The Americus recorder tri-weekly. (Americus, Ga.) 1879-1884, June 25, 1884, Image 1

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W" 1 - ■ • •• - * -fc-w .>'Jcriij.|j,j; -' > .-!>»*» ii. na«.<ri|i' iffi — : »; • - !>l l /:»i/in U*iH>i>lM+0i / r - lY J J - "1: [Established 1879. AMERICUS, GEORGIA, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 25, 1884. Weekly,..,,. Tm-WnouiT,., I Americus Recorder. f-w. Xj PUBLISHED BY GliBSSNEH, grriCE OK COTTON AVENUE PROFESSIONAL & BUSINESS CARDS LA IVYEUSl Xj. S. CARTER, AT TO It X E ¥ AT LA W, AMBK1CU8, SuMTEK COUNTY, Office, old Fir»t National Bank. Prompt attentbn given toall buBlneB<entra»ted. Collection a •penalty and prompt attention C. U. McCRORY, ATTORNEY AT LAW, fjLLAVILLE, GA. l EKifS-AU claim* from 580 . - o §500,1 ’ under, $3; w _ „ ,.... r .. - / §500, seven it. No charges unless collections are made, 'ilaylt-tf. JJOCTOBS. Dr. 0. B. RAINES, SURGEON AKD PHISICIAK, Hers his protcsslonal services, with an experl* uce of 20 years, to the people of Americus and cinity. Office over Davis it Callaway ’a Store. Ref deuce at corner of Jackson and Church steels. Calls will receive prompt atteufion. laniffil DR. C. A. BROOKS, AMERICUS, GA. Calls left at Davenport's drug store will receive prompt attention. Will be found at night ft t (Illl f ** "* 11 ' * Dr. D. P. HOLLOWAY, DENTIST, AMERICUS, GA. r Davenport & Sou's drag store. MISCELLANEO US. Nell PloKett, TALBOTTON, - - Will do Plastering, Brickwork and Housework Cul.Nontinc a specialty. Repairing done. Orders promptly attended to. octStf GdN WORK. B‘I would respectfully state to the public that I am now prepaired to REPAIR OLD GINS I After having bad an I experience of 'aevcral year* in the largest gin m mufactoriee, 1 know tint I can give satisfaction. All work guaran teed. I nm located with mv father on Jefferson Edward J. Mi’ler. C. Horace McCall. Monumental Marble Works, Mil,LEU & MeCAI.L, Proprietors, tycAPITAI, PRIZE, 0Y5.U0Q M Ticket.only05. Shares In proportion Louisiana State Lervott Co. “ We do hereby certify that toe supervise the arrangements for all the Monthly and Semi-Annual Drawings of The Louisiana State Lottery Comparand inperson man age and control the Drawings themselves, and that the same are conducted with hon esty, fairness, and in good faith toward all partus, and we authorise the Company to this certificate, with facsimiles of our signatures attached, in its advertisements Commissioners. , . - n 1M8 for *5 years hy the Legisla- s for Educational and Charitable purposes- Incorporated re for Kduca with a capital or #1,000,UOO-to which *““■1 of over #550,000 baa since been udued. ’ an overwhelming popular vote ita fViinclilke made a part of thepiesent State Couatitutlon adopted December 2d, A. D., 1879. The. only lottery ever toUd on and endorsed by the people o/any State. It never tealet or potlponei. Its Grand Single Number Drawings POWDER Absolutely Pure. T is powder never vailer. A marvel of purity WIN A FORTUNE. SEVENTH GRAND DRAWING, CLASS G, IN THE ACADEMY OF MUSK;, NEW ORLEANS, TUESDAY, July 15th, 1884 -170th Monthly Drawing, CAPITAL PRIZE, $75,000. 100,000 Tickets at Five Dollars Each. Fractious, in Fifths, In Proportion. LIST OF PRIZES: 1 CAPITAL PRIZE #75,000 1 do do 25,000 1 do do 10,000 2 PRIZES OF $0.000 12,000 5 do 2,000, 10,000 10 do 1,000 1C, 000 600 10,000 200 20,000 800 do 50, JO,000 25,000 26, 24,000 0 Approximation Prizes of §750 #6,750 250.. 4,500 2.250 ,967 Prizes, amounting to §265,600 Application for rates to clubs should be made oly to the office of the Company in New Orleans. For further Information write, clearly, giving Aril address^ Make P. O. Money Orders payablo Information write clearly, giving Make P. O. Money " ‘ and oddrcM* Registered Letters to NEW ORLEANS NATIONAL BANK, New Orleans, La. POSTAL NOTES and ordinary letters by Express (all sums of §5 and upward by •vien at our expense) to M. A. DAUPHIN, New Orleans, La, pM. A. DAUPHIN, 007 Seventh St., Washington, D. O. THE BESTREW BEATEN. S mtlrwest Corner of the Public Square, AMERICUS, GA. Monuments, Tombs, Etc., Etc. of tbo best Italian and American Marble. A. A. itaUlc’N $3.00 Men’s Shoes. R r A Guarantee from the Manufacturer. lalm that these shoes arc mado of the bes leather that can be produced. There ia no shodd; ; they will wear equal to any csstorn made >lioe that would c«wt yon live dollas*. I do a largo business, buy and sell for cash, and th refore I am ••ashled to defy competition. I havo taken this method of Introducing thU Shoe because there is a demand fbr an honest Hboc st a Low Price war ranted by the manufacturer. I claim these Shoes io be Ktitrhed with the best of silk, and the bul- otts are sewed on with ths best of Barbour's thread, which is imported from Scotland. Tbess »hoes are made on the latest Improved la-ts, ar.d >ou will hod thorn an easy fit, alter you have tred •me pair you will wear none that ia not stamped on ths bottom “A. A. Battle’s #3.00 Phoe.” F.x- • ludvo sale In Amerleua HTORK of 8. M. COHEN, C the BARGAIN MITCHELL’S EYE-SALVEI , Sale and Kfi'cciivo Remedy fbr Restorlufc the Bight of tlie Old I t’ures Tear-Drops, Uruuulatlous, Stye Tumors, He<l Eyes, and Matted Kye Lashes, AYD I'RODUOTRO ■ A•auein. vrh.u n..d • H i.Ti rncacsoai wsswu uiia 1“ Ol o* r nuladlM, such si Ulcers, Ft* Tnmora, Salt Rheum. • PI}**, or wherever Inflaiuatlon MI rCHELL’S HALVE may be •«nd to advantage. _»aid by all Druggists at 95 c NOTICE. , u”’ ^ “ATBIS ha. this day Mid her .lock 01 XUItMry Ooodl> C. A.TAVLOB, nod ih« *Ul hereafur b. conducted hy sera. H "AUL1CK fcCO. Attirlcm, Ot, U.y 50, Its,. So many merchants advertise prices so fabulously low, to draw trade” and so many customers are c ”- n,ld ' now aware of the fact, that It is done for that purpose only,—that but little reliance is now placed in advertising. Generally the articles udvertiecd are “sold out” or are a poor imitation of that which the customer really expects. I will men tion again to my friends, custom ers, and those wishing to buy any thing in the Dry Goods, Clothing, Shoe, Hat and Notion line, that I do no impossibilities, but that I am enabled (through the way my goods are purchased) to sell good goods for less money than other mer chants can buy them, at regu lar prices at wholesale, and then it leaves me a fair margin as a profit. I am not selling off at cost, nor do I sell at and below cost to make room; on the contrary, I continue to receive new and fresh bargains daily. The latest arrival is a very large lot of Hamburg lodging and Insertion, that I am selling from 2 to 20c per yard, fully worth double the amount asked. Call early and get the choice. Also a large lot of Ladies, Gents and Children’s Straw Hats, Hand kerchiefs and Hosiery. 'Call, you. will not ho disappointed, but rather surprised to find as last one place where you can find goods at the advertised prices. 8. M. COHEN, Bargain Store, Cotton Avenue. Meat Martlet PROVISION STORE. W.H.&T.M.C0BB St Cobb the Met ty kind , _... . ...... the multitude of low test, short weight, ulum or phosphate powders. SoUt only in tin cane. ROYAL BAKING I’OWDKR CO, 106 Wall 8' rest, New York. oct2tyL Disfiguring ^HUMORS, llJJltching and (Burning Tor- lures, Humil- iating Erup- , S'/^5Ations. such as SUViSSHf. % gm.Ssi'n'.'a ?;:!? °* tho Blood, Skin, and Scalp, with Loss of Hair, e positively cured bjr tho Outicuoa Riotmm. FISH LINES SIX MILES LONG. EACH WITH 20,000 HOOKS, BAITED TO LURE THE BTURQEON. Cntlrara R.wlT.nt. th. non blood pnrlSor. clooiiMB tbo blood .nd per.pir.lion of impuritioi and poisonom elements, and thus removes the caw*. CoMcnvft, the great Skin Cure, instantly allays Itchingandlnflammation,clears theSkinana Scalp, koala Ulcers and Sores, and restores tho Hair. Sm*i i exquisite Skin Beautlfier r-r Requisite, prepared from Gtmcuiu, U indispensable in treating Skin Diseases, Baby Humors, Skin Blemishes, Rough, Chapped, or OUy icdteo are absolutely pure, and Catlcnrn Ri ...... the only real Blood Purifier* and Skin Beautifi- cra, free from mercury, arsenic, load, zinc, or any othor mineral or vegetable poison whatsoever. ftwould require this entire paper to do justice O a description of the cures performed by tho UCTX- REsm.VK.NT internally, and CUTicunx and Cuticuba Soap externally. Sculled ITeade with loss of hair without number, heads covered with dandruff and scaly eruptions, especially of children and infants, many of which since birth had been a mass of scabs. Itching,burning, and scaly tortures that baffled Peorlnate, leprosy, and other frightful forms of tin diseases, scrofulous ulcers, old nores, and dia lling wounds, each and all of which have been ledily, permanently, and economically cured by Crnctma, 50 cente; , 1'OTTKtt DUUU tEe (JaxicuRA Remed'ikh.' Hold everywhere. ~ ' Resolvent, §1.00; Soap. 25 c< After Trying for '40 Years The Rigid One lias Come at Last! Koi^Iits of the Golden Star I. a Mutual Aid Association, a good, hon est and Christian institution, recom mended by white and colored. It is ohartered for the United States and Terri tories for 20 years nad has boon in exis tence for nearly three years. Has ft fine Library in each Lodge for the young Indies and gentlemen. Has GO lodges in Georgia, Alabama, Mississippi, and Ten- . “They fish with lines six miles long,” says a writer in the New York World, “In Winnebago Lake, Wisconsin, and use 20,060 hooks on every iine,” says a New York fisherman who has been there, “and if they don’t haul up 2,600 fish every time they call it indifferent luck; and every fish will weigh from twenty to seventy pounds. That’s the way they fish for stur geon out there. “One of these, lines will reach half way across the lake. It is a rope an inch in diameter. It is earried out in the lake, largo buoys being attached (o it at intervals to keep it on the surface. The 20,000 hooks baited with pieces of meat or fish, arc lowered to the bottom of the lake hy ‘snoods’of the proper length attached to the line. It takes twen ty boats, with two men in each, to look after this big fish line. Each boat has 1,000 books in its charge. The hooks are placed eighteen Inches apart, and to bait all the hooks once requires not leas than 1,000 pounds of meat. It takes the forty men and twenty boats ten hours to let the line for the first time. After that the fishermen are constantly employed in going to and fro over the line, hauling in the sturgeon that have been caught on the hooks, and rebaiting where it is neccssarv. “To haul in a 70-pound stuigcon from the bottom of the lake is an exciting piece of work, hut requires more strength tbnn skill, as the fish always has the hook several inches down his throat, having sucked bait and all down without any regard to consequences. There is no danger of losing the fish un less the sifood or the book breaks. When the fish is hauled to the sur face a gaff, like a meat hook, is thrust into the side ofits head,and the sturgeon is drawn into the boat and knocked in the bead with a mallet. The hook is out out of his throat, rebuked and thrown back into the lake. “The average catch of sturgeon is olio to every ten hooks. When a boat is loaded with all it will carry of sturgeon tho fishermen row back to shore, where others take the fish and dispose of them. The fishermen know the particular sections of the line on which they work by the arrangement of the buoys. These aro placed ten feet .otitbes and a p ar t t a nd every 160lh one is red. The space between the red buoys contains 1,000 hooks. The sec- tions are numbered, and each boat has its number corresponding with the section it fishes. While the avernge catch is one sturgeon to ten hooks, it is no uncommon thing for the fishermen to find but one or two on an entire section of 1,000 hooks. “The Lake Winnebago sturgeon is highly prized among the lum bermen and others lu the region. Its flesh is finer and of better flavor than the salt water sturgeon’s. The flsh sells for six cents a pound at retail. Large quantities are salted and smoked for use in the lumber camps.” . aidos of tho faoo. ncs-seo, and ia bow being established in Ills Misfortune. A man with a mournful expres sion of countenance sat in a corner of the smoking car. One of his DOING EUROPE IN ONE MONTH, A TRIP THAT TAKES IN PARIS, LONDON AND OLASUOW, COSTS ONLY $200. Florida and South Carolina. Haa never had any money atolen from it, and haa aome of the beat men in the country at the head of it. It haa paid out to Sick membere,... Digressed members,. On deuth benefit#, ... Printing, etc., .§438.60. ... 192.60. ... 867.65. ... 576.00. .$2,063.66. Grand total, Ia net behind in a single assessment. The| cost to a member ia not over $4 or §5 a year. Monthly dues only §2 per year. All persons desirous to form one of these Association* will write for infor mation to D. S. IUimiH, P. O. Box 146. AmmoUH, Ga. june!6m2 eyes was hidden hy a green flap, W. J. HUDSON & CO., WHOLESALE COTTON. keep on li.l‘l It.* very bMt cut. of J BEEF, PORK, KID AKD SAUSAGE, •nd uUo a full line of Green Groceries and Provisions, ...... It u their aim tokMp»flmcla»«*«t»bll»htn#nl, and glvs their i(tomera good goods st the lowett prices. pr*lllghcit price Mid lor Oattla* Hugs, and a nd* of country produce, Americas, the. 15,18l2.tf (MISSION MCIIANTS, And Birmingham, Ala. Melons, Fruits and Truck, AHEOVU HPLV1 ALT!EH. the other gave evidence that it had violently come in contact with some hard substance. His nose looked as though it bad been flat tened against a window pane when ue was a bey, and never regained its natural shape. Oue ear was missing, and the other drooped like a withered morning-glory. His left arm was in a sling, and no two fingers on his right hand point ed in the same direction. When tlie conductor came along he gazed compassionately at the wreck before him snd said inquir ingly: “Collision?” “No,” growled the human debris. “Prize fight?” “No." “Mother in-law?" “No.” “Dos?” “No.” “Then what under the sun broke you all up?” “Bsecball,” groaned the victim, pulling hts slouch hat down over his frescoed eve. We ask your consiunments, promising quick sale, and prompt returns. ■t3V*Sen.l for stencil, oi l price Hit. _ Hr'erci.ce»- R.Dk.ofAtl.nUandRirmlnx »s,30ir A two days’ sale of fine Jersey cattle was held in New York tho post week. Over a hundred head were sold at prices ranging from $200 to$l,600 each, although all the bidders knew that tbg. stock bad been watered. New Yo-'x 8un. . “It iB getting to be cheaper to go to Europe than it is to stay at borne,” said a tourist yesterday. “See what can bo done lor $200. ] leave with a party on July 12 on tbe City of Rome, and have an ex. cellent stateroom, with a colupan ion of my selection. We are to be at sea until Sunday July 20, when we shall land in Liverpool early enough in the day to see the docks the Exchange and the other sights. The following morning wo shall take the express train to London by way of Crewe and Rugby, and lu five hours in our hotel. “ " “We can wander about tbe city and go to the theatre In the even ing. The next morning a conduct or of tbe party puts us in cordages, and wo will spend the day in view, ing the British Museum, the Na tional Gallery, tho Kensington, the parks, tbe Albert Memorial, West minster Abbey, House of Parlia ment, the various monuments, all of tbe admission fees being paid by the conductor. The noxt day, July 28, we will drive to Kew or the Zoo, to Billingsgate, the Tower, tbe law courts, churches, and over the bridges; and we still have an other day to spare for a carriage ride, which will he provided with out extra coBt, or wo can go about on foot and visit some place of amusement in the evening. “On Friday morning, July 26. we go down hy express train to New Haven, cross the channel to Dieppe, and press on to Paris tbe same afternoon. Wo have four days to sco tho sights of Paris— the Louvre, tlie Luxembourg the Morgue, the sewers, the catacombs, tbo Champs Elysecs, tho Bois do Boulogne, tho Aro de Trlompbe, tho Parc Monceau, the Hotel des Invalides and Napoleon’s tomb, the palace at Yesnilles and St. Cloud— all In carriages under the guidanco of a conductor, who pays ail fees and all hotel bills here'and clsc- “On Tuosday, July 2!>, wo shall take the night train to Dieppe, and we arc in London early tbe next day. Wo havo a day to finish up. Bseing what there is worth seeing in London, and, after resting at night, we take a morning express train to Glasgow, and have a ride through England and Scotland by daylight. “Wo leaoh Glasgow at 8 o’clock at night, and then in the morning we have achanco to see St. Mungo’s Cathedral and tbo Necropolis. In the afternoon wo go on board the Circassia. Wc got a glimpse of the Giant’s Causeway, if it is clear and if wo sail down tho Clyde wo see Dunbarton Castle, Arran Isle, and tbe bold bluffs that make the approach to Glasgow so pictur esque. Wc touch at Moville, and thus get a glimpse of Ireland. “On Tuesday, August 12, just a month after leaving, I will bo at my business in New York. The only expense outside the $200 to Le in curred will be such gratuities as I choose to give and my washing. I can have 112 pounds of baggage to and from London, and fiG pounds between London and Paris. “If I lake a month’s vacation in this country it will coBt mo nearly $200, and if I choose to buy me an outfit in London and bring it homo I can save half of that sum by the difference in the cost of things on the two sides of the At lantic. The only thing about such atrip that is disagreeable is the physical and nervous strain. I wouldn’t advise a sickly man or a dyspeptic to cake it.” PresIdentialTlIles. It has ever been the custom in monarchical countries, and even among tbe Roman Catholic hier archy, to designate kings, rulers and pontiffs hy certain distinguish ing titles. History records the doings of Allred tbe Great, Louis the Fat, Ivan the Terrible, Chorles the Bold, and Gregory tho Great. While wo arc prone in the United States to characterize our favorite sons by certain soubriquets, such as, "By the Eternal,” and “Otd Abe,” none of our Presidents have been so honored In an official way. Had It been otherwise we might in our day have had Lincoln tbe Great, Johnson the Tailor, Grant the Conqueror, Hayes the Mean, Garfield the Good, and Arthur the Magnificent. Should Mr.JBlaino be fortunate enough to be the next President he may rank as Blaine tbe Plumed, with Logan the Black. The Democrat who may enter the White House must for the present remain Blank tbe Dark Horse. Pension Swindlers Exposed. Tlie Century for July. At a club dinner in New York recently, an examining surgeon re lated the following, incident, show ing bow the arrears act developed pensioners out of sound and unde serving men. During the war he was surgeon of an infantry regi- incnt. When the regiment’first went into battle be observed, sit ting behind a big tree,, at a safe distance from tho fighting line, the captain of one of the companies. “What are you doing here, Cap tain?” asked the doctor. “I’m not feeling wall," replied the officer, in a doleful voice. The surgeon was too busy look ing after the .wounded to stop and inquire as to his complaint. A few weeks later tho regiment again got under fire, and the surgeon found tbe same captain skulking behind a barn. ,; » “Hello! slok again?" he exclaimod. “ Well, the fact is, doctor, I am not exsotly sick. I may as well own up that jam (coward. There is no help for.it. ’ll must be con stitutional. Now, doctor, wbat is the use of my staying in the army? won’t you help me to get a/dis charge?" ' The surgeon thought he was do ing tbo country service when,.a few days afterward, Le recommend ed that the man be discharged on the ground of general disability. Ho hoard nothing of the captain until sixteen years later, when ho received a letter from the Pension Office informing him that Captain Blank bad applied’ for a pension from the date of his muster-out, and that as he, as surgeon of the regiment, had certified to the disa bility, would he kindly inform the • TT"*.. [Chicago Herald.; f A boy whoso face looked as if Id; had been under a mustard plaster for a night, accosted me in the hall way of tlie Herald office last night, and wanted to, know if . the man that took political items was in— “Because,” said he, “a club was hold at our house to-night which mother said I waAitofiJbMug down to tho papers. Pap was, outlast' night till broad daylight, and came homo this mornin’in what he call- ed the good old •way,"thrdfife’ii ifie winder InBted of the ddor. and 'he howled and woke up motherland said lie was wild and woolly and a white elephantianrl a plum knight and a lot of OU he had jined a club that had biu ratinfyin’ and that' he was for Blaine and long Jones, 'fife got up amll _ tj on the table and aez to ui Ovcrnment as to the 'nature of tbe DU ” D ? r ' iseaso from which the officer’ suf- tT brotntr is a Majorm the forcdl The surgeon replied that the captain’s complaint was chronic and lucurable. cowardice, not con- trauted in the line of his duty, hut constitutional. Tho captain’s"name did not go upon tho roll, and 1iis plan forgetting some four thousand dollars for arrears and twenty dol lars a month for the. rest of his lifo came to grief. How many no less dishonest have succeeded through the coinpluiBftfiee'ofexamlnlng sur geons, less honest than the narra tor of this incident, could only be ascertained by a thorough over hauling of the whole pension list and a re-examination of the entire army of pensioners. lie floBors JUi Father and Draws Tho holder of,one-fifth ticket in ,840, tho capital of $15,000 ic Louisiana Stale Lottery, Tues day, is Mr. Isaac Haines, engineer on tbe M. & C. R. R. To n Chat tanooga Times Reporter ho said: “‘I happened to find ah old $1.00 bill in my ppeketbook when in Memphis, and, conoludedYb buy a lottery ticket of M, A. Dauphin, New Orleans, La., by mail, I thought no more of it, when a tele gram from Now Orleans was re ceived to-day, that No. 10,842 bad drawn the prize, $75,000. in the Louisiana State Lottery, I found that my ticket corresponded with th* nnmhJr ’ Helms bcimou the the number. M. &. 0. R. R. 14 years, and le held injiigb esteem. Ho has sup- mrted two sisters and an aged ’ntlier for years near Stevenson, Ala.. A few months ago, in ihe same Lnuslana State Lottery, be drew a large prizo, receiving'$600 for his share.”—Memphis (Tenn.) Ledger, May 16. All Anxlons to Adjourn. Washinuton, June 22.—A ma jority of the members of both Houses are anxious to get away. The weather Is very hot and work irksome, ,T(ie Democrats want to go to thoir convention. The Republicans want to go home in order to quiet the disturbances caused by the nomination of Blaine, but Congress cannot adjourn until all the appropriation bills have beep passed, and it is a question wheth er the twenty-four members of tlie Senate and llonse Appropriation Committee have the phyBiual en durance to work night and day for two weeks to come in order to get away before the Democratic Con vention meets. ,.. f V , in’ mother, wno hez bln for Tilton all tho while, and party soen she got a pavin’ block that ! had got for kindlin’ tbo fire, aud she let drive at pap, and it hit him under the nose. Ho roiled over like ’a stuck Pig, anJmbtj^r^e^n.rt’ll lay you under tho table.’ Then she sez to me: ‘Jdsepb, tako the item to the papers, and tell the edit'or that one Blaine club hez bln hosted up.’ Are you the man wot! 'takes tbe itim*?” ,,,, ,,|| r NrjrTorkftafi. Blaine has d large mithberofrela tives holding effices under the Uni ted States Government and ;:tbe Stnto Government of JJaipe. 4 ithe fS United States army. > Ho' wddprbh moled to hie present rank " the Maine statesman’sjnfl Blaine's son, Walker, J counsel for tb’e tTnltea Sta Frenoh Claims Comm paying well and with He was AssistantSccreu.,,., He crjres hia,..plpce,to the, Rlaine Ibu+iVUVtiam*, Iraao A. Stanwood, hold first-class clerkships in thb custom houfe.' - ’ Blaiue’s wife’s ,relativo,Jamea:A'- Dodge, is a special,insRectqr jp t|w custom house, connected with Agent Brackett’s office. ' '; v - A Blaino nephew named SUhffOh is an internafrevemra agent for this district. Hl '“'’i'"'< Blaino has twodOusInsitnheatmy as oflicers, and any number of minor relatives ,)# qilmphfyWj- moots of the geverofflentj, . . The Chilian newspapers' contain somo curious statistics cOncernfrife tbe ooeupation of Llma"by !: their country 's troops. Thfly.. ealitnsfe at 9,000 the number , «f r ;cb(lil born there of Perubit " Chilian soldiers during th months, and asai'fiitat‘if*7t ; 0f ^ troop* have gone home already,and in many caae* bamntaken.i mothers and.pbildrep along, v them by permission of the Cbii . Government, and tlio occupation i expected to ceiisO 1 altogether lb Au gust, tbeyoompntelhescdelilohto - the population-fcWbfW* . source at, 14,006* im:> # oo The Philadelphia Press i)iis sent circular to the iron Tmanufgetur- In thirty-four out Of the thirty- eight States th; Democrats have done away with the two thirds rule in State nominating conventions. Florida, Alabama, Tennessee and Texas arc theonly ones that .still stick to tho old plan which nearly always results in defeating tbe lead ing candidates and putting in those who are greatly In the minority In the primaries. Tbe National Demo cratic Convention would do well to out loose front the two-third* rule. ers of Pennsylvania asking foFS subsidy of $20,000 toiaidJt in the campaign—the, ampunt to, ..be,de voted to . dUffflbnUpg, Uji*,Jljr?. protection newspaper free ( among tho workinggen, "About SlTjoSO of the amount has already been ■ subscribed and tbe Wanpff , wW doubtless |be forthcoming. Tbs Press may now be expected to jump up and caper: around On tbe tariff question ten time* worse tbim ever. . The Altai estates of the emperor of Rneaia cover an ’ area of Over 170,000 square miles, being-about three times tbe sUegfEuglandaW Wales. The «*Ktojjj|i!L in Eastern Siberia, arc ejti at nearly half that Altai estates aro eitha silver mines; a copper fount great iron works.' Tlie ' from these ffflpfpifjns 1882, however, were, on!. . and in 1883 the revenue i half this Bum. ; ' ’ ■raw • To til whs an 1 •ad Hi weakn ttc., I _ _ _ you, mtoijOiSH remeftrmf* fa South Anil envelope to Ihe Station J),