Centerville Citizen, The (Newspaper) - October 12, 1872, Centerville, Iowa IOWA of County In IF mil In NOTICE TO PATRONS further thr nf th will in of who lo nml for or fur nr Joh lire to nt nud nrc now too low fn Id lone M M PER ANNUM OCTOBER 1872 VOLUME 9 NUMBER AD on special Inserted paid Tor In advance Legal Bret and 50 cents per square tat each the first Ulett of type and arc prepared to do ALL KINDS OF JOB WORK at ss low aa trie same quality of can be done ihc cities The First District wny Snm of the fat over the nf tlic Liberal candidate for in Confound fellows out in tlic They don't know liow to appreciate oratory what's matter They poke fun nl Bit he And Press he nn hu docs really find truly lie snys of speech ttc clinrscd on I In- ns if n red were nod liis worked up Ihr inlo tin of and cut to sec I he nnd kept on nn nss or himself Wo no doubt H n man honest nnd bin liu stick to tie neither the information nor Hie his Inking the wr his if lie has liny judicious utirs him lo nt such If lie line in or nny Inr the he his gives no hint ol the the of n creature lo from this District in place of n ot intellect nnd I limn nny notions ever the head of Quixote Those fellows lire of They been They nrc jealous of men They nro ami of the number of filled by And the of the eloquence of his hesitations we menu the lie is euro lo bo elected four hundred thousand what worries those eral fellows And so they write that kind ol stuff about him the allegation and defy the Mr Shelley says it was the must enthusiastic meeting he lias yet intended He says he was generally told that no speech over delivered in Washington so much applause as The applause was so she it continued for live minutes in it impossible for him to proceed nnd i was for the enthusiasm of the younger part of the to be re- pressed even then for him lo go on He is confident that for ery minute he spoke was nl least two minutes of It n very gratifying indeed One of the grounds of com- plaint ninde by the Democratic porters of Mr Greeley against lit publican party is they style the for the suppression of the Klux outrages at the Smith Yet il is matter of record that no one urged that more vigorously Mr Greeley himself the col- of his And only one year after he had mndo nn ex- tended trip to the South and hnd en- joyed special opportunities to learn the condition ol things in that section of the in a speech which BIr made in Now ho hold our government by its duty of our citizens in their lo pass nnd enforce for the extirpation of the and il it has not power to do then I sny our government is no but a I on every advocated nnd justified the net I hold it especially bio for the South and if it does prove strong enough to its I hope it will be stronger nnd er fellow these very men that mo if I saw nny themselves rend the re- turns of ihc last Presidential election in when that with black majority on its made to vole for Seymour and Ulair by more majority counties which hnd negro voters alone giving nnd in instances no at for Grant nnd yon nnd they know perfectly well this result was secured by and by telling them You shall vote for Seymour nnd the enemies of your fundamental or you shall not vote at or you be killed was the way Louisiana was made in nnd that is the way I she will never be made to vote again Therefore 1 uphold and justify the Klux Bee Culture In a recent report of the ings of the N Y Farmer's Club wo find the following remarks of nn lown Mrs Ellen 9 of DCS n well known on the bee nnd Invited tlie Tupper snid she just from Ihc of n skillful einn quite surprised to bee to rnnt the of n person to lifter queen hers He wanted to know n queen bee She thought It time this should be She believed there ly n spot in this cily ns well ns nnd where bees could not be kept She knew of n In tho city of imore where thirty colonies of bees were kepi on the top nf n nt 100 pounds of honey were obtained from colony It ly woman's work keep bees She knew of n who nil her groceries nnd many of her from the profits of It for men ns the of chickens Her dn lighter of eight her very helper In looking after her bees Tlic dors of hives deceive who consequently think humbug Vet nil who the nro A n honey nnd n colony of Italian nro nil nro necessary to set up In the Two years at DCS n young Indy whose hnd or fourteen nf enmc to mo nnd whether she could tin them In n little t lold her how lo jo to work Tho first from to worth of the next nnd thU she wilt from her bees In the common bees nre worn from con- breeding In nnd in The fly Iho common bees nnd longer 10 they end get honey from which the other bees could none for Tlw In especially tor keeping I buy need Iho nnd after the prairie flowers the State Items lion John W Den has removed lo Indianola C G It Lewis of hove lo build five linnd red miles of ihc Pacific Railroad In there is a family of four have heavy beards a cleverer never Governor Carpenter has appointed J W judge of the 1st 8th in place of Judge resigned The denies correctness of ihr statement made by Cily lhat the C I passed into of C B it Q The last of tlic Si Paul nnd Sioux Cily was laid nt Lo Mam ihv other day Through trains between Sioux City and St Paul will he run in n few days The Burlington and Missouri railroad arc milking an sive collection of grains nnd vegetables of Southwestern lo send lo ihc New York Slale Fair Wm a Cily lias applied for a patent lor n clock of which nil tho miming gear is in the nnd according lo ihc keeps time well Frank a young man residing in Mason recently went lo Minnesota on a pleasure and was drowned in Lake So says an Lake is in Dickinson Iowa The other an old chased ol a rag in ihc pocket of which was a sum of money il is lo wan run through the Cedar Rapids paper mill and cut into A short time since a citizen of named Jackson denly disappeared a hotel al and hns not since been heard from Some of the DCS Moines police force are at work on the case A Bohemian nt City ted suicide by culling his bo- lore a lie wast in poor nnd leaves n wife nearly blind and in to vide for herself and seven children Tho Fair field Ledger Tho handsomest white grape we have this season is a seedling rained by lion Jas F Wilson It is nearly ns large as nnd has a rich flavor The arc largo and the berries compact on the Mr Wilson calls it tho Wilson The Atlantic whose editor is by no means a warm admirer of Gen and has cised sonic no is of Ms eh il concludes an article on the present cal situation Wilh President Grant the country has at least an assurance of ly It will not be lifted lo a of bnl it will incur no new peril The of Grant will make no rash experiments on onr finances and our dangerously ex- currency The public credit will be The country will have security Ironi foreign ing and domestic violence The ol dent will remain to be used to protect the public credit and treasury from hostile and ihc less growing out of ihc war will bo on the only possible sub Across the River DT LUCY When for me the silent onr Parts tlic Silent And I stand upon the shore Of the strange Shrill I miss Ihc loved I vainly seek mine own Mid Ihc crowd thai comes lo meet Spirits Listening to their echoing feet Down Ihc streets of I know a footstep near I for Then will one approach Die brink Wilh a hand extended One whoso thoughts I loved to think Ere Ihc veil I wo And nrc side will go with That be not To yon hills of mystery I wailed only to climb with Yonder hill of Can the bonds us here Know ourselves Drop like At life's Inner f Is holiest below Must forever lire nnd grow I love the Alter I found them In the mansions they With the glory round But nt first without Let me look In human eyes Step by step our feet must go Up the holy mountain Drop by drop within us flow Life's fountain Angels sing with crowns that burn AVc n song to He who on our Bids us help each Who his Well beloved hath Mndo our elder Will but we meet Therefore dread I not lo go O'er the silent Ihy hastening onr I Ihou Through Iho to the Where mine own gone before mission lo equal laws There will bo public which is re- lo ihc expanded trade nnd credit of and which is n need in our financial currency nnd banking and ihc try will have as much currency re- nnd reform as Congress and popular opinion will support F W Liberal candidate for Presidential Elector in withdrawn from the ticket Ho says in his to the Chairman of the Slate Committee I linve become firmly convinced by ihc observation of Stale and National politics the Democratic instead of forsaking its colors inscribed wilh the dangerous doctrines nf its to under the flag of Liberal handles onr colors but to creep the nearer to its enemy's citadel to trample them out of sight in the grand 1 believe ihc cause of reform will receive a deadly blow in Democratic success With Republican it can nt the worst but remain in I ly hope nnd believe that present movement will urge on the old party to real for puro government Gen is now slumping for Greeley Yel on of last BIny he ST May Just returned from nnd Hnd your letter of April here 1 wish II distinctly understood stories In circulation In regard lo me an being In of Ihc menl nre intended and the regular Philadelphia 1 trust my old friends In will not think me so busc n wretch us to wish to desert them nr In fncl nny time We Mctlenry JOHN F After this written lost the nomination lo That little ol luck opened his eyes lo tho wickedness of Grant's ad- ministration It is rumored the burning of the Northern Asylum will A MIDDLE-AGED LOVE STOBY They ix group of to mo with waving nnd kindly I stood on the nnd waving back till the er clown river out of their sight I knew I should have their prayers grunt be gentle with me I knew would watch nnd look for telegram of the of onr ship I knew I WHS Inking from nnd they would each go home hardly missing me BO il was with no greni wrench ol I saw pilot pul us nnd look Ihc Inst look nt my native shores During most of tho I just comfortably so I sat nil long in n reclining chair on watching Ihc while caps on the green nnd bine waves that mounted and fell down nnd up nnd out to the far horizon I the shining nautiluses flunt now nnd then n or n of or n sail white nnd lull ncross water I also a good many other things nearer for I didn't put my eyes in my pocket nlong with my ed nnd nobody was much likely to mind a woman in hood nnd The first thing I was a young girl wilh eyes brown that rippled itself inlo n tangle of rough curls whenever she took off her net She was not very nor HO very but there was n pi- charm her that attracted half the passengers before the first day was over By the end of tho day from the captain lo tlic ship's and from the to the cabin was rnger to show her and everybody was met by ihc same genial smile and lively retort She won her way into my heart by ihc kindly thought led her lo bring little relishes from tho table to tempt my sickly nnd to soothe my forehead with and gentle touches of her shapely brown where a great en- circled by diamonds Very soon she got in the of her nig be- my and on the deck leaning against so thai I might ns she said This how it happened that my corner came to be the center of life nnd gayety nnd romance of tho whole shipboard It seemed that this young Rosa nn If ealling ol an catra h taw I of Ohio Legislature an only nnd an going to on uncle in her nearest of kin I hope her undo will be wise as well as said I to for she seemed too agile a bubble of humanity lo drift on through life alone The tips of the brown curls were lighter the nnd here nnd thorp were litlle bright touches all over her as though iho snn was chining in on it One morning I pat coiling these gleams of around my nnd watching a flock of Mother Carey's chickens skim restlessly over the restless thinking these thoughts and having her soft presence alone to myself for a few Not soon came up a New of course there was a New or an Australian on our boat nro very Miss Ar- said he me bring you a yon I prefer to sit here on my rug and have Miss Wells pet replied turning up her eyes languidly deck is my favorite il 1 can only havo an ex- cuse lo sit on you need something over persisted the New going and coming back directly with his own heavy gray wrap Then he denied himself on a low camp slool beside folding tho wrap over the two never saw so rough a sea as thin nil the wny from Honolulu to San said looking out the gentle swell of the lazily-monnt- waves cried Miss am sure the ocean is as smooth as a pond but not as compared to the rightly We have never such gales on that aa sweep the bnt only the westerly The New Zealander and drew his wrap close over his knees have the most charming climate in New he went on are never too and never too cold In we never think of the weather And the soil is the most fertile in it is in such an out-of-the-way part of the earth that nobody can live said Miss Armour your Miss there aro several English towns of in- habitants and wo never think of ourselves as being of the bnt feel sorry for those who live so far returned the bending his tall figure earnestly for- ward Rosa leaned her head toward him in n confiding attitude of laughed so you arc the nnd wisdom is going to die with snid she But what do you do out there in heart of the dig gold for one and raise eheop for and millions of them from thirty to forty vessels are constantly plying to land wilh tho tallow and pressed do you do with all that ton looking idly at the light in her and then as idly at the light in the speaker's eyes use what we was the I am sorry to say we bury the but sometimes an order will come to a farmer for n thousand if you and nil he can do is to clip off wool get out the and burry a pily ihc meat can't be sent to the hungry poor at Why don't somebody condense it as they do iho beef in Texas I said in my way good I dare body will but we can't do everything at replied ihc New looking with sudden interest at the game of being played be- side us Just then along came Ihc ship's a blonde in wilh his hair parted in the middle said gun is to bo fired at tho bow will yon come nnd see it done Miss Armour stalled up nt turning the same nnd ready smile him she had been giving us am going to leave my rug with yon I shall come said she beaming over her shoulder upon me ns she took the surgeon's arm The New Zealander looked after tried to console himself by ing his wrap in another fold across his did not and ly got up and went away Of course it not worth his while to make himself agreeable to a middle-aged in hood and So I sat and looked at tho likeness of a lake among the sunset and tried to decide whether I should take oatmeal gruel or for my wondering the about the old chord in my memory always being struck hy n certain musical ring in the New voice After an hour or so tho gun was and presently Miss Armour came with the disorder of the strong in her and its freshness in her pretty pink cheeks as I she dropping at my feet smiling as though she had got where she best love to such a smile as she would have given to the stokers down in tho or to the ship's cat But it lovely to look upon while it lasted and we middle-aged people have learned to worm ourselves in any chance ray of stopping to er whether it is likely to be perpetual This time the bit of sunshine did not stay for there came up nn artist with his nnd when Miss Armour had sufficiently admired his graphic of the captain and tho and the sick occupants of an upper it time to throw the dog and so he bore her to find out by her own eyes whether we were actually going at tho rate of thirteen or only twelve nnd That how the days went The passengers read and paced the played games and guessed and were always hungry the pilot stood steady and firm at the the sailors ran up and down the ging like overgrown and were forever scouring and tying and drawing up and letting down nt we had come safely almost to our desired With fair we wore only one day out from fond as we had grown to be of each we were getting impatient to part Miss during all the had kept on ns she ing every one with her trick of lip and eye They ran after her like boys at the of a kite they had better to do just then and when she had faded out ns n rainbow I made no doubt she would be as easily forgotten or only remember ed as a by unless it might be a solitary warm hearted man like the New Zealander To tell the I was a little sorry for him life had not brought him all it and he was hungry for the love and confidence hnd never been his So I was afraid he would miss this litlle sparkle of girlhood and warm and find the void deeper when it had gone out To the very last Rosa kept her place by my and to the very Inst the New Zealander his place by when no one younger had stepped in to carry her which was pretty to be sure he ways went quietly awny wilh a kind of grave regret in his face Or this last Miss Armour hac just left along with a yonng law lo drop oranges and lemons among the steerage when I noticed the New Zealander looking her with a sadder regre than a hii eyes He had such handsome darl eyes I could see without m glasses said I to I hope he isn't to get sensible agreeable man like him old enough to be her father And so I looked at him to see il he was when suddenly he turned me least yon might have written Agatha Wells said he sharply I started M you may to hea my own name spoken so familiarly by a when looking be- I eaw the and under wrinkles and behind beard a face that twenty years before was the dearest in the world to the face of Duncan Ashley We parted one day expecting to meet on the but that evening he was called and wrote instead of coming In the letter ho said what he had said with his same beautiful I was the choice of his heart and the desire of his life he cannot wait till I see So I foolish there was no need of for he had read all I could say long wilh those eyes of then I watched and waited tor but never saw him or heard one word more If you are you can the slow dying out of hope and expectation and if you are you know how such things can be lived hidden in secret graves But as though the graves had been and the this sudden reproachful question up from the hurried past I fairly caught my as I turned back my eyes and looked him in the face again said he in a gentler tone did not mean to speak Yon brought it out wilh your lhat questioning turn was so familiar you were quite nnd I never blamed you I never you should see me again but Hie to feel my sell be- side only to ba in the soothing charm of your presence was too greal It has been a blessing I shall carry with mo all the rest of my He was rising to go but I put out my hand did can said letter mnst have gone did You wrote he sinking back to his chair and looking at me eagerly did you say was only one thing I could and I said I blushing as though I had just written the letter woman in hood and dear it was only my face that after my heart was as yonng and silly ns ever And as for Duncan's the marks of and and fell leaving in it only the eternal youth It was the old story of a lost and the older story of a proud mnn believing himself rejected and and fleeing to tho ends of the earth with his pain bless your I might as well havo tried to wipe up the tic with my pocket handkerchief He was so grieved and so impatient and so resolute when one conies to think of twenty years is long enough for an that I finally dropped off my water proof and sea and stood np behind the and was married before eight bells that very ring and all Duncan produced it from a small casket where he had carried it in his waistcoat pocket for the whole twenty years could never bear to put the little thing said looking at it tenderly precious years were d said my New ill not be separated another day vhile we bulh live There is a gyman among our passengers nnd we will be married this very That was eo like his headlong de- Certainly he did need a second thought like me for ast cannot be I Tho ceremony wouldn't be n license or something And would by no means do so nnd conspicuous The next day we came to with he sun shining and our flags was a flurry of a of a welcoming ot on the and a glad to and fro Among the rest was an of Miss Armour's lips on my and a little cling of her hand n the vanishing of a and she was like the flash of a out ot my sight forever But wherever she and however she she has the daily blessing of middle-aged whose way to each other she unconsciously lighted A great pet with the is the so called be- cause its narrow gauge three cet and single track remind one rather of some arrangement for delight of the nursery than of any seriously contrived for the of adult passengers and belongings Ils real name is Denver and Rio Grande and t will not be long before the City of almost will be directly connected by its means with eastern and ern civilization Even as now finished to it connects Denver with the heart of the most remarkable re- gion of this land of wonders Mrs Harriet Stowe speaks of motherhood in a when she says wonld sometimes seem as if motherhood were a lovely artifice of the great Father to wean the heart from selfishness by a peaceful and gradual process The is self in another form It is so interwoven and identified with the life that she passes by almost insensible tions from herself and day by day the instinctive love of self wanes as the filling the henri with a thousand new springs ol Business Cards 0 W Estate Conveyancer and sole Proprietor of System of Title bought and Taxes conveyances on equitable terms Having compiled with great a com- plete Abstract of all the Real Estate Titles in this I am prepared to examine Titles with great facility and more correctly than any other in the County Persons de- siring to buy or sell Heal will find it to their advantage to call upon me at the Treasurer's Office in Iowa JOSHUA MILLER W OTIS CROSBY Oc Attorneys nt South Side of the Public Joseph Store T C Attorney at Notary Public and Collecting Office in the business entrusted to his care will be promptly attended to Attorney and Notary IOWA Office in J Store given to estates of drawing Bounty nnd Pension Agent All calls promptly attended liy day or night attention given to surgical cases north-west corner of the Iowa s H M Iowa l calls promptly attended to M PHYSICIAN AND Ij C Physician and Johns Iowa Consultation confidential nnd free All promptly attended 8 A calls promptly attended to 44 DENTAL ROOMS DR H W Surgeon and Mechanical All the branches executed ID the beat manner Having given branch the Denial Science most of my for n ber of I cnn promise all who may give me their that their work will be dono In the best Sots can bo obtained nt from tlO to In perfect of and made to cnt nud examine specimens nnd lime nnd doors west of Ihc Post Continental East side Public A Proprietor This large brick is a first class en- tirely furnished in the best wilh 33 rooms and sample room No pains spared lo insure the comfort of lo and from all trains Good stable and attentive hostler Keystone Side of the Iowa J K Omnibus to and from all Good Stabling in connection with house H C CAMPBELL Iowa draw receive make and do a general business STOCKHOLDERS BOWEN S W V P D C CAMPBELL H SAWYERS A RICHARD The old elm tree under which Washington took command of ihc armies of the United is still standing at with nn iron railing its ancient and a granite monument ils bnt is beginning to show tho effects of old age Last week one of its largest measuring upward of thirty feet in length anc a fool in fell to the ground The venerable tree will soon disappear with other relics of the Revolutionary period A young lady it was not good for Adam to live single when there wasn't a woman on what shall be said of old bach clore with the world of pretty 3D General Life and Fire Insurance OFFICE WITH West side or the Public Iowa laving no oilier and represent ng none but First Class who me will find their interests losely guarded W T OGLE CITY PRATT LIVERY Pine Lumber MICHIGAN AND WISCONSIN PINE LUMBER GLAZED For sale cheap for CASH at Steele's A T HIS OLD WM Three Boon West of KEEPS STOCK OF SADDLES AND HARNESS And everything in his line of as represented Corner of Public CENTER 10 OCLE A Proprietors Feed and Sale Stable gers taken to any part of the county Gooc outs furnished on short notice Gooc for all Traveling Agents at low boarded by the day or week to and from all passenger trains to any City lickets five for one dollar can be bought at the office of Ogle Prat Single 25 els J C Martin J V Bashaw MARTIN Manufacturers of all kinds of WAGONS AND BUGGIES of the Iowa nave on hand wag ons which they sell at low est prices The usec cornea from the is of the best quality is well and they cnn warrant cv ery wairon for two years Alt repairs per taming to will receive prompt Give them a call IOWA NEBRASKA LANDS FOR SALE BY THE Burlington Mo River R R Co MILLIONS OF ACRES On Credit at 6 percent Interest No parl of principal due for Iwo nnd Ihc only yearly till In will for lima Mid- Improvement within the limit of this credit never arc not now never will be giving foil particulars aro wishing to to cm I gr si wilh them of to form a are Invited to for all they want to distribute Apply lo UEO S Land For Iowa at Iowa And for Nebraska at Neb ONE of the celebrated Triumph Fountains it the Sod On streel leading to the depot W J W A Nursery Dealers In aud of all kinds of RUIT AND AL and nuts and Maple Trees Tlic c named firm loomed at and offers to Ihc fur Fall nnd Spring trade 135.000 Plumb trees and Grape of nc gr mth ut liberal And also will sh anjlhins m the nursery hue the cars from aa Iowa City nursery and alock AND HAIK of the P Public and Collection vi Will write take Office orner Public Square L GOODS Ax J E WALNUT IOWA I cordially all my customers to and minc my and us I am rendy to com- prices Produce ol all kinds that 1 in Into taken in for Home Insurance Company of New York The Home has paid every dollar of her Chicago losses and comes out with an un- capital Patronize the rst and all the lime II H Iowa Hack Line Tho Camomile nnd Hack Line will ran as follow GS lit 8 nt II a m Centerville m nl 6 p ra Make connections with at Moulton and WALTER HARNESS SHOP of slorc Centerville Iowa Keeps constantly on hand a good slock of Saddles nnd Will manufacture lo order and guarantee thing m his line attention en o carriage and buggy A share of radc is solicited H A C M MAIX JOHNSON A- Wagon and Carriage They pleasure ia Baying to their old customers and the public that they arc prepared to o anything in Ihc blacksmith ness Special to horse shoeing and of all kinds guaranteed They cnn be found at of lumber on the road to the lepot J P Ullrich Wagon and Carriage East Side of Public Manufacture to order and Carriages but the best terial and satisfaction in all cases guaranteed Repairing done on short no- tice attention given lo horse shoeing With a number of years we think we can entire satisfaction in Ibis branch of Ihc business M R R notes must be paid due The Notes and Accounts of J L Ong are due Save cost by settling at once This call means business Just Arrived A fine assortment or Silk Mixed To be sold at the ruinous price of per Worth in any market Coats for and Vests for In fact a good substantial suit for These bargains are to be given in but for a short time Get your Fall nnd Winter Clothing while It may be had for little money WM MODE COOK New Grocery For family groceries go lo the PHILADELPHIA GROCERY West side of the Public Square A Complete Stock DRIED PLES nnd SMOKING BUTTER MOLASSES AND CANNED FRUITS The best brands of FLOUR Constantly on hand The market price paid for try Produce J B FIRST NATIONAL Iowa WILL DISCOUNT NOTES And other evidences of Receive BUY AND SELL GOLD SILVER BUT AND SELL On Personal Will Make Collections OX ALL ACCESSIBLE and attend to all matters pertaining lo a General Banking Business JOHN Cashier WM President C H A E J R WM J A TALBOT Bank open from 9 m to 4 D m Sturgeon BAYING OPENED A WELL SELECTED STOCK Moravia Nursery We have al our two miles and s- half of A large slock of Apple and Cherry of two and three years growth With a ber of years and after testing over 250 we feel safe in teeing lo our customers The business has our entire attention ers arc to call and examine our Block Orders receive prompt attention 1 tf A C REYNOLDS Sos TJ L STRICKLER'S and Feed Groceries ire ask the public to call and examine them and we will prove to them that WE 1 T BETTER AND CHEAPER GOODS than any other as we hare very important advantages over all other other houses in town Hear toe Comer of the Square Horses and lo let on terms Good stabling and attention to those desiring to feed yards and Sestet attached and FRESH Our Goods They were all bought since the reduction of the Tariff Jan 1871 Ice every 1 the We SELL FOR will not hare I our good niers pay our bad ways the cise with PRODUCE taken to Corner Cen Dotty the -J