The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, December 16, 1880, Image 4

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    Eastern and Middle States.
The ocinage executed at the mint in
Philnlelphin during November amounted to
7,650,840 piece = Of these, 138 4 0 pieces were
enules 187 280 half engle«, 2 960 quarter eagles
1,600 gold dollars, 1,000 000 silver dollsrs, 200
each 0! five and three-cont pieces, and 6,200.
200 cents.
The biggest map in the world arrived in
New York a few days ago on an ocean steamer
His name is Chang, he is a Chinaman, and his
height is nine feet.
Mrs. Valeria G. of Boston, from the
estate left by her husband has distributed more
than 81.000 000 smong
societies and colleges. Mrs Stone has also
given $600 (00 to relatives and friends, and
$100,000 to churohes and needy stude
for the redemption of mortgaged homes,
The first translation of the ible into the
English lJanguge was domemorated a few
evenings ago at the New York Academy of
Music by a Ww yolif fle sembmilleanial celehia.
tion uader the auspices of the American Bitle
soo’ety. The prircipal feature of the ceed
tion was an oration on ‘John Wyeliffe and
the fi:st Eoglish Bible ¥ by the Rev, Dr. Rioh-
and 8. Storrs. Short addresses were made by
ex-Governor Joshua 1. Chamberlain,
Maine, president ot the American Bible so.
piety, Cortlandt Parker and Enceh L. Fancher.
Many prominent clergymen and distinguished
laymen were present, and the audience
crowded the academy.
The New York surrogate has decided the
contest over Frank Leslie's will hy sustainiog
the will and ordering that it be admitted to
probate.
Stone,
various religious
nts and
Wn -
LLY
oldest piano masuisoturing firm in this coun.
try, have laied,
Bernhardt in New York the veceipts of the
theater at which she played amounted to alose
upon $100,000,
The crew of litecaving station No. 4, near
medals by the government in recognition of
their galb nt resus of the crew of a Spanish
brig last Febraary,
The Kearsage mills at Portsmouth, N. H
the immense six-story structure was laid in
raios, entailing & loss of about $300,000. Owe
operative was reported killed and several
wore badly burnel.
Western and Southern States,
Over 1.110.000 hogs were received at Chi.
mage, 1d, daring November, a larger nuy
than was ever Meir in one month at
marke! v
John T. Crawford, an eccentric Baltimorean,
who died iY, dt
antire estate, valued
8100.00 +, tor a home
Alaska is shown
bave a population of
aumber not more than 3
A fire at Dutham, MN. C,, dest
baidings and swept awny property valued at
$100,000.
An international ectton exposition will
held in Atlanta. Ga , next October.
Daniel Smith, a 0 lored man,
sentenced by the court a!
twenty-one yea 8’ imps
ing to sssanit & you: g white girl,
trom the bands of the she:iff by
banged.
By a railroad socident at Carey Station, Ill,
wo parsons were ialally anl thirteen others
serioasly injared.
Andrew J. Gillen, lawyer who
some weeks ago shol and kil ed Miss Sigerson,
pister of the New York assistant corporation
attorney, and then escaped, was arrested st
Cedar Keys, Fla. A his
bimsell, dying sooa alter from his sell-inflicted
wound. Be ore death he stated that he had
shot Miss S gerson by accident,
shoot himsel! in her presence th
witness his death.
The remains ol the late Lieutenant-Gov-
srmor-elect George B. Robinson, of Colorado
mately shot by mistake dari ning
troubles near Leadville, were received in
Kslamazoo, Mich, by and alter
lying in state
taken to his mo
The Piadmon
pany, of Richm«
Charles Hen
aber
ii any
md
‘
Eom,
| is found
resi men.
report to
30,000 persons, of whioh
for aed colo
by the census
are whites
oyed sixteen
be
after being
Pulaski, Tenn., to
wonment for attempt.
was taken
a crowd and
the young
ed a
ter arrest he shot
iatend:
at she might
ng to
& procession,
wer's home at Plainwell,
md, Va, has failed.
e¢rson, & colored man, was
har Friars Point, Miss, jor the marder
ol Thomas King in December, 18379, King
was sho' dead while trying to stop a fight be-
tween Henderson and a white man.
John Callahan was hanged a few days ago
at Wooster, Obie , for murde:inz Benjamin
Tormie at an agricul tad fair in October, 1879,
Callshan and others s«t upon a yo man
named Martin when Tormie went to his res-
cue and was stabbed in the buck by Callahan.
Diphtheria bas prevailed in a very malig.
nan! form in Grayson county, Va.
god at
i BL
yh
ung
In rome
instance the whole family died
drunk, in pure wantooness killed Margaret
Stewart and her two-year-old child, terribly
mangling them.
From Washington.
to be §3,609,261.23.
Cash in 196 treasury « cvs. $21
Gold certificates outstanding . .
Silver certificates outstanding.
Certificates of deposit outstand-
iog
Refunding certificates een
Legal tenders ontstanding.... 346,681
Fractional currency ‘outstand-
ing ..... an 7,163,207 37
U. 8 bondsof 1880 ont standing. 11,255,000 00
The payments made from the treasury by
warrants during November were as follows:
Civil and miscellaneous... ..... 8615229897
War.........
Navye.....
Interior Indians.
Inti rior pensions...
0.128.763 98
7 400 520 00
35,077 28) 00
944 350 00
016 00
1,677.474 13
671,713 72
eseeness sae 815,871 220 68
The annual report of Secretary Schurz is
although at first socepting the reservation
policy es he lound it, observation and study
the Indinns to respect their home attachments;
to leave them upon the lauds they occupied
and to introduce sworg them the habits snd
occupations of civilized life; to dissolve grad.
ing men, invested with all the rights which
other inhabitants ol the country possess.
civilized and uncivilized tribes together eulti.
vated Jast year 482 738 acres of land, or about
one and three fourths acres to each man wo.
wan and ehild, estimating the tolal Indian
population at 2
freight wagons have been in use by the In.
dians this year, with the result of saving con.
siderable money to the government.
ical work has in many eases been surprising.
The secretary speaks highly of the progress of
officers end 653 privates,
says that in bis opinion the wanagoment of
Indian affairs should eomtinue to be intrus‘ed
to the civil and not to the military branch of
the : ervice.
Sceretary Thompson says in his annual
report that the amount available for the sap-
po t cf the navy for the Jast fiscal year was
$14 704 644 22. The expend tures were $12 -
916 6 9 45. The number of navy pensions on
tle rolls June 30, 1880, was 3,93), a d the
amcunt paid during the year on account of
pensions was §752 771 97. The total amount
available for the operations of the navy tor the
fiscal year ending June 30, 1881, is $15,095,-
061 45 and the to'al estimates lor the fiscal
year ending June 30, 1882, are $15,953 761 61.
The secr tary favors the policy of govern.
metal aid to steamship lines, snd suggests
that vessels buiit for carrying the United
States mails should be so constructed ss to be
easily changed into war vessels, and says that
the number of vessels should bo increased,
The tollowing is & statement a the coina po
ex cated at the United Stitvs mints daring
November: Double ea.les—picees, 3200);
valua, $610 000. Eagles — pieces, 198,880.
value, $1 958,800. Hali-eagles—pieces, 387,-
260; wale, $1.036400. Quarter - ¢agl s,
2.960; $7,400. Dollars, 1,6 0; $1,600. Total
go'd — pieces, 622,720; value $156742 0.
Silver dollars—picces 2,300,000; value, §$2,-
300,000 Five cents—pieces, 200; value, $10.
Three cents—pieces, 200; value, $6. Cents—
!
|
i
preces, 6,900,200; Total base
pieces, 6 200,600; value,
S
value $62 002,
62.018,
of the lite saving
ol Biitisa
It wan organ.
and 26.96 lives have been saved
in 1873,
Last vear there
in the
iperintendent Kimball,
hans recived a the
report
Lit: Saving institution.
wed in 1824,
it. Onrs was organised and
d.
were saved in Great Britain 637
1.800, Sao
10 000 lives have been gay
lives;
excellent is our
sorvioe compared with theirs that they are
apying ours largely in methods and ma.
shinery
I'he report of the commissioner of internal
revenue shows that the receipts for the year
1880. in the foo of the reduc.
Hon of the tax on tobaooo, were 8123 981 816 10,
nding June 32
3
of $10,832.29 72
The receipts tor the first four months
inaronse ovet
IST9,
» the present fiscal year are $43 789 318 30-
the corresponding period of
il this increase
aver
total collections irom internal revenue taxes
at the present mate would ba §135 000 000
Duting the last four years and [ur months
4,061 illicit distilleries have been seized, 7,1
persons arrested, twenty-six officers and em
ployees killed and fifty-seven wounded in the
of the laws, The total cost of
the past fiscal
hi
The estimates for
The
total amount of collections from tohaeed was
$ a deorense of $1,264 863. There
wore 90,385,270 gallons of spirits produced
which axceeded the produ.
by 18 463 649
total amount collected,
S30,
during the year,
of the previous year
val lane.
tion
Foreign News,
The voleano of Mauna Loa, in the Sandwioh
islands, is in a state of eruption. The wal.
two great streams of
one of whieh is thirty miles long aad 10 to
200 yanls wide and about twenty feet deep.
At Tralee, Ireland a party of armed men
broke ioto a bailiffs house, seized the bailifl
and slit his ears,
inva,
siderably excited over the discovery that a
number of removed from
the cemetery, It is believed that th» work of
graves has beon carried
bodies have been
robbing g on systemat.
jeally for some time, and that a large number
of corpses bave baen removed alter belong in
terred by sorrowing
An Austrian count has had a railway bailt
on his domain which is propelled by sails
At Toronto, the
Casey's
relatives.
Mrs,
three years and the
barned to
Ontario, bodies of
ahildren—one
other five months old —were found
death. Their bodies were discovered lying in
the middie of the floor, while the mother was
#0 intoxicated she could give no information
as to the cause of the tragedy.
The second treaty drawn up by the United
States commissioners and the Chinese gov.
ernment Americans shall not
import opium or carry the
provides that
prouoet coast wise
or sell it
i won court of common council Las
ent to
om of the
unanimously to General
{ Ay » nh ve fr t
derrick Roberts the tree city
regogrmition of
hating it, pamphlet
forth, tumults are taking place among
students, and an oconsional leacas still
the streats,
will
cours In
A large number of eminent Jews
meat to consider steps
¢
? a ¥ : Ihr y 1 T ?
SeIves. iL 18 pr : 10 es'ab
support their can:
. Fila ia
Ine sitnatior Ireland
British
grows no
daily. The iron-olad Valorous
been sent to Ireland with small.
wnnsecos armed
ali
AI AIDMULL Ion AL team |
with seven river
Eng
usher of
h govern:
the
DIOsCu
Sligo BPI
Gordon
of
tenant to leave his farm. Colonel
© condition of the people in the west
that of avy
says ti
Ireland is worse than
ple in
General Gonzales has been masgurated as
other peo-
the warld.
President of Mexico with mueh ceremony.
wean cab'es are to ba laid
d ately between England and Nova Scotia, to
cost when finished $7,250,000.
The rowing mate on the Thames between
Ross, o ( , and Trickett, of
ia favor of the former,
gent Basutos, of South
Iwo new « Mme.
Austmlia,
resulted
The Africa have
with great lo 8 by the colonial
3a
troops,
taken pli ce at Waterfurd, Ireland. The pro.
cession, which included various societies with
Houses and slips were decorated
with flags and the streets trinmphautly arched
Four bundred police,
savalry were draited lor the town.
CONGRESSIONAL SUMMARY.
Senate,
At twelve o'clock the Vice. President called
dentials of James IL.
Gordon, were read, and Mr. Pagh and Mr.
Brown were daly sworn in. The credentials
of Se: ator Edmunds, of Vermont, re-elected
The Vice-
the attorney-general, and was proceeding to
lay o'her communications belore the Senate
when Mr. Thurman suggested that it would be
more orderly to wait notification that the
House was in session before transacting busi.
ness in the Senate. The secretary of the Sen-
on a resolution offered by Mr,
Thurmas, sent to notity the House. A reso-
lution offered by Mr. Bayard, sonding the same
information to the President by a committee
A recess of hall an hour
wss then taken pending the reports of the
commitiees. When the Senate
a mesmge was received from the House an-
nouncing that it was ready to proceed to busi.
ness, but as no word had arrived from the
President another recess was had until 1 30.
At 1.39 Mr. Bayard, the chairman of the com-
mittes appointed to wait on the President,
reported, and a moment alterward Private
Secretary Rogers appeared with the President's
Alter the reading by Secretary Burch the mes.
table.
House,
At exactly twelve o'clock Speaker Randall
called the House to order and the chaplain,
the Rev. Mr. Harrison, offered prayer. The
roll call showed 227 members, more than a
quorum. Mr, Cox presented the credentials
Thirty-second district of New York, and that
gentleman appeared and qualified.... lhe ap.
poin.ment of the ¢ istomary committees to
Jotily the Senate and to inform the President
that the Houss was ready to receive his mec.
sage fullowe !, and t ker then proceeded
to call the States for hils and resolutions,
Among the bills introduced and referred wae
the following: By Mr. Springer— For the tem-
porary increase of the justices of the su preme
it provides lor
w Spe
1881, making the number eleven, which is to
be eventually reduced to nine as vacancies
occur. Also changing the time for the elec.
tion of presidential electors and representa. |
tives in Congress to the seeond Tues'av in
By Mr. Cox~-A resolution request.
ing the President to communicate ANY corres-
pondenes and treaties with the empire of
comme roe between the two countries; also tor
the refunding of fees in all cases of void re gis.
tration of trade-marks. By Mr. Bailoy—For
Siates. By Mr. Hurd--A joint resolution
relative to the tariff. [t declares that suoh
legislation shoul ibe governed by the following
principl 8: Tha' a tariff is a tax on imported
goo is which is nlimstely paid by the oon.
rumer. that a tarill for protection (so-called)
does not, in most cases, protect the interest it
pretends to protect;
toes not increase the wages ol workingmen;
that the pro‘eotive tariff builds up ove citizen
at the experse of another; that a protective
tariff disturbs the primal law of trade which
governs exchanges by supply and demand;
that a protective tarifl has drive: American
commerce from the high seas, and that a pro-
fective tariff increases the probability ot the
crime of smnggling..
ment by Mr. Briggs of the death of his col.
league, E. W. Farr, the House, out of respect
to the memory of the deceased, adjourned.
So great was European ignorance of
this country a few years ago that a
Dutch journal informed its readers that
New Yo rk is a place destitute of Jaw and
order, where clergymen carry muskets
into the pulpit, and where the collection
is taken up hy men armed with re-
volvers.
The section hands near Rock Rapids,
11, discovered the head of a calf pro-
truding from a snow-drift the other day.
Upon shoveling it out the critter proved
tebe alive and immediately began eat-
ing. It belonged to Hoval Oleson, and
bad been tightiy bound up by the drift
or ten days.
United States Life-Saving Service.
i Mr 8. 1. Kimhall,
| Hleasaving service, in his annual report. shows
that at the close of the flson! year the
establishment ambrmoed 178 stations, ol which
139 were on the Atlantio, thirty tour on the
lakes, aud six on the Paciflo Ihe record of
soivicn, he says, swpasses that of any yet
made. While the weather of the vear was
genormlly milder than usual, it was mint kod by
resulting
}
{
suporintondent of the
inal
} any storms of axoopt onal severity,
ina muoh larger number of casunition within
the sphere of station oparations than in any
previous year, and the total loss of a greater
number of vessels. The highest former nam.
ber of disas ers was that of the year preceding
being 219 his year the number aggregated
S00 Ihe highest number of vessals to ully
lost in any preveding year was ffiy-dour, fn
1879. The number this Yoar was sixty-seven
| The TY board the 300
vessels lost this year was 1,858, of whom
1.080 were saved suooored at
Thee ware
the swaiions 449 shipwrecked persons, 1 3 3
dave’ relied being aftr
numbar of pais on
ded th I'he number
of porsacs brought ashore irom wires kad ves.
sala by the litosaving appliances was 708. The
life-saving crows also pssisted off, when
stranded, got out of dangerous positions, amd
piloted to places of safely 138 vessels. The
estimate! value of the whole number of vessols
G10 340, and of their cargoes §1,
the total value of property in
being nearly $1,000,000 more
than i « the year preceding. (M this amount
19.807 wee saved and 81,191,801 lost, the
oss boing $2500 509 less and the saved §1,174
+a) greator than io the previous yoar
the
“mn
Jost was 82
185 368. making
peril $3 811,708
Ihe number of casualties on Atiantio
coast within the scope of Lhe service was one
fess than in the year, helng 163
while on the lakes the number 8 more than
doubled, belag 136, against filty-three the pre
VIOUS Yoar in these 138 disasters, only a
single lite was lost. The total loss of lite with
in the soope of the service iu the smallest ever
Te vag ond the low
asl previous number baing twenty-two,
1 he toll
fesu
previous
Ane {18 general extension,
owing abe gives a summary of the
ts sapos the Introduction of the present
in 15871
pumber of disasters...
system,
Toa
Total value of vessels
Tots nl
l'otal value of
Total value of
Total number
Total num
otal number
{ Total numbe
Tolan! number
forded 5,95
Of the 871 given above as lost, 183 ovourred
at the disasters of the Huron and Metropolis
previously shown as aot
Yate Ol cargoes
property sav od .
wl
Taw
property i .
ns On vessels
ol persons saved ....
of Hves lost...
of persons sheltered
of days’ sheller al
ALTE
of pe
er
2,03
whic h have been
irgeable 10 the service
new stations have been added during
upon the Gulf coast, and are now in
operation, copstituting a new distriot, desig
nated the Eighth. Lite.saving medals have
been awarded during the year jor heroism in
Saving ife to nineteen persons, one of whom
was a woman-—-Miss Edith Morgan, Hamlin,
Mich.
M
ol the preced ng voar
and urges a moderate inorease of approg
nloy an ad
Six
the year
renews his recommendations
additional stations
Kimball
for
tions 10 enabie ! 0 en MONK
man st
season
Lite-savi
multipd certain
rapid lan ¢ of parso
tie alive
horses tor hauling ] the
wreck, and for
to secure the
us {rom vessels
station a out
wiing of
scenes of
CHRod
the
apparatus
Yue United States Mint.
he ann {
pint says ih
aninst Ovel
On Ww
#
sil
ball
nport of
silver bu
i}
i Amen
Mn and
amount ol
nd operated upon
was 817 Os O Lhe vent
83h 468 did ol i
the New York sssaj
i bere wer
oda I
© GO
ff gold and
La 1g the fiscal
mated at 36.0 0 gold and
silver. It 1s est
year ended Jane 30, 1
consumed in manuisclures and
000.000 of gol! and $35,000,000 of
most interesting won of the report
to the The gain ir
the country and of bullion in th
January 1, 1879,
| tion, amounts to
701 904 is in gol
On November 1, 1580, the amount
States ooin in the country
which $375,323 881 was gol! an
H44 was silver. The mints and
hold in addition In the
875.558 811 ot ®O id an
making a grand | total of eon in eircalation and
i lable on the first of November of
8 33 882,602 of which is gold
158.320 911 silver. Oi the amount of
Sates gol ld coin in the gounts ry
silver
VERY
$37,700,000
18 the fiscal
United States
the arts $10,.
The
relates
1 oan
i
i
siver.
oon oun
date fixed
309,418,
an « 851,697
18
tt
$327.3
id
ol
avount of
43 367 of silver.
on
797,60 ” hel
Id y banks and §200 379.138
Of the silver coin $47,084,
stan ed dollars and $24,629,459 ia
were held by the U iy.
nat onal banks h $56,330 30 in
{ leaving £75.233,239 in other
| in general circalation. As are] with
| the statement made November kL 1879. the
i reserve has diminished by 857.
holds over §78 000 000 of
Tie s Iver coin in the treasury has
increased by 821,524,348. The banks Pave in.
sremsed their stock of coin by 889 147 884 in
gold and 811,014 in silver, a d
vale hands have been increased by
030 gol | and §9 085 828 8 Iver.
production of gold silver
winoipal countries of the world for 1879, as
reported or estimated, was: Of gold, §105,.
00.000, and of silver, 831,000,000. 1'ae
poimgs of nineteen cOuUnirvg Was reported fal
$50 960 (Ol gold an! $117,318,293 silver. [he
lation of thirty-one co 1ntries is stated
consist of $4,031,721 803 paper
gold and §2 482 950,021 silver.
™
silver
aod
{ tional silver cas
banks
com
treasury gO
in coin, bat
the amoants
pn ds
and in the
ore
The Great Pigeon Roost of the West,
The most notable pigeon roost in the
West is located in the southwestern part
of Scott county, Ind., and covers many
hundreds of acres of the forest. To
this roost come nightly, in the season,
| when pigeons are abundant, millions of
They commence arriving
as early as five o'clock in the evening,
in. The birds commence leaving
dnylighi, and by eight or nine
Il have departed for the feeding
oft en hundreds of miles away.
During the roosting season this pigeon
roost is a notable and exciting place,
Hunters visit it from all parts of In-
diana, and from Ohio and Kentocky.
| They come armed with shotguns and
long poles, and supplied with torches
and sacks, the latter to be used in earry-
ing off the captured birds, The hunters
usually commence their work about
eight o'clock in the evening, and thence
on through the night the scene is an ex-
citing one. The roar of shotguns is
heard on all sid 8, Adde i to this is the
erackine and falling of t} imbs of the
trees from the accumulated we ight of
the pigeons upon them. Torches flash
at
o'clock
z grounds,
ie
through the
they
of the long poles lower
limbs of the trees as
flocks ereate confusion worse
| confounded. Thousands of birds are
killed nightly, and during the day droves
| of hogs roam through the woods to fat.
| ten on the killed and wounded birds left
on the ground during the night's foray.
change their roost ng place,
locate far away from the ol a roost,
short time ago they made a change of
{ eistant from the former roost. This
change was made in the pight. The
| Scott county pigeon roost has been a
Inmous resort for more than e ighty years.
| of the State took place in September,
1812. A party of marauding Poliawa
| tomies, out on the war-path,
| the most remote in this direction from
| and her twosmal! children—Mrs. Beadle
flying with the children in her arms and
secreting hergelt and them in a sink hole
and gave the alarm.
TS
Paper, as every one knows, burns well
when serunched up, but iz not by any
means go inflamma le as wood, and in
the form of books is somewhat difficu't
to burn at all.
was considerable trouble taken in de
atroying heretical books, which were
placed on large wooden platforms, but
after all the care taken to annihilate them
from the face of the earth, masses were
found in the embers sufficiently uncon-
sumed to be easily readable, and it was
thought this was brought about by the
wiles of the evil one.
THE TREASURY DEPARTMENT.
in his annus
rdinary revenues
the year ending
LOLO BX an
$20
Secretary Sherman
report says that the
of the government fox
June 30, 1880, were $313.59
the ordinary expenditure
649,067 78
Leavy ng n surplus avenne of
Whieh with {
fawn
fronn cash Dalatoe
Welt
8045 581 643 20
BH Bmount «
in roasary,
liven srsninnnsons 8,048 434 2
Making
Whi
(Nt
(H melo
BnEing
Of the loan of 1858
Him
coo STS DON O87
liad to the rede
fund, . .§7
wii oiyenoy lor the
i “he 1aes 251.717 42
40 (0 ©
100 Ou
a0 OO
OU 00
00
pg
i, 003,900
wh was app
onde tor the sinking
un
AHREY oan
Of bounty land arip
Of compound inte: 16,
Of 7-30 notes of 1864-8 ....... 2,1
(4 one and
dd
0
LW Voar nol 3,700 00
4858 Gu
(Ho omand
$73,008 087 41
The nmount due the sinking fund fo
this year was $34 831 643 55 I'h ere
was applied thereto, trom the redemp
tion of bonds and fractional currency,
ps shown in t above statement, the
sum of TAM 617 41, an exoess of
$35 072 97381 over the amount actually
req wired for thie year
Lhe requirements of the sinking fund
law have been substantially observed,
and the principal of the public debt, less
cash in the treasury and exclusive of
acoraing interest, has been reduced
from $2756 431 571.43, its highest
point, whieh it resold on August 31,
1865 to 81.890 025 740 89. on November
1, 1880- a reduction or $5066, 400,830, 54
Compared with the previous year, the
receipts for 1880 have increased $03.
G20 435 23.
For the present fiscal year the estis
mate is:
Total receipta...... cus. ssesngl] } +00 (
fotal expenditures. . £
he
,
0 00
} O08
«ld, A
$90 000,00) (0
Estimated amo unt des the sink
ing fand.... UR 0 554 48
Leaving a balaneo of. $50, 198,115 &
The secretary respectfully renews ha
fecommendations of last year, with
view 10 promote economy in the publ lie
service, a permanent organization of an
appropriation committee for each House
be established, who shall have leave to
sit during the recess of Congress, with
power to send for persons and papers,
and to examine all expenditures of tl
government: that rules adopted by
the respective Houses limiting appro-
priation bids to items of appropriation
and exciuding legislative provisions;
that appropriations, except for the in-
terest on the public debt, be limited to a
period not exceeding two years, and
that the expenditure of approprisvons
be strictly confined to the period of time
for which they were appropriated.
ie
be
“ y
REDUCED TAXATION.
It is a question for Cungress to deter.
mine whether any material reduction in
1xation should be made at s time when
the whole surplus revenue may be with
great advantage applied directly to the
payment ACCT wing bt, and when
such surplus is an important element in
aid of re fund ing. If it should be deter-
mined by ( to reduce taxes it is
respectfully recommended that all the
taxes imposed by the internal re venue
iaw other t those on bank circulation
and on spirits, tobacco and fermented
liquors be repealed. The tax on the
circulation of national banks is levied
partiy mnt nature of a moderate charge
for a Iranc Hise conferred by the govern-
ment, and ps y to furnish means to
pay the axpense of printing and issuing
hutional bunk nes Itis easil y collected
by the treasurer of the 8
and is a ¢ ust an d proper tax, whether
FegAr ded asa charge for the franchise or
as a means of re the govern
ment the cost of print the notes. The
tax on State banks of the gravest
importance, not for parposes of revenue
butas a ch upon the renewal of
system of 1 State paper money
The secretary recommends that pro-
vision. be made for the issue of an
amount not exceeding §400,000,000 of
treasury notes in denominations not jess
than ten dollars, bearing interest not ex-
ceding four per centum per annum, and
ruaning {rom one to ten years, to be sold
at not icss than par, the amount ma-
turing during any year not to ex-
ected the sinking fund for that year,
and the proceeds to be applied to
the payment of five and six per centum
bonds, maturing in 1881. It is believed
that, with the present state of the money
market, a sufficient amount of such
treasury notes bearing an annual inter.
est of three per centum, oan be sold to
meet a considerable portion of the
maturing bonds; but it is better to ocon-
fer upon the department a discretionary
power to stipulate for a higher maxi-
mum rate, {0 avoid the posibliity of fail
ure. Such a discretion is not likely to
be abused, while a power too carefully
restricted may defeat the beneficial ob-
ject of the law.
It is aiso recommended that authority
be given to sell at par an amount not
exceeding $400,000,000 of bonds of the
character and desceripti 'n of the four per
centum bonds ef the United States now
outstanding, but bearing a rate of mter-
est not exceeding three and sixty-five
one hundredths per centum per annum,
and redeemable at the pleasure of the
United States after fifteen years, the
proceeds to be applied to the payment
of bonds redeemable on or before
July 1, 1881. Tuough the amount
of the two classes of securities
weeds the amount of
bonds to be redeemed, no more can be
sold than the bouds to be redeemed,
while the alternative authorized will
permit a limited discrevion to sell the
securities most favorable to the govern-
ment. With the authority thus recom-
mended, it is believed that the depart-
ment ean within a year redeem all the
five and six per cent. bonds now oat.
standing, and thus reduce the interest
of the public debt $12,000,000 per an-
num, and leave the debt in a form most
favorable for gradual payment by the
application of the sinking fund, with
out cost or premium.
of
ON ETesSs
4
iit
nles
bursing
ing
is
a
CE
RESUMPTION.
Nothing has occurred since my last
annual report to disturb or embarass the
easy maintenance of specie payments.
United States notes are regularly taken
al par with coin in all parts of this coun-
try and in the chief commercial marts of
the world. The balance of coin in the
treasury available for their redemption
on the first day of November last was
$141,597,013 61, and the average during
the year has not materially varied from
that sum. The only noticeable change
in the reserve is the gradual increase of
silver coin caused by the coinage o: the
tional silver stated
hereinafter. "
All the requirements of the resump-
tion act have thus farbeen executed, and
its wisdom has been fully demonstrated.
coin, more ful'y
A Fast Mare.
“*Stranger,” said the stage.driver
** this was how I found out her speed:
alongside the railroad
track just as on big load
ture started. The fr
hold it all, but they managed t
ing in exc
which they
of hotel furni
ight car wouldn't
O squeeze |
ept a long bar
the
mirror,
the car
tied to th
flection in the glass
side of
I'he mare saw |
and thought
er 10
it nuol her
or the You
1 her back with a ¢
She just }
snorted along like
Was Liorae
lead couldn't
team wind.
intd back her ears and
a twents-inch shell.
Fhe passengers all be get excited
Fhey rushed out platforms ana
began to The conductor
stood up on the se and began to sell
pools, The engineer pulled the throtile-
valve open and niong
mies an how Soon the |
pare abreast of the coweatcher. |
\t San Bruno we had half a mile the |
erd. Near the Six-Mile the
rain wus go much aliead of time that it
fell through an open draw and ever.
gan to
on the
i
mike bets
i
$
:
wide tore ali
was
HOUSE
seventy-two
It was pretty
rs, but
n, bet yer life,
nonth after I sold that
present owner for 260.000.
kilied and 199 wounded,
rough cn the pastenge
distanced the tr
then we
A bout
a to her
mure
“ Why, Poly,” aid
‘what a time you've
the cotton I've sent you for?” Polly
(who uaas lost the money): “You
shou!dn’t send little things like me to
buy totten.”
her mother,
heen, Where is |
Some Absurd Printers’ Errors.
From a collection of what are
first prools, lips containing thu
takes of the newspaper posit Iie
fore they come ur der the notice of the
FeOviser, we nn few which show the
amdicrous nature of printers’ errors, “In
the same speech Mr. Gladsione dweit
on the gight which England had earned
by expenditure of hlood and treasure 10
interfere in Turkish Provinces; i hut
now, with a leopard and a hound, he
¢ formuiated a plan for = a the
Clirist! MOVIE ORs practically aulono
mous ha vonvers leap and a
bound into a opard and und must
linve th ingenuity of tl oOm
poser, who must have set up next
parangoaph, In which we th nt
Clirlsting religion sirielly enjoins ms
bosany,” instead of * monogamy.”
Referring of E. A. Freeman's
queer ppittieal notions, a writer is madé
ancoountable for saying ‘Coming as It
does from one who hing gained real
tinotion as a barbarian,” when 18 ob
vious Lie wrote inh n In the
same article we read It is nimost in«
credible that in spite these facts the
ex-premier should hb ventured tw
tell even an nois air of the
government of course,
thie word shou il When
Mr, G adstone is ns being
od ribed by
‘the spout of
under
Or 8 mis
Or
enll
ni
ion ol a
ah
taxed
read
it
to one
i
ais
il
* histor
Of
Ave
y snob thint the
Is, @Lo
represented
of his sdmin
Liberal party,”
“spirit” to
ono rs
the
stand
ne
we
should be in-
tended.
We
error
1 to quote, italicizing the
right word within
danger of mistaken
proc ™
and quoting the
parentheses *The
thie forms of mushroom for
thos re not enly but
wlio and nutritious stands in the
way of a more general tance of the
ers (fungus) as an article of food."
*** “On their return they proceeded
bread with recently pur
wr, and, having pariaken of
it, the paix once became delicious
(delirious.”) “In August, 1865,
when 8 | of the
Qiym : , id ut a piece
oal.ed : ince Man
(Camaaraizam mn)
This poser ol
surprise. He is
sentence that
hold Const
ol som«
and in
ain Lust
nineteenth
poisonous
whicl edible
some
noot
3
10 make Lic
chased oi
IrRivi e
Aan
real master of
ready Lo REROUNCE in
“if the truth ( Tark)
antinople it wiil fall
Aryan power to
the next proceeds
' Lin Civiie
ISR g
fw
OI
cannot
to the lot
i ¥
a0 80,
Lo
of
ration
ceniury is Hn
Arvan) dey 0
Ning thint
eles of
exp
thie
$0 [ry
ir iry
gent, Lit
Eng
meoeeiing i
took place, he is
at
a will
and
them ** piekied sth
is
Conve
have
tliat
red
heen
Ol
10 tel
BE ANXIOUS
Fis }
Lins fen
16% Of I8 CAD
Lid
y or tro
arge
inke
is
ont ner home
£ arried,
slung
oon
HE Was
BOTOSS Lier
She was padd
when nearly
discovered
immedi.
uiler taking
m, f pulled the
1€ buck made a sndden m
i A, | each.
1s neck,
wound
pain, struck
fore
On,
wee
ment, and
ing its mark,
making a
he bue k,
the boat
sttering the
at sank at
y
enter
ugly
enraged
with of 1s legs,
bark in pie The
leaving Miss Merrill
in the water with the struggling and in-
fariated animal. But she was plucky
And couid swim. She grasped the buck
by the horns and deliberately drawing
Ler Lunting knife, which was as sharp
as un razor, from her beit, she plunged it
into the deer's neck, killing him almost
instantly. She then swam ashore, about
an eighth of a mile, and hurried home,
where she put dry clothing, and
after procuring another boat rowed out
the buck was floating
} When
I more tt an 978
finest One ilied in
{ years, This the
th deer Miss Merrill has killed,
and she is proud of her last adventure,
which is the ing one has
ever had, She intends having the
buck's hen fed, as a memento of her
terrible struggle for life, Miss Merrill
15 uncommonly good-looking, worth
consid rable money and well eda-
ated, and only keeps up her Diana-like
ite because it pleases her. Her father
wishes to move into a more civilized
region, but she will not hear of any such
proposal. — Damasens (Pa) letter to
Indelphia Times,
A 5
Panctuality,
nstonis!
one
frai i
Gh ¢
on
where
and towed
dressed ti
pounds
this sect
4
t
10 dead
al to shore
on is
eighted
thri
most she
i
i: 8
18
there are who neg
thousands | i
CRUSE nione;
in itself, but it is
is how many
col puncluslity, and
niled in life from this
a serious vice
the fruitful parent of
many other vices, so that he who be-
comes the vietim of it gets involved in
toils from which it is almost impossible
0 escape, It makes the merchant waste.
1 of time: it saps the business reputa-
awyers, and it injures the pros.
who might other.
wise rise to fortune; in a word, there is
not a profession, not a station in lite,
which is not liable to the canker of the
destructive habit. It is a fact
not always remembered, that Na-
poieon’s great victories were
won by infusing into his subordi-
nates the necessity of punctu-
nity to the minute It was his plan to
maneuve country,
a0 to revder the enemy uncertain
where he was about to strike a blow,
and then suddenly to concentrate his
forces and fall with irresistible power on
some weak point of the extended lines
of the toe. The exeention of this gavatem
demanded that esclh division of the army
should arrive at t specified time
punctually; for, if any part failed to
It was hy
imitating this plan that the aliies finally
succeeded in overthrowing the emperor.
I'ie whole Waterloo camp jiign turned
on these tactics. At Mt. St. Jean, Bin
clier was punctual, while Groue hy was
not; and the result was that Ni apoleon
fell and Wellington triumphed.
In mercantiie affairs punctuality is as
Many are
instas.ces in which the neglect to renew
punctuaily has led to seri-
Vith sound p
insist, under the
on the punctual pa
for were they to
Hons won
inextricable confusion,
time has the
his
people
uve
1iis not only
rover large spaces ol
ns
ha
the
ley do
penalty of
ment of
otlierwise,
d tal
bn
pre
ks
Lest
108, de
failure of
abligati
core of olin
win
one
rs, Ju
fine oo; bricks of the
eauses the {ali of all the |
vest. Thousands remain poor all their
lives, who, if they were more faithiul in
their word, would secure a large run of
custom, and 80 make their fortunes. Be
punctual if you would suceced.
man
at on
the
1H
——
Yosemite Valley.
Yosemite valley, ol which the world
{ has heard so much, is situated on the
| Merced river, in the southern p rtion
{of the county of Mariposa, 140 miles,
| little southeast, from San Franciseo, but
nearly 2560 miles from that city by any of
the usually traveled routes,
western slope of tl
midway between its eastorn and western
base, and in the center of the Bae,
measuring north and south, It is
narrow gorge, about el. lt
iength, from a half to a mile in width,
and inclosed in frowning eranite walls,
rising with almost unbroken and per.
pendicular faces to the digey height of
from three thousand
feet above the green and quiet vale be.
nesth, From the brows of the preci
PIOeS 10 BOVEral pisces spring
walter, which in seasons ol
meiling snows,
and magnificence
0
rains and
surpass‘ng anything
known in mountain scenery, The val
ey-bottom is like a floor, the Merced
river laging up much room as it wan.
ders from side to side, apparently in no
haste to leave. There are broad tracts
of natural meadow, radiant in epring-
time with a wonderful earpeting of
Howers
by beits of trees, park-like groves of
pines and cedars, black ouk and live oak
nimost without undergrowth, and
through which one may ride unimpeded
in all directions. The walls are of
granite, with an average height of about
three thousand feet; in some places
nearly vertical, and with very little
debris at the base; in others, a pine-
covered slope leads up to gigantic
towers, spires or sharp-cut peaks. There
are now no fewer than five trails over
Present Population of the Earth,
Behm and Wagner's Bevolkerung der
gives a mass of well-digested in
bf the countries of the world, The areas
Asin, Amerion, Australia,
Polynesian and the polar regions have
been capefully recomputed, and as the
resulta differ in many instances from
we give an abstract of these now
figures:
Area in sta. 8g. m, Inhabliants
sure
may
valley: and a
footed, cool-headed and strong,
find a dogen places where he could,
without real danger, seaie tho e¢ seem~
ingly imprssible barriers. The general
color of the rocks
ing from a bluish-g
in fall sunlight,
Appleton's Journal
out of the man,
A ———————————— ¥
Tanning in China,
A writer in one of our foreign ex.
changes thus describes the Chinese mode
of tanning: The skins are put into
tubs containiny water, salipeter and
suit, After thirty days they are taken
but, the hair is shaved off, and the skins
well washed in spring water. Each
hide 18 then cut into three pieces, and
well steamed, which is done by passing
them several times backward and for
ward over a steaming oven, Further,
each picee is stretched out separately
over a flat board, and
nails, in order that it may
ally and thoroughly in the sun, The
smoke of the oven makes the leather
binck, and if it is required to give it a
yellow appearance it is rubbed over with
water in which the fruit of the so-called
wongohee tree has been soak Of the
offal glue is made by heating it in pans
for twelve hours over a slow fire The
giue so obl ained is poured into rough
earthern vessels, where it rem» ins three
in order to coagulate, The solid
cut into pieces with si harp
carela.ly { upon grating-
to dry,. which are placed in
resemblice the Duteh
time taken ir
g 10 the resson of
wind it will
but with
hirty or
+ dreg
dry gradu
i%
ENiVes
trays
and int
IRC
open
tires]
irying
SPACES
floors The
8 OOOH dine
i & north west
five days only,
ind fs much
be required,
the PANS, a8 well
¢ skiing, are sold to th
At Oons~sha, 8 vil-
an extonsive
r the manufacture of
well worth a visit,
ongols in wild parts of the con.
ake clothes from goat skins, which
and durable protection
id 3 wet, When the
from the skins, carpeis and
» from the latter, In the
thie hides are eaten, and
8 vither sold fordung or utilized
the manufacture of
ing
VED
wit! it
a
SL Ww
ays wi
i
i
as
ie offal left in
from th
ar n
near C
mers |
IRDA
anton, there is
Rhywin ng Made Easy:
The Tribune has fitted up a room for
sciusive use of its poets, and has
introduced its new system of riyming
charts, which are designed
of our songsters who never hb
ficuity in whooping up
sionally a liitie shy on the
of their otherwise highly
table productions. The charts cone
tain words that rhyme pretly well, and
are adapted to any kind of poetry, from
the Papa's-stepped-or
order to the weird.
verses of Swinburne
Ave any
the sentiment,
L AYE Oi%
mi
reat
mowing-
Vhen a poet
and easy,
wheat , he
sy liabie oh
hins only to glance al the on
art, which contains words
Time,
Dime,
search of Svmseibsig with a
el-up
one, whi i
Iime
Crime
M be is in
© RNY
¢ hex
0
contains words
Benison,
Venison,
Ix spot,
(zuess Not.
Tie m,
Fiy-lime,
Redress,
Maud 8.
Swinburne metre
wants, Chart No. 3 may be
advantage, It reads:
Azure Sky, Daffodil's Glow,
Refrigerator, Sorrel Horse.
And so forth.
invited to come in and try the scheme.
Take the el wator. It may fall
day.—Chiongo Tribune.
Dense Population of Africa.
Although we have not,
likely to Pave for years,
I Lie
is
studied to
y underrated it. Much |
lately been |
1 have great
pti oy Me has
gathered on the subject,
cerning the distribution
that far-off land. In
trict, for instance, there are territories
as thickly settled as many
States, relatively small areas possessing
mililons ol peop.e,
and
losiand and Novaya
Zomvyla)
Asin
4.749.263
17,200,808
Alrioa .11,548.3565
Amerioa 14,823 471
Australia sud Polynesia 8 457,190
Polar reglons «+ 1,748,878
816,920,000
Ki4,707 000
204,679,000
05 494,500
4,631,000
#2,000
Total 62,682,394 1,456,923,500
ff these figures are correct, the ocean
covers 144,504 860 squere miles, or 73 31
per cent of the earth's surface, The
most popul lous towns in the world are
London (3.630,000,) Paris (1,588 806),
Vienna (rk (with suburbs, 1 800000)
New Yol 5600000), Berlin (1,062 008),
Canto (1.020,770.)
{Daily Uhioago Times, }
Mr. George Barnes, of Bagnal &
Barnes, South Water street, said tha
iis wife had been u severe sufferer with
neuralgia for years and has tried many
remedies in vain, Bt Jacobs Oil is the
only thing that brought her relief,
i —— NO S27
You ean tell when a reporter is going
Proayune,
(Kalamagoo (Mich. ) Daily Gegette. }
It is an unprecedented success said
Mr. Chas. D’Arcambal, the wel!
known Burdick House druggist, when
asked for hus views in regard to the Si
giving ge neral satisfaction.
rn A555 535305555
Several jearne d professors at the Kasan
inte Shakespeare into the Tartar lan.
gunge,
—— ee
Hum bugged A
ih sad about Wh pip AY & ol Hop
who was always doetor.
ing and never well, teased me so wgently to
get her some, | concluded to be huwbuagged
peaing and 1 am lad 1 did, for in less than
two months’ use of the hitters my wile Was
eared and she has remained so for eighteen
wonths since. 1 Like such humbugging.—H.
w Pion ter Pres.
i Sw som
Louis, which is now the leading
Tos cotton town of the United
States, values its cotlon
A Werld of Good.
One of the most popular medicines now be.
fore the American public is Hop Bitters. You
soe it everywhere. People take it with good
effect. It builds them up. It is not as pleasant
to the taste as some other bitters as it isnot a
whisky drink. It #& more like the old-lash.
ioned boneset tes that has done a world of
good,
Hitters, — Neunda News.
———————————
The gases and vapors of manufactur.
ng owns,
works abound,
the color of moths,
grown in
The remedy that will cure the many dis-
eases peouliar 10 women, is Warners Sale
Kidoey and Liver Cure. = Mothers’ re’ Magasiae.
produce variations
even in the full
RECUS,
{ ee
: you'd 11
hee imrrove
your finger in
Corder,
to know how the busy
ieisure time, just stick
the hive — Meriden Be
& his
GREAT HORSE MEDICINE
HORSE LININENT In
years established isthe
id Sores. Sprains,
CUA DITION
mm
th #68 renning horses
@n ite. Bodd by rug
y Breet, New York.
of » f
and §.Gw oles
wot--4% Mu
B. W.PAYNE & SONS, CORNING, N Y.
HBT ABLE SD AAO,
Patent Spark-Acresting En.
ines, mounted and on skids,
Qe tical ¥ ngines with wro't
boilers. Eureka Safety pow.
ers with Sectional bollers—
can’t be ex All
{ with Automatic Cut-Off,
a) From $150 10 $2,000.
Send for Circular, 8
where you saw us,
THE ORIGINAL
tions are the reverse,
society gives the estimated
ous subdivisions of that
continent as follows: In the Soudan
the population is 50 000,000,
fifty-three persons to the square mile.
desert por
graphical
figures of «
2e0
ample, contains fully 90,000 inhanitants.
East Africa I+ rated at 30,000,000,
equatorial Africa at some
souls. A late
Betyg
000: the Hamites, 30.000 000; Ban.
tas, 13,000 000; the Fooial.,
the Nubians, 1.500 000: the Hottentots,
50000, making a tolal of 172 550 000,
These figures—only approximate, of
course—are considered too low by both
German and British geographers the |
former estimating the population ss |
high as 200 000 070
the
Hot lee.
A correspondent of Neofure, after nam-
erous experiments on the boiling points |
of substances under low pressures,
|
ble to have solid ice at temperatures far
above the ordinary melting point.
says: After several unsuccessful
temperatures so high
that it was impossible to touch it with-
out burning one's self. This result has
been obtained many times and with the
greatest ous; and not only so, but on
one occasion a small quantity of water
was frozen hy n glass véssel which was
so hot that it could not be toucled by
the hand without burning it. 1 ha e
had ice a considerable length of time at
fn te perature far above ordinary boils
ing point, and’ even then it only
sablisied away without any
meeting, These results were obtained
by maintaining the superincumbent
pressure below forty-six mm. of mer-
cury—that is, the tension of aqueous
VAPO!
Other substances also exhibit these
tained solid ice at
18 mercurial chloride, for
the pressure need be reduced
420mm.
substance at once ligquifits
3 5
10
hy taking the pillows
a smail
and a little soap dissolved in it.
them well on both sides, and
{on the warm water and rinse
thoroughly. Lay them outon the grass
{ to dry, turning them frequently; at the
days, and when quite dry beat them
with arod. This is to disentangle and
separate the the feathers.
ESTABLISHED IN 1865,
Great Blood Purifier.
packages make two guarts, with directions si
age free Liberal discougt to The
Chemist
teconsin
ML 3 Ww TLLIAMS Pie el
osh
PBANIEL F. BEATTY'S
ORGANS!
4 STOPS, SUR BASS & 007. COUPLER
fasas ONLY $65,
tee oP
1
SANS
Sent on Trial Warranted. Oatslogue Frese,
Address DANIEL ¥, BEATTY, Washington, N. J,
$5.00 Per Day Made Selling Our New
PLATFORM FAMILY SCALE
wer Family Sosies
rt A Hegulng
"BOOM oo AGENTS.
oil 84
iH
ony rRy e6 surprise old
DOM | ATIC ha SAL E Co,
No. INT WW. Fils , Ulnoinnati, ©
ENTS Make ich sales and the best
ur Ne
profits on our w Book,
Golden Thoughts on Mother,
Nome, and Heaven, in
wd Eo try, by a ot
»e A
Bann wr ho- tien of the Biber $1.75. * Masied
ee {1
TH ¥ AT, ishier, TOT Broadway, N. Y.
Eh Put
thee Mann nid whe uader i. Best BF. AM
fron. Grout rem
and Ki a,
Witte seit ated eaintogus
New York, Powars Patios works
MUSTACHE & W
PEAND RITE, Tee
mp - a
Eh? mre oro
nis Wanted for the somest and
CHEAPEST BIBLES Rver furnished Agents
Extra Terms and ang:
FORSIES & M¢ MAKIN,
A01 CASH PREMIUM
R'
i » OX Skunk, Raccoon Mme My bought I
Ht ghest P for O | par
777 8
Pn 0. Vil KERY, Augus tas, Maine,
BOUGHTON > Howard st. New York
A. MONTH !
Hest Selling Articies in the world, a
a free. Jax Br Detroit, M
LLE LLEN'S Bra ~ Brain i ood
& Weakness nea Organs, 81a
Cirl's to Allen's Plarsnacy, 818 ¥ir
A Musical J Adds PF
AYE AR and Sipe to agents
imggists
sLAVA N.Y
trelhim, Erie, Pa.
PISO’ Ss CURE! be Sent cough medicie,
872 A WEEK. $122 day at home easily made, Oostly
v Outfit free. Address Tavs & Oo. Augusta, Maine:
[VIENNA
\ i873
fou UNRIVALED” FRANZ LST
The human voice in He sweetness and
purity is deliciously musionl; throst
affection and i it aes ull alterations.
Dr. Bull's Cough Syrup restores it when fail.
ing thronghoo gh. Golde, aio,
It is said that 79.540,(00 packets, or
18,740 800,000 single pins. are manufac
tured yearly in the United States, being
at the rate of 408 pins for every person
of the population. Fifty years ago it
took one man a minute to make fourteen
pins: now a single workman can wake
14,000 in the same time.
Trast Those Whe Have Tried
W. L. Hawkins, dr Frinoeton, N. Ja
The past year is the first of wany that I have
been res from Catarrh, which 1 sttribute
to the use ol Kiy's Cream Balm. 1 have
recommended it to many friends, and in
every case it has worked like a charm, Jared
1. Walle, irsurance agent. October 22, 1880,
Messrs. Ely Bros., draggista, (Owego, N. Y.1
{have had Ostarrh for a number of years in
its worst form, Helore I bad used one bottle
of your Cream Balm droppiege into my throat
had entirely consed, pain and soreness in wo
head was removed, ss well as deainess,
have used w great many remedios, but nothing
that equals yours. I. also gives immediate
relief tor cold in the head, Mrs. J. DD. Haga.
dorn, Union, N. Y., December 7, 1578.
Price, 80 cents, Kiy's Cream Balm Jo.,
Owego, N. ¥. Will mail it for 80 cents.
Malaria] fevers can be prevented, also other
nisematic diseases, by oceasionslly using
Dr. Banford's Liver lovigorator, the oldest
genersl Family Medicine, which is recom.
mended a8 & cure for all diseases eaused by a
lisordared liver. Eightv.page book sent fres.
Address Dr. Sastoud 162 Broadway, N. T.
a
Vecerixe is noyrishing and strengthening;
purifies the blood; regulates the on,
quiets the nervous »ysiom; acts .
on the secretions, and srouses the Sseniy ure
yale 10 action,
The Voltale Beit Co. we
Wili send their Klseiro.Voltae Ti a
sfifioted upon 30 days’ trial. Bee their adver.
ison ent in this paper headed, * On 50 Days’
frial.’
Get Lyou's Pat Patent Hoel Btiffeners applied
10 those new boots bolore you run them over.
Vegetine.
Kidney Complaints.
DISEASE OF THE KIDNEYS.
The symptoms of ae acute attack of inflasnmation
of the Kidneys are ns follows: Pever, % iu the
Hin the back, and thence shooting ward ;
pale and
and some degree of collie, Is ob of
at night), peners! dropsy, headache, diss.
sight, indigestion, and paipitation of the
ual oss of strength, paioness and pus.
ad ectally
In diseases of the Kidneys the Veowrins fives
1t tas never failed 0 cure when
foliowed, In
many oases 3 may take several bottles, os pecially
cases of Jong standing, It note Sirontly & upon the
testify to cases of lo
fectiy cured by the
standing baviog been per.
EOETINE, even after trying
expressly for this disease,
Kidney Complaints.
Ompornxary, O,, March 19, 1877,
H. RK. Srevess,
Deosr Bir—1 have nied your Veaerisy for some
truthfully easy it has been & great
und to those suffering Som divesse
i Feonm
0. 8, SMITH.
“Astisield, ht corner
ow
196
Attested to by K i,
Civorxsary, 0, April 19, 1877,
Ma H R Srevess:
I bave suffered several years with the ¥i
duced to try Vesting,
sve taken several bottles of your preparstion, sed |
It bas done
other medisine, 1 oan
A it toall suffering from kidney
Yours respectfully,
4, 8 MeMILLEN,
Flour
Merchants, No, 88 West Front st, Cincinnati, 0,
Wearing has restored thousands 10 health who
had beep jong and palatal sufferers, i
Vegetine is So'd by all Draggists.
| Ad 4 RD'S .
FTE
Pointed
i P &é RTS
REA)
ETB =) Lo Ss iT RE
¥ NEW YORK.
GENTS WANTED
Best and Fastest Selling
PICTORIAL I BOOKS and BIBLES.
{Ep a
rent, Address NATIONAL
PUBLISHING « OMFANY, Philadelphia, Pag
NATRONA
fs the best in the World. Tile sheolutely
best for Medicine! Purposes. it is the bes!
all Family Uses. Sold by al! Druggists and
PENNA SALT MANUFACTURING CO., Phila.
os wad
JELLY
Sliver Medal
at Paris
Exposition.
PETROLEUM
Grand Medal
La ladelphis
Kxpost tion
This wonderful sphstance Is ackpowiedped by phe
s throughout the wor'd to be the best remedy dis
i for the cure of Wounds Burns, Rheumatim,
5 Diseases, Piles Catarth Ohihialng dc 18 onder
d nse. Obiain
botties for bouseho it from your dragiist,
Tinir isthe SAFEST
apd BEST; # acts Instanta
ne ¥ produ ing the net
patursl shades of Jack or
i ws 3% dors NuT STAIN
> ry iB easily
$8 & stamsdand
prensa ation Rand a favorite
on Every we appointed tole
vi for Lady or Gentietsan.
® 1 by Dru gts and ap
vied on Ro Mr
beget 88 St.N 'Y.
N, C SRITTENTON, Ak
ON 30 DAYS TRIAL.
We will sen’ our Kieotr yoink Beits and
} days to those nd
nal vioture,
ow —
RISTADORO'S ;
nd dscares of a pers
Address Veitale Belt Co, Marshall, Mich.
ASTROLOGY: ST
a Br
STHMA -
3 giv
Farnham's
fn tant
lo any ad {ress Oh 7 ¥ of One Do iar por So
Narshine Habit Cured nto 10
0 26 days. No pay till Cured,
Di J. 87 Pant Lebanon Ohio.
A WEEK fn your own town. Terms and $5 Outfit
free. Address H Hauer & Co. '0., Portland, Maine.
£5 to $20 Samples worth $5 Hee
Portand, Me.
per day at home,
Address Srinsox & Co..
Baltimore, Md., U,
NYXNU—a8
FRAZER AXLE GREASE.
ls
ALL D oe
mY AL OR DEALERS.
EEE
Deafness, Ear Diseases, Catarrh, Catarrh.
Br CESfHoEMARKER
fenced Aural Bor oan, Aut Author, ahd ie aa, 8 the inne
Discows, may be consulted In being ot he
aifice. Neo. 815 Walnm tL - ng a
evmgeste work
gs] book sed Tree. b in od and
a os op Deafness Divas oe 0 ot Toma
ant Catarh, sand Shelf’ proper “Heston; price 3 bY
maa
bor FE Xe abe Wil quetion 1c. Shcemikeite fag:
Es
JOSIAH ALLEN’S WIFE
"irs NEW BOOK,
Tm E BEST AND
FUNNIEST OF ALL
ae "
My Wayward Pardner.
AGE Ns WANTED in every Town Dw’ 1 mies 3, bet
a Ciregiar ai onoe, aid Bocas pry. Address
AMY iC AN PU BLISHING 3
CELLULOID
EYE-CLASSES.
Representing the choicest selected Tortoise
Snell and Amber. The lightest, Indus
and strongest known. Sod by Opticians
jewelers. Made by SPENCER OPTICAL
MFG. CO. 18 Maiden Lane, New York.
w SAPONIFIER
Is the = Original * Concentrated Lye and Relisdle Pemtly
Sosp Maker. Directions scoompany each Can for
Hara, Soft and Toliet sonp Pe ool
weigh strength. Asi your groves for ie
FIER, and take 50 others
PENN'A SALT MANUFACTURING CO. Phila.
This Ciaim-House Established 1865,
PENSIONS.
a ade ot Sars aa
: ea Time kosfind.
Address, with stamp, ge
GLrOoRG FHON,
P.O. Drawe: 335, =A
BOOK AGENTS
SUNLIGHT ano ) SHADOW
Book ever wwod. Aw entirely Now Work o§
Joln_ B. Gough.
br mal or
Hangs
ihe
This grant wow
Sowing with tender pth
iw on maths a
Geel #0 Tho
{er 0) re ™ 3 .
= wd (ings for ati
hg say “Gos
ports fron
and
day
A ®. we OKT HING TOS
Literary “Revolution.
merly 3 0 to $1.95 each,
Life of Frederic
{ £ I
i ir SL
rach: 1 Arpo. 1s Light
of Wakelteld, IL Baron
s i grief Adventures pot
IX UES rn 1 ny. a crim’s {lustrated
Sitalofue sent Ir MCAN ROOK. Fxeu 4208
- Alden, Manse: rie une Bul! ding. N
FEMALES: TH
will positively cure Female ¥ noes such as Fall
ing of the Womb, Whites, (hronto Jon or
Ulceration of the Womb, Ine oa Ih lemorrhate on
Folding. Bb Painful, iy Sunpresscd and A ens
traat a and reitable remedy. Sead pos
ale ard | or aban 4, With treatinent, cures ang
ina and San «ig hd to How.
an ail Bear, v NY. Sold
o
Munchsusen's Tr
ARviiis Walled eve
tose. to fam
Le
s:0ck in the count ¥; qual br terms the best. Quis
pi storek-epeis shou a write THE WELLS TEA
COMPANY, 201 Fu re Yi . F. «9 Dox 1560.
YO U N G MEN | a T3100 a a
sTaduate AEENTINE Address
us LENTINE "BROS. Janesvill o, Wis.
wane THE PRICES ARE NOT
UMENTS.