ud iMii'" "7 Elcuotci to floIittCB, Citctaturc, Agriculture, .Science, JHoralitij, axxb eueral itclligcucc. 0t" 32. STROUUSBURG, MONROE COUNTY, PA., NOVEMBER 12, 1874. NO. 25.- inn tori tiMiiiiifcn ii n,i listed bjr Theodore Schocli. - -o .l'l'i ir a four in R.lvancn and if hot frirJ5-1 . , , r lie year, txvo dollars fifty ' t 'V'cVts.' l.nsT on In proportion JOI5 PRSXTIXC OF Al t- KINO, ... .J,., t,Uhst Mvl? of the Art, and on the jji.o U nJ().t rjasn:il..le terms. LANTZ, crpSE0NT & MECHANICAL DENTIST. ' '' 'Vl br'kk bail.lin?, n-arlv opposite tli .Tf.N ...a 1. '.!.- him,.- f that .v A A, :il:llt-m. . , . .,. v,,:l i;- n.-irlv ntinos!1 till 'V'iT'i'-i4 fi'lv t? Prf-THi all operations ""a in -1 line In tlie moit cartful aud skillful utau- 'r i,-t,-ni.n ein tn s.ivin? the Natural Tooth; -p i'iiN-r 1 "f Artificial Teeth on Ruhbvr. ' ,'--v-' ,r (.outiuiious Gums, and perfect fits in all Miii-I. i "''""'s know the crrat MU and danger of n Vvt P-Cir ork to the inexperienced, or to thoss li v ' April 13, 174. tf. '"'rifi.iii to matters p;rtainin to his pro- D . tint havlntr juit returned from IVntal V- i f'lll v prop:ir-l to make artificial teeth In Cli V' ',Mi::ifn'l and lif.-Jiki" manner, and to fill de- U' T- i'l a.-n.rdins to tli- ino.st improved method. ' .X -xrvt without pain, when desired, by the 1 '','viir ,.' oxide tisis. which Uentir.lv harntl.-ss. wiiW"''1 kind neatly done. All work waranted. ti K- il-r's now brick h-iidinp. Main street, Ur,-; A.M 'Tl-tr. "WILLIAM S. REES, Surveyor, Conveyancer and Real Estate Agent. fms. Timber Lar.ds and Town Lots FOR SALE. 03" next l )or ao?e S. Kee' news Depot J' -! Wiw tat Comer store. !a':ch -ISTJ-tf. D U. HOW AUO IMTTEnSOX, Paysicats. Sanson aDd Accottcheur, (Successor to Geo. W. Seip.) O uce M street. Stroud-biir, Ta., in Dr. S ip b:il-l:!i, re-'M-iiiee Sarah ureet, next FrieMi-i new meeting house. 2'ronipt attention f 7 to 9 a, m. (iSechoais 12 " 2 p. m. 5 " 0 p. in. April 10 1874-ly. D U. GEO. W. JACIvSO. piiwnr;, subceox axd AiccrcnLUR. In tin c.lj 0:7100 of Dr. A. lleevM Jackson, r.iJo;u e, eurner of Sarah ijid I'ntnklin f-treet. STROUDSBURG, PA. Acgurt ,T2-if yoiix ssiswz:ci, . PHYSICIAN AND ACCOUCHEUR, MOUNTAIN HOME. PA. lltrcli 2V74-r.ra BIOTLlf.. A The u')-cr!';er wo'ild inform thennlilic that iie ha-i IcivJ i!)e houce forinall y kept by Jacob KvHit. in ilie Horotjgh of .Stroudsbtirg, Pa., !i'lip.viiiire;i:untc'l and refurnished the same, i prepare': t ) enlert:tm all who may patronize bin. 1; i the aim of the jiroprietor. to fnrn- ih -.pfrior acf ominndations at moderate rates wii! wT, ire I10 pains to promote the com- ' . i-i i i r I I" "i i-ie ti. a nuerai snare oi puone i?M 17,'72-;f.l D. L. PISLIi HONESDALE, PA. ii central location ot any Hotel in town. II. W. KIPLE ct SON, 53 iY;n st; Proprietors. cm r. EiKixKiiorst:, ' 11 J Oface.-Kresgeville, Pa. ""ruiUit, s.j!ieiuai aa.i full ettUfaction cuarn- Divio s. lkk, Attornejat Iair, Jj'e d-ior aUn-e the "fc'troudburg Jlmtse" -'ia!s!jtirKl pa. ieeti,t,s proroptlr made. KDWAIU) A. WILSON'S fof v iliiisaisbur?. X. V.) liec-ipe for COX '1WI0. aud ASTHMA carefully lon,poun.l.:rl at HOLLINSHEAD'S DRUG STORE. Mi:du:i;u: frts.lt and pure. 12107. W. HOLLIXHEAD. n0v'T roilCKT lliat wli?n jM you w nit anv thin in the Furniture or rffl-'T1 tl"at Mcl'arty & Sous in the p-rik,s' ila.ll, Main .street, Stroudsbur, l is the i,!.,,... . , jWkV74-tf DEALER IX J-Madc Uolhlug, Gents Fur- ((. ' ' ,lisoiitin'iol until all arrearages are & N? 'iYi!i.i option of the Editor, is '- 's'T' - i. ni',nt! of one square of Oiclit HncM or ' . rtiiij 1 50. Each aidiliuual in- ishing Coods, Hats & Caps, Boots & Shccg,&c. 4 -ST 8TR0UDSBURC, PA. (Near the Depot.) N)e,n!'c are invited to raU and examine 1 1 nroi medf rat. My ti THE ELECTIONS OX TUESDAY. OPINIONS OF T&E PRESS. The following extracts will give the spirit of the press with reference to Tuesday's elections : THE NEW YORK "TIMEs" The result of the elections yesterday in this aud other Eastern States will not be a surprise to anybody, except, perhaps, to a few tcrso:is at Washington, and it cer tainly will not surprise any of our readers, who have been kept tolerably well informed as to the causes which inevitably tended to produce the present over the w of the lie publican party. All that could be done honorably to avert this defeat has been done by us, but since the last Presidential election, many of the party leaders have been deaf alike to advice and remonstrance. They have apparently believed that the people would quietly, submit to anything and everything, and that the party which they represented was indestructible. Noth ing short of the events which we record this morning could have opened their eyes to the truth. The great and signal defeats of yesterday virtually began last year. The panic did much injure the Republican j arty, but the effects of that disaster might have been greatly lessened had a wise course been adopted by Congress in relation to the finances. All through last winter we begged Republican Congressmen to do something, and to do it quickly, and we pointed out the certain consequences of their mistakes and delays. In return for perform ing that unpleasant duty we were simply told that we were '"traitors" to the Repub lican part-, and that we should be instantly stumped out of existence. The mismanage ment at the Treasury, the Sanborn frauds, and the general series of blunders in nearly all the public departments were in the meantime causing incalculable mischief. The first two nominations for chief justice were shocking blunders, and disgusted the whole people. The administration was making enemies and losing friends every day. The party was handed over to the Platts and liutlers. And just when the disappointment and irritation of the people Ivcanie most mark ed, the paper at Washington, which has come to be known as a mere spcakingtube of the White House, was set to work cry ing out for .General Grant for a '-third term." What could any sane nun antici pate from such astounding folly except the over whelming defeats of yesterday ? In this State a Republican majority of 55,0:10 has been turned into a Republican defeat of 1L00), a change of fJ7,0R votes. The gjt.tlemen who have had the Republican parry in charge during the past two years will 1 e obliged to admit to-day that they have nearly strangled it. It would be useless to dwell on thee obvious lessons except in the hope that thc' will be thoughtfully pondered at Washing ton and elsewhere. If the greatest party ever known in this country is to be saved from utter destruction two years hence, and if it is not to pass from history disgraced as well as defeated the leaders and managers must moke a thorough change in their policy. It would be still wiser to change many of the leaders themselves. Fortunately the people have disposed of Butler as they would have swept away some other prominent persons, in both House and Senate, if their votes could have been brought to bear directly upon them. There is yet time to prevent a still more crushing blow in ISTt). but to do that will tax the combined efforts of the best minds in the Republican party. The opposition will now have an opportunity of producing a policy of their own, and they will find it harder to do that successfully than to attack the measures of Republicans. We shall probably witness the development of the ideas which were put forward in the plat forms of Ohio and Indiana, and the effect of that upon our entire financial system cannot fail to be very great. The West and South always controlled the Democratic party, and they will continue to control it. What these sections of the country demand now is inflation, combined with tmrtia 1 repudiation. Whether the people will deliberately approve of that policy when it is submitted to tUem wituout any dis-ruise still remains to be ascertained. When we see the great city of Ncv York deliberately voting to be put back under the rule of Tammany, it must lc admitted tliat even the cause of common honesty docs not appear to be highly ipular. W e probably have before us a stormy era, in which 'many questions which the people imagined were finally settled will be dealt with anew,aud iu a way calculated to sur prise the world. The legislation which has been carried out r-ince the war, on questions of finance, reconstruction, aud the nc'TO, and the constitutional amend mentsCof the same, period, are not beyond the reach of a Democratic majority in Congress and the country. The history of the rebellion and its consequences is by no means completed. For the sale of the country, it is to be hoj-ed that the Demo crats will use their victory in a spirit of moderation and prudent statesmanship. We doubtless see to-day the Democratic Presidential candidate for 1870; and if the Republican party is not conducted with greater wisdom and good fortune during the next two years than it has been during the last two, Mr. Tiiden is the most probable successor of Gen. Grant. THE NEW YORK "HERALD" Has a forcible article, from which wc clip the annexed extract : ' d-iK-rrd GnDt, who led the, R -publican party into power two years ago with the largest majority, perhaps, ever given to a President, may feel this morning, as he reads the returns of the November elec tions, that lie has been like the prodigal son, and has squandered a precious political inheritance. Whatever the causes, the result is decisive. New York, which has been anchored so firmly to the Republican party, now swings out in pronounced and irretrievable revolt. Even the splendid popularity of General Dix could not save thi 'lilmliilctivitli-iri This election' is not merely a victory, but a revolution. The United States pro nounces in favor of conservative purposes. Wc are weary of war and its bloody instruc tions. The practical lessous to be learned cannot fail to be of the very gravest im portance. The canvass closes the political career of General Grant. Mr. Tilden's success shows not merely the advance of the Democratic sentiment, but also what, can be done by a candidate who conducts his canvass upon sound busi ness principles. He has shown the utmost tact, industry and enterprise in his conduct of his canvass. He has managed it as he would manage a railway. He is now the foremost . man of the party in a national sense, and, by virtue of the primacy of New York among States, he must necessarily be more than any man concerned in the can vass of 1876. The third term is buried forever. General Grant has two years before him in which to retrieve many of the mistakes which have brought discomfiture upon his ad ministration and defeat upon Ins party. Let him take this lesson in its highest sense, and remember what he owes to his great name, his fame and the place he would hold in history. His career as a political leader. is closed, but there remains to him a per sonal career, which he can vindicate aud confirm by two years of good t'overment, reform and devotion to the highest and truest principles of administration. TLIE .NEW YORK "SUN," In a characteristic article, says : The indignation of the people, as expressed through the ballot-boxes yesterday, has shivered Grant's administration to atoms. The overthrow is complete and terrific. Sufiice it to say, it is the end of Grant and of Grantism. It gives the finishing blow to a third term for Grant If he is impeached by the new House of Representatives, as he certainly ought to be, there will be far more probability that he will not serve out Ins second term than that he will have a third. Of course the unconstitutional features of the Gag law will now be repealed. It is iinjiossible to enumerate the names of the great mass of hypocrites, adventurers and rogues which the work of Monday and Tuesday has but under the sod never to rise again. There are Freliughuysen, and Poland, and Dawes, and Robeson, and Kellogg. There are "Shepherd, and Bab cock, and Moses, and Casey, and Butler. These will do for a specimen of the whole lot. The incoming House of Representatives will certainly be controlled by the Opposi tion. It now seems, in the light of imper fect returns, as if the Liberals and Indepen dents may hold the balance of power. This is well, for it foreshadows the character of the Presidential contest two years hence. It was necessary, in order to obtain a ma jority in the Forty-fourth Congress, that the Opposition should make a gain of fifty two members. Sufficient returns have already been received to fchow that they have gained more than that number. They will no doubt, have a good working ma jority. If they have, one of their first duties will be the impeachment ef Grant, leaving it to a Republican Senate to acquit him on the trial, if they dare take that responsibility. When the results of this great contest arc fully ascertained it will probably appear that they are due not so much to Demo cratic gains as to Republican losses. We fancy that it will turn out that the stay-at-home Republicans did the business for Grant. If this proves to be so, it will afford an instructive lesson to the Demo crats, of which it will be wise for them to take heed. It will be their true policy to so use the power with which the people have intrusted them as to bring these dis gusted Republicans to their sides. They will do well to remember that pome things were settled by the late war past recall. Among these arc the Thirteenth, Four teenth and Fifteenth amendments to the Constitution, which those Republicans who have enabled the Democracy to win this amazing victory will not permit to be dis turbed. Glory enough for one day. THE XEW YORK "VOKU" (lM.) Concludes its leading article as follows With the light of victory be earning from their fines as the presage of greater achieve ments to be wrought and greater victories to be won, it only remains for the Demo cracy to close up the ranks and shoulder to shoulder under the old hammer and the samo watchwords go on from conquering to conquer, until the last citadel of Federal power has been subject to their sway. Grant's pretorian phalanx has been brok en. His "Third Term" banner- has been captured and reversed for a scoff and a bi-i-sing. The bummers ot his army, the spoilers of the South, have been compelled to slacken their hold where the prey has not been wrested from their teeth. The political sorcerers discover that Mortonism has lost its power for a dtdusiou of the de fenders of the Republic the people at the ballot box.. Yet this is only the first great . battle in a long campaun. it is wen triumphantly. Yet there are others to be won. Victory has been tied, with all her gar lands, on, to the standards of the Demo cracy by faithful hands which have success fully planted those standards in thj fore front of this battle. It is a victory for free trade ; a victory for hard money ; a victory for home rule. The sign by which we have conquered in the Empire State is the sign by which we small cornuer in the whole country. Let the seme victory-graced standards now be carried on to the storming of the White House, and to the northern as well as the southern wing of the Federal Capitol, nnd two years hence the quatrebras of ludi calism shall be forgotten iu the havoc of its Waterloo, "And that loud Sabbath shake the spoiler- down." THE NEW YORK "REPUBLIC." (Administration) is very general iu its re marks. It says : When old Massachusetts deserts the Re publican cause, defeating Governor, Talbot, and electing three or four Opposition Con gressmen by heavy majorities Mr. Butler beimr left at home, and the old district of Mr. Dawes captured by an out and out Democrat it would seem almost- as useless to deplore defeat in other States as to in dulge iu explanations over the election of Mr. Tildenas Governor ot Xew lork. lhe heaviest calamity to the Republican party and we only hope it may not prove a na tional misfortune is the reversal, by yes terday's results, of the niajorit' and con trol of the next House of Representatives iu Cougress. We need not feel discouraged, and should remember that though financial disquietude and factional irritations may have tempor arily invaded the succctsful record of the party, these influences arc only temporary, aud the party organization is still intact aud vigorous. THE NEW YORK "TRIBUNE" (Illd REP.) See in the result a direct blow at the ad ministration. It says : The verdict of the country against Grant ism is dclivcren. There were only two great questions before the pcopole at this election. One was whether the adminis tration deserves the public confidence, and the other was whether it ought to be per petuated. They have both been answered in the negative so loudly that even the President must her the verdict. It is not anywhere a mere Democratic victory. It is the protest of all classes of citizens against an administration which supported Jayne, which enriched Sanborn, which lobbied the Salarv bill through Con gress, which established its Kellogg in the South by perjured judges and misused bayonets, and tried to sustain them by slan dering an injured people, and which had just put itself forward with the insolent claim for a perpetuation of power. The public had grown weary i f six years of rule remarkable for nothing but blundering and greed. The demand for an indefinite ex tension of such misrule was too much for irood nature. It ncecle d the sharp answer it has received. This is the end of Grantism It is not the rivival of the rebellion nor the definitive rehabilitation of the Democratic party. It simply eliminates Grantism from politics as an impertinent factor, and leaves the two parties confronted so evently matched that both must hereafter he care ful to make no mistakes. The future be longs to the one who shall earn it. THE NEW YORK EVENING POST ( REP.) We do no regard yesterday's result as expressing popular opinion on a conflict concerning any of these three subjects, of which we heard so much durimr the can vass hard money, free trade, and "home rule." Wc do not believe that if the Democratic and Republican platforms had been identical as to all three of these ques tions, as they were, very nearly, in respect to the financial question, this morning's re turns would have read very differently. What then does the defeat mean ? Wc have called yesterday a Republicans defeat. It would be a great mistake to call it a Democratic victory. The Democrats, as a national party, offered the people only one thing. They had no olicy to submit. They had no record on which they could ask the jniople to trust them. They had no circfully matured or coherent measures for the future better than or materially different from Republican measures. They did offer one thing a change. The peo yle took the change ; they did not t:kc the Democrats. Whether they will take them remains an open question. Upon a change the people are resolved. If the Republican party have the wisdom and courage to per fect the change, that party will still be the strongest in the country. If it have not, the people will try the Democratic party not with much hope, indeed ; but they will try it. Let not the Democrats, then, de lude themselves into the belief that they have gained a Democratic victory. The Republican defeat is simply their opportu nity. The people have used them as an in strument to chastise the Republicans. Whether the instrument shall prove fur ther useful or shall be cast aside. the next two years will show. THE NEW YORK EVENING MAIL (REP.) Views the matter in this light : We are free to admit that the Republican jiarty has been accumulating burdens that would long since, have crushed any less vigorous organization. Oue of the heaviest tf them was dumped off upon the rocks of Cape Aru yetteivhy. A prty that ha had vigor enough to get along with Butler "to the fore" will find its recovery from rever ses very much faciltated by the loss of its "Old Man of the Sea." We notice, too, that the party is the lighter ft r having dropped several other "Back-payers" in var ious States, and still other Congressmen who have been more conspicuous for their capacity for jobs than for anything else. Of course, the 'Tidal Wave" that has car ried away this sort of rotten "flood-wood" has al taken some excellent material, but they had no business to be caught out in such a bad year for Republicans. THE N. Y. COMMERICAL ADVERTISER. (IND. REP.) treats Tuesday's work in this wav : The long-talked of Democratic "tidal wave" set in yesterday, and swept down pretty much every Republican in its way. It waa not entirely unexpected. Speculations upon the causes are idle aud will result in no advantage to the peo ple. What is wanted, now the elections are over, and what will do more to revive business and restore prosperty, is solid con fidence confidence that will make every m s1 l 1. 1 -man hopetul, ana encourage mm to reiy upon the resources and industries of the country, and not upon Congress. Secretaries of the Treasury and President. When peo ple will stop believing in demagogues, clap trap newspaper impostors aud shallow Con gressmen, who know less about finance, tariffs -Hud their effect upon the country, than they do about the doctrines of the Koran, then we may look for better times. Let us be hopeful and cheerful, and we are more certain to have a change for the bet ter. THE "NEW YORK EVENING EXPRESS" (DEM). Thinks that the most sailent points of this election arc these : A peace offering to the whole American people and the memor able words of Abraham Lincoln to be put in practice, "Malice to none, charity for all." It is the promise of a better feeling between white and colored people of the South, by breaking down the dividing lines which have politically separated the two races. The colored men, we contend, voted for their best friends in voting for their old masters, and wc shall be greatly disap pointed if the future docs not prove the fact. There can never be upon this con tinent any more slavery, and the Southern white people would not restore the institu tion if they had the power to do so. Nor, let us say, in reply to one of the greatest calumnies of the campaign, can the Con federate debt, or any part of it, be paid by the Federal Government ; but the Southern States can and must be protected iivall the rights aud privileges enjoyed by States North and West. THE BOSTON "JOURNAL" (RKr.) It is a significant overthrow in many senses, but it does not moan that the old Democrat iv. party has taken even a tem porary lease of power in Massachusetts. Thousands of Republicans voted yesterday with the Democrats because they were dis satisfied with grievances which are mainly the outgrowth of Butierism. The feeling m itself is sufficient to account for the change that has taken place. When we couple with this the special objection which thousands urge against all sumptuary laws, we have the leading causes of the rout. That the rwdt is disastrous to' the Re publican organization, as a party, it would oe lonr to deny, ino loss o ri t mi 1 ot Lonress- men, from whatever cause it may have arisen, is most damanging, especially in view of the victories accomplished by the opponents of the administration in other States. That it denotes important changes in the political future of the country is certain. THE BOSTON "advertiser" (IND. REP.) Thus expresses itself : But a part of the falling off, and not a small part, was directly owing to causes fir which the administration is responsible. Outside of all considerations of popularity or fitness of candidates, the Republicans would not. Vote in any way that could be construed as an indorsement of the means by which the administration has made its power felt in mass. They have had severe experience of what it costs to be loyal to party during the last twelvemonths. They have seen the power of organization passing into the control of men for whom the peo ple have no respect. They have seen im' portant Federal offices in this State mani pulated for private ends, in violation of the rules of the civil service, and in studied contempt of their advice and judgment. They have seen the party machinery taken possession of by the recipients of Execu tive favor and used to fortify themselves in their positions and to intimidate all can didates for office who would wot affiliate with them. The scheme of allaying the party with the temperance question has been tried, and it had failed disastrously. Voters thought the time had come to say that they did not care to continue the farce any longer. A reduction of the !ggire;5ate Republican vote for Congressman by -JU.UoO or ;j0,t00 and a loss of the majority of the delegation is the only answer it was in their power to make tu what they have long looked Upon as a grave misuse of Executive patronage. The defeat of some of our members of Con gress is to l.e deeply regretted, but it is the price wo hae to pay for wh.it we devoutly trust will result m the political tioii of the Commou wealth. regenera- Loather from tripe and other animal mem brane to be used for glove-making, etc., is a Lite Trench iavenU .n. The Burning Mine. The New York IfcralJ of Tuesday, con -" tains a graphic description of the burning coal mine at Wilkes-Barrc, together with' the means by which the fierce fire was ex-, tinguishod. The article is from the pen of Miss Susan Evelyn Dickinson who during her recent stay at Wyoming Valley, visited the scene of theconflagation, "and obtained a valuable amount of information relative to the modes (p' randi by which it was cx tinguihed, all of which is very interesting.' The writer says : "The agent which has gained the vic tory, after months of vailant, persistent battle with the flames, bringing into' plajj" almost every resource of engineering skill," is a new one, which henceforth takes iu place as the fire destroyer, whenever that most to be dreaded' foe enters the mine.," The employment of steam by the Lehigh'1 and Wilkes-Barrc Coal company in ex tinguishing tho I'hnpire mine fire has proved' a success, which must be of incalculable' value, not alone iu Pennsylvania, but in!. mining districts everywhere. The nam 'of tlie foreman of the Empire mine, Iiewis Jones, through whose sagacious and per sistent endeavors the trial by tcam was made, is certainly worthy of record and re-" momheranoe. Mr. Jones' own detailed," technical account of the method used in' fighting the fire, and of the causes which baffled all efforts through months of ener getic, well directed labor, is to be published by the company for the use of those most interested, and a paper descriptive of these . method: has been read before a meeting of civil engineers. But no account has yet reached tho publi e of battl e v flame as lull ot vivid and picturesque interests as it was of peril and excitement to those en gaged m it. She then details in a succinct manner' die method employed, an account of which 1 as aleeady appeared in brief in The Re FL IiLK'AN. .Miss Dickinson's view of tin National Miners" association will interest" our readers mot. Evidently she hiu'nV faith in the organization out w will let' her speak for herself in the owimr ex- tract from her letter : "I compared notes with the superintend ent in reference to the former miners' trade union, the ''Workmen's Benevolent associa-" tion," which is now endeavoring to reha-" billtate itself and become national in its or ganization. He confirmed the belief which I had already pained from conversations with intelligent miners t'vat,- whHe the as sociation might for a time regain" ascertain amount of power, the men had too thorough: an experience of its tyranny to pcrktit it to force any jniimancnt serious troubles in those di.-tricts in which capital and labor had begun to recognize their interests a identified with each other.- And these comprehend a much larger proportion of the cWt region-, especially in the northern part of the state:- than is wisely apprehend ed, a strike or difficulty like the present one in a single colliery belonging to a small company at Moosic being supposed to re present fairly the general feeling, which it does not, any more than the reports of murders and outrages among the dangerous' classes in New York fairly represent the city' We would merely add in justice to the Miners' National association that the men: who caused the recent troubles at Moosic did not belong to it, and have absolutely refused to join it, or receive counsed from' any of its leaders. A Cure for Consumption.- A1 correspondent of one of our exchange papers give3 the following, cure for Con sumption, which at the least deserves a trial. He says : "I have discovered a remedy for pulmonary consumption. It cured a number of cases alter they had commenced bleeding at the lungs and the hectic flush was already ori the cheek. -After trying this remedy to my own satisfac tion, I have thought, philanthropy required that I should let it be known to the world. It is the common mullen, steeped strong and sweetened with coffee sugar and drank freely. The herb should be gatheretl be fore the end of July," if convenient. Young or old -plants are good dried in the shade, and kept in clean paper bags. The medi cine must be continued from three to six months, according to the nature of the dis ease. Jt r? good for the blood vessels also. It strengthens the system, and builds up, instead of taking away strength. It makes good blood, and takes inflamation from the lungs. It is the wish of the writer that every periodical in the United States, Canada and Europe should publish this re ceipt for the benefit of the human family. Lay this up and keep in the house ready for use." Important to Banks. It has been decided by the authorities at Washington that the practice of writing or printing the works "one day after cLie , without grace," upon bank check., in pLt c of stamping them and drawing the money on them the same day, is a violution of the revenue law. Where it is flone in good faith, and the checks are not paid until due, it is all right. Dating them back one day,, however, will not answer. It is also "a violation to use an unstamped receipt in place of a-elieck where a third party enters into t&e transaction.- An experienced housekeeper says tho best thing for cleaning tinware is common soda. Rub -the ware briskly, after which wips dry, and it riU kvk e-pd to zw. II