvlfile rocks the other extraordinary ide tciidcred the evidence of eye who averred that they hud acThe mutter is now tually ocn them scl at rest and if ever the “Three Chimneys” had an existence they have 'I'he Atlantic cannot afford none now to lose the small amount ot interest which attached to the opposed presence of these solitary peaks but “facts arc stubborn tilings” and it has now been placed beyond a doubt that tliey are not to be found at lea t in the latitude and longitude in which they appear on our charts Liout Johnstone in the eimrse of his soundings went over the exact spot where they are indicated in the chart and fouud more than 2( 0 fathoms of water with deep and not the slightest water all around trace of rock or shoal in any direction The sooner however they come out of the admiralty limp the hett- r and it would bo curious to knowhow they ever ot there at all From the localli efthefiititioue pinnacles the cable course is kept iu a pretty regular demli of from lsfHMo over a 2 non Sathom- - and thrauahout soft Del of mud mixed with myriads of These shells minute slml'i the ol‘ ilitiiitnuu hi various firm' 'emprise mil it hi their which ihuugh lv mull are so vie! only tube visible unit' !iu mo- powerful li io really as film as flour and the yreao r jn( of the bed of the Atlantic is ere ire I with the Jc6A of these minute aninmenke tlie exist' what tenoc of whicli j'uvo- that at those great was long denied depths there - an absolute cessation of all motion a Latum the line is taken Over in an are of a large circle the most southerly point of tin: cable being in 42 and the most degrees north latitude northerly 48 degrees Along the southern end of the Newfoundland bank it is sunk in about 10 to 2'ri fathoms the water on the hank itself varying from Tims if is completely 10 to 90 fathoms sheltered Irom ice which if the ice bergs pass the bank at all muse dear the cable which lies under its lee by From this some 100 fathoms or more point it is taken up due north in the channel between the Breen bank and the St Pierre hank in an almost unva lying depth uf V Si fathoms From this pouit otic tlie course is over very regular shoal water so to sneak— being at no part less than loo fathoms and gen orally over 110 — to near Boston Sllpl'O-i- 'he J uf ' :( d q fiv M" 1' r‘ niuHcnl Mi: Mtiii h to s jl of foe proo'-tli wire b un- W if'i pcifi: fi !"ri''v in Di'lci- or lc elling and vi'i irm m l on along a rugged troct f cou'iti'y The - pi'i'iineni tl'' 'iiioo'hc-- I’uid being now pro cuti'd with ''impiety heiw"m ome Jn'ii'cstersliire sticen-toii'j (iiai'iii'- - ned u railway 'tut ion three miles distant of an iipportod on a scries oi rope pulleys eari'i'd by mbitiitiid post- which are ordinarily about luOfoot iqiurt but the intorvul bntwovn whicli may be - is shown in one greatly extended v here tlie vn from post to post is 000 feet One ol‘ the ends of this rope passes round u Bowler's worked by a portable sluain engine and this drives tho rope at the rate of ti mile Boxes are hung on the rope an hour at the loading end near the quarries by a pendant which isingeniously arranged to preservo ti porfeet equilibrium and at the same time to pass without hindrance Kwh of these boxes over the supports carrius 10O weight of stone and tlie delivery is nt the rate of 200 boxes or ten tons per hour for the three miles distance Already wire tramways on tho Leieosi tershiro model arc in the emirse of erection in France Italy and Spain Negotiations are on foot too between tlie and the engineers Turkirh government here ait'l it is not improbable that this generation may see goods carried by Tho wire as commonly ao messages indued not unlike an extramway and ceedingly stout electric telegraph almost droll iu the there is something trucks sight of a regiment of or Lotos passing gravely along it ut ami at a regular pace ted intervals much us if they were at an mrial drill The most important point in Air invention ii his method of passing Inc points yf Airport which eottnistain u curving Urn ofthu truck or box m to niiiiio tho center oi' gravity come itiuler thy 'ropo So admirably is this inumigo'l that ome of our Wiling engineers have been quite reof constructing a cently tho stout wire tramway between Dover and Calais which should bn supnqrled from a line of pillar punk in and along which passengers could bo convey d The cost would be comparativetrains could it ly small and is argued across the bo dispatched channel without difficulty or danger It should be stated tnat where heavy loads must necessarily be carried a pair of stationary supporting ropes with an endless rnnn'rtg rope for tho motive power are employed and that by these means as many as 1900 tons per day cun bo easily conveyed The cost of erecting tbc8 tramways in England and of supplying motive power and rolling tuck is from a mile for currying tons a day in boxes holding 5rt lbs eneh to £lo0Q a mile for one of the lino- - to carry 1000 tons a e holding 000 ibs day in boxes or truck weight encu For ull where there is traffic but where It would not pay to construct a railway the wire tramway is particuanil us will be readily larly applicable nnib wherever there is standing room for posts there a line can be erectA iecent application ed from traders copper for potting one up for them Josh BruiMs on the Him Brno inwhich should run through an African — They have no very partikultir parents forest mid owr an African jungle down nor birth place: are born a rood deal to the coast iliiMtrites tho varied az tud stools are wherever drey lean under which the new system find a good oft spm of liu pi c mu y bu iij'id'ed Thulium liuf- - don't "iiorally live t mil l' but have die comcrate while T!ic French ' h"rph cable an faknlty os duina in one pla pleted unite- - Bre-- t in France with a mull Mao'! offilie mitih coast of Newsuddenly Imru ” eiiOThcr awl in foundland- ’lu'iics indirectly extending They an aial ii’IOmL 10 New die cumin inicarirai ly telegraph and r'"'i pi ut win n nr Yuri and The etn tit perch a employed for hmii'-- t W'liild h in' i'i ’fi: rii it brought direct Irma India ml trinkets beacinii hi tl'' pe of idols 'I into a e :u to J'Nety tine i'Z dn The conductor u bucg ami yet cv'i' roil niak" dii'ir aniuainDU!'''' 'h if r roil of’ 'even wires or little les- - than ii '("’meter They have tin' oinru to a!! cii'llvs u! ii r i wliliotit kiiuckiii Irom the iv being emh of ut inch d around tire oentnil wire The to di" lowcn ami ho ul h n kiekao uw'in and fliui f'd vile fie traud - m:nle cumpuet mu arc wloumo-by a more than evr '’riii’Uid imj reiiiarkable ndbe-iThe iium hit' Lv mote limnd- - 'I’an The weight of tin properti uuii bill he Mi'inid Is tour hundred pounds per naulie know- - what tical mile andwi'h it ooringuf g'itta ilia uagi’s tew gw the wbo’i f tlr b b Ii” on poundper mil" the Thare ain’t mm) hod' 'uppo-i iiioii! 'Men!') divided bi'wcin ho ov lie w H'lia Tie who Mfltuallv puics upjicr and tli” "Ut't jh Imd !' rii oil tl’ uf the iVu Fi ance IS ri’li'hia i' d miles and h n tie li'rur Tin IT1’ ni'' a w ' I' - a n Uon o tli'1'1 " to 8 re ncv Si iiX'i '’io i '''i " n THURSDAY nrANCit: Six Month s(ai AOTaNC:1 Six Months $2:r0 tiaW SruMKU Expimt vrtoxs There are huiidteds of tourists from die this Summer engiiged ia the yoniowhat arduous but vet generally delightful exploration of California scenery the mountain lakes the mammoth trees of Calaveras and Mariposa the Coast Bamm valleys the Geysers tin? airy table lauds of the Sierra 5 ma da the ovanyc groves of Log Angelov the vineyards if Sonoma Mid the orchards of Alameda and Santa Clara and in line all vc ha’ i' wrath seeing is likely tube well wu utiiul written nl ut by touii-tbefore Iu Till re are twoexplor ' Diuihe f fro Ilia parties threadin thu roams of liit u ri ii :i( tic' upper Colorado !n mu part of a!! the p limps the fin P tcritiny in Cue uiu Slte- tile loJialt- - Tien an rii’gr part pii'iiiuu ilitrath a !"i'Inar vu’teofilic mi tire iii'H ortbem 1 :iei lie Ihiilway 'Hill auothei pioueeritur fora iilhuiy on the thirty 'OconJ piralli! The are r'yroii: Lake liogut exjiloriiig the Klamath and Bid fixer reuits fra'a railway with the InuuboUlt nod wo hall probably warn heat- of a California party (f engineers among Hie Scott and Siskiyou mountain- - hunting n railway route from MarsIlle to the Wallamet A' alloy 'The parks of Colorado Territory will be tilled with tourists and So with the valleys of the squatters Horn Yellowstone and Little Missouri and the hardy IF e forward from Kansas to g warti Die upper luni Liver of the South while their brethren in Minnesota are feeling their wav for a railroad to the Bed Bivcr of the North and Lake Winnipeg Everywhere tho country is in motion Such restlessness of the million such eagerness to get land were never before Manifested even in this country of wild uorest — San a: fawn — Manuel's nre only to la The series ot‘ negations from person is distinguished person not by whut he does what ho lent es undone The person just differs from the person in that he knows what he ought not to do The very best breeding consists chiefly iu the utmost and well To be in short is to keep down the mannered (jo upon every omisioa j to control evof evy expression strong fording tube Ot noiseless bearing and gentle speech to abstain front all that may hurt the ieeliiigs or prejudiees of others to make small sacrifices without securing to make them in a word to remember that in society one lives for others and hot for oneself But politeness is not like a rolie of state to be worn only on occasions of In no place do the Ituvs of covemouy etiquette bear more gratifying results than in rite home nireleis where stripped of their mere formality tempered with love jiiid fostered by all kindly itnnulseh they iinjiroxe the character A true ana boar their chnieest fmit-gentlewoman will show as much courteobserve all the little duties of sy and her towards politeness as unfailingly husband anu family as to- parents A true ward the greatest strangers gentleman will never forget that if he is bound to exercise courtesy and kindness in hifl intercourse with the world he is doubly bound to do so in bis in- tercourse with those who depend upon him for advice protection and example A new monthly paper entitled tho Dirortsr is about to do started in Paris divorce with the object of legalizing Tho prospectus states that there are not fewer than 11000 separated men that the and women living in France courts have at the present moment 15'J3 demands for separation and that moreover the number of couple sepa— Hr rated voluntarily is hnnteni-Such a sheet ought to take wri! iu tjliicago according to accounts Manners by a defined the but by Treatment Charles of i) wtlr'-n- ihbt time sinco 18 fid I’roniioc Ins n’rnost 'oldici for the v t i nlog Till- v t In h’’A ' (”nel titer yi'”!’ v' v ts !i t:'1: ii jh’ t ' Soarikt Fiih T Thompson gtes treating carlet fever it the in a The patient is Jjaucet: warm bath in the early rage w the disease and thiisri‘peated frequenti)' or as often as strength of tit" tient will allow The first effect - to produeo a soothing and refreshing fil iu the patient to Ik followed b) ing such an oinptimi of the surihcc si vivid a color and in such amount as those who have never would astonish witnessed it Tims one of t lie civttii dangers of this fearful disease the supis ereapeu pression of the eruption The appetite generally returns after tlu first or second hath and the strength of the patient is kept up by nutritioa-looTint bath prevents the nation of the by removing tie is I'xcreti from the skin as soon 'i’hi- - ti'eatnicni 'fi qiumatii’! Til' he trentli ihiod b Ii the Dr ’'id r dy tiu " 't t Uin or ’i'i ui tn oe Per annum t No Throo ih Month MAHKO— CAn $7:00 Three Month I YOL 1869 4 MONDAY TfRV— annum Per Six Mouth mourn 3:M Three Month 1R?i)ii!b feD City 1’iH’cr cirenliititi in tUsTerriniry - lO' tl “3H' f- vo f |