Jones County Liberal (Newspaper) - March 13, 1873, Monticello, Iowa T MM Tint ( DelUn T OF fHl The A committee of the Constitutional ot New York charged with th i duty of ud to ira in the reported that tl see local debts reach the mini of * 21 1,000,000, exclusive of the State debt The New York by a vote 7 to s declare tho seat of BOBS Treed - - a ' e on 3 - Female Suffri ge in the House of ves have reported iu favor of granting to w men the ' right to Tote and hold The first number of tho new ted daily the wan issued in ' York on the 5th large edition waa Hold. It is believed the enterprise will prove i A brutal at Collier's W. the other between the bruisers Hicken and was broken up in a - M nda J be S Several shots were but unfortunately none of the brutes were hit by the flying At the annual meeting of the stoc of the Union Pacific at the following Board of Directors was Horace Fl John Oakes Sidney C. 8. Elisha Boyall E. Gordon E. Joseph George 8. O. 8. i ' | A train oil the Pan Handle road ran off the track not far from a few days a of passengers wore ] The Government Directors of the Union at a in re- elected Horace F. John Vice President and E. Hi Secretary and 1 Gen. Fremont nays he has no knowledge of the fraudulent transactions with which reports from Paris have connected liia Judge of New has enjoined Credit Mobilier from parting with any of its property until the claims of the widow of James to 20,000 of stock are adjudicated j In the case of John indicted for murder iu New the jury were unable to seven of them being in of and five for acquittal on the ground of i New York advices represent that the various ' trades of the city contemplate a general strike at an early 4 The Hour League claim to have $ 100,000 in the and say they have doubled their means since tbe struggle of last i Th ' The Alton ' and St. Louis railroad baa brought suit for ( 10,000 damages against some of the persons who detained its trains in the attempt te ride for the legal fare of three ' Advices from Oregon report that there is a prospect of the peace negotiations ( with the Indians coming to a j Capt. Oscar O. a known recently committed suicide at A train was thrown from the track by a broken near the other by which three passengers were badly A keeper at 111 has been fined $ 10 and had his license revoked for Helling liquor to A righteous I The Judge of the Cincinnati Police Court was ' the other by of a ' The Peace Commission have at last succeeded hi having an interview with Capt. Nasty Faced and others of the who have made their country so hot for the white and the result has not proved The Indians having rejected the proffered the commanding officer has expressed his determination to accept no terms but unconditional Gen. Cary H. Chief Paymaster of the Military Division of the died at San Francisco j A terrible encounter occurred in the notorious quarter of Chicago known as last between two policemen arid six villainous which resulted in the killing of two of the and the serious wounding of one of the The Newport and Cincinnati Bridge Company has brought suit for $ 557,000 damages against the United The ground of complaint - VOL. 1. 10 f MGH 13,1873. NO. 25. rested the Speaker and me that In answer to a formal inq dry from Emory that tb seizure slid arrests were made wl boat hi knowledge or and that I e has n opinion to express about them i bnt I h t he i under Instructions from n tode fend the Kellogg from ny violent The arrested members were subsequently and J Legislature assembled in St. James Tennessee has adopted the common schoo I Ex- Gov. W. W. Holden has been appointed Postmaster at N. Gen. N. B. Forrest bu been elect A of tbe Memphis and Bebna Affairs in New Orleans have d down into comparative and it is ai that there is no apparent danger ol * A committee of tbe Baltimore co iterance after patiently investigating the ea of Bev L. D. have unanimously reported in favor of preferring charges of against At Geo ge Hall aged 18? 1inot- dead Amelia is the action of Congress requiring a change in the construction of the bridge ' after the Government had approved the A widow named Nancy Lanxton and her adopted 12 years were found dead in bed in home at a few days with their throats ear to A sou of the murdered woman wax arrested on suspicion of having committed the v y - In 6hi6, the r a party of young who were in the disreputable business of serenading an aged just with tin were treated to a shower of sulphuric acid by the irate Half a dozen eyes were permanently several suits of clothes and a number of hitherto faces disfigured for t Mr. Colfax was accorded an enthusiastic friends of South who turned put in large numbers to welcome him They cannot persuade themselves that he is not an innocent and much abused The Modoc war may be regarded as at an Capt. Jack sent word to ' Gen. the other that he accepted the terms of under which the savages surrender themselves as prisoners of war and consent tp let the Government provide for their comfort iu To this the Modoc chieftain orders the Federal commander to meet bun with and to have tents erected for the accommodation of the The The election in Arkansas has resulted in the ratification of the constitutional amendment doing away with The political troubles in Louisiana have finally culminated iu The Enery a few nights attacked the Third Precinct Police in New commenced an indiscriminate firing into the which waa returned by the Gen. Chief or with 200 Metropolitans and one piece of executed a flank movement bn the He peppered them lively with scattering them in every The foot up one militiaman killed and twelve and one policeman slightly Subsequently the Federal troops came upon the scene of and their presence had a magical effect in quelling the The city is now in possession of the Tbe keeper of the Southern Bank of at in a defaulter to the amount of $ 30,000. ' The defalcation in the New Orleans Postoffice figures up over 950,000. Tbe New Orleans police made a a few on the place of meeting of th MeEnery and she had failed to answer a letter hi had written to in which he ' hi I j The Senate committee to investigate the charges against Pomeroy report that none o the charges of bribery have been sustained Senator Thurman dissents from the The inauguration ceremonies appear to been a grand from beginning to end being marred only by tho extreme cold which prevailed throughout the both hi its military and civic divisions far surpassed that of any preceding with the exception of the grand review of 1865, made the most brilliant display ever witnessed at the ball was the grand feature of the The attendance was and everything posset off The scene hi the room is described as one of dazzling far surpassing anything of the kind ever hi the The President's inaugural address in printed in full in another Hereafter the Globe will be issued from the public printing office in quarto The passed by Congress providing for an equestrian statue of Gen. Thomas at Washington donates eight condemned cannon for that The is to be erected under the direction of the Society of the Army of the Not a single containing a subsidy or lane grant of any description passed during the late session of A Washington correspondent writes thai there is much canvassing there as to the Presidential policy to be pursued with regard to Federal On this point the authorities are Some friends of the President claim that he will make numerous changes throughout the especially among postmasters and while others are confident with but few the incumbents will be appointed for a second It is asserted that there will not be a single Cabinet with the of Mr. Bout Levi P. of is henceforth to perform the functions of Private Secretary of the Judge Poland has sent the ten shares of disowned Credit Mobilier stock that were bandied about between Kelley and Ames to United States Treasurer who is to sell with accumulated for the benefit of the of the It is authoritatively stated that the President will send but very few appointments to the Senate this J. B. the contumacious Credit Mobilier has brought suit against Speaker Elaine and the at- Arms of for false He claims damages to the amount of $ 100,000. It is stated that it is not the intention of the Secretary of the Treasury to inflate the currency by keeping out permanently any part of the $ 11,000,000 tender though he still adheres firmly to the conviction that he has the right to make use of this and will do so should the exigencies of the public interest require it. Senator Sumner was in his seat in the Senate the other His health has vastly Doun the publisher of the Washington says the police of the city stopped the sale of the extra edition of his paper containing a burlesque account of the inaugural It is rumored at the capital that France has demanded the surrender of Gen. Chandler the other day made his and arrived grandson a present of $ 50,000. The Present bos sent the following nominations to the G. P. Collector of Customs at James H. N. M. 111.; Michael 111.; William C. M. 8. Z. H. M. H. Fort Wis. Collector of Mich. United States J. B. Eastern District of B. H. Northern District of Illinois A. Eastern District of A. B. United States Attorney for C. A. Surveyor General f The Congressmen who voted themselves $ 5,000 extra salary have been imploring the disbursing officer of the House tor their but it seems they have run against a The Comptroller has decided that the law is so loosely worded that he does not feel authorized to draw a warrant for the The amount which the law requires for increased pay for the Congress just ended is exactly $ 1,655,000. Washington swarms with The greatest rush to be The Comptroller of the Treasury has finally come to the conclusion that the increase of salaries can be paid as authorized by the warrant has been drawn for $ 1,500,000. A large quantity of left over from the inauguration was distributed to the James E. of has been appointed Special Agent of the Postoffice Col. John W. of will succeed Mr. Nelson as Minister to The following are among some of the appointment of Collectors of Internal Revenue made in anticipation of the act of Dec. 24,1872, abolishing the offices of Assessor and Assistant Mark First District of Harvey B. Third District of Crowley P. Fifth District of Tenth John Fourth W. Sixth Edward Sixteenth John B. Eighteenth E. Ninth The discovery of immense frauds on the Bank of England causes the greatest excitement in London financial Tbe bank cautions the public against the negotiation of MO and 1040 United States 000. It U thought that the I which amount to ' fully $ 1,000,000, ' ' ere prepared by a ring of American n. Tho frauds were y Bo noticing in the same a differen to in the color of ihe ink n ed. The reward o lered for the arrest of the swindlers has been Tho recent in Can was attended by another disgraceful ri it. Tho roughs in tbe interest of the Governi tent candidate charged several election ] seized the polling bopk and tore The charged the who made a Ught and the troops striking all' in the way with the fla of their laying a few cheeks city was under and the sole ten held i i tb t * l It Is reported that the frauds ou he Bank of England amount to $ 2,000,0000, at j that of tills amount $ 360,000 was drawn u on Jay A Co. $ 200,000 upon the and a- large upon the Gen. Fremont's alleged swindles by the sale of worthless bonds in Paris amount to ' ' The Spanish troops have suffered a severe defeat at the hands of Gullets near I The yellow fever is raging ( n Bio Janeiro and other parts of ( t There are signs of trouble in and street conflicts are I President Thien i seriously A rumor comes from London that | the Marquis of Lome - and the Princess Lo ise have separated because of incompatibility lot that the Princess is in a religious retreat near that the Marquis has gone ' ' ' j The Carlists every day grow more formidable in their attempts to re- establish a throne in They are 1 now about to negotiate a loan on the credit of their Thiers gives an of the quality of his Republicanism by hastening to be the first to accord them belligerent rights in their assaults upon the distracted Spansh Republic The impression grows hi London that Don Carlos will Thiers is again on his An accomplice and paramour of the in the Bank of England las been arrested by the London A large amount of money was found iu her which she The clerk of tho swindlers is also in but neither has as yet made known any Important The Duke of Edinburgh is engaged to a foreign The reported separation of the Marquis of Lome and Princess Louise is discredited iu up to this has paid Germany three and a half millions of francs on account of the war Contradiction is given ta the report that the European powers will jointly break off diplomatic connection with Spam if a Federal is The catastrophe at which was briefly announced some days has been seldom surpassed in Two hundred persons assembled to witness an acrobatic at a cafe built on piles over the when the piling gave way and the building carrying down all save a few who had the presence of mind to j mp out of the and were picked up by The reported successes of the Carlists in Spain have been greatly The Government is taking vigorous measures for heir About a dozen persons were recently and a large number by the explosion of a cartridge factory hi the suburbs of France has officially given financial guarantees for the payment of her war and negotiations are hi progress for tho complete evacuation of French territory by he German The Pope the other that reconciliation with the Italian Government was and that God would punish the of his The master printers throughout Germany have locked out all employes who are The cable again reports President Thiers seriously Barcelona has declared im favor of the Federal Amadous has arrived at Ho as received by the 3. In Tesey New York $ 200,000. At Ohio $ 30,000. $ 75,000.... a shanty was and three negro who had been locked in by their were burned to 4. In N. Y. Mich. $ 10,000.... ' ort $ 16,000.... $ 12,000 $ 30,000. I 5. At 111.; 12 including the offices of the Tri- Weekly and % man were destroyed loss and insurance Tenn. $ 15,000. Canada $ 10,000. BOH 6. At the business of the town was involving a oss of $ 100,000.... Woburn $ 100,000. 8. At $ 80,000. Pa. $ 25,000. Ohio $ 50,000 9,000.... 111.; $ 20,000. Ind. $ 10,000. SECOND March 3. Tbe Deficiency 111 WM the item of 1397,800 to pay interest ue the being stricken The impeachment of Judge Delahay reported o the Senate by the House The on the Sundry and the Po t l bull were concurred In The commitee of conference on the tor tbe distribution of he Geneva award reported that they were unable o agree the Bonn u to the clan of louea to aad ai to The conference committee 1 report on Sundry Appropriation cutting down tbe Senate $ 3,800,000, WM agreed The request of the Benato for a conference committee n the College land grant was The amendment to the legislative as reported by the concurred In by 108 d committee of til matter aa to bin be hail had u 1, which bo hat prepared and would make Tho Hou r ( i ibe waa declared tint 8EHHIGN, March 0. The Senate assemble at all the Senators being Jon ( Ferry ( and Wadleigh ( N. wfc swor In and took their ( alba offered himself to be in. Bayard and long debate bnt no notion was reached I the a resolution to th effect that Caldwell was not legally elected nato from which went over under tun March 7. The Mr. New man was re- elected The by vote of 94 to 33, refused to postpone ifl Spencer ( Be was admitted suit Won presented tbe credentials of McMillan ( Tho were ordered to lie upon the table and be printed An ineffectual attempt was made to ti ke up h ( ' Raymond and The Herald rigidly organised than either the or the wai concu s the salary of the ' cornto It of the Supreme Cabinet and $ 10,000 Chief 10,600; Senators and 17,900 members of the present the into be in lieu of all except for actual raveling expenses to the capital and return The amendment relative tbe withholding of pay for of and Wilson's amendment directing suits to be brought against the Credit agreed Merrill's amendment - - - - - Adored by t h e - - - J claimants was ricken March 1. Bills o remove the political disabilities of B. M. t T. to extend the time for the restoration of le Ottawa and Chippewa lands to The administered the ' oath of office to he new Vice- and at 19 o'clock m. tbe second session of the Senate of the second Congress waa declared Wilson then called the Senate of the Congress tp and several new memera Senate adjourned Tbe Senate UU tp the Texas A t T J respect to the news editoria Raymond and Mr Greeley permitted great freedom in their and encouraged individuality o thought and The in rarely interfered with his asso suggested or dictated a line of Each editorial writer selected his own treated it in his own in of witl the tone and character of tho OIK Mr. even when in saw the articles except in This system its tages slight variances of opinion sometimes detected in the which of were laid to his charge bn this was balanced by obvious advantages Mr. Bennett pursued a very differen He established the daily conn oil of which is still a feature in the management of the It is held at every editor to bo The topics of the day are fully discussed at these am each writer has his subject assigned to and its treatment While the influence and views of other writers besides Mr. Greeley and Mr. Raymond were frequently apparent iu the Tribune and the the under this always faithfully reflected the ideas and purposes of its founder and Mr. Bennett kept the public at a Few outsiders found access to his private room at the Herald Mr. Raymond and Mr. on the rarely refused to see visitors in the A gentleman once entered Mr. Raymond's private office with the Are you ai leisure was the courteous as the quick pen was in its progress over the but I am at your F r a previous his Mr. Greeley had a private room in the Tribune to which he could retreat when the pressure of visitors became too great for his patience but his old room was open to and he might be seen engrossed in If he heard a step on the floor he would without looking up What's wanted and would generally keep on writing while the visitor his unless his attention j was arrested by something of Both Greeley and Mr. could listen and write at the same a rare faculty even newspaper English In Tho London News says it is high time that Englishmen were taught tb speak and write The half of the population of the islands is about as unintelligible to the other half as if it were talking * Yorkshire and a Devonshire peasant thrown into company would not understand each other as readily as an Irishman and a Highlander talking Gaelic to each Even among the people who are fairly and who live in those large circles of population in which ' provincialisms are supposed to die the language is subjected to serious ill Half the country members of the House of Commons omit the final consonant in words ending with Many of them talk of The tricks played with the letter which are in many do not as a in except where the rural representative has to pronounce such a word as It would be an ignominious thing if 30,000,000 of Japanese were to be found speaking better English than the English the Eastern nations havo an odd habit of Every one knows the story of the Chinese tailor who made a coat according to pattern by imitating all the rents iu and perhaps the Japanese will take the English language as it reproducing all the current faults of The Coal The census of 1870 shows that the number of collieries in the United States at that time was 1,566, of which 588 ( 227 anthracite and 361 were in the number of engines employed in them was 1,173, of which 898 were in the number of men employed in them was 81,514, of whom 60,508 were in the number of boys employed was 10,940, of whom 9,364 were in Pennsylvania the capital invested was $ 110,008,029, of which 067,911,703 was in the amount of wages paid per annum was $ 44,316,491, of which $ 31,978,80.8 was paid in Pennsylvania the number of tons produced was 32,860,690, of which 23,448,793 was produced in Pennsylvania the value of the product was $ 730,524,992, of which the Pennsylvania product was $ 523,257,814. It is thus seen that the single State of Pennsylvania has a coal interest which is more than two- thirds of the entire coal interest in the Next to Pennsylvania comes West Kentucky and in the order in which they are The various substances included under the term are the tusk of the the the narwhal and To these we must add the fossil so often used in early This was obtained from where the tusks of the mammoth are found along the banks of the large It is a curious fact that the huge tusks of ivory now procured would not finish pieces as large as those which were used in the middle There is every probability that the agents softened the and could then enlarge the A fifteenth century recipe in the British Museum directs that the ivory should be placed in muriatic and it will become as soft as By being placed in white vinegar it hardens The Greeks used ivory to decorate their and also shields and Greek did not think it beneath them to work in i Iowa East. Iowa has quite recently engaged i hipping Eastern draft ant carriage Mr. of i lias in the past few weeks several loads o splendid of thorn largo weighing from thirteen to six teen hundred fine appearing some of again trim und handsome buggy stylish and active that Mr. of - Indianola has been shipping a large lot of tin horses to New York This is Homo W n K - W w r 1 ft as anything lately coining to ou the agricultural advance mont of our State; It is something fo Massachusetts farmers to send to low for jir draft and more for New York bankers to send t Iowa for their carriage It show that Iowa is gradually coming to its that shall have or rived at It was no long ago that we hod to to the Eas for all of our good It does look cheering to see it otherwise Thor is a great in the matter of ex between sending from Iowa tc the East two hundred dollars iu an Iowa raised horse and Bending the sain amount in All we want to dp i to keep this sort of improvement going Let us seek in every way to exchange produce instead of cash for all we have to buy in tho East. whili doing let us ax quickly as pon get into the sensible way of buy ing in in to anywhere all and everything tha we buy A is a good deal of money for any to for every State keepf within its own and ye year the heedless people of Iowa send more than that much money out o the State which might just as well be kept at and paid to homo We mast wisdom from the He known that every tinu a dollar changes hand in trade makes at least ten cents out of it. AI the dollars wo make in Iowa are lion earned Then after wo liav earned $ 9 we not keep more o them at changing hands amon our own passing nimbly Imc and forth between producer and buyer and merchant ant each one making ten or twenty per in instead of solid ing them as soon as for East ern people to sgrow rich upon Dc School Law In compliance with the request of i subscriber ( says the we below in brief the changes na made in the school law Of this State by the new code The school tax may be increased by the Board of Supervisors to three mills ou the an increase of power to levy one- half Hereto fore the tax Has been limited to $ 15 per pupil for this lias been so amended that the directors are an to levy a tax not exceeding $ 27l for and $ 75foroontingeii fund for each sub- The con fund can hereafter bo used for the purchase of and the but no debt shall bo incurred the purchase of such In districts over three hundred th polls must be kept open from 9 a. m. to 4 p. m. in as the sovereigns may to suit their wn honest purposes All contracts for building exceeding in whet in every $ 300, and all repairs exceeding that amount of cosi shall be let only after tho same have been advertised for four weeks in a failure to thus advertise or proposals having the effect to vitiate all contracts made contrary to this School orders will draw nol over ten per an increase of two per cent. Any civil township nay become an independent district by die majority vote of the electors Independent districts having a population of five hundred will elect six directors any district having a less three tho President and Treasurer to be elected by the A failure on the part of an independent district to publish a full statement of receipts and expenditures for the past year and estimates for the ensuing will subject each director to a fine of ten dollars for dereliction of No sub- district shall be formed contains fifteen though ihe School Board has power to rent a oom and employ a teacher where five are Physiology is to the branches that must bo aught in common The duties ind compensation of County remain as Artesian Wells In In an article in the field Ledger is fiven a list of the artesian wells in One at the Mount Pleasant 1,175 feet now on account of one at 705 feet out of which he water flows with considerable me at COO feet sunk for but the water of ound for that is now used or a public bath room one seven miles 803 feet sunk to cool and which were not Fairfield will Boon vote on a tax or an artesian well for public Kansas Compared to Kansas in 1870 was computed to at a true less than $ 189,- and Iowa $ 717,000,000 worth of Kansas had about $ 6,500,000 f and Iowa $ 8,000,000. Kansas was taxed $ 2,750,000 per and owa above $ 8,000,000. All this to 1,- 00,000 people in and 365,000 in There remain of the public lands in Iowa less than 1,000,000 Kansas has 39,000,000. on Good Lot of Iowa L. P. of Prairie at the stock Tuesday with 240 hogs of his own whose average weight was 440 Chicago Drover State COUNTY has 17 JACOB of ' the Dubuque is traveling in the South in search of THE Keokuk Gate City says that the bosom of Burlington is The Dubuque Times thinks it is a pity that a Keokuk editor should have to go so far from home to see a bosom TBE State Board of Public Instruction have Adopted a rule requiring teachers in all to pats examination in physiology before certificates will be granted and after next September the will bo added to tho regular EnglisJ branches tho public schools of tin ' n prominent law yor of is about to remove tt New to accept the position o attorney for tho large mercantile house of H. B. Clallin Co. 157,000 pounds o butter Ehst last A college in projected a Mount arc flve students ii tho medical r department of the State A roN firm ships dressed direct to Mr. J. who will Iowa at the World's Exposition ai A r will sail from New York 01 Tun St. Joseph and Bluffs railway has been mortgaged to capitalists for $ 8,000,000, to pay off the floating provide now rolling stock and now etc. THE recent land decision of the Score tary of tho in favor of the Sioux City and St. Panl Railway Com involves the title to 180,030 acres of land situated in Sioux am THB Council Blurts Nonpareil calls attention to the disregard of the law against slaughter of the on the and says that upward 100,000 buffalo hides have boon from that city alone this election a young lady to kiss the editor of tho Volga Valley ( once a month for four years if Grant bo is keeping her word bnt ii growing her appetite is one unless the winner of the bet deodorizes Ins face and quite allowing he will to announce u funeral er - RAPIDS has one man of a hall reports that the springtide of emigration is already flowing West through that channel in considerable TUB new code provides for the payment of county supervisors by In counties of 4,000 the pay is $ 400, am $ QO is added for every 1,000 inhabitants until tho salary is equal to $ 1,000. Wit made a statement a few days ago that tho $ 20,000 donation of Mr. Bone of was the largest so far made to any of tho educational insti this The Mount Pleas ant Journal corrects us by saying that Bishop Simpson gave $ 25,000 to Cornell of this over fifteen years State THB Dallas Gazette tells tho story that Boto actually killol ilvo hundred ana eighteen birds a two man who will kill as innocent things us 01 even ono must be lacking in the bast feelings of conscious in. UH contemplates a $ 30.000 opera Iowa City one to cont $ 25,000. and Dos a similar institution ai an expense of $ 50,000. COUNTY now boasts of having 152 school and tho whole population is less than 20,000. TUMI Agricultural Implement Manufacturing Company at Cedar has completed its and will put up its factory building during the spring and The capital stock is $ 100,000. THIS Council Bluffs Iron Works have more orders than they can ' Hiss State Auditor estimates that the February tax collections will bo about 000. This will pay off all outstanding and leave a balance iu the State Treasury of $ 100,000. Two aged respectively 9 and 11 light the street lamps at Dos A railway company ha een organized in Muscatine to build as been a pad from Muscatine to Minnesota State THE State Iowa is laying a fine telescope and spectroscope manufactured in which is ex- in a few The Temperance Movement In By our friends abroad prohibition is viewed as an States ( ind beyond the ocean How does it work Is it a perfect success in The last question can be answered in dno no. It is not a perfect We several hundreds of towns and and they have shown every degree of from great success to What then has been the result in the State as a No answer is entitled to so much weight as that which comes officially from the representatives of the In a recent vote the House declared for the of the beer as well aB Jie spirit by a vote of 145 to 72, ind the Senate by a Vote of 24 to 12. Their vote is their answer to the As against prohibition has no anything to With us the is It is nevertheless rue that much of the battle is yet to be ' The traffic is not yet The liquor question will enter largely into the issues of the next But license will not be * o such thing as a license flag will be The whole effort of the will be to find some or cover under which it can evade the r embarrass its Prohibition las yet much to fear from these indirect but nothing whatever from avowed Our friends abroad may rest assured although ide issues the main question as o the policy of Massachusetts is irrevocably Boston BITES OF of tells a little tale tiat forcibly illustrates the easy way of life of the and the pant ceremony with which his funeral are In one little yard where I happened to be said the there were seven and my discharged the office of old me that the occupants of six E them were killed in as he expressed died and were buried Mh their boots The grave was that of a Personal and Two hundred and fifty miles of paving permeate Now York Ex- Gov. in travel ing in the Southern on and his German wife will mako Germany their THB Golden Age calls Emilio Caste lor Wendell Phillips translated into New England's snowfall this winter lias ' boon one hundred on a Toil Soon estimates tho wealth o tho railroads which ho controls a $ 050,000,000. arc now 20,000 men and 100, 000 horses and oxen employed in th lumber regions In - MANY old women wear strings of beans around their nook to keep oft tho revision of Alabama laws has boon trusted to committee wholly composed of black SANTA ASHA isn't dead Ho is going to visit Now York in the spring unless another rebellion W. who has made i colossal fortune out of the is not yot 44 years d. Win mourn he fate of tho Amori can press since the has expressed his contempt for waa first used in in 1520. Before that words AKNA former wife o of has married H. of HI THB actual cost of a sowing machine is from $ 5 to $ 7, with table and al from $ 10 to $ 80. the price is $ 00 to $ 115, tho difference being clear Minn says that she will America on April 6, with great Her asthma has boon BO severe in this country that her physicians or dor her immediate I AM a man that God not tho roared the - irrepressible Ben on the floor of the House It is supposed that God made the retorts an irate newspaper A AKY of Now York and vania capitalists have purchased ton acres of land at McKinney's Station ten miles from for tb purpose of establishing works for th manufacture of tool by the Bessemer process. The company has u capital o $ 1,000,000. H. just elected to the next first entered the a in 18411, and was con tinned in seat until 1859. Ho for thp f 1854 and was thereafter classified as a Demo which he now claims ts bo of Mr. Stephens is now 61 years and retains all his THE Utica made tho gratifying It is now unlawful for tobacco to beg u The United States internal revenue law allows no person or persons to soil or dispose of tobacco in any no matter how great tho without paying first a license of $ 5," Some men would insist upon bogging their if they had to pay $ 5 a Tim Pennsylvania road is said to control 14,( miles of and above $ 500,000,000 of stock watered and still paying great dividends the latest stock subdivision and still wheat in Kansas and Nebraska ii depressed until tho farmer find the boots shoes of his family in u whole landscape of THB latest proposed venture by the gentle iu a business is tbe establishment of a life insurance company in New Quite u number of prom iuent and wealthy ladies recently held meeting to discuss the feasibility of the Only females will be insured in thin if and its and nearly all of its general will bo done by female Land to The first grant railroad was introduced by Stephen A. in ho United States Jan. 3. 1850. Mr. of reported it book with six weeks t comprised in its provisions not only he Illinois Central but the Mobile and and therefore provided fora road from Chicago to t finally became a Sept. 20, 1850, in tho term of Millard In this grant was contained 2,595,053 or about 26,000 good sizeable the whole granted to the Illinois Of that the Illinois Central Company advertise at the present ime as still for 630,000 at Tom $ 7 to $ 10 on between $ 3,000,000 and $ 4,000,000 worth of annually increasing in to the and leases several The total sale of land will realize above $ 30,000,000, and the net revenue is over $ 3,000,000 per an num. The second in 1851-' 2, endowed Missouri and Arkansas with railway the third in 1853-' 4,' helped Minnesota he same in the Congress nine railways were endowed in the Northwest and twelve in the Most of the Southern grants were arrested by the bnt he four railways of the three of and the two of Wisconsin were made rich by the acts of 1856. owa received 3,456,000 3,096,000, and 1,633,000. The total of acres embraced n all the railway past and is now 175,000,000 and 00,000,000. Missouri has not 1,000 sizeable farms left in it of the is not recorded in he land report as possessing any more and Iowa has left only bout 1,000,000 AN excitable person named Mr. Frank ' been delivering a lecture in an and calling upon the Drs. Stone and Bishops Alemany and Mayor and lis Excellency Gov. Booth to go down o the torch in and burn any ship which brings women from He would also have these eminently respectable persons hang to the arm every ship's officer and comnander and stockholder who hires and ends his service to damnable All this in Pacific and in a delivered for the benefit of a e Jonw JOB PRINTING Of with Oil Bono or THK ran AMD W. BT OM Let hi itf f how sublime At spim TM ( lowing t And on the vut wings of Hood WCM W m it h n 1' 8 * o * w U n * I m * g * b cu m lu * g Tint win th f torn Wrth For mora fruitless 0 ttw of the Wh Himself i need mil good upon * rirt Work of the work of * No Olio IUM empire solely So Pen und together Work on In And Mini M we the Pan and Flow Ruled Earth our The P t WM our onn Is UM A fl Future with mow There mint be 4ns Far full strength M. sna It Is with no Br not Bui ' - And for now lt brow to On Thus grow mid grown the wealth And mural strength and health With It triple With every day uow triumphs 0, light for beneath their Mill Broad blessed by the Eternal 1 And thus we the Pen and Mow ' Hilled Karth rw trd pur atory The Faet waa la the And Future with man 1* 1 then be V Farmeri true And wed bjr What crowns will be for ' The of the 1 lly work the prophecy Of from angel Oau only bring While | u It rejo proudly work with Mill and all 1 In shop and Ye are with Ood How on and reap with Brain and In wealth all On Karth for alone Hymn of Light In With It wn the Pen and Plow Muled Karth our atory The waa ours In tho And Future with more Pith and A Neman of a A dry This tap of the Doos u dumb man always keep his Tint best literary work is done in the Money in the waistcoat MACHO A beautiful lit up with OUGHT a strong boy to bu paid n salary How MUCH is required tu make a wrapper 1 IB water moot liable to escape When it in only half PUNCH had found a man too lazy to labor under an THIS is the affecting epitaph on a Book bland Captain's He's done a- and gone to meet his Tins question agitates Has Should u young mull leave his music lesson to split wood when his mother is at homo in perfect health You ought to up something for a rainy nil father to his profligate And HO I replied the What An A advertises in an Eastern paper for a boy to open oysters about fifteen yearn No matter what the wo some boy with a strong A BDO girl broke 6ft" an engagement because her lover wore cheap paper and yet at the same time ( the story may not lie she was wearing garters torn from an old A man hunting turkeys at thought he saw one in the but the jury decided that it was the head farmer who owned the and was taking A Y paper lately informed its readers that an additional number of policemen are to be placed in the most parts of to prevent the robberies which happened last THE late eccentric Methodist Peter described the sort of religion that comes and goes in iud which experience brought him nto contact with a good deal more than 16 as what is the interest of a kiss asked sweet sixteen of her I don't Why do you ask ' Because my borrowed a liss hist night from and said he'd lay me back some of these with AN old gentleman of 84 having taken 10 the altar a young damsel of 16, the clergyman said to him You will find the font at the other end of the What do I want with the font asked the old I your said the clerical I thought ou had brought the child to be THB young man with presence of mind resides in Just as he was lifting his hat to a couple of young ladies on Woodward a boy ran a sled against his legs - and the fashionable young man turned half a and down on all Peking up his hat without so much as a he remarked to the ladies I am always subject to these dizzy spells in The Vienna The World's Exhibition at Vienna not only to a great expo but to be attended a great number of kings and The of who is President of the Snglish will be prevent at he as will the Shah of Fhe Emperor William of Germany will visit the exhibition towards the latter part of in company with Alexander of The King of Italy is preparing to spend some time and it s said the rulers of the States in the North of Africa will be present In rder to be near the Exposition and to be ready to do the honors of the Emperor Francis Joseph has erected a fine pavilion near the grand Several German Princes have erected villas The Sultan uus built a magnificent to be occupied by himself and his rather numerous and has sent from the fountain of to in the grounds surrounding t. The Viceroy of not to outdone by his is aUo building a splendid it is he convert into a mosque at the erne of the for the benefit of the ople of his faith who in t is believed by that this collection of mien will result in measures of a