ANNUAL REPORT of Middle Coal Field Poor District , December ill. lSUtt. RECEIPTS. Balance from last report sl2,i d 73 Joe Oormley, Summit Hill, 95 122 18 David Reese, M Chunk twp, 95 101 88 C D Culver. Mauch Chunk, 95 . .. 58 82 C E Foster, East M (.'hunk, 9U -11 II C D Culver. Mauch Chunk, DO D 2 42 .Joe Gormley, Suiumit Hill. tHi 2"> TO David Reese, Mauch Chunk, 9G 11 58 S W Hollar DU VV N Fichter, Banks two, shj 58 8 A A Bachman, Freehold. i7 odd 82 J M Williams, Beaver Meadow, 117.... 129 lo C E Foster, East M Chunk. 97 •_>>■ s C J Crcvelitig, Huzletoii City, 07 61J 49 Jus J Heeney, Lehigh twp, 93 M Juo S Koneuius, M Chunk twp, 97.... 2". 89 C D Culver, Mauch Chunk, I*7 >4O . 0 Jno J Hackett, Banks twp, 07 208 27 W H Reiubold, Jeddo, 1.- W Wm Suiyrl, Summit Hill, 07 122 .1 Thos Kogati, Lunstord, 07 134 35 Juo Potters, Lausanne twp, 07. . 43 uj W E Oberrender. Foster twp, 97 704 .. Patrick Smith, Huzle twp, 07. • 1.022 42 Patrick McKeuua, W Hazleton, 97... 182 22 Frunk P Hoover, Weatherly, 07 34 u*. J M Williams, Beaver Meadow, 08.... I*l on C E Foster, East M Chunk, 08 1,003 40 C J Creveling, Huzletoii City lo,o*o 01 .las J Heeney. Lelngh t wp, 08. Ins 47 Juo S Houciiius. M Chunk twp,08.... 3,'.rJ.> 02 C D Culver, Mauch Chunk, 08 3,311 :$u Jno J Hackett. Banks twp, 08 1,583 40 W 11 Reiubold, Jeddo. 08 250 84 Wra Bmyrl, Summit Hill, 08 3,2.. oo Thos Rogan, Lunstord, tW 3,574 82 Daniel Kline, Freeiuud. 08 1,307 o". Juo Potters. Lausanne twp, 08 41) un W E Oberrender. Foster twp, 08... . 2,502 .. Patrick Smith, Hazlo twp, 08 0,300 30 Patrick MclCenna, W Hazleton,oß.... 05< 08 Maintenance of Mrs 11 Mitchell 85 40 Amanda H inkle 150 00 Sophia Larson 150 ot) Peter O'Brien 40 00 Amanda Roth 08 00 John Sewuck 2 80 Mary Young 28 <;> Joseph Mischel 0 3., Gustav lleuse) 144 UI Fines by Alderman Heidenrich 2 35 Unseated land tax from Luzerne eo.. 1,172 42 Total §02,431 01 John Schwartz, / James Met .'ready [-Directors. Samuel Gangwer,) Attest: C. Fred Kline, secretary. We, the undersigned auditors of the Middle Coal Field Poor District, do certify that we have examined the foregoing accounts, re ceipts and vouchers for the expenditures *;i House expenses mm ; 1 Total $13,875 00 1 Average number of inmates, including stew > aid's department, 192; cost per month, $0912; 1 cost per week, $1.50; cost per day, 21c. 1 George T. Wells, steward, i Ida M. Wells, matron. DIED DURING! THE VHAII. , Sarah Fredrick, Jan ii, aged 02 years. Henry L'rtwine, Jan 10, aged 70 yeurs. , Mrs Meichel, Jun 21, aged si years. Luke McGraw, Jun 25, aged 73 yeurs. , Andrew Fitzpatriek, Jun 27, uged 18 years. Theresa Sinoiil, Feb 14, aged 70 years. , Thomas Thomas, Feb 25, aged 58 years. John Morris, Feb 20, uged 34 veurs. John Seenick, March 10, aged 48 years. Doiniiiick Boyle, April 28, aged 08 years. , Thouiits Thomas, .May 12. aged 78 years. Itose Krinold, May 21, uged 49 years. Noul Boyle, May 28, aged 19 years. Hubert Geipel, June 22, aged 38 years. I Peter Manucliettu, June 23, aged 31 years. Mrs Thomas Wurgo, June 27, aged 23 years. William Brogan, July 2, uged 52 yeurs. Patrick Gallagher, July 14, aged 70 years. ! John Bwautick, July 24, uged 50 years. ■ Peter O'Brien, July 30, agedoß years. George Beitler, August 12, aged 37 years. Andrew Humanick, August 21, uged 15 years Martin Harrison, October is, aged 50 years. Philip Ocher, Nov. 14, aged 79 yeurs. Kate Wena, Nov 14, aged H) years. Mrs L Bell reus, Nov 17, aged 07 years. Patrick Cudden, Dec 5, aged 08 years. ! Guspier Holdig, Dec 12, uged 21 years. ADMITTED DURING THE YEAR. Male adults 07 Female adults 21 Mule children 3 Fcmaietdiildrcn 4 95 | DISCHARGED AND REMOVED. Male adults 14 Female adults 10 Male children 1 Female children 2 57 DIED DURING THE YEAR. ! Male adults 21 1 Female adults 7 ! 28 1N M ATES II KM AIM NG. I Male adults 129 Female adults 05 Male children 3 I i'emulo children 4j 201 I CLASSIFICATION. j Males In hospital BO I I Females in hospital 50 I I Mules In almshouse 43 . Females in almshouse 13 ~WI NAPIER'S BMDIUGGEI His Remarkable Story of Find ing the Large and Fam ous Chunk. IT WEIGHED 146 POUNDS. It Got Him an Introduction to Queen Victoria and Was the Cause of His Ruin. The I>i Mini 11 ien Kneoituterml In (letting It to it I'liice of Safety— Afterward Exhib ited in the Itritirth MUKHUIII— Witt Even tually Sold to the It-ink of England for SftO.OOO. Tlit recent shipment to England of a Klondike nugget valued at $50,000 recalls the famous Napier nugget found in the Australian diggings forty years ago. The front end of Mr. Napier's name is Samuel H. He re sided in Bat hurst, N. B. nearly all his life and was once elected to the Legis lature, but his chief fame rests on the fact that he once upon a time picked up the biggest chunk of gold that ever gladdened the heart of man. "It was in 1854," said Mr. Napier, "that I left this country for Australia on the hark Marco l'olo, which, when condemned was believed to he the oldest sailing craft nlioat. She was no chicken, even in the fifties. I sailed four voyages from Liverpool to Mel bourne, chiefly as purser and second mate, before 1 caught the mining fever. In 1857 1 started for the dig gings and remained there a year and j a half. 1 went to Bendigo first and | then staked a claim at Kingower, I about forty miles from the Bendigo | diggings, on an arm of the Muriui . bedgie called the Loddeu. I had been at Kingower about six months when I I found the celebrated Napier or Blanche Barkel.v nugget. My brother, Charles H. Napier, was in partnership | with me, and our cook and general | handy man about camp was an Eng lishman, 75 years of age, Hubert Am* j hrose. He is dead now. or if he isn't, it's plenty time he was. j The Kingower diggings was a small one compared with the Bendigo, and didn't pan out much at first. It was |on August. 14, at 10 o'clock in the I forenoon, that we made the big strike. We had dug down about fourteen feet ito the pipe-clay stratum and were , shutiling around in the bottom of the .'shaft more dead than alive from the lieat. old Ambrose lit iiis pipe and leaned against the side of the hole for a rest, .lust then I struck something with my pick. 1 tuilicd it up so the light could strike it. and by jiminiuy frost! it was a hunk of gold us big as a hub bard squash! "Well, that minute 1 knew our fort une was made. Old Ambrose got ex cited, and jumped around till 1 thought he'd have the whole diggings down upon us. Charley and 1 Kept cool and covered the* nugget up in the earth and didn't go nigh it for the rest of the day. After night we lugged the beauty to our tent and covered it up in the bedding. About midnight we set to work as quiet as possible with our picks and sunk a shaft down about six ftet underneath the table in the tent and buried the nugget out of sight. For three long mouths it stayed there, with us eating over it. walking over it, sleeping on it and dreaming on it, and not a soul at the diggings any the wiser. Asnbrose used to talk in his sleep, hut we found that a good dose of gin would settle that, and he generally got all he could cleverly stow away. Sometimes we lay awake all night with our guns handy in case we were molested, for there were plenty of tough subjects at the dig gings that would have made short vvor kofus if they had guessed our secret. "Well, about the middle of Novem ber we bought a horse and cart and lit out for Melbourne, having in the meantime dug out our claim and piled up enough of the yellow stuff to carry us to London. It took lis four days and four nights to reach Melbourne, and 1 hardly slept a wink on the way. The nugget was packed up in a rough box with some old clothes, and we told every one we met that we were going to New Zealand. We carried no anus with us for fear of being suspect ed. W hen we reached Melbourne we took private lodgings, and the next morning lugged her ladyship down to the Bank of Victoria and made all the necessary arrangements for shipping I her, and we never saw her again until 1 produced the necessary documents at the Bank of England in London. f course by this time the thing had leaked out, and in no time the city of Melbourne was crazy with excitement. We sold our beauty to the Bank of England for £10.001) sterling, my brother and I dividing the profits equally and pooling in handsomely for old Ambrose. Ilow much did it weigh i The heft of that nugget was Just 14ti pounds I ounces and 3 penny weights, and when it was smelted it was found to be 23% carats tine, con taining only 10 ounces of dross.For some time it was exhibited in the British Museum by permission of the bank, and there is a east of it there now as well as one at Kingston Col lege, Ontario. "While in London we were presented in the Queen. She sent her carryall and a batalion of mounted police to lake the nugget and us to the palace, iWe stopped with her for lunch, and 1 must say she made herself general ily agreeable. I teetered the Prince of Wales on my knee, for he was only a ! kid then, and ho promised to come to Canada to see me, which he did about I'ight years anerwurd. Then I went to Liverpool and got married, and went into the ship chandlery and sail making business, and pretty soon every ounce of that nugget was gone lo kingdom come. Mind you. I got no fault to And with marriage in general, but I didn't seem to strike a pay streak. So then 1 came back to my | old home, and when I got here the hoys took hold in earnest and elected me at the head of the poll by 140 majority. But the nugget was my ruination after all. for I've done noth ing ever since but hunt for gold on ihe Nasliwaak, the Nepisigult and the Nappadoggan. 1 found lots of sigus, hut nothing lo pau out. POKER PLAYED BY A DREAM. The Player Uncertain if Fate Slipped a Cog or if lie Is a Chump. ! "Brown always swore that he wasn't 1 superstitious." said Brown's friend, "but I've seen him twist his second finger around his first when he met a cross-eyed man, and I know he has ' j conscientious scruples against going 1 under a ladder. The fact tnut he oc- ; casionally gets up and circles around I his clialr three times while playing poker may not prove anything, but ; any man who will lay down a good | hand on account of a dream is open j to suspicion, and that's what Brown did. 1 "it seems that Brown dreamed one night of having u tilt with Smith. Smith opened a jackpot, and Brown just hipped him once for luck. He held the eight, nine ten and jack of ' clubs, so lie laid chances of tilling , j either a straight or a flush. Smith i | drew one card—in the dream and I Brown, of course, did likewise. lie , pulled the queen of clubs. Smith j seemed to have bettered, too, and they < had a nice little tilt. When Smith called In* showed an ace full to kings, and Brown woke up just as he was raking in the pile, j "Well, it happened that a few even ings after this Brown and Smith were in the same game, and after a while Brown opened a pot with aces and kings. The rest dropped out. all but j Smith, and lie raised the limit. Brown , made good, and each man drew a j card. Brown got a third ace, and Smith seemed to be pretty well satis- ' lied with his draw. Then Brown re- j membered his dream. He held ex- ; actly the baud that Smith had held in the dream, and he broke out in a cold perspiration. " 'Dreams go by contraries/ he j thought to himself, 'and it's a cinch i that Smith lias got my straight flush/ Tlicy he bet a white chip, and Smith ■ came buck at him with a limit raise. , and the limit was pretty high. That blooming tool Brown hesitated for a minute, and tnen laid down ids hand with a sickly smile. 'Your straight flush beats my ban 1/ he said. 'How diil you know I had a straight flushY | asked Smith, surprised. Then Brown | told about tlie dream, and Smitli laughed tit to kill himself. 'There's \ your dream hand.' he said as he laid it out. The eight, nine, ten. and jack ; of clubs were there all right, but the | fifth card was tne seven of spades. I "Of course Brown swore, but as the matter stands now he doesn't figure j out just where lie's at. Those two hands came so close to the dream that he can't settle it in his mind whether I fate slipped a cog that once or whether lie was a chump. But I know what Smith thinks." The Illeittnl Hohim. For extraordinary, incredible, dia- j bolical wickedness the name of Itosas lias become a proverb in South Ameri ca. It is barely -0 years since lie I died; yet when the people of the River Platte speak of him, we seem to lie hearing of some half-mad Ethiopian Sultan or hero of the "Arabian , Nights"; a (treature of other clay than ordinary men; a being, half devilish, half divine, slavishly worshiped by all, capricious, vindictive, ruthless, slay ing in the dark by some mysterious power his enemies, his refractory slaves, and even those who dreaded and haled in silence; not to be caught unawares: proof against plots, free from ordinary human infirmities; knowing neither fatigue nor fear; violent, too. and fantastic, striking astonishment and a kind of supersti tious dread by his mad freaks, his , dangerous banter, and his fits of sav age generosity or cruelty. Such is the Itosas of popular tradi tion; nor does the picture so drawn seem exaggerated in the light of auth entic records. But Itosas was more than this; he it was who gave the first real, solid government to a young nation which numbers to-day 4,000.000 souls, and has the largest city of the southern hemisphere for its capital. He practically secured internal peace— with brief interrupt ions—to a country torn by incessant revolution and civil war. He was the creator of the j Argentine Confederation- by force, perhaps; but force was the order of the day: and he arose from among a crowd of eaudillos. party chiefs, half soldiers. lialf-brigands. mostly as des potic in spirit, as regardless of law and restraint, as contemptuous of hu man life as ltjsas himself. To him more than to anyone it is due that Argentine is one country instead of containing half a dozen rival and dis cordant republics. Coultlu't .Jnsgte Without Hit* .lag. "Queer thing about jugglers," said an old-time vaudeville manager. "1 had one of the best jugglers in the business uuder my management once, and lie had 110 sooner opened than he started on a highly ornamental spree. He did his work all right, but 1 got tired seeing him wandering around with his jag. and told him 1 would cancel his date at once if he took another drink. He promised to stop, and that night he treated the audience to a few things not on the programme. For instance, a bottle slipped out of his hand and nearly brained the orchestra leader. Then ho dropped a pyramid of glasses and I scattered pieces all over tae parquet. He wound up by letting a cannon ball roll into the footlights and smashed i eight or ten dollars' worth of fancy I iucaudesceuts. \* hen he came off I asked him as a special personal favor to get drunk again and stay drunk for the balance of the engagement. He said he was ready to do anything to oblige, and his subsequent perform ances were superb. Between times he would lie in a stupor on a trunk in his dressing room. Queer people, jug glers." Human Nature la Queer. A Chicago woman waded into the lake chin deep with the,evident in j t ent ion of drowning herself. A young man caught her in the act, leveled n shotgun at her and told her he would blaze away if she did not conic in out of the wet. The bluff went and the young lady waded ashore again. I This reminds one of the ancient story I of a man who sallied forth with a rope to hang himself. While he was tying the rope to a treee he spied a bull making for him and immediately ran for dear life. Human nature is a queer mixture of inconsistencies. inraßNDi The Gun Play of a Bad Mar From Nowhere, and Its Sequel. A BARROOM TRAGEDY. The Stranger's Method of Dealing With a Refusal to Imbibe With Him. Dnslted a Clan* of Whiskey Into III* Op ponenl'ft Kyes and Fulled His Ciun —The Hurteuder Knew His Rusliiess and End ed the IXfHcully With 11 r eat Prompti tude. "Where lie came from or who he was nobody knew. He was not com municative, and nobody was tempted, to ask him. That he was bad all hands who saw him agreed when he rode in through the new town and began drinking in the saloons about old Las Vegas Plaza. You could read it in his burnt reu skin and wide, low cheekbones, and tliln, straight lips and square Jaw. It was just as plain that lie was mean of disposition and bound to get meaner with every drink lie took. He was tall and wiry of build and carried himself like a man who knew what it was to take care of himself in rough places, and it was an ominous sign that while drink brought an ugly gleam into ids eyes, it did not feaze him a bit or make him talkative. It was the winter of 'SO, the year after the Atchison road came to Las Vegas, and toughs and desperadoes and gamblers from every where had flocked o the town, which was the biggest and hottest oil the line of the New Mexico division. "He had been drinking pretty stead ily since 10 o'clock in the morning, and it was about 4 in the afternoon when I stepped iuto the Escudero sa loon. where he was standing at the bar," said Ellis Lyford. sometime of New Mexico, continuing his account of an episode which lie prefaced with the foregoing personal description. "I was new in the country or I might have remarked the circumstance that the saloon was pretty empty for that hour in the day. The bartender, in a white jacket and apron, two cattle men talking business at a tanle in one corner, and the stranger, with his el how on the counter, were the only people there when I entered. I asked the bartender if a friend of mine had been in. and then, before going out. called for a drink. 1 swallowed the whiskey and had turned toward the door when the stranger spoke to me. " 'Have a drink,' lie said. I caught the eye of the bartender, and lie gave mo a look which said 'do away' as plainly as words could hove done. " 'Please excuse me,' I said. "I have just had one.' " 'You're making too much talk.' the stranger said, and turned the bar tender. 'Set out the stuff and a cou ple of glasses. The gentleman,' with a drawling, sarcastic emphasis on the word, is going to do ine the high honor to take a drink with me.' " 'The gentleman says he docs not want to drink,' said tli? bartender, setting before him a whiskey bottle and a glass. "The stranger tilled the glass to the l>riin and. not taking his eyes from mine, pushed it along the counter to wards me. I saw that lie meant to go through witli what he had started to do. It* was his first outbreak since lie had begun drinking in the morn ing, and all the homicidal devil within him, which had been coining to the surface as he turned in the liquor, now had full control. Watching him. 1 was aware that the cattlemen had stopped in their con versation to look, and that the bar tender, a fresli-faced, boyish-looking young fellow, was pulling the bottle toward liim as he wiped the counter with a cloth. " 'So you'll not drink your whiskey,' said the stranger, with an ugly set ting of his jaw and a drawing at the corners of bis thin lips, as I shook my head. 'You'll take it this way. then,' and with a motion as sudden us a cat's lie threw the whiskey into my eyes. As. blinded, smarting and half knock ed off my feet by the shock, I clung helpless to the counter' a crashing sound was in my ears and a noise of the falling of flying glass, then the slain of a chair overturned in the ! corner where the cattlemen were, and the footsteps of men gathering about me. Somebody wiped my eyes with a wet towel and the bartender's voice said: " 'Gome with me. Here, step around a little, this way. Now straight ahead.' "Holding my hand and with one arm arouud me, the bartender was guiding my steps to the back of the saloon. He turned me aside once as we went, but not so quickly but that my foot tripped against something on the floor which I knew to be the body of a man. Then I heard him pouring water into a basin, and he said: 'Now, (lip your eyes in this and keep them there till the doctor comes.' "By the nine the doctor came, which was in a fe*r minutes, the smarting of my eyes was nearly gone, and I could see as well as ever. With my face in the water I had not paid much attention to the comings and goings in the room, but when I lifted my head and looked around I saw a crowd of men standing about a man stretched out on a plank laid across some whis key barrels. It was the stranger who had thrown the liquor in my eyes, and be was us dead as Julius Caesar. A smash in the head with a whiskey bottle had settled him short, and it was the boyish looking bartender who had done the trick. " 'I landed th* bottle none too soon,' the bartender said to me afterward. 'Ho bad his pistol half way out when he went (.own. Why should ho wttita to kill you? Ask me something easier. All I know is, some men get that way when liquor is in them "Tt never to my knowledge was found out who the gentleman from no where was, and. in default of a name, his resting place is unmarked among the illustrious dead who have ceased from warfare and sleep their lust sleep in Boot Hill Cemetery outside the old I town." How to Prolong Life ✓ • No man or woman can hope to live long if the Kidneys, Bladder, or Urinary Organs are diseased. Disorders of that kind should never be neglected. Don't delay in finding out your condition. You can tell as well as a physician. Put some urine in a glass or bottle, and let it stand a day and night. A sediment at the bottom is a sure sign that you have Kidney disease. Other certain signs are pains in the small f of the back—a desire to make water often, especially at night—a scalding sensation in passing it—and if NT, Jj/ urine stains linen there is no doubt that the disease There is a cure for Kidney and Bladder / Diseases. It is Dr. David Kennedy's favorite fifl Remedy. It has been for thirty years, and today, the greatest and bestinedU^e^^^^^ disease very badly; at times f J J /JwMj-J / I was completely prostrat- / I ed; in fact, was so bad that / (/ a day was set for the doc- If] "l ° Ti tors to perform an operation f I |Qi ! upon me. Upon that day I com- / / rH me need the use of Dr. David Kennedy's I ' favorite Remedy, and it was not long before I was entirely cured, and I have had no return of the trouble since. My weight has increased, and I never was so well as lam now. Dr. David Kennedy's favorite Remedy saved my life." favorite Remedy acts directly upon the Kidneys, Liver and Blood. In cases of Nervousness, Dyspepsia, Rheumatism, Ulcers, Old Sores, Blood Poisoning, Bright's Disease and Female Troubles it has made cures after all other treat ments failed. It is sold for SI.OO a bottle at drug stores. A teaspoonful is a dose. CnmnlA D.iiL r -AA | Send your full postoflice address to the DR. DAVID sample OOtllC ITCC ! KKNNRDY CORPORATION, Rondout, N. Y., and mention this paper, and a sample bottle of favorite Remedy will be sent free. Every sufferer can depend upon the genuineness of this offer, and should send at once. RSfpASTORIA w „. , j| For Infants and Children. PiSfBlS |The Kind You Have AVceetablcPrcparationforAs- H . simulating theFoodandßcgula- B ling the Stomachs and Bowels of ®l RgQ. r3 f,}] 0 M . B™™™ I Signal Promotes Digestion, Cheerfu- Jfl 0 / ness and Rest .Contains neither Hp m .Jp Snum, Morphine nor Mineral. |H I) J. /ft f\ fj OT NARCOTIC. ® |l\\tK JtxvKafOIdarSAKVELPnTXKa flj Pian/dcm Seed' \ ftjJZZto- I 9 JLrl __ _ I 1 t"' The ffirmStcd - 1 M U / ft ■ I ■ V m f If! nrl A perfect Remedy for Constipa- || U Fit IV 111 U lion. Sour Stomach, Diarrhoea, || liK Worms,Convutsions.Feverish- HI if W _ II _ a , _ ncssandLoss OF SLEEP. ffl \/ J|j y HTUP facsimile Signature of tj I Always Bought. n R OTA II | S EXACT COPY OF WRAPPER. PP NTF IFFK UJI FF IF LLBLL Dry Goods, Groceries and Provisions. S" u A celebrated brand of XX flour always in stock. Roll Butter and Eggs a Specialty. AMAUDUS OSWALD, N. W. Cor. Centre and Front Sts.. Freeland P. F. McNULTY, FUNERAL DIRECTOR AND EMBALMER. I'linbnliuiiiK of female corpses perfortucd exclusively by Mrs. P. F. McNulty. Prepared to Attend Calls Day or Night. South Centre street, Freeland. frPBBHMP# Best Uuod. Use I DePIERRO - BROS. -CAFE.- Corner of Centre and Front Streets, Freeland, Pa. Finest Whiskies in Stock. Gibson, Donsrhorty, Knufor Club, Koseubhith'B Velvet, of which we h ve EXCLUSIVE SALE IN TOWN. Mumm's Extra Dry ChampaKne, Hennesy Brandy, Blackberry, Ginfl, Wines, Clarets, Cordials, Etc. Imported and Domestic Cigars. OYSTERS IN EVERY STYLE. Uam and Schweitzer Cheese Sandwiches, Sardines, Etc. MEALS - AT - ALL - HOURS. liu Dentine and Hazlcton beer on tap. But,lis. Hot or Cold. 25 Cents. ' Anyone sending a it- t<-h nnd description mnj qnleklv ascertain our opinion free whether an invention In probably patentable. Communion tioriH strict ly confidential. Handbook on Patents sent free. Oldest fluency fomecurtng patenta. Patents taken through Muun A: Co. recclvo i special notice, without charge, In the Scientific American. A liandanmelv Illustrated weekly. I.nrgest elr dilation of ntiy scientific journal. Terms, $3 a I v; 2V ,r months, sl. Bold by all newsdealers. MUNN & ()jl.36lßroadway, New York Branch Office, 025 V St., Washington, D. C. FE,X3srTX3SrGI or every description executed at short notice by the Tribune Company.