Paoli Weekly News, Volume 6, Number 50, Paoli, Orange County, 28 August 1878 — Page 4
Jl
c
1 f I
1 L
- t ... t:
......
111
h r,J5 1 In 1 1' o Cl n The A..-
i H I
1
-1 tC i5 - in
1, -V . 'V f
' I 11;Tl I 1. I l c t: c- '.. i t & V to (
"i ; .h , Lv. f I", rt ;
j . r (
I'uin C' - . 1 r I C : cate f ' i : ' , , t
wf 1 :U'J '., e. .1 i ' " "u It is re- ; -i Lave been
O. " r .
r f f c I 3
ft
K i V r. c it
i i
o 1tr 1
re t f1 .th r I a
- '.r.,u
t v r t- r V 1 a Li cf t -JIj, IN T t . r V, !-r r i , f . 1 1. ,f Lo v n't r ,
1 1 l.n n.l t i..' il oljti
dii'm am .if. J i-c
Ii rn I :.t II vta c ' I r t f-r vl ,t 't 1 i c . l r V t a - ; ' r ; r a j !. I in t cn it. I'r.
v, .... i -ii la I i. L.t in h"d
d riofe.' a. piujory t ip.ili 'i gri; h Gov. r - 3 th w ' ' f-i ..i cf ti r.cy toil rrtcJ, f iid h lit
it i:' 1 I ' i ? r f ' j i I . "J I ,1 .If.. iCL.e. t:r.Jj;i:if.itl3 r.L.f f.f L3 j " j r-f v.r tJ.ZL.tr3, ty ciJ.r II j r 3 i.i t i A- -.21 from the Yarici6 I.- . i.i nL'.li t"..'3 yellow fever r ) t 7 ry of etiffoticg d v.l'a ria tzi an nI"3 ?c.-le. At V.tw Cr-ki'.utL-til ts La3 ct. ' 2 to corSiiQ iu-tlf to
sf I. 'ry Ei.l ' irriurce
-The congress for the reform
nt tf the - :u Dt-l-ii nts. cf icter-
n&tioD&l law &5opte:l a rcs&'atioa favoring Iba
freedom cf tho S;-zciia! ia time of wir.
The racI:lIL:i'Jta c to the Dtimber of IbOA
,r Wo! k.3
il:,. "0 r.L.
t) 1
gaint the inatu tnt iu S'nii, Co-!,;.i ar. 1 Iloiitenegro, ebows the raagriitude of the tmdsrtaking -whicb Anntria baa arsnmed in her attempt to exercise sovereignty over the Turk-
a .VU tJ IL .t
--W. E. Ilosno ji Lffuro tLe Potter c mr A-r. L . i r t. 1 ti.".t L c 1 mt re gard hjcntifclf as the legal advistir or attoraey for Gov. Young, and was ready, aa soon as ha corJJ get bis telegrams and letters, to lay them before ' tta committee. Mr.
Iliocock read a
itch "which he hid
THE POTTER INVESTIGATION. At this stage, owing to the absence of Gen. Butler and some witnesses, the committee adjourned until Monday. - The Potter Investigation Committee resumed its sessions Aug. 19. John E. Leete and his apparent insanity were generally discussed. His wife and children were sick with the yellow fever in New Orleans, which, with the excitement of testifying before the committee, may have caused the temporary derangement of his mind. A dispatch was received from Gov. Kellogg, denying several statements made by Leete in his testimony, and stating that Leete had been for months past begging for office. Latterly he had been threatening and denouncing him because he did not receive one. Any statement that Packard and himself, or leading- Republicans, ever took Leete into their party councils would he received with derision in Louisiana. Gen. Butler called attendtion to his request made last week regarding the failure and refusal of Senator Stanley Matthews to appear before the committee, He now moved that the committee report him to the House for their action. Mr. Potter put the resolution to the committee, and it was unanimously carried to report Stanely
Matthews to the House as being in contempt. There being no witness before the committee, an adjournment was taken. Maj. E. A. Burke was before the Potter committee on the 20th. He testified that he was Chairman of the Central Committee in New Orleans in 1876. About the 15th of November the returns were all in except those of the parish or St. Martins, which has about 2,000 votes. The highest Tilden electoral vote was 83, 859, and the lowest Hayes elector received 75,240, a difference of 8,612. The witness could not give the vote for Nicholls exactly, but he had a majority of 2,000 votes. The Returning Board threw out some 10,000 votes to count in the Hayes electors. The witness said that he religiously and sincerely believes that Hayes and Packard were defeated, and Tilden and Nicholls elected, and that was the opinion of every honest man there. " I went to Washington," said the witness, '"on the 15th of January, as agent of Gov. Nicholls, to secure non-intervention by the Government troops with the State Government." Gen. Grant modified his ideas after my visit to Washington. I was in Washington for the purpose of getting the troops not to interfere, and got an order to that effect on
the afternoon cf the 2d of ITsrch. Q. Then you got that order on tho day when Gen. Grant's term expired, at 12 o'clock that nipLt. Now, did you know that Hayes called on Grant that same day at 11 o'clock in the morning ? A. No, sir: I did not Lear of it. I did not know of any conference between Hayes and Grant. On the 2Cth of February witness received & telegram from Ellis, of Louisiana, from Congress, and went to see Lim. He eaid, " Come instantly." lie told mo Le Lad a letter from Lamar relative to a ccarexsatioa he (Lamar) Lad with Matthew and Foster in regard to the ppeeeh made by Foster. "ZIt. Ellis proposed a conference ia the room cf the Finance Committee of the Senate, and there were present at it Matthews, Denison, Sherman, Foster, and myself. I showed them the guarantees which the Nicholls Government iviun, ' La make. I suggested & cemferenee in t evening, when other parties reprt "ih.'g the Pernocr&tic side could be present. I. v s 1 1 i i i ;:r, T. v. t r; -., Li,t 1 o v :. t
Th re w-s prc :.t "-r. Pht-rman,
j " -1 received from Gov. Yonug, of Ohio. It elates: "So far as I am concerned, Idr. Horne is' at liberty to testify all he knows. I Live to t-. . rc is to conceal as to cur c jrre-s-f 1-nee or telegraph." lie. Totter read a !-'. . - C -: h. Maj. Uarka then took 'the i .:. I, ir-.l t.i.; 1 tiat Lo cohaiJered all the acta of the L 3u:i.-.ua Eetumicg Board illegal, as the boa't was an illegally constituted body. After son 9 ur.iaipcrtant coiloquy, Gen. Butler
aaked: "Sot, tsir, was the abandonment of the Packard Government ever consented to by Senator Jlortoa?" A. I w&a assured positively by Senator Matthews. Senator 'Korton would gnstain the Hayes Government in withdrawing the troops from- Lcxiisiana, thii3 virtually recognizing the Nicholls Government. --Senator Matthews told me Senator Morton would make a fpeteh on the subject. Q. Did Gen. Grant's
order of the 2d of March cauee the withdrawal of the troops? A. It did not result bo.
r
. '.- 3, -1 ii viing over the
c. tiiej tjefjj. . r puis i iviocu v- uo-
L h 7jc tl tt the f-vcr his b coma epidemic. Tit- t ' "J i no 1.-3 t iLlo at Tieksinrg. L re overC'J ca-s are reported, and IL ,..;..-'iy cf - "-gl- 1 ' r me-dical tttendslco a- I t,-at-' g . 1 1 to the mournful aspect cf t!.. !.: '.: x Thtre ft-ems to be no longer a. h 0 tL ; t tho f- rt :.l of th j pbgue can be t taed untd the tdvent of coU weather shall dr. . e a tLs L rrid vi Jm. F.aru-i" tn :i: 1 three Ltita La2:15, 2:13 and 2 1 i Jt Ilst'i i i, Ct., the oil er day. Edma r.rrtrt alK troth 1 a r de in 2.141a', and IPlef ul a Lalf-mde i. l.CJ!.".
Lovr perches are prsf
rabla far fc
1 It M Ut.
(Uj'ltld, PosUr, Lt-vy, V.'it! r-!. n, t-o h le c 1
I-.,i mi, nr. 1 my-' u cf a".".
.1 1 " a :rttn
r tt
alattnews, Ellis, If. We di cived i. Adionrned.
t: ;!."'..' y cu cnt," tSl tho s w ro t 3 vi t
POLITICAL. The Tennessee Democratic State Convention convened on the 17th inst., at Nashville, and adjourned over to the next day, when a dead-lock was broken by the nomination " Chancellor Marks for the office of Governor. The Tennessee Republicans, in State Convention at Nashville, Aug. 22, nominated Hon. Emerson Etheridge for Governor. The Vermont Greenback State Convention nominated the following ticket: For Governor, C. C. Martin; Lieutenant Governor, J. W. Currier; Treasurer, Fletcher Tarble. The New York Democratic state Committee met at Saratoga lately. Syracuse was appointed the place for the State Convention, to be held Sept. 25. Emerson Ethridge declines the Republican nomination in Tennessee. PERSONAL. -Jimmy Greenaugh, clerk of a Missouri river steamboat, great-grandson of Sir James Greenbaugh, of England, has received a letter from his mother in Pittsburgh, Pa., saying that she had come into poseession of a fortune of $2,500,000,- Sir James' estate. Jimmy says he will serve out his season on the Upper Missouri, and accept the care of his mother's wealth. The witness before the Potter committee, John E. Leete, is claimed to be insane, and performed some strange actions at the Astor House, in New York, firing a revolver through his room door, etc. He was in that city for the purpose of delivering his diary to Mr. Tilden.
Hon. Baillie Peyton died at his residence
in Gallatin, Tenn., the other day, of effusion of the brain. He was a Representative in Congress from 1833 to 1837 ; served on the
staff of Gen. Taylor in the Mexican war; was
subsequently appointed Minister to Chili by
President Fillmore; was afterward United States District Attorney for Louisiana, and
practiced law in San Francisco in 1860; was
State Elector in Tennessee on the Bell and
Everett ticket, and at one time an extensive stock-raiser, and always a liberal patron of the
tnrf.
The life of Senator Blaine was seriously
imperiled one day last week by a runaway accident while out driving with his family. His
horses became frightened by a sudden storm,
and the carriage wrecked, Mr. Blaine receiving
very painful bruises.
Gea. Grant, having "done" Russia and
Poland, is now in Vienna, Austria, and will next
visit the region of the Alps.
Mr. Alexander Mitchell, of Milwaukee, who
was elected President of the American Bankers' Association at the recent meeting at Sara
toga, has accepted the position.
The death of the aged ex-Queen Maria Christina, the mother of ex-Queen Isabella of Spain, is announced. She died in exile, near
Havre, France, aged 72.
President Hayes has promised to attend
the Wisconsin State Fair, at Madison, Sept.
10. He will l-e at St. Paul, Minn., on the 5th.
Mr. I- l"?:n i i t v Itht ct I.o r in Lis own
country. His n-ct j t'en 1 y tLe American As-o
c i...m tr the AuvnooLiLnt ct bc.t.aee, in
e--'icn ai St. Loins, was as faticring as t
eT.t:.n- ?-:.c s . r:.uon or the leavers: tci
FINANCIAL JL2TX JXI)USTf-IlL. The First National Bank am the Quincy Savings Bank of Quincy, Eh, d'ed their doors a few days ago. Both ban" were under the same management. In th" card to the public the oGcer3 and Directs cf the banks assign as the immediate rsson for the suspension the insolvency of ova of the large manufacturing firms of that city. Chicago eleviOrs contain 637,239 bushel of wheat; 2,16o,757 bushels of corn ; 52f,T77 bushels of oats ; 130.C33 bushels of T?i and 259,344 bushels of barley, making arand total of 3,729,805 bushels, against 2,17;366 bushels at this period last year. The St. Paul (Minn.) rer-Press edi
torially estimates the wheacrop of the State at 25,000,000 bnshel3 ; acreage, 2,225,961 ; average yield per acre, elen bushels. Below a line due west from St Paul the yield is probably ten bushels to te acre. CHIME A2iD CMIMIKJZS. CoL J. P. Colcord,' an attorney of St Louis, killed 113 mistress and then himself the other daw while under the influence of liquor. phard Shannon, who killed Mrs. Bee at TYpierford, N. Y., has hanged himself in his .ell.
At Bennettsville, S. C, two brothers, John
and Neill Locklear, and Pompey Easterling, their negro confederate, were hanged for the murder of Frank Bryce, an pish peddler, in February last. The Locklesrs were half-
breed desperadoes, and formery belonged to stead aa makiig a fertilizer rhidi needs
the notorious North Carolina howery gang. no analysis to demonstrate its value, by
The Commissioner of Internal Revenue nrlrliW ntantv'of Mrt in tho Rtah.lA ma.
trri La ia icJi. pensabla to cue-
Tm prl-c "r3 T;r! !L j of wheat raised ia i:iz. fro 1'Ifc, lied - ChstS an3 L" l. IT: ' ' z. .- . .. ; A Xittxe uBcoohed rice every two or three days ia highly recoramendable as eroitabl feed for chichs a week old or more. Tits coinxite parasita which occasions the -whitish scarf known aa ' scaly leg" ia poultry nay be killed with' carbolic E-onp-EaJs, or sulphur and lard applied aa a 6 aire. ; . Gatzzzxxa end - -water, the Toronto Globe says, ia comicg into general use on Canada farms as "grateful and strengthenirjg beverage," for both men and horses. There is no better time to kill weeds, old or young, than August and September. There is no better ' time to calculate for draining than ' the interval bet ween h.irvest and the time of the autumn rains. -1 Lay your plans, and at the proper time -work to them. . Turns has always been a leak cn the farm where hogs were raised that -weighed from 200 to 230 pounds at
from 1 to 2 years old, when xt has been demonstrated that it is aa easy to ra.is-3 pigs to weigh from 300 to 400 pounds at from 8 to 12 months old.
oilers a reward of 6C0 for the arrest of par
ies who attacked a posse of o ulcers and killed
Collector Cooper's son ia Tennessee.
G . 1 1 " t'. 1 ,
v .'- r-r r 3
. ti.i w.th a v w f
wt'.e cn tie oai -ih.ncftlee t,h-
-.-.t cf the N ehHs Govt j u g s- ui a fir a
l a ' iv: . , n. 1 v f-
v !
I - t am a-a; e,
. ...
s and ' i'n." r--. v. 1
..1 - is, that The w.' h t e I d th t 1 y a t . : h c.i!
a.a
U
k i W d" f:;m LI. t v a Fi-l r th. i s
-Id lo
tf a
:ttf t: r..l St-es cou'd
make . l
He was hs.'.'.fd as the rractical man who Lad
fjr-.lt.I n j to f 1 v f er L;J ni . d-i, and 1 quit'.iy j rt o. dd 1 1 do Lis own c.ieoveri; g
t i
V 1 1 1 z 1 1
c-r
I ra t
- 1
(;r.v;;.7.ii. ,Lt. ifg fciru.-'r a pmi , the c 1 tr di1
a t f 1,1 ' J ks.gs cf tho txjk wt w kill-1 and several in ! o p r.'-.H '.'. r J.. a went ft: ".. M , I tike Michigan, tlif otht
1 "3 cfe v -V .o a'l ta s c r tl e pi 1 vw f .
i rn t t.f f.e
or laaau c:.. Ir.jth
ve.
t-X
xnie
Pkof. Lazes by, "alter numerous ex
periments and very careful trials," com
mends the following as "safe, cheap and
effective applications" for the cabbage-
worm using either, t-o or three times
during the season : 1. A pound of
.white oil soap in about six- gallons of water ; 2. A few quarts of tar in a barrel of water. ,
Mr. H.H. IiLiiET, of Windsor, Mass.,
is reported in the 2ew England Home-
nure and turning in a number of swine
to work it over. Ch e same journal reports eighty-five ggs from a Pekin duck
geographic Ail CHANGES siade ia eighty-five sucessive days, and sixty
ax the J3ERHN tkeaty. bushels of rye froi a one and one-eighth-
The territorial changes effected by the acre Connecticut teld.
treaty of Berlin are of a most compre- The best traine of colts I ever knew hensive nature. By the treaty of San nsver allowed th "whip or spur to be
Stefano, Turkey wa3 called upon to sur- used, while the brses he trained never render 78,530 square miles, with 4,530,- needed the whij Their spirits were 000 inhabitants. The treaty of Berlin unbroken by se-sriry, and they obeyed deal3 -with 83,300 square miles, and the slightest implse of the voice or rein.
4, 882,000 inhabitants, as follows: with tho most airoated promptitude.
& Inanlt h3 Norseman mays claimed that it
Coded to no-uiuania 5.9 J5 246,000 Ceded to Servia 4,326 264, CCO Ceded to Montenpgro.... 1,549 40.000
Ceded to Acstria 15 2,000 Ceded to Greece (?) 6,200 750.0C0
To be occupied and ad
ministered by Austria. 28,125 1,061,000
Formed into the princi
pality of Huleana 24.401 1,773.000
Included in Eastf-rn Koa-
meU 13,618 746,000
The island fortress of Ada Kaleh, re.
cently occupied by Austria, is not re
ferred to in the treaty at all, and will prob
ably remain in the hands of the power which now holds it. Roumelia, in
exchange for the territory ceded, is
I42,ooo was with horses s -with children, if ac-
customed to beting tney would
9,000
40,000 513,030 631,500
265,000
not
obey without it, lit if managed with untiring gentleneseanited with consistent
and very equabltfirmness, the victory
once gained over pern was gained for
ever. -Rural Weld.
Lime Kills Pcato Bugs. A corre
spondent writes j the New England
nds air-slacked lime
applied to the pato tops will kill the
larva) of the Corado potato beetle.
called upon to surrender 3,270 square This is also the fperience of a corre-
miles, with 140,000 inhabitants, to Bus- spondent or taedirror ana farmer,
Thfl tolitiV.fl.l divisions of the who says: rwrfear3 ago the Colorado
Balkan peninsula will henceforth be as
follows.
MoJumv medar.H.
143.300
5,500
9,00i
3.081.0(H)
But, if we exclude the provinces " in
definitely " to be occupied by Austria, three tici between hoein
Bulgaria and Eastern Boumelia, there M0Rsnm timn. id found it nntnnlv ruta
y 74,790 square to the lft-a3 but a material bene-
Roumelia. . . Servia Montenegro
lurkey
Square m ilex. .. 49,463 .. 18.816 ... 2,808 . ..140,963
Inhabitawf j. 5.149,000 1,642.068 210.000 8,339,000
beetle attacked by potato crop. After trying various tpgs without success, I stumbled on a 0k of lime which had become air-slated. I commenced to dust it on the ts, and wherever it fell on the slugs thl turned black and soon
dropped off ancjied. I passed over the
and
remain to Turkey only
miles, with 4,779,000 inhabitants, of whom 2,521,500 are Mohammedans. In Armenia, Itussia takes 10,000 square
miles, with about 350,000 inhabitants.
Cyprus, intrusted to the keeping of
England, has an area of 2,288 square
miles, and about 150,000 intiabit'tnts. Oa the follovjg day he sprinkled lime London Atheneum. ;" nwr hia tmtJ mtah. And on Mi a npyf.
Jt j A - mn-rnirsoi. f ,-inffpns of th on Run d at it Vmcn
TIZE SCOTCH , I'EOPLE. , . , , 1. , - . , ! iTinfr iaa( fhft PTnerimPTit ia nr. lAn.ct.
-r ii. -i.. I J"-o -
taem loyal. xnere
fit to the crou Last year I tried the same remedy fanother part of the town with the sanugood result." "We read
of a man wbojlaeed 200 potato bugs in a bottle and inkled lime over them. Within one liir not one was left alive.
e are probably not 3 ay in all Scotland,
tended the
!icg.
Durii: this tl
2,C30 soldiers this day in all Scotland, Ieediso rnE3. l or a pcr.ol of and they aro there merely for recruiting over thiity Jars horses have been unand kcerinpr a few cf the fortresses in dex my cc;ol ; I personally euperin-
crder. The 2..puh.!,icn to-day ia barely up to 4,030,000, and will probably nevtr be greater, for the yorg men and women in the lower walks of life emigrate to the colonies, wh-ie many ri?e to distinction and accumulate fortunes. Bcn-
r-.il is fcaid to belor;
no horses h'3 died, and I have had little sicknc? A traw-cut.ler, with rawhide rolieas been in continual use till the pr. t time. In the cutting cf the food fTt-o teams, enongh is eaved
re c J Feint r dav, and is
d h
, ' t
i r i. f C-c ; t ts'i 1
' lev tr in the m-
wbs and cities, since the d.-!'. cp t j Arg. 10. m.y : At New Orleans the total
i.r
r cf
1H
C, C At r tf fk - i t S7h .UYi. i H. At M-.-.-ci9 .1 ;; -V i a' o . -
tl
t -1 i
v -
) belocg to the Geoteh, on ia one to p.iy for its purchase, he many of ices, occupied by Whilo th. orcs ere eating their din-
ace ,va.t of t
them. They are a hard-woiking people, rr.-Th..hle for their fckill in fjj-niitg and p-.rd-.ning; but they Lite a mortal aver-hn t sweeping Eirefts crd"irg
1; r.nd j. t they wul vrcili f:-,tc-:n
t . out cf t-r-y-fuur cn thfir ot:i in tl-e Icrg days cf tummcr end ,ir.ri. Thcr. ii rrohsl ly not a feizzlj
.lr: - a th" j C:j cm- Icj...1. r 3 a t 'rt -p-Ti.if-ry cf cr.r hr"-?clih:;. 1h j ; i Lo ih,..l i j v ou t nil 1 1, 3 t
I mm
ner, enouj can re cut icr m-:I, th-iwa'tcrel, to mo:;
TO"
41
an
their next
n ii ttrd i f !
mn hoi ant
q-Li.-.rt3 c" r:J 13 ampli fcr cr :h hr e. Ti.e mc "3 cne-tlird corn, cno-thirl
-3 otner shorts. A van- !y is irg a fc',7 Email potaiaeg or Jy. The bcneCU resulting rairer cf f edirg ate that "fro
r
tv
IV. 2 1
a th
4T.
1 h ' -
r he:
-1 ti e r-.r.-frl hlly, c
Ul V O - -"I -r
r-3-0-
c 1 -
; ' 1 C cf t I". tc
t !
h V.. ::i hh I a )
1 i :
d. ir
4, .
wl j t ?o wai
13 C
; v : ' 1 (by etc, mid ith . : : 1. j
. liiey t C3 C
thra
CaU e 1
c. J cf 1 h-
- ud h, sco where 1 pr.c3 it
fr.rCtt mith or t r, o : - d cio 1 - t '.ic
Ilo'i-rs is CAr.prrs.- Tuo 1 kill moths in a carpet ; j to wet -srith fcc-fc water, on tho j the pest is supposed i ) ! 1 T.iih a very hot- iron.'
CiiOTiiEs-riKs aro re" h. - 1 jr.. at" xibla and durable by 1'odh:''- ii cle n water from five to tt n 1. 1 .L 3 tv :ry two weeks. They choul 1 be d:i d quickly, and kept in strong L free from dust. The lines j ;e 1.1c- . 2 L.hd every month. Whex gold or fiivcr is tn.hh.d, the best liquor that ca:i Le u.-cd fcr restoring its luster ia e; Iriis cf wine ; it should be warmed before it is applied to the tarnished epot This application will preseive the color of the silk or embroidery. Apple Tapioca PunxiNa. rare and core tart apples, fill the openings with butter and sugar, put into a pan a hea-p-iiig teaspoon each of dry tapioca and sugar to each apple; put in the apples, sprinkle ground cinnamon over them, fill the pan nearly full cf water, and bake. ' : : Tomato Pbe serves. Pare and quarter good, ripe tomatoes ; place them in a porcelain -with a little water, so they will not bum. They require to be cooked until the juice is nearly all out ; then add one pound of white sugar to esuh pound of fruit. Cook slowly half an hour. Cream Bice Pudding. Wash four ounces of rice (cost 3 cents) through two waters, put it into a baking dish with three ounces of sugar, and a teaspoonful of flavoring (cost 3 cents), pour in one quart and a pint of milk (cos'i, 12 cents), and put it into a moderate oven to bake an hour and a half, or until it is of a creamy consistency. This pudding ' is very delicate and wholesome, and costs 15 cents. A thrifty housewife writes : Warm a stew-pan with a little dripping in it; take half a pound of mutton and one pound of liver; cut the liver into slices, and brown it aloEg with the mutton; put a little pepper, salt and onions into the pan; make a paste consisting of dripping, flour, pepper and salt; add this to the pan, and let it stew for one and a half or two hours. Cost, 11 pence potatoes, 3 pence in all, 1 shilling and 2 pence, which will make a very good dinner for eight of a family, and suitable for any workingman's family. The same may be done with a half pound of steak instead of liver to cost 1 shilling and 3 pence, potatoes 3 pence, for the same number of a family. WHERE OUR INVENTORS E1VE. The geographical distribution of our inventors is, to say the least, suggestive in respect to the number of patents taken. The leading States stood, in 1878, as follows: New York, 3,914 patents; Pennsylvania, 1,895; Massachusetts, 1,298; Illinois, 1,298; Ohio, 1,195 ; Connecticut, 736; New Jersey, 085; Michigan, Indiana, Iowa Missouri and California stand close together, about 425; Wisconsin took 303; Maryland, 273; Bhode Island, 231; District of Columbia, 197; Maine, 178; Minnesota, 164; Kentucky, 163; Virginia, 145; Texas, 108; Tennessee and Louisiana, 107 each; New Hampshire, 107; the rest less than 100 each. It will be seen that New York took more than double the next in the list; while the first three took more than all the rest together. Massachusetts took more than all the rest of New England, and 200 more than all tbe States south of Mason and Dixon's line. The number taken in Connecticut exceeded by 120 the share of all the South Atlantic and Gulf States from Virginia to Texas. New York tcok more than all New England, except Massachusetts, and all the South; Illinois nearly as many as all the Southern States together; Missouri and Maryland more than the rest of the South, excepting Kentucky and Ttnnecsee; and the l:.t two more th"n the Cardinal, Georgia, Florida, Alabama and Mississippi. In the ratio of pahnts to population, th? leading Stitcs were: The District of Columbia with 1 to COS inhabiting; Connecticut, 1 to 7C0;P.hod3 liUzd, 1 to 011; Mist-.ichusctis, 1 to 018; No'? York, 1 to 1,121; New Jersey, 1 to 1.3:3; C-difun.ii, 1 to 1.37C; renrrylvEii, 1 to i.r;?; Ihiuchs, 1 to 1,937; and Ohio with 1 to 2,2:23. The prrportion fcr the United S::tcs ea a whole
was 1 to 2, CCS In! alit.irt? era coast Cut. 3 avers
I --t to 2i :') inh-d.-h-ut
4.1,
d flout eve
Frvs ETxritni Asn THJETY-o7E Srxas cf ne-iriy all nations h ..ve cci.tr il.u. d to1 i'-e Int -rt rc-'il Paper ExhIUlkn at Berlin cpned mc-.th. I". p . r cf every thcriptlcn cud r.:;cLi-jry fcr r-u! irg it are ? xL'Th: h
A li'e J r rie.'y I r r "o jt j. 3h f-n". r Jr--1 rrri n t.-:fr..in-.p.tt;.:: . 1 - ,.- 1 ' k.- T, t i r 3 t - '-;.- 1 1 - "I I 1 h ( '..,.. -h .1; o-
t T
1 i- i 1
. -1 .
- J." - " 1 ii
3 - t . t
1- . till
' t Tf II i 1 t f l i r-" t 1
1 1 I - -Vi j t. t h k l i T j a a . 1 r the Cre the v hide
Lit J 1 J. rf t - f . 1
: "Ai.hA: n a to i,, a 5 v t
"vnt ; s --t ev- 'j
: - 1
i't t - h as
c ;t' . M 1 "I r h r" 1- 1 "1. b 1 r - ' i ft . - t - ry f rvn. ra r? rt . 1 - rp-tn'; tr i--H' i! v f 1 u't' 1 1 tp 't. in-, i t . :...i'1L.ic .ti it Urjoc t f r 1 r k g- 1 ' tr v ! r ;tiyl - .;.L, r- .rf it 't', tiithns rt t Tt r prt it t - tt f-o pvn, 1 sot.itt' . :i -t. . nf. ltrinlfe.4i '..-tti' tecl" trcfthec . ..1: am n of th.- c "ri-t-y. hvri 11 Lii a 1 e c 1 it.e sL, j fr m a "-t t cl hr f 1 be a -1 run.n a r it . t " v . 1 Lft.tn. duy . 'j.o tina deserves great credit for its enterprise, i:- s to t" ? t-f "-"ct t Lr.a cf Z Lf i 1 J rf & Co. Cnicctao limes.
To 1 : ousc'i e" pe r 8. The attention of heads of families is respaclfully invited to the superior quality, in every respect cf Dqoley's Yeast Povdeb. It is entirely free from adnlteration of any kind, and every package contains absolute fell weight. Consumers aonkl bear in mind the fact that a strictly pure, full-weight baking- powder, although it costs a little more than the adulterated, cheap, light-we'ght or bulk powders, is by far the cheapest, both in purse and hesi.L. Voluntary assertion should be considered as grand evidence of the merits of a remedy. Beiow is what one person thinks of Dr. Graves' HE ABr ItEGUhATOil as a cure for Heart Disease: 8irb : WIH yrm plee send me & bottle of Dr. Graves II FA KT KKGULATOR by express. I see yrm have it advertised ia tae Timrjt, and 1 can Bay it is the best rBicedy for tlia heart erer ofiered to the paMio. N. Ham. Sutton. VU
Among the many forms of Heart Dieseaaa aro
Palpitation, Enlargement,
Spasms
cf the
Heart, Stoppage of the Action cf the Ut art.
Trembling all over and about the Heart, Ossification or Bony Formation cf the Heart, Rheumatism, General Debility and Sinking of the Spirits. Send your name to P. Ii. Imgalls, Concord, N. H., for a pamphlet containing a hat of testimonials of cures, etc. Dr. Graves' HEART PJ2QFJX-ATQR is for Bale by druggists at 50 cents and il per bottle. - To Develop Healthy and IIabmonious Action among tho organs of secretion, digestion and evacuation, take Db, BIott's Vegetable Lives Pills, which healthtully stimulate the liver, give tone and regularity to the liver, counteract a tendency to costiveness and purify the blood. Their cathartic action is unaccompanied by griping, and is never violent and abrupt but always gradual and natural. The?e pills are of tha greatest assistance in overcoming serofuloua tumors and eruptive maladies. All Druggists sell it. Wilhoft's Tonic. Safe, PsnvaiKT axd Complete ! "VTilhoft'tj Tonic ores Chills and Fever, Dumb Chills and B-i0tl3 Fevers those Titans that kid their chousands wJiere this remedy is nnknown. t cures Enlargement of the Spleen, tj cures Hypertrophy of the Liver. It hurts - one" Ifc cure3 a11 types of Malarial Feve aud is pei-fectly protective in all its effects. Try Wilhoft's Tonic, the great infa'uble Chill Cure. Wheelock, Fislay & .0- Proprietors, New Orleans. Fop sale by all Dbcgois .-s. Ami Axteomy, wife of Mark Anthony, residing at No. G Locust street, Fall River, Mats., wa.3 afflicted with a severe Felon on her finger and was induced to try Grace's Salve. Almost instautly he experienced relief from the pain which had been almost unendurable. Every other remedy proved unavailing. Fob upwards of 30 years Mrs. "WINdLOW'S SOOTHING SYRUP has been used for children with never-failing success. It corrects acidity of the stomach, relieves wind colic, rsgnlates the bowels, cures dysentery and diarrhea, wnether arising from teething or other causes. An old and well-tried remedy. 25 eta. a bottle. For loss of cud, horn ail, red water in cows, loss of appetite, rot, or murrain in sheep; thick wind, broken wind and roaring, and for all obstructions of the kidneys in horses, ue Sheridan's Cavalry Cornlitkm I'oinltrs. Xon't buy a large pack of worthless powder.
An Irishman called at a drug store to get a bottle of Johnson's Anodrne Liniment for the Rheumatism; the drrjgEiwt asked him in what part of the body it trouble! him most. "Be me sou'," raid he, "I have it in every houl and corner of ma."
What will you read when the evenings grow long and coot? Did yon ever read The Best Family P per in tne United States? If not, send Ten Cents, and get three specimen copies. Address, Th e Leix; s.e, Chicago, HI.
To cleanse and whiten the teeth, to rweeten the breath, nse Brown's Camphorated Saponaceous Dentifrice. Twenty-live cents a bottle. IiH I'OltTANT NOTICIh-ruriMtTS, rami. Iiei and Others can pnrchiiee no remedy eqnd to Dr. TOBIAS VENETIAN LINIMKNT, for tho cur of Cholera, Diarrhcca, Dysentery, Croup, Colio and Seasickness, taken internally (it in perfectly harmle" ; oatii accompanying each bottle) an-,1 exurn&tij for Ciironio Rheumatism, H"-tacba, Toothache, Sore Throat, Cuts, hnrns. Swellings, Bruise, iionqnito lits, 1l !Mrs, 1'a.itia f.im'us. Hack &r.- Chwt Tba VKN'KTIAN I.lXl.vi KN'T was imnidiiL-o i ia lrA,l, and r.n fine who has wsed it- but r. -Tit : -i.if-A to. do so. many stating if it was Ten roiars a K(tfie they would not be without it. Thonnands oi Certiiicaies can be seen at the leiot, speaking of its wonderful curative prope-r. ties. JSoid !y the Dniggitits at 4U t ts. Oepot, 41 Murray street, Nevr York.
THE MARKETS.
SEW TOKK Beeves Hogs Cotton Flock SnpprBna,. . . . . ... , Wheat Xo. 2 Chicago. . '. ... , . . . Co'bk Western Mixad Oats M bted ..... ........ J'.yk Wfetern Pork Mess LillD CHICAGO. Beeves Choice Grarle.i Steers Choice Kativea .... Cows and Heifers Butcher steers Medium to i'air . ...... Hoos L-ve. . .; , FnotjB Fancy White Winter
Good to Choice Spring
m heat o. "2 sprint; .N2 No. 3 Sprinsf Cobs No. 2 Oats No. 2 I. vji "So. 2 Bakley Ko. 2 Butteb Choice Creamery Bk FresSi. Poek ileea.. . .... Lai.d. ... sixlwauex: Wheat No. 1 Xo. 2 Corh Vo. I Oatis yo. 2 KYK So. 1 BABLtI-S(J. 2 sr. LOCI-. Wheat Ko. Radi F.ui Con Mlxetl. Oats -o. 2 i'.VE.. Pork iJ't-tss ..." Lass Hogs Cattle ci.ci:;.riT Wheat -Bed cosn.... ; Oats Xew Bit 1'.. ... s. It eea ........ La 'ii x
Ex.
rt at r vCr: Ti. ?f ..... . UAXi iO
V .1 A I
1 '
s . .1... ... ... 4
.17 50 (Jill) (Ml . i 25 ( 4 r-,0 VI 0. i2t . 3 30 H i -;' . 1 O'J u 1 1 :i ' 41 (. 4'.t . i; id. ?i 80 i,, m .10 20 (ailO 5 ) "' 7.?i . 5 00 vi 5 50 . 4 50 i !-0 . 2 60 (-- 3 5'). . 3 (.0 i 3 51 . 3 75 ( 4 4 1 . 3 00 u 4 !-") . 6 25 -5 f,0 I. S m 5 5 . m (ri, f;7 ) ;4 fl 37 Mi ZH : 21 -4 21 47 (4 4'-i . 1 c;j a, 1 fi 20 fi-i 2 3 ICX'.A Jl . . 9 65 t 9 75 7' (3 7,ii 1 f " 1 (0 . . i ' 1 1 .. st v a21 i.-fl, - '-2 4-i Ul 4J . 1 11 it I 11 bi -a s . t - ; - ' 21 4; . 47 .11 , i'j .-i i 7 ' ..17',. ; t . . 2 J , j 5 v. J i j r .. '1 . . 41 .. '. J hi. : ; f 1 t-i ft .. 1 '7 1 .
(1 t-.
-W ...
I ' ' -i I..... I
1 ''-ii.it
1
.otitmin-',.- . 1 , , ' " 1,1 r
t-i fr '
an.i limaho.l iial lo inn h-
.11!' nil ( ls j-t coillr , 1 1 ,
rim ,1 n -,.n 1 f , . , , .. .,(,'' '
Oivi or v
lit fti 1 e. : - it. 1 . t
ce 1 -ui Au 1 H f. I.r
I - . i 1 !
-i i
i f,,.
fl( ll;
. - t 1 . , J A-' t, ! ,.n ! v
r"f O " T fX I'H' V i-t A..-.T-. V , ' C7 A ,,A,Y, 8 t rt - ... ? f Usifor. I 1 .-i t . r i- J "V or F. O !lit,u-,A:( , i s
vJ' u V 1 lrK,v i"; -
r
1
I 1
S I ... it .M I 1 A- i ,, .
-s. irt ...la.l v.
A th y -s t , n .11 it t ,
N r
1 ti'!,"
VlurV".ti...'iuri in- An i, i CL J
J. IL BUFFORD-S RONS, Manofactaring In...J" I A 1 to lit Franklin Mrt-et, Boston, Ms.
KFtabiishnl nerly l-s'y -.-.n ri.
fir-NOW li HAi) V.I f A(i. 'rWuT-
A ti.ifvtijtci.ia
i.i,
t i J iJ lala i A full hUCory of b' fneat. pni ;,! n ,.rn ,r 1 iluri nip CoiiUo. .-,iie:i.;i : r , .,, . priCKd. I ne bock the puti'icaie '. " tt'IlSkU ,rt' i ttHA!I..(. s,,,l,i , N , '
f f "-' n "V TV7T
jl f p.Vlt Wi-i'1 ut Z- 'i
Secure ir now: n,n.( i'w; Acres S. Ic f in F ttJn rnk.i fir ,ir , . n , ' ' ttrmi. (treiit Kurt unsin li;irni-il I U s."i for the l'wri trti't-. a new book wit h nw mi' ,'.;t fwMen"T. () F I'uMk)!,, ' Wn.S'.'il Sl, n. 1 J-.1 r" 1 ii '.-On.v',, V',
oi. r
1 s
-tv T
- r - .
LADY 1 LI. Ti-'oi n s,,
i ii men. I . . . . .. ' .
drws Fro- Ajvormore, Muadville, '''
MKADVILI.K ,1 p-ctari a. !s a tens Pr" iiveriut
I lAli I u iiuiiu i Uit L'lj I'OIi KAIt.MI its AMI .11 M ; ( 'H si.; .... They are uniform m fluu.-. and the color ri .i- v,.., be in.Lici'e-1. Any oi,e can v oiit .t i t n lit. I , very superior covering properties, and no n---- j. , eo.c:ti:ei pntettt priirits. contain etuser witter, i or ahtaji. 1 nese paints pre in I.t-;-!.i -nrni. nr i e,hi i 1 G.ii.oii an-" ati,i 1 .itw, I ' ,n a . , , insinall cans of tine to five pj.md ..rvj 1 r i"---s carj novunifd 'n.t t if I. W. Di-.t.... cor. k ttltoa and Vt uUam fcti-s.. So York.
iiAn
rTTT"l FI '1
if iiUI
UtrLl "-t n ' . t C -i r 1 , iffine chr'rtnf qx-zlt'ct rrA ni.d it f artrr rf ncecte,-m q ft.vl fl-rrnrrrg. The h:-l tia-vt ever mide. As our hiua ptri- tradr-rna: !c H T imitatert on inferior paoElX pe 1 hat J ?ct s J- t u on every fiincr. hv nil (lertVn. t-v form!-.., f-e, to C. A. J4.f-'v A ,)- 1 fT
J fc mm m y tm w
M team m iJi I
JrKE8vn.LK, Mich., Doc. S7, tT7. .irrt. r''f I Bentyoufnii . l'ir to liiti i.t i.-op' M 1 i. " had two arm h ite ti-'-.i ( netjj on an im.t r ' . p .1 it is aixncsL well, luispeotiuliy youra, C J. .N;..-a.
Price 2 H cent. a box at aii draegifttR, or icn' H r-l on receijit oi cn. I'reo.treit by M.'Iii 1 I.t. lV S--N. NJ 1! trl f tl Ale . I. -' ' '
'I if 'fl i- i el 1 liori its,' n uil . Jrillitif, ;..i-liiu t ctii, JW.,1.1 ' will succee,! pvi'ryuiiorc. It r,i.ii,ts tht of weils in any ft.n or nvlt. ti- m.ti anil at horse can r.i.ke r -o-n J . I ;. tj.tv. Circulars and rcfctL-iKres sent Ii (('. . . j Pat. ENT Kfl-.HT SwiNt'l C. A .'I i ' - '-'-s
:
i
VOO.OOO aoron taken in f..nr mtbi l S3,Ht fK-K f, -c-ti c;:t'..-. a. il, i .: t-tiii.-iiiii- Kt.n... t:-..i Ctety. Adore?, b. J. l-.iiiiK.r". i.ati.l t niu r. st.i.a. Ka-M:. nClf -' -A' f ' "Y T TfirjK)r tf Daily and 'Vtckiy, C'-irto, E "rv r . T! o T r-o-t, t i" -i lit 1 1 ' 1 in 'i N ' !.-it."r in New l-.r.cl.irt'l. l-.iiit.fi wnn K,e .,.i rei. rrn-e t i t1.vttried tftstei anti i'efitlr-!U''OtH at l.-.io hotttfrj tivv-ii.'. .i the ioreiKti and local news put.:,. . .! rouiutlj. rfu!y Tran-cnyt, S 1 O p"r annnm it sdv:i-,rt;. Wt-eKiy ' tactic .nn t-Lir.-'.. -..Vpr i,l.!iir.ii.il i:;t .y...ri ,n,tice. s-ttd Ton. sAiirr-r; ccpt. J f k L U t.i IstloClirc::--'- C-. llje ia i a i I L i w y j ... i "i.iiiiiiiii it j" rin I'to.'T a M : r 1 1 r r 1 he Tt' ir- 1 !H ' I - ! , fT ( ' 1 f ' ' ' I- e. un ii u uer t i n it.1 fit' ttfl i i ., f ' ' " fn.tjt.. soup.
MAI". EY TIIK Pcnmyl-. cra Colt I.lar.nX Co-, rni'.i'-i "mi .
1
fc .... . i.i.jaS''
fit).
V,
f r.
sr. ...... Rgt jjp .ra (f M
f
