Iltridfora Nqiotttt - ammo% • 0. GOODRICH. s. W. ALVORD. . . Towanda, Pa.,)Thanday, August 1, 1878. REPUBLICAN STATE TICKET. GOVERNOR: GENERAL HENRY M. HOYT, Of Luzerne. - LIEV ; TENANT-00YERNOR : - HON ; CHARtES. W. STONE, Of Wdrren. sECRETARY OF INTER (AT. AFFAIRS ZION.. AARON EU DUNKEL, Or Philadelphia. .TU,DOR OP SUPREME COURT : JUDGE JAMES P. STERRETT, Of Allegheny. REJMBILICAN COIMTIrCOINVEATION _ Pumnant to a resolution passed by the Repobll can County Convention, in sessioti May 9, 1878, and concnred in by theltepubilean County Committee, tbeircitivention of the Republican Party for 1878 will convene et the Court House, in Towanda oulh, on TUESDAY, AUGUST, 27, 1878, at 1 o'clock r. rt., to mate the following uominatietlN to-wlt - • • • ifue'person for Member of Congreis' or Ole Unit ed states, ter the 'Fifteenth District, (subject to the approval of the Conference). -.Throe persons for Meinhers riftbe;llouso of Rep istmintatives;of the State Legislature., One person for Sheriff. ' One person for Prothonotary. One person for Register and itecotdcr. Two persons for County Commissioners. One person'for County Treasurer.; Two persona for County -Audltoril One person for County Coroner. _ Appointing Congressional Conferees, and for the 'transaction of any other buslness that may come Ihtfore the Convention. • The Committees of Vigilance of the several elms ; . Don MAD:lets. will 'call a primary or delegate elec tin for their respective ikistrists for SATURDAY, ASL't:CST 24, 1 5713, to elect bytiallot tat) delegates to represent each district #ln iald County Conven tion. The delegate elections Ln 'the townships will be mganlzeil at 3 o'clock C. at., and kept open rontin -11.,1i.,1y t., the close at 5 o'clock r. J. In the bor. ough4 the delegate elections will be organised at $ gerlock r. at.. and kept open continuously until the clone. at 8 o'clock r. at. The rotes shall then be counted, and the ii suit certified by the officers to 'the Chairman of the said Convention, and a copy delivered at mien to tho Delegates elect. . Tin Committees of Tiglianee areparticularly ro -1 Miest 1 to ohierve the aboVe suggestions. carefully p i Co plucting. the primary sneetings, so that no jut cause ut complaint can arise. lf. STREETER; Chairman. JOSEVII M. ETA - , Secretary. • CIMIIIIITTLES OF VIGILANCE. Armenia—Dante] Webb, Sheep Sherman, An.' drew Seward. Atha—Geo It Webb, G W Carman, Jeff Long twail.. - Athens Ile'—ll IV 'Tripp. C Hayes, F V Athens twp—F E Weiler, Samuel Ovenshlre, B. Frank Broivn. ' • • Asylnin—Jeseph - A C Minos, R Herrick. Altriny—Levi Stevens, S S Watson, George Waltman., , Itarelay—C P Moore. C W Tldd, E.l Eldred. iturlington-Ilorti—J V Rice, r .A Evans, John RII rt.y. „ • Itialhigton West—J B McKean, S Ballard, Thos Blackwell. • Burlington Twp—A J Blakesley, G S Travis, An drew Melvllle. Canton Iloro•—F A Owen, S Mix, _Theodore 'Pierce. can ton'Ta p—Watson Froema i n, Henry•Mattlson, Weattierliv. commlila—J it Wolf. it It Fe.rgntion, 3 Wat kins. Frarikiln—Janics C Ridgeway, - Stearn McKee, •3anies 0 Mason. itranytile—Adam Dds, J I. Ferguson, John Vriunan, 2d. Herr Ick—C L Stuart., James H MOW, E Feuer. lielloy—lt It Palmer,' H M Holcontb, Weffley Stone. I.ltehfleld--John Ii Meßlnney, T Brink, AI) .• Chandler.. • t.eltaysrille—M It Codling, J P Carle, S R John son. Mourne Boro•--A Lloyd Itnekwell, M W Boss, John Dtanfee: f Monroe Top—Dwight Dodq, N Northrop, Jr, G I. hull. t 4, . r)rcut reek—F W Keyes, David, Gardner, Al iatt..3trl gi ylk.. orrrell÷ll I. Case, Thomas B Smith, Frank Johnson. I . -.Overton—James Molyneanx, Fred Beverly, Al fred Streerey. I - Pite—t, A Bosworth, S II Canfield, dm Grant, Bidgehttry—ltlley Mead, E A Cooper, Alex SUIT ton. - . Rome ltortf--Corydon Barnet, M 11 Towner, G Rinney. Rome Twp—Joslah Borten, J E Gillett, S N ' Barpes. sayre—E E Roblitson, John A Perkins, Hawley 'Tozer. South SVarerly—D L F Clark, John D Falkner, John Post. - sinithfleld—N W Waldron, Waiter Phillips, lr -Manley. Springfield—Theodore Wilder, Edson Harkness,. 'Frank Rlpine. south Creek—D F lilitireth, S L Thompson. Geo Berry. Sylvania—Finley Furman, Geo Monroe; I.eander (; regm v. sbcsliconin—Wm Snyder, G L Horton,' *hale I. Young. Stand Ing.Stone—Wra Bostwick, ir, Ste se nv, Goy l:mwn, Terry—,ronathan Teriy..TC Dyer, S Bowman. Towanda Twp—JamesT Hale, Leroy Bowman, V. Dairblcou. Towanda Iloro•—First Ward-411-1k Passage, Jas Bryant, 11 T Stevens. Towanda Bortr—Second Ward—W Keyser, Mar -1:11. Gray. 0 D Lyon. Towanda pony—Third Ward—J H Orcntt, W Alger. W S Vincent. ' Towanda North—lteuben DeLong, Wm 'Smith, inner Newell, - Croy Boro•—H M-Spatling, D C Lampman, Wm -Morgan. • ,Troy Twp—,John Hunt, Milton Pierce, M O ntls: • Titsrarera—Wm - ShurnWay,Gny Lamoreaux, Bal- Ulster—Refry . ..Mingo, George Morley, Andrew Morrisina. '. • Warren—Mlles Pt - Weal, Rowell Gowen, J 13 Kin ,ney. I 1 , Windhatn--ficcWll6aron, Eben White, Geo L Lawrence. M Ctark, Daniel Ely, E Meeks, Jr. '‘';'Welts—Nlorris Sheppard, Wm ltelyea, Win John 7 Wytiluslng—W K Segrwrea, Geo S lloinet,'A Cul- .Wysek,—.l It Hinds, L T Lent, W L Shores. .141ru11rAcAs . Docrum. Sound money, good wages fora day's work, . the proseeutiOn,, of public improve ments wherever needed, keeping faith ---w th:the nation's eredi tors,'equal j us- Lice to all, high and low, rich, and poor, .white and black; literal pen **dons and bounties to the Soldiers of the late, war, anti to . their Widows and orphans; protection to American citizens every inhere, free education toilielmasses, an army large enough to-prltect the frontier 'and preserve the peace, the unity of States, and the adminiStration of the Government try lionest,'capable, and loyal officers. If this platforin is not sound enough for the.average citizen to stand up on, she had better look kir some lone rock sel iti.the3. • and bid adieu to his native land. • -. , • THE , NeW York. Times - km had a cor respondent traveling over :the Em pire State to discover as. nearly as Strength of the third party in that State. Thisgentleman reportis [that 46 in t i wo or three' of the • counties they may possibly . number a plurality of the votes, but in' Mine jof theni have they anything near a majority, and in none could they. elect a Congressman, or, with half a dozen -exceptions, an 'Assemblyman, - tinaidett . by votes from one or - the other' of the old partis t ."' We believe • this is the condition of the party • • everywhere, notwithstanding the . boasting and loud promises so freely indulged in by its leaders. Tus new Fee .bill introduced in the Senate last winter by Senator DAvq.s; and Which has become a law, . reduces the charges of the Sheriff quite one-half. We refer to this fact for - the benefit- Of the several aspir. ants for die office. • ,Unfortunate debtors will remember Senator D. ": with gratitude when the reduced bill of costs is presented. .• . - - 112. ;i!I In another ecilumn we copy from the New-York Tribtine an elaborate article under the above heading, to which we invite especial attention'. The article is not simple theory, but contains facts and figures from' au- . thenti and.official sources. It proves toitclasively that the volume of cur rency has had nothing 'to do with the great depression in business for the past five years. The'cause of all our trouble is clearly traceable to the fact that we haVe been over-produc ing. , The inevitable law of supply and dema, nd r has as arbitrarily controlled, pribes * as the sunshine and warmth Of summer has the growth of vegeta tion from the beginning of time. Jacon and - his tieseendants keenly felt this law when Jossm's brethren were sent into Ey pt for corn; and it appears to bee of the laws inter woven with the creation of the world, Which no condition or circumstances can change. As shown by the table of , figures in the Tribune article repre senting the facts for the eighteen years included, it is clearly shown that the: quantity of circulation has no relt4ion to prices. The ,price of steel a4l iron rails is a good, illustra i tion this fact. • Steel rails were I higher in 1863 than at any other pe riod, simply for the want of :ability to umakifactare and supply them. They then rapidly declined in price until 1870, when they as'rapidly ad vanced—as also iron—until 1873, on , account of the great demand caused by the ; excessive railroad building. But the - ability to produce soon be- came - greatr than the deniand, and the price again declined and has con tinned to the present time, the sup- . ply and atiility\to produce being so largely in exce \ ss of the demand. And this is - equa l tree of all manu factured articles', •Inlt the iron and steel interest being s important a branch of indUstry, its \ condition is known to every {one , ami is made more prominent. Theorists are ever on the alert tilimake everything bend and conform to , some hobby, buts, when a man or -a nation coarmes extravagantly a large amour money they must pay the penal such extrartganct, and this acc in. the most conclusive manner for all present difficulties and embarrass-, ments. This nation took from the useful pursuits of life over one million of men and employed theM in de-' stroying property, and at least one half of that number of lives were sac rificed and four thousand millions of dollars was furnished for that purpos. The non-paying" railroads _after the war spent about as much more, cre ating an unnatural demand for All prodnctions and stimulatthg all kinks of manufactures, to an extent that no demand in the ordinary course of things can, possibly consume; conse 'quently we must pay tile penalty, and the Burp:us population - must be restored to the regular pursuits and industries of the country. This fie cotriplished, trade and cOmmerne will again be adjusted by the .inevitable law of supply and demand LABOR AND CAPITAL. Is this country there is no such thing as class or classes, nor can there be. The wages and aila l ry men of yesterday are the employers to day, or as it is commonly expressed, the laborerof yesterday is the capit alist of .to-day. Labor is a commod ity to - sell; capital furnishes the means for its purchase ; but the care fully husbanded proceeds of, vales of of labor soon become capital hnd the seller becomes purchaser; the labor er, in turn becomes the capitalist. The capitalists of to-day who, for fear of loss, will not invest in prop perties and commodities at falling prices, wete laborers -before they were capitalists, and many of the la borers of to-day, many- indeed who are now seeking employment with out finding it, will, in the revival of industiy, soon become capitalists and employers. All antagonism, therfoie between the employed and the employer, between labor and cap ital, is unnatural; all organizations baseiL upon the assumption of the hostility of capital to labor are hurt ful. In ~times of business prosperity, when all the people have remunera tive.occupations and employment, there is general, contentment, and in tithes of business depression and in dustrial paralysis, when wages and salary 'men are with out OmplOyment there is.discontent, and dpmagogues are ever \ready to pohit out the Wrongs of \ the laborer.lpus when Mr. Voottites' attempted' to array labor against capital ,in his 'speech on the silver he .was accused of doing by his Drkoer.stic brother. Senator EATON, be \ only played the role of the.demagogue. - I \ THE publishers of newspaper serer ore from the plea of "-hard times," 'n the payment of their 1411 s, than any other business people. The sums lue am small and these are scattered over a aids expanse of, country; and cannot be \ collected by personal ET plication-4hat is one specially emk ployed for the purpose, as the expense\ in many instances would swallow up the whole amount. This fact should be considered b 3 13s( to news papers getierall3 I induce them - to - remit ti Mons at least once a yeas time. If the sum iswell t i the' ad dress properly mat 3 next to no danger in its 3 fact, we believe that all pubtisherb staid be willing, when the amount is'nclosed and the letter directed in thepres cum of -a postmaster, to assume the risk of its safe earring,e. These pay ments are a matter of some impor tance to publiebers just now. The Potter Coramittee has been in session for severaleeks, and so Air have - discovered n , hang reflecting cot \ upon the Admm• istratt n. One dey last week the following otters were prodeied before the Committee. It they give any comfort to .16 POTTER he is welcome to - them. E•• ry sin cere advocate of honest , el. ions will read- therewith pride. A letter was produced from ~ r. ~, SHERMAN to ttOvCTROT.IIAYES, da • New-Orleans, November 23, 1876, of which the.following is the concluding portion :: • ' ' . • "It seems more illte.the history of hell than of civilized sod Christian eommunities. The mesas adopted *ere almost Incredible, hat were fearfully effective upon an ignorant and superstitious people. That you would. have nweived at a fair election a large majority In Louisiana no honest man can question t that you . did not receive a majority is equally clear ; hut that intimidation of the very klad sod nature pi erided against by the Louisiana law did enter into and control the election In more election polls than would change the malt and give the Republicans the tote. I believe as thinly as teat I write this. The Mincing tie gathering this testimony and putting It In legal form has been verygreat. but I believe it bas been fully met. The whole case rests upon the action of the . Returning Hoard. I have caretully observed them. and have formed a high opinion of Governor Wells and Colonel Anderson. They are-firm. judlettete, and, as far as I can jugde, thoroughly honest and conscientious.. They are personally familiar with the nature and degree of Intimidation In Louisi ana. They can see that the Intimidation: as or. wised, was with a view of throwing out Repebhi. I can parishes rather than endangering Democratic parishes. Our • little party are - nom dividing our the disputed pariobee, with the-view of a careful examination of every paper and-detall. Many are impatient of the delay and some hare gone home. We will probably be able to keep about ten here. We have incurred sense Ilabllltles fOr reporting, printing. etc.. but hope the Republican Rational Committee will matethis good.. If not, We must 'provide for it emigres. We &rein good hope and spirit. not wishing the return In your favor unless it is clear that it ought to be so. and not willing to be cheated out of it or to be bulldozed or 'Mimi dated. The truth Is palpable that you Ought te hare the vote of Louisiana. and we Wive . that you will have it by an honest and fair return according to the,lett .r and spirit of the law of -Louisiana. Very truly yours, • JOHN liffinuaN." To this letter - Governor HAYES re plied as follows: • " COLursauti, Ohio, November 27.187 e. ..1117 BM: 1 am - greatly obliged tor your letter of the =I. You feel, Ise sure. as I do about this whole business. Al f tr election would have given us shout forty el torsi votes at . the South—at least that many—but we are not to allow our friends to defeat one outrage and fraud by an other. There meat be nothing 'crooked on oar part. Let Mr. Tilden have the place by violence, laded dation and fraud rather than undertaketto prevent It by - means that will not beartbe severest sestitlay. I appreciate the Work doing by -the Republicans who have gone, South, and am especially proud of the acknowledged conduct of those from Ohio. The Democratel made a mistake in sending so many ex-Republicans. New converts are ptoveribially hitterand unfair towards those they hate recently left. I trust you will soon reach the end of the . work, and.he able to return in health' and safety. "Sincerely; It. B. Titans. • WHAT BEHOCBACT Awl DONE , rem TIME LABORING MANE First.. Before the rebellion they held 3,000,000 of lalmers in slavery, thus degrading the - whole mass of 'laborers in the Country. Second. They refused to pass the homestead law. Third. They went to war to per )petuate slavery. I \ Fourth. They held that slavery was he normal condition of the la; borer\ Fifth:, They enacted that all dnes to'the Government should be paidTbv coin, that \ Government employes might be paid in a superior curlew. cy, leaving only depticiated State currency for the laborer. Sixth. - They opposed the creation of a Government currency for all the people. - Seventh. Since their accession to power, under the false ilea of econo my, they have - refused \appropria tions of the people's money \ fOr need ed improvements, this dep ressing \ labor in a' time of general distress, while they squandered million! in profitless investigation and payment of rebel claims. • Eighth. They have attempted the reduction of the tariff, that American labor might be i reduced to empett tion. with the half-paid labor of for eign eouniries. Ninth. They have refused encour agement to commerce, through which our slurping:productions might find a profitable foreign market. - Tenth. They have embarrassed and retarded the public 'business by unwise reductions of the clerical force in the Departments. Eleventh. I They have attempted the reduction of the army below the actual necessity of the country for the protection of tbe frontier settle ments, and with the View.of throwing upon an overburdened market an ad ditional supply of unemployed labor. ers. • GEN. GRANT'S Fourth of July speech, delivere d- at an .American . dinner in a country hotel, near llam burg, and repoited by Mr. YOUNG for the Herald, is about as neat as anything the. ex-President has done in the. oral line. It is not - elaborate, but it is meaty, modest, terse and epigramatic. rn fact, we beg to pre sent it to our readers enttre: Mn. CONSUL 'AND FRIENDS lam obliged . to: you for the kind manner in which you drink my health. ..I share with you in all the pleasure and gratitude Which Americans so far from home should feel on this aneiversaty. lint I must die sent from one remark of our Consul, to the effect that - I saved the oeuntty during the recent war., If our country could be saved or ruined by the efforts of any one man, we should net have a _country,. and we should notf g now be celebrating our Fourth of July' s `kahere are many men Who would have done far better than I did under the circumstances in which I found myself during the war. If I had .never held command ; if I had fallen ; if all our generals. had fallim, there were ten thousand behind us who would hale doue, our work just as well, who would have followed the contest to the end and -never surrendered the Union. Therefore it is a mistake and &reflection upon the people to attribute to me, or to any num ber of us who held high commands, the salvation of the Union. We did our work as well as we could, and so dkl hundreds of thousands of others. We deserve no credit fer- it, for we should have been un worthy of our country and of the Ameri can name if we had not made evety sacri fice to save the Union. What saved the Union was the- coming forward of the young men of 'nation. They came from their homed and their fields; as they did in the time of the Revolution, giving everything to the coantry. To their 'de votion we owe the salvation of the Union. 'The humblest soldier who carried a mus ket is entitled to as much credit-for the results of the war as those who were in command. long as our young men are animated by this spirit there will be no fear fa the Union. SENA7G . UINAN and Inner FOYLE l t, are haviti , a little onpleaaantnesa through th columns of the Journal. ''he " Sena .!? more than intimatee that Mr. Fovrs violates the ninth commandment ve?en he says his name was attached , to the dreenback reso lutiont; without any authoray. from -himself. "When Ore, meets (reek t" . GO . LD Closed yesterd yat- WO l. ins saw yam maw ma. It should te rementle. ilea the _ New York State .114ri01 - -Coctir ear= lier in the lea* this rig.:,tain Usu al, lt opens the State Agileigtnr al Society's 'gronnibi, : near Jilmira city, on Tuesday, the 9th of Septem ber, continuing through the' entire 'reek. The books. for receiving en tries are now, opm,. and we ire . in formed that an animal number of applications have already beee:re calved. _ Entries must be made before a . ugust 10th, scion that day theibeeks ' I be closed. ,Great care should be ex , 4sed in stating precisely the pre miu ~ s for which any article is inten; ed to compete, so that the ex hibits • be ini t properly classified in the, cats l ue which the Society al.: \ ways publi es before the opening of the fair. A rson should • have the premium list fore him when mak ing, his entries. f any of our read ers who are intening to become ex hibitors have not,'et received the new list of premiums, they can ob tain it by addressing Secretary T. L. Harbs;n, Albiny, N. Y., or President G. W.)loffman, Elmira. - Practical: &limns should exert themselvea to make the approaching fair as interesting and instructive as possible. - They should not leave the work of making an exhibition entire ly to professional . stock breeders.. manufacturers of machinery, &c. We hope to see a fuller and-better exhibit of 6uvn products than 4as ever yet been made ht a State fat. The suc cessful dairymen of **Others New . York and northern fennsylvania should make a full and fine display of choice butter in firkins4tubs, crocks, rolls and novel packages'. We . under stand that a cool room will be ape chilly provided for storing butter, • The stock department alirays a prominent feature of the New York State fairs. The Society has ilone much to encourage the raising of good stock.. A gold medal is given for the beat herd of Short-horns, Devons, Herefords, Ayribirett, Hol steins, Jerseys and Guernseys. Over eleven hundred dollars In premiums are offered for the thorough-bred cat- Ale of.the different breeds. Thirty 'dollars is the premium for the bekt much cow, and fifteen dollars for the second best. The same preinimns are offered for a fat ox, fat steer, fat cow and. fat heifer. Liberal prerni- ums are announced in the horse de partment, although the State Society spends no part of its - funde for horse racing. The preminins in the sheep department amount to . twelve hun dred dollars, and for swine over sev- en hundred dollars. There are over one hundred premium - offered for poultry of the various breeds. There are fifteen prizes of ten dollars .each for the best barrel of white winter wheat, barley, oats and other graitts. It is not necessary to particularize further concerning the premiums. Every farmer should secure the list and see for himself what the premi ums are with a , view to becoming a competitor. The officers of the Society are ex hibiting great enterprise and zeal in making arrangements for -the ap 'preaching, Mr. The excellent and commodious buildings will be put in Sri e condition. Special terms will be . • made with the vanotui railroads for transportmg exhibits and passengers, and for \ rtmning trains to accommo date the needs of the fair and those who Wishtd2 visit it. Much of the responsibility for the success of the fair must' rest the farmers. If they do well thekr part the exhibition can not fall shorsof l a grand'auccess. VALUE Or KLil2l DOiLABS. WASIIINOVA, July 15.—The fol lowing information is frished by the Director of the Mint, in - conse quence of the number of inquiries re ceived relative to the vale o f the Mexican silver dollar and th terms on which it is received at the mints : Section '• . 3584, revised statutes, United States, declares that u ao for eign gold or silver coins shall be'a legal-tender in the payment of debts:' The Mexican dollar therefore has only a value of bullion, which de pends upon the price of silver. At the present price of silver bullion it is worth about 90.8 cents in gold per piece. Its circulation as money in the United States is optional, and at whatever value may be agreed upon. The United States trade dollar also is not a legal-tender; and therefore has only a bullion value. The stand are silver dollar being a-legal-tender for all debts, public and private, is received at par at all 'government of flees ii ,payment of dues. Mexican dollars, as well as other foreign giver coins', and United States trade dollars, are purchased at the Mint at Philadelphia and the Assay Office at New York at the equivalent of the London rate for silver bullion on the day of purchase, less one-half cent per ounce of fine silver contained. A Tribune correspondent, writing from the " Lake of a Thousand Isl ands," says there are really about two thousand Wands in the, fifty miles extending from Kingston to Ogdensburg. The water is so deep that the largest steamers can land their passengers without any wharf. It is- a broad, deep current of pure, cold water. It haa come to be under stood that the very northern limits of the United States must be a place of great resort in the heat of sum mer, especially as it is not a desert, nor even an ordinarily uninteresting country, but the most picturefique combination of land'and water on - the hemisphere. The air is cool and bracing all summer, the waters abound in' fish, the multiplicity , of the islands affords abundant anchor age and harbor accommodations, and indeed: they _semi providentially adapted to meet the demands of the people. Tug Republicans of Mains met . in State Convention on- Tnesday . CONN= waLAnanimotisly nominated MSS 1301118=11M 1101813 E. 'Under. Its` present Managementthe Trcasa rryy Repartment 'halt prepar, more f*prOmpt anddetailed 'state.: meets of Its'Operations than were ever elven toihe public atany prevl. l ons iime. !Therein: Seefttal Stier ; man haaVeriddred "Tainy pnbl Seiri=l us, but another, of no small imiinr‘ ince, he hats performed by. the vetY timely publication of .a detailed se count - of- the currency , outstanding each year since 1859.. In this state inenti all Government notes circula ted as currency are included. and the notes of- State" banks. Moreover, the - actualpurchasing. power in gold, of paper currency outstanding each year,, has been caelulated, and it is safe to say that the results will-be most surprising to the advocates of inflation. For it is plainly demon strated that the progress toward re sumption has been one, not of con traction, but of actual' expansion in the purebasing power of the currency outstanding.. A moderate decrease in the.nominal amount of notes Circu lated has resulted 'in so large au ap preciation that there, bas been an se-- teal increase in the' gold value and purchasing, power of , the entire paper circulation. The smaller amount has been rendered more efficient than the larger amoinnt was_two years ago. ' The scope of this statement is such that it omits, • verY properly, a most important item. Fradtional currency is included, as part ot the'paper out standing, but the reduction frail $45,- 881,295.67 in 1874 to "only $16,547,- , 768.77 in 1878, though it appears properly as a reduction of over.s29,- 000,000 in paper. currency, has been more than balanced by the introduc tion of small silver. "In like manner, the larger, paper currency has been reinforced by the circulation of trade dollars in large amthint, and standard silver dollars and Mexican trade.dol lars in smaller quantities. Moreover, an exact, statement of all the curren cy in u3i3 would take into - considera- Von the increased availability and use of gold as reserve in bank'vaults and elsewhere, and its Incas currency on the Pacific Coast. Butlhe object of the Treasury statement was to show the variation in nominal amount and in actual value of the paper cur rency only, and in that 'regard it, is complete„ In the following, • the Treasury statement 'is abbreviated ;- the amount of bank notes, State and National, is shown foir each year, the entire amount prior to 1864, and a very large amount prior to 1866 be ing the circulation of State banks; the amount of legal tender notes out standing each year on the 30th of June is shown; and the third column gives the amount of paper currency of all kinds, including beside bank notes and legal-tender notes, the one and ;two-year notes of 1863, the com pound interest notes 'of 1863 and 1864, the old demand notes and the fractional currency. The col ; nmn shows the actual value in gold of the entire paper currency out standing, at the price of gold July' 1 each year: Rank• Legal I Total Notes. Tender. i Paper 267,102,4771 202.006,2671 182,71/2,0791 . 96.620 . .(001 238,837,218 297,767,114 110,292,087 421478,671! 260,067,498 422,687.969 J 01,478,0711 400,619,206 BOX 799,4911 271.782.697 202,1124628; aaa,ooo.coo 302:488,498 26 6 , 00 0. 000 201,969,777 asa,oocknoie ral,2V, ^ J.r9 866,000,000! 1t28j65,110 267,600,000 241,561,621 asa,ooo,ocio m5t,990,033; 34900,009 . 555,t94.862i 275.771.550 f 332;657,2741369.772.2942 217,616.483.358,764,232; '224,940,788' 8U4481,016 I This statement corresponds exact ly With the official record, excepting that notes of. State and National banks are added together for "bank notes," the minor forms of currency as above mentioned, are included "total paper," and the formal state ment of the quoted value Of a paper dollar in gold on' the first of July each year is omitted. The compari son places in strong light several in teresting facts. - . 1. The bank carrency, alone is more ample with respect to population than it was before the war. The gold and silver coin does not appear, but forms nearly as large a part of the currency and bank reserves now as it did,in 1866. 2. The reduction in legal-tenders since 1868-1873, when the country enjoyed extraordinary apparent pros perity, has been leas by $10,006,600 than the increase in bank circulation since 1868. - 3. The nominal amount of the cur rency, all notes included;though less now than it was after the e Panic, is actually greater now,- when the addi tion of silver is ansidered, than it was in the prosperous years 1868- 1811, inclusive. 4. The real .value, or purchasing \power of the currency, is now great er than it has been in any year hith eitu- except . 1865, if paper alone is' considered, and greater than it has been\in any year if the addition of subsidary silVer in place' of fraction al notes is taken into account.--.N. Y. Tribune.' A LEETTRER 9 B SUICIDE ON VIE STAGE.—A dramatic suicide occurred at Capron, on Tuesday the 23d init. Early in \)llay last, GEo. W. Buniziou, who , was an old resident of Ohio, went to Chicago, ostensibly to start a barber-shop. DISR4 - 111 had a fine ethication, and was versa tile in- conversation, Last Sunday he published a card, infOrming the citizens that, in order to gratify an often-expressed curiosity on the part of .his townsmen to witness 'some such tragedy as the hanging of SIIEIr BY and CONNELLY in Chicago, would, on the evening of the 23d, inst., deliver a lecture , in- Thornton Hall, and at its conclusion gratify his hearers by shooting himself tier& the forehead. The price of admission would be $l, and the amount realized should be used, in his funeral expen, sea, and the remainder be invested in the works of HUXLEY, TYNDALL and DARWIN for the, town library. His idea in ending his life was to-se cure eternal peace by annihilation. At the appointed time the - hail was crowded, and, after the delivery of an infidel lecture 6f wonderful power3 l in a manner and tone which marked him as an adept, be suddenly drew a Derringer, placed it to his forehead, and, despite attempts to prevent the rash deed, fired, and fell into the arms of two friends who 'were on the wings of the stage:for the purpose of hindering the execution of the design. The large-sixed linnet literally tare his brain to pieces. Ile left a request that his body be forwarded to Cin cinnatifriends. WUT Otni 0011011011=1 Wl= 'l:4 ,- .'T_iiizniii THE itsitii: - !--- ~-,,i• - *mei Oliebboasinespenot en _ Itaxsait Clxx, July Si, IsTa. . litario or jwie . Itmeotirmi,:—l my last letter I Wrote that we ware resting , a few data_ !a ; Kansas our t Mb. ' We- are still hare, l t and shall. -probably 'remain. some time. It is' - certainly a lively, - thrifty, business place ; it numbers 'over forty , thomnind . inhabitants, of which six thefts and atc . negmes, who are largely employ edln hotels" and private - families—white help is very scarce. There are Many - elegant residences hem ; the building material used. is prin cipally brick, for, which article there is at present 'a great '.demand. . :'Thenty-five brick yards running day and night, aver aging from one and one-half to two mil lion bricks per week, aro , unable to sup ply the demand. ' • There are two ininiense 'packing houses here. During the year 18'17 ' there were 1130,357 bogs packed, and 27,863 cattle. 1 One of these houses kiU lire thousand hogs, and one thousand head'of cattle , per day. • The receipts oT grain at this' point are very large—aline of barges has recently been established on the .Missouri river be tween this place and. St. - Lids for the transportation of grai. • ' There are several large wholesale houses here' embracing all the different branches of trade ; there are two extensive retail dry-goods stores here that remind one of, Stewart's Iu New-York, or Wanamaker's in Philadelphia. Buiiiness seems every where brisk ; " hard times" are unknown. It is impossible to find a house to rent, and almost as hard to find board. The Pikes of merchandise and provision rate at about the same as in the east. - •• Kansas City is the groat railroad cen tre of the West—there being about four teen differeut lines diverging , from this place ; one of the most importantof these is the Kansas Pacific, winch own large portions d valvablo laud, which they.of fer to settlers upon liberal terms. Per sons desiring to purchase western land would be wise to examine this territory before looking elsewhere. conclude by saying that Kansas City bids fair to compete with aliy eastern city in less than ten years. It is i impossi- He to realize that it is 1,300 miles from .Towanda. Ity next "occasional'? will be dated from a point farther west. E. B. M. Tanga. prisoners recently escaped from Sing Sing. . . , Tim coin balcnce in the Treasury is steadily increasing.- HARUS trotted the three fastest heats on record at Cleveland 'Saturday. A. shark eight feet long, was caught at Ocean Beach, N. J., on Friday; - Tins year's harvest in Nebraska will be the largest ever gathered in that State.. Fouir per cents to the ,amount of $ll3,- 000,000 have been sold within five months. - ' NEW TOE K city last week: had 732 deaths, 520 births, and 111 marriages. ItErouTs of the Kansas crops show that increaseq,acreage will give an immense grain yield. ' A 'Massachusetts girl has taken a con tract to kill potato bugs' at 2 cents a thous and. kt:30,001?,000 of • 6 per cents have been re called by the government to be invested in. 4 per - cents. Loup DuFFEntn, Canada's Governor General, leaves for England, September 2Sth. • THE President has signed the cammis sion of Gen. Badger, as postmaster at New Orleans. . SE'VEWAL foreign gm-el-Tents have auth orized their, Anibassadors to ratify . ,the Treaty of Berlin. ' 1r is stated that Newgate prisbn is to be shortly demolished, and the' ground let for a building site. THE marine authorities at Trie4e offi cially announce that the port of Kick has been closed by torpedoes. Onld. V'alne 207.,102.177. 20z005.7871 &13.132,079 j 619.897,283 , 833.716,084 931,319„686 891.904,686 720,41;603 693416,037 700,373,999 717,873,751 733,670,004 750,062,369 .791,490,916 773,616.729 738 , 376 ,3 36 691 1 .191470 693,297,7.73 ,_207.102.477 1 . 202,003,767 . .388,789,534Y 497 798,3.19' 3=:5 1 49,247 893.7.52.815 588,657,093 892.990.783 1505,069,:35 810,00,332 *599,521,770 838,909,418 649.240.3411 648,053.887 7i1,1311,734 t 474.819,947 860.817,090 861,1159.974 4.44.40 c 32 Cosolcusssrm: Sicinrnatt's has been re nominated by the democracy of the gec ondiArkanSas district. A clondzburst in Dakota' last ...Monday submerged a WO section of the country and drowned seven persons. 311NNESOTA'S Wheat drop is reported to be much larger thaa - of lastyear, notwith standing the recent storm. 1r is said morg miles of railroad will be eoustritetedin'Colorado this year than iu . any uther State in the Union. Tun Army Commission is still in session at the White Salpher Springs, but has re fused to tell what they are doing. - - THE Massachnsetts Republicans hold ther convention to nominate State officers at Worcester September ltith. TuN Nevada Bank has stiblieribed for 1,250,000 of the new four per cents, pay. able in standard silver dollars. Tint encampment of the Grand Army of the Republic, at Gettysburg, Pa., was formally .broken up Saturday morning. .1 M} GORDON 13r.:51.:Frr Esq., Proprie .tor of the Iferalti has, returned from Ed rope after au absence of over a year. Jottli B. GOLTGR'S friend gave him a reception in the Collegc • Gardens at Weittnister, on his arrival in RF.v.`At.nEur I3a iNEs' memory is to be perpetuated by a stained glass window in the Walnut-street Presbyterian Church. '. IT is said Peter. Coopeisthinks that next after himself Ben Butler would be Use fittest candidate for the Presidency. EX-SECICETARY BEISTOIT is to 'visit Newport, R. 1., next month, and . there will be au informal Meeting there of s li me of his political friends. , WALTER H. SHUPE; the - NOW lora Greenback leader, was held-Saturda , as a judgement debtor. Ho swears he isn't worth a eon. SCITEPPI?,II;4 it of Philadephia, have Arranged with , their' creditors and:will continue bush ess. They 'employ 1,600 men, women ard children. • I •• Tim eldest bity of Mr. Ewing, of Belle.. ville ' N. J., was gofed to' deathly a cow Thursday. 'llia family lost three children by drowning, tree weeks ago. , iSram„Eir, thAfrican explorer, gave a ii dinner in Paris • Wednesday. to his Ainericau and !French friends, The af fair is said to have been a brilliant one. TILE Second !Assistant POstmaster non end has been engaged for the past week, in assigning. contracts for carrying the Mails throughout the United States. ..Mus. W. IL BIIISTOI„ nee Fannie lifur dette, the dwarf 'with Forebangh's circus peve birth to a child ,weighing eight ounds. Themother weighs fifty pounds. IVOIIN'AEN love iornmenced the founda tion of the new Bureau of engraving and Prihting building at the Capital, 1 for which ;7.'300,000 was appropriated by Con gress. • , A Vienna dispatch reports the &humla was surrounded by the turks July 20.. Fazli l'asha only consented to • eracute the fortress after consulting with Minister Layard. A private telegram from Trieste an nounces that the Austrian Loyds' Steam- Ship Company has arranged' fur a weekly `steamer service to Cyprus hy- the way of Alexandria. • Tat. Porto had decided to give the Gks the territory from Zagora to MagT ritte.\ This includes Vole and Pbarsala, but not Tricale or J'anina. Negotiations ate proCeeding. , . A Boudiarest dispatch states tha Cap tahr GrCenthe American military attache has received , the drder or St. Vladimir for the passage, of the Balkans with General ti a uorko. , ' • i .. - THE French caderg of Science has presented the of . Brown-Seguard as a candidate for tbe Chair of Medicine made vacant up the death of M. Claude Bernard. \ . • Santana liftman, a Iliebmond_miser, loft $850.000 as• an eridownment 'for a school for the education Of one hundred poor children of Albemarle, county, Vir. 1 gima , - 1 • Trim Customs authorith have made a sizure of um and Jelvehy, on theAtaatn valued at $J$4O, beloidging gd Davis, of Montreal'. • 1)41. Join VitoibliT, Sunday-school worker, is ju. fife and in splendid health . ispo . ssessed of a :handsome and 'expansive forchrat, :with'it keen, inquiring, but pleasing eye, well.curved . features, a whining- and gen ial t deep, sonorous video, and gen eni/ly shapely physique. GLEANINGS Mna. VOL NEwntr, nee Miss Mud. Warren, the dwa r f,. died in giting.tarth to a child last weak. The deeeStett Wolk 27 years old. The child weighed 0 litnflidfe and was dead. _ :4 _ . A Constantinople 'dispatch :save final instructions havo bans. sentto Coratheo• dori Pasha to agree .to a continuance of Bosnia and lierzegovinia until security and order are restored. - A Bronson Alautt, "the New England . - tiocrates," and father of Longa M. Alcott is now neatly' eighty years old, and be once said that his early education consist ed of the "Pilgrim's Progress." • 'ON the 17th inst. an accomadation and freight train of 22 cars broke . " through a bridge over thei Tippecanoe river, near Monticello, Indiana, and fell into the river a complete wreck. Only two lives were TIM= hi much distress in the agricult• ural districts of Spain in consequence of the drought. In Andalusia the peasants resist the collection of the octrol and land tax. 'Locnsts and the phylloxera aro also very prevalent. . . UNITED STATES .. Consul at Cork, in dispatch to the Department of . State says the amount of papOr mousy in circu lation in Ireland is $35,000,000. with •a reserve of, coin in banks of $14,206,589 . . Paper money and coin are on a par. Cola's,Vompany at Hartford, Conn., are now engaged in Manufacturing` a double-action forty-live calibre revolver foi the , :English market. • This is . a favorite arm with Englishmen.:' The Haling gun in being , improted at the suggestion of French experts. • join; P. Galax, •for many years in charge of the•Stato Asylum at Utica, N.. Y., in the American Journal of Insanity, claims that suicide. is the result of defi cient moral education rather than mental derangement. He says it is not ,an in sane,act, although an unnatural act. • _ THE Crown Prince and PKincess• of Prussia, after the! formal signa4nre of the treaty, invited the Plenipotentiaries and their leading secretaries to Potsdam to have a drive through the royal parks .and ganicus, and to dine with them at Sans Souci, the famous residence of Frederick the great. Tin: harvest in Nebraska this year will be the largest knoWn. Tue wheat crop will not fall short Of fifteen million bush. els. The coin will roach fifty - Million bushels; the oat crop fifty million bushels, the oat crop seyeety.six million bushel, barley crop three' millions, . rye. ono mill ion: STATE NEWS. Tits Brotherhood of Locomotive Engin eers of Altoona have disbanded. • • Titit agitation of the new county 'pm ect in Luzerne county is intensely lively FIVE million .barrels of .oil are unsold and ready for market in the oil regions. • Tits cliesnue• crop. of Centre, MiI%HITS Jimiatl and Clearfield - counties pipinises to be immense. . • Tut: - Bethlehem ironworks five-resum ed Operaions, with orders enough to keep them going for a year., Alan. JONES, a pall - leer - in Carbondale buried Ills thirteenth child on Saturday, Ile has only one child left him. THERE were one hundred andseventeen deaths in Pittsburg last week,- the heaviest. weekly mortality J im that city for two years. -,CoNsionnAntx anxiety, is Mt in. the mining regions as to whether the Reading Coal and Iron CoMpany will agree to a suspension in August. .'Fitt: venterns.of 'Wyoming county pro• pose to hold their annual encampment at. - Mohoopany on the second Thesday in September. A.iine time will undoubtedly be enjoyed. • 'Tin; I;eard of :Indian COttonissioners have awarded the contract .ror furnishing niediciaal.supplies for one year to Mr. 0. H. dadwin of New York, brothey of C. C. Jadwin of flontssdale. WENt:ERT, of Scranton While in a ;:late of somnambulism walked out third story window• - a few nights ago. lie sustained injnries froni which it is feared • ho will not recover. Fr is mid that the waters of the ,Laeka wannaTiver are so contaminated by the acids and minerals fram the coal mines in its vicinity that neither nab, snakes or.dz ards can survive'in them,. - AT the second day's session Of ' the State Teachers' Association, at Reading there were present two hundred members. Tile day was spent discussing-the labor question. I The - next meetin,, , • will be bald at York, the.time to be fixed by the la .-- ecutive Committee. .. • • HEN, DR. r.r.ras of Philadelphia will deliver the address _at the Susquelianna County Agrreulturaf Fair this year. Dr. Willets is -a very ptopular speak-Er, and will be remembered by many of ourxiti. zees for the very entertaining• lecture he • wave here some years ago. • THERE is an old, unoccupied house on the farm of Jefferson Jones, in Schvylidll township, near Phcimixville. When Mr. Johni'looked into the house the other day be found the skeletons of ten sheep. lie had missed them and thought that some thief bad carried them Off; II: seems that the sheep leaped in at awindoW and then could not get back. • TEE Sernton- Repr'ilieizi — r. says a &n_} of counterfeiters are turninl,ont greenbacks in that vicinity. Ibe , plate and material employed in this illicit enterpi ..haVe been manufactured in Scranton, Mid' so admirably is; the work done that none but those having the experience of au expert can.; distinguish the differenee between the bogus and the genuine bills. &ME time ago four wolves esp Aped froM the Philadelphia Zoological gardm. They are now running loose in 3lohtgom cry county, • and t'ht efforts to capture them have, so farsroved fruitless. They attacked a man who *as! 'driving along the Germantown pike in Norriotown town ship a few evenings ago, but he escaped from Ahern before he WS injured, his weapon of defence being a bushel basket.. Jolts SHt TF of:•Pliecnixville, has been arrested by the coroner of Cheater county fer the murder - of lienjantin Sterrett, who was shoton tho 20th of June last. Ster rett was in a state of intoxication at the. time and attempted to get into the house. of stint 4 for the purpose, as he afterwards . stated, of getting a, place to lodge for the night. !Att.: Shiite, 1 believing that ai) at tempt was being Made to burglarize his house, became excited and shot Sterrett as ho was retreating from the - building, the ball taking effect in one of his legs. THE REMAINS OF A MASTODON FOUND. STAULICCA,. Pa., July 27.—1 t hay- ing been announced to-day that the fossil reotainssof a mastodon had been found inn cave near. the railway stii tiOn at Mt.• Ararat, on the Jefferson ' branch of the Erie railroad, hundreds of persons, both on. foot And, in pr rjages, visited the scene. It seems that some workmen, .while exeavat st the point named, came upon wriut they at first thought to be part of the tusk of an elephant. It was' taken to a naturalist.who lives in the neighborhood' and he pronounced it to belle tooth of. a mastodon. The worlpilen at once returned to their task; and nuderthe direction of the -naturalist and an antiquarian whom. tie summoned' from. Carbondale, the search, wilt prosecuted _until nearly the entire 'skeleton . of .the monstOr was unearthed; and is now on, exhibi tion at.the:opening of the cave. The, jawbone is four feet long and thiiteen inehes.thick; the vertebrve; twenty three feet eight inches long; knee cap eighteen inches in length and nine and. a half inches •in width at the narrowest point; thigh bones, six.and a quaiter feet 10n.7,-and the bones • from '.the knee to ' ' the foot 'seven feet in length. It isisaid that the skeleton, will be boxed and ship. Ped.to . the Smithsonian' Institute. 'boo Ids , .4 LABOR riotilhas.peen - nipped in the bud in Washington by the arrest atui iprotnpt imprisonment of the leaderfi and instigators. The.prac.i.'t for . th& disturbance was stile fact tliat rtainlaborers saw:-tit to itorltii,:r altar a day, and a lot -of loafeis sOn s ght-to prevent them. : ral Otrielose at Many, :•ireillitts-1110113 , Interestlair pc. of the AMille. Dr , N . SrZli, Col., Jelly . 29. With the aieeptio4 of. a few masses of eurmc -100,43100s over the - rnoontains .wards.' the north and westward, the sky was , clear and the :atmospheric condition s favorable for the observa . tioni of the eclipse..- The bouse4ops .were with people The tin* of the. first contact was 2:20, Refaverg .time, suadten miantes..later..the.lpres , ence of the moon at the edge of the sun's disc was plainly.perceptible. to the ordinary..obsexvers_with , smoked. glass: By three o'clock -the 'sun light bad moderated 'iCkniarked de gree, showing a rale yellow color. Later :on, aChirid: glare overspread the earth. The . heat of the sun Was no longer oppressive, and a light similar to twilight was shown in the horizon, and' light flecks, of clouds began slowly - to dissolve, owing tct the change in the- temperature -As the period or totality came on, the sight from .an elevated station was grand: An . , extreine'dark shadow fell on Lop g's Peak, seventy-five runes distant, and sweeping rapidly south-eastward, , covered the plain . like a gray pall. To the north-east ward the could - be seen bathed in sunlight, ,rand presenting a viewrof beautiful sunset. Placing the periud . of obsehration, the moon appeared like a huge black ball, surrounded by a beautiful circle of light,lind as-the - sunlight suddehly burst forth again, chickens crowed as though morning had dawned. NEW OILLEAIIB July, 29.—There Was opportunity.fdrobServing- only a partial eclipse of. the sun, the view being entirely obscured by theelouds from 4:50 to P. m. MAHON ' E,E;N. IL, July 29.—Owing to the- unfavorable weather, no ob servations of Ithe eclipse were taken at Dartmouth Observatory. LITTLE Rom, Ark., July 29.—The eclipse was - plainly visible this eve ning through smoked gleSs and even with the naked'eve.. . . CINCINNATI, 2 4 1 , ---Extensive preparations 'were: made at. the Cin-, einnati ObservatoiT to obsefVe the eclipse, but theclouds . obscured the view. . . I.TxrCS, July 29.—The.obScuration of the sun by the clouds prevented the observation of thecelipse at the Litchfield ObserVatory, Llamilton College. - LiA La., July The eclipse began at 2:45 r: 1. 31., and ended at 4:41.. The total eclipse oe curred.at 3:45 anA- lastettone Minute. The clouds occasionally obscured the sun, ',but the view at the commence ment, for most of - the duration, .and for the last hour was wholly unob= .At the moment of total ob scuration, a Match had to be lighted to note the hour on the clock. Mitt - iag the following -minute a_pereepti ble halo ringed the moon: the surfa'ee of the latter. looking . like a blaih steel. No perturbation was evinced by the animals.. GALVESTON', Ter.,* July 29. A . Fort Worth special says there was a successful observation 'of the eclipse,, It:di:en with tvsetity-six,' instruments; securing notes Of.the - corona euspics, of the moon and sum, and all con-. tarts, but the last, which the heavy clouds rendered partially a failure. photographs were obtained: The firSt contact 3:12-25. , The see- M111,4:18-26. Third, 4:21-92. Forth '5411-36: Washington- time. The totality lasted 2-minutes and 42 see .onds. " • , TIKES PEAK ! ,Tuly-29;--211e &ism- 7 cations were successful. 'The corona was traced several diameters from the sun; anal seen for lice , minutes Miter the totality.• . . iWASIINt;TON r • July, 29,---On ac-, c. not or - the chiinle,' . nn 'obercations o , the eclipse were taken.. TUE Point Boy.s,Possznimms - In the Se. 'darS 'of oriniddincr 'and, labor strikes, people. are prone to overlook the experience. of the'past, and, to forget that wealth seldom -re mains in the same channel; for.any great length,of time. Let_ anyone look around and see who the wealthy men of to-day are. : - Three-fourths of them began life as poor as the labor- I ers who are to-day envying them. generation hence their children may be beggars. In an oration At. Gales.: burn 111., on the Fourth, the speaker hit the nail squarely on the head.and. delivered a discourse which Should be read by every. poor and labor ing. nun in the country. He said -" The man who owns the Most stores in tile city worl ed Out when an apprentice for twenty - I ,lWe' dolUirs .a vear, and clothed himself out'of it, The most successful dry goiyis mer chant, one of - our wealthiest men; came to th s town. a poor. and-I. 'knew him. when he was a clerk in_ a.I store: on Main-street at a small salary. I Thelarfrest stockholder in tiM PirsO Natioaa Bank, - and a manor hirge means,: get his start by working on a farm for nine dollars a month. - One of the leading bank directors. worked . as a hand when a young mim.oit North river sloop, ..A- citizen worth a hundred thousand: dollars, . who started with nothing, learned to write his name after he was fifty years old:. One of the wealthiestlnen who walks, these streets worked , as,ap apprentice in a drug store in ,Philadelphia for ' Ids board and clothes;.eeme to P6oria with nothing but his good mune, and hired out aS a clerk. Ile soon went into company 'with a. man-Who fur nished 'ea,pital, and in a few years paid.his partner forty thousand (101, lava for his interest- in the establish, ment. One of our wealthiest eitizeos, president of a leading lank started life On Cape Cod - With ii -dol lar, and, has - earned,his own living since he_waa'eleven yeais old. • Near ly every director of the three banks; . First and Second. Nationals,, and .the Farmers and 1 Meehanies', started penniless. There is scarcely an ex ception. The president of One of the banks told me that the entire:board of .directors 'had- inherited $1,5,00, The honorable Chief Jristiee _of thp stipreine„conyt;of Ililhiois,,a resident of this city, commenced the practice of his profession ,in Knoxville' with only $lO in the world. The .hunora-. ble judge of. the circuit court of this district, who 'has lived here - for-thirty years, worked Way:through OA lege and to his profession. i The coon- ty. Officers, judge, attoyney , , treasurer, Clerks of courts and spent'; all start ed poor, en. The presidnt of Kuox College; from the time lie was - a mere lacknot only earned his own living .and paid (Or Ilia education, but assist ed in the Siipport of his parents,',' eoRTLANIi, orogtto, w:ts l‘y a tlestrtittive on Tt $15,1100. . . • ("JO - 2eofe relateis this Incident:- "Sonic years ago Mr. A. V. florist, of Youngstown,_ was• anxious toOhtain a. very,,rare plant, and wrote to a number of the leading ntirscrytrien of the country to obtain, receiving uniformly the reply that it could not be lied. lie then wrote to the Agri Cultural,Depactment at Washington • foOlaidatit,iiiit - big letter waS Lot ianeweredi ",isNs2* , illieuUragWrlY 'his . failuriisrbe addressed -43 ton. himself, then Praidcytiand teeeived" from ~a private;secretary _a letter"in which it was stated that the Trent, • ; I tr could not be procure in Stata. This was some yeerii ago. ' Last `winter' Mr. LEwts received from - Europe the Very plant he had been • seeking, r with the :Compliments of GRANT: It is really wonderful - that - these things' should remain' in the Memory of a man perplexed with countless - public cares and beseiged ;lilt requests fur favors Of one sort " or another." THERE are 4,000,00 dead letters received annually at L the Dead Letter,-' Office. , *Thice hundred thou Sand :without stamps. ,1 Fifty thousand partially addressed: Biz thousand, .no address. • One and a bar million money derS.and drtifts of money value. • . Forty five thousand packages con:- tabling pro•perty, Forty thousand dollars in money nine-tenths of which. is 'returned, , ,... the balance remaining in the Treas ury, subject,to application for four 'ears. - Fifteen thousand photographs. .. One-quarter of a . trillion-European etters returned . unopened. One-tenth - of all. letters received contain property. Ten.thousand apPlicatrons,for let terrePorted lost; the great propor tion found and delivered. - - _ rovEnrk AND '-81.7FTERING. was. dragged down with debt, poverty and suf fering for years, caused by a sick family and large bills for doctoring, which did thein no good. I was completely discour aged, until one year ago, by the-advice of my pastor, 1 procured Hop Bitters and coninieneed their , use, and in one - month we-were all Well, and none of us have seen a Sick day since, and I want to say to all poor men, you . can keep your families. Well a year with hop Bitters for less than.one doctor's visit will cost, I know it. A Workingman." r IST OF LETTERSrediaming in _Et Post - 0111ce ItradfOrxl Cu., I's., for the week eprting July :51, Ifll I.3uni Mitehell, .N I Spi-agae, Jul 4 .r,rmnts calling-T.4 any of the Atocire will please say .. :Ldverti.e.l,7:4;lviDg ,:az r. of list: W...t . 1.V9111), P. M. 0 MARRIED. Wysea, at the resldeueo of Ow brid'e's paretit‘,..lloy 21. Is7a, by the Itev. lleury Ir. 11Iavn, Mr. Jes.se U. Smith, m of, - East, Stuilshorg. l'a.„ to: MIAs !Sarah E. Bishop, of Bradfortt Co. 101..003111-11AV ENS . At the home of. the Iffuto, July 2lth, 1.•575; J y lt.er. N. N. Ilitirs, and ►ll-, .1. Harem, all'of :Ulster, Pa. TOW.iNDA 'AtARKETS. • • L.Ert , :rrED ra'• ENs LONG, •. Geverat deate rain tkn ken Ova and P rodUct., Patton's Blank, es.rner.Maln and Midge Streets. •WEL) N Ea:DAY in• EN NG, JULY 3t, ts 76. IsIIOLESA I.E. nuT 11,. :5e 5 7s 73 VOG -117 50 • 1-51'(k1 01.1' I :Do 1 (welt 10 1 1064.1 41 67,; 15 :Of • 50h9 CW4GS :3/- _ Ufa', 3 . 3 - 5( , 41 Go 5 PO I r , 1,(51 1 25 1 2"no 12 O 10 Float' p2r l,ht ' raga - per Corn Meal per trx)ll Fred Wheat, per corn Ity.! l tat I.3neks - h,3: ....... Clover 6•:‘, . yfrit. 1)re.5, , e(1 bop Ham. S!r•al4. - •.rs Larrl. . Lotter. tubs " • Rolls apphy s eoe!., per bus/01... .otuctui rtleesvrax I= GEE Veal De wr TAlioNe Wool . - - New Airorreeraents BANNING'.3 SYSTEM SPIN AT. PIZOT"fi, II) BUACE TRUSSEti, . Pl LE 111:Af)ES- z, FEMA I.4..TITORTS. .IFu.l ANNING, et Isi..m".Vork,frtfortussult orers front s.l?lnat.we;tl;neAs and rut-ratan!: 1 drooping irvak chew; holigesthi, trat ton, piles, t ool tusplaernients of the female sy,tout, that jn may he gratititOnfdy ron.lltint.for a rt . V. - daYS., at - 31 r. PFITTF.S'. eu Main-st, for th.ir 'pri.topt rellrf by means - 1.1 his srsteni of .ke.; filch pace tong been sn wlaely used the profc-o.b.a , :11 Europe, In forlorn 1. MiccieliA in female ' hat a .Vorzlo t.napor:u)" falfurc) ha ror-rs to E. P. Alden,-of Athens. Oat fur fds t.rce patophle , .. • .• I 44.• Are to ntate pobliclY Quit wbile I was fist I 'Aid.: lug ;1;01 cripw op; down. utoler a' painful st•lttat curvature atul 1:111111VIIL Dr, I,v hln Spinal Props.. 101,, p.,..1.1dr;y cie to r”:o.•.ve lay Tatn, :nor ettunlo nu"to ito more work :0 :k day tlmll count lit a month I.re:rim:sly. ad wilfe rots to eoroollt 1/ASNAII HUNS. No. 13 Smith Division Slteet ra" Mt, BANNING 'IA at— 1!r. PETTES', Main strc..t, Trman.ll, r 3. • • - 9wt., • If you ~ .r••• a otan of t o sinew, weakened by the • strain oryein duties, avoid rtlautlanheaml take 1101." BITTERS. • . . If you are a man of iettefs,_toillag over your mid. night work, to •restere•lrain and nerve waste, take, lIOP BITTERS. If you are yoang.and suffering from any intlisere. tiumordissipatlort, take, 1:10P , BITTERS: If you are married or slogfe, old or young, suffering from umir health or. lurodahlng on a • bed . ' of farkbess. oBEe •110 P BITTERS. Whoever yeti aro, vt 4 3:erever you are, whenever you feel that sour Srft - 0:11 heeds cleansing. toning - ur FULittell!inii,*(ilinat tufo:ilea, lag, take llol' Have you ,Iyapsioda. kioliiry or isrliihry COM+ ,Mont. diseine of the slonearh, bowels. b1" , 4, /leer or 7acrt . ,,, , will b tuned IL lea take.. 1101.' BITTERS. - . Tryon are simply 0,114: are Weak and lovi spirited, . try it ! Buy ft. Insist upki.o it. Your druggist keeps , • • HOP BITTERS. • • It may wire your ilre. It has- pied hundreds. INSURANCE. . • 11l MX OF HARTFORD, OFIntAN 4%.:%IFRICAN, OF FIliE ASSOCIATION, OF PIMA., DRITISEI AMERICA, CQNO.!:CTICUT, VNIONcNIIITUAL,(IXI7), NAILWAYPASSNNOERS,.(A.CCIDENT) . TIIAVNLEIIS LIFE AND AtLIDENTS, 11 0111 MRS. 210 ,";:eial of the late line of Nook Selaticeat havtiag lawn runsfuired 14. me. I ani 074. , 11, , , 1 to trait ui a genetal bout , ahrr ontt IntAiterts, tm reucmabh, tunris. AlkiirAdtvorui-i, , ..1 . ....1 (orient. • • WM. VINCE:4T. • , 31aLt St., To!vaikkla, rt. Neivell, David Prke, • kteed T =IS= 12'1 off 1%; i 1147.1:1 I:Awv; ~f, 6.5(4 70 54r , ItiitOi 4f 6454 f IMEI ...FEW, lirrt..t.i.c?, July LANCASUIBE,