Warren Ledger (Newspaper) - December 1, 1882, Warren, Pennsylvania WABBEN THIRTY-FOURTH DECEMBER 1, 1882. NUMBER MISCELLANEOUS BUSINESS W. G. TRUNKS Attorney at Office with formerly occupied Judge Pa. M. Pa. Office WILLIAM Attorney and Office in Exchange DALE Office occupied by on Pa. J. W. W. A. DR. P. Surgeon and Office over Morck Drug Pa. DR. J. M. DA Homeopathic Pa. Office and resi Liberty opposite Baptist at Tele O. H. Attorney at W Pa. Office ou Second opposite Warren Savings BROWN Attorneys at Pa. Office on Second over First National a. C. W. H. E. NO YES A at Office on Second below t. D. C. H. W. D. CHRISTIAN Dealer ia Leather and ht the aizu of the Golden Horse opposite National Pa. P. Justice of the Pa. ma king out and other clerical business entrust ef to him will receive prompt and careful Attorneys at Office on Water up GEORGE H. Dealer in Lager Fancy Canned three doors below Carver Pa. The under First is prepared to do hair satisfactorily and him and J.D. and Gas echer Kooms opposite Variety Pa. BALL Attorneys and nt in Pa. D I. C. C. Dist. GUTHRIE Attorneys at Office on Spring opposite the Post Pa. Legal business in Craw and Forest Counties care hilly attended E. D. M. Homeopathic Office cornet ot Third and Lib erty at on High street Pa. REVERDY B. STEWART AND RICH ARD B. and residence oc Hi lear THE AND THE HOW LEGISLATION HAS DESTROYED TUE OXE THE The tendency of population towards entres of commercial and manufacturing j Cities and towns absorb the energies and numbers of the People do not see and cannot j ell how or why it but they do know i farming is comparatively profitless j every species of protected most In any event urers tradesmen grow rich while the 1 oiling people of class can It is even pitiful to see how pretty j once Yielding profitable j n a hundred miles of New York are i to fences have gone to fruit in neglected orchards is un- houses are gardens 3lossom no more ia native and desolation marks the face of the while New York and every city grows The country loses all that towns and cities The tide of migratory if the United States were wisely would flow in the opposite toiling mobs of the great if the con- gress were not the mere register of the edicts of bondholders and mongers would move steadily out of garrets and and out of rookeries and tenement houses to find healthful homes on the bright hillsides and in the rich valleys of states east and west of the Why is it that nobody that could evade the obeyed Greeley's wisest young man! go The young man did not He learned that all mercantile and manufacturing suits were enormously He soon discovered that farmers must bear all great burdens of direct state and county local These have been augmented five-fold since the war and since republicanism inaugurated its schemes of unaccountable popular regeneration and benevolence and of as illustrated in Hubbell's practices and the remorseless tariff and has become However exuberant the soil or convenient the the hat and winter clothing and iron and j steel implements were so with j thing he and his employees that he found himself at the end of each year j overwhelmed in There was no for In the markets of Europe the American must compete with the slave-grown cotton of Egypt or of and with the produced wheat of Taxed from 20 to 100 per on all that he buys and on the soil he cultivates and on everything he uses and and victimized by and denied ad- vantages to spring from railway he finds agriculture and to whose simple virtues and honest worth we owe the acquisition and tenance of American independence and the original purity and freedom of our LIST OF Drawn for December term of Court com- mencing Dec. 4, at 2 D. Pine A. J. A. K. G. W. 8. G. F. M. Philip Sugar O. D. B. T. D. P. R. Walter Orlando D. P. Perry G. W. J. S. Clarence John Sam G. H. John Horton J. E. E. M. Cherry N. H. Philip W. Spring B. J. D. T. J. K. AX OSTRICH ME. OF BUENOS ONE IS A CITY PRICK OF TO LOWEK THE South W. K. T. Sugar W. A. Samuel E. G. Pine B. TIIE STATE 01' The business situation continues Trading is moderate in most and the season is now too far to admit of any marked or general Improvement before the close of the is a good deal of tion in mercantile with the result of the season's business to and early anticipations of the extent and volume the fall trade have been realized in but very few departments Now that the approaching period for stock in- and the annual settlement of accounts naturally influences a quieter ing in most of the wholesale the prevalent tendency to conservatism is in- WILBUR 9CHNUJR, Attorneys and Counsellor's at Pa. AH promptly attended Office on Front story entrance by first stairs west of W. W. A. GREA Portrait Pa. Studio in story Hall's next to Episcopal Portraits from or from any old picture of J friend painted in Satisfaction and first-class work warranted in all are absolutely legislated out of Their children are expelled from ancestral homes and herded in the vicious atmosphere of cities by the creased by the apparent depression in the of the Republican iron and steel industry and some branches j of textile as well as by the Poets and scholars and in continued stringency of the rates for money ery have as Goldsmith did j and tlie unsettled and declining market for one hundred years and under j These disturbing influences the benign sway of Augustus toward the close of a somewhat dis- cesses and systems of government that j appointing season naturally awake distrust rendered rural toil and farmers and promote caution until a clearer TIME effect January 1, at 4 p. st. PASSENGER SOUTHWARD p I O 30 9 4'.) 3 41) 9 21 9 25 n 34 9 17 4 15 9 58l...........Cassadaga........ 3 28 4 27 10 33 t 39 1 Sine 40! 5 02110 46 5 13 10 57, U 00! Mill 11 is j OS 5 15 5 2n 4 28 4 8815 44 11 3t 4 44i5 51 11 40 4 58.6 04 11 54 5 111 12 00 12071 p.m. 10 12 10 11 21'7 00' 12 01 57 U 57 n 10 57' 33 11 34 10 30 U 22 U 24 13 11 12 OU 11 00 i 9 5U'4 51-10 5 i 9 4S.4 45' iO 45 0 42110 42 9 9 24 5 29 9 10 5 18 10 19 9 12 10 13 9 Ofi 25 32! 42 5 48] 6 52 (i On 7 05 8 534 52; y 451 9 45 8 40' 8 20' 9 29 S 25l t 22' SI 22 12 15 12 20 12 30 S 25'4 12' 9 12 12 41 8 17J4 01 02 12 54 S OG'S S 47 0 13 1 03 7 58 3 30 8 li 85 1 26 7 34'3 14 8 14 7 40 130'...........Tituniille.......... S 10 D. C. A. connection made with trains on Luke Shore road ill Dunkirk for both east Through tickets can be baggage f arren Valley D 11 v Mill SOUTHWARD AM. AM. I'M ion il m A Mill 400 112 0.4 Cf G K 32.r-s 1 IT I So Sunday leave n in A. M. r. M A. M. 10-0 A M 05 v. M n lit 1S.2T.V T sire run On E. U. U leave Oil and Titus i le for hy remain hours retin on sale sit P. E. Warren irip at A. the mudsills of 2So wouder this patient are No wonder they are in open revolt in all the states against ring another term for the mastery of the protected No wonder the even in the vicinity of great a j No wonder that splendid abodes of j opulence and all external evidences of j riches and prosperity are discovered in j cities and manufacturing while homes ami their children arc driven from ancestral homes by tent ment of the conditions of the near future becomes but there is no general apprehension of serious commercial and apart from these disquieting elements the situation presents many tures of Some men don't seem to understand the difference between political and business Three or four days be- fore election a Baltimore lawyer made a political speech in a country Being a red-hot republican he naturally NEW Nov. who went to Central Park yesterday wanted to see the herd of twenty-two ostriches that has just They are full grown and arc the only lot ever imported for breeding It was a cold day for the and they were not at home except to a few favored They are confined in the deer which is nice and They are quite gentle and being full look down ou even a One came up to Superintendent and after gazing mildly at him for a made a snap at his pin and another at his watch are worse than a gang of said won't leave a ton on your coat if you don't watch In several of the party were minus buttons on leaving the mild-eyed They look a little worn by their long and will improve in appearance after u few They arc fed liberally with and other Mr. J. a wealthy who owns and has cultivated es for their feathers for told the Sim reporter how he came to breed and farm them in the United he brought up by me to Buenos Ayres from South Africa a year I have a large farm about 500 miles from Cupe on the Orange I ed an ostrich farm in Buenos Ayres partly because business and trade had collapsed in South where they have just gone through a great and I thought I could make more money I have about 350 birds in Buenos but con- cluded to try the experiment also in the United Ten birds are males and twelve are All are about eight years Farmers in the United States have ordered ostriches from but I did not send thinking they could not vive the I shall examine the places in this country to start a It is a mistake to suppose an can't stand cold weather and climate In South Africa ice forms some nights nearly an inch and we have snow But it melts during the AVe have the ostriches out doors at and never feed They live on Us igs of and the but will eat When can't get they die They swallow large stones to promote digestion and keep them iu their crop until they wear are of no use for anything but their Never tried them foi draught Their feathers are ed every seven months from the time are eight months The average life of an ostrich is forty though m they tell stories centenarian We get about a pound of feathers at each The pure white is the most selling at to a These are from the Next come fancy and tail A fair average would be a and at that price I could make 100 per more here than in where everything is so ex- A camp there would cost twenty times as much as have eaten the eggs from young they have a s Eggs from old hens would be too expensive to These ostriches I would breed in New York in summer but not in We use incubators in Buenos but not in I had one camp in Africa of It was surrounded by a wire fence 4 feet 6 inches They won't fly and won't jump over a fence higher than they can feel with their ostriches stand me about concluded Mr. as one j them made a dash at his coat but tun Mr. Protheroe says that fabulous profits have been made by and cited the case of a gentleman who made in a year out of two hens and a cock by belling ostrich besides keeping the The next presidential election will show j democratic party the best he the laboring people of the and among other things asserted that in States have discovered that the prosperity case of democratic success the country would have to pay the confederate Two or three days after election a man A TO THE TO A of which republicanism as the suit of benignant is wholly It is the unparalleled walked into the lawyer's opened a and of the and pitiable j valise and took from it of of the poor and of j ate bouds and are they It is the growth of cities in multitudes and worth cents a and extinction of the virtues and prosperity of fanning That the republican party should ever the democratic of that 1- party has won't the country have to pay these bonds by a regain mastery in this is as absurd j The bondholder looked steadfastly as it is and as it would be fatally The whole toiling of country and cities would I at the lawyer for a long minute and then slowly by ninety-six of us republicans who listened to your speech went and voted the crat ticket in order to realize on our bonds you now tell me that you didn't mean what you said Wall Street There is quite a good joke now going the rounds down at A young lauy visiting there is quite sweet on a certain young One morning the pair started out for a long ramble over in the Contra Costa Being gone all they returned in the evening completely worn out and lady and gentlemen were met by a party of their friends soon after their were asked to what kind of a time they the young lady has a habit of proving any assertion she make by appealing to any friend bhe pens her at the as away she and answered the inquiry we had a line But climbing over rocks and bushes made me black and blue all hasn't It to the young mar who had gone out with George said emphatically that he'd be hanged if he knew anything about and now that young couple get no rest from the chaffing of their ONE of the dwarfs ever ed in this country was Dollic who tours up to ten years At that time was ly years and was said to weigh only twelve The reason for lier retirement from was the difficulty in managing was u freakish little and would refuse to go on the stag at all compelling her manager to refund the ad- In she married a may man of ordinary named but separated from him Their child in The news of IK r being taken lo an insane a does not not who have known THE SECRET I lO. Two have applied at the Patent Office for a patent on a recently discovered process of preserving the supposed to be the long lost Egyptian art. It is claimed partly by accident and finally by they have ed a certain combination of antiseptic if diffused through a dead even when it is in an advanced stage of will destroy all corruptible matter and convert into a the denser parts such as the gristly part of the being converted into a horny but natural in one of their experiments by the aid of applied the com- pound to the body of a dead Ten weeks after the body had been removed from all contact with the compound the had become like rubber the cheeks were full and pliant to the and the ears had become like polished There was not the odor and the seemed to have no more properties of decomposition than a rubber Whether the body remain in the pliant or whether it will become haul like born as the denser parts now will probably take more than one life-time to t- day recently Rev. I. N. or of the Central church al and Lacock through mail a note which about thus preach a sermon on gambling n oil I have lost my OK THE Mr. Hayes at first threw the note saying to himself that it was none of his but on reflection he to comply with the The sermon was preached last night and if the gentlemen who lost his and his both was there he received some solid in- Mr. Hayes took for IUK text the eleventh verse of the chapter of Jeremiah the partridge on eggs and hatcheth them so he that getteth es and not by right shall leave them in the midst of and hi the end shall be a The partridge building her nest on the where it can be readily or irodden and where the moisture can destroy the vital principle in the eggs is doomed to So will it be with him who tries to obtain riches by He will leave his or it will leave and he will be com- to say in the end that his life has been a and that he has in the last degree acted To gamble is to employ or stake money in plays or pursuits with the object of profiting without giving any consideration in It differs from justifiable speculation in that there is no real ownership of the property Justifiable speculation is the buying and holding of property in the expectations of an advance in its Gambling is ing in Speculations of all kinds are and may be right or according to Gambling ia at all Between gambling and speculation a sharp distinction should be Are there not scores of families in these cities that have been driven to poverty and a bitterness worse than death by the baleful spirit of And still it goes It is reported in the press that several new exchanges are to be ed. A gentleman who siunds high in iness circles says the legitimate ings of all the actual and contemplated exchanges would not furnish a drop in the bucket towards their Where then is the money to come This fact is enough to lead one to feel seriously respecting the evil of such gigantic The other day a broker in oil told a. friend of his when oil reached a figure to and he would profit In five minutes thereafter oil touched The friend and on Saturday he mortgaged liis Mr. Hayes described the exciting scenes at the Oil Exchange and explained rately all about He said dealing in margins was ply betting on the ascent or descent of the When one matt wins another He who made may sent in his ill-gotten gains the woe and misery of fifty hapless Not even the incongruous sounds of the salvation nor the scenes of Pandemonium could equal the sessions of the oil It is wrong to gamble in because the beginning and ending is founded on lute fraud The very end of the venture is to gain that which belongs to another without labor or The heartless cruelty with which men are de- stripped of their homes and and their families plunged in poverty and is enough to make the blood Robbers and thieves would do no Wealth is a sacred and when bark of it are the joys and comforts of a home it is more than He that provides not for his own is worse than uu No man can jeopardise his erty and that of his wife and children without committing crimes against Gambling dwarfs and stunts The gambler knows nothing of the moral courage and manly aspirations that grow from thrift and honest He almost unfit for the society of his own wife and Gambling leads to almost every other Very rarely is it as a vice found alone It breaks down ali moral and step by step leads its victims to fraud in its very worst It blights Who is there respects a gambler ad He does even respect When he comes out for an or asks or solicits docs be ever refer to the fact that he is a It blights the It blasts with the mildew of despair the hopes and joys of the family How runny sad hearts have been in the last few months in this country of ours by this evil God only Not comes the and there are broken-hearted wives and dis- In conclusion Mr. Hayes adjured liis hearers to Bland upon principle and not THE in the vicinity of have been annoyed for the past month by some scoundrels sprinkling Paris green over fields in which cattle were being A number of the cattle and one of the left the Ax Eric named lias entered j into n contract to furnish tics to the i Salamanca and Olean lie procured them from the timber along the and THE Wayland liquor passed bv the last Connecticut provides for the scaling of nil saloon on Sunday bv an JN parts of Spain where butter N a rare article of it is not sold by the but by the It brought from the mountain in sheep like are with string in required by the To travellers butter by inch rather curious the product usually neither palatable nor particularly are in Sun four palatial worth together more than 000. Their Charles Mrs. Mark and Mr. represent about The magnificent stand pied about fen of each IN ON do most veil lie De easiest H man makes voman vul haf it. in di- lisk no tal find von make Dink uf und valch your ands of and married no count vor were dot de fleas slay mil must feel you No von can tell vot a vas going to 3Fr. a man a voman vat Jiti don't he haf respect for no matter n she was my odor respect I know a man vot dinks de same vay as you ven married und now he goes around tie street vearing blue pants mil yellow a poor rope yon