EVEtfY MEROHAUTf tXD BUSINESSMAN ADVERTISE. nemgmper it the otdyrml medium heteoeen thehuetnee* manandtbe reading public, % Thit item age ofnoite,and there ie memidetu* that a bue ■nete it in eeddmve ttnlem it mutter* mite. Cojne to the VoLftt r ?>? PEOPLE ARE FAST XlA' Job Printing Hous» . ■ fttt&ford. H. ©„ ** • 'vfcW---* ><•. - .. - i ' m ■ v.: * SANFORD, NORTH CAROLINA, SATURDAY, APRIL 6.1889. This fact it demtmttratrd hg theeontnmal nu*> and inmate of info*'' -ihHg printe almost anything from a titifing ea*d,t#,a lor;* . ^=r'' No. 3& IHC JnURUAN VISAS It If. -- ' Frtvisus Naval Lotte* Recalled* j Samplt Hurricane Dttcribtd. - - The following it a condensed re '"•jpert of the recent naval loses to the TJnited States, as reported, by" the press: ^ V Naval officers generally concur in ; the belief that the disaster at-. Apia eras the wwtAsmtie that. has erst overtaken the American Navy in i: time of peace. Commodore Walker, Chief of the Navigation Bureau, an g officer of long experience in naval affairs, makes this statement emphat ic Wally. His recollection of previous naval losses from storm and stress, > running back fifty-five years, is as follows:* ' . • .The Albany,sloop'of war, was • loatin West Indian ureters in 1853. - - She is supposed to have gone down ;g. in a cyclone, with every soul of her ; crew, of 210 officers and men, as she < was never heard from after she sail t «don her' last Cruise. In the same year the brig-of-war Porpoise, with 100 persons on board, went down in the China seas without leaving a trace of her end. In 1858 another aloop-of-war, the Levant, went down in the waters of the Pacific, taking aome 200 men to “Davy Jones's ■ locker.” In 1803 the brig-of-war ' Hainbridge met a eyclone off Cape Hatteras. A colored cook, picked up a day or two afterwaid on a bit of wreckage, told the story of the 'iC’.L .• Ivtca rtf avaro nnn nf Ilia oliiinmatAa The old Yorktown was blown arfhore near'the Cape de Verde Is '0, lands oh the African coast soiue years later, hut the crew escaped. In 1808 a gaeat tidal wave picked up the shi|Mtf war W a terse in the harbor of Aaaeiu Pern, and carried her seven ; «r «tjrM *ni,les inland,' depositing he> iu «tropical forest, where she ended her days as a hotel. The same tidal wave cauglit jthe storeship Fredouia • at anehor, rolled her over, and sank ¥ her instantly with every soul op • board.' ' . - . ‘ The Monongahela, how in active service, had a peculiar experience in 1867. She was caught tap by a tidal • wave, carried over a number of largo . buildings on the is land of Santa Crux, West Indies, knocking down one of them, and deposited in the — streets of. aJ city, Subsequently : workmen were sent there who block - «d her up and launched her again. The Sagiuaw was east away in the .night upon one of the islands of the Pacific about fifteen years ago. The wreck of the Huron, although it occurred thirteen years ago, is ' r still fresh in the minds .of people oo the coast. The ship was wrecked on Currituek Beach, N. C„ and few of her crew escaped to tell the story • of the heavy weather and false bea con lights. 5 Commodore Walker think* that the English man-of-war Calliope 'escaped at Apia liecanse she had steam up. , The American vessels were very short of coal, and were probably compelled' to try to ride out tfieatom at anchor./; •>. : i th* Havana hubAicank. Mr. Hayden, in charge of the pub lication of the Pilot Chart, visited Havana last September on purpose " to study cyclones, and his descrip tion of the great hurricane of Au gust, 1877, will be of interest. ‘'What a tremendous engine of destruction. Let us watch its origiu ~ and progress. Imagine to yourself a hot, sultry August day in the tro pics, off the Cape Verde Islands, at about the nortnem limit of the belt -T of equatorial raius and calms, where - the northeast trades have become fitful and irregular. “Tbs uniformity of the trade sky is disappearing, and the little masses of cumulus elouds that have fleck ed the sky from xeuith to horizon gather together here and there as if .. undecided what to do, and now and then rise in tall, massive columns, that grow before the eye and mouui v; higher and higher, till one busily wonders bow high they will rise above their broad level basis before - they reach some upper current tbal will scatter their beautiful crests and 'spoil their snow-white symmetry .r.; In the distance an occasional dart mass is seen, from which heavy rai* is falling, with sometimes a moat flam of pule sheet IigbtnHig. ' Ja one of the toll nunen of cumulus, off to the westward, taller and more majestic than its mates, a slow gyra tory motion can be detected which, gathering strength, rapidly draws in the warm air from below, saturated with moisture, and sends it aloft in to cooler and cooler regions, to add rapidly to the growing and darken ing masses of clouds. A new feature catches tbs eye;. long, graceful, snow-white, feathery plumes reach out at the top of the mass, ‘projec ted against the deep, clear azure sky. Beneath them the shap, rounded, upper edges of the now dark and threatening cumulus begin to grow misty and indistinct, and the inner shaft of the radiatiug cirrus plume are lost to sight in this' new misty veil. Gradually, faint and then sharp, dark horizontal lines appear against the cumulus and rapidly grow into stratus clouds, as -though a fine rain were falling and settling at the level. . Below, the distant horizon was now obscured by heavy rain. • Oft to the northeast some lit tle trade-wind douds ate moving this way. Watching them a moment, as they rise toward the zenith, some mysterious fores to the westwaid seems to attract them, and their paths carve that way. What doe* it mean? you say; and - looking in i that direction you see more little fiatches of scud moving across from eft to ’ right, and notice that a breeze is springing up from the east, while the barometer ts falling slight lyand the whole, great mass of cjouds is moving westward. A hur ricane has hud its birth, a great cyclone storm has started on its westward march toward 8t, Thomas, Hatteras, Cape Hace and Norway. v/ue ui our rotera tornadoes is lo this monster ns an electric light to tlie noonday sun, and all the torna does in the records of the signal office rolled into one and added to it would hardly add appreciably to its energy. “Let us now take our station in advance of the approaching storm and await-its. coming. Whirling along its ocean' pathway at an aver age velocity of nearly twenty mile an hour, it sends out a long rolling swell a thousand miles in advance, and is heralded by a long, high, featherlv plume of cirrus clouds, ra diating far beyond the slowly thick ening cirrus veil that casts its pale halo over sun and moon, and at dawn and twilight envelopes heaven and earth with an awful, fiery glares like the light of some great confla gration. Soon the massive leaden, ' colored cloud bank Heaves in sight above the horizon, a great mountain range—Ossa piled upon Pelion—and flying scud forms overhead and drifts to leeward,i not with the surface wind, but at a mark angle to the right, moving with the upper cur-! rent of the great whirlwind. At in tervals fine misty rain seems to grow out of the air and then vanish again, and the squalls freshen, the barometer sinks lower and lower, heavy elouds'cover the whole hori zon, and the low, distant moan grad ually changes into the shrieks of a thousand demons wrenching at the stout masts and spars, tearing the storm canvass into shreds and flut tering pennants, hurling timber and masonry into heaps of shapeless ru ins, driving wild breakers high up on land, and laughing to scorn the feeble strength of man. Suddenly a pause, silence, calm—the warm, bright sunshine of a summer day, a brief glimpse of heaven, and. than another seeming eternity, of hell.” John Bright t-*'” jr. r. M*n. — Alone amid English orators of the first class, John Bright was a stranger to the influences and tra ditions of the great public school and the university." His speeches bear no marks of Greek and Lutin studies; their charm is all native, their vigor is of the soil. Had he be-in an ancient Athenian nr a mod ern Persian, he oould not have dis played a more complete indifference to foreign models and imported em bellishments. As i^ is reported of Demosthenes that he many times transcribed the work of his fellow countryman, Thucydides, so John Bright drew his limpid and captiva ting eloquence from the local foun tains; for, as he once explained.it bad been from youth his custom to store his memory with the thoughts and words of writers who have enriched the English tongue. So that when he came to speak in Parliament, his own thought and feeling clothed it self with almost instinctive felicity in the forms best fitted to impress and jwrsuiide, ■ - ,V . ' • SCIENCE AND CRIME. A Third Article on the Subject CaJUar*a Vjm. • ITmA. r A case which excited great scien tific interest in America, in theyeai 1849, was that of Dr. Parhman, wh« was a well-known physician of Boa ton. , He disappeared on November 23, 1846, and was last traced to ih< laboratory of Prof. Webster, * lect urer on themistiy. Suspicion hav ing been aroused, Webster’s labera tory was searched. Therin the haunch-bones, left leg and right thigh of a man were found. .These remains were wrapped in towels bearing Webster’s name. In the refuse of the laboratory— furnace fragments of skull-bones were found. In this place also, the search disclosed the blocks of artificial teeth, and some melted gold. A tes chest was next found, and in it were discovered the trunk of a human body, and the left thigh, the remains having been covered with tar and mineral matters. - The scientific ev idence showed that these were all parts of the same body. When they were placed together these relics showed that they formed part, of a body, of which the head, arms, and hands, both feet, and the right leg from the kne ; to the ankle were mis sing, but which at the same time corresponded with the frame of the missing men in every particular. Dr. Parkmau at the time of his de parture was sixty years of agB. The cA.uiuiu<aiuu ui me BKCiewjii ^uiuieu to-its being a man of about that, age, Purkmun's height was five feet seven inches, and the skeleton pieced out, proportionately measur ed, was found .to indicate a height of five feet ten and one half inches. In these points, therefore, the identity of the remains seemed to he clearly shown. But, as in the case of Caro line Welsh, there were special points in Dr; Parkmau's case which served to place the identification well nigh beyond a doubt. It was quite evi dent that an attempt to destroy the head by fire had not only been made but had well nigh succeeded. . The e'vidence of Dr. Keep, the missing man’s dentist, came to the rescue in a very remarkable fashion, after an examination of the rema'ns of the artificial teeth, which had action of Webster’s furnace.. Keep’s evidence was that four years before the dis appearance of Dr. Parkmau, he fit ted artificial teeth in blocks for that gentleman in both upper and lower jaws. The dentist could also speak with certainty to seeing these teeth hr Dr. Parkman’s house about a fortnight before bis disappearance, when he had fitted the teeth with a new spring. The artificial teeth se cured from’ Webster’s furnace wen sworn to by keep as those he had made for Dr. Park man from their fitting the molds in which the teeth of the latter had been made, and from the peculiarities of make. Thf left side of the lower jaw of Dr. Parkmau exhibited a certain irregu larity which was recognized by keep in the form of the gold recovered from the furnace of Webster. Oth er circumstances combined to weave the evidence strongly around the lat ter as the perpetrator of the crime: the motive for which was supplied by the fact that Dr. Parkmau had been Webster’s creditor to a large amount, and that on the former be coming troublesome to him by -in sisting on the repaymentof the debt, Webster bad murdered his creditor, as a short and sharp, bat as the se queal proved, fatal method of dis charging his obligation. Webster was found guilty, mid was duly ex ecuted. a person may be effected or disprov ed in a very simple fashion by a simple induction of medical science. ThuS at the old Railey in 1884, a man, believed to possess the name of Stuart, was charged with being a returned eonvict, and with having escaped from transportation. Evi dence was given that in 1817 a per son of that name was convicted and sentenced. The governor of the iailin which the convict was confined tes tified to the identity of the prisoner at the bar with ths convict, and no less certain was the guard of the convict-ship to which Stuart was consigned that the old Bailey priso ner was his farmer charge. Urosa exined on behalf of the prisoner, the guard admitted that the convict Stifart in 1817 possessed a wen-on hu left hand, and Indeed this pecu liarity was duly entered iu the con vict records as a distinctive mark of the person in question. In answer to the charge preferred against him, the prisoner stated that he was not the convict Stuart, and that his name was Stipter. Between 1817 and 1834, however, witnesses who might have testified to the truth of his statement had disappeared, and ware not forthcoming for the de fense. Already the Recorder was prepared to charge thfe jury, when a singular, and, for the prisoner,~inoet fortunate incidentr occurred. A celebrated surgeon of the day, Mr. Carpue, happened to be seated in court during the trial of the alleged Stuart. Struck with the evidence of the guard of the; eonvict-ohip^re ganfing the presence of a Well mar ked wen or tumor on the convict's hand, it occurred to Mr. Carpue that this fact could be turned to ad vantage in the Cause of justice. Hurriedly consulting tire counsel for the defense, Mr. Carpue entered the wisness-box. He testified as a surgeon, that the removal of such a wen would entail the, presence of an indelible scar as the result of the op eration. If the prisoner were Stu art the convict, said counsel, either the wen or the scar should be found On his left hand. Both ..hands .of the prisoner wore found to he free from wens and from soars alike, whereupon the jury at once acquitted him; In this case a chance accident and the accuteness of the surgeon may be said to have saved an inno cent men from a lengthened period of incarceration as a culprit of more The well known case' of Joseph Lesurques, whose misfortune forma the incident on which more than one melodrama and novel has Been founded, has recently been brought anew under publie notice through Mr. Henry Irving's performance in the “Lyons Mail,' and by his as sumption of the role of Leseiquet and his villainous doable. The case actually occured in France in 1794, and the details are sufficiently well known to obviate necessity for their repetition here. Charged with rob bery and inorder, the iunoeent Leser ques was recognised, identified, and sworn to as the real culprit by vari ous disinterested witnesses. Not withstanding strong exertion? which were made to save his life, and, des pite his previous high moral charac ter and probity of conduct, Lesur ques was sentenced to death, and'ex ecuted. Soon afterwards, the real culprit, a man who bore the closest possible likeness to Leserques, was brought to justice. It was then seen that the similarity in features, stature, build, and manner was so close as to have deceived the witnes ses who gave evidence at the trial. On the grounds alone, and us a mat ter of common recognition and Hen tifieaion, the misfortunate resem blance of Leserques to the real cul prit had unwillingly led them into a ‘•Comedy of Errors,” which resulted in a legal tragedy sa lts denoeument. But more extraordinary to relate still is the incident, well nigh un paralleled in the annals of coinci dences, that Leserques was marked by a scar on the forehead, and by another on the hand, while the real criminal likewise possessed similar markings! Surely “the grim irony of Fate’ could no further go than this, in causing likeness to assume « lurrn aim to entail consequences so fatal and sad, as in the case of Jo seph Jeaurques. The simplicity'of scientific evi dence, to which I have already re ferred in the case of Mr. Carpne, was equaled in an instance in which Sir Astley Cooper, the famous sur geon, was concerned. A Mr. Blight of Deptford, was fatally wounded by a pistol-shot in 1800, and Sir Astley was called in to see the suf ferer. Proceeding to the scene of the assault, Sir Astley, from an ex amination of the locality and the po sition of the wounded man, togeth er with the situation of the wound, came to the conclusion that the as sassin must have been a left-handed man. A Mr. Patch answered to the latter description. He was near ,the locality at the time of the murder, and, hitherto unsuspected, he wss arrested. On being asked to hold up his hand to plead to the indict ment, Patch at once raised his left hand. He was tried and convicted for the offense, fully confessing his guilt before his execution. Finally, as regards indentification of the dead, the famous cause of Eugene Aram may be mentioned. Aram was born at Kamsgill, York shire, in 1704. Settling <at Knars borough as a school master, he be came acquainted with Daniel Clark, a shoemakers, who was possessed of certain valuables, and who was al leged to have been murdered by Aram _ and another. Clark disap pear'd in February, 1745, and Aram was shortly thereafter arrested on suspicion of having been concerned in his disappearance, but was acquit ted from want of evidence. Eventu ally Aram became usher at Lynn Academy, Norfolk, and while there engaged his accomplice confessed that certain bones discovered in a care near Knares borough in 1758 were those of Daniel Clark. Aram was brought to trial at York in 1759. In his elaborate defense he laid great stress on the difficulties.beset ting the iudentification of human remains after each an interval as bad elapsed since Clark's death. His pleas in defense were founded on the alleged impossibility of determining the exact nature, sex, and other par ticulars regarding » skeleton after the lapse of many vear$. The fract nre of the temporal bone found in the skeleton proved nothing; for was it not probable that . the cave may have been a place of burial in olden times, and that the injury might have been produced after death in the spoliation to which graves were frequently subjected? These and like pleas Aram urged in his defense with singular ability. But the confession of nis accomplice ana the facts of the case overruled his pleas, and he was found guilty and executed, having previously con fessed his..crime; while with strange philosophy he wrote a defense of suicide, and endeavored practically to defeat justice by carrying his theories into effect. Opinions of tbe Press. World, Ind. Item. In giving to Robert Lincoln the mission to England, - tbe President has again, as in the appointment of CoL Grant to Vienna, shown his re-’ spect for that principle of heredity which secured his own nomination. This is a new department in Ameri can government. * * But neither in point of ability, reputation nor public services is he a man who would be thought of for the highest and most, important diplomatic mis sion in the gift of the Government except for the fact that he is tbe son of Abraham Lincoln. This ap pointment is a piece of sentimental politics, obviously the President’s own act, bnt it is one likely to re ceive the indorsement of the Ameri can people. JIT. r. IImcs, Ind, Jtrp. If Gen. Boulanger were a success ful soldier there would be nothing to marvel at his popularity, A French General who should beat tjie Ger mans would doubtless have France at his feet, and unless he were a Cin cinnatus or a Wushington, there would be a grave danger that the re public would perish under “the curse of a granted prayer.” But Gen. Boulanger does not' possess any of the requisites of a dictator except the military profession and the - dicta tor^ temper. These have carried him so far, and it is a disturbing question for intelligent French Re publicans how much further they are to carry him. - Democratic Literature of 1844.' Mr. L. J. peberry recently handed us a copy of the “Democratic Sig nal,” edited by Perm Busbee, dated Raleigh, Nov. 8,1844.” It carried at its mast head James K. Polk of Tennessee for President, apd George M. Dallas of Pensylvania. for..Vive President. The publication of this particular issue was just after the election, as the fallowing taken from the edito rial columns will show: “Our read ers must excuse us for the scant of editorial matter which onr columns exhibit this week. We have had little time to give to any thing else than election news; and our princi ple regret is that we are unable to furnish more returns of our State elections than appear in our table.” The paper is a five column sheet; measuring about 15 inches in length and it looks like “long time ago.”— Scotland- Neck Democrat. Howto Judge a Town. - t’Jiarlefte ChnmMm. The advertising columns of a newspaper, are the true, and the ac cepted index of the pluck, push and enterprise of the people of the town where the paper is published. Un less the business of a city is mirrored in its advertising columns, the glow ing words in the local or editorial ooiurnbs, about the “great boom the town is on," will be aocepted by the general public, by the people at home as welj as by the people away, as the whistling'or a scared boy passing a graveyard, ~ . -r Preface to Eirst Step* JnN.C. Hi« Thts little book has been written to interest and instruct the boys and girls of North Carolina. ; It is ad dressed to them,is dedicated to them and its Author would be glad to know that not one of them, from ten to Hfteei) years old, will fail to read or to approve of/ it. . She will be very #611 content 'with such a test of its merits. ' It is one of the brightest signs of our new day that more books about North Carolina are called for and find a market among our own pieo ple^ml that more and more are writ ten by our own people. , The story of our State has few ro mantic incidents. It is. the story of aslow growth, beginning in a series of failures and marked by recurring periods of depression. Heaven had perhaps done too much forusrff we had had an ungenial climate,a stony soil frozen for half the year, and few or no advantages from Nature, we might have developed more activity, exhibited more perseverance, and built our walls more rapidly sho wing ourselves in many ways more ag gressive and more calculating. That has not been.our way. Ours is the story of a quiet, contented, somewhat unambitious people, not studious of change, not easily pro voked—a people loyal to Law and .to Religion, steady, modest sincere and brave; generous, but not enter prising; prodigal of their best when dalled upon by others or in de fence of their own rights, bat mov ing too slowly and cautiously when not under the strong stimulus of special occasions, ’ / 1 I., j out these occasions have shown | the world that North Carolina is worthy of high honor. Our State . has always sprang u> the front in resistance t<> oppression—has been the first and freest to shed her blood, and the last to furl her flag. She has mantained her self-respect and her credit in crises where others have wrecked both. Her mederation has stood her in good stead, . and the strength and durability of her ad herence to both Law and .Liberty prove that her sons are true “hearts of oak.” _It has been, onr fault that we have left our story so long to other hands—a fault tt)at we have suffered from. If it has been well told in these pages, our children will feel each fibre thrill with a new attach ment to the land of their birth, and will imbibe fresh zeal to show them selves worthy of their sires. three Short Steps on John Bright mirnUnfflm Stmr. The lover of tasteful, elegant and correct English must relish the no ble, dignified and eloquent tribute of Mr. Gladstone to the illustrious British statesman just passed away. .It is the tribute of the greatest liv ing statesman and orator to the greatest public man England had with the exception of the speaker. It is a very memoriable eulogy. V; . ' The late John Bright was a great statesman and, therefore, from ne eessity, an advocate of the opposite of Protection. He was too wise an economist to accept the dogma that the way to national wealth :Jwas along the rugged highroad of tax ation. In 1879, he wrote to Cyrus W. Field, of New York as follows: do not think that anything an Englishman could say wouia have any effect upon au American protectionist. The man who pos sesses a monopoly by weieh he thinks he gains is not open to .argu ment. It was so in this country for ty years ago, and it is so with you now. It is strange that. a people who put down-slavery at ahlmmeusc sacrifice are not. able to suppress monopoly, which is but a milder form of the same evil. Under pro tection, the man is apparently free but he is denied the right to exchange* the produce of his la bor with his countrymen, who offer him much less for it than a for eigner would give.” He was one of the two or three chief leaders in the ta*..reform tot ended in the abolition of the ‘ Corn' Laws in 1844. : . r . In the life of John Bright by > George Barnett Smith, the following summary of his great qualities -fi given; '-j£*>& “So long as virtue, courage andIm patriotism retain their significance, so long will these noble qaalitien continue to be associated with j(he * name John Bright, JJe .tabes' ~ rank with the Pyms, the Hampden*. > the Militons and other Incorruptible men of the past who, • in times of ’ difficulty and .of peril; have unswer vingly fought the battle of freedom and asserted the liberties of Ena? land- • ! ; 'r - s* i __ %»• > w. c. t. u. Earpraaa CnrretponAenre. . Says Rev. John W. Higgle ’’Men’s faces are like dials, telling the. time which the heart keeps.”', ,, <r' • April 7th is the day set - apart an the Sabbath in which the oiji Sabbath observance is to be specially.; agitated., Ministers and Sabfathi School Superintendents cue request, ted to preach and talk upon that sub,'; ject ou that day. ‘ " ' v Mrs. Leavitt has now reached Natal, Africa, ' • ' { The Deleware W. C. T. U. is try ing to secure legislative BctiSta ^ai*. . ing the apo of protection for girls from the present legal period of 7 years to 18 years. ! The New Garden “Y’s.” are pre-’ paring for a “Y’s Social." Besides the.! Social they are to have comic read* ings, recitations, etc., and are anti-' cipating an enjoyable . occasion. During the time they wiU circuh^ul the petition concerning wine at class' suppers, knowing that the young men of the College will be ready ‘to* add their name to the list of/Coli* I lege gentleman who “look not upon the wine when it is red.4* * : * Luckier Than Many Man. % at iMtm JFIwmr Prrms. True, Grover got left, but there is one grand consolation. He also got Mrs. Cleveland. B Like the Early Worm. - The sun never sets on the United States. When the evening sun ia going down in Alaska, the morn ?un » «•» tour high in Maine. 1 his is a big country for a fact, and * I e politicians are always up and (ircsscu. Experiment station No. 61 1-f, Bulletin No. 62 $ is issued to-day. It contains in addition to the fertil ise analysis published No. 62 oth er analysis since that time. The' list as printed No. 62 $ embraces " with but few exceptions, all of the brands licensed for sale in the Slate. Write for-the Experiment Station Bulletin No. 62$; this and the sub- ' * sequent publication are sent free up- ^ on application. ' ^ r H. B. Battle, . . . ' * rt:_l_) ** "VOX I I > ■■ J On the 4thof May.the thirdanni versary of the Haymarket massacre . in Chicago, the statue in honor of' the brave two hundred policeman : ' who faced the mob on that fearful? night will be dedicated. The statue, standing on the very spot, repre sents a police officer, heroic sine, with his right hand uplifted. The inscription reads: “In the name of - the people of Illinois, I command „ peace, the words.spoken by Captain ’ Ward a moment before the bomb ' was thrown, v.-.S The bagging trust or pool which ' caused a great deal of excitement and excited much opposition on the part of eotton planters and others ■ ' last year and whioh expired by limi tation last December, it is unnoun- 1 > ced from St. Louis has practically been reorganized and will be run or f , managed by the same parties as bf»~ fore. The plan of operation will not be exactly tbe same as last year, ‘ i however, and prices are not expeo- . tod to be pushed up so high, but it .1 m alleged that it.will not be long : ' before they reach ten cents per . pound. It is said that there is a cor ner m jute butts in New York amt5: that they are half a cent- higher no«r * than they were last season! ■.y:. T’* : Fifty-five fourth class hew Pfl#£rr* masters was the first good day V work1 of the First Assistant Postmaster General Ctarksojj. — rv ' ■ ' '£■ '"V -'je~

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