Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 14, Number 9, Jasper, Dubois County, 5 April 1872 — Page 3
NEWS SUMMART.
The East. Asot'T forty miuor Tammany exiles, who 00,1 fruu New York to avoid arrest or tbo witness stsnd, uro congregated at Bt. John, ff B., whero they have formed a club and are saving quiul, luxurious tiiuo. They re well supplind with monoy, and have at leaithalf million in Unitod States bonds deposited in St. John banks, feter H. Bweeney recently paid them a visit, and at lust advices they wero expecting Tweed Oneof th mills of the North Andover, Mass., Mill Company was totally deatroyed by lire, together with its machinery, Thursday. ..Mrs. Keep, widow of the late Henry Keep, hus giveul 00,000 to the New York Homeopathic Instimtion lor the Blind H. Marten, a wealthy local agent of llolluway's medicines in New York, has been sued for breach of promise in $20,000 damages by Miss Margaret Boutigny, who alleges that he visited her as an accepted suitor from 1863 to 1870. Two yours ago he went to Europe and retimed with a French mistress. On Saturday a man named Clark, in Cold Spring, near Otis, Mass., by the most foolish carelessness, with a loaded gun shot and killed his sister.nged 23 years, and wounded her daughter, fl years old, so that amputation of her arm was necessary A boiler in the Trenton Rolling Mills, in Jersey City, exploded on Saturday, destroying the blackemith slip and a portion of the rear building. Fi vc men w re injured, and one Hughes, a boiler tender, is missing. Loss $,000. Michael IIaykh was arrested in New York on Tuesday for a murder committed in a Roosevelt street bar-room row, fifteen years ago. Somebody then in the District Attorney's ollice took $3,000 and pigeonholed the indictment, and the assassin tied. At Pittsburgh, on Tuesday, a little sou of John Scott, aged about four years, struck his brother, acd fourteen months, on the head with a pokar, killing him A fire at Port Leyden, N. Y., on Monday night, destroyed Sylvester k Itiggs's block. Loss $26.000; insur:tn'e$21,00O The New York World says Jay Gould netted a profit of $3,240,000 in the rise of Erie stock on Tuesday Elias Marlin, of New York, has recovered $244,1 14 in a suit against the Adams Express Company, for the value of a box of watches slapped to Memphis, Tenn., in 1863, and lost. Thk Executive Committee of the Centen nial Commission met in Philadelphia on Wednesday, tnd elected Hon. Daniel Morrell permanent chairman The excitement iu the New York Stock Exchange on Wednesday eclipsed that of any previous time since Muck Friday. Four hundred thousand shares changed hands. The stock fell from 70 t. 58. Ami. Rbayf.v, a New York lawyer, has been committed in defaultof bail in $10,000, on a charge of forgery, in obtaining the signature of a UAy to a sheet of blank paper and filling the page so as to obtain her property The family of Col. C. J. Jack, a lawyer of Hnoklyn, N. Y., wore asphyxiated on Wednesday night by the fumes of oal fro tn a defective furnace. Miss Norton, a visitor, whs found dead. The.emainder of the) family, eleven in number, will probably recover John Quinlan has been awarded $4,500 damages troni the Sixth Avenue Raiiroad Company, New York, for injuries received from a collision of a horsecar with a runaway team. No negligence on the part of the company was shown. The West. Tub Missouri Democrat was sold at auction at St. Louis on Friday, and was knocked down to Mr. Fishback, one of the former proprietors, for $450,100 Governor Fairehild,of Wisconsin, has written a letter, statinn that the report of arbitration in the ruattrrof the Fox River and Wisconsin Improvement, u. presented to Congress by the Secretary of War, will be accepted. Governor Fairehild is now in Washington, and laboring earnestly in the interests of the meiisurc Joi n O'Ncil, charged with aiding in the robbery and murder of a man named Atkinson, some twelve miles from Memphis, Tenu., lust January, was arrested in St. Louis on Friday As Mr. Allen Härtung and son, of Green township, Summit county, w-re returning home from Akron, Ohio, at the A. A G. W. railroad crossing their tea i. hecume frightened and ran before an approaching train. The son and both horses were instantly killed. Mr. Harting was seriously injured. Ol Saturday night, in a saloon at Springfield, 111., Edward Duffy shot and killed Henry Stoy and wounded Edwin Slater, the saloon keeper. The murderer escaped The Protection Life Insurance Company, of Chicago, has commenced a libel suit against nil Masonic Advocate, of Indianapolis, Ind., placing the damages at $10,000 A young man about eighteen years old, named Lewis Uerted, committed suicido nt Canfield, Ohio, on Sunday by hanging himself to a tree. Disappointment in love was the cause. Frances Tv leb. a young lady from Quincy, Mich., committed suicide at Detroit, Mich., on Sunday night, by taking strychnine The machine shop of William Crippen, at Manistei , Mich., was burned on Monday night. Loss $12,000; insurance $6,000 El lard P, k, teller of the Bank of Jose, committed suicide at San Francisco on Sunday, shootine himself through the head. No cause known Tobias Clay well, a saloon keeper at Winchester, III., was rhot and killed on Saturday by a man whom he had oreibly ejected from the saloon. WoLr's brewery, a saloon, and two dwelling houses wero destroyed by fire in Stillwater.Minn., on Monday night. Two men the barkeeper in the saloon and a laborer in the brewery, whose names are not given perished in the dames. Two others barely escaped. The loss is about $10,000 ; partially covered by insurance. Ths Republican State Conventions of Ohio and Iowa were held at Columbus and Des Moines on Wednesday. Both conventions adopted resolutions favoring the renoininatioa of Grant, hut differing in their choice for Vice-President-Ohio putting forward Ex-Guv. Dennison, and Iowa preferring James F. Wilson The Los Angeles antiUMMN rioiera have all been convicted of manslaughter The lottery advertised in the But for the benefit of a charity hospital m Ban Francisco is, says a dispatch from thnt city, a fraud. There is no such institution or lottery there The Annual Conference of the Methodist Episcopal Church of orthern Indiana met at Muncieon Wednesday. A new feature of the present Conference will be the introduction of 160 lay deleRate( At Milwaukee on Wednesday afternoon, a girl named Mary Rudinski, eight years of age, was startled by a passing team, and sprang into the Thceuii mill, whsro she
fell and instantlv exnirod. She was fright..
ened to death. Two young men named George Barber and Michael MoGurrygot into a dispute about a dog, at Middlebury, 0., on Thursday morning, when Barber shot and instantly killed MoGarry. The South. Thk Baltimore Gazette has boon sold to Wm. H. Welsh, late proprietor of the Philadelphia Age, am' Henry Taylor and Wm. II. Caipenter, of Baltimore A dispatch from Wilmington, N. 0., gives a rumor that the Lowery gang havo shot the captured Herald correspondent Slough, the wife murderer, committed suicide in iail at Richmond, Ky., Monday, by hanging himself to the top bar of the door of his cell, with a rope made from a towel and two pocket-huud kerchiefs. Tub building and stock of the Washington Leather Manufacturing Company, at Hsgersstown, Md., by fire on Sunday morning. Loss $70,000 ; insurance $30,000 The Bourbon House and three stores at Paris, Ky., were burned on Monday. Loss$10,000 ; insurance $5,000. Jo.sKr-H W. Johnson, a brakeman on a freight train on the Nashville and Chattanooga railroad, fell from the train on Tuesday, near Nashville, and was instantly killed. Tu k Kentucky Legislatureon Wednesday passed a resolution providing for the sale of tho Portland Canal to the United States A number of South Carolina delegates to the Philadelphia Convention are about to go to Washington to demand the removal of several Government officers, in cluding tho Collector and Postmaster of Charleston. Washington. Thk amount paid to unsuccessful contestants of scats for the last Congress was $113,000 A naval board of inquiry, of which Commodore W. E. Leroy is President, lias been ordered to inquire into the case ot Captain Egbert Thompson, who is charged with endangering tho safety of the Canandaigtia by towing her through heavy ice and injuring her sheathing. The Supreme Court has denied a writ of mandamus to compel tho Secretary of the Treasury to pay tho Kentucky war claims. Tho House Special Committee to investi gate the charges of irregularities la the Navy Department met on Tuesday evening. Mr. Voorhees declined serving on the committee on account of business engagements. Mr. Bartlett, counsel for Dana, asked that Admiral Torter be summoned. It was so ordered. Adjourned Tho committee appointed to examine tho accounts of the United States Treasury has reported that " the business of the Treasury has been well conducted, and that the losses in the aggregate are very insignificant, as compared with the transactions of the ollice." The Senate, in executive session on Monday, confirmed the nomination of Gov. Francis Thomas, of Maryland, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary to Peru. Foreign. Tue famous race for the Liverpool grand national steeple-chase handicap, which was run on Friday over the Aimree course, near Liverpool, excited great iuterest, ami was won by the chest i ut mare Cassetite, the geldings Rearrington and Dispatch being respectively second and third. During the race the chestnut mare Primroao fell and was instantly killed Gen. Brownlow, in command of a detachment of tho Looshai expedition, telegraphs on the 13th inst.: "AH the southern Howlongs, and fifteen chiefs, have submitted, and many captives have been released. Twenty villages were destroyed, and our task is accomplished." THEnr. is terrible suffering in the vicinity of Tientsin, China, in the flooded district. Many arc dying of starvation daily A duel was fought near Faris on Saturday between Rogat, of the Pays newspaper, and Richardet, of the Corsaire. The latter was wounded in the chest The Prince and Princess of Wales are at Rome. . Marshal Bazaink has received permission to publish a pamphlet justifying hiscenduct at Metz M. Jules Favre, in his testimony before a committee of tho French Assembly on Tuesday, broadly intimated that Minister Washburne and some American officers aided the Prussian spies during the late war. Thk Pope on Tuesday gave a long audience to the Prince and Princess of Wales. He desired their Royal Highnesses to convey to the Queen of England his thanks for her constant evidences of sympathy, and praised the people of Great Britain for their piety. An explosion occurred in a coal mine at Atherton, near Balton, England, on Thursday afternoon, by which 28 men were killed outright. Eleven men were rescued, but they are fearfully burned, and nearly all will probably die European mail advices state that the town of Shamaks, in the Caucasus, was almost entirely destroyed by a recent earthquake. The number of persons killed was 137, and the destruction of property very large. A considerable portion of the country was converted into a desert, and the inhabitants are reduced to great misery by the destruction of their crops The bark Nimrod was burnt off Bermuda on tho 10th ult. Of seventeen persons on board, osly ten were saved. The vessel was loaded with naphtha and kerosene, and an explosion from some unknown cause took place in the hold, behind the main hatch. It is believed that the Captain, wife, and daughter, a young girl, were in the cabin at the time of the explosion. When the fire was seen from tho harbor of Bermuda, it was too late to render assistance. Proceedings in Congress. In the Senate, March 22d, a bill was passed to refund to tho Winona and St. Paal Railroad Company certain duties paid on railroad iron The Soldiers' Horn steads bill was passed. The bill provides that the time of service of soldiers in the Union army bo deducted from the time which, under the Homestead laws, is usually required to perfect titles The Tariff bill was taken up. An amendment placing tea and coffee on the free list was adopted by a vote of 36 to 13. Adjourned to Monday, March 25. In the House on the same day $4,480 was paid to paid to Mr. Cessna f r expenses in contesting the seat of B. F. Myers, of Pennsylvania A large number of private hills wero passed Adjourned. In the Senate, March 25th, the bill was passed for the sale of the Marine hospital and grounds in San Francisco, Cal The following bills from tho Committee on Commerce wero passed : To establish a col
lection district at Duluth, Minn., and to make St. Paul, Minn., a port of entry; for the enlargement of St. Mary's Falls canal ; to extend the customs and navigation laws over Alaska und adjacent waters and islands acquired by 'i:e United States; authorizing the construction of railroad bridges across the Ohio river at or near Kvusville and Mount Vernon, Ind. ; appropriating $70,000 to deepen the St. Clair flats canal to sixteen feet; to amend the act to regulate the consular and diplomatic system of the United States; increasing the salaries of the various consulates, including London, Paris, and Havana ; authorizing mail steamship service between New Orleans and certain Mexican ports The Senate then went into executive session, and soon after adjourned.
In the House on the same day the Senate bill to enable honorably discharged soldiers and Bailors, their widows and minor children, to secure homesteads on the public lands, was agreed to Mr. Taylor, from the Committee on Public Buildings and Grounds, reported a joint resolution providing for a oslossal statue of the late Admiral Farragut, to be erected in Farragut square, in the city of Washington. It Instructs the Senate and House Committees on Public Buildings and Grounds to inspect all models that may be presented to them before the 1st of January, 173, and select therefrom one of the most appropriate to commemorate the deeds and character of Admiral Farragut, and it instructs the Secretary of the Navy to contract for such statue at a cost not exceeding $30,0OU. Tho resolution was adopted Adjourned. The time of the Senate on the 26th was taken up with the discussion of the Houje bill making tea and coffee free. Amendments to include salt and c al were voted down, and the Senate adjourned before reaching a vote. The House on the 26th spent most of the day in voting on motions to adjourn alternately with motions to take a recess, but without coming any nearer to a solution of the difficulty Mr. Hooper, trom the Committee on Banking and Currency, presented the testimouy taken before that committee in tho matter of the failure ot national banks, with a resolution that it is the opinion of the committee that tho successful working of the Currency Bureau required a chauge in the head of that bureau. The testimony and report were ordered printed, to be called up for future action Adjourned. In the Senate, March 27, Mr. Hamlin offered a resolution to pay $5,000 from the contingent fund of the Senate for expenses of the Arms Investigating Committee. Adopted Tho remainder of the session was taken up with the tea and coffee bill. In the House on the same day several hours were occupied in discussing the bill designating a depot site for the Baltvnore and Potomac Railroad Company The Speaker announced the appointment of Mr. Archer, of Maryland, on the Select Committee to investigate tho affairs of the Navy Department, instead of Mr. Voorhees, declined The House then adjourned. In the Senate, March 2th,on motion of Mr. Trumbull, the bill w. s passed fettling the title to certain lands along the boundary between Georgia and Florida On motion of Mr. Wright, the Senate concurred in the H use amendment to the Chicago Relief bill, exempting lumber from the operation of the act The Tar ff bill was tsken up. Mr. Scott offered an amendment repealing all internal revenue taxes except those on banks and bankers, distilled spirits. fermented liquors, snuff, tobacco, and cigars, said repeal to take effect on the 1st of July, 1872. The amendment was rdopted by a vote of 28 to II. The bill as amended was then passed amid great confusion ayes 35, noes 4. It now goes to the House for concurrence in the amendments Adjourned until Monday, April 1st. In the House on the 28th Mr. Dawes from tho Committee on Ways and Means, reported back the Chicago Relief bill, and intimated that he would allow amendments to be otl'ered excepting lumber from its operations. Mr. Farwell (111.) offerol such an amendment, which was agreed to without division. The bill now goes to the President for his approval and signature Adjourned until Monday, April 1. Expensive Indian Fighting. Fighting Indians in Montana is evidently an expensive luxury. The bill lor the expenses of a battalion of troops which was raised by the Governor of that Territory in 1807, for a brief Indian campaign, has just been e?nt in to the General Government. The Inspector General having examined the items, reports some most astonishing facts. Among the articles purchased for the troops were tobacco at $3.50 per pound, tea $4.50 per pound, dried apples and peaches S0 cents per pound, buffalo robes $25, and whisky $10 per gallon. The cost of the food for each horse was $3 per day, and the cost of clothing for each man $207 besides his buffalo robe. Before the accounts are audited the Inspector General should not only ascertain what eort of meats these high-priced Ctesars fed upon, but wherewithal they were arrayed. The regimental appatcl of the late .lames Fisk, Jr., on testive days, could hardly have equaled in gorgeousness the $207 suits in which the cavaliers of Montana chased the unbreeched Indians over the plains. The Government ought to know if when Montana expects every man to do his duty she expects him to do it in broadcloth, green kids, satin necktie, diamond stud-, monogram sleeve-buttons, silk hats, and gold-headed canes. If so, it would be more economical for the Government to board Montana volunteers and horses at some first-class hotel, and Bend out regulars to do the work. A Timely Recognition. Capt. T. S. Curtis, late first officer of the steamer Morro Castle, had charge of the ship during a terrible storm, not long ago, and handled her so well that her passengers, recognizing his evident ability and disposition to "come to time" in reaching port safely, despite the tempest, presented him a magnificent time-keeper in the shape of an elegant chronometer watch, of the United States Watch Company's manufacture, and now the owners of the Morro Cattle have additionally recognized the Captain's skill by making him master of the ship. A vor no man generally gives a lock of his hair to his sweetheart before he marries her. After marriage she generally helps herself.
The New Party Movement. Hon. Leonard Kwett, heretofore a prominent Republican of Illinois, has written a letter abjuring Radicalism and favoring a united movement for the complete overthrow of the present corrupt Adiuiniatration. We give some of Um more prom'i.etit parts of the letter : Dear Sir: Your note asking my views of the Cincinnati Convention has been received. I understand that Convention to be a mass meeting of all Republicans opposed to the existing policy and practices of the party, and I intend to cooperate with the movement, because I believe the principles of our party have been subverted, and its present policies and practices injurious and demoralizing to the country. At the close of the war the Government enfranchised the negroes, and by attaching disabilities to men prominent in the rebellion, practically disfranchised the property-holding and intelligent clatses oi the South. The next step was to empower the army quartered there to override civil authority. The negtoes and poor whites thus holding control, and the country thus subordinated, political power became a question of muscle and enterprise. Adventurers without character at home swarmed there, and encouraged by the Government because they were Republicans, "corraled" the negroes in the name of Liberty, and appropriated to themselves all the positions of profit and trust. Thus, under forms of law, property has been pillaged, intelligence enslaved, and every State, city, county, parish and town has been saddled with debts generations cannot pay, and for which the people have literally nothing to show. These leeches are still at their work, feasting upon all that it is valuable and vital ; and, if the tiuth may be spoken, our party is aiding and encouraging them. Tho people, thus crippled, cannot shake them off; and they will gorge themselves until the rights of citizenship aie restored to those whom they are depleting. Seven years have elapsed since the war, and looking over the scene of the conflict, we find the white man loaded with political uisabilities, the conttol he used to exercise given to his former tlavo, and bis country a Botany Bay for every Bcallawag who wishes to plunder him. To fix permanent ditabilitie-s upon the body of the Southern people, is to make slavery the consequence of rebellion. In doing this we violate the law of civilized warfare, subvert throughout
the South the spirit of our institutions. and stand before the world confirming their fears, and false to our professions. The Cincinnati Convention in my opinion meets an urgent public wan!. It proposes to break loose and organize a party upon the principles of universal liberty and amnesty. It proposes to carry out and apply those principles and precepts which their great leuder taught and practiced. It proposes to adopt as a cardinal feature to liberate within our land the enslaved of all colors and races, to enfranchise a'l the people, and, remembering only the virtues and heroism of the war, to encourage a generous forgetfulness of all the harrowing memories it produced. The Republicans in power excuse and continue political disabilities on the ground that whenever left free the Southern people have been and will be unruly. Many answers to this position are apparent. In the first place, it is not true. No war so great was ever followed by seven years of peace so universal and complete. And, then, the excuse itself is nothing but one of the worn-out false pretences by which tyranny justifies its abuses. England asserts this of Ireland : Russia does of Poland ; Austria did ot Hungary and Italy ; the master did of the slave, and we do of the master. The fault with this policy is, that it leads to no end of our troubles. On the contrary, aside from the wrong it involves, the longer it is pursued the greater the injury, and the harder to stop. Can we pin this country together permanently with bayonets? Will four, eight, or twelve years of misrule sweeten the Southern disposition ? On the contrary, are not enslaved peoples unruly because they are slaves? Contentment is not the fruit of tyranny and misrule, but Liberty alone brings peace. If wo would ever have a Union worth the blood and treasure it has cost, we must lay its broad foundations, not in force, but in those affections which good government only will develop. Delay not only widens the breach, but corrupts, and hardens, and unfits us, year by year, for concessions which ultimately must be made. Aside from the condition of the South, there are other changes contemplated by the Cincinnati movement, which demands our especial consideration. Prominent among these is the Tai iff question, and the release of our people from the oppressions of " Protec MM." The situation of Chicago aptly illustrates this necessity. From $150,000,000 to $200,000,000, to all human usefulness, have been annihilated by fire. It must now be reproduced in kind. Architects and master-builders, to use one's expression, say a large third could be saved if foreign material were admitted free of duty. Now, if this is so necessary to Chicago, because burned up ami poor, why is it not nece-sary for the whole West, because poor but not burnetii If we can save so much on the reconstruction of a single city, what would the hand of labor save in adorning the Empire yet to rise in the West, with its wealth of cities, villages and towns. Of course, no one will pretend that the neo(sitiis of the Government will permit absolute free tr.ule, nor should we fail to afford such just protection as may bo incidental to revenue; but this whole subject needs revision by a hand not
hostile to the manufacturers, but friendly to the MMNMMft What the country greatly needs g the breaking up of old lines, und the rear
rangement of the voters in new associn tions. Nothing remain at issue be-tuc.-n the If. -publicans and Democrats, but the malice which the conflict produced. I both parties wero dissolved, and their members redistributed and 00 fused together, thi.s relic ot the war would find no ratting plan-. Tin y are now held together by mutual antagonisms. The continuance of 'ither perpetuate both. The disintegration of lie dissolves the other. I, therefore, most sincerely hope the Cincinnati Convention will produce a new National OrJ ganization, founded upon the principles Of Amnesty, Liberty and Reform; and that, through its agency, the bitterness of the oast may be forgotten, National friendship revived, and the blessings of Free Government dispensed to all peoples in the land. Yours truly, Leonard Swett. Democratic Sentiment. From Ihr Chicago News. Our Democratic exchanges very generally seem to take a correct view of the political situation. While all feel that a straight Democratic victory may be achieved this fall, they are prepared to cooperate vitb the Reform Republicans and the Labor Unionists in their effort to defeat Grant. Judge David Davis is undoubtedly, of all Republicans, the one most likely to unite the various elements of the opposition to Grant. He has been presented by the Labor Unionists as the candidate of their choice. He belongs to the reform element of the Republican party, and possesses the confidence of the Democracy. There are few men in the country who can boast such elements of strength. There are certuin things which the Democratic party will do, and there are others which it will not do. It will unite upon such a candidate as Davis, presented upon a liberal platform. It will not accept of any one whose political course is stained with the ultraism of the past, nor will it permit an abandonment of Democratic principles as expounded by Jefferson. It will cooperate with ethers in the overthrow of Grant, but in so doing will not abandon its organization. It will move its trained battalions under its own chosen leaders, and in any act on taken will act as a party though it may be as a co-operating one. Should the Cincinnati Convention temporize and refuse to nominate Judge Dais. or pbice an object enable candidate in the field, the Democracy must strip themselves for the tight, nominate a straight ticket, and achieve a party victory in the approaching contest. The German Republicans of Little Rock, Aik., have determined to follow the lead of Senator Schurz, and oppose the re election of Mr. Grant. This action possesses consid r.ible significance, as an indication of the probable course of the Germans thioughout the country with reference to the Presidential campaign. Current Items. The practice of we.-aing veils over the eyes is said to be very injurious to the sight. The English capitalists are freely subscribing their money toward a tunnel under the channel between Dover and Calais. OwENsnoRO, Ind., has a Newfoundland dog vt'iich promenades the streets with spectacles on his eyes and a pipe in his mouth. Noah Cameron, of Douglas county, Mo., has seventy-five swarms of Indian bees, which gave him 6.000 pounds of honey last year. The Japanese girls at Washington now dress in moderate American style, and report themselves very happy in their new home. The oldest city in this country is St. Augustine, Fla., but its population in 187Ö was only 1,717 three centuries of life having failed to give it vitality. The fellow who wants " to marry a girl with plenty of snap in her" is advised by the LaCrosse Leader to go for the Wisconsin girl who swallowed forty percussion caps the other week. Two men were found in a freight car at Fort Howard, Wis., with both feet frozen and turned black, and almost dead from cold and starvation, having stolen a ride all the way from Chicago. John Daves, from the Santa Clara vineyards, eloped to Snn Francisco with Mary . Parr, chartered a tugboat, and was married on the stormy Pacific amid an immense upheaval of sighs and sandwiches. A Ufffil girl in Bushnell, 111., was burned to death last week; she went to a smoke-house to make a fire, and being gone some time, was sought for and found with her clothes on fire and nearly consumed. The St. Paul Pioneer establishment has pnseed into the hands of a joint stock company, at a valuation of $85,000. L. E. Fisher will be managing editor, and Colonel Paulding business manager. The quarry and mills near Castleton, Vt., where most of our slate pencils come from, are owned by a stock company, and are valued at $3lK),000. From 50,000 to 100,000 pencils are turned out daily, and upwards of 100 hands are employed. A votNO woman in Pennsylvania is reported to have been quite cured of consumption by the internal use of kerosene during many months. It any Joung man should make a match with er thus filled, would she be more apt than the ordinary run of wives to blow him up?
