iimnUvri ;t reman. eoENSBunc. pa., FRIDAY, DEC. 16, 13S1. I r appears fio.;t the- i'realdcnt's mes sage tliitt of tie f.ft'.vn millions of dol lars of fruc 1 currency outstanding, only about. ei y thousand dollars have been re.it fined during the past year. The government will Le the gainer by many millions of dollars from the fact that most of this idiiuplastcr currency was worn out during th3 time it circu lated so freely throughout the country, and will therefore never be presented at the counter of the Treasury for redemp tion. A llEPi'i.i.K as member of the IT. S. Sena1 e, says he 1k,s it from President Arthur that Grant will be permitted to name one member of hi3 CaVinet. but thunfar our second Washington is unde cided a3 between ex-Senator Chaffee, of Colorado, and NTcd. 13 ale, of Washing ton, who knows all ubcutt hoists. Al though Grant's youngest sou is married to Chaffee's daughter, still, if Arthur has agreed to permit Grant to select a memh'jr of his Cabinet, we will bet on ; JNed Ileale against tho held. ; Nearly every member of the Ken tucky Legislature, in iespunse to an overwhelming popular demand, has re fused to accept free passes from the rail road companies. If there was a session of the Pennsylvania Legislature ;this winter we would like to see how many of its members would imitate their Ken tucky brethern. Free passes have done more to destroy the usefulness of Legis latures In this State than all other influ ences combined not even excepting the corruptions of the lobby with Bill Ke ta ble as its head and front. The Philadelphia Timrt, the prospec tus of which for 1-2 will be found in mother part of our paper, still main tains its well-earned reputation as an able an J admirably conducted newspa per. Col. MeCT.ir.-, its editor, has waged a most vigorous and untiring warfai-2 against the rule of corruption and oilicial profligacy in that city, and deserves the thanks of its citizens for Lis devotion to their best interest?. A paper as fearless and independent as the Times is a terror to wrong-doers in any community more to be feaied, iu fact, than an army with banners and for that and many other reai"v::Hit deserves to be. most liberally sustained. (: Monday last the President nomi nated to the Senate Frederick T. Fre linghuyseii, of New Jersey, as Secretary of State, to succeed Mr. Blaine, who formally resigned his ofllee when Mr.Ar thur became President, but continued in the discharge of its duties at the Pres ident's request until the meeting of Con gress. The nomination was immediate ly confirmed. Th5 new Secretary was formerly a member of the Senate and is a nephew of the Fr-lia';huys.m who was the Whig candidkte for Vice President in l-j-ll ou the ticket with Henry Clay. The writers of Whig campaign songs, to enliven that most exciting contest were put to the. severest tri.ils in order to find woids that would rhyme with Freling huysen's outlandish name. The chorus to one that we remember ran thus: "And 'e'll give the Locofoccs pizen With Henry Clay and Frelinchuysen." The gnat and nm;sual length of the President's message forbids its repro dueUon in uir columns, but wo do the next best thing ..by, publishing a synop sis of it containing it3 most important features. A President's message ought to be lika the widow M?lone's song, "not long, but strong." Instead of this, each incumbent of the office tries to outdo his predecessor in the length of his official communication to Congress, and a paper of ordinary sue ia thus pre cluded from laying it before its read ers, unless it excludes everything else, The message as a whole is a plain, busi ness like paper, with no straining at ef fect, and as it discusses public questions in a calm and temperate spirit it has been very favorably received by the press and the people of the country. Mr. Arthur's trouble, however, from the very nature of the circumstances surrounding him, is certain yet to come. ALTitoron Logan, of Illinois, failed at the last syssiou of Congress to get the Senate to pass his bill placing Grant on the retired li.-t of the army with full pay, he is dctei mined to put the thins through if lie can, and on the very first day of the present session lie rode the same hobby into the Senate chamber. Logan ought to bo ashamed of such a performance, and his friend, Ulysses S3. Grant, ought also to be ashamed for per mitting it. A man like Grant, who is worth ball' a Trillion at bast, is not a proper. 1 ei son to be placed on the retired list, and especially so as he is a private citizen, and has now nu more connec tion with the army of the United States than tho Lmperor of China. It is be lieved by some shrewd judges of men at Washington that Logan's real purpose is to retire Grant aa a third term candi date, in order to make room for himself for a P.rst term in 1S4. It has long be en supposed that lie is troubled w ith a weak ness of that kind. JosF.ru II. JiAixKv, the coloic l ex-. Congressman and a candidato for Chief : Clerk of the House at Washington, has I discovered, or has l,l4 1 a mighty fair chance to discover, the utter hollowness of republican professions of love for its , faithful ally.the negro voters. Two years 1 ago, when the Republicans in the House couldn't elect him, or anybody else, he bad no difficulty whatever in obtaining i the nomination; but now, when they : have the vot:-s to organize the House in their own way, and Ilainey again conies up smilir.g and insisting upon the place, ' Ldw.-.rd MoPherson, w hite, of this State, ; a chronic oftice-seeker, steps in and car- rif.i the caucus by a vote of !-2 to 42 for Ra.'.c;. . r.xry m;tn of common sense, I: new well that in fmch a contest Rain- : r-y would be remors 'e;'y slaughtered. ' He is certain, however, to receive tho ; ro'.-iir uion for the House clerkship just j s soou as the Republicans find them selves in the minority, and therefore ' powerless to elect him. J M. 01 i'.'j'vy-ii f; cm this d. ft riot. accoutring to iiii ;.!ie re pons from Washington, swore more terribly than "our army in Flanders"' when he was coerced, iu obe dience to the imperious demand of Don ; Cameron and against his own settled and better judgment, to vote in the Repub lican caucus for Keifer, of Ohio, instead of Ilisceek, of Xew York, for Speaker of the IIous". Gen. C. is just as com ! potent, if not a good deal more so, to know who ought to be nominated for ' Speaker as Cameron is to tell him, but for some low personal purpose of his i own the Pennsylvania "boss" wanted : Keifer nominated, although not a single ; Republican member from this State was ; favorable to him. Cameron, however, ; insisted upon a united support by the ; Republican membersfrom Pennsylvania and what was Gen. C. to do ? If he vo ted against Keifer, whom the boss want ed, and for Hiscock, whose defeat the bo?s was determined to accomplish, he was certain to bring down upon him the wrath of the house of Cameron, and be ing thus placed between the devil and the deep sea, he went with the majority of the delegation, voted in accordance with Cameron's edict, and took his re venue in unlimited vollies of profan ity against the tyranny of boss rule and the abject slavery to which it reduces a man like himself, who claims to bo his own master, when he is forced to yield and protest. To see a man like Gen. (, who knows what is right and approves it, and yet by the force of political pow er and patronage, wielded by another, is compelled by personal considerations to pursue the opposite course, which he condemns, shows the despotic rule ex ercised over Pennsylvania Congressmen by Cameron, who don't possess a single attribute to make him feared except his position as a Senator and his money. AVhen will men assert their own abso lute independence, not only in name, but in fart and by their deeds ? Cor.. John VT. Forney, the well known politician and journalist, died at his residence in Philadelphia on Friday morning last, after only three days' ill ness, in the sixty-fifth year of his age. Ever eince lto, when he became the editor of the Penngylvanim, the leading Democratic paper of the State, Col. For ney has been prominently before the country in on capacity or another. A detailed nairativo of the part he has played upon the public stage is there fore unnecessary. The following, which we copy from the Philadelphia Record, expresses a just and true estimate of his character. That paper says of him : The death of John W. Fornev takes out of the list of living men the most noted and tal ented journalists in Philadelphia, lie was more than a clever man socially he- was an active, scheming and forward politician, full of shrewd Instances and plausible prece dents, and he was a patriotic citizen : but he was at his best as writer for the press. He was, like many other of our public men, iiew;paper-made. lie fell short of the breadth of statesmanship, and in so far as his rareer was a disappointment to himself or hii friends the true cause probably was referable to the fact that his ambitions were not always in line with his abilities. Few public men had a wider acquaintance than Mr. Forney. Popular manners, a s'nive nnd easy address, and that universal kinship which springs from a kind heart, made ami kept for him a host of friends among all classes of people. In his partisanship Mr. Forney refused to merge his friendships, though his impulsive nature made him as sentimental in his beliefs as in his affections. The passionate incitements of the civil war swept him from his Democratic moorings, and he went as far as the farthest in his at tempt to break down the party which it had been the work of his life to build up. But there was no venom in his nsture. After the war was over his vindie iveness melted away in the glow of renewed f i iendships snd the pride of a reconstructed Union. His views were widened and amplified by for eign travel and asst ciiitir.n. When he died he was less of a partisan than a patriot. His loss makes a cap that must remain unfilled. We do n';t think that he leaves behind him a personal enemy. Psace to his ashes. Tnr; Commissioner of Pensions states in hi3 report that there are now pending for settlement 20o,o75 original pension claims, 227,040 of which were filed prior to July 1st, It is stated that 13 per cent, of the number of claims now pending will Le rejected or aban.loned, which would show the probable admis sion of about 103,000 claims, all of which involve the payment of arrears of pen sion. It is found that every case allow ed requires for the first payment upon it about Jt,3u0, and multiplying this j mount by the whole numberjof proba ble admissions cive? nearly $250,000,000 as the sum required. This arrears of pension is the most stupendous swindle of the kind that was ever railroaded through Cong re n. The men who had tho bill in charge and engineered it through both houses two years ago al leged that it would not take out of tho tieasui) more than fifteen millions of dollars. Under this flimsy prepense the bill easily passed, and now the figures of the Commissioner of Pensions reveal the full extent of the gigantic fraud. Con gress ought to interfere and put an end to the pUmdcnngbcheme if it can. Has it the. power to d so V VW do not think it has, but that liavii.-g embarked in the business it is si-o p-d fi-.iu now annul ling it, and must carry out its provi sions to their legmm.;e consequences. Secretary of the Common we a lth M. S. Quay, was in Washington last week, and is reported as having stated to a member of Congress from thisStato that Governor Iloyt will not call an extra session cf the Legislature togeth er during the present winter. We pre sume that Mr. (uay spoke by authority and that therefore the present Congres sional, Senatorial and Representative districts, as well as the Judicial districts will remain as they now are until tho im-el iug of the Legislature in .January, lSS'J. The refusal of tho Governor to call the Legislature together will save the State between one and two hundred thousand dollars, and if the apportion ment biil to be pased bj Congress at the present session shouldgive the State one or two additior.nl members, they can bo electfrd as candidates at large, as was done on a former occasion. Xor can any real, substantial harm be done by eUeting Senators and Representatives in the present districts next November. rosTMASTER-GEXKRAL ,I.MES will retire froin otiicc on the first of January, to assume the duties of the Presidency of ;i Xew York banking institution. Ueyond all question he has Leen one of the most competent and efficient officers the l'o.stodice dciurtment ever had. Grant's friend, Filley, of St. Louis, will take his place. oie. p n i i. a r-n.ru i a. i.t ttfr. jf$-lS 5 A W V ; TYKE! :-1 k,: ". DO E - VOf j n.AR SUFFRAttE IN PHILADELPHIA ! KEfcPISfl WOt.FR OUT OF THE FIELD I TrtTMOS TO BK GRATEFUL FOR, ETC. i Philadrlphia, Dee. 12. ; fSpe!al Corres-pondenc of the Fbiihaj. Dear McPike Death is reaping his har vest with untiring industry. Within the last year lie has taken many out of the list , of my friends, companions and acquaint ances, lie lias been busy gathering in his j sheaves, some before they were ripe and oth ers iu the readv mellowness of time. In the death of Col. John W. Forney another has ; been taken out of the list of my old friends j and acquaintances. That eloquent and ac complished journalist passed quickly and i quietly to his last rest on Friday morning, in i tbetHUi rear of his aire. Oniya few days ; before his demise I visited him at his ofhee, ; to confer with him upon the subject of an organized enterprise in Texas, of which he ! was the President. Among other subjects, j we had a friendly talk about the respective parts we acted in the memorable Senatorial ! conflict at Harrisburg in 157. We also I talked upon the subject of the sudden and j un looked for death of our mutual friend Jere. MeKibben, referring to his and our , own ages Foniey's age being 04 and mine 74 years. lie being t.n years m r junior in perfect health, in the full preservation of his , almost phenomenal memory and singular , beauty of rhetoric, I said to" him : "Colonel i there is a probability that you mav have ; twenty-five or thirty years of useful fife be j fore you," to whic h he replied : "O ! no, no, Smith; you allot me too many years; but I , feel as if i had fifteen or twenty yea-s of ; life still before me Then in a serious iMHon.-r lie said: lo.it man im.nncx God dispose." l.itile did I s,ir,,.,.c I 'ie t-oionei that it was the last time I won i.i iook upon m uemal living face it ) was but a few 1rvs after this interview that i I was startled with the snd intelligence that ; Col. Forney was in a riving condition. Next i C'i!'' I "? so""- to say, the announcement of his death. Jew men have had a more eventful and varied life, and fewer still have had better preserved high natural qualities, than Col. 2 .. ' fornev. He was peculiarly endow ed with those natural tial to journalism. As a journalist, he was j well known over two continents. He was a , man of generous and noble impulses. Per l sonally, John W. Forney was a high type of ! the American. i The men of my day and generation are i last passing away. But few of my early as ! sociates are above ground, the most of them ; being under the sod. ! "When I remf inhfr all i The frim.a si. Iiuk,-d tethr, ' I 1 hat I have seen around mo f.-oi ' , Jjlke leave in wlntery weather I feel like one who treads alone ' . "me ,,nqot hall deserted. I W hose lijrhn are cut and Car!and down. And ail but ma departed." TWEEDISM OUTDON-. If the late illustrious Mr. Tweed, who to i largely contributed to the evil fame of w iork were alive to-day, Philadelphia could ! turmsh him competitors worthy of his steal ( Our city surpass.-s all others in the Union in the way of municipal mismanagement. She 1 lias more rogues to the square acre than any i y.,,n J,. wrld. Pressing upon the heels . of the lax Office revelations, and abreast , Willi disclosures affecting the Sheriff's Office I and all the City Departments, comes an i,i- yestigation of the management of the Alms ; House by tha Guardians of the Poor The ! depredations of the ;s Trust of this city and the open confession, crowned by fresh. ! evidences, of the Riirautie svstcm of o"iuridT : " K C1.tv trasury, are events, crowned i into the history of a few month that rend like the pages of a crii.ii ttr-.l calendar. The : people of Philadelphia have no excuse for ; nger patience with thee common knaves. . 1 hey are fit subjects for contempt and de ; serve to bo betrayed to the end of time POPUI.AR ElFFliAC.E IX PHILADELPHIA. Ail instance of popular sufTraTe in the f Republican city of Philadelphia i , tree tonous fact that ten thousand men employed ill the gas Works and other nnhlic eitirlo i,o- paitments were at 3 o'clock, r. m., on the Uh day of last month, twrned loose to do the bidding of the bosses on the pain of los ing their bread and butter. Such is popular siirlrage m this boasted the voters of Philadelphia on Tuesday, the ; tli or .November last, been allowed to hon- estly express their own sentiments, Mr. No- i hie would be the State Trea No : man of common sense in this city believes I otherwise than that the result of the late election in Pennsylvania was achieved by t he dependents of the rintr who voted as , taeir luasters in Philadelphia dictated HOW TO KEEP WOLFE OfT OF THE FIELD. Republican bosses are troubled ta devise . ways and rr.enns to keep Wolfe out of the . h-.d. Whoever may b" put np by the Ke : pub, leans as their candidal" f .r Governor ' no matter what his record, the people, taught ; by experience, will regard him as a tool ot the rmcr. 1 he f.ftv thousand honest h'epub ; hcHiis vi ho boldly let used to obey the crack of th whip on the SUi of November last have emboldened less courageous hearts, and Rt i tR npxt opportunity a still larger army of : deserters will march away. The more the bosses ponder over Wolfe's vole the more ! uncomfortable thev become. They are now ; badly alarmed. A!i the jrreat Republican ! leaders are quarrelling before one man. ! They recognize the necessity of keeping i Wolfe out of the field as an independent l candidate. Even the most stalwart Repub- lican orgnns make pretense of concealing the j fact that there is danger ahead. But a sin gle thoueht now enteri the minds of the bosses how shall we keep Wolfe out of the I field ? If the Democrats are wise and will I nominate. the proper loan, the defeat of the I J.epuuncans in the approaching gubernato j rial campaign will be a certainty. j TFI1N08 TO BE ORATHFCL FOR. j Gratitude is oce of tha most beautiful j things in human nature, and lor the foliow ; Ing thinfti the American people should be i profound iy grateful. They should be ex ; ceedinglv thankful that Providence hss given them a Charles JulianGuiteau anda Chester ( Abel Arthur, for they would not have had . one without the other. They should be both proud and thankful that their Presi- dent is a handsome and royal American ' Gentleman with a big (i, whose clothes fit him so well that his form is used as a fashion ! plate ia every tailor shoo in the country. Tl;e good this will accomplish by the cultiva tion of en aesthetic tat in the common j pe'pie cannot be overestimated, and for this : the people, especially the common people, should be more than grateful. Thev should be thankful that Mahone has broken the j South on the new isue of Repudiation, and j that they have Grant, Conklinr, Logan and others to chastise them with the sc.our.ee of Stalwarttsm. They should be thankful that I the reform Idea is exploded und reformers : have been driven from the Cabinet. They j should be thankful that John Sherman has ; lixed his fences and got back to the Senate, i J where he can manace bis own investiuation. ; They should be thankful that Grant, Bab- ! ; cock, Belknap &, Co., hold the winnine i i cards and will play them for all thev are worth. They should be thankful that Me- j : Yeay;h's self-respect drove him out of the ' : Cabinet ; for now that American Gentleman I with a bi" a can take care of his friend and ' reward Dorsey for havine carried Indiana. I They should be thankful that the Star Route ' i American Gentlemen with the big G are now j j under the protecting wing of tiie adminis ! tration, and that;they are Stalwarts of the ! i Stalwarts. They should be grateful that ! ; the four Washington organs owned by the ! Star route thieves, which bitterjy assaulted rresiuent Garr.-.d np to the day of his a- , sassination and death, are still unanimous in ; support of the handsoma royal President. There are a thousand other things for which : the American people should he thankful, but ! the few above mentioned are all that the , writer deems necessary to apeak of at the : present time. By the way, I beg pardon for , having almost neglected to add that the peo- pie snoui.i oe grareruiinat ine "iiign larur - ites" have conceded that the Republican party may continue to exist if the tax on bank checks is no longer collected, and that they are in favor of reducing the bank tax. For this people should be fcraWul. Yea, verily, for this midne lodeed in the ear of the elephant that tramples them down let them be profoundly thankful. S. N S. An Evgin- on the KiVPAOE.-Shifting ' engine 711, whil standing In the Pennsylva ! nia raiiroad yard at Philadelphia on Satur 1 day morring, from some unexplained cause i started off at full speed, during the tempo : rary absence of th engineer and fireman, and ran out the road for about ten miles, I with one car attached to if. Luckily the small ; pump which supplies the boile: with water ' continued to work incessantly and filled the boiler full of cold water from the tank that the steam pressure was rapidly reduced and tne engine came suddenly to a stand-still so suddenly, indeed, that th car attached j jumped the track and was thrown into tha I ditch alonpiiue the raiiroad. .Nobody hurt MArrrvxr.'s godless crew that is to say, ' the majority of the Virginia Lpcislature ; held a caucus on Tuesday last and nomina- ted Hidlet'crger for the'U. S. Senate. Of j course he will be elected and then the once i proud "Old Dominion" can point to Mahone ' and Pidleberger iu the Senate chamber and exclaim : "These are now my jewels." rKEun:vr Aunirirs iiu.' A I ON ; Oi. S Tio.N Or" lis Moil 1 :-5 rol.t A X I FKA1VKES WITH VARIOUS OPINION AND COMMENTS TSEUEON", President Arthur on Tuesday of last week 1 ient his first message to Congress. It is a lengthy paper and ipiite replete in dealing ' with the uppermost topics relating to the af I fairs of our goyernment. We have not the i space to give the message In full, but the fol j lowing review of it which we take from i the Philade!phia.tfr, will be found to con ! tain the leading points of the document. In ; presenting a condensation of the message, ; all that part of it which relates to foreign af fairs may be dismissed with the brief state : ment that but a few points call for remai!:. i Tiie Spanish Government Is annojingsome of our shipping that gets to her porta with vexatious fines and other interferences : the treatment of American Jews in Russia has been the subject of energetic remonstrances ; tog lat Government; the President regrets ! the injury to our commercial interests by the ! withdrawal of our;steamships to Brazil ; and ; he has supplemented the action of President , Garfield with reference to the proposed F.u ! ropran protectorate over the Panama Canal, ' by opening negotiations with the British government for the modification of the Clav , ton-Bulwer treaty. That treaty concedes to I Great Britain a joint protectorate with the j United States. With thee exceptions, and that of the Chilian war with Peru and Boli- via, presently to be mentioned, everything is j satisfactory with our foreign relations, and I there is nothing iu the Message about them that is not already known As to the Chilian i question, it is to be regretted that the Mes sage is not fuller and more .peeific. Tiiere have been allegation of extraordinary inter vention r. the part of our ministers in Chili ' and Peru, of the truth of which, or the ex i tent of which, if i'i any degree true, but lit tle is known, except through partisan discus sions in the newspapers ami other unauth.-n-; ticated publications. Possibly pending ne gotiations or diplomatic instructions to the special envoy, Mr. Presscot, just despatched to those countries, may not permit the State Department to give publicly to he very in teresting movements that appear to be e'oing , on. The event may prove that it would have been better to place more confidence in the , people about these matters in their present stage. The Secretary of State is known to be an energetic apostle of the exclusive jur ! i-diction of the United States in th political , affairs of the countries on this continent to the southward of our southern boundary j line in all cases where mediation, protec tion, or intervention Is needed. Large rnass ! es of his countrymen have doubts as to 1 whether it is worth while for the American Government to embroil itself with other Gov. : erninents on either side of the Atlantic in the j enforcement of that idea. Without entering inio concussion as to wnether tho persons 1 who entertain these are; richt or wrong, or whether the Secretary of State may get to ! he too "aggressive," so to speak, on tho "Monroe doctrine," it mav be well enough to remember that there is no prevailing pub lic sentiment in this country now in favor of intervention in the affairs of our continental neighbors, or of getting into entangling alt i ancesof any sort. The cry of "manifest des tiny," which was a cieat nuisance in its day, was hushed long ago ; and the career of the "blue eyed man of destiny" eanio to a rath er inglorious end, about the time when Sec retary of State, bewail to think of going to Congress. The rest of this section of the Message shows everything to he feerene. Home af fairs are m eijuaily happy condition. jot of these the public are aireadv familiar with as they mun.iy refer to the official rear which closed on the first of July last The finances are (iou:ishir,K. The total ordinary revenue tor tue year was. g:;o.7s2 ooo iu round numbers, and the total ordinary ex pendiline was ii'),n2,noo!,.avii.a- a sur plus of more than a hundred million" which was applied to the redemption of the Nation Hi debt But t hat is not the wh reuc k n of the debt lor that year, the aggregate of bonds leueerued or that have cead to hear interest being 5123,ca,;1oi au1 tht "tal r" ductionot i.iiciebt, $lti,t-;ji2...-.25 This iii-iv be regarded a huge woi k for ot.i year n the way or gelling rid o deU Oar present revenue is greatly in excess of S"r, "e,Ce""'l,e9' a"U- ir i-'ing laws contin- extinguish I'm dili-jn leads ti uc . iuk-c, u.d, grow at a rate tint u.i,i .it urut iu icji yi Li.l rn 'I'I. t.on that the time has a rrii f,-"-.- tion of all Internal LPVl.n .Z . i'i those on tobitcco, snirituo.w ,,fi ' L : and the special taxes on tho dealers 'in these repeal ot ail others, he recom meiius, 111 coneurrencH with ti w'. . - the Treasury. Then conik t " r . n!"h;TT--''-h we , - iso need iey .'ision. com ' rli,i-.T i.,t..r...- J l" u;e 1.,... uuc leiiaro m t;u:t changes thouiu bi minor. made with caution. ir a caretul rcvisioii cannot be ni ,.i.. , session a commission such as was lately Vd Proved by the Smmie and j, now iceomnie'n I e l by the Secietary ol the Treasury w m I oouot,ess hgnten tho Ubors ,f c!.n begM'iM1e,'wo!ii" ? """o" ' Congress to r.e.'"""e woik of revision without the aid be patted arTlk'm:ld 8i'u"sC rta nly r b.rt'y b"tcll,,d and would hardly relllain sett.ed over the next election there can be no coherent, equitable erwn.r' ins revision of the tariff wk ,t a a nff iVi" stnmViV. VW hyy or Confess . destructive to anythm-r careful con sideiation of it. multitude of details It s Congress mainly that the idea ,.f "conflict- i there is no such "conflict ti-- i our industries exists : there is nosuch "conflict" vim isif expetienced, broad-minded men. wpresent- inieiesis ot tne country, sit down quietlj ai business men, to co-.tsk er the subjec of agriculture, nianufacturiiijj, mmincr and commerce. '" riIh1,',;i! as,r.f'n-r0"nin"n('ation for the rehab, hta , on of the navy, and for such n.ea def'ifcev r',;t Ur hai bors hl "dit on for defence v, Inch everyone should be cHd to sc-. The recital of Post-oi:,c affair, is Va? tistical. exc-pt ai t the star Poute frauds, and upon this subject the President spe-iks in strons terms of the injunction he la id up on a. the proper oflieials to ' prosecute with the utmost viKor of the lawall persons char" aole with frauds on the posfjl revenue " He- fiVri'" I.',ii"n a!TairS the Resident' takes the eorrcc yu-w, now beeominsr strong in tlm overnmm.t, that is, that these peopfe must , I'n;r treated with as independent 2n nN 1 S!KU"'1 b0 P11 on t!,e '""tine of i l IZL-Ka'T,Z ! bo subject to tne State and federal laws; should have their land allotted to them in. individual ownership, and should have liberal -rants for schools, hke those at Carlisle, Hampton. Hon schools. Legislation to enable a "plur al Mormon wife to testify against her hus band in prosecutions of bienmy is retfom mended as one aid in the Oppression of the remaininc 'tw in relic of barbarism and the I resident declares his determined purpose to co-operate in all proper way for its sup pressions. That most improvident piece of Wialation, the pension arrears bill, t'ie Pres- meni te.ls (.onsress, will cost six years of labor in the Pension office to Cet np the ar rears unless two or three hundred more cleiks are employed ; and in any event Con press will have to look forward to an addi tional expenditure of f 235,000,000 on this ac- Foliowing these subject the message con tains a long passage on reform in the Civil Service, in which the President reaffirms a strong passage in his letter of i.wt, "No man, he savs, should be the inc imbent of an office the duties of which he is Vrom , any cause, umit to perform who is lackC ff I in the ability, fidelity and integrity winch a I proper administration of uch office' de : mands." He then enfrs into an interesting j discussion of the subject, showing that it j has many sides for consideration This nas aase of the message is worthy of capful ; reading and study. Some earnest refor,r. will not acree with it. hut of practical views that require to be cons'id ereo. The important subject of the laws relating to Presidential elections, and to he succes sion in cases of "inability" re brought clear ly to tnn attention of Congress. This run ning review may well close with th follow ing significant passage relating- to the de cline ot ourmerchant marine, while our ocean tr.ff-.c is Inci easing to such vast proportions "The substitution of iron for wood, and steam for sail have wrought great revolu tions in the carrying trade of the world. But these changes could not have been adverse to America if we had given to our naviga tion interests a portion of the aid and pro tection which have been so wisely bestowed upon our manufactures, I recommend the wnoie snoject to the wisdom of Congress Itk f 1 , .. . : . 1 . '. i greater maumitude orfarttier-reaciunr imM,. ..it., nip puyut-suon i:i;it tance can engage their attention. RESTORF.n FRO A DECLIKK. SOUTH GREECE. S. V., April !5. 7So. Dr. R. V. Fierce, Buffalo, X. Y. Dear Sir: I feel it my duty to write and thank you tor what your ."(iolden Medical Discovery" and "Favorite Prescription" have done for my daughter. It is now five weeks since she began their use. She is more firstly, has more color in her face, no headache, and is in other ways greatly improved. Yours truly, Mrs. Makcella Myeks. A Fad iiiver wife murderer kissed his sleeping victim before shooting her. Two sons of . I nines Tilton, at Kxetr, N. II., were drowned on Saturday while skating. Hugh Davis, a nephew of Jefferson Da- vis, is a member-elect of the Mississippi Legislature. On Thursday at Bristolville, Ohio, M. D. rhelps shot and kilted his son Wm. Theipi. It was an unprovoked murder. Samuel Albright, of Perry county, who killed William Miller, of Harrisburg, two ! years aco, was recently seen in Arknnsas. Easton, Pa., counts up twenty-five boys j who have been rendered permanent cripples i by attempting to jump on railroad trains i while in motion. Jefferson Davis mi!ed upon a crowd of boys who, at the Columbus, O., deoot, th other day, sang: "Hang Jeff Davis on a I sour apple; tree." John Kili, with his wife and child, were , drowned on Saturday night while attempt- i ing to cross South Crow Creek, San Francis- tucuuiii), i aiuoriiia. j It is said that three members of Clay , Snell's family, at Kdgerton, Mo., have died i of shame and grief since he was hanged for ! murder a year ago. j Willie, Joseph and John Johnson, of j Matiitowac, Wis., aged respectively eight, ten j and twelve years, broke through the ice on : Monday and were all drowned. The Clearfield Republican says that ex- Senator Wallace has requested it to say that j "he is not a candidate for the Gubwi natorial nomination or for any political office." ' At the Guitean trial on Monday, Dr. j Spitzka, of New Vork, was examined at j great length for the defense and testified that ! in his opinion the prisoner was insane. i James Walker and Thomas Bogy were I killed and three others wounded by the fall- ing of a shelf of cement in the Ksmeralda mine, near Deadwoo.l, D. T., on Friday. ; Eight, persons were killed and a"large ' number injured on Friday morning last by i a collision between four trains in the tunnels ; at Canonsbury, a suburb of London, Eng. j John llaian was thrown from an ox-cart ! in Powhatan eonnty, Virginia, on Saturday i breaking his neck the third fatal accident in that county within a year resulting from ; runaway ox tennis. I Charles Stewart Parnell. the Irish states- man and patriot, now in a British prison for ! having an opinion, has been made violently ; sick by bad diet. Bad diet is one of Eng- ' land's civilizing influences. I. D. and A. J. Aleock, brothers and ! farmers, living in Little itiver county, Texas, were murdered on Wednesday night while j on their way borne from Texarkana, where I they had disposed of their cotton. I John Matz, ag"d twenty years, was work- I ing on an ice dam across the river at Read - j ing on Thursday, when the bank caved in and buried him under a mass of earth. He i died iu a few hems after his rescue. j Thomas MeAppiegate, aged t;o vears, j has been arrested at Scottburg, 1ml.. f,",r the j niurderof his young wife, who was his Hood i niece. She was insane. McApplega'A killed i her with morphine and hydrate ofcliloral. j A druggist in New Richmond, O., Mr. E. .1. Dunham, writes as follows '-i ,,;, i! er Dr. Bull's Cough Syrup one of the very I best things made. I use it altogether in my i own family and can therefore recommend it." j --Speculative insurance policies to the ag gregate of ;7."0.0uo have b?en taken out in , i-.in- oi ,'mw.wi imik o?en laKen out in ! .casioii, on wiueu s.nirce.v a dollar has been I realized. The business there now is in .lia. p reoute mm me victims liav re given up hope of ever realizing The mother of a supposed dead infant at Champain, III., inteminted the funeral services by crying out that "her little one was , alive; and so it was, though she aione had detected the Flight signs of vitality. Resus j citation was allccted. ) - Requiem Mass was celebrated at Vi enna on Monday for the victims of the Ring , iiieaiie lire. 1 lie irown I'rince, the Arch- j ' oukes, and other dignitaries were present. ' ! Tee grave for the unidentified victim is ljo ! ; leet long and 14 feet wide. i ! In tiie new city of Pullman, near Chi- i , cago, a handsome -looking roofer, who for ! j more than three months has done work on ; the highest buildings with at much skill as j the best workman, has just been discovered i to bo a young won, an in disguise. The Pennsylvania Railroad Company ' ! have in contemplation a plan for reducing i i the the time of their fast express to Chicago j i from New York to twenty-live hours iustead 1 ' of twenty-six hours. It is expected that this ' ' will double the travel nn the fast express. ' An !vmpia, Washington Territory, di- ! ! patch of the Ulii savs: Thomas Phelps. Mrs. i Thomas Pobson and daughter and Miss j j Mora West were drown, d while attempting ' to ford the Ghehelis river. Their carriage ! i was overturned by the force of the current I A colored woman named But hi, rcsid- j -ig in T'ittsburgh, was hnrtied to death on 1 " Thursday evening. It is supposed that she nan ueen ormKing and while she was oass- i ing near the stove her clothing ignited. S hen discoveied her body was burned to a 1 crisp. j A Mrs. Fishei, of Mil waukce,;Vis., sud ! oenly became insane on Sunday forenoon, I at'd. getting possession of an axp attempted j to brain her four little children. Her hus : band, in trving to save the children, received i a blow v hich laid his skull bare. He cannot ; possibly survive. I One of the circuses made a great stir last i samwier by showinthe "handsomest woman ; i" America" at the head of its street pro cessions. A rival circus will n'xi spason ex . hibit "the handsomest man and woman In the world," and a pretence of offering a prize , of ?.;o,ooo for the pair is made, j A boarding house in Morristown, New ' Jersey, was burned about six o'clock Wed nesday morning, and Mrs. Ann Walsh, a , boarder, and Lizzie Ketch, a domestic, per ; istied in the flames. Dr. Stephen Piers..n had his leg h.oken in two places bv receiy. ; ing the fall of a woman who jumped from ; tne building. ! Addison F. Burns and hi son William Bums, v ho were found guilty in a land-fraud ease at CHrion, h;ve each been sentenced to an imprisonment in the penitentiary for ,; seven years and six months, 'the sentence ; occasioned considerable comment, as it was ; considered unusually severe by the friends t of the jiartie. ! ,At Eminence, Ky., Joseph Warford, of Shelby county, was killed on Saturday last by Alex. Shirley. Shirley savs WaVford called him to his door in tiie niifht and fired a pistol shot which wounded him. He then i fired at Warferd and took to his bed from pain. Yarford was found dead next morn . ing, and Shirley is in a dangerous condition. In Newport, John Slavin, aed 21, sur ! rendered himself to the police, 'lie said that . he had unintentionally poisoned his sister. He had bought two ounces of Paris gr-eu , put it in a teapot, in hope that it would be ; drunk by a female member of the tamily ; whom he alleges his father was too intimate. ! I he young man's mother is in an insane asy ' him. It is thought by the physicians that his sister.s life car. be saved. 1 11 raff. Bennett A Co.'s rolling ml'.!, situ 1 ate.l at Bennett station, on the West Penn railroad, about four miles from Pittsburgh, I was totally destroyed bv fire at an early hour , on Sunday morniii!' last. The mill was an extensive concern and employed about 1,000 nu n, who for a time will be" thrown out of ' i employment. The fire was first discovered in the carpenter shop and is believed to have , . been the work of an incendiary. Loss about . S.)(j0.oon ; insurance, $104,000. ; Franklin, Pa., is greatly excited over i what is called a m'uacl'e. The wifeof Rev. ' B. Lloyd has been raised from her death-bed, 1 it is claimed, by prayer. She had been giv- ! en up by the doctors, but her husband asked the various churches to prav for her recove- ' ry, and while be was praying with his flock I 111 his chinch the sick woman arose, dressed . 1 herself, and astonished tiie congregation bv 1 ! walking into their midst, though she had no't 1 ! been out of bed for six months. ' ! John Abernathvand William Leslie, two ' J notorious ruffians, became involved in a dis ! pute in Knieger's saloon, in Diamond street, j Pittsburg, a week aeo Monday night, in the i course of which Leslie struck Abernathy, who thereupon drew a revolver and shot hU : assailant in the neck, killing him almost in : staidly. In the excitement which followed ! the murderer made his escape, but was sub I sequeotly found by the poiiee in a cellar, : where he had secreted himself. Leslie was ; 35 years old and was married. Winchester Armstrong left his home j near Moscold, Lamar county, Ga., on Wed ! nesday, leaving his wife and babe and his 1 mother-in law in he house. After he had ; gone a crazy neiiro entered the house and ; tried to carry off the infant. The inothrat ' tempted to rescue the child, and the negro j split her head open with an axe. He then , beat her mother to death. While still at his murderous work, Mr. Armstrong returned, i and the negro assaulted him with an axe, I Mr. Armstrong quickly procured a gun and j shot the nero dad. The infant was unin- jured. j A despatch from Pueblo, Col., to the I Denver Republican says that last spring ' Christopher Shutrow was found dead in bed? I Tl e coroner and some physicians vie wed the j body, and, concluding that the death was ; the reault of diphtheria, gave a burial certi5- cate. A few weeks ago the body was disin j terred and shipped East, where an examina- tion was made, resulting in finding iu the I back of the head a bullet hole which had i been so ingeniously filled with a wooden j ring as not to be noticeable except on very close examination. The murderers are be lieved to be still in the vicinity of Pueblo. ! ' i j ; i j I i ! j ! j j I i tie j ' j ' i ' I ' j ' 1 ! i I ! ; i ; i i j ' ! ! i 1 I ' ' ! i ' ! i ; ! j i I ' j ' : : ' ' ' . At the In both the Main Building and the two new annexes, when five acres of floor space and galleries will be thrown open tot!.. t -the marvelously beautiful exhibition of dry goods, fancy goods, ladies' dres?e. ; V furnishings of every description. Vienna, Paris, Berlin and Switzerland have poured in beautiful things f - (j mas, and the new toy department covering a half-acre lot is All told, the present stock offers our customers a selection from air.-:-million dollars' worth of goods. The ladies' suits and coats and the Fur Department occupy the new in directly on the corner of Thirteenth and Chestnut. The ladies', gents' and children's hosiery, gloves and gents' furn:?.r; - -occupy the three stores (thrown into one) on the west side of Chestnut Street cr.-r- The Immense Windows on Chestnut Street, and the arcade entrance (with its splendid displays of Christmas th';:v Will be illuminated with Electric Lio;ht until Mail orders have hundred letters daily. Tirand Depot, "Guaranteed to cure is the iudiiiv rt James' i.ew i rnent ottered to you to j Drug Store, Elnsimg Pa..rnd buy -tic ! of Dr. Faust's German Oog!i Svruo. P is based upon chemical laws, :n:d P"P ! with the mot s-rupnNm e.ire. Ti i cme is warranted to cure coiin!i1tj.-.;i.e-.i:g1 , 1 colds, sore throat, bumchitis. "and a'l 7ml 1 monary diseases. Remember an ordia.uv cough leads to consumption if allowed to continue without relict. Pi ice, -':.. :.: and j 51 a bottle. 4-H.-e.o. w.ly.j . The res-dent of the township of ;itnh ! by and South Ham, county ot Kicl.m .n l, ' Canada, have been thrown into a s-:.t of j terrible exciti ment over the outbreak of on ; epidemic which medical ski 1 docs not so fir j appear to have controlled at all. The patient '. is attacked so suddenly as to fa'! from a j cnair and loe conscioiis'iess. j he syim ton.s bear a certain resemblance to tlvise of dip 1 theria: tho suffering becomes more and iiMie labored until death results. Neighbors who . had gone into a house where the itise.ise was raging have been almost imaie.liately st 1 icken ; down theniselves. !'be .-oiisequ-iice is that ! men will not visit ea.'h otlu-r for aa; of in ; fection, even n matters of Pumocss. ! Horrors in Pittsburgh follow cl se upon ' the heels of each otlu-r. Friday evening a I terrible explosion occurred nl t he K sfnc i Pol, ing Mill, in the F"ureei:th v.ard. and ; next morning came another, v l.ii ii excce.b'd ; in horror anything which has occurred in ', fiat vicinity b'nee the terrilde d.-trii.t ion ff j life caused "by the collision at Twenty-eiuM!! street. Between 2 and ,a o'chx-k Saturday j morning a fvr ice lu.ardiug hoas. located on the line of the Pittsburgh at Lake Fa i: lail j road, some seven miles below I'ittsbunrh. i was set on fire by the explosion of a lump, I and ot forty persons known to be sleeping in i the loft only twenty-four evr.ped aiiv-f, nnd : even they were all more er Ir-ss burned, and I not one of them suece Vcd in securing his 1 clothes, so rapid was the progress of tiie 1 flames. The others were hteia.iy loa -tcd to : death without an effort being made to res '. cue them. ! James P. Weller, of Wil rcs.Rnrre, the ' lover whose strange conduct in deserting j beautiful Bessie N orris .n tht- moriiing of their wed. ling day caused much comment, ' and who returned ? nhsequently to find the ; poor girl prostrated with brain fever, made things ail right Tuesday morning by marry ! ing his affianced. The affair is mot rcmark : aide in many respects. The sudden flight nt . the lover threw MissNorrison a bed of sick- ness, where she lav between life ami death for many days. T'pon Welter's return he 1 went to see her. He was refused admission to the house by the ld.v 's mother. He push ed ms way m and caught her in ins arms as she was approaching him from her sick couch. After that the physicians ordered him to remain by her. He' did. so, nursing her until she was out of danger. She w,n willing to forgive him for his conduct, the mother's objections were overcome, ami on Tuesday morning the two were married in the bride's home. A Tktiritii.e Distkr iv Vifkna The ; Ring Theatre in Vienna. Austria, caKEbtfire j on last Friday night, while a play was in ! progress before a crowded bouse, and was entirely consumed. The scene of the bnrn ' ing building with the flames bursting thro' i the windows and then through the roof and : with the ciiesof the dense mass of human I beings inside struggling to escape, is deg j cribed s being one of the most agonzing ; and most heartrending that was ever wit j nessed. Hundreds jumped from the npper , windows ami many escaped in the same wa . from the lower balconies, some safely, but dozens of them were killed and many inaim ed for life. The upper gallery, which was densely packed, fell into the n'it who th j only remains found were small fragments of : bone. It is feaied that the loss of life will , be found, after the facts are fully known to ; be not less than eight hundred. The fire started on some part of the stage, but in j what manner it originated has not vet been ascertained to a certainty. O-Qt-KKTIOXARLT THE VERY RUST. i Baltimore, Md., April go. iksi. i 1 have recently been using your Brown's ; Iron Bitters in my f?.mily, consisting of my. : self, wife and three children, and the effect lias linen always as maiked as in the case of I Mr. Pheips. It is unquestionably a wonder i ful medicine. A. J. Bowes Important to Travelers. Sperial in ducements are offered you by the Bcni.rto to Roctk. It will pay rou to read their advertisement, to be found elsewhere ln this S-18.-lCm.j John Wanamaker Will inaugurate on Monday, December 5th, Great Holiday Sai of Philadelphia, Grand Like Fairy Land. o'clock every night. our careful attention. We art; organized toatter: John Wanamaker. Thirteenth, Market and Chestnut Sts. .' I'M 'P 1 -. Him n K o! M ,: :: w v. , ; c t tatc f t be v r i-M-;;eii'i 1 .1 I V ! 1,0 r.ntio;:n.. inc:.T t!:at hem 1 I 1; iil b CO r..lir:n.tt l 1V a I. M'V o -' tw.wii i.:cn .,; t:.c ie;.: .-.ce ",t , I ': si-"-, :;-.;y so M ais ol h- -. v 1 car Ki; !;t .1 t.w:i a 1 1 1 1 dis M.-r.i-t-.-.v n. Late :: - :lm:; v iv-ii-H'r 1 1 '!' in. ;. r. w l.i-i two c:ai"i-. !::i' o..:!i lle, '.''o g !a li.-. w-.s il .fi.vf Soon uli-.-r tic :.i .1 1,; " . s .i t 1 t'i on 1 l.er n; i ived an. I , !e .1 I v ; g: in daughters wi-'e re--.-i'-d "it-- !. In ; lie. ; to t "i" g! o; tli-". young 'a li-'s v tioiii si vcrc iiiiu: peiiiboi tng r 'a-' summoned tint ! !; d. trs. v ii rc f.sKi.l to ! - ai'd were t where inc.'.: id iad ...,,., id .'aiigi ters !'-! PI" :t C -'llVer.l'g Ii. il t ll;e i! aid was fed. siin wcre s- ii .ii- (lav e eiiicg l ei l i cieli! ly le-". . , red T o 1 1 la and t Hen t ',e s-i i-1 r. !ig . J.T '.'.:- (":rs! :.. a:et si.i'. il t r. t on M!i:r lay i t!M ir 'iii-f.'itiui- I t-ii s .,i t ... ; ., '"iiui. Ti.e g lis il.t eight iii-.i slid- , li'-niy cntcied ine la.use, and without Whtr.ii'g attacked ihcin. M' v.n,e to ihi-ir assistance, loit down and beaten ui-nu-r.-ii n:.; W as Ti rrMlips were then at i"i..-y i t v r die Is, who, ;:!,!' !. a!!ig t : . ill a l . cimdiiion, s,-t ! to (!. h. u.- a . I parts uiikliowii. l'.n'ies of . .'.'. 'i b-cn formed to scour t h.- mutou: .nng c i for the f .igitiv. s. and threat of lu:H,l they are catur-d aie lr-e!y ma :e on all s n;t y ig i: ides. '.e ocean ;:i fiv .'ays m, and !Ir. .luc .'i I,-.. !cr. says it chu be b cf st. ,. fe b:i' ! into fiitv w,itcr-t-.g',.t .at tbe 1 !. ie t est (.igge i ; i f pio' .;a'l. died c -mi 1 -et v Vt ss( 1- a:- 1 long. !!V i it ;! ments. '1 he trips will be ma..- New York a iid which is .'. b.n tlii'.n Liv.-r; . .rl li.1V. I ' - 1 . I..U T ?S- bo !, issi ge fating i s-lig-nS VV.:I I cinied. Ti;';.' ex t i.t pri.-e . extras. v.vpi exri.i pri.-c .i 1 be idea I- to hiivo .i line ot vert pilaees. To rMpp whir'agc u the vessels wiP. lie out in 1'ie sir-i Tl:e American Express Line is the name of it. Dvsrr.rsiA am Livi:; Comti. a int. Is it not Woith tie small pi ice of 7.". cents to tree your-e'if from every symptom of these ..is-trt-ssing conplaiiit .' 'if win think , caii at E. James' Drugstore, !:.iicnir,ai.., , and procure a bottle of Shiloh's Vita'.iza'r. Eeiy bottle has a print, d guaratstee on it. 1'sc ac cordingly and if it does you :io .g..,.,l itwid cost you nothing. ' (4-H.-tTo.vv.ly. Nkxt tear issj be the two'hun- i dre.ith anniversary of the founding .,i p cieipma and I'ennsyl vania bv Wiflam Penn. nnd it is proposed to have 'he Ik !I of Hide- . pendence Hall stun-k two hundred limes at midnight on New Year's eve in conuiK-mo- ' ration of these events. The churches, coiut bouses, etc., ti.r..ug!iotit the State are ex- : pected to j jin in the bell-ringing. ' MOTHtr.s Don't Know. How manv 'iiil dren are pur.iihed lor being uncouth, wilful, and indiflerent to instructions or rewards' imply became thev are out of .s.ith ! n nielhgent lady said cf a child of this kind i Mother should know that if thev wouii give the little ones model ate d..s,s",,f H,,,, Bitters for two or three weeks, tiie childnn would be all a pmrent could deiire." About 5 o'clock on'Fridav evnmg last a boiler at the Keystone Polling Mill, on Sec ond avenue, Pittsburgh, at, the.' Copper Works station, exploded with tertific foice wrecking the boiler shed, the blacksmith shop, a portion of the mi.l and one end of the cooper woiks, killing o.ie man ii.stantly ami more or less seriously injuring ten oth- Goi.dkn Mfoical Discovery - (Trade- I mark.registcred) is not only a sovereign rm- j edy for consumption, but also f..r luiMinip. live night-sweats, bronclrtis.eoti.dis i,itt:ng ' of bn,n, weak lungs, shoitness of br-aiti : and kindred affections of throat and chet' ' Sold liy druggi.-ts. ! Ov- the Cincinnati :Sntittienirai!ro;,d two miles south of Kismet, Tenn.', the second section of a freight train rin into thn f.-'st section on Sunday last, kiliing Engine, r Price, and a brakeman and fireman. My daughter's defective vision was H1,.h improued by Percsa. J amis Civik Ba kerstown, Pa. For sale at new drug st'o-e D epot Phil utti, n h a a tr Of St : . re. Sir. 1- I a A T n --i r.t inv 1 y rt 1 c r h. tt. it u t t., tLc Iu 1 1 Jt a rt.-n.-r r , p - v v C rt It -t ia: ; :: :-. 0 1- nis .1 n . : irif lr:-l. uj :n it r t i 1 " t l!j Ht.L-' I. ' i 1 n t r.T T !( (! rn , rMeM-.c mil.) n:a- t ,n tr. . !. i i ! r. a; .1 li . . s .., ... . , 3 3 It : 1 1 1 v e r : 'it '! t! n - ; ! S I NEW Ai'V!.:.: A I I -ur v. t I thr.-o U!: f , l'-Cil 1T1. j R'i-,-.l r in.''.- t ' r'uhl 1 - : j kMin 1" to : j i .--sc. r. t ;i ' ' j of te-1 1 tr. :.- ' : j tir il. rliuif W.-'rnTie ; f .-. . .- ' rti: a i.-r "i ' t'1 I uS .n 1'lMH.t I T g 1. 1 r 7 Per Cen! i k "S 1 t i H t I, 1 Municipal It". lnu V . ' : trtT t r a I ln.i NmpHpf 4 .ici;