Tk My Bevies
JOSII. T. JAMBS, Edand Prop
.wiuinf GTOX. n. c.
' VlETVS ATfU REVIEWS.
The social event of thc'comins!ieasoJi
trill be tbe manias of Mr. S. S. Howland
ofKetf York, to Miss Belmont, daughter
of August Belmont. :
Frenclilroors in garrison are nowje
qmred to go through much of their; drill
them additionally for active service. !
Prtfessor Tyndall, who for the, last
twenty yetrrhas spent his summers in
SWitzerUndis going to build himself a
rnountaiahomc in "the centre of a region
of unrivaled beauty and interest." Mrs.
, Tyndall is said to be .ai enthusiastic, a
lover of glaciers as her husband
J ' tte wife of General Sherman, who has
been zeaious m mcsi-iviu vj i.v-.
(JatnOIlC Churcu, Is tu ieeuic from the
Pope in consideration of that real the
"Golden Rose" which has hitherto been
bestowed only upon very great persons.
The Empress of Austria has it so has
the Queen of Naples and the Empress
Eugenie.'
Among 1 the recept inaovaUoiia 111 the
British army. arc 'new helmets. The raa
terial is of felt, with a brass spikeon tho
' top and a brass plaque in front, consist
ing of a sfar surmounted by a crown, with
the royal motto surrounding the regiment
al number. There is a Lrass scale chin
strap and a small chain above the peak,
which gives the helmet a light and hand
some appearance. Thcrp is a ucck piece
'.behind, and the peak is of the Prussian
shape. .,
Tb eccentric Duke of Brunswick, who
left so magnificent a bequest to the city of
in tn 1arr 1iit "mpmnrv honored
uvuvip " " - - y
there by tho raost splendid monument in
Europe. 'It will cost $280,000, and the
design is to include a scries of six statues
representing ancestors of tho Duke. - On
a colossal pedestal of polished grani te, CO
feet in height, will rest the sarcophagus,
and over thiswill be a canopy to be sur
' mounted by an equestrian statue of the
'J latb Duke in modern civil costume. M.
Vela will execute this statue. -
. Tho Crystal Palace, Loudon, will in all
probability .be turned into a college lor
technical education. The city guilds have
taken I Hp the project, and the mercers,
drapers, "fishmongers, goldsmiths -and
clothvforkers have each promised the sum
. of 2.000 annually. The armorers and
braziers' have promised 525, and the
plasterers 52 10s. each per annum. Tho
projectors confidently hope that au en
dowment of 50,000 per annum will be
forthcoming for technical education of
. youth. t
Queen Victoria' has been put out of
temper this year by the toilets at the
- court. No fewer than fuur ladies have
. been formally "censured" for making their
appearance in "unbecoming costumes.
Whether they were dressed too much or
too little is not stated. One viscountess
was on the point of being turned back by
tho chamberlain's officers, hut she was
permitted to pass into the ! presences of
royalty aa she happened to be an Ameri
. can a circumstance- which, like charity,
"covers a multitude of sins.7' There is but
one American viscountess in England. .
Thefollowing remarkable announcement
has appeared in several of the Italian jour
nals: "At j the earliest favorable op
'po7tunity Vius . IX will leave Civita
VccchU and' thence to Marseilles- and
Trrtn in a French corvette: whichv will
Ue SCul' 10, convey miu. mo uuuit
. a' . t. T It.- Jirtvhi m
be the signal of complications between
' and France." In connection , with this
Will
Italy
rumor it will
be interesting to recall a
discourse which Uic Pope delivered tol a
body of pilgrims from Lyons, and in which
he oiludod to the probability of his having
.1 - w "
i . ! The report that Archbishop Bay ley, cf
ialtimoro, pas eoucuiu ui ,iue uraiu is
unthbritativcly denied. A Baltirrtorc let
ter tijii "The 'Archbishop is a 'constitu
. tionil snffercr from gout, wbish n hcrcu
iitnr widi hint, liia mothcr"IIavirjr died
of U, - It affects the arteries, J particularly
there of the head. buthtts not incapacitated
him seriously 4 The ailmcut which took
mni noroaa is acute oyspersia, jmeuutu
with nervous prostration, and for the
remedy tf which ho' has been recora
mended to tho waters of Vichv. There
In his rank of Archbishop of Baltimore,
. moment of death. The appointment of
Bishop Gibbons is simply that of Coadjutor
'Bishop of the diocesc,with the right, how
"etW; to succeed" to ' the archie
Vpacyshouid he' survive the present
incumbent. -It was doubtless the. at
. tachmeitolthr',:t mentioned privilege
to Bishop Gibbons's appointment that
iravo rise " to ' thft wTrrt that he had
,eiK&cdc4 Archbishop Bay ley, and that
the latter was hopelcly invalided abroad
"wu uvir ckuiu America. -j-
THE fXTE OF T0BKEr.
If Turkey is left to fisht Russia single-
handedj says the Augusta CAronc-ber
fate would seem to be already decided!
And vet this mav tarn out fallacious reas
oning. .Russia: has crossed jthe iHnube
in over whelming force, hut she may not
so easily cross the Balkan. If Turkey
can make anything like the stand she
should south of the Balkan, and on the
plain of Adrian, her invaders may roe
the hour, they ventured so far inland.
About twenty miles from Constantinople
the Turks have the finest defensive posi
tion ia'Europe. It was there that Attila
was baffled hack, and there too Belisarius
defeated the Huns and saved the Lower
Empire. If the Muscovite legions pene
trate thus far into the bowels of the land
without a fatal overthrow of Abdul Ker
im's main army, they may be halted per
manently and forced to retire to their lair
beyond the Danube. It will be difficult
for the great armies of Russia to be pup--plied
from Roumania, and Bulgaria, and a
crossing of the Balkans may put them in
the plight that Diebitseh found himself in
1829, when he reviewed at Adrianople
an army which had shrunk from 150,000
to 14,000 men. We shall presently see
how much better a fate is in store for the
Russian commander who shall emulate
Diebitseh.
The friends of the Ottoman power,
however, are already losing heart. The
other day, in an address before the Lib
eral Club, in Xcwi York, Gen. Franz
Seigel expressed' sympathy with the Mos-
Icm as against the i;usso-UrccK, mil was
of opinion that the hour of Turkey's
destiny had struck. He was very sarcas
tic in finding reasons why Americans
should sympathize with the Russians, and
hit upon finally the following : Whatever
we know of Russia, he thought, is the
product of the Western civilization. Ker
social order, her politics and her literature,.
had their origin elsewhere, and there was
really nothing Russian in Russia except
the Russian Church, Russian leather and
Russian hemp, and each of these three
was an agent of progress and civilization
in. about equal degrees. Russia, how
evcr, was a great country it was over
tice- as large as the United States,
counting even Alaska, with its icebergs,
seals and walruses. ' Russia, historically
considered, was a "big thing," and Ameri
cans liked the Czar because the. grip of
his iron hand was felt from pole to pole.
Asd then Russia, like ourselves, need not
eliminate her own population from her
shores. She keeps all she has and, takes
all she can get. ,Furthcr, she had a huge
national debt, consumed an immense quan
tity of whiskey,- and wtis very fond of
''reconstruction,", as might , be seen on
every rage of her history her last ef
fort in that direction having been made as
late as 18G3, when she "reconstructed"
Poland for the third time by killing about
thirty thousand of the population and
sending 85,000 more to Siberia. The
General then drew a startling picture of
Russian religious intolerance, and the pro
pagandism of the popes and Cossacks. He
concluded that Turkey's chance of success
without aid from abroad was hopelesss
and that exterior help was not now appa
rent anywhere. Russia, he said, had a
population of 85,000,000. to draw from,
while Turkey, which recruited its army
from her Mahometan inhabitants only,
could only 'draw on some fourteen mil
lions. Russia- had -00,000 men in the
field and proposed to brin 1,000,000
more. The remainder of her vast army
had to guard Poland the Black Sea and
the Caucasus, or was useless on account
of the vastnes? uf the country and the
lack of the facilities of transportation.
Turkey had about 300,000, one-third of
whom were in Europe. The Russian ad
vance, he understood, was from two
points, somewhat far apart, on the Dan
ube, and you1d in all probability be di
rected so -.that She two columns yould
meet, if left unopposed or successtul l
overcoming opposition, at Adnanople,
'where all the various roads -from the
mTttli, cost antl wesi- concetitrate. Tho
Turkish defence could only be made in
one way now, and hat,was.to mass their
troops in Bulgaria, between the lines of
the two Russian columns, and strike at
either ouc or the other before they crossed
the Balkau mountain rane. Vet even if
successful, it would do the Turks little
good. . Russia could keep her araiies up
to the strcugth they started outon. and
Turkey could not da this, as she had no
reserves. The grand upshot wou'd be a
jre'neral division of Turkey all round.
Russia would get the Hon' share, (AuitxU
would come :u si, ana . men uermany io
some way would be compensated, while
- ' 1 t 1,1 i T J '
tngiana woiuu wtuu xgv-pu,
Granting, for the sake . of 'argument,
that this partition shall take place, who
can predict that peace . will follow when
the dogs of war begin to parcel out their
quarry and quarrel over the bones?.
It will require all the'fihe abUitiei of a
silver resutnptionist to Explain the ' difier-
euce between tho Iowi . ilvcr platform
and an openly-avowed inflation platform.
It seems to make no" difference which way
the dollar of our father's is started.it always
rolls into tho inflation hole, .' ! ' i
THE CUBBE5 CY COfTBACTIOX.
' The New York Journal of. Commerce,
in reply to inquiries te subject, states
thit UteraTuTa itfnim&n mistake about the
cAmtractiott of the-japer currency. In
1872 4hfrewere; n round, nuifibers, $354,
b00,000 citstiiidingSn bink notes, $356,
W,00(rin legal tenders, land $40,000,000
in fractional currency in. all $750,000.
000. Last week's statement gave $317,
snnnftA bardr nntps: S3fib.500.000 in legal
tenders, v $2 l,t)00,000 inj fractional cur
rency, making in all $699,000,000 out
tandiDgr This-makes a seeming reduc-,
tion cf $51,000,000, but ii place of $20,
000,000 of Pactional currency called in,
and of i nearly $8,000,000 legal tenders
held for redemption of fractional currency
not yet presented,, silvej- coin has been
used, so that the actual reduction in the
common currency is but 21,000,000. If
we add the increase in gold we shall find
that the total of both cur rencies is actually
greaternow than it was in 1872. It
added, too,.thafcthe loa'r s and discounts,
instead of fihrinking, hav : increased, now
amounting to about $930,000,000, against
$872,000,-000 in 1872. -
Tbe undegtound telegraph wires be
tween Halle and Berlin', in Prussia, have
proven so successful in Uheir working that
the German postmaster-eperal has con
tracted for the laving -ofl Underground ca
w fMm TWlin n rVtTo?ne bv way of
Pottsdara, Magdeburg, jBrunswick, Ilan
over, Minden, Munster, Wesel and Dus
seldorff; the work to be' finished by next
snrinir. Workmen arc also busy extend-
... i
ing the Berlin-Halle line
to Lcipsic,
and
the
six
hundred men
are
now
flifrrrinrr
trenches for a line from Maycnce, " by way
I:
of Casscl, to Leipsic. .( Tc say nothing of
tho advantages gained in dispensing
with the
unsig
htly and
expensive tele
em has the fur-
graph poles, ,the new
sys
ther advantage of not
beinff
affected by
wind or snow storms or
the clctncitv, m
thcatmosphere. 1
Marshal MacMahon's b
rthday was cole-
brated on the 15th of JuAc.
alls age is
sixt-ynine. He was born j
Suily, near Autun, in 180
n the chateau of
8. .His father,
Maurice de MacMahon, w
Ks faithful to the
! ' . f
Bourbon cause, and during
Louis XVI I f. was- create I
the reign of
a lieuteuant-
general and a commander
of the order of
St. Louis. Hisgrandfiither, Jean Baptiste
de MacMahon: born in Li nerick, Ireland,
was naturalized and ennobblcd by the
French government inj 1750. His ancestor
first visited France in! tile suite of the
exiled James II. of England.
A daughter of Lloyd Tevis, the richest
hnirpssin California, is to be married, to a-
son jf the late John O. Brcckenridge.
A Superb Blood t)epurent.
Upon the action of the
and bowels depends the
iidneys, bladder
epuration of the.
blood.- It is by promoting
the activity of
these organs that Hostettet's Stoniacli Bit
ters ensures purity to the circulatioa. In its
passage' through the j kidneys, impurities
which, beget rheumatism, ;out and gravel
are strained from the blood but when those
small but all important organs grow inac
tive, these impurities of course remain and
inevitably produce the diseases mentioned.
Hostetter's Bitters rouse the kidneys to re
newed activity, by which means the blood
is depurated. It likewise purifies" the blood
when contaminated, with bile by promoting
a gentle but effectual1 action of the bowels,
and has the further effect of regulating 'the
action of the liver, ihu$ (counteracting a
tendency to bllllcsness, Dyspepsia, mala
rial fevers arid urlnkry complaints are also
conquered by it. I
8600 PIANOS FOR $25a
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. MENDKrSOHN TIANO CO
apt. li V , Broidw?,y, X. Y.
Notice Schedule
B Tax.
A I.L WHOLESALE AND
RKTAM.
. chants are hereby notified that .a privil
ecre tar was levied by the last Legislature of
Five Dollars, (the tame levied by county)
in addition to the Schedule taxes proper.
Wholesale -dealers are also lotified that in
giving in their purchases the law now com
pels payment on jail purchases, made
within the State as well as out of the State,
ilfifltttypg timber, lumber, turpentine, spirits
turpentitt.e, r?Jo andparal stoes of any kind
and coUtm.) A I 'oies, bcfariiing houses,
reitaurants and eatjng houses 4rr rciulrcd
by lar to py tx of ane-ba)f per cent, on
gross receipts. The fax will je dne July 1st
and payable with U the ife'rst ten days
thereafter, on all purchase since the st of
January 18 J. :
Ail. parties interested in the pavment of
Schedule B Taxes Will save costs by attend
ing to the same at once as the law wi 1 be
tiicy enforced. j J. E. SJAMPSON,
june'ZS , j Register of Deed.
tar copy 6tc4 -. ,1- - I .
V S. C. Hall, .-.
DdOIC AND JOB PRINTER.
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and lowest In price.
If jam. rlll study your interest, give me a
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. .... 1 ... , - . 1
OUBSClKBli TO TUti
DAILY REVIEW
1 1
Miscellaneous.
SGRIBNER'S MONTHLY.
Aa 'Uxbivaled Illustrated Magazine
- - i :
When Scribner lisued iU famous Midsum
mer Holiday Number in' July, a friendly
critic said fit:' "We are not sure but that
Scribner has touched high-water mark. . We
do not see what worlds are left to it to con
quer." But the publishers do not consiaer
that they have reached the' ultima thule of
excellence they belieTe "there are other
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conquer them." J ' t
The prospectus for the new volume gives
the titles of more than fifty paperi (mostly
illustrated), by writers of the highest merit.
Under the head of j
"Foreign Trave I . "
we have "A winter on the Nile," by Gen. Mc-
lllor . Kl aii n tori ntra Ahont flnngtantino-
Vll-liau , uuivw-8-
pie," by Charles Dudley W arner ; ; 'Out of
ler ; "An American in Turkistan, ' etc. Three
serial stories-are fannounced : 1
Nicholas KUlinturn,
i
Bv Dr. Hollandj the Editor, .
whose storv of -"Sevenoaks" gave the highes
satisfaction to the readers ot the Menthly.
The scene of. this latest novel is laid on the
banks of the Hudson. The hero is a young
man who has been always "tied to a woman s
apron strings," but who, by the death of hu
mother, is left alone in. the world, to drifton
the current of life, witn a fortune, but with
out a purpose. I. I '
Another serial"IIis Inheritance," by Miss
Trafton, will begin on the completion of "That
Lass o' Lowrie's, ' bv Mrs. Hodgson Burnett
Mrs. Burhett's story) begun in August, has a
pathos and drama tic' .power j which have been
a surprise to the. public. ! .
There is to be a series of original and ex
quisitely illustrated papers of "Popular
Science," by Mrs. Herrick,Leach paper com
plete in itself. j ' -
Therq are to be, from various pens, papers
oh
"Homo Life and Travel."
Also, practical suggestions as to town and
country life, village improvements, etc., by
wpll-krinun snecialists. ! '
Mr. Barnard's articles on various indus
tries of Great Britain include the history of
"Some Expriments in Co-operation," "A
Scottioh Loaf Factory" in the November
number, and "Toad Lane, Rochdale, ' in De
cember. Other papers are, "The British
Workincuian's Home," ."A Nation of Shop
keepers," "Ha'penny a Week for the Child,'
etc. .'-'
A richly illustrated series will be given on
"American Sports by Flood and Field," by
various writers, and each on a different
theme. The subject of j
"Household and Home Decoration
will have a prominent place, whilst the latest
productions of American huniorists will ap
pearfrom month to month. The list of short
er stories, biographical and other sketches,
etc., is a long. one. ' '
The editorial! department will continue to
employ the ablest pens both at hotne and
abroad. There will be a series of letters on
literary matters, from London,' by Mr. Wel-
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The pages of the magazine will be open, as
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specially to the freshest thought of the Christ
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We mean to make the magazine sweeter
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FIFTEEN MONTHS for 84.
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Our Low, Prices.
reduced to m -re ting the requirements of the
times. Determined not . to be undersold
and at the same time famishing' insframents
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WARRANT FOR FIVE YEARS,
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dec 18 ;" CHAS. E. CLEAPOR.
APPLETOW'S
imm vtmnm
. - "
NEW" REVISED EDITION". '
Entirely rewritten by the ablest writers 011
every subject. Printed from new type,
ond illustrated with, fcieveral Thousand
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ISkThe work originally published under the
title of THIS Nt W AM LKICAN C Y1AXJP Jfi
DIA was completed in 1S73, since which
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tained in all parts of the United States and
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THE A&1KKIUAN CYCLOPAEDIA.
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ing national changes of peculiar moment.,
The civil war of our country, which was at
its height when the last volume of tho okl
work appeared, has happily ended, and a
new course of .commercial and' industrial
activity has been commenced. : ;
Large accessions to our geographical
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cable exDiorer of Africa. ,
The great political revolutions of the last
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of time, have brought into public view a
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everv one is curious to know the particulars
Great battles have been fought ami impor
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In preparing the present, edition 'for the
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First-Class Cftnyasing Agents Wanted
Address the Fubllsuers, " i
D. APPLErOX & CO.,
549 & 55 Broadway, N. Y.
Watchmakers, &c.
T. W. DROWN & SOS7S,
WATCHMAKERS AKD JEWELLERS.
No. 37 Market street, -
Wilmington, if. C;
' fEdtablished 123 .
.UAR4tKE'TIE MONEY'S WORTH
J for every article purchased of them.
An eleeant stock of fine Wntch rinrlra.
Jewelry, Silverware Fancy (roods, Ac, kept
constantly on hand for sale at a very slight
aavanceon Aew. lorx cosL
Agente for the Diamond Spectacles; v
Our country, friend are invited to call afi
see. ar: -dec 13
JAS. T. 'PKTTEWAT,
C H. SCHULKBH
MCflAfiflisnoniiissiDfi
'AND
Brokerage .House.
I 1 Pftpil'p nrntfr 1 ti 1 ,r .
, . . nwuiiAnid sina nare on
exniDiuon, samples of Coffee, Flour, Rice,
Molasses. Sncar. Srrnni. Tnhtn l.
Take orders for MeaLs, Lard, Salt, Candles,
wt- ' VUVVV' ooap, jye, rocasb, 4C.
Wire promptly all orders. Orders and con
signmentB solicited, j . .
r,X,tATC. agent3 for the eateof WILCOX,
QlpBS 4 CO'S 3IANIPULATED OUANO
au me neasiy Cotton Ties. i
PETTEWAY & SCUULkEX.
dec 13 '
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9
Miscellaneous.
THE New
ji iDo enicnnini j;xiniiti.-n, ...v'
M A A .A . . .
&mmm. wherever cxhibucO.
ACQJVIPACT, slim, DruiKi
Light Itunnlng'and EFFICIENT irr,
STITCH" MA CHINK. ADAPTEDtoV
WANTS Of KVJSltYHODY. Tit TWflVi
J mm W lliriwn I II St " "3 IfTiJC!d tZ
rara einco bv tho ail of thn i-4 i!r
tdlCIIIl i.nviiuiiiiiu cma IKIijrv.
all iho Kdsentlal' 1'artB c f a TlS'Tr u
MACHINE, is SIMPLU ia CONSliiini N
kSUAVJSltlOR in -Strength aaj
contains less VyorKina Vzm fcCcr
Df DOING a wider raitae ol irtttiftLC
bewing Macnines. itwiiiKUNrr
without costing ONE CENT'i Rw:e
In tho Manufacture of this MAUJIXE e
Very BcHt 3rntcrlal tn
The WEAKttiU TAKTS aro HAROWED
and tho Mechanism -lias been cowman.'
with tho special view ff rroducaijr
Easy Bunmnsr, DURAELE, tsd Un.--..
TsOISELESS MACHINE, ftdipkd renin
weli for ' Coamo or fine TUKEiD. iVl,
TON. filLTT or LI MEN. SEVIS0 froa t
Jjghtett Muslins to Jitattr CUifc IV, i
mTatueu. such ConflderwinLT
in the ihtmimsiu MtMns a
HOME 'SEWING, MACHINE tUt
every MACllLNE id lully
Warranted for Five Tears.
LIVE AGENTS uantca la lociIUci to
Ave arc not reprcscnicd. '
Send for pricep, and pamplos of work &
n the IIOAIL, or can at any or our oiacts.
JOHIJSOH, Gw -S Co
1111 Secoad Ave, Pi'.tst'b.L
141 Stato Street, Chicago, 111. '
21 South 6thfitroet, t. Uziul
17 2hr ifontoinexy St., fiaaTrasciseo, U
01
from the ctWcti of Krror ui '
Abuses in clily lifo. -V-
hook IIkstorkiv. Imjx.iJiir.f t'J
to Marriao rcmorcJ. vi t
mctliod of treatment -V' '
! and ' remarkable tcwcjlj:!-
I Unnl-a nd circulars rnt free
1
H
n
Si
83 I
in sealed catciopp. Addrv
Howabd AsniTios, 410 . u
V:K I'hiladelchll, ! w
o
An Institution Iwint; y
reputation for totvuaw -t
ductJand prnfrK-i""'
E. 1
lASHIONALi; HAKUEV
: Front Street, Wr
Hair Cutting Sl.Hvin? 1
.Attentive and polite Carburi
to wlait upon customers.
feb24
. TTaf aVilished 1505
GILMORE & CO., AttomcysatL
Snecessors to ChlpmU H j
629 F Street,1 Washij
Patents procured In all V
minted. No- fees for &
American )fs
mn .nnrtnctlne- a rehearing. .v I
animations. ISO adqiuou "ZLt,
KSS:. n7ioni before Crr
Buit. in different
United SUtei Court! WS
ifnlted States. CoofCU.C,
Commission, and hu JL ,
Otticxzb. BOixwan
war. or ttimir hir. 77l
Son'ey from the OgffJfli&T Jgf I
,Ut amount of pa nf?irt
closeatamp.-andafaurcpir. .
will be giTenyoa free. . 1
All omcni. "Sruw
ruptured, or "JVS
lighUy.canebtalfl rS;B
ing pension! are wjwlfi8
giamp ana , T,.iC
UXUKU Bli WT4l C
4
UonanuJMrrrj
rr,fc,for. the Gene,
VMMTW
TMnnrl Ci - I
il r.nd Warrant .n.J7 t,rwt
St,a under act of frJuurai;
to perfect them.
are auspended froni p
A .mm MnirFI ITU k ' . - -
rratuitoualy foifraxija i3
. Address uu-Tff
P.O.B0X4-
fleac in im
f.w "Patent
kCod Una city.
MOH