Getting into a Court Boom, Among the crowd which surged f and struggled at the doors of the court room in which the ' Beecher-Tilton trial was held was a young man who displayed more than ordinary energy in his attempts the enter. the court. The room was already filled, and thfc officers had er ders to prevent the entrance of persons not having business. Several times the anxious applicant for admission had al most forced his way in, but only to be hurled but when on the point of success. Repulsed but not disheartened, he step ped back to the stairway leading to ' the jury room for the purpose, of planning a fresh attack. Presently -a police officer in full uniform came along the corridor, and turning up the steps leading to the jury room divested himself of his coat and cap,.and assuming an undress blouse went to. the court room in the building to which he had been assigned. Hardly had the-ofHcer disappeared from the cor ridor 'when the anxious applicant for admission dived into the jury room. After a few moments he appeared clad in . the policeman's coat and cap. Assuming: an official air, he also approached one o . the court room doors, and, selecting one or two of the most inoffensive looking citi zens composing the crowd that sur .. rounded it, he hustled them roughly, and ordered them in the gruffest tones to "get out of here." The genuine blue- coated gentleman at the door, filled with a feeling kindred to that which makes baggage-smasher glow with pleasure i i 11 wnen one oi ms ieuows uemoiisnes a costly trunk, smiled approval on chivr.; sociate, and, of course, had no thought of opposing. his entrance to the court. Onco inside the court the bogus police man slipped behind the crowd, and, un seen, doffing his borrowed plumage, ap- peared once more in his own proper ap parel. The bold trick was . not discov ered until evening, when the policeman, whoso coat and cap had been taken, missed his property, and discovered it rolled in a neat little bundle under one of the back benches in Judge Neilson's court. As no one was seen leaving the court room coatless, it is presumed that the man who took the policeman's coat from the jury room wore it over his own and concealed his hat about his person. NEWS OJi T2MZ ,J4IV A Jtesolutton Worth the Keeping. Among the many good resolutions so universally made at this season of the year, one, and a very important one--to pay small bills on presentation may be acted on at once. . Our ; virtuous dis positions are, doubtless, spread over the ontiro year, but here is something which we may dispose of in a week. : It is wonderful how' sweet is the, sleep of a man who has no unpaid accounts in his pockets. And if we all do this a little money will go " a good way. John Doe pays Itichard Boe $)00; Bichard paya ilt to John and John 'to Simon and so it goes round, half! of it getting back very likely at the end of the month to the wallet of John. Of course we mean to havo fewer bills in the future, but the c first thing to bo done is to attend to 1 those we havo already incurred. . The holidays are over ; square and uncom-' promising business is now in order. If we. would not have the next season of festivities 'saddened in the sequel of minor troubles of a pecuniary character we shall bo caref ul of our expenditures for the year. Wo shall not go mourn ing along the months, but we ehall con sider our income-, and keep within its limits. Those-'who do large business . must take some risks, but the -majority have it in their power to bring up at New Year's well and hearty in their finances! It doesn't cost much to live if one lives for modest and genuine enjoyment ; it is the i eyes and tongues of other people that, cost. But then, we are not troinc live during 1875 for Mr3. Grundy. Interesting Items from Home ana Abroad. 31. D. McCormick, road supervisor of the Kansas Pacific railroad, and. also Mayor of Brookville, bas been arrested and committed at Ellaworth, Kansas, charged with embezzling large sums of money from the Kansas Pacific railroad during the years 18C8, 69, and TO. The residence of Slilo Buggies, at Put-in-Bay, Ohio, was burned, and bis mother, sister, and sifter's child was burned to death. . . Hi; Bog gles jumped from a window and waa fatally in jured. .....Bach el Coward was sentenced to twenty years imprisonment in New Brunswick, N. J., f or killing Charles Ten Broeek.... Joseph Shields, of the Pennsylvania Railroad Company, was killed at Princeton Junction. . -. . . . A large fire in Orangeburg, S. C, destroyed most of the business portion of 1 the town. The loss is about $200,000, with but little insurance. The Meroney Hotel, the Orangeburg News building, and all the stores on Bussell street were de- troyed.:....The ex-King of the Two Sicilies has vinited Alfonso, and assured him that the Counts Caserta and Ban will withdraw from the Carlist cause. . . ...James Jeffries, a member of the Louisiana Legislature, has filed a suit in the United States Circuit Court against Generals Sheridanmory, and De Trobriand, for $100, 000 damages for ejecting him from his seat in the House of Representatives. A similar suit wag abiO iiled by George D. Kelly, who was alpo ejected.... .The United States ship Pensacola has been detailed to. carry Kinc: Kalukaua to his home . . . ... . At Botherham, England, an ex- ; plof ion of fire-damp took place in a coal mine, killing eight persons.' B ' Drs. Cliane and Clapp of .Boston, who were tried by the IfasMaohuHetts ledical Society for practising -homeopathy, have been expelled ......In the Ma;ne Legislature E. F. Webb v. an elected President of the Senate, and W. Thomas, Jr., Speaker of the House...,. In Philadelphia, a barkeeper shot and killed his employer in a drunken row. . . . . .Depositors in the Charlestown branch of the Freedman's Savings Institution, numbering over 5,000 and representing over $250,000 of deposits,: have held a meeting and adopted a memorial to Congress, showing that the depositors were mostly of the laboring clas.who were indncod to place their money in the bank' under tho im pression that it was guaranteed ana protected by the general government, and praying Con. gress to take measures, for their indemnifica tion. .... .Hie Governor and State Council of Massachusetts, by a unamimous vote, have re fufced to grant a pardon to Spence Pettis, the forger It is estimated that during the last year 1,000 newspapers suspended in the United Staies.and that $8,000,000 have een lost in the publishing business within the year. 5 ; ' ' - I ' ! A post-mortem examination -was held ovr the body of Elizabeth McCarthy, who was found dead in a house in Jersey . City, and it was ascertained that she froze to death, hav ing no fuel or covering ."L,.. The Milwaukee Circuit Court has appointed Judge Voorhees, of Hackensack, and 'Henry L. White, of Jersey City, commissioners to take the testimony of Mrs. D'Auffray, -better known as the escaped mm. ller evidence is to be used in a suit pending before that court, for the purpose' of exposing the internal arrangements of convents and nunneries'. ... . iThe debt "of the city of Brooklyn, including all her obligations of what ever character, amounts to the sum of $35, 018,621.52, an increase in the last year of $525,115.8..:.. The debt of the city "of -New York is about f 110,000,000. .... .The evidence in the Vicksburg case shows that seventy-six negroes and two wlute men were killed in the attack upon the city. . ... . .Sir Henry Elliot, the British Ambassador at Constantinople, has lodged a complaint with 'the Porte protesting against the increasing slaver trade which is being carried on in various parts of the Otlo mau Empire in Africa..-..;. One of the boilers at the Franconia Iron Company's mill, at Ware-: ham, Mass., burst with' a frightf nl explosion, demolishing the west end of the immense ing the Potter law and the State officers and Supreme Court for. enforcing it ; also areaohv tion asking Congress to so amend tho patent laws that any person can manufacture a patent article upon the payment of royalty The mails destroyed by the bur ting cf the car on the Baltimore and Ohio railroad ic. eluded those cf the following dates : Kew Orleans, evening of the 4th inst., and morning of the 5th ; Richmond, Va., 7th ; Bavannab, 5th ; Char leston, 8. C, 5th ; Wilmington, N. C, 6th ; Nashville, 5th ; Galveston, 1th ; and Mem phis, 5th. ' Mails from all Intermediate points are of course also destroyed The snspen bion of coal mining operations in Pennsylvania has become almost general. Affairs in the producing regions are in a very unsettled con dition .The revenue of the Dominion of Canada for tie month of December was $1,- 614,006, and the expenditures $1,010,096 Taylor Strander, colored, the Virginia wife murderer, whose case baa been carried from court to co art and appealed, was sentenced to be hanged on the 26th of March next. . . .The Western Hotel at Sacramento, CaL, was de stroyed by fire and several lives were lost. .... General Talmaseda has been offered the pest of ' Captain-General of Cubaj but refuses to accept it unless the government guarantees him a reinforcement of 20,000 troops to aid in crushing the insurrection. The mining difficulties in the anthracite region of Pennsylvania are causing the stop page of machine shops and foundries During a snow storm the brig Agnes Raymond, Captain Randall, ran ashore at White Island, thirty miles from Halifax, and became a total wreck, ifthen some fishermen 'discovered the wreck no person was on board, and there is no doubt . that all hands were lost. The crew doubtless todk to the boatp, which were swamped, as two boats were washed ashore in the neighborhood. There were probably eight (persons on board. Mr. Scudder, of New Jersey, introduced a bill in the United States House authorizing tunnels between New York and Jersey City, and between New York and Brooklyn The Committee on Elections in the United States House directed. the chairman to prepare a report in favor of the resolution for the exclusion, of delegate Cannon from a seat in the House, on the ground of hia being a t polygarnist , . A boiler in Tyson's Baltimore Chromo Works, Baltimore, exploded, lulling William Lucas, a colored employee, and causing damage to the amount of $10,000 The Lake Shore and Michigan Southern railroad declared a dividend on the 29th of December. Jacob Rubino, a stockholder and bondholder of the company, complained before Justice Tap pen, in the Brooklyn Supreme Court, and an investigation was ordered preventing the divi dend from being paid. a, . - ; - Most of the time of the House was used in discussing the Louisiana troubles. . The House afterward took up as the special order of - the day the Senate Finance bd to provide for the resumption of specie payments. All discusnon was stopped on the bill bo as to cut off amendment, but members were allowed to put their remarks in the Record. The bill then passed bv a vote of 136, all Republicans, to 38, including all the Democrats in the House. Mr. Biery, of Pennsylvania, introduced a bQl to amend the act of 13th of June, 1S66, so that no additional special tax shall be levied on suc cessors in certain cases of dissolution of part nership. A bill report'! by Mr. Young, of Georgia, authorizing the President to promote ftsher R. Eddy and Bui us Sexton to be lieutenant-colonels and deputy quartermaster-generals, to date from July 21, 1866, and to take places on the army register next below CoL Stewart Tan Yliet, gave rise to a lively discussion, in which the whole question of the relative merits of the regular and volunteer officer '. came up. The bill passed the House. Mr. Kasson, of Iowa, from the Committee on Ways and Means, reported a bill providing that section 19 of the act of the 22d of June, 1871, repealing moities, shall not be constructed to affect any authority, power or right that might thereunder have been lawfully exercised by any court, judge or district-attorney of the United States to ebtain the testimony of an ac complice in any crime against or fraud upon the Customs revenue laws, by a discontinuance or dismissal of any proceedings against such accomplice. Passed. Mr. White offered a resolution, which was ob jected to, thanking the President for his action in the Louisiana cafe ; a petition from R. B. Irwin, the recusant witness, asking that he be eonnneq, in some other place than the common jail, was laid on the table ; the resolutions of impeachment against Judges Durrell and Busted were laid on the table. Mr. Cox introduced a resolution, which was referred to the Judiciary committee, declaring the control of the Louisiana Legislature bv Federal troops to be in violation of the Consti tution and a menace to the liberties, rights and dignity of other States ; and demanding the restoration of peace by the immediate with drawal of troops, and tne condign punishment of those guilty of the " reckless usurpation." Mr. Kassoa introduced a supplementary Specie-payment bill, containing a provision for me uesirucuou oi reaeemea notes. - - The Consular and Diplomatic bilL appropri ating $1,311,785, was passed. ! Bilis were introduced as follows : ? Authoriz ing tunnels between New York and Jersey City, ana between jew lork and Brooklyn ; to ex tend for one year the time to bring suits for the recovery of internal taxes illegally collect ed ; proponing an amendment to the Constitu tion, declaring that the Government owes pro tection to ail citizens m tne enjoyment of then- rights ; to refund the losses of depositors in the Freedman's bank ; to cheapen telegraphic communications, iacmtate news reports of all press associations, and prevent telegraph mo nopoly ; to aboiisn tne omce or lieutenant-gen eral of the army ; for pensions to soldiers of the -Mexican war who, served in the Confederate army. r Calendar for 1875. if fa European Police System. Jia. In. . ; - z : : i I I I W I 1SH1 eel " p.gj-rrTg. IMS I . IU'U1UUU!M 17 liril 1T13KI ins 19 a) a 'a 25 k;s7 J8:.a II S! 41 Si 7 si tiwnhru 14'15 16 17.18,19 20 H aion?x?il U'U.1S,17I13,19 30 April Joe Kl XI TAS4 CM. aa 13 19 a II 22 23,24 25,36,27 ISB.lSJUi-1 9 IV 11,11 13 11 l 18-17 IS 19,30,21 22- 7 ! 10 11 12 U1445 l I7il8!19 bo n 2rn.s4.1s 36 (zr:2S'2J0'l I ys,s irriKu,i3.'iii7 H.19 at-Xl'22 ZS S4i m )w(iTliri5i4i Li'lS 17 18 1-21 1 it a. 14.15 16 17 IS 19 :JiTJ2;a,i4i: i i m w ti m -w h?ii!i2u'i4Jii;i Sf. See. 17 'was )ni2'a 24 ia.a X7ii a 71 84 1 10 11 12 ' 13 1 i 1t'l tv'foSA! 2l!22 23-24 23-26,27 l 71 S t H 11 12113 14,'lS 16' 17 18 19-20 21.22 X124 2S l'27t 2S1 He that abounds in warranted unkind neaa malice of its "keen edge. excuses for un roceiyed, robe 5"! 25 i rr u l as ., ' v ; 4S A 1 45 A School for Apprentices. The house of B. Hoe & Co., press makers, convinced that the efficiency ani success of their corps of workers would be greatly increased if they pos sessed a good English, education and a thorough knowledge of the fundamen tal principles of mathematics and me chanics, established a year or more ago a tchobl for their apprentices. The re citation room," fitted up with all modern improvements, is a portion of the new business house, having views from win dows on every side. The course of study erabraces grammar, arithmetic, algebra, geometry, reading, writing, drawing, composition, the ten science primers, and Overman's mechanics. The classes iijt these various branches recite once a week, the recitation being an hour in likigth. The. lessons given are long, but tse apprentices have ample time out of work hours not only to prepare them but to reflect upon and study their prac tidfu applications. All of the appren tices, numbering upward of a hundred, are compelled to go through this course of study, and as the term of apprentice ship ranges from five to seven years, they have time to become proficient in every branch taught, so that when their apprenticeship is over they have a thor ough English and technical education so g. S. MAJiS A K.Howard ijl, BnM4. The -fiirkets www Toax. Bf Cattle-Prime to Extra Bollocks lSa MY Common to Good Texana.. 04 (ft 09 S Much Cowa , ........CO CO 40 00 Hog live TPMBed. ... Sheep. Lamb. ...... ...... .......... .. Cotton Mlddhc c Flour Extra Wetrn. ....... . Stat Extra Whft Rod Western Ho. 18prmg Bye Stat , Barley State...... . Barley Halt 1 0U Ml red Watra. ....... ....... ' Corn Mixed Western MX& 81 Hay, per ewt ,.M TO (4 90 Straw, per cwt CO 4 M Bopa , Sto, 43(948 We M 0 U Pork Me. 20 to 4 55 Lard 14 14 nah Mackerel No. 1, new 13 CO (l 00 No. X new 10 00 - y10 SO Xry Cod. per cwt ........ i 8 & t 00. SO (4 Xr&ned, 8. & M 4 0 f4 24 & 34 (4 30 (A 34 (4 WV 04-a io a S3 ss 24 as 31 43 26 M 33 36 1 H 18 18 34 t Herring. Scaled, per box Petroleam Crade, Wool California Fleece.... :. T6 X A m m Australian ' Butter tme.. M'eetern Dairy. . " Western TeUov Wentrro Ordinary...... Pennsylrauia Fine Cheee Ftcte r'mrtorr Skimmed........ Egg-Stat Wheat .- Eye i-tte M Corn Mixed Barley SUte 0t SUte 9CTWAUO. Floar Wheat So. 2 Sprinj Cora Mi Ted Oats K.e Bu-liy.. BALTIMOU. Cottou Low MiddUugt : 14a U Flonr Extra , 6 24 (4 I IS Wheat Ked Western 1 34 A 1 94 Bye 1 00 Corn ieilow.... .... kj Oate Mixed 3 retrolcum 4 90 r-RiLADaxrHia. Floor Pennsylvania Extra......... 6 SO Wheat Western Ee4 1 IS Bye., 1 00 Corn Yellow 3 Mixed 84 OaU Mixed 4V recrplenm-r-Crude..:.....D9 09 Beflned, 35 M S 44 63 S 25 1 06 ti CO 6 3) 1 ss 4 S8 (4 87 (4 l it (4 It (4 S SO 4 l rs (4 SO (4 60 06 44 1 29 1 09 hi 61 9 835 00 (4 1 30 4 1 00 (4 S3 ' 4 SS 66 13 WXITEO STA TES COXGUESS. buil'iinjj and shatteting the entire Btructure moretor leaa. Out of eighteen men who were iu the builJing, Edward Cafery was fatally and four othera slightly injured. to A dispatch Bays that Senor Castelar is pre paring to quit Spain tefore King Alfono's arrival...... The Allegheny Trust Company of Allegheny City, Pa., bUHpeuded payment 'and cloucd its. doora. The liabilitien are etated to be $123,000, to cover which the company poa- BCfwes in billa receivable and real estate $230,000 Julia Theurer, wife of Chriatian ineiu-er, of Itocheeter, N. Y., leaped from the oeucrai ranroaa biUdge at the edge of the falhj into the river, i and waa ewept over the falls. Grief for the Iobu of her child had unseated her reason.-. .. . .The body of a drover, who waa murdered for hw money, waa found in Shebhe- qum, Bradford county, Ta. . . . Joeeph B. North. alias Buffalo BilL who murdered George Jonea on Cliribtmas eveiiing a year ago, was hanged y eiegrapta pole by a -mob in Wallace, Kauaas. The knol of the tope with which he waa hanged caught under the chin, and did not choke him. He hung this way for a lone, time talking to the mob, imploring them to release v : i 1 - . xuMi, oui received only jeere in return. He did not die for over two bourn, tJd finally froze to death. a The Committee on War Claims at Washing ton made an adverae report on the House bill lor the rehef of certain citizens 6f Penneyl Yania who suffered loss from Union and Con federate troops daring the inyasiou of that SUte by General Lee's army. The hill pro posed an spi ropriation ot $1,254,574 for-the use of citizens of the counties of Adams, Bed- lord, Cumberland, Franklin, Fulton, Somerset and York. . . . .By a collision on the Baltimai-r LctterH for the Insane. committee on post offiors ami post roads hare unanimously afrreeU to report thel bill of Representa tive Hawley, of Connecticut, providing that for tho purpose of securing the posts rights of inmates of insane asylums, tho postmaster-general, when ever requested Ljy the authorities of any State, is authorised and directed to cause to bo placed upon or in ah insane asylum, private or public, within the territory of tho sid State, a post-office box, into which the letters of the inmates may be dropped by ' the writers themselves, which box ehall not lie under the control or surveillance of tho officers of said asylums, but subject to such outside cen sorship a th.3 Legislatures of th3 severa States shall determine. The collection of the mail matter deposited' in said boxes shall be made at least once a week by an employee of the post-office depart- Ohio lailroad, the Northern mail and tacnt. lhe person so collecting shall stamp tho name of the asylum on the mail matter. Her Fug Xose. - Mrs. St. JohnEcket, " Maria Monck's Daughter," gives the following account of tho successful reformation of hfjr pug nose : One of the first things my sister' had .said, on seeing me, was: But where is your pug nose ? 'It is gone, I replied; but I did not tell her how it had gone. I will here make the confession to the reader. At night I would take a long garter and fasten it around my face, drawing it so tightly over the tip of my nose that I could hardly breathe through my nostrils. During the day I used to pull on the nose. In two years I suc ceeded, and the pug had-disappeared. How much did I not suffer for this vanity f" I The Secret of Health. First Keep cool. Second Eat regularly and slow ly. Third- Maintain regular bodily, habits. Fourth Take early and very light suppers. Fifth Keep a clean skin. Sixth Get plenty of sleep at I night Seventh Keep cheerful and re- spectable company Eighth Keep out of debt Ninth Don't set your mind .on things you don't need. Tenth Mind your own business. Eleventh Don't set up to be a sharp of any kind. ' Twelfth Subdue cariosity. express car for Washington, was smashed up, set on fire and burned. All of the mail and much money belonging to the United States government waa destroy ed. Two aien7 were badly crushed. The express loases-jre very heavy,, aa the nine safes in the cafcontained a large amount of - money. . Hotace B. Gibba, an employee of the Indianartolik 'rnmnn&tf and Lafayette railroad in CdnnaUcontmitted suicide under peculiar eircumstances; Some two or three years ago he married and lived happily until a few days ago, when his wife died and was buried at 8prin : Skarrii. ' Since then he had been very melancholy, and went to his wife's grave, where he shot and killed him.elf . ....A fire in Honesflale, Pa., destroyed ei00,000 worth of property...... Burglars ahofc and killed a watchman at Tarrytown, N. T. . . . Lewis I Adams, colored, was hanged at Pitte sjlvania Court House, Ta.1, f or the murfcr of another negro named Rice Wilson on the 27th of June last, ne was strangled to death, his neck not being broken. . . . ,.Tbe total lo-s by the burning oitobaeoo warehouses at Balti more is estimated at $350,000, $250,000 of which is, on stock. Tie msurance of the buildings' amounts to 188,500, and on the stock, as faa as known, to $150, 000...... General Bntler introduced in the United States House of Representatives a bill or a new election in Louisiana. The State Legislatures of Tennessee, Arkan eas and Yirgiuia have protested against the Louisiana, affair..... The anniversary of the death of Napoleon IIL was observed by the Imperialists in Pans, and by the Imperialists of Loudon and Chiaelhurat. . . . Farther diffi culties betsreen China and Japan are antica pated. . . .The Wisconsin State Grange adopted a resolution thanking tb Legialaturs for paes- Senate. Moses Taylor and other.citizens petition that they were owners of merchant vessels which were destroyed by the Shenandoah, and ask to 4hare in the award. " " The following bills were reported adversely from the Finance committee, and indefinitely postponed : The House bill fixing the amount of, legal tender notes at $400,000,000. The 116x186 bill authorizing gold note banks to issue circulation to the extent of ninety per centum on the amount of United States bonds deposited as security, and senator Stewart s bill to . pro hibit the national banks from loaning money on legal tenders, United States currencv. or erold aa security. Senator Alcorn s bul making United States silver corns a legal tender for amounts not ex ceeding 100 was reported adversely, but placed on tne caienuar. Senator Davis's bill to reduce the tax on cir culation of State banks to an amount equal to that paid by national banks was reported ad versely, Dut on motion of air, b argent was placed on the calendar. lhe bill to remove the - limitation restrictinsr the circulation of banking associations issuing notes payawe m gold, was reported favorably. It provides : That so much of section 5, 185 of the revised statutes of the United States as limits the circulation of banking associations organized for the purpose of issuing bonds payable m gold, severally, to the amount of one million dollars, be, and the same is. hereby repealed ; and each of such existing banking associations may increase its circulating notes. and new banking associations may be organized in accordance with the existing law without re spect to such limitation. Mr. Thurman DemA of Ohio: offered the following resolution: " Itesoloed. That the President of the United States is hereby re- j t . . . . . ... - questeu to iniorm tne senate whether any por tion oi tne army oi tne united States, or anv officer, officers, soldier or soldiers of such army did in any manner interfere or intermeddle with, control or seek to control the organization of the General Assembly of the State of Louisi ana, or either branch thereof, on the 4th inst. ; and especially whether any person or persons claiming seats in each branch of said Legisla ture have been deprived thereof, or prevented from taking the same,- by any such military iorce, omcer or soldier : and, if such has been the case, then that the President inform the Senate by what authority such military inter vention and interference have taken place " During the discussion on the resolution of Mr. Thurman, much feeling was evinced in the remarks made by members of both parties. . The naval appropriation bill for the corning year waa taken up. ' Mr. Sargent said the total amount appropriated by the bill was a little over. $1G,000,0W, somewhat larger than the amount appropriated last year. , The principal item of increase was for coal for chips' use. The Senate committee had reported in favor of increaaing the appropriations made by the bill as it came from the Houso in a very few small items. The bill ras then read a third time and passed. - j. The Senate adopted Mr. Thurman's resolu tion of inquiry into the use of Federal troops in the organization of the Louisiana Legisla ture, after adopting amendment- calling for in formation in regard to Ku-Klux, White Leagues, etc. . -?-'.'-" r '" t The Senate passed the bill to remove the limitation restricting the circulation of banking associations issuing notes payable in gold. Mr. Gordon, of Georgia, apologized to Mr. Edmunds, of Vermont, for harsh language used in the heat of debate. During the debate on the Louisiana resolution a motion to clear the galleries on account of ap plause, cauped a lengthy discussion. Dunne the discussion of the Louisiana question, Mr. West, of Louisiana, referred to the hints thrown out by the papers of attempts mat wouia do maae to as at-8 mate the Presi dent. MnjThurman, of Ohio, treated them in nia remartB as only bubbles. The reports of Mayor Merrill and of General hjnory, relative to the disorders in Louisiana, were called for from the Secretarv of War. Carl Pchufrz spoke at length on th Krsni reeolntion)renouncuig the action of Gran and Sheridan, and warning the Republicans that they were pursuing the right course to stifle all the constitutional rights of the people. He condemned the interference of the military on constitutional grounds, and urged Senators to retrace tneir steps Del ore it is too late. -W "Bourn Mr. Orr reported a bill granting right of way and depot grounds to the Oregon Central Pacific railway. Mr. Holman mnv1 an imtnnuTii that the States through which the road may . .... .J pass snaii aiways nave tne .right to regulate the rates for carrying freights and passengers. Agreed to. and the bul passed. The new army bilL which was discussed, ap propriates 27.701.oo0 It f.-a-hi. beyond the number of 25,000 enlisted men, in cluding Indian scouts and hospital stewards. Mr. Hale, of Maine, offered a resolution That the Judiciary committee be instructed ta prepare and report, without delay, a bill provid- ng i or a new election oi state omcers and Rep resentatives in Congress in Louisiana, under such guards, restrictions, and euarantaM m will insure the fullest liberty to every citizen to 1 exercise tne ngnt or suurajjre witnoot fear and without restraint, and as will provide for such a count and declaration of the result as will in sure to the majority their constitutional legal rights. - A bul was introduced to increase the tax on distilled spirits from 70 to 80 cents per gallon. The Fortification bill, which peted the House, appropriates 8850.000. including $50, 00 for forts in New Tork harbor. - A bill was passed providing that the adjtrtant general's department of the army shall consist of one adjutant-general, with the rank, pay, and emoluments of the brigadier-general ; two assistants, with the rank of colonel, four with the rank of heutenant-colonal, and tea with the rank of major. , The system of police common, more or less, to the whole continent of Europe seems to have come in under Louis XXV., who appointed D'Agenson his Lieutenant of Police, a position which he held for twenty years, greatly to the advantage of Pans as regarded tho improvements he worked in maintaining law and order." The Parisian police has, throughout its existence, been very much of a political organization, and in no place has the sPyiystem been more in vogue than there. .Possibly this condition of things may have culminated under the famous or infamous Fouche, but even in his day the espionage could scarcely have sur passed thatr prevalent in the time of Louis Xappleon. The story is well known how the Prefect applied to Lady Holland (the present owner of Holland House) for invitations for his agents at her parties. Lady Holland who, with her husband, was quite in the He intime of the Tuileries was indignant, and said : " There is my visiting list: vou can see for yourself how little likely it is that your agents would find it worth while to come here," or words to this effect. The officer glanced at it, said that her ladyship was right request was quite unnecessary, the neing that several of the most guished people on the list were in hi3 pay. and His fact distin-already. Waking the Sleepy Ones. It is often more than a question of J taste how far, clergy men can, in the pul- i pit, afford to carry unceremonious ad dress and familiar illustration. When it comes to gamboling therein, one would be apt to think that only a lunatic could be found guilty. Yet Mr. Spurgeon lately presented as a remedy for congre gational sleepiness a game of battledore and shuttlecock played by the gentleman in the pulpit. A clergyman of his ac quaintance did actually go through with this game before bis dull congregation cii several occasions, and did it. savs Mr. Spurgeon, ' with the deepest solemnity. " When all the' drowsy Ones were- wide awake and wondering at this sportive ness, he rated them soundlv.for rmvino- . ' A J O more attention to his foolery than to his sermons. This recipe of Mr. Spurgeon's would be a dangerous experiment for most ministers. far as mechanics is concerned. t 77ie EauMaking Season. Now is set in the annual busy season of law-making, with Congress and the Legislatures of thirty States in session, viz: Alabama, Arkansas. Delaware. Florida; Georgia, Illinois, Indiana,' Kan sas, Louisiana, Maine, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Mississippi, Mis souri, Nebraska, Nevada, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, Ohio, Penn sylvania, Rhode Island," South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, iVermont, Virginia, West Virginia, and Wisconsin. As some of these are second and others special sessions of Legislatures, it has rarely oc curred that so many have been simulta neously at work. The politics of these thirty Legislatures are : 16 Democratic, 12 Republican, 1 (Illinois) controlled by an Independent balance of power, and 1 (Louisiana) in dispute. The list in cludes all the States but seven, whose Legislatures do not meet this winter, viz. : California, Connecticut, Iowa, Ken tucky, Maryland, New Hampshire and Oregon. - A Pitt. A goose-yoke, made' by a boy who has since become the wealthiest man in Indiana, is now one of the adorn ments of a jeweler's store in' Indian apolis, and causes people mournfully to remark, " What a pity it is that a man who could whittle gooso-yokes so well, should have wasted his time in making monev! . yl5 LAST 1 1 ut a US 8 .1 J m ELASTIC TRUSS AXD SUPPORTER ta now liptritdiic all othara. Mine adopted -wrywhara by tb tea ding phytic iana,aarroDa,drac irUU. army and nary, baa. pitala, pmnnlnmi, ate. Ttaa aaeooaa and snirar- mml utiafMrin tiiav h.v. rlTeo. f- wall aa tha raat number of radical nru they have effected, haa aVmMr Um fact that ryptwrt Mil ba ry tirrtd without Buffering or annoyance, and - out the danger qf immrrimg Spinmi or fmnlytit, fu-a caaad hy tha aerore pressure of Metal Troaaoaand Supporter. It I the only aara a for Hernia, aa it ta the only Truaa ta use that will hold tha rapture eecurely in all poaluoia in which the body ean be placed. It will perform radical ruraa whan all othera fail. It can be worn with eaaa and comfort when no princ truaa can be ued. When once adjusted, no motion of the body or accident can displace it. Theae lnatrumenta have the m tqualijUd aprol j the moat eminent practitioner! in the proteesion. From the numerous testimonials In our pnaaaailuu wa append the following : After the experience of months. psUenta testify stromrly to iu twv. aa well as to the rat and freedom from inconvenience with whioh the inotrnment ta worn. With superior ndrantairee, (A E'aatit rVsss nr in in a hijfta decree A LL requtsttae and qnattfleatkMta elaiwtit iur uuiw uiTvuuuna. i un no Deaitauoa in refaraiBar it aa aa important meana for the relief and care of H-rnK. J. M. CARMHHA tf. M. P.. Kx-Health Officer of the Port of New York. Snriraon-ia. Chief of New York Slate Hospital," ate, ate Geo. V. Hocsr. M.D.. Superintendent Elastic Truss Co. I'rur air .- Aiwir suneruvr to tnirty years, in my own eraon from tbo una of arerv form of Metallic Truaa pro curable in this onuntiy and In K a rope. I. two years ae. applied yonr Bltu:ie rnu, and since thst time I bare experienced comfort and aaUafactkm, and been taoa-ht the truth, that the Elastic Truss ta the only instrument that should be used for the relief and cure of Hernia : and D w after mora than thirty years' eootiaooas prac tice, and harinx adjusted many hundreds of Trasses (and for the last twenty months yours exclusively). I gratefully derlare it to be my deliberate opinion, that yoar Elnf.it Truit ta the only one entitled to the onofl. dence of tha public : that elasticity is the only power at all adapted to the requiremenU of a Truss orSnpporter. --iu i.utujuvu ui fwr sisnir i i sss actually euree a Urge pinportton of all cases to which it is applied, not oily anions; children, but in numerous esses within my own know ledge of patients from 6n to TS years of aa-s. - ," . JO H- BURNftAM. M?lX Prof, of Anatomy and Surgery, N. V. Iu Medical College. I- Beware of cheap and worthless imitation Elastic rmssfs, which some parties adrartiaa and sell, fraud u leotly Teprosenting that they are manufactured by the E'. istic Truss Co. These Tmsexa are sent by mall to all parts of the eoua. try. Satisfaction guaranteed in all eases. Before pur chasing any other, writo for Descriptive Circular ifrt) to the ELASTIC TRUSSGO., 683 Broadway, New York. THE NEW YORK Dr. J. Walker's California Yin- Cgar Bitters axe a purely Vegetable preparation, made chiefly from the na tive herbs found on the lower ranges of the Sierra Nevada mountains of Califor- . nia, tho medicinal iiropcrtics of which are extracted tbercfrom without tho use of Alcohol. Tho question isx almost daily asked, 4Yliat is the cause of the unparaUeled success of Vixegau Bit-' TXtsr Our answer is, that they remote the cause of disease, and the patient re covers h'.s health. They are tho great blood purifier and a life-givius principle, a perfect llenovator and Invlorator cf tbe system. Never before in the history of til world baa a medicine been eoapooaoed r-ossessing the remarkable usliUea of VixeoarBitties in braline b nek of every disease man U heir to. They are gentle IfurtratiTe aa well aa a Tonic' relieving Congestion or Inflammation U the'LiTer ana Visceral Organs, in Bilioua Piseaaea. The properties of Da. Walker's IXKQAK jBittkrs are Aperient. DiaDhoretic, CarminatiTe, Nutritious, Laxative, uinretic, Bedative, Counter-Irriunt, Sudorific, Altera tive, and An ti-Biliotta. Grateful Thousands proclaim xgas Bitters the most wonderful In vigorant that ever sustained the sinking system. Ne Person can take these Bitters according to directions, and remain long unwell, provided their bones are not de stroyed by "mineral poison or .other means, and vital orpins wasted beyond repair. Bilious, Remittent and Inter mittent Fevers, which are so preva lent in tbe. valleys of our great rivers throughout the United States, especially thoso of the Mississippi, Ohio, Missouri, Illinois, Tennessee, Cumberland, Arkan sas. Ked, Colorado, Brazos, Rio Grande, Pearl, Alabama, Mobile, Savannah, Ro anoke, James, and many others, with their vast tributaries. ihrxjugUout our entire country during the Summer and Autumn, and remarkably so during sea sons of unusual heat and dryness, are invariably accompanied by extensive de- rangsments of the 6tomach and liver, and other abdominal viscera. In their treatment, a purgative, exerting a pow erful influence upon these various or gans, Is essentially necessary. There is no cathartic for the purpose equal to Da. J. Walker's Vixegar. Bitters, as they will speedily remove the dark colored viscid matter with which the bowels are loaded, at the same time stimulating the secretions of the liver, and generally restoring tho healthy functions of the digestive organs. Fortify the body against disease by purifying all its fluids with Vinegar Bitters. No epidemic can tako hold of a system thus fore-armed. The Hares in Mississippi. A correspondent, in describing -what is called the negro bolt of Mississippi, says that in Vicksbnrg the -white population is 7,907, while the colored people number 18,862. . The next county is Issaquena, in which the population, as returned in the census four years ago, is white 741, colored 6,116. Tho next county above that, Washington, has a white popula tion of 2,164, and a colored population of 12,40o. Yazoo county, back of Issa quena, has a white population of 4,884, and a negro population of 12,395. Hinds is white.9,826, and colored,20,659. Clai borne, just south of Warren, has white, 3,390 ; negro,' 9,996. ' The next county, Jefferson, has white, 3,215 ; and colored, 10,636. . A 'Beautiful Woman. ' I a " : Ja m j-iio perceptive iacuity oi women is U3rxally keener than the same phreno logical organ in men. Woman knows X 1 L. 1 1 i . . umi. oesuiy ratner tnan frenros is worshiped by the sterner sex. A man may taix witn His lips of the latter to his lady-love, but the keenness: of the woman knows that he is thmlcing of the former in his heart. All women nave an innate desire to please their beaux. They are fond of aomiration, hence one of their lonirincs is to be beantifnL Tha grand secret or female beauty ia health the secret of health is the power to eat, digest and assimilate a proper qnantity of .wholesome food. Tak Vinegar Bitters. It will cleans the stomach, tone the vital organs, give a perfect digestion, purify the blood, clear np the complexion, and produce a elate of mental and physical electriciry which gives symmetry of form, bright eyes, white skin, glossy hair, and a genuine type of female loveliness which no ooametio can compare with. Com. A Drop of Joy in Every Word. FLEMUfOTOX, Hunterdon Co., nj., ) June 26. 1374. f Da. R. V. Pierce. Buffalo. N. Y. : Dear AV -It is with a happy heart that I pen thr ines tcf acknowledge that you. and vour Golden Medical Discovery and Purgative Telleta are blessings to the world. These medicines can not be too highly praised, for ther have almost brought me out of the grave. Three months ago I waa broken out with large ulcers and ores on my bodv, limbs and face. I procured Jour Golden Medical Discovery and Purgative 'ellets, and have taken six bottles, and to-day 1 am in good health, all those ugly ulcers hav ing healed and 'left my skin in a natural, healthy condition. I thought at on tim I could not be cured. Although I can but noorlv express my gratitude to you, yet there is a drop of joy in every word I write. God's blessing rest en you and your wonderful medicines is the numDie prayer or lours truly, . Jakes O. Rgrj-ta. "When a medicine will promrrt.lv cure mmh tr nble eating ulcers and free the blood of the viruleut poison causing them, who can longer doubtts wonderful virtues ? Dr. Pierce, how ever, does not wish to place bis Golden Medical discovery in the catalogue of quack patent nos trums by recommending it to cura ease, nor does he ho recommend it ; but what he docs claim is this, that there is but cne form of Wood disease that it will not crirn an.l ti, disease is cancer. He does not recommend bis Discovery for that disease, yet he knows it to be the most searching blood cleanmr vet covered, and that it will free the blood and sre tem of all other known blood poisons, be the y animal, vegetable or mineral. The Golden Dis covery is xcarraniedbj him to cure the worst forms of skin diseases, as all forms of blotches, pimples and eruptions, also all glandular swell ings, and the worst form of scrofulous and ul cerated sores of neck, legs, or other parts, and all scrofulous diseases of the bones, as white swellings, fever sores, hip, joint and spinal dis eases, all of which belong to scrofulous dis eases. Com. The eekiy Witness Crirlna Sew, Urlrt.,StnrU, Pictarea and Lira V.nai. at-Ml.20 per War, pnsts-a pij (OP 30 . r-Mrw. wnu igrrsr ftampla Uorty. H 4 $5 1EK DAY at boma Taenia fraa. dr-. (?. 8TIXAON a Co.. P..ftl.n4 Ad Ma .JfoareAVwaa Sc Vo, ?ra, Hawtftm-H rs Uu . aaur Uona. Oar salsa ara four fold what vujt wr vaar scol" All lika la, wan ion a. n Bcaddrr ;., ymtttn Vmntn for tha past tbr O rarer. Bolom, sas T'r Perfect utiatactHMi to ail wu nits DnoffQi n- I ta 17 Uawaoe tc, .New Vi $250 rk. A .MOTH-AoU waatad wbttra. Basineaa boaorabla aad claaa. Partioolara aant fraa. Ad W'ORTU.a UP.. St. Ixmimjio. book. r-Q K-VTS WANTED for en ixmnlar AhittleFolks mi. In tother8 and Fur, m mm sTW aw sm - - - m m w I C !r.i)UT,TM01uS' n.MUkWsrtii '. ry.-'y yrsasaaesa It rtmalsr. Sisst fsilr liisaataasa- lC sMtttsrtnrtMnsw ssa iisisa saaaaaaa starts t ainrasiiss ,rZt TO ALL. MmUu. PL8TIN, G1LMAM A CO UsrOssa. Csa. BIFLRHOT-CCIS. PI8TOTJ9 BCTOLTESS, Or any and every klad. Send ttimn forCsislosss. A4t.-a Klrs.it lVsstsra Cssai suss artaaaa Wsrka, riTTt llaoil. TIOIV'T1 w Moaaha PrornX A'VXl JL araatsss yog want soar frfcaada ant ta kixm rou. for a sinsla eaaa will furca a baary aaastacba " 'J' l oaya. srlttooot innry. orrmir mony retariMML Frlea rmaU. 4rtW otUr thai Oonaral Ayxnt. R. W. HARRIS, PaWsT 1 ' o can Bar Mtuw, Haalta a1 I fa.bj harlnc Va. a - . I The imporUnce of civing Sheridan's Cavalry f ondUion Pcnvlers to horses that lnXt-v LftfT AT w.T bare been out in the cold rain, stood in eold i?lL VT P-fcltr.soa CrwaxdwuT.N.v. KM w nave Deen out m the cold rain, stood in eold wind, or drank too much cold water, cannot b over estimated. No man shoald be withcut hem who owns a good horse. Cot. ; ' We were pleased to see, not long since, in one of our exchange!, eome pretty severe remarks addressed, to several persona wuu, uunnz sn interesting lecture by Iter y-tl. BTST- W" oaK and win t,n.r t. Aotraia.w. ft WKBBKR A CO.. M.rvi.O 7 Dyspepsia or Indigestion, Head- nche, Pain in the Shoulders, Coughs Tightness of tho Chest, Dizziness, hour Eructations or the btomach. Had Taste in the Mouth, Bilious Attacks, Falpita tation of the Heart, Inflammation of the Lungs, Pain in the region of tho Kid neys, and a hundred other painful symp toms, are the offsprings of Dyspepsia. . One bottle will prove a better guarantee of iu merits than a lengthy advertise ment. Screfnla, or Kine's Eril, Whito Swelling. Ulcers, ErysipelaA, Swelled Neck, Goitre, bcrofulous luuaimnatious, indolent Inflammation, Hercurial directions Old Sores, Eruptiona of the Skin, Sore hye, etc. In these, as in all other constitutional Dis eases, Walker's Yixeoar IIittels have shown their great curative power in tho most obstinate and intractable cases. For Inflammatory and Chronic Rheumatism, Gout, Bilious, Remit tent and Intermittent Fevers, Diseases of the Dlood, Liver, Kidneys , and RIadder, these Bitters have no eoual. Such Disease! are caused by Vitiated Blood. ' Mechanical Diseases. Persons en-1 caged in Paints and Minerals, such as -Plmnbers, Type-setters, Gold-beaten, and lliuers, as they advance in life, are subject to paralysis of the Bowels,- To guard agouiftt thin, take a dose of Walker's Vin egar Bittkrs occasionally. For Slain Diseases, Eruptions, Tet ter, Salt-Kheum, Blotches, Spots, Pimples. Phstules, Boils, Carbuncles, King-worms, Scald-head, Sore Eye, Erysipelas, Itch, Scurfs, Discoloration of the Skin, Humors and Diseases of the Skin of whatever name or nature, are literally dag up and carried out of the system in a short tune by the use . of these Bitters. Pin. Tape, and other Worms, lurking in the system of so many thousands. are effectually destroyed and removed. o ystem of medicine, no vermwnge, no an-' ihelniimtics trill free the system from worms like these Bitters. " For Female Complaints, in young or old, married or single, at the dawn of wo manhood, or the turn of life, these Tonic Bitters display so decided an influence that improvement la soon perceptible. Cleanse the Vitiated Blood when ever yoa find its imparities bursting through the s'kin in Pimples, Eruptions, or Scree; cleanse it when you find it obstructed and. sluggish in the reins; cleanse it when it It foul ; your feelings will tell yoa when. Keep the blood pure, and the health of the system will follow. U II. KcDOXALD A CO . Dnrrati aad Gea. Agts, Saa Fraaciaoo. California, aod ear. of Waahiartoa and Caartum Scau X. 7. Rold by rn.ll ihrmcKut Paailara. Ula- a 1 - ""taT a CO.. 7 ITasaafj Straat. Haw Tort A CENT VVANTPD. Me. e, .., 34 "ni " W r. M. RKKD. K-tth c yi i. Jno. 8. C. Abbott, kept a continuous eonghinirl I pOXSTANT rTitPixiTaiKNT-At whiph preTented many from hearing. People I Js-JJ pZZi2.it30 wwai K Ktay away from such places, or else take a bot- ue oi jonnson s Anodyne Liniment with them. Com. Mala T a- a iraaa, with 6c rata.ni stamp, Q. IfaHua,Btmi,BJ. y OOX AGENTS WAJSTEX iAIELl IT AUL t?. Cf Ma. rrara tfaa a Rail LaVa Cir. . . . . r . ' . sua oi a aaraaaai ti'ra T Mrs, . Taja i as a Investment with Positive Return. No financial securitiee yet offered in the market hare become so readily and generally popular as the first mortgage premium bonds of the Industrial Exhibition Company of Kew York, and there exists many potent reasons for this marked preference. In the first place, the bonds are placed at the attainable price of 20 each, and the return of the principal is awared beyond oontinge&ry ; farther, the holder of each bond parUapaiea in erery quarterly pre mium until it is redeemed nriivrfnaJ nAi t. By addressiirg Morgenthau, Bruno ft Col. WA 1TF1H ?r tt fJfe mm4 r nnanciai agents, at a 23 Park Bow, N. Y., INuVtqne." 5: "w""' B"uig uu cxpuvnaoon may be ob tained. rf-om. There is money than This is especially the ease in so coaBpicuooa an article of drem aa a gentleman's collar. The wno nave worn eitber the Elm wood or Warwick Collar hare direorered this, acd adriae their trienda to try these ftrst diss goods. Com. ariTls- vtu. aaaA Utn far aO. XI Is Klsnn aare. waWy mmT; . , ., n. mJf aWaaaaTewTa aiuMiBsaVpa as UJ aaar at." ---ral aM radons sL ErmU, mo is M Ifosa ie la a aay f StAta , ( nT-TxTsT-Jj vaot JyQaO ssar. trastr acaau NO W an ar mo7. , s aiS aaaU 0cSt Prr la Oaaaa wfca vil isan I. aarOeasar. amaav ate. mist, i A. IX Waasaiaaxaa a t llsrtfasJ t- taermi of DR. 1.1 V- B- B. RUSaHIX. PabiaW, BaatoaQtt no better .way of m parcUaainaT . a rm) sanng arucie. HOC niiruisi eoo JOmtm. rfUbavsaalOSaMs, v awv . m ir. t. i. Tie I1ILLER & HULTOGHT A M oat hlr JoaraaJ ol 1 paa. MilW mnd .V- TWrht aboakl Uaa M. AiMraaa 6IM1SOJI A O Al'LT, CHrtSMll, O. t l.W pr axuroas- Sscxl lor Sampla ojyy. . SENT FREE WALL ST. A Book arpnalAa; tha artartaa of aaafmUy vttA aaanttal M or SlOOO. tmrMa tnatrartinna aad tlinatrataiaa to any addrasa. T I l- ItUIUiiK Ac CUh Bswiras aao Baoaxaa. s WaU HawTara. a (xx. TO a Drrnrj ra. sow jell a m. 4 sWAMa1 Sao ti l Park mtn vs OIO. . Y . fna o La a - M mrmTmT 1

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