In bl La tio nto guard thole own righta, and 7iit.the disposal of the landO held by them the same period. 'V During the last fiscal year there' were die. of out of the public lauds 11.884,875 quantity greater by 1,099,270 acres was disposed of the previous year. or •, la amount 1.870,220 acres were sold for cash; .480 acres located with military warrants; / • .882 acres taken for homesteads ; 093.018 • located with college scrip ; 8,054.887 .• granted to railroads, 405,847 acres; ted to wagon roads, 714,255 acres; glien • yen to States as swamp land ; 5700 notes • ted by Indian scrip. The coati .receipts •Ireni all Bootees Inthe kind: 0111 m amounted $3,219;100: ARnspresslon, Of the ' l'resi- Aentiadeteruilnation to' enforce the reform & regolittlenaln the "0;0 Berrieo" doers the rtomprehethihriitional4ffalre zasnibraped In the Message; bat juin plevitius I,o4heknlosittg' passage Is a reference to .the t • terintallExposltien of 4870. :'lCoricernlng. Ilie - Frealdent says t'"This *celebration' ~nhhelooaed forward to by: Ateerioan . insiiiyilth•greit - Interest, as marking n century .f grater progressand prosperity 'thin is re : corded In the history of aq other Callen, and and aiirrylpg a ' ferther :geed' pUrpose fn brlnglitg,on our soil people of all the other :Commercial nations of the world in a manner t' calculating to ensure national good feeling." Yetigt gegisttr. itOBT IREDBLL. ALLBNTOW N PA., DECEMBER 11, 187 Wl:publish elsewhere in this. Issue the an. nonncement from the Metial Life Insurance ' Company of New York, making a reduction in the rates of insurance. The Company, after an experience of thirty ycars,has seen the folly of charging a high rate of insurance and then returning a large portion of the amount to the policy holders at the end of the year. We are glad the Company has seen the wisdom of tak 71og this step forward, as it will enable men of . • small means, those most interestt d in life in surance, to take out larger policies, and at the same time the reduction is not so much but that the insured will still receive dividends, though not so large as under 0.1 former eye. tem. Some of the opposition companies have fl• been publishing adverse criticisms upon the 'policy of a reduction of rates, but the public I . will understand their motives. In the Mutual Life the old policy holders will have the priv I liege of exchanging their polic es for new ones, I paying therefor at the reduce d rate ; but if they tofit to pay the old rates they will continue 1 to draw the lame dividends that they would laye received had the reduction of rates on - w policies not been made. For each policy , . a ssparatt calculation is made and thus all are treated equitably. A certain amount is taken I far death risks, expenses, etc., and another amount for a reserve, and whatever is received above this sum is not used by the :.'ompany, ant: - s therefore returned to the policy holders In the shape of dividends. The amount put (!away on each policy by the Mutual Life for re. sere - , to secure the payment of the policy at . death, is the same under the new rates as un . der the old ; it is the same as adopted by the ' MassaChusetteCompanies where they insure a man for along time after kris premiums have • ceased to be paid—and it is therefore , plain to : be seen that policy holders In the Mutual Life cannot be affected by the reduction, but on the oontrary the benefits to be derive by the re. duction, and a greatly Increased new business, will show the reduction to have been a very , -wise measure. Those who desire any f. , tlher 1 ' light upon the subject can be accommodated ? ' at the office of More & Troxell, 544 llamiltoe street, who are agents for the Mutual Life In this section of the State. . This remains of Horace Greeley lay in state Mike City Hall, New York, all day yesterday and were viewed by Immense throngs of peo ple. Never since the dead body of Abraham Lincoln lay within the walls of that building have such scenes been witnessed. The build ing was draped In heavy, sombre mourning. Numerous Inscriptions were displayed In dit ferent parts of the building recording 'expres- _ slops of the great editor. The floral offerings were especially fine and appropriate. The 'body was removed to Mr. Sinclair's residence at BIX o'clock this morning, alid at eleven the • services commenced at Dr. Chapin's church the programme having been prepared on a grand scale, the musibal part having been se leoted by Ida Greeley as follows : Funeral March De Profundis Reading of the Scriptures. "I know that my Redeemer liveth." Miss Clara Louise Kellog, Address Rev. Henry Ward deccher "Sleep Thy last Sleep" Quart. tie Address Rev. Dr. E. H. Chapin Prayer. I "Angles Ever Bright and Fair" - Miss. T. WeneciO Soprano of St. Francis Xtvier's Church. Benediction. Organist Dr. WU!lam Berge There will be no procession except from the church at the conclusion of the .cery ices, the body being privately removed to the church n the morning. Tug - gamblers of Wall street, New York. are an unconscionable set. The New York Times says : Daniel Drew does not care a fig what people think about him, or what the newspapers say. lie holds the honest people of the world to be a pack o I fools, and you might as well try to scratch the back of it rlii - noceros with a pin as to reach his mind—if he , has one—by preaching about murals. When he has been unusually lucky In his trails of fleecing other men, he settles accounts wiili his conscience by subscribing toward a new chapel, or attending a prayer meeting. Ills life IS the effect of religious professions upon the character, but es a sharper he is undeniably einem& This Umo ho has been made too =art, and by another, sharper whose name is - - only too familiar to the public.' Jay Gould Ought long ago to have, been stUdying arith Matto In •isil, but he is still at liberty to en joy the reputation of a "brilliant financier." We do not see how the s eill la to be reached, for men cannot well be prevented from gamb ling in stocks with their own or other people's money ; but at leant we must hope ;hit these "mammoth speculators" will by and by come to be held in the same estimation by the pub -, BO as other pickpockets. IN a review in the Nation pfe: recant life o f Okief Justice Taney, it , le stated ~ that ho mar .. sled Miss Hey; the sister of Francis Senn lie . , • Uie author of the "Star BPsugled Bennet." The history of two brotheie-in-law and t. f ' their work suggests how true Is that say log ssually attributed to Napoleon, but probably uttered long before him-" Lot me make 1 e songs of a people, and I care not who to es their laws." ,In this particular case , at les t the "Star Spangled Benner" expressed the vital sentiments of the 'people of the' Unites ' 'States, which the Taney decision outraged. When they were brought face to-face with the t : Mane, doubtless the " Sk l ar bpangled Banner" "C supplied an Inspiration to the atlict which. 'he antislavery sentiment could not. . w a dOngton correspondent of the New York World nit; that 13enator klumneris " in ton d o . neto to b e t," await some man 'testa lien of the t,emper of tit...4ldininlistratlon wardii him before declaring Maew his con Ilona of penned duty or with .111 0 m b e wil l In the Attar..." Our opinipn' ie t h at it O. rice Sumner Waits natil Ws' fl*oolltell ant tO him iiCeourta. his favor; Walt tone rear InAiittlieforc he "dc*_ - thiet anew his conytintiiiiirritiitiltW.tiq; • aid if hfit convictions are ,to be governed by r whit;Prestiien Grant or any 'other: man, or let of men, may do, he ileiliveti to witit: , T 1 WPC tbown that their hill6ve in Orant tbitY 4.lo Jia Witmer. '* TEXAN CATTLE. An Enornions Interest. Texas Is credited with 8,404,043 of the 23,- 820,608 cattle 113 the United States ; and these canto of Ours are estimated to be worth $13,- n 81.272, or less than $4 a head. It will Milli- ly be admitted, however, that the number of our cattle is Mush targer titan the estimate's giien in for titEttleb, from which the above figures aro taken. r'rebehly, after all the de Mellon ikent yenta, It would not he ex trav4nnt to act down the number of our cat tic at 6,000,000. The estimate of the value of . our cattle at l'huidollttre per head is ridiculously low. A t least, iu torming a proper Inca of the wealth of our 4ti4e in cattle,it may be'justly said that if the_ .Improved process of cattle tending now being'introduced should reduce the number of cattle; they will grealy increase the value per head:, So .that In putting down for Texas 5.000,000 of cattle now as worth not less than $80,000,000, we arb, In our own opinion, he low the actual truth at the present time, and Ear below what will be the value In a very few years to come. This sum of *60,000,000 is two and a half times more than the officially reported value of all the merchandise to the)itate ; more than twice as much as the value of all the miscella neous property ; two and a half times mote than the merchandise and miscellaneous prop erty put together ; six times ns large as all the reported money on hand or at interest, and larger than all these other sources of wealth put together. rsm Perhaps this is tTut n rough way of sumest• lug the value of the cattle intnrest o: the -tate. It might come nearer the troth to say at o•,c, that this interest is of Incalculable Importene , . How Is it appreciated outside ~f the r•tate may he seen in the contending thou of railroad companies and other wealthy combinations t , control it, saying nothing ot the rivalry which it has created even between eiti , a and Sian B A leading West, rn paper, in calling r , c• nil 3 upon its own city to put forth renewed effort' , to command the cattle trade of Texas, said that the locality whore this was done coild Nell afford to let others have the benefit of the cotton trade of the State. Yet It must be ad mitted that our cotton has attracted a great deal more attention from our Legislatures, our press and our business men generally than our cattle. While we have been nodding over this source of untold wealth, shrewd stockmen have been making use of our resources to build up an immense cattle interest In the ter north west ; and this is already hegining to pour itr Thousands of cattle to market by why of tip railroads which connect them with the Eto'. What Texas needs, in a general way, with re• Bard to this cattle business, le to adopt sum, anti depleting policy—some method which. whi e it will beetow•our catile In the best con dition possible upon the markets, will give th, people of the State as much benefit is possitili from their sale. If we lie still and adopt ro defensive measure, we shall im pine d in th, Position of mere raisers of the rawest material for others to work up, their part of the wort, amounting to less, perhaps, than one-sixth ~, ours, and their part of the profit being flat less than six time's as mach as we are perm a ted to packet.—Houston (Teran,) Union. A FALSE PROPHET There is a tribe of Indians in Nosthwestert. Calitornia devoutly anperstitious in its religi nos ideaS, ardently believing in final resurre c lion and In prophets, particularly when the prophecies are pleasing. They area quiet aie honest people, unused to civilized crimes, mot unacquainted with their punishment. There tore, when the summer of 'O7 a red warrior. pet named "Jim," was sent to prison at Sail Quentin for a small eccentricity in housebreak ing, they failed to understand the arrangemen and innocently supposed that death was the cause of 1.18 long absence. When his term of five years' Imprisonment was ended, this in• genious gentleman returned to his scarcely sorrowing friends, and, finding what impres slob prevailed in regard to him, did his best to confirm It. He had been dead, he said, toui for five years had indulged in all the luxuries of the spirit land ; and more than this, he had been ordered to return with these delightful messages to his people ; that all their departed friends were shortly to appear again In the body ; that the whites were immediately to be turned into stone, and all theiroossession lee to the delectation. Consequen.ly, die pre the t " Jim" observed that they nit do' tualte any further provisions for the fu are. A'l th picturesque announeem uts the Ind an i u. illicitly litoieved, and three nemtlis ago tae stopped all their I•thors, began to tnt kid ev. • licit g they had stored and spend their Unit• in religions dances, end thingsof that sort. Th. prophet declared that in a moidit the s; iii would arrive, and G r four weeks his t,.p.,W. re joyfully lop! up !. sacred pjlkas 1.0.11 tie killing of their tlev-t , It. hit:Wits. At the end of that time the c!isetii bode d not having ap• peered, lie rental ked that it was the harking 111 the dogs which delayed that blessed consum mstlon ; Whereupon all the doge of the tribe were given ofer to dire murder. Still another " moon" went its way with the prophecy on fulfilled, and ibis time the crowing and click ling of the chickens was said the spiritual " Jim" to he the cause of the failure. The re •maining caeklers of the tribe were instantl) put to death. The singing and the dancing continued, but the faith of the. dancers began to waver, and they manifested an intention of malevolently entreating the prophet if, at the close of the third month, the millenium was stiff far off. By this time that precious person Is undoubtedly exhibiting hie glowing genius di some other sphere than that of the Liodpat. Valley. Chapin Chant THE SCAFFOLD; Ereettnon of a Murderer in Brooklyn- Ranging et Hatar adore-lie Faints Upon the avert Jolt BTrt:) i 'TN, Dm': y toted Mettle murder 1 on the 7th of. July las 0118 Morning. On bet and just previous to the no 1 his neck, ho tainted. and d r of the attending priest. The crime for which Ro ers Buffered death was committed under the cowing circum ounces : Rogers and a num rof hie compile- Irma.k all of whom had been ( inking in Neil McGoldrick's bar-room, on N rth First street between Tenth street anti UM n avenue, as ambled on the sidewalk In fro it of McGolti rick's place, and began to sing t t&lakerw Ise •reate a disturbance. It was thee - beta eel, , weivo and one o'clock the Mort:ling. Pre toneto leaving Mai ddriek'S saloon Rogers made the remark that if Officer Donohue came along that way that n ght he would 0 , lay him .dit,7 but uo particult r notice was taken at the time. While the p ty were sin leg Officer Donohue came alo is and told them that would ' nut do, MI it th y wanted to sing they must go inside. Mc dthlck's place, however, was dosed at the ti e. As the officer turned to -nave-Wm , few a club which he h a d o b. tallied from Mrs. McGoldrick, and struck hint on the head with it, felling hint to the pave ment. A witness described the blow as being so poweriul that itturned Donohue complet.dy around! The crowd then fled, h•lt V leg the poor officer weltering in his own blood and in. sensible. Rogers anti the other memi era of the gang were arrested, but Rogers was the only ins tried. The others are row at large. Tills Is the story of the tragedy, In't fly told. -Ereeution of Barney If nods, the Burden, .WASIBMITON, Dec. o.—The execution of Barney Woods, for the murt er or tvmnel (lawman. in August last, link plat 10.111;. The murderer was brought out a. 12:22 I' tool walked tip the seellohl wltluiut au forum. Ile appeared ready to go. It was expected 'hat he wail.) have to be carried up the scaffold, an:! p eparfulons had teen matte, hat to foe surprise la: .all he walked up without a tremor. ^y , t 12:25 the trap HI, his neck 144,,, z Ab v ;ell. The bine cut down at 12:46 P. IV c lif.t..m ad e 140eoll I •Ral.lll on the se. fluid ..iiirriitiamotlffii49efFatErf McDevitt and Wig 'gett officiated. , hi. only t d arty VMS cut anti pullu. 8 me cifflin and talon to the Oiettodio ,Ci Mt , ..y w Id:re tile wife and the tardily ot leo mur doter took the Wif view of the ranting, THE LEHI6II REGISTER ; ALLENTOWN, WEDNESO TIIE 'RESIGNATION •OF JUDGE , ' , NELSON. An Outline of Filly 'Vence Nervlce on The Bench. • Tho house of Judge Nelson. whose retire moist from the bench of the Supreme Court of the t tilted States l a ss just taken 'thee, is in Cooperstown New York, a village charming ly situated at the foot of Otsego lake, where is the beginning of the Susquehanna river, and widely known as the home and burial place of James Fenimore Cooper.. Few rif mons have passed much time hi thhrvillage during Judge Nelson's vacations from official,duty, without observing the verferable man la his familiar movements about the town. .01 middle height, of a ruddy countenance for one of his years, nod with hair noticeable for its whlteness,he is prominent in a community of marked social refinement and general culture for the elegance and dignity of his manners and for the breadth of his learning. His home is one of the prin eipal streets of the village, and outwardly dots nett differ in appearance from that of any prosperous citizen. Inwardly it is a befit. ting abode for a gentleman and a scholar. One of the village newspapers, the Free. man's Journal, wh•ten editor has long he- n In nmstely nequalt.ted with Judge Nelson, con tains an account of the principal events of hie public life. The body of the article is as fol. lows : •'After a service of twentyeight years on the bench of the Supreme Court of the United Stotts, and twenty two years a judicial officer of his native State, Judge Nelson, on thanks giving day, bent to the Secretary of State his resignation as one of the Justices of the Su prem.- Court, and it was accepted on the Ist lustent. ..nd thus closes a most remarkable and highly honorab,e and distinguished judicial er, , savering a period of half a century. As to F Ant of tong• aud canatant service, it Is • riti out preqedtmt in this country or England ni v.e dent tt •rbrtoi-r it bas a !mallet in the to,dcry of jurisptudence Lord Manirfig set red thin y -two years end Lord Eldtiii twen ty.eight y.arr, nod they were longest on the twitch of Orr at Britain ; Chief Justice Mar Thai Wan years On the bench, Chief .111911 Ce Tan thirty years Mr. Justice stor) ihirty lour years, end Chancellor Kent ahou' weedy five years—land of the dist ogu shed judges of th s country they longest held Judi clot p iiillooB. ••Judge :stetson was appointed Judge of the Sixth Circuit. which included Otsego county, in April, 1823, a position vitt ch he held until February 1831, when he was made Assoclatt Justice of tar Supreme Court of the. State til New York, and on the Resignation of Chic] Justice Stange, in 1837, he took his place. It February, 1844, he was elevated to the bench of the Supreme Court of the United States, where he has won the highest honors as a judge of strong common sense, broad views. to, highest sense of honor, and a ready grasp id weighty topics. Judge Nelson reached the advanced age of eighty years on the tenth of last month, and his friends throughout till country will he glint to learn that recent pub ' , shed reports in regard to his feeble health, etc., have no real foundation. Uuder thole% Is6ll he now retires on lull pay—well de served by one who has so faithfully served ht courdry on comparatively small salaries dur inc the space cif five decades. "Although the following letter from Secre• Nary Fish Is of a private cbaracter,it is so just, truly appreciative rind well deserved that w. cave bogged the, privilege of publishing it— knowing full well that the public sentimen win he tiett tlo. Seceetary honors himself it honoring him to whom it was addressed, ant tiro in sp. eking us warmly as he does he out; expo sues the feeling of the judiciary, the ha and the reading public: "WA.IIINGTON, November 30, 1872.—Mg bear Judge : I nave just now received you ever of 28'h, enclosing your resignation resat. Asuncion. Justin- of the Supreme Court, an, cannot allow the formality of ad official cc Know ledgement to go without the expresso of my personal regret toot the time has corm when you feel It your right d. seek the repos. to which an honored course entitles you, one hat it fulls to me to file the paper which is t. .•rminnie your connection with the higher goirt of the country, and to separate yon foie die. administration tit Justice, to which for milt a century you have contributed an amour patient labor, am) learning,and a purity dignity and impartiality which have coin mended the confidence, esteem and admire 'ion of an entire nation, and the acknowledge tout n 1 jurists in other lands. 'I hanks, sty dear judge for your congra'u .ations on the result of die treaty, to whose aegotiation you contrinuted so much learnine and w ii3Ootn. It has had a hard run on both sides of the oceanoince it wee lauuchd on Bth May, 1871—but it seems likely, at last, to vin dicate itself, and to find a quiet resting place in the security and confidence which it gives to two Illations 0' hr.o paptiono it lino cAstined. "May years of tranquil and happy life hr ours, my dear Judge ; and allow me to sub scribe myself, very sincerely, your friend, lisotruroN 'Hon. Sant'l Nelson, Cooperstown, Otse go comity, N. Y. TRE ALDINE FOR DECERBER fl ery'iotl‘ , hto ar. n thn old r'iettire Of th .is.Nive , 7 of pr utin., where la o elderly eel •I, men, will, the anti of the devil (Ilien now an innocent lad.) have taken the first in pr-n.loti Iron' a typo form, and are rap! i IW O 11S OW in. por.ance °rule 074:111 saierh+ in 111011 rn'tnis Fancy the leelings t lett trio could they o'erkap the harries o f , one and wiz, with us npou the sp.emild da L tes hetore us. here are specimens of do n. t. exciiiisfic workmanship in wood in quantity sufficient lor a very p MBE z it volume, nn the most sumptuous piper, yet It k merely one month's oil' rina 01 a Live , Lollar ottruttl , eal ! Let us In inure 110- , ,twier. let count these p , .ttes—Just forty tat , I small, (5110 mg subscribers one cen nest I When it is e..nsitierect t. at in no other puldicadon or shape can so much art no oh eined for many times the amount of the sun ,cription for the whole year,it can be readily understood that we are hut ing our readers common jublice to acquaint theM of Bach an .pportundy and to Impress upon the Ameri• can nubile the plain duty of a cordial and prac pit al support to au maw pries • which reflects credit upon our young country " Can auy !nod thing ,come out of Nazareth 4" i• •here such a thing as art or correct taste in America?" Come and see Among so many it will be impossible for as to totempt even the briefest critical native of the picinres, which collectively form amnia +aperb gallery of art, but we must express .ur admiration of the beautiful picture of the Intent Jesllll, Po timely, so, charming in lie chiloliki. simplicity, and so delicately and del) , rendered—a more fitting subject coeld not have been chosen to open this Christmas vol The other plates are : "A. Street Scene in Cairo," (tint); "The Guide Board," Knee. mg ; "Alwr the Storm," Schenck ; "Christ. Irma Visitors," Guido Hammer ; God's Acre ;" Moose Hunting ;" " Good Bye, -tweet heart," (full page); "The Ornamental," Decker; "Th.- Vertu'," Delker ," "The Death Chase ;" "The Advance in Winter ;" "Keep. House," John S. Davis, (tint) ; "Ye Limpid Springs ani Floods ;" " Then Fare Thee Neil, My Country, Lov'd and Lost," "Pick- O.—Henry Rogers, con• of• MeerJohn Donohue. was executed at 0:40 • led to the mad(' Ise being put around 9pped int.a.the arms ing.and Choosing," Beckmann;' "Caught at Last;" "At Home;' "The Fisherman's F Ity ;" 4 •Here Chick I Chick l" "Sport ;" " • he l'ets;" •:Eojo)ment " " Morning;" "Ow of Doors ;" "Evenit g;' An.Doora ;" tter the Storm, a Calm, ' (four scenes); •'Per the Muster," Off.ere Inger ; "It OlVtimes 11,ppens that a Child ;" "Which in Infancy LAN,. ti ;" "Is the S lace of Ago ;" "An Ar tistic Evening ;" "The Naughty Boy," John S. Davis. (tint). 'The reading matter Is good, es usual, but of course, In this issue,, is overshadowed by the extraordinary pictorial attractions. The vol time of l'he Aldine for 18 . 12 in announced by the publishers as the holiday present, and, we think, when It Is known what a royal book It 1 4 . it will hardly require their additional offer of a beautiful chrome free to crowd them with orders. Send $B.OO to James Sutton CO,. lo,;;ltshers, 58 Maiden Lano, New York, for this bound volume, and secure a galloiy of en gravings dint will be a source of Joy in the . home for many a day. Senator Sumner Preparin lcn Speech. When Sehator Sumner returned from Eu• rope he was advised by his physician to ab. stain front ti,l labor In the Senate, and It was his imentim to do so To this end he asked to bet ace wit from service on any r.f th. Se nate C unetltteee. It seems, however, tbpt ho dt 11. ye,* at levst one sp.ech la dellenee of, Lis bill for erat int the names cf Wales le the ,Tbel,lon Lout Jags aid army records. The bi't will Iti , Itihicked 1 , 3" several leading Sena. tore, cottspeuour , 6111(111g 1111111 t3eneral Logan and Povernor Morton, and Mr, b'utnner in, tends t' show tJat it has teen the einem') ef ostlerscivihzen in All time to duicourege up tar is pe,sible the perptquatiou er the nterapry civil btrites. Adjutant General Davidson, of Terns, wag s chard over a despatch announcing his elec tion I 4-the Stale ta4-nnie 'bat be rePlgord. He was earresp aidinely. depressed Wile.n the des• uteh Was tumid to bo bogus: CIIRIRTMAS IVIYMBE ' , A w r y !fin Feeling-ft TWO WAYS OF DOING A GOOD' DEED. Immediately after the death of the late Gen eral Meade, a few of his frienda resolved that hits large family should;not he uopmvided for, and deteemined to raise a sum sufficient to se cure them a handsome sum in cash, in addi- lion to the comfortable residetice which had been given to the General soon aft. r hie glori on4 work at Gettysburg. It was proposed to raise fifty thousand dollars, bat In a few days t;io subscriptions exceeded one hundred thous and dollars, the income from which, along with the liberal pension hoped for from Con• gross, will be sufficient to enable Mre. Mead uud tier children to live comfortably and free. from all anxiety about money matters. Out: of the most gratifying features of this honor able work is that It was done without any ap. peal to the general public, and without the publication of the names of the donors. This is Philadelphia's mode of doing a gen• erous service to the family of a distinguished and beloved citizen who has suddenly been taken from them by death. It is not, how ever, Now York's mode. There, before the remains of Maraca Greeley were -laid In the grave, an appeal was published for contribu tions to a fund for the support of hie daughters and daily lists of the sums subscribed, with the names of the subscribers are printed in the papers. The beneficiaries of the fund are thus paraded as objects of charity, and the contributors are advertised. the amounts of . . their kindness being measured by the sums placed opposite their names. We cannot but think that the Philadelphia mode of doing.a _nod deed is better than the New Turk mode. f the sum needed to make the daughters of Horace Greeley pecuniarily comfortable for lite is not raised In New 'York, let it be mad.- known, and the deficiency will be supplied here, without any ostentation of Individual benevolence, and without wounding the fee '- toga of the young ladles. Since the above was put In type, we find an article In the New York I Statue, which says• , 11111 the Misses Urealey decline to receive tie proposed fund.—Phitadelphia Bulletin. BUSINESS NOTICES The Peoples .. , tamp of Volue.—The C7on•rnmen ember...sent, width legalize!l the tale Of PLABTATIO' Dirritne, le not the only stump affix. d to that (moo VBIETAIA.II TOMB It bears. in addition to that alias sac l• 0, the STILL MORE VALUABLE IMAM` OP PUBLI , APPRoDATION. This ininitim.ible voucher oft e rare prop -Mrs at a Tonic, CORRECTIVE and ALTERATIVE, to munch i,riler dale than tile Government credential: fu loth , me of nick peaotts hid prooonuced II the ORAN Seaciric OP TUE AOl3 hug hefpre Cowan. thought of tax mg proprietary at• dicinea• It le uneeceseary le r pea to.detall, rho proportlea of thle wouderful Vegetable 1 corset The beet reference Coat can bo offered to lb bode Ore the toll partteniara of Its clrtnes, In the Go sash PUBLIC. Ask those who have tried it as a rem.•dy for dyspepsia, conetopstion, bilionsoess. intericitwo (avow, nervous debility, rheumatism, sea sickness. I,.vr npirlte, or lone of vital power, what Plaolnlloo MU. bee done for them, and be governed by the reepon4e they make to your ,notortes. The Great Pict() lot A linual. —Flostetter's Un Ited Almeolac for 1873. for distribution. yraffs, tb tons h out the United States, and ell civilised countries of the Western Iletniaphere, is now published end ready rot delivery, In tno English, German, French, Norwegian, Swedish, 1101 end, Bohemian and Elpmish lan. [meg< s. and ell who wish to understand th true 011 eo ly of heath should rend and ponder the valuable ear g •stlone It contains. ,u anditi..k la an elltntrable me I tioati.onthe cause-, prevention and