Port Royal standard and commercial. [volume] (Beaufort, S.C.) 1874-1876, June 08, 1876, Image 4
THE CENTENNIAL LEGION.
The Organization Completed?The Pre*
gramme at Philadelphia.
The executive committee charged "with
the organization of this representative
corps of volunteer military of the " Old
Thirteen," met at fhe headquarters of
the "Old Guard" in New York city.
The following is the roster of companies,
with dates of organization and names of
commanding officers:
1775?The Providence Light Infantry,
of Rhode Island, Colonel Bullock commanding.
1793?The Fayetteville Light Infantrj,
of North Carolina, Major Charles
Haigh commanding.
1807?The Washington Light Infantry,
of South Carolina, Major R. C. Gilchrist
comma uding.
1808?The Boston Light Infantry, of
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juassucuimehtt*, voj/wuu < ?
oom man ding.
1813?The State Fencibles, of Pennsylvania,
Captain John W. Ryan commanding.
1816?The New Haven Grays, of Connecticut,
Major T. A. Barnes commanding.
1826?The Old Guard, of New York,
Major G. W. McLean commanding.
1828?The Norfolk Light Artillery
Blues, Captain Samuel Hodges commanding.
1854?The Amoskeag Veterans, of
New Hampshire, Major commanding.
1854?The Clinch Rifles, of Georgia,
Captain Frank G. Ford commanding.
1866?The Fifth Regiment Maryland
National Guard, by detail of seventy-five
men in one company, Captain commanding.
1868?The Phil. Kearney Guard, of
New Jersey, Captain W. *H. De Hart
commanding.
1875?The American Rifles, of Delaware,
Captain Samuel M. Wood commanding.
The organization was declared completed
by the enrollment of the above
commands. The following gentlemen
were then announced as the choioe of
the companies of the Legion for field
officers:
General H. W. Slocum, of New York,
elected by the companies from the Middle
States.
General Fitz Hugh Lee, of Virginia,
eleoted by the companies from the
cj?II
OUUU1QIU kJUavco,
General A. E. Bornside, of Bhode
Island, elected by the companies from
the Eastern States.
These selections were confirmed. It
was ordered that the headquarters of
the Legion should be established forthwith
in New York city, under the direction
of the three held officers; that an
adjutant, quartermaster, commissary and
seven aides-de-camp be appointed at the
earliest date by the held officers distributed
among the States so that there
shall be a representative of each State in I
the held and staff, all of whom are to j
appear in Continental uniform, mounted.
It was also voted unanimously to
invite the West Pointcadets and Annapolis
naval cadets to unite with the LcgioD
in the fourth of July parade, the
cadets to form a battalion to be escorted
by the Legion, as a mark of the^respect
in which these national institutions are
held by the people of the " Old Thirteen."
The Legion will parade in Philadelphia
on the fourth of July in honor
of the one hundredth anniversary of
American independence, and will assemble
in Chestnut street center, in
front of Independence HalL The colors
of the Legion will be the Revolutionary
flag of Colonel William Washington
Troop, known as the "Eutaw flag," the
old Continental flag, and the national
colore. The special color guard of
honor will consist of one commissioned
officer from each company of the Legion,
and invitations will be extended to
the few companies of Revolutionary date
outside the Legion for details of commissioned
officers to unite in doiDg
honor to the colors. Companies of the
Legion will bear each the flag of the
State it represents. Legion and company
colors, color bearers and special
guards of honor are to meet in Independence
Hall before the parade. As
soon as the line is formed on the fourth
of July in front of Independenoe Hall
there will be a grand dress parade, trooping
of colors, etc., and it is intended to
make this command worthy of the memorable
occasion, and an honor to the
country.
Superior to Others.
Neither of the great world's fairs held
in past years in Europe has equaled in
extent or surpassed in variety or general
interest the Centennial Exhibition at
Philadelphia, a correspondent writes.
At Paris, in 1867, there was a more compact
and systematic, and at Vienna, in
1873, the Oriental nations were more
V fully represented; but the American
fair possesses many points of superiority
over these exhibitions. It shows the
natural products, the industries, the inventions,
and the arts of the Western
hemisphere as they were never shown
before, and brings them for the first
time in their fullness and perfection in
contrast with those of the old world. L.
the department of machinery it is incomparably
superior to all its predecessors
; and in that of farm implements
and products it has never been equaled.
The art department, although not containing
as maay really great masterpieces
as were seen at Pans and Vienna,
embraces a wider representation of con
semporary painters ana sculptors ol recognized
merit from all parts of the
civilized world. In the department of
general manufacturing, as represented
in the Main building, the display is
much greater in quahtity than was ever
before attempted, and in objects rf
special interest is exceedingly rich. The
international feature is complete beyond
all expectations?every civilized State
on the globe excepting Greece and a
few of the petty republics in Cential
and 8outh America being represented.
Even such far away and little known
oountries as the Orange Free State in
Africa, and Tasmania and New Zealand
in the Australasian group, join in the
grand concourse of nations.
A Murderous Riot.
Salonica, the Thessalonica of ancient
times, has once more acquired a passing
and painful interest on account of a
frightful and murderous riot, in which
a large number of lives were lost. The
hostility between Christians and Moslems
has always, been so bitter that a slight
disturbance mighi at any time precipitate
great disorder. The alleged
proselyting of a Christian girl by the
Mohammedans has in this instance fired
the train ; and, in a riot which followed
the attempt of the girl's friends to take
her forcibly from the Turks, the French
and the German consuls were assassinated.
The resident Turkish authorities
appear to have,regarded this affair with
? their usual stotidity, but theVSublime
Porte has ordered that the assassins
shall be found and dealt with as they
merit. The French government has
taken steps to present a formidable
L:ival force at the port of Salonica.
SUMMARY OF NEWS.
| Interenllnjt Itrdi from Home and Abroad.
I After President Domingae fled from Hayti,
the new president Itamcau was approached by
a Boa of Monplasior Pierre, who shot him dead
to avenge the blood of hie father, who was
massacred under the orders ot Bame&u
Forcible expulsion of the Chinese in California
i? urged oy various clubs iu that State
Authony Gehring, a carrier of moruiog paoer.
in Chicago, sbpt his wife twice, killing her distantly,
and then killed himself by the same
means Oregon Republicans instructed
their delegates to the national convention to
work for Blaine In consequence of quarrels
between the great roads running west j
from New York, thero is every probability of |
a reduction in freight and passonger rates for j
the time Of the three direct cables be-!
tween Europo and this country only one is in J
working order?the Direct The drought J
which prevai'el throughout the island <f|
I Jamaica is at an end. During its prevalent
water sold readily in Muhchceter for il.5C j
| a puncherra.
Ben. French and wife, of Warsaw, Ky., wlio j
were arretted and oommitted to jaii for poisoning
an old colored gentleman for the purpose
of securing his property, Were taken from their j
keepers at midnight by an Hrmed mob of j
masked men and hanged to a limb of a tree
seme two miles from town The Maryland !
Republicans appointed delegates to the national
convention. Their resolutions praise
President Graut and Bristow, but direct the
delegate* to vote for B.'&ine By the failure I
of Henry Arnold Jc Co., of the North Adams
(Mass.) paint works, six large mills have been !
closed, viz.: The p&iut works, Gallup, Hongh- j
ton A Smiths works, E. H. Arnold <fc Co.,
of North Adams, the Williamntown Mannfac- j
turiug Co., the Arnold mill at South Adams,
and the Pownal Co., at Pownal, Vt. Eight
hundred persons are thrown out of employment
$20,000 were lost by the burning of
the Ohio Woodenwaro Co.'s building in Cleveland
There is suffering in the Black
Hills on aocount of scarcity of provisions.
Bacon brings fifty cents per pound, sugar forty
ceDts, and other articles in proportion. The
road to Custer City is strewn with broken
wagons of parties who have been attacked by
Indians.
The Georgia Republicans left their representatives
at the national convention unpledged.
The delegates are divided on Presidential candidates?Blaine
having the majority The
Texas legislature elected Gov. Richard Coke
(Dem.) United States Senator South Carolina
Democrats instructed their delegates to
the national convention to vote for the man
mo6t likely to win A severe e&rthqnake
shock occurred in various portions of South
Australia, and many buildings were damaged.
A letter received from Kegasha, on the
ooast of Labrador, states that there is great
destitution all along the coast. At Berthier de
Belle Causae a man named Peter Blaie died
from starvation. Seal catching is a failure this
season, and the inhabitants along the coast are
waiting with the greatest anxiety the arrival
of the ftrst schooner with provisions The
pigeon shooting match at Indianapolis, Ind..
between Bogardus, of this country, and Price,
of London, for the championship of the world,
resulted in a victory for Bogardus by 84 to 72.
A sanguinary encounter took place between
ClirittU OS and Mohammedans at S&lonica,
European Turkey, on account of Christian
Qreeks endeavoring to rescue one of their
yonDg girls who wished to become a Mohammedan.
During the fracas the French and
German, consuls went to the mosque to protect
their countrymen, when they were assassinated
by the Turks. The governments which they
represented have sent gunboats to demand reparation
Of the eighteen Mexican states
thirteen remain loyal and five are revolutionary.
Religious riots oocurred it Queretaro,
during which Kev. Maxwell Phillips, of the
Presbj terian mission, was wounded The
governor of California having offered $5,000
for the head of the noted bandit Chavez, a
gentleman has arrived in San Francisco with
it in his possession A fierce tornado
visited Chicago and did damage to the amount
of $253,000. Two of the principal churohes
lost thsir spires, numerous buildings were unroofed
or demolished, and the new tower and
fog bell were blown into the lake A railway
train ran into a torna3o near Neoga, 111., and
the engine and cars were lifted from the
track and dropped down a four-feet embankment.
Twenty persons were more or loss injured
Immense damage has been done in
and about Kansas City by heavy rains A
rend rock powder magazine on Jersey City
Heights, belonging to the new tunnel company,
exploded with terrific force, doing great
damage to buildings in the neighborhood, and
' caneii g a shock which was felt for miles.
While a horse car was btiug drawn upon an
elevator at Hoboken, N. J., preparatory to being
drawn up the hill, the engineer started
the machinery and drew the platform from
under the car, which toppled over into a pit of
thirty feet deep. Of twenty-seven passengers
on beard, all but one were more or less injured,
some fatally Piper, the Boston
belfry murderer, under sentence of death,
confessed to having killed little Mabel Yoorg,
and also to have beateu Bridget Landregan to
death. He claims to have had the insane desire
for blood while under the influence of
liquor King Alfonso has offered service
to Don Carlos' offices, and wiil put them at
the B^rne rank in the army they held before
deserving One hundred good fighting
men have lefc Fort Laramie to punish the
Indians who have been committing depredations
in the neighborhood of Caster City
I The promising Kentuoky colt King Alfonso
; has broken down?one of his foreleg tendons
having snapped....The Methodist conference
I ordered the New York and Western Book Concerns
t J be investigated Seven Frenoh
I fishing vessels were lost' ou the Icelandic
coast.
The grand jury of the District of Columbia
! criminal court have found a true bill of inI
dictment against ex-Sacre'ary Belknap for ac|
oepting bribes A decision by an Omaha
jury upuuius railway wmytuiiea iu
known gamblers from their trans The
British consul at Bio Janeiro reports that a
mutiny broke out on the English bark Caswell,
of Swansea, and all the officers were murdered.
by the crew Rubenstein, the PolishI
Jew under sentence for the murder of his
' cousin, Sara Alexander, died in his cell in the
j jail in Brooklyn, N. Y., from extreme exhaustion
brought on by refusing proper food,
keeping himself extremely filthy Gatiue&u
! Point Village, Canada, was completely sub!
merged by the overflowing of the river Ottawa,
i Much damage was done Gen. Diaz, the Mexican
revolutionist, has been compelled to give
up his expedition to Monterey and has retreated
back to Matamoras. There was uo
water along the ronte and many of his soldiers
died of thirst An insnrrection has broken
out in Bulgaria, Servian agitators having
been at work for some time. Turkey has sent
all available troops to quell the disturbance.
Ninety members of the English House
of Common a have signed a memorial asking
for the release of the Fenian convicts
Kenduskeag, Me., lost a considerable portion
of its business houses by a conflagration.
By the breaking of a boom in the Trent
river, Canada, nearly one hundred thousand
logs were carried out into the bay of Quinte.
The Pennsylvania railroad companyj
*vhose lines penetrate every section of the
Union, and directly connect all important
: 1 T->1 ; 1 J -1-1 : 1 J ?
[)UU1M wnii x^iiiiauuipniii, uiusuiaut; u-iayniucent
preparations for conveying, with safety
and comfort, the millions of people who intend
visiting the Centennial Exhibition directly
to the Centennial grounds. The location
of the Exhibition made it impossible
for any other railway to directly reach the
Exhibition buildings and grounds, and the
management, ever since the site was designated,
has employed its gigantic equipments
and unrivaled facilities to make the
Exhibition a success, by providing the
amplest accommodations at the minimum
price, for both exhibitors and visitors. It
was fitting that a railway company,national
in its character and operations, should thus
second the commissioners in illustrating out
centennial history by demonstrating the
high degree of excellence attained by the
railway transportation system of America,
in making the great thoroughfares uniting
the Atlantic seaboard and the Mississippi
valley, the West, Northwest and Southwest
with the Centennial City, as j erfect as possible
in all its essentials and details.
Its routes follow the geographical channels
of continentaf intercommunication,
uniting most of the larger cities on the
The Centennial exhibition was formally
opened at Philadelphia by President Grant,
in the presence of two hundred thoneand people.
The President and the emperor Dom
Pedro started the machinery in Machinery
k?ii . (ha.m*f>hinpir in the Women's pavilion
! uau f _
being started by the empress of Brazil
Advices from Liberia ate most unsatisfactory
aad discouraging, and the new administration'^
financial statement is looked forward to with
great anxiety... .A. Barton, of Walton, N. T.,
while under religious excitement, laid his I^ft
a A on a workbench, and taking an ex
out gashes every inch and a ba'f from hio
shoulder to the elbow, where the aim was
completely severed. Every blow cut through
the bone. He was properly cared for
At the Lexington (Ky.) races Aristides won
the four-year old sweepstakes of two miles
and an eighth, in 8.45>??making the best
time on reoord for the distance, and beating
Ten Broeok.
FORTY-FOURTH CONGRESS.
The B a sinew of General Internet Transacted.
BEN" ATX.
The Senate resumed the consideration of the
bill in relation to the Japanese indemmty fund,
the pending question being the motion of Mr.
SargeDt (Rep.), of California, to strike out the
first section of the bill, which authorizes the
return of the fund, lese $125,000 to be reserved
and paid to the officers and crews of the
United 8tatea ships Wyoming and Jamestown.
Rejected. Yeas, 19; nays, 32.
HOUSE
Mr. Blount (Dem.), of Georgia, reported the
Naval Appropriation bill. The bill appropriate
$12,806,855. It contains a provision
looking to the sale of the naval hospitals at
Annapolis and Washington, and directs them
to be closed during the next fiscal year. It
also contains a provision looking to the sale of
the navy yards at Oharlestown, Washington,
and Pensacola, and to the recession of the
naval station at New London, and directs the
establishment of a naval rendezvous at Tybeo
island, or at Cocksom, in Georgia.
On motion of Mr. Wood, of New York, the
committee of the whoJe was cuscnargea irom
the further consideration of the bill to carry
into effect the provisions of the treaty with
the Hawaiian islands, and the House proceeded
to its consideration. After some diecussion
a vote was taken on the bill, and it was passed
?yeas, 116 ; nays, 101.
The bill, which was originally introduced by
Mr. Luttrell, of California, provides for the
President, whenever he has evidence that the
Hawaiian Legislature has parsed laws to give
full effect to the treaty, issuing his proclamation
declaring the treaty of January, 30.1875,
to be in effect, and that thereupon the following
articles, being the growth and manufacture
or produce of the Hawaiian islands, shall
be admitted into the United States free of
duty: Arrowroot, castor oil, bananas, nuts,
vegetables, dried and uudried, preeerved and
unpreserved; hides and skins, undressed ;
rice, pulu seed, plants, ehrnbs or trees ; muscovado,
brown, and all other unrefined sugars;
syrups of sugar cane, mslado, and molasses,
and tallow.
How Much Butter We Make and Con
sume.
Statistics place the number of milch
cows in the United States at 13,000,000,
and credit them with a product of, in
round numbers, 1,400,000,000 pounds of
butter. They were arrived at first by
an estimate made by an old and very intelligent
butter merchant, who has
given much thought and cai eful study
to the subject, and whoso investigations
led to the following calculation : That
of our population, 6,000,000 would consumo
one pound of butter each per
week; 10,000 would consume threequarters
of a pound each; 10,000 would
consume one half a pound each, and
10,000 would consume one-quarter of a
pound each, making a total consumption
of 1,040,000,000 by 35,000,000 people.
This, it is calculated, is for table use
alone, and one third is added for culinary
purposes, giving an aggregate consumption.
of nearly" 1,400,000,000 pounds,
the difference being made up by the exports.
God has fixed upon the earth two
gates which lead to heaven. He has
placed them at the two extremities of
life; one at its beginning, the other at
its end. The first is that of innocence,
the second that of repentance.
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SflBBW^frlW^rSf iTiT in ir
CENTENNIAL DEPOT. PE
1 southern shores of the great lakes, on the J
Mississippi and Ohio rivers, and on the Atlantic
harbors. The main road from New
I York to Philadelphia, though passing
through the principal cities of New Jersey,
does not deviate six miles from an air line,
i and this deflection is due to the interposition
of navigable waters. These routes not only
excel in directness as well as in the number
of important cities and towns they connect,
; but they are confessedly superior in con;
struction and equipment. Between Pitts'
burgh and New York, 444 miles, the entire
; line is double track, laid with heavy steel
1 rail a with joints connected between ties by
I a process tliat gives the effect of continuous
rail, on which there can be no unpleasant
I jarring. All bridges on the line are of iron
i or stone. A large portion of this distance is
j provided with a third track, which enables
1 freight trains to keep entirely out of the
; way of passenger travel, r.nd permits the
express trains to run their allotted distance
without interruption, and near Philadelphia,
and other important terminal points,
lour tracks have, for considerable distances,
been completed.
The Block signal system, exclusively
used on the Pennsylvania railroad throughout
its entire length, compels the engineer
of a train to know whether the track is
clear or not to the next station, be it one
! The great Empire of Brazil, with a
splendid map of South America, is exhaustively
treated of in the American
i Cyclopaedia, together with a special noi
tice of the life 6f the emperor, Dom
, Pedro II. This great work is nearly
. completed, the last volume being in
press. The cost of trts immense nnderover
8450,000, exclusive of paj
per, pointing, and binding. The publishers,
D. Appleton & Co., New York,
; supply the work in monthly or bimonthly
volumes when desired. They
' will supply specimen pages, on application,
gratis. *
Pimples on the face, rough skin
i Jhappea hands, saltrheum and all cutaneous
iffections cured, the skin made soft and
smooth, by the use of Juntpeb Tab 8oap. That
made by Oaewell, Hazard <fc Co., New York, is
the only kind that can be relied on, as there
are many imitations, made from oommon tar,
which are worthless.?Com,
Tn West End Hotel, on the European
plan, 1526 Ohestnnt St.. Philadelphia, next
door to the Reform club, centrally located, and
arranged for two hundred guests, supplies a
long-felt want. Accommodations first-class.
Prioes moderate. The proprietor, C. T. Jones,
| Eeq., for eight years in the Hoffman House,
I New York, knows how to keep a hotel. *
A Toast.
tmnAi4anf dionnronVa ' Til A ^iwnVAfV
X nv luipvi MUJ V UiCWTVIiVW ? ? W
of America by Columbus, and Dr. Pierce's
Golden Medical Discovery; the one opening
up to mankind a new continent, the other
a fountain of health, which is indispensable to
the full enjoyment of life and its busings.
In response to the above sentiments come the
unsolicited attestations of tens of thousands
; of grateful patients, who have been relieved of
chronic ailments through its instrumentality.
These voices are limited to no one locality, but
j from every city, village and hamlet in our
b>*oad domain, 'as well as from other climes,
and in the strange utterances of foreign
tongues, hke the confused murmur of many
waters, comennfeigned and hearty commendations.
It is,- in combination with the Pieasant
; Purgative Pellets, the great depurator of the
age. Under its benign action eruptions disappear,
excessive waste is checked, the nerve*
are strengthened, and health, long banished
. from the system, resumes her reign aod re|
establishes her roseate throne npon the cheek.
All who have thoroughly tested its virtues in
j the diseases for which it is recommended
j nnite in pronouncing it the great medical dis|
covery of the age. * .
The all-gone feeling which people
, I sometimes speak of is caused by want of
! proper action of (he liver and heart. They
I may be assisted and the bowels regulated by
: Parsons' Purgative Pills in small doses. ' *
Corn and flour are staple articles ; bnt
j not more so than Johnson's Anodyne Liniment,
where known. It is good for children
j or adults, for any internal soreness of the
cdest or Dowels, ana me ueei uunueub prepared,
under whatever name. *
Important to Persons Visiting' New York
or the Centennial.
The Gbakd Union Hotel, New York, opposite
the Grand Gentral depot, has over 950 elegantly
furnished rooms. Elevator, steam, and
: all modern improvements. European plan.
Carriage hire is saved, as baggage is taken
; to and from the depot, free of expense. The
restaurants supplied with the host. Guests
can live better for less money at the Grand
Union, than at any other first-class hotel.
Stages and cars pass the hotel constantly to all
parts of the city, and to Philadelphia depot *
To ALL, particularly Invalids, spring is a trying season.
Indications of sickness should be at once attended
J to. Fatal diseases may be caused by allowing the
bowels to become oonstlpated.and the system to remain
In a disordered condition, until the disorder baa time to
develop itself. An ounce of prevention is worth a pound
of care, is an old and truthful saying. Therefore, we
advise aU who are troubled with the complaints now
very prevalent?hsadscje, Indigestion, disordered liver,
want of appetite, niusea, or feverish skin, to take, without
delay, Scbenck's Mandrake Fills, We know of no
remedy so harmless and decisive in Its action. It at
once strikes at the root of the disease and produces a
nealthy tone to the system. People need never suffer
from any disease arising from a disordered condition of
the liver if they would take this excellent medicine
when they feel the first indications pf the malady.
Families leaving home for the summer months should
take three or four boxes of these pills with them. They
have an almost Instantaneous effect. They will relieve
the patient of headache in one or two hours, and will
rapidly cleanse tbe liver of surrounding bile, and will
effectually prevent a bilious attack. They are sold by
all druggists.
T"^," ?^5aiS8MKff r^^E&M|Bh5|dF^jBBHBP3BJ^BSvt5rgl
N'NSTLVANIA KAILROAT.
or ten miles, and every modern appliance '
for combining the highest speed with the
most perfect safety hap been adopted. The
company has built 200 elegant cars, with
engines of the first class ample to move all j
trains that may possibly be required.
Centennial visitors will find the Pennsyl- f
vania road the only direct route from the '
West, North and East to the Centennial i
Exhibition, the rates as low as by any other !
route, the time made by it the quickest, and
the accommodations for comlort, luxury j
and safety unequaled. Careful agents, on
all trains, will arrange for the prompt and
cheap delivery of all baggage, and, fo
cents, sell seatsun a comfortable carriage fo
any point in Philadelphia.
Above all, these visitors will be landed at
the very doors of the Exposition, in the
beautiful Centennial depot of the company
represented in the above cut. It stands opposite
the open space separating the Main
exhibition building from Machinery hall,
facing the principal entrance gate and the !
Judge's pavilion, and in close proximity fo
several immense hotels and restaurants. It
is 340 feet in length by 100 in width, two
stories high, and surmounted by six towers.
In design it is tasteful and ornamental,
comparing favorably with the many beautiful
structures erected for the purposes of the
Exhibition. The first lloo- contains a genIt
is woifch while going abroad for a
few years, if only to know the meaning
of that one word?Home.
Don't Throw Away Ynnr lfow?.-To THF
PtrBiac.?For onr 28 years Db. TOBIAS* VENETIAN
LINIMENT bus been s^ld: every bottle baa been warranted,
and not one bu been returned. Thousand* of
certificates of it* wonderfnl curative prope- ties can be
s-en at the Depot. It will do all, and more, than it is
recommended for. If Is perfectlv safe to take internally.
It cnre? Cholera, Croup. Dysentery, Colic, Sea Slckaee<,
Chronic Rheumatism, Sprains, Old Soree, Cute, etc.
Sold by the Druggists.
! There is nothing like leather
hiahi] "silver tip
for children. They never wear
Of 5 a | J 3|^t through at the toe.
WWMMMaiaiMMiM A too try W ire Quilted Soles.
Do you want the best Shoe ever |B^PVV(ME9l
made that wl>l not rip or leak.and V{V'V ?
is easier than any machine sewed
?r pegged Shoe, buy the HCaVSI 3ll'l
CABLE SCREW WlREKMRn
make. MvB M ^
Also try Wire Quilted Soles. BMBIMBI
A A MIXED C ARDS, Name In QiU, 20 cents.
*?\) J. F. MOORE, 11 Paine St., Providence. R. L
Q A Bon Ton or Centennial Cards, with namev20 ct?.
O"/ poet-paid. J. B. Husnro. Nassau, Rensa.Co.,N.Y.
Off FANCY Curds. 7 Styles, with Name, 10eta.
Lif} Choice. A. Tkav?B A Co., North Chatham,N. V. j
I.ADIEPt! Superfluons Hair permanently eradicated
Price 50c. A stamp. Union Toilet Co .Indianapolis, led.
OA Extra Fine Mixed Cards, with Name, lO
&\1 eta., post-paid. L JONES A CO., Nassau, N. Y.
O K JET CALLING CARDN, with name in gold.
Li*} 20 cents. J. K. Harder, Maiden Bridge J*, g
6 VERY desirable NEW ARTICLES for Agents
Mfr'd by J. O. O ape well A Co.. Cheshire, Oonr
Profitable* Pleasant work; hundreds now employ ,
hundreds more wanted. M. W. Lovtll, Erie. Fs
d>b)AA A MONTH. Agents wanted. KzceL M,/.
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WANTED AGENTS. Sample and Outfit Jrt<.
11 Better than Gold. a. COULTER a OO., Chicago.
? K /a $ 9 A * dey at home. Samples worth 81 sert
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QlOadny t home. Agente wanted. Outfit and term*
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Send for Chroma Ow?'?r
^iU^av'.H. Bcrroap'aSons, BceVw.
AATA A Month.?Agents wanted. 36 bests'11\
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I Tft A ftP VTQ for the best Books. b*$tojf tr? I
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A cents Wanted.?1Twenty Dxl 1 Mounted Chrome
xx for *1.2 samples by mall, post-paid,fcOc. Govt:
sgyTAL Ohbomo Oo., 37 Nassau Street, New York.
\\ A "|\rm |.i 11~Salesmen on Jalr Salary to In"
X* IN J AjjJL J trodnce our goods in every
county In the U. 8. We mean Business. Address Gin.
Novelty MaypTAC. Co., Box 1344* Clno nnatl, O.
/Dnpf WEEK guaranteed to Male and Pe
Jit M M male Agents, In their locality. C ?t>
U) fl f NOTHING to try it Particulars Free.
^ P. O. VIOKBBY A OO.. Augusta, Me.
I nmrmn All Want It?tboossadsof lives *nr
IZrWrV millions of property sared bylt-fortuoo
A IT Ml 111 made wtth it?particulars free. O. M
^ LrwrsQTQWABBQ.NewYorkAOhio ?
AntTTW and Morphine Habit abeolutelx a:ic
11II111 speedily cured. Painless; no public' i j.
I l I I 11 nl Send stamp for Particulars. Dr. OaIJ>
" Aw Ala ton, 187 Washington 8t., Chicago ,111.
a a a A MONTH ? Agents wanted everyUVIhll
where. Business honorable and fl/st n/.llll
class. Particulars sent free. Address
H/AIVV WORTH A CO.. 8t Lonls, Mo.
Learn telegraphtt
THE BEST OFt ER ever Made to Young Nf
MEN and LADIES. Address, with stamp JL
WHEKRAN TEL. CO.. OBKRLIM.O.
Mind Reading, Pnvchomancy, Faeclna'la.,
Sonl Charming, Mesmerism, and Lovers' Gulcie.
showing how either sex may fascinate and gain the love
and affection of any pernon they choose instantly. 4(H1
pages. By mall 50c. Hnnt A Co., 139 8. 7th frt.Pir '.a
AMITVV HABIT cured. Chinese mote cl
| ft If 111 Hfl Care. Painless. No publicity. Dot
I I ur III I not interfere with business or pleas
ill B II III are. Cure guaranteed. Address
V* * W '* Da. J. B. WILFORD,Toledo, 0.
CAPSICUM PLASTER j? {jSo"?dE^;?
matio Pains, Boils, Carbuncles, Stiff Neck, Lumbago.
Headache, Asthma, Colic, Sea ^Sickness, Etc. Believes
pain In ter minntea. Samples oy man. auums o. a. a.
CODDINOTOX, I 182 Broadway (Stnrtevant honsel.N.Y.
Tour Name ElegantlyPrint
U'lia *d it TiiiiniHT vitnmro
MV^BK c aids, for 14 Cents. Each card eontalr:
a mxme which to not viable until hnld towards the Lijht
Nethinrllke them ever before offered In America. Bif Indacei
mentato Aeenta. notbltt FamTino Co. Ashland. Mam
A BOOK for the MILLION^
MEDICAL ADVICE and (fhronir l>??i?a.?c$, Cancer,
Catarrh, Rupture. Opiuiu Habit, Ac., sext free on receipt
ot elamp Addre.o,
Pr. Butte'Dirpenrary So 1? X. 8th at.. St. Loula. Mo
AcenU wanted for a new, permanent, and reepeetable!
>'jt<net>, In wblch any active man or woman can V?m
ly make $5 to $10 a day One who had nere^. artaj
ranraated before made (7.C0 1
lour; an experienced ayegt W lartnade
$74.76 ln.^ifC.
I 16?ww^^V?lay^A.atO?l, Manager M
?t.,N.Y. "We taewC. .V
LtrB* ,fli?| II be reapoaalble and re I laand
think heeflferaAcemtaextraordinary
Indncementa."?-V. Y. Wttkfy Sun, Apnl 19, 181S.
SAVE MONEY
By (ending 84.75 for any 84 Macazlne and THR
WEEKLY TRIBUNE (regnlar price 80). or 85.75
for the Magarine and THE SEMI-WEEKLY TR1
BUN (reg?iar prioe 8S). Addreea
TUB rklHUNR, New-York.
I
t
1
bmi ^jy
mrq
ernl waiting room, 130 by lGd feet, a ladies'
waiting room eighty-one by 100 feet,& bag*
gage room forty-nine by 100 feet, a ticket
office thirty by forty feet, a package room
ten by tbir.y feet, and a number of retiring
rooms, all handsomely finished, and provided
with every convenience. The rooms
on the second floor are for the use of the
railroad officials and employees.
This depot is reached by a circle of three
tracks sweeping from the main roadway
four-fifths of a mile long, and the diameter
of the circle they describe is 600 feet. All
trains will enter this circle heading west,
and depart from the depot heading east
Three trains can be landing or receiving
passengers in front of the depot at the
same time, the entire tracks being floorec.
over, and no matter in what direction the
trains may come or go, they can lie moved
without ronfnsirtn. delav or dancer.
Seventeen additional sidings have been
constructed, connected with this circle, of &
j length of 1,000 feet each, upon which wai?;
ing trains can be run and remain with engines
attacheuntil'the time arrives lior
them to enter upon the circle, receive theii
passengers, and depart J or destination.
This arrangement of tracks and sidings if
novel, and affords facilities for the tran'action,
without detention or confurion, of at
almost unlimited passenger business.
COOPER'S COMPOUND
PHOSPHORUS PILLS
A 8*(*i Sp-edy and Radical care for Ktrwni Exhu*Ion,
Peralyxis, Softening of the Brain. Epilepsy, 8t
Vitas' Dance. Loss of Power, L^rgaor of Mmd, Near*!
:1a, Depression of Solrlt*, Inaptitude for Work, Conlump'lon.
Kifl-e? Spinal Trrltstlon. L/xsotnofor,
Ataxia, " hakln -, Psj'sv and to Vitalize and Re-tosoiate
the system from that cord I; 1 n of " Breakdown'
retailing from Mental and > hyrioal Knees ant Old
Age. Seat to any a-'dress on receipt of price. J
GKORGK COOPER. M. D.. <?2ti R. Itlh Street
Sem York _ Pr1?-e et I ,>Q per hot.
CENTENNIAL
BOOK OF BIOGRAPHYof
the great men of the
FIRST 100 YEARS OF OUR INDEPENDENCE:
The glory of America is her great men. Everybody
wants to read their lives at this Centennial season.
ACE'MTS WANTEIK Agents selling histories
ibould sell this b^ok slso. Everybody bays it. The
zTeat?*t suc- esi) of the year. Send for circular. P. W.
ZIKGLER A CO.. 518 Arch Street. Philadelphia. Pa.
THE SUN
FOR THE CAMPAIGN.
The events of the Presidential campaign will be so
faithfully and fully Illustrated in The NEW YORK
SUN as to commend it to candid men of all paitiee!
We will send the WEEKLY EDITION (eight nagws),
ooat-pald. from June 1st till after election for 50 c's.;
'he S&TNDAY EDITION, same size, at the same price;
or the DAILY, four pages, for A3.
Address. THE *UH, New York City.
llfPA and Portraits of all the Presidents,
I I 1? to which is sdded the ConstltmLml
V UW Uooof the United StsUM,??A
all the Amendmenta Beautifully printed; 35 cents Ay
mail Agents wanted everywhere. Sells rapidly.
STRANCERS'SS
Exposition. 10 cents by m til Send for Guide before
leaving home. Telia What to do.Wheretogo/Whettoeee.
A I the Preridente of United States in one ?! .
AA I I gant Steel Engraving, 32x24 inches. Sold
? only by agents. Terms very liberal Send
for circulars. tSOOTHUR ?fc SON,Philadelphia.
THE PENN MUTUAL
Zjlfo Insurance Go.
OF PHILADELPHIA.
ASSETS, ... $5,504,329.24
Incorporated la 1847. Purely Mutual.
Annual Cash Dividend! available te reduce Pre ml ami
the second year. Policies non forfeitable for their raise.
Endowment Policies issued at Life Rates.
SAMUEL C. HUET, President
SAMUEL E. STOKES, Vice-President
H. S. STEPHENS, 2d Vice-President
J AS. WEIR MASON, Actuary.
HENRY AU8TIE, Secretary.
Agents wanted in Eastern and Middle States.
jlpply to H. N. mTKPHBNN, V. P.,
Pcrtn Mutual Building. Philadelphia, Pa.
C AGENTS WANTED FOR THE
ENTENNIAL
HisTony?'?sU.i
The great Interest In the thrilling history of oar country
manes to is the fastest selling book ever published.
It contains a fall account of the grand Centennial
Exhibition.
CAUTION.?Old. Incomplete aod Unreliable works
ire being circulated; see that tbe book you buy oontains
443 fine Knwravings and 035 Pages.
Send for clrrnlars and extra terms to Agents. Address
NATIONAL PUBLISHING CO.. Phlladelph.a, Pa.
THIS CLAIM-HOUSE ESTABLISHED
IN 1865.
DT?TWCTmVC obtained for Officers. SolrriDIMVilNO
diem, and Seamen of W?u
of 1 86 and -i, and for their beira. The law inclodee
desert e s and th 'Be dishonorably discharged. If wounded,
injure 1, or have contracted aoy disease, apply at
once. Thousands entitled, (treat numbers entiled to
an increase 1 rat', and should apply immediately. All
"oldiers and Seamen of the W r of* 1812 who served
for any p-ried, however suort. whether di able tor not,
and a I widows of sncb rot n w on t e Pension r.lla, are
requested to sen ' me their address at once.
?j/STTJkr(f^\T# Many who en is'ed in 1861-S
llV/Ui^ I and 3 are entitle i. Send yoni
dis harges and bare them examined. I'neinees before t e
t,4Tr>'r (il'Fli P S- liclted. Officers'returns and
icc nnts settled, and all j s cla ml prosecuted.
As I mate n > char.e unless successful, I reqne tall
to incl te two stamps for r?ply and return of jMipeis.
'.< JjE. UU^i n?*
WttHiiiDgio", n. t:.
I wmniMd Captain L?mon as an honorable and
successful Practitioner ? S. A. Hurlbut, M 0., 4th Coagre
a onal Disttict <f :Uinria, late Maj-Gen'l U. S. Vols.
In writing men ion name ?-f this paper.
ROOFS
I
that leak are eoail. property. Ton cannot afford them.
The damage to yon. h >usea crop*, w iioi rtsul.sfrom
one st-mu, is often more tnan the coat of putting your
Bain rooi in order. The yearly decay of agHenltuiai
machinery a id implements, arising from leaky roofa on
onthonsea, von j m ore than pay the cost of roofing
every abed, crib a id storehouse on your farm. Your
Lock auffers from tne drippings of yo-ir stable roof, and
the necessity of their lvlng in wet stalls. These evils
affect property, iyit when our hooso roof leeks, it 1
worse yet: then comfort departs, and you have a garret
full of palls and pans to catch tne arc- idy streams; there
are wet ceilings and falling plaster; there is spoiled furniture,
damp bedding and rhenmatiam; there la the
anxious wife, ?eariea win running up a*aire to guard
against new leaha; i. is decay, ana ruin, and property
wasted, l'ou cannot afford it Our Slate Roofing Pa nt
will end your difficultiee and make your roofa watertight.
For mw roofa, our Rubber booting Felt oovared
with Slate Roofing Paint will give satisfaction to any
one. For fall information in regard to Roofing ana
House Paints generally, send for our 100, page Book,
which is free to all who write mi omea, and sue Wee tMs
nncfpapor. Address. N. Y. BLAT3 KOOFIHO CO.,
Limttkd,7 Gedarbt,N. Y. ?
? 1 .
Special Notice to Our Readers1 ?'
SPECIAL "AH.
AGENTS WANTED
To sell the New Patent Improved EYE CCP8.
Guaranteed to be the beet paying business offered to
A genie by any Houee. An eaey and
pleaeant employment.
The valuo of tne celebrated new Patent Improved
Eye Cups for the restoration of ai^iit breaks out and
u.axes in the evidences of over 6,000 genuine teeimouials
of cures, and recoa>m?>uoed by more than
1,000 t our b st physicians iu their practice. I
The Patent Eye Cups are a scientific and physiological
discovery, and aa A lex. R. Wteth, al. Em
and Wm. Beat lit, M. D., write, they are certainly
the greatest invention ot the age.
Read the following certificates:
Febocson Station, I/igan Co., Ky^)
June 6th, 1871. /
Db. J. Ball A Co., Oculists:
Gentlemen?Your Patent Eye Cups are. In my
Judgment, the most splendid triumph which optical
science baa ever achieved, bat, like all groat and
important truths, in this or iu any o'ber branch of
science and philosophy, have much to contend with
irom the ignor nee aud prejudice of a too skeptical
public; but truth is mighty, aud it will prevail, and
it is only a question of time as regards their general
acceptance and indorsement by all. I have in my
hands certificates of persona testifying iu unequivocal
terms to their merits. The most prominent
physicians of my county recommerd your Eys
Cups. I am, respectfully, J. A. L. ROVER.
William Beatlet, M. D., Salvias, Ky.t writes:
" Thanks to yon for the greatest of all inventions.
My sight is fully restored by the use of your Patent
Eye Cups, after being almoat entirely blind for
twenty-six years."
Alex. R. Wteth, M. D., Atchison, Pa^ writes:
After total bliudness of ay left eye for four years,
by paralysis to the optic nerve, to my utter astonishment
your Patent Eye Oupe restored my eyesight
permanently in three minutes."
Rev. 8. B, Falkinsbttbo, Minister of M. E.
Church, writes: Your Patent Eye Cups hare restored
my sight, for which 1 am most thankful to
the Father of Mercies. By you.* advertisement I
saw at a g'ancc that your invaluable Rye Cape performed
their work perfectly in &c.-o dauce with
physiological law; that they literal y f? d the eyes
that were starving for nutrition. May God greatly
bless you, and may your name be enshrined in the
affectionate memories of multiplied thousands as
one of the benefactors of your kind."
Horace B. Dcrant, M. D., says: " I sold, and
effected future sales liberally. The Patent Zye
Caps, they will make money, and make it fast, too;
no small, catch-penny affair, but a superb, number
one, tip-top buslneR&, promises, ss fsr as I can see,
to be life-long."
Mayor E. 0. Ellis wrote us, November 16th,
1868: "I have tested the Patent Ivorj* Eye Cups,
and 1 am satisfied they are good. I am pleased
with them. They are certainly the greatest invention
of the age." ?.
Hon. Horace Greelkt, late editor of the New
York Tribune, wrote: u Dm J. Ball, of otft city,
is a conscientious and responsible man, who j?Incapable
of Intentional deception or imposition.
Prof. W. Merrick wrl.es: " Truly, I am grateful
to your noble invention. My sight is restored
by your Patent Eye Caps. May Heaven bless and
preserve yon. I have been using spectacles twenty
years. I am seventy-one years old. I do all my
writing without glasses, and I bless the inventor of
the Patent Eye Cups every time I take up inyold
steel pen." .,
Adolph Bioukbero, M. D., physician to Emperor
Napoleon, wrote, after having nta sight restored by
our Patent Eye Cape: "With gratitude to God,
and thankfulness to the inventors, Da. J. Ball k
Co., I hereby reoommend the trial of the Eye Cups
(In foil faith) to all and every one that has any impaired
eyesight, believing as 1 do, that since the experiment
with this wonderful discovery has proved
successful on me, at my advancod period of life?
ninety years of age?I believe they will restgre the
vision to any individual if they are properly
applied. ADOLPH BIOBNBEBG. M. R"
Jornmonweaith of Massachusetts, Esse*, ss.
Jane 6th, 1873, personally appeared Adolph Biorn.
oerg, made oath to the following certificate, and by
him subscribed and sworn before roe.
WM. STEVENS, J. P.
Lawrence City, Mass , June 9th, 1871
We, the undersigned, having personally known
Dr. Adolph Biornberg for years, believe him to be
an honest, moral man, trustworthy, and in truth
and veracity unspotted. His character is witbsut
reproaoh. fa. BONNE ix Ex-Mayor,
8. B. W. DAVIS. Ex-Mayor, e <
GEORGE 8. MERRILL, P. M.,
DrtnvnT u tvWTTSRlTft Y_ f!i/v Tr6aa.
Header, these are a few certificates oat of thousands
we receive, and to the aged we will guarantee
roar old and diseased eyes can be made new| your
unpaired sight, dimness of vision, and overworked
ayes can be restored; weak, watery and sore eyes
curod; the blind may see; spestaelbs be dJsfardod;
sight restored and vision preserved. Spectacles
and surgical operations useless. t J
Please send yonr address to us, and we will send
you our book, A GEM WOBTH HEADING!
A DIAMOND WOBTH SEEING!
Shoe pour Eye* and Restore your Siphtl
% Throve Away your Spectacle*.
By reading our Illustrated Physiology and Anatomy
of the Eyesight, of 100 pages, tells how to restore
impaired vision and overworked eyes; hoy W> cure
weak, watery, inflamed and near-sighted eyes, and
all other diseases of the eyes. Waste no rnoie money
by adjusting huge glasses on your nose and disfiguring
your ?ace. Book mailed free to any person.
Send on yonr sddres-.
AGENTS WANTED
To sell the Patent Eye Cupff to the hundreds of
people with diseased eyes aud Impaired sight in
yonr oounty. Any person can act as our Agent.
To gentlemen or ladles, $510 ISO * day guaranteed.
Fall particulars sent free. Write immtsdJSic.}
to ' 1
DR. J.BAIL 4 CO.,91 Liberty St.,
Jew York City, P. O. Box 957*
Do not miss the opportunity of being first in the
field. Do not- delay. Write by first mail. Great
inducements and large profits offend to flMfent
during the winter months, and to any person who
wants a first-clan paying business. v '
if* Thx usout commission sjxowxd , to
Aoprra bt ami Houct in th? Untikd States.
Agents Wanted ! Msdsle and Diplomas Awarded ^
B"iw v" Pictorial BIBLES. r~f
'800 Illnatrarlaas. Address for new circulars,
\. J. nOL tl AN Ac CO.. 93Q ABOH 8treot. Phils.
50 gfS-stgs
iSmU WmATmxP 1 OoT. Brocfctoo.^fiSl
FITS, -v
iPiLEPSY, FALLING 1 FlTS
CURED. "
nus Is llo Humbug. For information, inquire of or
write to MOYRR BROTHERS. Wholesale DingrWs,
Bkunehnv. Onlnmhia flonnli. Pswmwlvsat*
PORTABLE GRINDING MILLS.
Best Frenefe Burr ?titr?pindie
under-riinnera, cock &Md
upper-rnnnera, for Firm or
yVjA /I Rerdnat Work. Sipe*
/Ifflltl rlor mil Ntones of all
/IBVln sizes, Genni neBatch An/lam
leer Boltinsr Clolh, Mill
iM1 Picks, Corn tsbellera tod
n{nS Cleaners, Genring, Shifting,
?&> Pullies. Hangers. etc., ill kino*
Mof Mill MacIiLnery and Millers'
""^kAr^C^^P^OBappliea. tend for Pamphlet,
^t^rl Ntraub Mill Coapur,
Box 1-130. Cincinnati. O.
HALE'S
Honey or Horehound and Tar
fob tiie cube of
Coughs, Colds, Influenza, Hoarsehess,
Difficult Breathino, and
all AfFECTIOTS of the throat,
Bronchial Tubes, and Lungs,
leading to consumption.
Tills infalliblo remedy is composed of
the Honey of the p'ant Horcliound, in
chemical union with Tab-B atjt, extracted
from the Life Principle of tho
forest tree Abies Bumamea. or B;lm
of Gilead.
The Honey of Eorehoond soothes
and scatters nil in itationsond inflammations,
and the Tar-Bahn cleanses
and heals the throat and air-passages
.leading to the- lungs. Fit* additional
ingredients keep the organs cool, moist,
ana in healthful action. Let no prejadice
keep you from frying this great
medicine of a famo is doctor, who has
saved thousands of li?ea by it la hia
large private practice.
? N. B.?The Tar Balm has no Bib
?? /\? ompll
^PKTCBSjBO CERTS AtTD $1 PER BOTTXJk.
Great ttrtog to baj Itm size.
^Bold by all Druggist^ * .
" "Pike's Toothache I>roi?*
rnre in 1 minute.
h v up s* IB
U7IIEM WRITING TO ADVBBTIS*KJS
VT pieuf ut (hat j?a iawtt? MTWtlil
x:ut la tkla paper.