McHenry Public Library District Digital Archives

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 4 Jun 1879, p. 1

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

% timw * Chi, " *"% '* ~ - < *\ "* 1 W# , ' .# ̂ V«- ^ +> ^ *• • - ,, ; ^ 0: » *-r *',? si,---H f 7'- ; >A' »••• f'?» .s^^A!;.^:. k . A <fi y^lsi&Wfai -5? lit 1 H,» . , .V-;"' r!\ ... - r'; . ... V"" v ' * ' > -; ' ipt* w* .vi »»«<** .$fcV 5*^ ^ K'^ IjM ;f J iti i I , * :< ; *» • «"tjb,:: rK£ fa^®;,; m**Tr '<. * ut i "> Xi-U 1# tin/ i.; fe.. •k-v:X !• 4. *•#*• ,' " .' '. ' L ' ' '• " "." 1 " --" .'. ! • . I • I I - •',: 'S. •i'Jj-.C "- I If I • - , """"*-- J"".'",, ," } *" " ' ; ' " •' "- T ' -••? . , . - > ' • • . • • > • ' . . : • if " '.t. •. ' " "Pledged but to Truth, to Liberty and Law; No Fa*Of*Wtn us and no Pear 8hafl Awe." v • i • • • "A:-1 % ... , ,, , , tU > £*>&; Published Every Wednesday by •VAN SLYKB Editor and Publisher. ]Offiee in Old P. O. Block, V HDrroitn Birmros Kocib.- *-,! ? •. „ JTERMa or SUBSCRIPTION: U , %no Year, (In Advance,).--..... $150 If not PaM within Threo Months 2 00 ftabsoriptions received for three or its months -giifche same proportion, S BUSINESS CARDS* „ ^ H. T. BROWN. M.D. PHYSICIAN and Snrgeon. Office over the Post Office, opposite Perry ft Martins Store, up stairs McHenry III. C. H. FEGERS, M. D. ' " Physician and surgeon, johnsbnrgh JT Ills,--Office hours 8 to 10 A. v. dally. McHenry Ills.--Riverside House, Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays. Office hours Sto^A r. m. E. A. BEERS M. D. Physician and Surgeon. Office a (residence, two doors west of Post Office, MoHenry fit. 0. J. HOWARD, M D. *>HT#lOTAir and Surgeon. Ofllee at the store of Howard 4 Son, McHenry, 111. > •••& W. H. BUCK. M. D., SOMEOPATHIC Phyticlan and Surgeon.-- Office East Side Public Square, Wood-5k, ill. Office hours 11 to 18 A. M., and 3 F. J. BARBIAN. CIGAR Manufacturer, McHenry 111. Or­ders solicited. Shop North Sail corner Public Square, E. PERKINS. WAGON Maker. McHenry, III. General Jobbing promptly attended to. Shop, West of the Pubiic Square. RICHARD BISHOP, 1 TTORNEY AND COUNSELOR AT LAW. l McHenry, 111. •h i-ji. I RICHARD COMPTON. 'Pffi TTSTICE of the Peace and Conveyancer.-- Will attend promptly to the collection of bts. Volo, i^ake County, III. GEO. ,.A. BUCKLIN OTARY PUBLIC, Conveyancer and In­ surance Agent. Office at Bucklin A •en's Store* near the' Depot, MoHebry, 111. E. E. RICHARDS*. „ AS & complete Abstract ot Titles to land in Mcllcnrv County, Illinois. Offioe with' unty Clerk, Woodstock, 111. < ROBT. WRIGHT. Manufacturer of Custom Made Boots and Shoes. None but the best, of material Used and all work warranted. Shop Northwest Sfrner Public Square, Mcilonjy, III. E. M. OWEN. n EXERAL Dealer and Mannfaoturfers \3T ilgent in Leading Farm Machinery, Prices low and Torins favorable. ILLINOIS. N. 8. COLBY. cHENRY, McHenry Co., III. Breeder of *tjil Spanish Merino Sheep, Berkshire and Poland China Swine. A choice lot of young Buck stock for sale. Please call and examine fore buying elsewhere. GEO. SCHRKINBtt. SALOON and Restaurant. Nearly opposite tho Parker House, McHenry 111. •WFlrst-Class Billiard and Pool Tables. J. liQNSLETT, C! ALOON and Restaurant. Nearly oppoeite O Owen's Mill, McHenry, 111. FreshOysters tArv ed up In any shape desired, or tor sale by the Can. *HTGOOD STABLING FOR HOR8E8.JB» » PETER LEICKEM. 1>EPAIRS Watches, Clocks and Jewelry of gji all kinds. Also Repairs Violins in the best Mssible manner, on short notice and at rea- ion*l»lo rates. Also Yiolins for Sale. Shop trst door North of Riverside Block, McHenry XKT A XTTP1j*T\ To make a permanent W A IN 1 EiU engagement with a Stergyman having leisure, or a Bible Reader, to introduce in McHenry Countv, the CKLE* ORATED NEW Centennial Edition ot tho HOLY BIBLE. For description, notice edi­ torial In iaai week's issue of this paper. Ad- tress at once F. L. HORTON A CO., Publish­ ers and Bookbinders, 60 E. Market St.. Indian- fepolis, Ind. • TO SELL LIVELY 10 (Mtrd times vou need something of Real value to the people, do yon not? finch is that grand Mw low priced book,. len's Useful Companion, -AND- Artiflcer's Assistant. W" f THluable receipts by thousands for anything Mul everybody. The most universally useful ok ever published, saving money to all yei's. Outsells everything. Agents want- Address SCAMXELL ft CO., St 1»«U 000 BOYS & GIRLS act as agent >t&r the best Boy's and Girl's paper published ;t the West. Jloautiful presents to subscrib­ ers and agents. Every boy and girl can earn •&s of money canvassing during leisure li#ure» Won't fail to send for it at once. To latroduce it we will send to any address on Sltal three months, for 10 Cents in cash or •Mfeage stamps. Sample of paper and • (Mticnlars FREE • Address l D c f ie«fl»1l«id Gem,Cleveland, O- r fl 11 m A | f|f| MONTHLY MADE. Agents wanted 9 «."U County rights given gratis f«r tho Mle of seven well-known Standard Medicines seeded in every family; reputation world­ wide; established many years; made by a •Slehrated physician; proofs of evidence given. Anin tustrioiis, energetic person can •lake snuffpermanent income and very liberal ' terms by addressing with reference, 333 Xbeatnut StrccX«Phliadelphia. ... V^ GRACE'S CELEBRATED 8ALVE ' 7" Is a Vegetable Preparation It vented in the 17th century by Dr. William trace. Surgeon In King James' army, irowgh Its agency he cured thousands of e most serious sores and wounds that bafll- «rt the skill of the most eminent physicians «f his day, and was regarded by all who ., (pew hint as a public benefactor. ~W " rtMUCE *5 CENTS A BOjfc 7 '••tS .v#»^wlll: Veget freckles,. * 5,: '.rr i PIMPLES, tail {F^eJ ihf receipt fors simple ^bleJtalni that will remove Tan, [Pimple* and blotches, leaving the slesr and beautiful; also inatruc- *oducing a luxuriant growth of Lid head or smooth face. Address, |:V Yasdelf * Co.. SO BUSINESS CARDS. y- *. •*• • M*HENRY, ILLINOIS, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 4, 1879. CUAS. H. DONNCLLT. ATTORNEY at LAW *nd Notary Public Woodstock, Illinois. OImotk 4to«e'« Drug Store. C. IL TRUAX. CARPENTER and Bnildfr, Naiidft, m-- Will put up buildings 9f the Job or da/, and guarantee satisfaction; E V. ANDERSON, |S. D. PHYSICIAN and Surgeon. Ofllee at Gil bert's Drug Store, opposite tho Parker House, McHenry, IliinoU. # ~~~ E. BENNETTTil. "* SURGEON and Acsoaoher. . Diseases of Women a Specialty. Office and Residence on Clay Street Woodstock, 111. DR. C. E. WILLIAMS. DENTIST, Algonquin, 111. All work war­ranted. Teeth extracted in a oareful and skillful manner. DR. O. W. COX, . ~ DENTIST. Office Over Smith, Aid rich* Haythorn's Store. Richmond. III. SIDNEY DISBROW, J^OTARY^r U BLIC and Conveyancer. Al- DR. F. J.-CROSS. ' J Dentist, Riverside Block. Mettentr, 111. Having opened »n officodn this viluupe, I am prepared to do all work lia the line ot my profession on short notice and in » workman­ like manner. All work warranted. ELECTROPATHY. Dr. Samuel Sherman, ' And Wife will be at their residence IX miles West of the Depot, on the Woodstock road, three days in each week, Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays, for the pnrpose of treating all curable diseases. Consultation and Examinations Free. Offlo* hours from 8 A. M., to IP. K. REFERENCESJohn Boran.RtehaMl Bish op, Martin Welsh, Arthur Whiting, Leonard Bonslet, James Sutton, Jofta M. Smith. F, K. Granger, Geo. Gage, Ben. Gilbert, Horace Dwefly, B.F.Peck, Wm. Hntson, Geo. Gilbert, J. A. SHERWOOD AUCTIONE KR gaAND APPRAISER^".; ii Algonquin, III, .i« O ALES of Stock, Farihing Tools and Goods O of ail kinds promptly attended to. Farm sales a specialty. Terms reasonable. Post Office address Algonquin III. f. . y&Li. ,W. H. SANFORD, Merchant Tailor. In the store of 0. H. Dickinson, East fMfe of Public Square, WOODSTOCK, ILL. A good Stock of Fine Cloths for Suitings al­ ways on hand. Suits made to order awl a At warranted- Give me a call. T' W.H. SANFORD. Woodstock 111.,Sept. ITth. 1S78. H. E. WIGHTMAN, Proprietor. First class rigs, With or without drivers, furnished Rt reasonable rates. Teaming of all kinds done on short notice. •j Geo. H. Stewart, A u c t i o n e e r . Richmond? 18l«. S|M,an experience ot 1§ vean, *ad will guarantee satisfaction is all eases, where sales entrusted to my care, are properly ad­ vertised, or no charge will be made. Torms, from f6 to $10, according to aiaonnt of sale. All orders addressed to Riehmeail, IU., will receive prompt attention. M. ENGKLN* d U N - S M I T H ! Scale Repairing, Grinding and Pol­ ishing Razors and Shears and Table Cutlery a speciali­ ty. Repairing of all kinds done in 'Steel or Brass.-- All work warrant­ ed. Also dealer la Guns, Revolvers, Table and Pocket Cutlery, Gun and Fishing Material, Pipes, iCigars, Tobacco, Violin Strings, Ac. ' Shop and store near the Post Offioe, He. Henry, 111. " : 'fi J»E3«OVALI !| Scott & Co*,!' U4TOB iRADINQ- -'". -- ! HATTERS! Have Removed from their old stand, cornel Fifth Awm**6 and Madison Street, tb the elogant Double Store, M. 135ant 137 HafimSL, Wesi of Clark Street. " : 1 ie Largest Stock of Style Hats to choose from In the West. 13^Prices the Lowest. It will pay you to call and see themi. BRANCH STOKES" S. E, Cor. ciark & Lake It % it S. E. Cor. Halsted and <• CHICA^O. S 10,000 send you a 1111. silk regular pri L25,01ark Stroot, From the Sycamore Ve^aMMA, ^OCRXKOlgt-ATURUL If ts fhe fashion to denouuee leglsla- tures; and it ix a bad fashion. When ttie people have acquired a contempt for legislatures that contempt naturally attaches to the laws they enact, and when a people have learned to despise law they have acqoired a dangerous habit. They submit unwillingly to laws they despise; they won't obey what they don't respect. They become lawless; anarchical; and out of anarchy comes we all know--the man ou horse­ back--a despotism; power that people will respect because they must. Re­ publican government proves a failure when people have lost respect for law. For these reason should the custom of pouring ridicule and contempt on legis­ latures be discourged. For many years it has been the custom ary when a legislature hat been a tew weeks In session, for shallow witlings to set afloat such paragraphs as this. "The 30th General A8sembly,ha8 been In session thirty days at a cost of $75,- 000 and has passed only one unimpor­ tant bill. It had better adjourn and go home." How absurd Is this method of estimating the work done. There would be as much sense in saying the carpenters have been at work foe a month on Mr. so and so's residence and have'nt finished one room, or the fac­ tory men have been at work for a month; two thousand harvesters have been started and not one completed. They had better 'quit and go home. Everybody can see the absurdity of this. Though no one room and no one harvester has been completed yet many fyave been advanced toward comple­ tion ; and so with the laws. Hundreds may have been rapidly- advanced toward perfection when none have been finished. The evils of hasty legislation have been so great that the passage of a law has been made a long and slow prqeess. It Is introduced one day Is referred to various committees at various times. Is overhauled by them all, is read three times on three sepe- rate days, and may be forced to run thegaunietof debate each time. If among the hundred'and fifty members there are those that desire to defeat it there are so many cunning ways known only to the Initiated in which It cm be slyly done that it is a wonder how any get safely through. It requires great care and skilful pilotage to bring a bill safely through the rocks, shoals, currents and eddies of legislative nav­ igation into the safe harbor of perfec­ ted legislation at the dose at the season. It Is not the simple matter that Is generally supposed and it is well that it is not. People show their folly when they denounce a legislature because it has enacted but few laws early in the season, At the last etd, when tttese measures have passed through tho various necessary processes they roll out of the legislative mill more rapidly. The present legislature has undergone rather more than the average amount of this kind of abuse. And impression (a gaining currency that this has been a particularly costly* and Ineffectual body. With a true view of correcting this error a correspon­ dent of the Chicago Telegraph has gathered the following information showing by exact figures that with the exception of the session following that one which adppted the revision of the laws, (at which time no new legislation was required) this has been the short­ est of all our legislatures aud the least expensive. A .t* ^W. BKKHOM TKKWINU, When a swarm of bees leaves tfbr the woods they are off before ycyn fairly know it. They drift away from the hive in a wide-spread and apparently aimless concourse, then suddenly gath­ er up their skirts, draw together their forces, and away they go, a humming, flying vortex of bees, the queen appar­ ently In the center aud the mass revol. vlng about her as a pivot, over orchard and meadows, across creek and swamp, or deep valleys, strait for the appoint­ ed tree, slow at first, so that you can keep up with them, but presently with a speed that would tire a fox-hound.-- In this flight jthe individual bees do not move in right lines, or straight forward like a flock of birds, but round and round like chaff in a whirlwind: unitedly they form a whirling, revolv­ ing. nebulous mass fifteen or twenty feet across, that goes as straight as a projectile to Its mark. They are not partial as to the kind of tree,--pi tie, hemlock, elm. birch, maple, or hickory, --any tree with a good cavity high up or low down. A swarm of mine ran away from the hew patent hive I gave them, and took up their quarters in the hollow trunk of an old apple tree across an adjoining field. The entrance was a mouse-hole; near the ground. Another swarm In the neighborhood deserted their keeper and went into the cornice of an out-liouse that stood amid ever­ greens iu the rear of a large mansion.-- JUut iherc is no accounting for the of bees, as Samson found-when he vetetl the swarm in the carcass ore probably the skeleton) of the had siaia.̂ cuhn Mvrrough* in ' A me He« n Ibutt When the English sporting men flrst saw Parole they pronounced him to be far from a beauty: one sporting paper Land and Water, described him as a mean little ewe-necked, curby-backed brute. But they admitted that the moment he Is extended, even in a oan- ter. It Is seen what is In hlm.for a more level, easy mover never trod the tnrf.-- He throws his hind legs well under when running, which gives him a tre­ mendous leverage; he has a much lon­ ger reach than oue would be led tc suppose before seeing him take a stretch upon the turf. After hie flrst season upon the American turf It was found necesftary to make Parole a gel­ ding on account of his very high tem­ per. Parole wks foaled at Chestnut Hill, Philadelphia, in 187S: his sire was Leamington, his dam Maiden, a mare with the good blood of Lexington.-- Mr. Lorillard gave $1,000 for him when two years old. At that age he won two races at Long Branch, and two at Saratoga;he lost two out of six that year; next year he was beaten by Va­ grant at Saratoga, in the spring; iu the fall of that year he ran three races with Tom Ochiltree, beatincbira twice: and this horse is considered the king of the American turf. He next won the all Aged stakes at Jerome Park; was then taken to Baltimore where he was beaten by TMtnlloo in two races; as a five year old, he ran at Saratoga, Jerome Park, and Ptmllco Park, Baltimore, coming fin the winner each time. In 1877 he ran against Ten broeck and Tom Ochiltree at Balti­ more. Tenbroeck was the favorite in the pools, selling at 61.200 to Ochil­ tree's 9400, and Parole's 9336. The race was a two-and-a-half mile dash, Parole coming in two lengths ahead of Tenbroeck, and six ahead of Ochiltree. Last year he ran ten races and won eight. One of the most Interesting races is that which is to come of! In England, where he runs a match race against Isonomy for £5,000. The vic­ tories of the Continental, and ndw of the American, horses are spreading consternation among the English turf­ ites, and they begin to tremble for their hard earned laurels. * j « A Bulaeii Opening for * MnMWtr eff Traveling Men In this State. The Ohio Scale Works of Cinelnnatl, offer an opportunity to a number of active enterprising men to engage In a pleasant occupation during the next year. They are now employing traveling men to Introduce their goods to deal­ ers aud appoint agents in all the prom­ inent cities and towns In the country. The goods this firm put upon the market are always new and desirable, and of such general use aud excellence as to at once command a ready sale; In fact, they might be said to sell them­ selves. The company will be liberal with good men, and want a nutsberto work this State thoroughly,and estab­ lish local agents in every township. It seems to us thti Is an opportunity sel­ dom offered reliable men to secure a steady Income in a very -agreeable man­ ner. Among the specialities they have been devoting most of their attention to of late, is what Is known as their Un- versal Family Scale. Tblsis an article which in Some sections of the country has already been extensively Intro­ duced and has proved to be one of the most readily selling articles oyer put upon the market, as they are just what every housekeeper needs and wiU have after seeing them. We have no room to give an elabo- r*te <le8criptiou of this Universal Fam lly Scale. We can only say that it weighs accurately up to 13 pounds, Is made entirely of brass, and iu shape is a handsome base surmounted by a col­ umn upon which rests a small platform for placing the articles to be weighed. We presume there are several persons among our readers who would like to avail themselves of the ^Company's of­ fer. A line dropped to ihe Ohio Scale Works, Grand Hotel Building, Cincin­ nati, Ohio, will bring full informa­ tion. "... : : Is almost certain* tfe^'lffrs. Freeman, mother of the Pocasset Mass., victim of fauaticisin, will die in con­ sequence of the shock to her system on awakening to the fact that her daugh­ ter Edith came to her death by a most horrible murder, perpetrated by her own. parents, There are Indleatlons that Mrs. Freeman is not a woman of callous feelings, when not possessed of the Adventist devil. The Poeasethorror should teach Be nsible people to have nothing to do with religious fanatics. Bis Last Dose* Said a sufferer from kidney trouble when asked to try the Kidney-Wort for a remedy, "I'll try it, but it will be my last dose." The man got well.-- His blood circulates nicely, he has no paiu iu either Ms back or aide, lipid by Druggists. : , :M-J, in* •? tAtt DAISY MABXimi. ^ NEW York, May list, MW. Receipts of Butter for the week, 28,- 661 packages; exports, 11,560. There was a qnlck market all the week for fresh creamery and ohoicest selections of fresh made dairy butter, hut there is no demand for poor qualities such as buyers would have to hire somebody to eat Is not wanted. At the clo'se, re­ ceipts were more liberal and the feel­ ing easier, with considerable sales of creamery at 19 and and a notion that next week 11 would go to Itte. for the top. Sour cream creamery butter, fancy, 18c; do. choice to fine, 18to 19e; sweet eream creamery, fair to good, 16 to 17c; private dairy butter, selected, 17c; private dairy butter, grass, in lots, 15 to 16c; private dairy, white, hay make, 6 to 7c; imitation creatnei^r but ter. as In quantity, 13 to 16c? Chekse.--Receipts for the week 33,- 913 boxes; exports, 35,136 boxes. The top was 8}c; with a good many choice cheese sold at 7} to 8c; over the trier and a rather more timid .feeling at the close. Still the cold weather and|back- wardness of the season both here and in England may sustain prices until the market runs Into a flush grass make There Is not much room for skim cheese and its making lias almost ceased to be profitable, but flue full creamjstock cer­ tainly has a better outlook than a year ago. We quote: State factory, mil cream fancy, at 8 toSJc; do good to choice, at 7 to 7fe. do. half skims at 4 to 6c.; do. skimmed cheese, sold at 3 4c. Emmet Wells Hop circular say*:-- Brewers have been moderate buyers this week, but exporters have for the present withdrawn from tho market.-- 6 to 13cents is the ruling prloo, the latter figure being reached ouly In ex­ treme ci^es. it will be seen by the reports, published from our exchanges that the reduction of hop aoreage, of which there has been so much talk, will be small and hardly sufficient to effect prices favorably next fall. With the prospect of another season of ruinous prices, growers will give very little care te their yards and the range In values will be eveu wider next season than now. t Bos TO if, May, Slat, 18T». There Is no change In the butter market; the Sales have*been at 17 to 19c. for creameries; 14 to 16c. for choice lots of New York and Vermont dairies and 10 to 13e for fair to good. Good and new cheese sells at 6 to 7c. and skim at 3 to 4c; old cheese ranges from 7| to 8c for fair and prime. Eggs are dull and have been selling at li «nd life, per dozen. * I®*Now while untold millions of money are going a begging at four per cent, why nont those States and mu­ nicipalities that are heavily in debt aed paying six per cent, thereon try the experiment of "floating" four per cent, bonds? Georgia has tried it and apparently with success. The bonds Issued are of small denominations and arr taken up by the mass of the peo» pie. There if no reason why State bonds shouldn't "float" as well the se­ curities issued by the General Govern­ ment If they were ouly buoyed up by a feeling of confidence In future legisla­ tion. In every country there Is always more or less hidden capital--money in the hands of the middle classes, whloh, for the sake of safety, is secreted in old stockings and other such plaoes of domestie deposit. The harder the times the more hiding, |The French Milliard Loan to pay the Prussian In­ demnity In 1871 was all taken by the French people themselves. There was a general emptying of old stockings for the National bonds, and had the demand been twice ss great It would have been met. When citizens become public creditors there is no longer dan­ ger of repudiation, and with that fear removed a State bond is as good an In­ vestment as our United States eertlfl­ ea tes. IGjrThe next decade is likely to witness vast improvements In ocean navagatien, as to the time required for passage, If not as to the security of the passengers. The Baltimore million­ aire, Mr. Wlnans, Is expending about 11,000,000 for the construction in the Clyde of a mammoth ship, to be from 4000 to 5000 tons burden, and designed to cross the Atlantic in five days. The Or eat Eastern provod that bigness can­ not ensure speed, but the -experiment of Mr. Winanswill be watched with in­ terest on both sides of the sea, l» the hope that it may show how to lessen the time of a transatlantic yoysge without diminishing the safety. Color Is surely a point in selling but­ ter, as all judges well know. The Per­ fected Butter Color of Wells, Richard- son ft Co., Burlington, Vermont, com­ pletely supplies the desideratum in this regard, as it works better and pre­ serves the desired shade more satisfac­ torily than anjr otfcer used, ftrid by Druggssts, •j : - W4«I*INGT«!»N Washikotok. OL <JL MfcySS*. A great stir In polities has earned by the publication of a letior from Secretary Sherman, In which bo openly bids for the Presidency, nM says that he shall. In case he Is "rsllni** rely upon those elements largely that have not supported the KepnbHean ty. The Republicans are furious abont f t. while the Democrats laugh at it as* good joke and a pleasant relief the anxiety In which they have placed for the last few weefct, Tho Secretary has not Improved his ehaiwes for future promotion. He hac stlrad up afeeling In his own party whieb will react upon him severely. The Legislative appropriation Mil with political riders (roes to the Presi­ dent to-day and willeome back prompt ly with a veto message. The«L tome means will be attempted to wrtto the Democrats upon a poltey, tbO fOSttlt of which will be, the appropriations win be voted In some form probably, and Congress will adjourn very soon. That Is the way It looks now, but this be changed by the events of a., day two. There Is a wild wish for the of the 910 refunding oetllfleates. almost all of the 940,099,000 authorised will be taken by speculators for a rieo*~ The poor people's bonds to called, wltt be the capitalists bonansa. People are getting their der for the vacation. The Pi * family are preparing to go t^J Home for a Summer residence members are giving up tbeir auds^me have already gone htav, mitlclpatlng an early ment. The weather so tar has beautlftit and delightful iat the tal, The Piesident has been lntervtewo4 relative to his opinion on the exoia* of colored people and the efforts of the Southern planters to prevent Hub going. He advises tho sending of ft steamer down the Mississippi River it transport the refugees if tho ngsltf steamers will not tnke there. In «nso any disturbance resnftsbe safsH will be rebellion and must be Mppfbilti by the National authority. The Republican Copgresslonal €om* mlttee will hold a meeting today 9* begin Campaign work, Hon. Wsa, X. Chandler, their Secretary, having to take charge of the work. Tho Omm» crats will get to work also hi» Jbw days. Both parties threaten a piatb* ora of polltlos this summer. v The most important measure belbtt Congress, aside.from the appropHatkNt bills which caused the extra and perhaps far more importnit they, was Mr. Warner's coinage bill, It passed the House on Saturday, |a| not In the shape in which 11 was lntro- duoed. Itaginost striking feature,mMlta the opinion of some its most valttftblo Aid In the opinion of others Ms swssi obnoxious feature, was so eltanftfi a* not to be recognisable. The foBowInf Is a earefot abstract of the blllfts 19 passed the House. :•' , . _ N It Axes the weight of the standard s silver dollar at 413| grains; %u#M!rt*ef the owners of silver bullion to deposit the same at any mint to be foriMflllte bars or standard dollars; makes tin charges for coining such buffkMI Um difference between the market valne I* New York and the legal tender vaHio of the coin; makes subsidiary sllvor coin exchangebie at tbo Treasury for legal tender money to the aoMMMIt of 930; makes the standard &Hves dMiar legal tender In all payments S& tbolr nominal value; requires Mtb to pay out silver coin wlthoil I nation the same as gold coin dation of all eoiu obllgatfons i^^nst the government, and authoiiflK tbe Is* sue of certificates to depq#$&#*? fold or silver coin or buUion^** sllpber Ises the issue of certiflnnlijftepKM*. ting coin in the Treaalltf of interest on the public detft,botb 'classes of certificates to be r^einMi In payment of dutlei* oil tUp^ts. ¥hi certificates for bullion de^mted are to be for i ts average ssfiricftt vatne te ooin Of like metal during tbe preesedlaf week in New York.' Tlie gold and sii- ver bullion deposited Is to be colnMtl the full capacity of the m:nts(ln Qs»» nection with other coinage 0 and If tfeo bullion deposited for coinage does not am omit to 92U9CKMIOO per month* ths Treasury is to purchase sufficient silver bullion to coin that amount. There arc Influences at work Democrat•$: Senators which may the Senate to pass the bill as It from the House, but It is most liko|f that tbe Senate will amend or kill it^ , . • M. M. W|* '* i<» Or** Mate*. ' .; ^ Meelivete&jtc old by. wntehtagi* tbe early sy<M$gjp*$^^htey -Ifibll^ and taking nev-Wort ift season. By so*8^B^sgvJ^ve to ho honored when Iclne cures h«'iit^wumnwti! agrecuirfc action on the 11 o& aud purities the blootL V +'! jr-' : ,r ^ - ( ' . x ,<t£ • • ' 1; 1 , l-A'i f- v ,1-N' ,:t Kt. v'

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy