I lv u. urn» Pull A GREAT CELEBRATION.gone onring meritctiug Mr.cconntantat a re-has beenPullmanor fifteenrear, and */i officials•n, one of ;ho State.wing flat-f the 1st a eopj of ;tte con-trait and •h of our riend andt Bailey,ished edn-irated and ne of his ie United leney—noding and (Z, Miss,,it August,pmizationhas undersinging in1'he valueX). ownedhe officers illiamson: iston; *ec-solieitor, ted reproof direc-a editors, n-bolders.STas#ville,eusion of been re-e woman husband’s b was not 1 for sup-s rule not dored sol-o draw a husbands lg slaves Appomat-damatkms to have : injusticef the col-THE OLD SHAKER GRIST MILLTo Bo Blown Up July B-A Structure Containing Ton Thousand Tons of Stono to Bo Lovelod—A Balloon Ascension.It is seldom that a man is found with sufficient public spirit to take the entire burden of furnishing a 4th of July celebration for a large city upon himself.Mr. C. E. Render, Councilman from the Nineteenth ward, is the exception, and has perfected arrangements, except in a few minor details, for the most novel and what promises to bo in its ultimate realization one of the most startling affairs of the character every known in this section of the country. Mr. Reader has lately added to his immensequarry interests the old Shaker quarry, of which he has secured a fifty years' lease. Over part of the quarry stands the old stone Shaker mill, a landmark to which the pioneers of Northern Ohio brought their grists fifty years ago. This ancient and massive structure, whichrequired two and one-half years of unremitting toil on the part of the original proprietors to uproar will have to go, and according to present plans will afford a grand and interesting spectacle. The mill is probably the largest of the water power variety in the State, being 115 feet in height and 106x94 feet in length and breadth. The building, if left untouched, would remain for ages as a monument to the honest, enduring workmanship of the Shakers, the walls being rive feet thick at the base, narrowing to two and one-half feet at the eaves, containing thousands of tons of stone, the whole surmounted by a heavy slate roof. Thisimmense structure’it is Mr. Reader'sintention to blow up with dynamite, and the result of thirty months' labor of a small army; of workmen will be laid low in as many minutes. The sight will be of unusual interest, re calling as it will the days of chivalryand crusades, when castles werestormed and laid waste, or thelater times when forts were knocked into perch stone ami scattered about the surrennding landscape. One principal point of difference betweentMr. Reader’s method of creating havoc andexist; the c that Iveins I havt in aujArnet of the the phaveeratin there that excuslt; that tl of thernnau1 feel ,jority colon; that, tlearnein theeo n c ii i pecutiiThe trbe for the fesadvanithe quin butequal ffriend* who aicomm;mblicong qjvantajibe hlt;teacheSome We eapayt.the salonly iirace a.*in the(kmgr few ye in leasrace.noarlvrgift olfree Uiback tlyea. tvfind foWhentionabolisiansweimen ii proud.