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Janesville Daily Gazette from Janesville, Wisconsin • Page 1

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Janesville, Wisconsin
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SEMI-WHEKLY GAZETTE I'uWlehed every Tneajlay nnrt Krldiy, nt TS.00 per The Weekly Gazette THE DAILY GAZETTE. Jubilated orer? cicojit Sandaje, bj GAZETTE PRINTING COMPANY. The Janesvme Gazette. TERMS: delivered in chy itataa, if puiu In la tic largest Wkly njwepspcr publlelied 1 JOB 'jEHIIV'rl2V3 NUMBER 74 JANESVILLE, WISCONSIN, TUESDAY, JUNE 3, 1873. VOLUME 17 Temperature at Great Depth nniio Xuncr.

from Mad-tllc themiildlfl of every montti or liepairlns lea nt Motcley jlytSdtf narpy Itcller far Yon afi Men from 1 1 Irrore and Aliases tn early life. J1jx.1i id. ImjicdimcntH 10 Marnisc conduct and profcE a Jjnuaville for Tti "li si Di ir hff. suceccdlns No fl)tillci -Ohm a- rliuu the to-loa: i. coit no-os of tu rcrttnoiTS 1)7 on'ooa publls-icre.

53 Maiden Laae, New and n'o a nooh-i haa oca placid of tl htsiu TO.0,U 'S ABVEKTISEmiljXTS R. J. WALSHE, DRAPER TAILOR NEEDLES! ToGOESMBISOf S1TM The Eureka Machine Twist OWNERS OF HORSES! The Zinc Collar Pad If AIR GOODS Wealth and Wondersof Tne ounaiess esi. liart a Ii 1 i Oa.ra, Ihi.lOah V.V i ra! aah hotly, ah 1 oj 1 GEO. WOODS CO'S ORGANS, All lovers of Music Combination Solo Stops.

Family and Pocket BIBLES SUTHERLAND'S! TOTrtE-All p'jrBO-as Irflcbtcd MOSES KISNEV. aud harr.ens maters. Maro.o.ao i. o.m t.j ouLh.Mt 1 1J Oh ii lLh.ei.a- i 'i LOVERS GUIDE. i a'rf: l'v.

a hot 0 II To-, 'l'a 'a li he Nom PBrVTIrVO WISCELLWEOUS. ECHLIN FOOTE Jli.ve very e'eat pi. -en re In irvhlnff MtenllOT tn nV ii If a 1 in 1 i mi or-niNC gPIirso grnixo QVEtfcoATs, fiofio. Echlin Foote's gU SUtTS.f ECHLIN FOOTE Hr. oajj-fKitlt iioys" and You Urn' BovS.Sv!Ts,.

20VS' HtlfU A Big Offer pet'ceiiit-iih a s.M or GOOD JAPAN TEA For 50 cent per pound) oi-siv coruiT. hock covy lie eifl.ata Of Oirlll J. DENTISTRY. DK. 31.

A. NEWMAN, Experienced Dentist, i Oil 'il Soyoii-hoili prncilroor Ills prult All operations en Iy uc'cupitd by Ur. M. Oolinison, i ICK-t el iJero.e-no. ami omo.

ineily recem-K-lh illtlh-ioooh 1 1 Plankinton House, V. II. COTTUILL. l'rop'r ube? oie'-m'm'eno-Ooil, 1 1 oi-m. ho-a; am! ACil.) M.oOS- h'l1 lt''1)'" tiy he ii -'he.

ol Neatness, Elegance and Comfort. BUSINESS EDUCATION ttnpcrior facllillcslat Hie 'l'Oah SHIPPING XAOSi: A good uterinum or Water Fro.rihW eb. Address, CA or at Gazette Job Decoration Day The Indications of I'uWit aoitiinient in itcs'aru to it. On Friday last buamoaa was suspended and tho people assembled to do tliem-sel7us tlie honor of calling to remem brance how much our nation and mankind are indebted to tho soldiers of the late war who had laid down their lives for tho principles of civil liberty and national unity and iu token of tho perennial beauty of their deeds to decorate their graves with flowers. Two facts are especial ly noticeablc in the reports which reach us from all parts of the country, of the observance of tUisnniversary for the present year.

First the increased favor with which the ceremonies alluding to it are received by the people na we recede from the stormy period in which these commein. oration serviced originated. Tho angry passions of the war aru subsiding. Itio significance and importance of the per petual union off the status, anil the destruction of tho principles of slavery as a vital force in America politics are biwoiniag more apparent. The real nationality of the cmise Tor which the war was Jouglit, as disthiEuialiCLf from the sectionalism with which the parlizau spirit of tho period sought to invest it, is becom.

iag tinivcrsaHv acknowledged; and the people assemble ou Decoration Day, not partizana, but aa Americans, to cultivate a higher aud purer patriotism, and renew their devotion to the fundamental tenets of republican liberty, by recounting tho heroic deeds of those who counted their Jives not dear unto them, that government by the people miglit tot perish from the earth, Second An increasing disposition to no longer remember iu aogcr'tbe foilics and crimes which the confederate soldier was led to commit through the influences of a false education, but to regard him as au American who laid down bis life in what he erroneously deemed a righteous cause; and, while denouncing tho error to honor the heroism which he displayed by dropping a flower upon IiU grave also. Twice upon tbeac anniversaries has Governor Washburn recommended that all who felt disposed should decorate the graves of tho confederate dead who He la the cemetery at the capital of our slate. We have rarely read anything more touching than a little iocidcut related by Hon. Charles G. 'Williams, iu his speech at Galveston, Texca.

A HUlo girl, the orphan of a soldier who Tell and was burled on southern soil, Tvas engaged iu assisting at the decoration of aoklicrs' graves in a northern cemetery, whero a- number of confederate soldiers were buried. After concluding the decoration Of the graves of Union soldiers, tho little girl dropped a Ilower upon the grave of a confederal What, exclaimed a bystander, would you decorate the grave of a rebel? Yes, re-plied tho child, perhaps somebody in the south will drop a flower on papa's grave. The reason was conclusive. It was a condensed statement of the imperial demands of human nature. The remains of thousands of our loved ones who fell on the picket Hue, or in tho skirmish, or on the march, or may be in the thickest of the fight, and were buried in the hurry which always attends the movements of armies, or perhaps were leit to be buried by the enemy, lie in southern soil known only to inhabitants of the vicinity.

It is not probable that over such a vast extent of country all of them could be gathered Into the national ccmclriea. It would he a great triumph of civilisation, and a great honor to human nature as well as a national blessing, If by the influence of our example the southern people can be brought to forego all distinctions and honor alike the heroic devotion to his convictions manifested by southern and northern soldier and the people of both north and south be brought to forget the animosities of the past in a united effort to achieve the destiny which the future opens beroro us. The unmistakable tendency of public sentiment in this direction ia hopeful that, out of tho Ios3, ami suffering, and anguish of war, there will grow a closersympaiby between the two sections of our common country which shall form the basis of a more perfect and a perpetual union. Mr. Charles BradlaugU, who is jia Ikr: leader of the republican seu- timent in England, and correspondent of the New York World, was recently arrested by Carlista while on a tour for tho purpose of gaining information iu regard to the civil contest now going on in Spain.

Yellow fever has been reported from the quarantine in New York and it is expected that tho cholera -will not be ions behind if. Tho Press is crying out vociferously about the sanitary couditiou of the metropolis. It is claimed that the streets, alleys, barns and purllcwa of the city were never in so filthy a condition as now and that if any contagious disease should obtain an abiding place within their limits the destruction Of life would inevitably be great. Captalu Jack r.ud the members or his hnml rnr.alt'.od with him were captur ed on the 1st mat. The celebrated chief ia described as about forty years of age, five feet six inches hierh and compactly built.

Ho has a huge and well formed head, and face full of individuality, Al-Uioueh droned in old clothes, the descrip tion says, he looks every inch a chief. Ho ia aa still as a atatue ami uccuncs to spcait Lieutenant governor. Tho uouiinrUion of A. 31- Thomson inr Lieutimutit by the Gazett Spr.ru I 1 1 Frtft Press and several other papers- Item and thu River Palls Journal 3aya tiny woUi pr.jler to him fur Governor man VERY LATEST NEWS Ten Murders in Virg Two Weeks. A Young Man Shoots his Father in New Torn.

Particulars of Van Buren's Operations in Vienna. Captain Jack Reported as urazy. News Items from New York and Elsewhere. FROM RICHMOND. Richmond, June 3.

A Negro was murdered by another in Brunswick county, Saturday, making the 10th number in this state during last two weeks. FROM TOLEDO. Toledo, Ohio, June extensive lumber mill an the loot of Walnut street owned by Daniel Smith, was destroyed by iro last right. Loss from 25,000 to 30,000 dollars, insurance The fire originated in the engine room. THE MODOCS.

Longclls Yalley, Lost River, Oregon, Green Camp, Hay SI Evening via San Francisco, June 2 Aftera thorough exam ination of the Modoc captives gathered in during the present scout under Colonel Green it was ascertained that the last haul netted 3-t men women and children, 13 ol whom being able bodied warriors, lli rifles of various patterns, 113 cartridges and several lean and hungry pontea. Boston Clmriy ana ScLunc I-1 -re aitxiou; about the disposition to be made of them. The former murdered Dr. Thomas, and the latter niulilaUd Meacham. Boston aud Schonchin look like desperadoes.

Each a his character io hia face. Boston is about 2S and Schonchin ia SO. The boldest jr. of the band is Scar-FucedCharley. Doctor Cabonisse, of Yrekn, the contract surgeon, ivho was putting the Motlocs into jj this morning, niter sleeping at, nigni isir retreat, say9 of Captain Jack that he presetted a most woe-begone appear- The wily warrior sat upon a roci.

the center of little lava bed a few yards bid: from the crest ol a bluff, and seemed lonely as hi3 surroundings. He was wrapped in a laded array blan ket, and his head was Buried in his nanus. His sister Mary, captured at Willow Creek day before yesterday, talked to him with in her eyes, ana ashtea mat no enter camp. He was sullen and had Utile to say. He did promise that he would sur- der to-day.

In the nignt no sioie iy. The Modscs say that: Jack i3 in-o. There is much method in his madness. At present he is thought to be the neishhurhooC with three to five warriors. There are twelve Modoc warriors at larjre now.

Scouts were made today in three sections of the country by valry v.nuor Col. lJcny, jJiaj. 1 nim ble, and. Maj. Cusson.

lighting with the Mottoes aa a tribe is over. Scouting after the guerilla Washon will probably be continued until the last outlaw captured killed. Captain Hizcr a company oi voluutcers arrived iu this valley last evening and bivouacked near us. They will have a chance to do some little scouting to day. FROM NEW YORK.

iw York, June 2 W. J. Stillman writ-o the Tribune from Vienna about the ioments in the American department of the exhibition tells the atory ot the now old scandal of the restaurant corruption of Jcwctt and Tracy ol New York, how they called on General Van Buren in October last, and told him that tbey intended establishing an American the exhibition, Van Buren replied that he had many applicants, Tom Cable and Sutherland, of New York, among them; that he had already made a partial promise to one Hetzol, of No. 30S lirtmchvr.y, and suggestcillthat Jcweit and LEctzel unite their resources as ue omy wanted one restaurant and a good one. The suggestion wis a.

looted and Meyer up the articles ol agreement wnicn signed, "Meyer nlso signing as a wit-o the immediate deposit of 81,000 each aud another of five thousand each be- June 1st. Heizel Faucd to rualie ins deposit in the lime spcclheo, the Banners declining the cheek presented by hia partners and went to Meyer to arrange the final details aa to the concession, when Meyer said that the expenses ol the coin- mission were heavy anil mac no appropriation had been made by congress ami sugc that they give him, as a loan, the check rejected at the bank. Jewett refused and was obliged to sail for Jiuropo with-out tho papers and leaving Eetzel to deposit the unpaid money. Meyer, however, gave Jewell's lutter to Baron Schwartz who informed him that Van Burea had no right to make concessions or grant space outside of the building for any purpose. Jcwctt'd concession was made and contracts entered into involving $3,000, the understanding being between Schwartz abd Jcwctt that no other concession for a restaurant could he made.

On returning to New York, Jewett found that netzel Lui r.o, 1 Movr $1,000 to e.u when the appointment was made, but bad the Slate University is chief; Frank Jenny graduate of Columbia College, ihe.School of Mines, and' Engineer of Parks is' first assistant. Number 10 of the Milwaukee Sunday Sentinel is before us. The enterprise seems to be a successful one and it should be. The Sentinel'is giviag to Us patrons an excellent-edition for their Sunday reading a well arranged assortment of ongiord and selected matter bearing upon the nri portant topics of the" day. Two hundred dollars worth of.

im provements' are to be bestowed upon the Flkhorn Methodist church. A 5110,000 ohurch is the pride of East Troy. The next Fair of the WalwoUh- County Agricultural Society will he he.W'.tke ilrst week in October, 1373. Mrs. Johnson, of ElkLora, frightened a burglar out of her house by screaming A new side wheel steamer, the "Lsdy or the Lake," was launched atLako Geneva last Saturday.

Two or three deaths from whooping are reported in Delavan. The Dclavanliepubliean says that Mr N. O. Francisco, has'buii; a handsome sailboat large enough to carry or hi-. persons safely under sad, which he is to lauucli on Lake Como.

The Judicial Election in Chicago and in Hie State. early hour of roe Judicial eieonoi, appeals ot the newspapers, the apallTy mTk was so frnrinnil that Aslitou look i T. si itiv-itl arei iiatle fair ic keep As soon as tliis danger be- 1 i in i i ofcirculars summon-rf voters to tho noils. These were sown broud'-if-t through the the business pcrtiou? of the city. The board of trade suspended -closed, and.

employers and employes went out to vote. In this way the vote, which would not have exceeded 7,000 or 3,000 re sell o.OOO, and, although lie carried of toe strour; German wards, Ash ton is defeated by about ma- elected. this writing, the returns of tbr- utest between Ijasvrenco-anu Mr Co-ait- seem to show a light vote except in Gulcsijurg and the Immediate- vielaoy, where Judge Lawrence bashis homo. Some towns have been heard from, giving Judge Lawrence a majority of C(k-ijn IWiUhS. From the AJbany Hcsisicr.

Jt may not be generally known that a few years ago somewhere about 18C3. probably the head chief of the Modoc In- iin was a white 1 Tv: suasion, with whom he lived and loved for celebrated Oregoa HTlllRP. While reigning as chief of this warlike band, nrobablv to more securely establish his title to the chieftainship and gain the it picn uiuLuuia, the red-skins, he concocted the diabolical plan of attacking and sacking the City of Yjvkl, Cal iiiroselt vtsitej reka and examined tint approaches and chances ol an easy capture. ha then contained a much larger proportion of 0oating population, miners, gamblers, all were armed and gen-eralivola rovine, position just ihe kind men that were always wav in fact, a class of of mcu to whom ex citement of EOine character was an absolute necessity. JOaqUin Was HUt lOllg -uiuaiu.

tee facts, and the attack on Yreka was in definitely postponed by the Modoci consctiucnce of hia report. The iiiilure Ct Joaquin to carry uui uie i u.un., scema to have "soured the Slouoca somewhat him, and it was nnt Km re he returned to the "white settlements' These and other io tiie lire anu auvemures or joutium i'u given us by an old mounttsinitiau, who was personally acquainted with the Modoc chief at the time of his chieftainship The Kev. Ilenry Ward Becchcr has bitberto jireserved an unbroken silence with regard to the -haret ic-peatod so of-fclll vole by the Woodhull-ClaCiu crowd, of New York, but which originated in a quarter more respectable. In the single allusion which Mr. Bcechcr has made in rcrereuco to them, be said that he knew no other way of treatiug these women and Iheir attacks than as he would treat a ivlin ftlmnlfl i.tirow dirlv water on him he would pass to the other side of tin street and pass oo.

But he eecma to have finally decided to meet them. The deacons of Plymouth church held a me el lug last Friday evening, at Mr. Beechcr" in immediate occa the rrublication. the other. lav, ol the at son- i.oo.c-meut between Mr.

Beeeher, Mr. Bowcu, and Mr. Tillon. Chicago Tribune. Hotel Arrival.

Myers House. Robiuson, Utica; Oabkosh; A MoHus, Jewett, do; Preston, Freeport; Bork, Madison: Gump, Philadelphia Peck. Chicago; Bucsetft, Oshkoab Wyman lady, Bradford; A INyc, Milwaukee. DEAtnBOiss IIot'SE. A Farnham, Johnstown: A IIuUoii, Milton; A BnrdicU, i Dr.

.) Coakley, Miitou Junction; A Brown. Albany, V. A Bhdlip-. Brodhead, A li nri; Brigcs, Ft Atkinson: Ji Black, Monroe; Mr. 1 ,1 II' andlady.

Delevanj Capt Miles, Fulton Mrs I' roiii and daughter, Brodhead; Harry DeGaltn. u. lormin, (to; iom uutson, tlo; James ttutaon, ao. Buss Hoi: si: T. J.

Coming, San Jose, p. llvzm. Bocte Prairie; Sam Jj. Lyaton, Louisville, Ky; P. S.

Stciuer, St. oiio; J. M. L'hatlwieh. Monroe; K.

Stair. Hn. A I'nlinm Oi! Dr. W.A. Har vey, do; II.

P. Cody, do, S. P. Kelley. do: George Baucs.

do; C- Place, M. St. P. pay ear; Go W. do; L.

Daucy, do; ifetrv Moore, do: lieory jamcs. ctco a. Dnugcrty, do; S. F. Skinner, 1N.Y Win.

oleiolook. Three I 'overs. Mich Sylvester Armstrong Add Harbor, Mich; S. II. Gilbert, Wiukegan, 111; Wm.

R. Chadsey, Elkhorn, Wis. also ascertained that Van Buren made to Wiele concessions for bar rooms, and was informed by' one of the firm that they paid from 2,000 to 3,000 dollars for these concessions in Uie shape of loans and school housB donations, 11 at part of this went to Van Buren, Heljrei had not yet made the deposit requir ed by the contract. made position to buy out or sell out, which Mey- or, as Hetzell's adviser, refused but he insisted on new articles. Jewett thereup on save his late partner notice of hi: withdrawal, aud gave Van Buren a statement of the affairs and requested that lie be afforded the necessary facilities for transacting his br.3inos3 at Vienna, but hq wa3 obliged to leave again without further recognition, and ahcrth after a Vienna.

TJetzell arrived with a concession for a restaurant given him by Van Buren for himself and msun, for which they Had given Leu a I originally paid in by I ott Dennison having paid Meyer which tho latter handed oyer to Hctzel as Meyer's, share of the original Yi Buren being iu possession of the other Jewett proteated to Baron Schwartz ogamst the concession made to ippheanta, and it waa refused, so that they ict only had not concession lor their de posit but no compensation tor their trouble and expense, and It is only since the whole lias been disclosed on oath belore the investigating committee, that attempts have been made to hush the affair by returning ITetzel the money and inducing Bochuoe Wicl to take Inm into their establishment. It is known that Vau Buren has admitted a knowledge of these transactions and receipt lor part of the money, and appropriations were made' by conetress. A phase of Ihe corruption which can have no relation to the pretexts of lending, is agreement to pay Meyer a percentage on sales by Bochmc Wicl, and hia direct demand of 10 per cent of all profils from Jewett, which was! not admitted. Jt appears also that Meyer permitted persons to send jjo'ods intended for private use and profit aa goods intended for the exhibition United Slates vessels, and that he offered Jewell and Tracey some privileges which they declined. One person is said to have saved several thou' sand dollars of freight in this way.

Pleasantries indulged in recently by some New York detectives at the expense ol some English officers who arc engaged here in the ease of McDonnell, the forger, threatens to result unpleasantly to the victims. The home government is to make aniinvestigation and baa asked Lacy Pisk to sit. to obtain particulars of the so called joko. Lucy D. executciit of Jr.

haa begun what is essentially known against the Union Pacific 11. li. Company and Credit Mobihcr of America, against Governor Uji, George UpdyKe ana A suit has been commenced by members against the founders of the co-operaticn building association of the united cabinetmakers, section No. wherein the former uarge the latter with receiving nd depositing it to their own advautagoi allowing tho land represented to be free from all incumbrances to rest under a heavy mortgage to foreclose which said suit is ponding. Thus awiridliug the plain- New York, June 3-Prank H.

-Walworth, aged 19, shot and killed hia father, Mansfield Walworth, iu the Sturtevant house, this morning. Deceased was an author, aud boarded in the Sturtevant house, away froir. hu Domestic trouble is assigned as the cause of this tragedy. STATE ITEMS. -The Liberal Democrat, a dai paper i the ln-copy of published at La Crosse, entirely i terest ol the lemate sex, scnua us borne made postal card Willi graph of the editor cu tho gabJe end.

AVeare always rniuaiui ot sum remembrances and the Democrat has our warmest (00 in the shade thanks for its tittle ticket. Fond du Lac begins suspect that it did itself no credit by heglecti.ug-to observe Decoration Day. A Milwaukee tolesram reports new-formed ice in tho lake between that city and Sheboygan on the first, day of this month. The sheriff of MilTvaiikec. county enjoins race horae riders from pnrsuiag-their avocation on Sunday but permits beer gardens to run and opera houses to open its to crowds of amusement seekers.

His is a higher type of civili- than most oJJua have yet reached. The combination which fastened the safe of the Milwaukee National banK on Thursday was forgotten and workmen are taking out tne locic wuu nuns. The receipts of wheat at Milwaukee lor the week endiog May 31, were bushels: since Jan. 1, 1S73, The shipments for tho west were 080,274 bushels, and since Jan. 1, 0,000,031 bu3liels.

Ontnf ten bidders frooi Chicago, Milwaukee and Madison, J. Fulton of Chicago, have obtained the contract for walks and roads in. Capitol at $1.30 for walks aud $1-00 to $1.70 for roadways per square, yard, made Of crushed bltumiuom rock and Trinidad asphalt A sportive Madison pound master, one Ttfinr-. Rmith. fired a revolver twice, on Sat urday evening, at William Salmon, whose horae be was tryiog to capture, one item grazing hia cheek and the other lodging in his thigh.

The nartv for a geological survey in. the iionegions of Northwestern "Wisconsin started vesterdav for Ihe Feuaukue range.iu Ashlaud county. Prof. R. lining, of A deep bore of course affords the best means of practically testing tue lenipera-t- riifcrnnt.

Vtpnt.lic from Lhn earth's surface, and to such purpose has recently been devoted tl i dee; 11 iu the world, Pi tun tho past six months throueth the tools salt formation at bperca-nre neetr Berlin. This feet deep, I cxpei ip rr idi i i suitable appliances gave presumably correct data as to tlio temperature at various depths the erust of the earth. It was found that at 100 feet the temperature was 57.2 degrees at 1,000 feet, 73.S; at 2.000 91.4; at 8,000, 109.4; and at II full ol water and that lowest down the warmest, the latter rises constantly to the top, bo that a constant circulation is kept up. This rendeis Drobable that the index of Die thermometer gave a slightly less than the actual temperature at the bottom, and a proportionately reverse effect at ihe top. Americanizing the Thousand Islands.

The Belleville' Intelligencer says: "Sonic American spectators are said to have bought up all the Thousand Mailt! group in the River St. Lawrence that lies within the United States boundary, and two or three of those belonging to the Dominion. It' is farther said to he their intention to obtain by purchase control of lb Canadian group, a design to which the n.v.nlp on the adiae'on' mainland are strongly opposed. Dr. Brouso haa moved lor miormaiiou niu wr.

mnv in thin tainnection that few people have any idea of these islands or iviv is transnirinrf omoni them. The day is not tar oisiant wuen uiey n-nrld. In view of ibis Inct there has becu hv manv nartics a desire to secure the purchase of one, more or all of them. Many have already bee provided coming when ail will be; and tUis romantic spot will he known as the "City of ihe Isles," whereto our future nabobs will resort to enjoy the coo.ing breezes the heated term of sunimer. Tlie New President of Spain.

Marshal Esparlcro. Duke of Victory, at the advanced age of 81, is to elected to the Presidency the Spanish Republic. is not man throughout Spain who has la higher character for moral courage and devotion to popular ri in he this Marshal Espartero. Ill was made a Duke, by Queen Isabella, lor Ins sreat ciihtary services against the L.r'.is'.c, teat that high 'rank not to have ciiancred tue gentleman's prin ciples. He warmly supported Amadous, i lees of tbejkingdomlwerc turning iii, him.

In truth, 'it was well faid at the time, in the Loudon journals, that the name of Kspartero gave- more morai iclit to aov cause than any other individual in that country. ir this veteran was not so nged, his aceen trust i the Spanish Presidency -a-cnld r-o far to Insnrc the staliitilv and tranquility of the country, aud at the same time to- confirm the republican system. But Espartero is very in years hi; physical are too creat to unable Litn to act with the full vigor and the aoititv otMiis youerrer years. Ilia selection wilt cove the HopuWiC a good name abroad, and that is what that unhap. py country needs just now; yet we fear thalitwdl bo the fate of Spain to go Uironolt trials and struggles that will shake her like a reed, before she reaches the solid cround ot a durable and law abiding trepublic.

The Cuban cancer is eating out cut! to the cession of the island to the United Slates. heening i- CITY UOTICEIB Ic Jlctcl, 1'JiUadelpliia, rnrnlEh nil tajle. LCl'i Scspcns.able'. oclTdjlOMly 1 West Mtlwankc. Wc will estliibit on Monday, J-Jiic ih, a splci did line ol Llama Lace Paints In Shawls an Fatctols.

Thee are riro and beautiful good, at bmishtby'iisatalarsolmirartcr'a aocthofit.i.e coat io import We oi llieladiCE to call ai uiyiSdaw URO'S. Good. Sport-hi; i tills state can be speedily ciliicr wltu. acTlde or lliopor.cy tenpin balls, ui ttu Excel-iorBowlin'z Alleys. BvcrytUlag reqaSsile for yUdir T.

U. SMALL WOOD- Awlt yonr grocer tut Frussin'B Vinegar, celo rate I fir Ol parity ami WnrrjntcU to uescrve pickles for years. First rremlum awir. tcmed plsuo, jcJdawSm eet, with tho ia package to sirIclIyPureWhlteLeo.de Sb.crwood'3, 41 West Milwaukee followiiis manuXacturcr's guarao lead, and will pay twenty ounce of adulteration iqualcd for purity, -whitenesB aprtdawly anyone doing Ijusinom 2, SHERWOutJ. got no memoraudum or receipt for it.

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About Janesville Daily Gazette Archive

Pages Available:
261,548
Years Available:
1845-1970