Bloomington Progress, Volume 6, Number 42, Bloomington, Monroe County, 12 February 1873 — Page 4
NEWS OFJTHE WEEK. The East. It is announced that Commodore VanilorbUt has abaudoaed his nudergroniut railway project ftt New York A mounment has just been placed in Greenwood Cometory, Xow York, to the memory of the gifted Cary wsterfi. The idea of the monument originated 'with the Into Horace Greeley, who started n subscription paper Congretwman K. B. Boosovclt, of New York, haa pot his nomination for Wont Point up for competition among 1.6CK) scholar in the two public grammar schools in his district Boss Twoed, while reading the evidence af Oakes Antes in the Credit Mobiiier invetttigatien, the other day, said: " Thank God I am not a Congressman. As bad as they say I am. they have never accused me of soiling my vote ae a Senator." George Francis Train has caught fever and agne iu the New York " oniba, but he persists in living on prison fare and repelling all offers of bail. He says he will not quit the prison until the merits of his cause release him The Gilbert Elevated Railway Company, of New York, lias contracted with the New York and Boston Iron Company to build five miles of road, at $1,000,000 per mile. Thi Pennsylvania Senate has instructed, by a vote of 25 to 1, Senators Scott and Cameron to vote against the Postal Telegraph bill when It comes before the United States Senate The trial of Boss Tweed, of New York, resulted in a disagreement of the jnry, who stood 11 for acquittal and 1 for conviction. O. Lot, of Bogton, recently shot his little daughter and then killed himself. Causedomes tic trouble Ben. Butler has written a . sympathetic lettur to Sirs. Woodhull. The West. Trs Mayor of Detroit has been fined $200 by the Recorder fox' violating the small-pox ordinance. Caxt. Jack, the Modoc Chief, recently attacked CoL Berr ard'g camp, and waB repxused. The white settlers are greatly apprehensive of raids by the savages, and many families are leaving. Thb Staati-Zeitung, a daily Gorman Republican paper at St. Louis, has been sold under the Sheriff's hammer for 312, 500... ..Win. Lawn, a sewing-machine agent, was latoly murdered by a Perry county (0.) saloon-keeper, because he refused to pay for a drink of whisky. Jok' J. Imoaju-i, the new Kansas Senator, vice Pomeroy, is a lawyer, a native of Essex county, Mass., and is 38 years old. He resides in Atohiaon Negroes from tho South are being introduced into the coal mines at New Lisbon, Ohio, to supply tho places of the striking white miners. This being the first attempt to solve the difficulty of miners' strikes in this manner, the result in looked upou with considerable interest. Advices from California state that Capt. Tack, the troublesome chief of the Modoc Indians, after having been shelled by United States troops, has been shot and wounded by some of his own treacherous trib-j, who were dissatisfied with his want of vigor in the conduct of the war. It is added that, at his invitation, two officers have gone to hald a big talk with hirn, .Senator Pomeroy, by counsel, appeared before the Judge of the United Statou District Court, at Topeka. Kansas, on the 1st Inst., and gavo bail in $20,000 for his appearance at the Juno term ot the court. A rumor has been prevalent that the fallen Senator is a raving maniac, and that his life is despaired of. ....Three incendiaries were recontlv hung by vigilante at Arrow Rock, Mo Hon. Joel A. Mstteson, ex-Go vemor of Illinois, died at the residence of his son-in-law, B. E. Goodell, iu caiieago, on the 31st ult., aged 65. His death resulted from injuries received more than a year ago by being thrown from his buggy Mrs. Boyce. of Chicago, has been seuteueed to live years' imprisonment in the Illinois Penitentiary for the murder, bv poison, of Calvert Johnson.... Three laborers were killed, the ther day, by the caving of an embankment on the Milwaukee and St. Paul railroad, near Chicago. A lot of Chinamen, at Carson, Nevada, recently .engaged in a fierce encounter with knives and pistols about a woman, in which three were lulled and a number wounded The Liberals of Cincinnati have held a meeting and resolved to organize on the principles of the Cincinnati platform San Franci.ico has had a slight earthquake shock Two murderers were recently hnug by a vigilance committee at Bozeman, Montana. The South. A dikpiccltt recently occurred in Forsyth eounty, Ga., between a number of United Stat Deputy Marshals and citizens charged with rtolatix g the revenue laws, in which seventy-five shots were exchanged. One citizen was killed and two Deputy Marshals were wounded. B. B. Cokovzs, Republican, has been elected United States Senator from Florida. Twentyseven Democrats voted for him C. H. Slscorab, a leading merchiait and one cf the most prominent citizens of New Orleans, is dead, aged 41. He was a Captain in the famous Washington Artillery. CoraonoBz Matthew Foutais Maobt, celebrated for his rat.earcb.CB into the physical geography of the ssa, and for the discovery of many laws of meteorological science, died on the 1st inst., at Lexington, Vs., aged 67. Washington. Thb bill Just passed Congress abolishing the franking privilege makes a clean sweep of the whole system after Jane next. Members ars not even allowed any stamps, as in England, for official correspondence, Thb House Commerce Committee has agreed to the bin relieving goods imported in French bottoms of differential duties While the bill restoring pensions to the soldiers of the war of 18U who resided in the rebellions States during the lata civil war was being considered in the House, the other day, Gen. Ben. Butler made a brief but earnest speech in advocacv of the measure. He said those old veterans should have their dues, even if during the rebellion they were led by circumstances to sympathize with treason, and ended by hoping that the time was near when the New Orleans of 1312 would be remembered and the New Orleans of 1862 forgotten. He wae loudly applauded Bovorai times by the Southern members, who gathered around him, and the Speaker made no attempt to suppress tho demonstration The friend 4 of the Hubbard Postal Telegiaph scheme claim to have scoured a sufficient number of votes in the Senate to guts the bill whenever they can get it up ven if so, it is said that the bill has no chance In the House. It is stated that the President has decided to appoint a commission to treat with the Modoc Indians The President has signed the
act abolishing the frankinir PriviWe. and it
July 1 The House, by an
will ro into cM ant
- - j ..... uuuno, i' , ait almost unanimous vote, has relieved several
vfvwiuvm reoeis oi oisahilitieN, including William A. Graham, of North Carolina ; Tavlor Secretary of the Confederate Navv -, John Forsyth, editor of the Mobile Heghter and Buchanan's Minister to Mexico, and D. C. Dcjarcette, formerly leading member of Congress of Virginia. Bbkatob Scmsjsb'b health continues to improve slowly.... The following is the public debt statement for January : Wiper cent, bonds P,3H,4S,00O Five per cent, bonds. UsVSU7,sw
Total com bonds'....... Lawful money debt Matured debt. Legal tender notes Certiflcatea of deposit Fractional currency Coin certiorates Total without Interest. Total debt Total Interest
tl,75,016,000 $ 10,608,0011 8,533,02 . . 3SS,09H,13H 2B,935,000 6,05T,fm 3t,M,50
...$ 457,337,!'.! ...$2,233,4W,7Ki ...f 27,44H,H8ti
Cash to the Treasury, coin. $ (!3,3i'2.r'H S01"? 7,007,464 Special deposit held for the redemption of certiflcatea of Udpowlt, as prescribed br1. 38,935,000 Total to the Treasury $ 9R,2R,r8 Debt Mas cash to Treasury 2462,fi5H,5l Increase daring the month , 406,243 Bonds tamed to the Pacinc Railroad Companies, interest payablf in hvtvf ul money, prJnc pal outstandltg 64,623.512 00 Interest accrue land not yet p. d 323 1 1 7 00 Interest paid by United States 18,609 m-K) Interest repaid by transportation of smile, etc ..... 4118 432.75 Balance ef interest paid by'nnited ' ' I- 1490,WR.15 Foreign. As unknown British vessel has boon wrecked near Bordeaux, and all oa board lost... The New York BerabTs correspondent lias been interviewing M. Gambetta. The Fronch statesman says that the Republican cause never looked brighter in France The two branches of the French Bourbonu have united thoir force, in order to prasen: but one candidal n for the throne of France in eato the monarchy be restored. Bitv. Adam Bedowice, ths distinguished English geologist, is dead, aged 85 The cable assures us, for the 'Ki9tl. time, that the Carliet insurrection in fipau, is completely crushed The Italian Government has seized sixteen convents in Rome The yellow fever is raging in Rio Janeiro. A KCJfoa comes by the cable that tho diffvr-
e ices between Great Britain and llussia on the Kliivau question are increasing, and that the Governments of Franco, Austria, Italy, Turkey, Pfllllini'k and Sweden have dotortninod to support tho Britii-li Government ill its position . . . King l.nimlilo hits been nnaniiuiinsly elected
Kins or Hawaii nv a popular vote.... The
Til'libornc iliiimant lin e-'.red into rflcog-
nizanco in Iz.OtHi to answer to the t'ouii of
Queen's Bench on a charge of t'-outeutpt, for I
ma speet'ti at jtngiiton rorty-t wo numbers of tho International Society were arretted thu other day in Paris, .. .Pauline Lucca's petition to the Emi-or of Germany for a remittal of the line of ?l,000 against lior for breaking her contract with the Berlin Opera House lin been rejected. . .A numerously attended meeting ot slave owners aiid others was hold at Havana on the evening of the 2ittli ult. Several speeches were nude, in which many different views cf thi slavery quest ion were 'taken, and propositions in favor of its abolitior were advocated. Several planters, hitherto considered uncompromising pro-slavery men, gave expression to very liberal views, to the great astonishment of the audience. Rcskiah feeling is being wrought into a w ar fever by stories of atrocious outrages committed liy the Khivans upon their Russian prisoners. Expeditious are being formed to avenge these wrongs, and the excitement has spread among the nobility, many of w hom have volunteered to accompany the" army. , , .Glasgow is subscribing liberally for a monument to the poet Campbell It is reported that American bankers of London loaned Napoleon 9200.000 to facilitate a roup he Mas meditating, sad that since his death the m niov has been returned to them News from J")r. Livingstono represents his health as much improved. ....The Queen of Spain has given birth to a bouncing boy Thiers refuses to accept tho constitutional project submitted to him by the Committee of Thirty of the Assembly Over 120 Internationalists have been arrentcd in Montmartre, a suburb of Paris. . . Ex-Eiiipross Carlotta, widow of Maximilian, is reported in a dying condition at Dresden Kand'lph Rogers, the American sculptor, has been made a member of tho Roman Academy of St. Luke, tho first citizen of the United States who has received the honor Itnstichnk, a fortified city of Bulgaria, has been the scene of a fierce street riot, in wuich 19 Bulgarians and 10 Greeks were slaughtered. It was tho Spanish steamer Hiiriilo, as was surmised from the first, that ran down tho Northfleet iu tho English Channel, the other dav. She was not damaged in the least by the collision, and has arrived at Cadiz in perfect condition. Lisbon was her real destination, but as her officers and crew on landing there would have been immediately arrested under the extradition law between Great Britain and Portugal, she carried her cargo to a Spanish port. This may enable her officers to escape all punishment for an act of cold-blooded inhumanity oiinal 10 tho worst of those that rendered infamous the Spanish bnccaneors of 300 years ago The Spanish Government has officially notified Minister Sickles that no eteps will be taken to abolish slavery in Cuba until the insurrection in that island has been suppressed. There are, according to the recent census returns, 2(!),000 slaves in the island. The great Vienna Exposition building is completed An incipient resolution in Hayti has been discovered and suppressed, and five of the plotters executed A Btrike among the engineers and firemen of the Portuguese railways has been ended by the interference of the Government, and the striking workmen forced, at the point of the bayonet, to resume their places. .. .The British iwles have been visited by a storm of extraordinary violence. In London, snow fell to a groat depth, and travel was almost wholly suspended. The gale raged with great fun' all around the English and Irish coasts. Many wrecks have already been reported, and there has been a fearful loss of Ufa, especially off Torquay and around the Sicily Islands. General. The additional evidence taken in the Greeley will case, the other day, iudicates that Mr. Greeley was insane cvon before tho election. Bocent deaths : Hubert B. Cranston, an exCongrcssmau from Ithixle Island ; B. W. Norris. lato mombcr of Congrceu from the Third Alabama District ; Luther Tucker, editor of the Cultirator and Country Gentleman, at Albany, The highest rate for telegraphic dispatches from any two points in tho United States is hereafter to bo $2.50 for ton words, insteid of $5. as at present. This regulation mainly applies to dispatches between the Atlantic" and Pacific cities. The rates betweer. Western cities and California have been reduced, but noi in tho same proportion .... The competition between the three trunk railroad hues, selling tickets botween Cincinnati and New l'ork and return, has ended by a compromise, whereby all resume the regular rated. Tickets for the round trip to New York sold as low as 8 before "he compromise was effected The Atlantic Mail Steamship Company (Havana to NewYork) has collapsed, and itR steamers :md other effects are to be sold under the hammer. Epitaph : Died of competition It is proposed to tunnel tho Ohio and Mississippi rivens near their junction, in order to facilitate railway movements. A company for that purpose has been formed, with a capita! of 810,000 00, and has applied to Congress for an t-ct of incorporation Preparations for the celebration of the centennial anniversary of American Independence at Philadelphia have been intrusted to a committee of 300 leading citizens. At a meeting of this committee, the other day, 189,000 were subscribed, making 600.000 promised by Philadelphia for the celebration. The City Council is asked to appropriate $1,000 from the city funds, and subscriptions are invited from every citizen of the United States. Tbebe is an increase in the public debt for the month of January of 400,243 Aspinwoll was visited by a terrific hurricane on the 18th ult., causing the destruction of nearly .1,000,000 worth of property. Satttrdat, Feb. 1. Senate. Not in session. HcrsE. Tli: sub-committee of the select committee on the emid.tten of the Pacific railroad and Credit Mobiiier wa outhnrlTed to take testimony tii Phil-alf-);uliv, w Y'.rk, slid Hoittou A bill waa paired M -eenrc :i more eftictent administration 'f Indian affairs." Firos. J.s. 27. -Union Springs, N. V. ; loss, i20,000 insurance, .flO.OOO Cincinnati, O.-j loss, $35,000 KingBtree, S. (.'.: loss, 450,000; insr ranee, $30,000; Green Ba, Win.; loss, 513.(100. J.i.v. 8. At Springfield, 111. Tho fine residence of it. E. Goodell, known as the Matteson mansion; loss, about $125,000; insured
for $40.0flo Madison. Wis. Vaughn & Son's j
agricultural implement warehouse ; loss, S10,000 Nashville. Tenn. MeCiBa, Murray A Co. s distiiierv ; loss. W,000 ; iusuranco. j 35.-
000 ...Washington City The National 'Theater wai totally destroyed, ami the Imperial Hovel, adjoining, seriously damaged v total loeti, about $140,000. .. .Dubuque, Iowa La Baigo Bro.'ti bakery ; loss, $2.000 Iowa Falls, Iowa St. James Hotel ; loss, $5,000. Jan. 29. At Lancaster, 0. The extensive steam tannery of Martin Evans A Co., involving a loss of $41,000 Three Rivers, Mich.: a number of buildings destroyed; loss, $40,000. Beverly, Mass. Seth Norwood it Co.'e shoe factory was partially burned, t nd a number of workmen were severely injm jd. Jan. 30. At Allegheny City, Pa. Tho Excelsior Coffin Works; loss, $30,000 Clinton, Iowa: loss, $15,000.... Uxbridge, Ontario; loss, $10.000 Now Orleans Thompson's Orescent Sugar Refinery; loss. $200,000 St. Paul. Minn. ; loss about $15,030. Jan. 81. At Jackson, Tenu. Nearly the entire business portion of the town was destroyed, involving a pecuniary loss of e ver $100,000, . . . Qnincy, III.-- A number of tenements were burned, rendering homeless some t;u families. Feb. l.At Northfleld, Vt. Gould fc Son's woolen factory: loss, $100.00 I New York 710 Broadway: loss, $125, M0 Now Jefferson, low a The residence of Alexander Cairns : Mr. Cairns, his brother Henry i antl two little children wore burned to a crisp; supposed to be the work of an inc.endii.ry Woolwich, England -A portion of the Royal Military Academy was destrove d : loss. $250,000. . . .Cohoes, N. Y. The Stark Knitting Mill ; loss, $40,000. Feb. 2. -At Brooklyn, N. Y.--Loss, $30,000. Omaha, Nob. The Pacific Flouring Mills were totally destroyed: loss, .$20,000 Cleveland, O. Tho mill and forge of the Lake Erie Iron Company's Rolling .Mills were burned ; loss heavy. The Credit Mobiiier. A Washington dispatch of the 27th nit. says : Oaken Ames contiiinos to -efrcsh his memory. He spent to-day overhauling his papers, and came across another receipt, signed in full by Senator Patterton for additional dividends received to the date named from Credit Mobiiier stock. This is later than tho receipts exhibited in previous evidence, and is cumulative testimony convicting that Senator of abse.lute falsehood in denying that ho had received n iy dividends, 'fho fact is, his profits fro::-, the stock were ten times what any other Congressmen received. Before the Wilson committe.e ex-Congressman Alley was for a long time on the stand for tho piirpeise of explaining, if possible, w iat became of the $400,00 spent in Washington for the Union Pacific railroad in 1HG4. and $120,000 spent to secure the legislation of 1H71. but. he did net appear to know anvlhing of his own knowledge. Ho tmid that Biu-ant, MeConib
and Bnshuell spent the money here and f claimed that it was a secret matter, though Alley says that from what thejy intimated lie inferred that newspaper men received a good part of it. Still, he was not positive that ho thus understood them distinctly, and had heard the nntno of no- newspaper man mentioned then or since. Diiraut claimed, Allev ! lidded, tlmt he paid Thad. Stevens $80,000 for reporting the act of lStri. but Alley professed j to believe that it vas untrue. Indeed, ttie whole drift of his ovidonco sought to create j the impression that he injlieved that Dmunt j
A- co. pocketed all the money ttiey cinimeti to have spent iu the Washington lobby in 1804 and 1S7I. The cashier of ti e bank where Vice-President Colfax keeps bis account was ordered to appear with his bools before the committee on the 2Sth ult. A Wiuhington dispatch says: It wid be remembered that the check which Ames swears he gave Colfax, payable to 'S. C." or bearer, for $1,200, June'20. 186. was charged to AnieV account the same day as paid, on the privato bonks of tho lorgeant-al-Aruis. Mr. Colfax appeared a second time before the committee and sworo in the most impressive and emp'ratic manner that he had never received this check or the proceeds of it. Tliero were over 100 people in the committee room to-lay when the cashier opened his books to the. pages whore Mr. Colfax's accounts were recorded. There was a perfect hush in the room at the members of tho committee ran over the dates and amounts. M'hen Judge Poland pointed out to the cashier a sum of over $1,900 deposited June 22, 1SBS, and askod the cashier to produce the deposit ticket for it, the stillness became eippressivo, and when the ticket was produced and fomid to be in Mr. Colfax's handwriting, and tho first item entered was bank notes of 61,200, no one spoke or moved or seemed to breathe for a time, which appeared to aU a full minute, and for seve.'al minutes afterward all movements and tones and impressions in the room wore such as are seldom seen or heard or felt except in tho presence of death. Mr. Colfax sti'l insists that ho never bail that check from Ames, and never received its procoods. Ho says ho now remembers that aliotrt that time he received a sum approximating $1,000 from a friond, and lie has telegraphed to-night for details. The genc -a! verdict upon the case of Senator Logan is that he occupies alout the most enviable place of all those who acctnafly had stock carried for thorn, as he never received a single cent advantage upon the transaction, but a very few days alter receiving the check for $325, ilia first surplus due him after the par value of the stock and interest on it were paid, he returned tho money. The most important developments, next to tho matter concerning Mr. Colfax, were in the Wilson committee, ami appeared in tho outset to seriously compromise James F. Wilson, of Iowa, Government Director of the road. A Washington dispatch of the 29th says : "Judge Poland's Credit Mobiiier Investigation Committee was largely attended to-day. it being popularly expected that OBkos Ames would not only exhibit liis original memorandum, but alec le-.ters, receipts ana statements from Congressman which would cause something liko the sensations attending the production of Patterson's letter and Colfax's bank account. But few of tbcsfi documonts were presented, however, those offered being adelitionBl receipts from Patterson, and a statement of figures in Garlknd'e handwriting, wherein the latter makes Ames his debtor for $2,400 on account of bis Credit Mobiiier investment. Robert S. Hale put in an appearance as the attorney of Vice-President Colfax, and proposes, on the behalf of his eliei t, to establish that the $1,200 dopositcd in the First National Bank the day after Ames gave !iim a edieck on tho Sergeant-at-Arms for that amount, was obtained from an entirely diJTorent source. "In the Wilson committee, Joseph B. Stewart, of Washington, who received several hundred thousand dollars in connection with the legislation of 186-1 on tho Union Pacific railroad, was cri .ically examined. He was finally driven to the point as to whether he bad paic'i any newspaper publishers, when he declined to answ er nn the ground of the relations of clients to attorneys : tho fact was reported to the House, which ordered that Stowart bo compelled to answer tomorrow or stand committed. Stowart says to-night that he will go to jail before he will ami. Her. He .distinctly testified over and over that un a dollar was ever paid by him to any Congressmen or newspaper correspondents, but the committee insist that he must tell to whom he did pay it." Horace F. Clark, President of the Union Pacific railroad, wa examineel before the Wrilson committee on tho 30th ult. He showed that he hod never pe rmitted the expenditure of a cttnt to influence the action of Congress. He introduced in evidence letters and dispatches written to him 'ov ono of Gen. Butler's secretaries, which he considered as an attempt to blackmail the company. Tho Poland committeo was devoted principally to hearing an explanation from Hon. Job Stevenson, as to his assertion that J. F. Wilson and Speaker Blaine were connected with tho Dubuque and Sioux City railroad. The Poland ce'mmittee was mainly occupied, o ntho 31st ult., in listening to the revelations of Thomas C. Durant. He showed how the election of the Board of Directors bad been controlled by fictitious subscriptions and legal maneuvers, mider the direction of Cfc. Butler, and threw additional light upon some of Oakes Ames' contracts He said that Gen. Dodge, the Eiigineer-ir.,-Chicf of tho Union Pacific railroad, was a member of Congress and spent his time iu Washington, where, it was asserted, he could do more good than elsewhere. He received a (salary of $10,000 a year, and his wife held 100 Fhare.i tf the Credit Mobiiier stack. Alley took tho stand, and met Mr. Duraut's statements by tho somewhat familiar remark that tho cry of " stop thief " was raised by the thieves themselves. Considerable evidenco was taken by the Wilson committee, but none of it was important except an incidental admission from President Clark, of the Union Pacific railroad, that Gen. Dix, now ( tovonior of New York, received a fee of $50,000, while he was Minister to France during the Johnson Administration, to negotiate a sale of tho Union Pacific bonds. He failed to sell any bonds, but kept the fee handed him. A Washington dispatch of the 1st inst. says: The work of taking evidence has been practically completed by the Foland comnittec, there being no more witnesses to hear e xcept Ames aud Colfax, and the committee have made up their minds that nothing more can bo got from either of them of vital importance to the investigation. Thecommitteeheld a private sesnion this afternoon, and tletermined to proceed elirectly to tho vork of preparing their report. This wiL! take a week or ten days, and in the meantime, Mr. Colfax will have' an opportunity to present any evidence which ho may obtain, and Mr. Ames will ho expected to produce his memorandum book. Whether ho wilt do so is an open question, and if, when he returns, he says that he cannot find his papers, the committeo will not press him. There is mne h speculation and a wide variety Of opinion as to the report of the Poland committee. It is argued by some of tho ablest lawyers in Congress that no charges of bribery have been proved against Oakes Ames, nor
against the men who took stock from him, antl that if such charges were proved, it would be out of the province of the Forty-second Congress to discipline any members for what was elonc during the sess on of the Fortieth Congress. Nevertheless, Judge Poland has openly declared that die committee would not whitewash anybody, and they may perhaps declare Mr. Oakes AraeB unfit to occupy a seat in Congress, and indirectly recommend his expulsion. Tho fe.jling against Ames is so great that he would be expelled in a moment if a decent pretext could be found. C05GRESS IN BRIEF. Monday, Jan. 27. Senate.- Remonstrances against the repeal of the Bankrupt act were received The bill instructing the PostuMfiter-General to C"iitract with the Mediterranean and Oriental Btearnehip Con-pony for carriage Of inntle to Kurope aud to provide for indorHement by the ftovernment of $l;),!XX,l)0 of the bonds of eald company was referred A bill wub introduced appropriating $2,000,000 for the promotion uf education in the Kouthcrn 8!ats....The Kdmunilfl amendment to the Legislative Appropriation bill, directing ihe Secretary of Ihe Treasury to withhold payment to the racilie railroads for transportation of mails, etc., and to apply the amount so due to the payment of Intel est on the bonds issued by the United Htales t the companies was passed, it authorizes the companies to brint; suit in tl.,e Court "f Claims, with light lo appeal to Ihe 8upr..ie Court, the question of legal right to be decided by the courts. Hoi-K. Hill introduced: To refund tile taxes on cotton expo ied ; to enlarge the James river and Kanawha caue.!....A resolution was adopted rerjwethi;? tile several departments (except that of
mate) to inrnin copies ot uie questions put, in ! examinations i: nder the civil service rules, to randi- ! dates for cler!:ships, etc. . . . An amendment to the j Bankrupt act was passed, exempting from JudK- i jneuts against the iunikrupt's effects of whatever j property was exempt from execution by State hiw 1 in force in 1871 The bill aliollshitur tli. franking j
privilege, as a ineuued iy ine senate, was adopted, and wili take effect on the 1st of July. TrjESDAV, Jan. 28. Senate. A motion to appoint a committee to investigate the charges cits ciliated agaliifit the Vice-l'reeident in connet:tioa with the Credit Mobiiier, which was offered at his request, was 1-st, only one Senator, the mover, vnt-
ill in the a!titi:a!lvc The House amendment , to the. V.iil providing for representation of the. t'nited j State:, at the Vienna Exposition was concurred in. ! . . . .The bill to pay Japun for grounds in that ronntry occupied by ""r llovernineiit. for Inispital pur- ! poses, was l ast.ed The amendment to the r'i'is- j lative Appropriation bill, providing that no judg- j inent of the Court of Claims shall lie paid except tn ! Iiersons nhose loyally is proved, was agreed to. i Khcrman': amendment raising the salari-s r.f A:- ! sistaut Secretary, Solicitor, Itegister nd Hupervie- j tag Architect i f the Treasury Department, Ae.'btaut Secretary of the Interior, the fjommifsioner- of ! Patents, of Imliaii Allaire, of Commerce, of A;,rt- i eultnre, of Pensions, ano of the eieiiernl l,.-:nd i Office, Auditor of the Treasury and Assistant 1A- ' master-General, and of the Ruperintetideiit of the Money Order Department, and forelcn Mail.-, to : $4, (ton each pel year, was adopted. An amendment ' to raise the salaries of Congressmen to $7,OH0 wae tallied. : Htd'sr. Th i'e.;'sion was mainly occupied iu d.-- j bate on the bill for the admission of Colorado.whieh ; did not Ciime to a vole.
Wkiiskhoav, Jan. 20. -Kknatk. A motion to reconsider Sherman's tuienduieiit to the I.:'gi"-
lative Appropriation bill, Increasing the salarM "t '
Assistant Heeretariefl, etc., was lost. A motion to ! strike out of the bill $10,01)0 appropriated for extra ! clerks was agreed to. An amend'fnent for :C(tue(ao t the force In the Postofnco was agreed to. liorsK. Tho bill for the admission of Colorado wan laid on the table by a vote of 107 to til. In the j
i'lorida contested election case the committee reported that.XIblaek wan entitled to the seat. The report was agreed to. ... A report watt received front ihe Credit Mobiiier Committee that J. II. Stewart, of Washington, refused to nnswt r questions put, o i the ground that the answers would call out ronfdential communications Itctwern counsel and (ilea: which were privileged. The committer moted frr an order that the Sergeant-at-Arms take Stewart into custody, subject to further enter of the House. An amendment to have .Stewart brought forthwith before the House to show cause why he should :nt be committed to answer for contempt was agrec'd to, and the resolution as amended adopted. THimsnAV, Jan. 90. Henate. The bill exempting mineral lands in Michigan, Wisconsin and Minnesota fr nil the operation of the act to prmote the mineral resources of the United Htatea -ifv passed Morrill's amendment to the legislative Appropriation act, prohibiting payment, tiniest let specia: act of Congress, of Judgments of the Or url of Claims to claimants whose loyalty during the rebellion had not leen proves! was reconsidered ? the Morrit! amendment was then ajrreed to, and the Legislative Appropriation bill passed. Hot'SK. A bill restoring to the pension rolls the names of soldiers of the war of 1H1 2, stricken e,f because of their aiding the reliellion, was jwiesed, Stewart, the witness before the Credit Moodier Committee who refused to answer questions, wa brought to the bar by the Sergeaut-at-Arms ami heard in defense. He claimed his privilege an counsel exempted him from obligation to aiurrei. A resolution was then adopted that his answer was insufficient, and that he tie con ddered in contempt , A resolution was offered providing for the retentin i of Stewart in custody of the Sergeant-at-Arms unt il he shall have appeared before the committee an.l answered all proper questions. A substitute ordering him to tie committed to ttie jail of Ihe District and hept in close confinement until released by purging himself of his contempt by answering tie question or by order of the House was rejected, antl the original rcsoluti'in was adopted. FninAV. Jan. 31. Senate. A bill was introduced authorizing the Northern Pacific railroad to bridge the Rt, Iuils river. . ..Harlan introdnc, d a Joint resolution proposing a constitutional amend nient for the election of Heitators by direct vole of the people. .. .The bill for a subsidy for Weill's Australian line of steamship was discues-jd, but iio action was taken on it A. message was received from the President vetoing the bill for tho relief .if the. University of East Tennessee. TTotsi.. The whole session was oceupfctl in dlsposing of private bills. FARM AND HOUSEHOLD. Hints for the Housewife Honey Pm-rr Cake. Four eggs, five cups Hour, two pups honey, one enp sweet, milk, two tenspoonfuls crenm of tartar, out! spoonful soda, one pound of roistns mid currants, quarter pound citron, one teaspoouful each of ckws, cinnamon and nutmeg ; bake in a large loaf in a slow oven. This will be nice months after baking. Rkmkdy fob Haib Pam.ivo Out. Wash the hair twice a week with castile soapsuds, then rinse thoroughly in tepid water. Ue no pressing for the hitir whtitever. The same remedy is also used as a preventive of dandruff. Aa the scalp is cleansed, the hair soon grows rapidly, and yon are well repaid for your tremble in seeing the fine new hair starting. Vegetable Soup. An excellent scup can be made by putting a cupful of lima beans, a cupful of sliced potatoes, t.ntl five sliced carrots inte one pint of mi ik ; pepper and salt to taste. Simmer it for eme hour and a half. Before serving, blend a teaspoouful of flour in half a enp of milk ; bring tho soup to a boil, antl slowly stir in the thickened milk, until the soup becomes smooth. Correct Way to Sweep a Carpet. There are three ways to sweep a carpet ono right antl two wrong ways. One wrong way is to holel the broom nearly in front of the operator, with the handle inclined backward toward him, then press down as a forward thrnst is given, thus throwing the heaviest flirt half way across the room, while the light particles are sent whirling about, covering, as they settle, every article of fnrrtitare. Another wrong way to sweep a carpet is to move the broom forward with a heavy, drawing stroke, by which the material tx be removed is pressed into the carpet rather than worked gently along on the surface. If either of tbene wrong ways is adopted, the broom will wear out the carpet more than it in worn by the occupants of the dwelling. When a sweeper collects a dust-pan full of the nap of the carpet every, time it is swept, a new one will soon be required. Cabbaoe Soup. Take a large cabbage, three carrots, twei onions, five slices lean bacon, salt and pepper to taste, two quarts of medium stock. Scald the cabbage, cut it up, and drain it. Line the stew pan with the button, put in the cabbage, carrots and onion? . Moisten with skimmings from the stock. Simmer very gently till the cabbage is tender. Add the stock, stew softly for half an hour, and carefully skim off every particle of fat. Season aud serve. It takes one hour and a half to cook. This is a splendid sonp for cool weather, and this quantity is sufficient for eight persons. Bf)n,p,D Chicken. Plain, artless boiling are apt to produce a yellowish, slimylooking chicken. Before cooking, the bird should always be washed in tepid water and lemon juice, and to insnre whiteness, delicacy and succulence, shonhl be boiled in a paste made of flour r d water, and after being put in the boiling water, should be allowed to ftim mer slowly. This method is veiy effectual in preserving all the juices of thtt fowl, and the result is for more toothsome and nourishing than the luckless bird which has been " gallord to deutli " in plain boiling water. M utton is also much bettor for being boiled in paste.
The Greeley Monument, As a member of tho Greeley Monument Association, I respectfully request the press and the people of tile Northwest to senel to me such sums as they may wish to contribute to that object. It would be best to send the money by check on some Chicago bank, by Peratoffice order, or draft on New York. All sneh sums reeeivetl will be aeknow'ieelged in the newspapers of Chicago. It is hoped that every newspaper will contribute seimething, and that somo one who honors the name of Mr. Greeley will take np a collection be it ever small in every town and city in the Northwest, and forward the amount as soo:u as possible". Probably no man ever contributed so much te the settlement and the prosperity of the Northwest as Mr. Greeley. Her people will be glad tei contribute their full proportion to honor his memory. Address Wm. Buoss, Tribune Office, Chicago, 111. .Tan. 25, 1873. Northwestern papers please copy. WoNiiEitFiTf. Statements. Unless hundreds of our most responsible citizens have conspireel tei delude ti e community, a medicine has at last been introduced which is a specific for almeist every human ailment, not involving the entire paralyzution or partial desi.niction of the organ or organs in which i; exists. These witnesses testify (in some instances from their own personal experience, in others on behalf of others) that dyspepsia, liver complaint, remittent and intermittent fever, nervons debility, and numberless other diseases, are rapidly and radically cured by this new remeely. It hails from California, and lias in two years overleaped all competitors among advertised tejmicK, and
become per t'xvrUrncc tho m':di inr of
(hr )roplc. (Jamomia is nn exceptional region. Its vegetable proelucls, especially those of a medicinal nature, have no equivalent elsewhere, and it is from the choicest of these that Dr. J. Walker prepares his famous alcohollces 'ViNEeuR Bittkrs, the invaluable invigorant, nutrient, laxative and alterative lo which we refer. Those who have tested the curative properties of this marvelous preparation pronounce it the most comprehensive remedy ever eiffered tei mankind, and assert that there is no inorganic disease which it will not sulnlne. Am a family medicine, we can recommend it without reserve. Com. BA.Nf.itorr is wandering in the direction of the Pyramids, gathering material for a forthcjomiiig book.
TIIK ;HOST OF BCCKUS'ti MllLli. Sr Et'ORNK 3. HAM.. Illustrated by O. I. Hopkins.) Bay, stranger, where are yer travolitl' til, An' what is yer bizness, hry 1 If youH joet hold on, I'll ride with yon, lr yer o:n' down my way. Iz the old nrjiy boss yer driviu' yourn ? Itev yer bin' in these parts afore? Be you the feller that Hiram franc See over to ComsbH'k's store ? No? Wal, that's curls. N"v how did it romu That yer hapjieiied this way tu steer? Hev yer strayed away from hum to-day, Or got relations here? Ho yer don't know nnthin' about theae parts? That's n'.iier enough to kill. Hain't yer never lu-erd o' Moses t'ole An' the Cliost o' lluc.klia's Mill 1 Moses Cole, that's me, yer know, I've alius lived rife here : Pad's lieen a llvin' on bin old farm A goin on fifty year. The fact is, slraiiRer, the t'other nlht I was over tu Oosiien Gate With slot of the fellers, a loatlll round, Till it got to be kind o' late. An' when I started tu travel hum 'Twas mitey dark and still, An' 1 felt uncommonly lonesome down In the holler by Hucklin's Mill. I sind alone on the old stun bridge, A leanin' agin the rail. While the tr.oonilto streakii!' throti-h it e clouds Ixioked tarnally queer aiid pale. I heerd a miKhtey uncommon sound Kite overhead in ttie air ; An' tile holler round seemed Uted up Wttb a Bert of ghostly glare.
I started np like a frightened pup, An' I tumbled over a lop, An the b.alr on my head Jest riz rite up Like the brusfs:-la on a hog. But I hopped to my feet aud f cut and run Like thunder e ver the hill, An' told the nabnrs what I hael heerd In the holler by Bucklin's Mill.
We puttered around till mornin cum. An' we all we :it over there. To find out je.d what the critter was That heft give me stcli a scare. . An', stranirer, what d'ye think we saw When we got down the hill? The water was rushiu' through file flume, Au' everything else was still.
An' Jest rite over the old stun bridge There sot on an old dead tre?e, A w-allopin ixrpat hoot --wl that kept A wiukin his eyes on me. An' stranger, IVe Jest made up my miud, I reckon I'n nearly riffht, That ghosts don't travel around the world A searin' f lks in the night.
Villi
WEEKLY SUN.
Only $1 a Year. 8 Pages. The Kest Family PAritn. Tho Weekly N. Y. Sun. 8pa;;;s. flavour. Bend year Dollar. The IiKST Ati ue rbTC'-iAj. Patch. Tho Weekly N. Y. Stm. 8 pages. 1 a vear. 8emi vour Io!hir. The Hest j'oijTieiAL rAPEn. The WeeMy N. Y. 8m . Independent antl Faithful. Against Pn lic Plunder. 8 pages. 1 a year. Send your Dollar. The Kest ItEwsPArr.R. Tins Weekly N. YSun. 8 par; es. si a year. Henei your Dollar. Has Au. Tin News. -The Weekly New York Sun. 8 pages, lylaycar. Send your Dollar. TnE IIest S ronY P.vrER. Tho Weekly N. Y. Hun. 8 paf es. el a year. Keud your Dollar. The Best Fashion II Ernr.Ts : n the Weekly N.Y. Kim. Spajcs. 61 a year. Send your Dollar. The Best JIi.bket Heforts : n the Weekly N.Y. Sun. 8 paces. SI a year. Send your Dollar. The Best Cattle IiI Pobts In tho Weekly N. Y. Bun. 8pai:c.H. 1 a year. Send your Dollar. The Best Pa mm in livery lte:ipect.-The Weekly N.Y.Sun. 8page!. ?1 a year. Send your Dollar. Address THE St'N. New York City. Thb Latest Slawo "Phbahk When tho Parisian b 'hoy of ths period desires a perstm U:. keep still he says : " Put an ox on yotr tongue." l'his is the most recent "addition to the slang of the Fronch ca pital, and it is said to have achievetl greate'r perpttlarity than our "JDry up," or " Simmor down," of a decade or two ago. Thu theory of the phrase is not exactly obvious SHch is often the rase with slang ; but it must be admitted that a man with an ox on his tongue would find i" rather difficult to vociferate. We noticed in one of our exchanges this week the statcmont of Dea. John Hopkins, of Sor.tli Jefferson, lie., whose son was cured of incipient consumption by the use of John.ion's .-tnexfine' lAnmrnt. We refer to thin at thin rime as tending to corroborate the statement re made last week in relation to this Liniment an applied to consumption. Com. Pattest " Doctor, I huve a terrible eongli. and my children arc all down Bick with coughs, sore throats and colds. What shall we do? DeicTOK "Take Dr. liausom's Hive Syrup and Folii, or Houoj Kyrvtn. This will very soon relieve and cure yon anil all tho children. It io an excellent family medioiii". Full directions ore on the bottltM. Yon can got it at any drug store feir thirl y-!ivo cents." Com. Chatted Hands, fate, rough skin, pimples, rii .gworm, salt-rheum, and other cutaneous affections cured, and the skin made soft andsmootl ., by uning tho ItrNirER Tau Soap, made by Caswell, Hazard ft Oo., New York. Bo certain o get the Juniper Tar Soap, made by um, as tl ore, are many imitations made with common tar which are worthless. Com. It malum nil the difference if you put Dr. before instead of after a man's name. Wha r Nr.vr ? Thix favorite jtivonilo magazine in qiiito a wonder in its way. It gives 108 largo pngen nf excellent reading, anil a SI. 00 Chrome, 10x13 iuoluM. mounted for framing, to every snlwcriber, all fhr only 11(1 cents a year. Knougli, c.irtainly, for tlm price. The l'c'irnary uumlie-r, just received, is a real gem, ivery way. Spei imen 3 emits. John B. Allien. Publisher, Chicago, 111. If Covi.kkss hael en-ployed as much scientific i kill in the arrangement of its " llocontrm ti.in Policy " at. tlie close, as the War Department did in the beginning of the war, in arranging fur (lie lliiuitl fiicturc of what was called Still-titan's 'Vrrar t'omtititm Porrtlpr, for the tiee of the f lavalry horses, no doubt the l'nioii wo lid have been' restored long ago. Jixctuing? NTEOT,i:e-rF.ii Cottons and CoT.ns. Few are aware of the importance of checking a Cough or ' Common Cold," in its first stage : that whie :i in the beginning would yield to " Brown's BiioNcnui, Tboi.ues," if noglocted, often wotks upon the lnng.--Com.
Polnoiied to Death. A healthy liver socretos each day ahont two and a half "pounds of bile, which contains a groat amount of waste material taken from the blood. When the iivor becomes torpid and congested, it fails to eliminato thiB vast amount of noxious substance, which, therefore, remains to poinon the hlnod and ho conveyed to every part of tho system. What must be the condition of tho blood when it is receiving and and retaining aoch day two and a half pounds eif poison i Nature trios to work off thin poiHou ilirongh other channels and organs the kidneys, lungs, skin, et. ; hut tliene organs hecomo overtaxed in performing this labor in addition to their natural functions, ami cannot long withstand the pressure, but become variously diseased. The brain, which is tho great electrical center of all vitality, is miduly stimulated by the unhealthy blond which passes to it from the heart, and it fads to perform its office healthfully. Hence the symptoms o? bile poisoning, which are dullness, headache, incapacity to keep tho mind on any snbject, impairment of memory, dizzy, sleopy or nervous feelings, gloomy forebodings and irritability of temper. Tho hl'ootl itself being diseased, as "it forms the sweat upon the surface of the skin, is ho irritating and poisonous that it produces discolored brown spots, pimples, blotches and other eruptions, sores, boils, carbuncles and scrofulous tumors. The stomach, bowels, and other organs spoken of, cannot escape becoming affected, sooner or later, anel costiveuess, piles, dropHy, dyspepsia, diarrhea, female weakness, and many "otlMr forms of chronic disease, are among the neoeseary results. As a remedy for all those manifestations of disease, Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery is positively uuequaled. By it tho liver and stomach are changed to an active aud healthy Btate, the appetite regulated and restored, the blood and secretions thoroughly purified and enrieheel, and the whola Hyuteni renovated aud built np new. Sold by all first-class Druggists. 626 OtrrTiER's. Vegetable Pulmonary Balsam " Doubtless the beat Cough Medicine in tho world." Com. The Markets. NEW YORK. Beeves Good to Prime !2J 14 Common 9 10 Hons Dressed 5J(S 6j Cottok Middling Ui land Flour Superfine Western. .... 6 85 S 7 00 Wheat No. 2 Milwaukee 1 70 S 1 72 Corn 6t 67
Oats 53 57 Pobk Mesa 14 25 14 871 Labd &i 8 CHICAGO. Beeves Choice 5 75 6 00 Good 5 25 5 75 Medium 4 25 5 00 Common 3 00 3 75 Inferior 1 75 2 25 Hoos 3 80(3425 Flour White Winter Extra. .. . 7 60 10 75 Red Winter Eitra 6 60 7 50 Wheat No. 1 Spring 1 31 1 32 No. 2 Spring 1 25 (a 1 261 No. 8 Spring 1 111 1 12 Cork No. 2 SO 81 Oats No. 2 25J3 27 Rye No. 2 68 68i Bablet No. 2 79 80 Bctteb Choice 23 26 Eons Fresh 34 35 Pore Moss 12 00 Labd 7 25 7 SO ST. LODIS. Wheat No. 2 Sprirg 1 35 1 Sti Corn No. 2 Mixed ; 32 82 Oats 29 80 Pork Mess 12 50 Hoos 8 80 4 25 Cattle 3 25 3 75 CINCINNATI. Flocr 8 25 8 50 Wheat 1 76 1 80 Cobs 40 8 41 Rye 86 (S 88 Pork Mess 12 75 -913 00 Lard 7 8 Hoos 4 60 4 70 3III.WAUKEE. Wheat No. 1 133(S) No. 2 1 2S (S .. Oats No. 2 26 5) .. Cons No. 2 86 87 Rye No. 1 70 .. Barley No. 2 87 CLEVELAND. Wheat No. 1 1 75 5 .. No. 2. 1 70 Cor- 45 46 Oats 87 89 TOLEDO. Wheat No. 1 Red 1 80J 1 82 No. 2 Red 1 78 $ 1 78 Cobn 38 89 Oats 34 59 Can any aiedlclne do More 1 The art of changtig the base metals Into gold haa sot been discovored, bat the happy retnlta of a discovery infinitely more important are familiar to tho community, and have been so for the paat twoaty yeara. T exchange debility for vigor, aicknussfor bctlth, apathy for energy, gloom for clicorfnlnesi, is a much more desirable operation than to tranamute lead into tho root of all evil. And ':liis ia what ' Iob tetter's stomach Bitten accomplish, and have been accomplishing dally, ever ainco their introduction. Dyapcpaia, oilionaceaa, servciua affectiona, constipation, intermittent fevers, rheumatism, sick headache and general debilit j arc so longer Ihe bug-bears that they were a fifth of a century agx The Bitters, taken aa a protective medicine, provent them, and taken as a remedy enrea them, and the people know It Hense their overshadowing reputation and enormous sale. The fame of tho groat vegetable specific is ever on the march, and at a pace that no competitor ctin live. It is to-day the foremost medicine of Itsciiasia tho cinliaed world. Every now and then attempts arc made to rival It, and sometimes a nostrum concoct d In tho Idle hope of sharing ita popularity, haa a brief spurt of apparent euccoaa. But tt is all Illusion. One by one they sink like stones In the sea, while the great tonic, whose celebrity haa beon the caaao of theao blind ventures, continues to ride on the topmost wave of public favor, unapproached and unapproachable. Owe Cold aster akotheb will, with many oosstitutions, secure' establish the weds of Consumption in the system. Those in need of a remedy will find Dr. Jayne'8 Expectorant always prompt, thorough and efficacious. Greatest Success Evef Known 1
of lorrsosr & co.'S OEMS of STRAUSS v vow oostais: Telegraph, Academic, Publisher, Contortion, liOOI Nlghti, Burgerstnn, Manhattan, Royal Bongs, Vienna Woods, .Vbw Vienna, illustration, German Hearts, Blue Danube, Artist's Life, Love A Pleasure, Marriage Bells, Wine, Women Life Let us CherWiener Vreslton. and Song, Ish Waltzes, And 30 other ef his Best Waltzes. Pizzicato Polka. Clear the Track Oalop, Tritwh-Trltsch; One Hoart, Ono Soul, Fata Morgana, Mazurka, Lobder Pr uen, Mazarka, Belle H.'lnuo, Ouudrtllo, Orpbeua, Quadrille. And 20 other l'olkaa, Masnrkas and Quadrilles. " Embellished with a flue portrait of Btrausi, and filling 2S0 largo music poReatt la a musical gem tiMiisponstble to ill lovers of Strauss's dancet music." Eve itiff Uf u if. Price. 2.a in board covers; (3.00 tn cloth; IH.0O In gilt-' Bold by nil Hook and nnalo Dealera. Now Ready, Straues Danoe Xuslo tot Violin and l'iano, gl. Pulillhried by Oliver Piteon Co Eos teas. Largest Organ EstailiSuiBEt in the World 7 Extensive Factorlea. J. ESTELY & COMPANY, Brattloboro, Tt, V. 8. A. THE CELEBRATED
O. S. 2781
Tbo latest and best improvements. BTerj-thin tbftt 1b iipvf nd noveL The leading improTuroents tn Organs werv Introduced first iu this fltftabUsbmnt' Esstabliesfred 1846. Send for Illustrated Catalogue. llJflRSONS wUhinfr Cot th pond ohta saa Jt cents find imp tu A. L., Huston.
Write for lurne Illustrated DtfftjnivPitce Lis to
GREAT WBTERN
1
sJrfWOh
PITTSBURGH, PA.
Double, Single, Muzzle arul llteech-Loadtnf Rifles, Shot Guns, Hovolrers, Pistols, etr., of every kind, for :.non or boys, at very low prices. Onus, 93 to SSXjl'lstoln, jil to $26.
(tot Uin Hick Ifofitlicho nnil Neurnlpia? Talio Ir. Miller'a Magnetic Ilalm and get null, tt will enre aa if bv Magic. Only 25 eta. per br.ttln. rice ailtnrtii-oiiiciit. in thin papor. Com. A f.Aiiv wiitt'H : "Jnover knew nny one to pcaU iiipnniKi!iKly of tho " QtioonH Tii'if," fur the f 'omplexicii, who hail (riven it a lair trii.l. EnerytHHly tA '-s it. f!oin. Tub J'jImwofHl (!llnr is ileoiilwlly tho hcM ever worn. Kvory one that tricn it likes) iljtixt will wear no other. - Com.
. Oven Medical Book
Hevrvtaror KtfwttostfcCtenta, Sent frcn for 2 BtamM. Aftrirem
lr. BoiiavfMarte fc Co., Clneltusstil. X
-UK tn K9D oraayt Agontswantodl All classes ptl WJ q0U f working people of otthor sex, ? Along or old, make mora money at work for us In heir spar" moments or all the timo than at anything .-Inc. P&rticulars free. Address O. tStinson 4 Co., Purl) "I , MttlnO;
V.l'ISERS, AtJENTS and all who desire a profitable business will do weli to nend Htitmfi for onr Catalogue and
rru s Lisu'ioriirwj popu iar woiinica nn Port cl Maps. Address CHICAGO BOOK
Agl'.NCY. C liicago, I "mFJj- ' Tiik O'nKAT WoNnElt. The New England Carpet Co., establUhdrt over a fluartcrnf a century ago, bavtng expec-'led much ttma, talent and money ti produce a sty ilnh and durable enrpet at a low price, after yenisoicxiierlmeiitliigwlth Ihe best artisans have lironjttit out a carpet which they have nnmrd and mill lie known as UK KM AN TAPESTRY. lieiiiK exact Imitation of Bnlid Brussels, the first thoutiaiitl pieces of which, in orCor toslntroduce them, will lie mild for 37 1-2 cents pes yard. Sample sent by mail 'ju receipt of 10 cents, or 6 different patterns liO cc its. HEW ENGLAND OAHFET 00., 373 Washington Street, Beaton, Mass.
HAW
UXU1
Dr. A. H. SMITH'S CELEBRATED Old Style Bitters! The Bi-t Tonic and Ilenltb SI TOT f tho Acre- Tho Famoai BIsmsI Furiller sal In vigor atstr.
A DcciiH Improvement upon ibt leficiw era PrpateatalbfWriai rUMLTTEGETABLZ. Having heen tltfironr.li y and well tried the piPpriekorshuvc no hcr 'tniicy In raying that no prepataaton mas ever pi von rnrh nnlreral aatistsutlea as the OLD ETYLE BITTT.Z3. A I who have used tbem once will take no other. Thtyaro pleasant to the taste anal contain more Medicinal properties than any other Bit. teramade. Fcr Hyiciaia of all kinds and far liver Complaint, Biliousness, Jaundice, an I all ktodiad diseascs, we defy the world tu produce a preparation equal to this. For Catarrh. loss of Appetite, and Foreran Agno, the Old Stylo Hitlers are unrivalled. Tbeyere especially adapted for l emales, and contain nocntaf that tain the least inj irious to the weakest physical frame. They will bnild up and inrigoate the weak and dsbilitated. Tho ladies cannot, find a Tonic en pcricr to Old Stylo Bitters. Let all Ihe afflicted give them a fair trial. FOB SALE BY ALL DRUGGISTS. UNION MEDICINE CO.. BOLB PROPRIETORS.
VAN 8CHA ACK. STEVKUSON A REID, Chicago, IU., MEYER BROS. 4 CO. St. Louis, Mo., McKKSSOX at BOBBINS, New York, Wkouisals Aoznts.
1,000
REWARD For any ear of BUnd, BleedinK. Itch . ng or Ulcerated riles ti tt XlzBroo's Frui RaxLT foils to cure. It is prepared expressly to csre the siles, and no'hlngelst. 8old hy allDnujiciats. f rice 1 1.00.
FOSTER'S ROSIN CEMENT Unsurpassed for Paving Streets, Walks and Roofing Buildings. Wears thirty years. Y'. C. F06TER,.Bugqlo, ItTT.
To Hook Cat vassers A New " Jwa. W4y ( f ramulia; il. BOOK. BfCan sell a thousand copies per week. Address Union Fuiilisiiixu Oo, Sts Wtiiash Ave, Chicago.
Dr. Coi'a Hive tCronB) Strap hasbeen known aud na (1 by Ihe medical profemiofc over 100 years, and as a remedy for Colds and Coughs has an older and bitter reputation than any other Cough medicine ever offered to the gahllc. It is known a the Compound Sympof qnills, and a form la may be found in every medical dinpeneatorv. Hr. Bansom'a Hive Syrop ajaea Tola, in addition to the ingredient for Cox's Hive Syrnp. contain Balsam of Tola, decoction of Sko.nk Cabbage Rocl and Lobelia, a combination that mast commend it to e rry one u a noperior reirndy for Croup, Whooafntr Costsrbj Asthma, Bronchitis, Cooeha suad Colda, indeed for all aflections of the Throat and Luting where a Cough Medicine is necessary. Thla Syrup la Carefully Prepares! under the personal directum of a regular Physi. clan of ever twenty years' practice, whose signature ia attached to t'nc directions on the bottle. Its taste la vury pleatamnt and chUdrea likeitEverr family should keep it as a ready rem.-uy for Croup, Colds, etc., among the children. D. Rastbox, So;t & Co., Prapr'a. Bofiolo, N. T. DR. tl. R. MILLER'S lnrivsaaAi, MAGNETIC BALM. Ft cures as If by MAGNETIC INFLUENCE, Neuralgia and all pain, and k therefore very properly termed ' Magnetic Bahn." It Is pnrely a vegetable preparation. It has no eqr-sl a a remedy for Cholera, Cholera Morbus, Diarrhoea, Dysentery, Colic and all llosvel Comptaiatar It timely use wilUnreColds.t reap. Diphtheria. Quinsy, and all T iroat affections. When properly tssed. Fever and Agne, and other cuinplairta inc dent to onr western and eon them cliiiiK:e. are csily broken np. Nervous I'aln. Pick-Headache, and Bheamailsm ore ear id by this medicine when all others have failed. Toothache, Earache, Bums. Chilblains and Braise are relieved at once by It use. The eenulne has Ht. Raueoaa ckCa.s private Rcven le Htamp on the outside, and Dr. J. It Miller's Ilagnctic Balm blown in the bottle. Kizaaalne cloudy, and bay none bat the gennine. Sold by ail DrnggJstii. Bttee So cents per bottle. I. Baksox, 80s Co., PropVo, Baf&lo, N. T.
Dr. tatreHi Ct rrM
RCsanefsly eiTcmcurttapoa actentiAc principles, by its mild, heating ptupttrics, to which the disease KTovdtuJhr
yields, when the system las been yiut in perfect order wilh Dr. IPierce'B fioldeH
medical DicoTrr which should be taken earnestly, ti correct the blood and wwttm, w'lich are alvays at fault, also so act spedncaBv.
I as it does, upon the diseased glands and luting membrane of the nose and its conunmuraunot
chnrabrrs. The Catarrh Remedy thould be applied with Dr. sPleree NatalAoelie as this is the only form of .aKtrumcot yet in waned w th which fluid medicine can be carried itf v
11U perfectly appueq totiii parttet UMaaectea
ru.sal passaN ana cziamoers in wnicn sores ana ulcers exist, and trom which the discharge generally procced-i. So succesfful his the at ore course oT treat tuaent proven, that tbe proprietor offers $ftOO Ward for a case of " Cild in Hd " Oxen or Citnrrk which he canncc cure. Tbe two med-
I icines wAh iaMrutncnt, fcr $Z) by aUdniggists.
i
MBEOSAofT'S 6ARGLING0U IS GOOD FOB Bants BmMs, sThesiaMSJasa OallMalas, McsaaiibaMa r PWaa, Soralas mni Brtsases. San Rlpplea, Ckapd I loads. Caked Bitaoto. ricoh Wovatfo, FiMwin, Masota. Frest Bites. Ssaavlos, Sweesosx, Citeraal lt -earn, ScgatiiSvsw or ail 1 qqi.
Bi4 Cracks, SMawfcaU. WIsOaaBs,
UatU ot Alt Kindt, Fswnvoere Pass,
Sltfaat. UisaW. fasnefcrsl ssreta. Pall B-U, Fas Bet as Sheen, Animal Jt laaowt Biles, Basia 1" hshq, Toathashe, JL., Ae. lst Bank, ate, oka.
Large Sao H.tO; MetanmoOe.; BautntSc
The Onrvlnf Oil hubMnln MswaiUiiawlttt. All we sik U fti triml, bot Im ran Mai sJira)tsa. A a s vrsr i.o&reat DnurtTUt ttt dsslT Is PaVMBt MtMcia
fcr one of - AtnMtmet WBtt r4 wat Uw ft4$ mf atoM
the Ull. The GfttTHDr CHI It far is try all uiairtrtli iiilm tiiroMaU-al ri-rf Afw end kr Orir,a,
Oar textim alst om a Um bvmm., m art mnUfifd. Um tat Grflis ".7, mU itll jnt vfyrim
' JEEJ-CHA-TTTS WOBX TABLKTB." Wa rW uir svnd liberal win all. aai y tmtmAictim. WrUt Jmrm JiantUteU. Misaafiatarc n lk9U X.Tby MERl'HANT'S GIKGLING OIL COMP'V JOHN HOOOK, steorstarjr.
TH3B CiTJUiarS TOILET,
Far Isapiroirtas asHl nevatifyrsis taa Oooa-
psojsswa, suaa rsnaaarnac Ian. Sunburn, rrscklea aid all Brnptioosoa tkeSkJa
This -enaratlio la tbe naly one elT Its e'ass wkleh iBDraliarod from a Pmraun limimn,.uiil
rhtich a lKDa-8u.i analyal i spogrnpaatss each buttle
mmm seraaiee sxia phbii't and Qmrnxxsma. Printed on tbe wranae r of evarv battle ia tba In'.
loviuf cert Urate from Prot 8. Dona tiaras, etas
Asitaver aiid Che nisi for II
Das. fl.fl. Ptvrw A Saw?
G ehtl cvkn : "The QcswsTolltw reerivae frees
yen nai. oeon aaaiysM n tne iounwias resaiu; This is a tiurety veaetible preparation, free from pet soitons rentals orlnjarioae enonaneeaef aarkiaal and it ;i. compwd of lngr dionw haviae knows emolieat and ferallBcprap nice. BespcctfaUr, S.liaKA HatisT ID Siate street, Besssa. Price)) I per Bottle. 8ld by all Drasarsota
LMontia's FulioniG Spp, Seaweei
ionic ana mananuie nn. These are the nnlv Meilietnna that will ears Pel-
miiuary Consumption. Dr. Scbenck, of PhiladelphLa, hi.s been in conatait praotlee for over thirty reura, lutLnmilly eioi lining lnnira, and knows hta medicines, tf propel ly token, will cure Consumptl ;n. His MondralM Pills clooiiso the ltv and strnarh; bla Sean ee l Tonio ulsaolvea the rood, st mulate i the cos Hag of the stomach and aids dtneatlon. Ilia Pulmonic Byrnp ripens the
w uaiuru inrnws it on wiutomany co.bc Hon. l or sale iy ail dmggtsts.
SOXtDIERS' BOUNTY. Soldi' rs enlisted betveen May tb and Ansrasl 8th, MS! , for three years, and never received bounty, can now obtain It; also those who tailed to apply wr the additional bonnty. Address, with stamp, B. P. BllOWH s CO., PittabUraTh, Pa,
Btttens are not a vile Faner Drink.
made of Poor Rum. Whislcev. Proof Sniriu and RefttM
Iiqaoca, doctored, spiced, and sweetened te please tbe taste, called "Tonics," Appetizers," " Restorers," Ac., that le? J tbe tippler en to dcrmkenmess and rain, bat arc a true Medicine, made tram the native roots and herbs of OalHbnna, tree from aT Alcoholic Stimulants. They are tbe Great Blood Purifier sad a IjJe-givroe;
mocipie, a renect Kenovater ana Invigovator at tna System, carrying off all poisonona matter and restoring the blood to a bealthv conditkm. enrichinr it. refreshen:
and invigorating both mind and body. Triey ate easy of administration, prompt in their action, certain m tbnar
aesnita, sue ana reltauc m an loraaa ot euaeaae. Ho Parson caat tahte Uaeee Biatera seosreV tn( to diaectimra, and remain long rmweJt piwcided tbeir bones are not destroyed by mineral pcison erethec means, and the vital orsans wasted beyond the paint of repair. Dyrspepeiav or IssdlirtiosB. Haastacne, Pam in the Shoulders, Oorlis, Tirhtneia of the Chs-rt,JDis-aineaa, Sour Erecuaoos of the Stcsnach, Had Taste m the Mouth, Bilious Attacks, Palpitation cf the Heart, Inflammation of the Langs, Pom in the lepooabf the Kidneys, and a hundred other painful sysaptoms, ore the oSspriuce of dyspepsia. Ia these complainta It has no cqnal. and one bottle will prove a better esurantee of its merits than a lenjrtbv advercsHmieat. Vsnt aveiaaeala Osmplateta, in yotmg far esaV married or single, at else dawn of womanhood, or the tare of life, these Took Biltera display so decided as imtuencc that a marked inirensa 001111 is aeon pejeapUbie For laflsmiasawswrw aaatt Clsrsmte) stsmaa -ssqaullam and Goat. Drspcpsia or ImdircatHm, Bifiaiss, Remittent and Intermittent Fevera, lhaeaaes of the Blood, Liver. Kidneys and Bladder, these Bitters have been most successful. Such Diabases are caused by Vitiated Blood, whch is generally produced by derangement of the Digestive Organ. They sure a Seatls Petrsratlw aa wen as a Tojoic, pmwsainp also the peculiar merit of actaag aa a powerful agent'ia retievine: Congestion or infiam snanoa of the Liver asd Visceral Organs, and in Bilious Diseases. sTenr SUm Diseases, Eraptiona, Tetter, SaltRbeum, Blotclies, Spots, Pimples, Pustules, Boils, Carbauelcs, Kinc-worma, Scald-Head, Sore Eyes, Zry aipalas. Itch, Scurfs, Disceloratkms of tbe Skin, Humors and Diseases of the Skin, of whatever name or mature, are literally dug np and earned out of the system iu short time by the use of these Bitters. Oae bottle 10 aoch cases will coemoce the roost incredulous of tbeii Curauxve enecta. Clftsuasa tke "VIUsitSMl Blood, wawnever yon and its impurities bursting Through the skin m Pimples, Eruptiono, or Sores; cleanse it when yoa hod it obstructed and shsggiaa in the veins ; cleanse it when it is tool ; your feelings will tell you when. Keep the blood pure, and tbe health of the system win follow. OrsUdfsU ttsouiaamils proclaim VtsnasAa BlTrsas tbe most wonderful invigoraat that ever unstained tba sinkinr srstem. nam, Tap, aavd atlaer Wsrisaa, lurking iu the system of Co many thousands, are eSectnally destroyed and removed. Saya a duimguisbed pbwelogist : There is scarcely aa individual upon the fatter the earth whoae body isexempt from tbe pcesence of annaae It ia not upon tbe bealtby eiemenrs of the body that worms exist, but upon tbe diseased bamors and euary deposit that bread these living monsters of iKsimt Ho system of Medicine, no vermifuges, no anthelenairks, will free the system from Tonus nke these Getters. KoclaamleaJ IHseases. Persons engaged ia Paints and Minerals, each us Plumbers, Type-setters, Gold-beaters, and Miners, as they advance m life, will be subiect to paralysis of die Bowecla Toaroard against ibis taV.e a dosa of Waliekk's ViNacaa BiTTaats once or twice a week, as a Preventive. miasms, Remittent, aaad Isstermlttorvt Kevera, which are so prevalent ia the valleys e onr great rivers lhrougbout the Uuited States, especuutr those of the M isstssipju, Ohio, Nfissoori. IlKnoss, Tea nessee, Cumberbind, Arkansas, Red, Colorado, Brazos, Rio Grande, Pearl, Alabama, Mobile. Savannah, Roanoke, James, and many ethers, with their vast tributaries, throughout our entire country during the Summer and Autumn, and remarkably so during srwws of unusual heat and dryness, are in variably accompanied by extensive !erauernenu of the stomach ani river, and other abdominal viscera. There are always more or lean obstructions of dm liver, a weakness zad irritable state of the ananach, and great torpor of the bowels, bemf slogged np with vitiated accnmulamma. In their treatmen:, a purgative, exerting a powerful nwaenee upon these various organs, ia essentially necessary. There is no cathartic for the purpose equal to Da. J. Waxjcaa'5 VrtrsGAK Urn-rats, as they wal speedily remain tba dark-colored viscid matter with which die bowera an loaded, at the same time stimulating the secretions of tbe liver, and generally restoring the healthy tuncnec'of the digestive organs. arofsilau or Kisaar'e Karat. Virile SsseXbass.
Ulcers, Erysipelas Swelled Neck, Goiter, Scrohiloua lonammations. Indolent Inflammations, Mercwial Af-
aecuona, uia sorea, unptions 01 toe aam. bare ansa, etc., etc Ia these, as m all other oonamtstional Imeases, Waun's Vihbcak Brrraas have shown their great euramre puaeju iu the most obstiaate and isstaadabiecases. Dr. WIattnrs Csdlltaata Vtaesruj-atlllstS act or. all these cases in a similar mantwr. Byfrnrdymg the Biood tbey remove the canae, and hy resecvsss sasaw die effects of tbe inrtammatica (the tnbtacular dssasaaas) the onected part teiurra bcaltb, and a permanent csare isvffrctnd Ths yropertte i of Da. WAiJtua's VtsnacAa BtTTaas are Aperient. Diaphoretic and Carminative, Nutritious, Laxative, Dinrenc, Sedative, CuUaU r-irri-taat, SedcriSc, Alterative, and Ano-Bihoua, Tsm Apcricmt and rnild Laxative ptupertics si Da. WatKna'a Vismcaa Birms are tbe best saw guard in aU cases of eruptions and aaabgnamt fevers, their babaatne, healing, and stiehing pi oyieititq psoas U tbe humors of the fauces. Their Sedative properties a IlaV pain in the nervous system, stosaacb, aoii bowels, either from inflammation, wind, colic, cramps, etc. Their Coaater-Imtant influence erf ends thiongjiaat the system. Their Diuretic properties act on the Kidneys, correcting and regulating the fiow of urina. Their Anti-Biiioas properties stimusate the bver, hatha asxretaon of mis, and oa discharges thraoga the binary dacta. and are superior to all remedial agents, for tbe cure of Bisious Fever, Fever and Ague, etc Fortliy tlsa taoaly aaraiaaat sUaveus by puA fying all its nutds witk Vixocau Brrraas. No na. demac can take bold of a system thus aacaimed. The liver, 'lie atonuch, tbe boweia, the kidneys, and this nervt'. are rendered diaase penof by this great mvigomnt. Pirtmata j Take of the Bitters on geassr to bed at night fro a half to one and one-half witk&aasatuH. Eat good zotaishing food, such as beef steak, isallna chop, venison, r-ast beat; aad vegersbies, aad take M-sWeiaoa T.iey are composed of pmaiy sigslable incTerhect, and contain no spirit. T. WALKER, Prop'r. R.H. KcDCWAUlskCSaH Druggista and Gen. Agfa. . Saa Fraaaaeoassl New York. aV SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS & DUUCRS.
UTHK
S0XHS318! S
BOTHERS!!!
IBM
This valuable nrenaratlon has been sued with
KKVKaVPAILIJrG bOOCXSS IX XHOrjoABBBW
CAnZo. It not nry reHeves the child from psau, Vat taTlsjormtes trie etomaeh and bowalt , corrects acMtty, aud Kires tone and energy to the whole srssesa. It will au Instantly relieve ClTXfBtaaa; km txac ztswrola aaad Wlaaa C'otae. We VaUere It tba BEST aad grrRBBT KTWTDT IX THB WORLD in oU eoaea of DTSBXTXBY ASB DIAKBHKA IK CHILDelKM, wfcataar ariotutr from teething or any other canae. Impend upon tt, aaosaezs. It will give rest to' yourselves aad KeHef aaal slastltaa to YwsarlmtJaatsja, Be sure one call tor Bxira. Wisxatoss lsstatag lsyaaf,m Having the tee simile of "ClTgriS A ?KfIXB an the outside wrapper. gold by Druggists tfaronghont the world.
EVEHORKBSS (ao 16 Inches) Trsnaplantaa. 2 to 5 for Ida. kesm stams lot descststtes Het to Ba-tUiKB a. CO., lTowug America, ttt.
THE A-N ECTAtt nrKK HkaW TKL with th gaesm fen Savor, woe ran ted to east all taetae. Tot aameA-arywIwre, Aadinr ale wholesale catty by ths O rest Attaatto st Padao Tea Co., Ko. 11 Putsoa St., and I Church St., Bern Tori. P.O. BcxNsm, BttbeaTMrn-Bectaf
cSaaasesa
$1Z
EACH VTEtK-AOMTS WAJTBaV ff Business lei liquate. , PactlcuJare
free. J. WORTH, Bt. ltfuts. Mo. Box t
CftSA-a assow mm in, tmas nmsvsmm,. and will not waste. Sett t,ptiee f oreaoory Soap. Grocers have it. i Chicago, nilsraokr. ImtriH, ad ancismatl Jobliers. Wliobvoilp Agents.
Or aavtsory armmssn aw .
Wiwn ,v - ;
Attorney at auw, vwtobi a, 1
tsge csianii isyaTMTwasi . Law Biuiliiess jwoaaatly a" Sohunblo, Lancaster Oew PS.
DR. WHITTItEH. "VtiM? Longest engSsTed, and moat ncctwstalsbyaMfM at the age. Consultation or pamphlet ffte. Call or writr! Just pstMlshed aW tbe beoeat cjf yosnt
men woo saver xrova aorvsamua,
a treatise of pages nu-X stamps i astmaa tllastrated, tot m ceata.
Kl.i,
C. . V.
stnaiaaKi .
