New Ulm weekly review (New Ulm, Minn.) 1878-1892
March 7, 1888 · Page 1 of 8
OCR Text
t^mmmmjk New Ulm Review, HEW TARIFF BILL. are some of the most important changesproposed 40 per cent ad valorem,now 10 cents a yard Gen. George Crook wHI be the man elected. THE CXAND ARMY. by the bill: and 35 per cent ad valorem. VfomesPs and HA has always been a favorite with Gen. children's dre6S goods, coat linings, Italians, Sneridan, and it is well known that Mileer-"* China, ornamented, 45 :per cent ad valorem, Th© Minnesota Department G. A. etc., 40 per cent ad valorem. The present has failed to establish the best relationswith now (JO per cent china, unornamented R. Hold Their Eighth Annual Encampment BRANDT & WEDDENDORF, Publishers. duties range from 5 cents per yard the secretary of war and President-,-.~y and earthenware, 40 per cent ad The Tariff Bill at Last Reported to in Minneapolis—J. H. and 35 per cent ad valorem to 9 cents per valorem, now aboutao per cent, and caustic Cleveland on account of the Apache busi-^^vi the .Full Committee on Ways yard and 40 per cenc ad valorem. Clothing Ege of Minneapolis Elected Commander tiles. 30 per cent ad valorem, now 35 per neas in 18S6. There will be a lively con-i':^_,' NEW ULM, MINNESOTA and Means. ready made and wearing apparel of -every cent green and colored glass bottles, threefourths for the Corning Year on test for the brigadier general's place, ancT^-improbably description of wool, exeept knit goods, 415 -J cent per pound, now one cent the Second Ballot. more than half a dozen candi-uS--dates percent ad valorem, now 40 cents per pound There is also a provision for adding the value will put in their claims for it. Sev-^VJ^,. The eighth Annual Encampment of the Eev. Dr. Leonard Bacon is vigorously and 35 per cent ad valorem. Cloaks, of bottles when filled to the value of the* Lumber, Salt, and Many Other Minnesota Department of the G. A. R. was eral of them hove been in Washington already dolmans and other outside garments for dutiable goods. Mint and lime glass bottles a33ailing, and Rev. Dr. 0. H. beld at Minneapolis on the 23d and 24th. looking over the ground. I am tol(f ?.£C~ Commodities Added to the ladies and children wholly or in part of and pressed glassware, 30 per cent ad valorem, Piatt is as valiantly defending, the About 500 were present and were heartily that"either Col. Brooke, of the Third, or wool, 45 percent ad valorem, now45 cents Free List. now 40 per cent cylinder and crown welcomed. Commander Wheelock of Col. Otis, of the Twentieth, will get the» per pound and 40 per cent ad valorem. glass polished and between 24x30 and 24x faith cure, at Waterbury, Conn. As The chairman of the committee on Ways Webbings, cords, dress trimmings, braided place. Owatonna .called the encampment to order 60 inches square, 15 cents per square foot and Means has presented the new bill to both are doctors of medicine as well buttons, etc., of wool, 50 per cent ad valorem, and read the annual address. above that measurement 25 cents per the whole committee, and it has been printed now 30 cents per ponnd and 50 Der square foot, now 20 and 40 cents unpolished In this the commander, while claiming as of divinity, trenchant work is being for the benefit o! the public. I will cent ad valorem. All carpets, 30 per cent The New Commande and cylinder crown and common window that the ex-soldier had as good a right probably be presented to the House done on either side, but thus far the ad valorem, now ranging from 6 cents per glass, "not exceeding 10x15 inches, 1 cent as any man to speak upon political on or about the 15th. Thelatest estimates yard for hemp or jute to 45 cents per yard per pound: above that and not exceeding 16 faithists have been unable to cure Dr subjects, *aid no man had the slightest made by the committee on ways and and 30 per cent ad valorem for Axminster x24, 1^4 cents above that and not exceeding right to use the Grand Army means of the reductions is a totaljof about and other high grades. Bacon of his skepticism. 24x31, 1*2 cents all above, 134 cents, organization for his own advancement. $53,000,000. This total includes about now 13g, 17g, 2% and 5 Porcelain and Memorial day, district, semi-annual $22,250,000 on account of the free list Bohemian glass, 4© cents ad volorem, now MISCELLANEOUS ABTICLES. and national encampments were next $17,250,000 on account of woolen goods 45 per cent The Swiss bureau of statistics recently Endless belts for printing machines, 30 per considered, and an encouraging report was $1,600,000 for china and glassware cent ad valorem, now 20 cents per pound 7— prepared a reliable report giving THE IBfSfSS SCHEDULE. made in regard to the growth of the Woman's $750,000 in the chemical schedules something and 30 cents ad valorem. Paper, sized or Iron in pigs, kentledge, $6 per ton, now Relief Corps and Sons of Veterans. Of glued, 15 per cent ad valorem, and rprinting .the annual liquor consumption of less than $500,000 on cotton, $1,500,000 three-tenths cent per pound. Iron railway the latter, twelve camps have been added paper, unsized. 12 per cent ad valorem, now on flax, hemp and jute, and sugar bars, $11 per ton, now seven-tenths cent different countries. It showed that during the year, representing an increase of 15 and 20 per cent Paper and other fancy about $11,000,000. The attorneys and per pound steel and part steel railway bars 185 in the membership. The address concluded boxes, 30 per cent ad valorem, now 35. the people of the United States drink agents of the highly protected interests are and slabs and billets of steel, $11 per ton, with a number of susgestions for Envelopes, 30 per cent ad valorem, now 35. making their way io Washington, and already now $17 per ton. Iron or steel rails, $14 per capita less than those of Denmark* the good of the order. Annual reports Beads, 40 per cent ad valorem, now 50. denounce .the whole bill and threaten per ton flat rails, $15 per ton, now ninecenths Blacking, 20 per cent ad valorem, now 25. were also submitted by W. W. Braden, St. Holland, Switzerland, Belgium, Germany, its defeat. and eight-tenths cent per pound, respectively. Carriages and*parts of not enumerated 30 Paul, assistant adjutant general E. \V. Bound iron, 1 cent per pound, Sweden, Russia, France, Austria, per cent ad valorem, now 35. Feathers Leavens, Faribault, Assistant quartermaster OUTLINE OF THE BILL. now 1 2-10 cents per pound XDn sheet iron of all kinds, 35 per cent Hungary or Great Britain and general J. A. Leonard, Rochester, The bill makes the following additions to there is a uniform reduction of 1-10 cent ad valorem, now 50. Matches, 25 per inspector S. W. Hayes, Redwood Falls, per pound, excepting taggers iron. On the list of articles which, may be imported Ireland. •i cent ad valorem, now 35. Gloves mustering officer Rev. W. E. Stanley, Albert hoop band or scroll iron less than eight free of duty: of all descriptions, 40 per cent, now 50. Lea, chaplain Dr. D. P. Kennedy, inches in width, there is a reduction of 1-10 Timber hewn andsawed, and timber used Gun wads, 25 per cent ad valorem, now 35. cent per pound on grades thinner Litchfield, medical director, and Maj. for spars and building wharves, timber Ten thousand persons who receive Gutta percha manufactured and hard rubber than No. 10 wire gauge. Cast iron pipe of Thomas Montgomery, St. Peter, of the ^oumFl £-9- squared and sided. Wood manufactured, articles, 30 per cent ad valorem, now 35. every description 6-10 per pound, now 1 pensions for services in the civil war council of administration. The several not specially enumerated or provided for. Hair jewelry and ringlets, 25 per' cent ad cent per pound. Cut nails and spikes of iron reports showed that the posts in the department Sawed boards, planKe, deals and ai) other reside in foreign countries. Their valorem, now 25. Hat bodies of cotton, 30 or steel. 1 cent per pound, now II4 cut 1 are generally in a prosperous articles of sawed lumber. Hubs for wheels, per cent ad valorem,now 35. Hatters' plush, tacks, 35 per cent ad valorem, now about 3 James H. Ege, the newly-elected commander 1 (Vouchers are paid from the Washington condition, and there has been a steady increase posts, last blocks, wagon blocks, oar blocks, 15 per cenc ad valorem, now 25. India cents per pound railway fish plates, 8-10 of the department of Minnesota, in the membership during the year. erun blocks, heading1 blocks and all like rubber fabrics, boots and shoes, 15 per cent pension office. It would be interesting cent per pound, now 1^ wrought iron was born at Pine Grove Furnace, Cumberland Twelve new posts had been established, blocks or sticks, rough hewn or sawed only. ad valorem, now 30. Inks and ink powders, steel spikes, horse shoes, etc., 1*2 per pound, county. Pa., March 20, 1844. When to know why those persons and a balance of about §4,000 was reported Staves of wood, pickets and palings, laths, 20 per cent ad valorem, now 30. Japan now 2 cents. Anvils and forgings for machinery, fourteen years old he removed with his in the treasury of the department. shingles, clapboards, pine or spruce logs, wares. 30 per cent ad valorein„now 40. •have expatriated themselves, after 1*2 cents per pound, now 2 rivets, parents bo Illinois and worked upon a Tarm provided, that if any export duty "is laid upon Marble sawed, dressed slabs and paving The presentation ofreports occupied most 212 iron and steel, cents per pound, now fighting, as it is presumed they did, until he was seventeen, when (in 1862) he the above-mentioned articles or either of tiles, 85 cents per cubic foot, now $1.10. of the first day's session. hammers, crow-bars and track tools, 1*2 enlisted in Company F, Ninety-third Illinois them by any country whence imported, all Marble manufactured and not enumerated, for the United States. cent per pound, now 2 iron and steel The report of Adjutant General Braden infantry, and served as corporal until said articles imported from said country 30 per cent ad valorem, now 50. Pipes and axles, 1*2, now 2 horseshoe, hob and wire shows a total membership of 8,3000 in the close of the war. His first engagement Bhall be subject to duty as now provided by smokers' articles, not enumerated, 50 per nails, 2*2 cents, now 4 per pound boiler this department, about 7 600 in good law. Salt in bags, sacks, barrels or other clajr was at Jackson, Miss. at Champion Hills cent ad valorem, and pipes, 25 per cenc Prof. Kirchoff of Halle, Germany, tubes, 1*2 cents per pound, now 3 chains, standing. During the year 840 have been packages or in bulk, when imported from ho was captured by the enemy and held a ad valorem, now 70 and 35, respectively. iron and steel, not less than three-fourths suspended for non-payment of dues, and estimates that Chinese is spoken by any country which does not cnarge an import prisoner three months, when he was paroled THE ADMINISTRATIVE FEATUBES. inch, 1^4 cents per pound less than threefourths the membership of posts from which reports duty upon salt exported from the and returned to his regiment. (400 millions, Hindustani by over 100, inch, II2 cents per pound had not been received is estimated United States. The remainder of the bill, twenty-five He was in the battle of Altoona less than three-eighths, 2 cents, now at 125. The actual number of posts established Flax, straw flax, not hackled or dressed [English by about JL00, German by 57, printed pages, is made up entirely of the Pass and the several minor engagements 1%, 2 and 2*2 cents respectivelv Bax, hackled, known as dressed linen tow of during the year was fourteen, between that place and Dalton, saws, 30 per cent ad valorem, now 40 per leading features of the Hewitt administration land Spanish by over 47. Thus four flax or hemp hemp, manilla and other like and the total receipts of the adjutant general's Ga. He went with his regiment through cent files, 35 per cent ad valorem, now bill introduced in the Forty-ninth congress substitutes for hemp jute butts, jute sunn, office was §3,300. times as many people speak Chinese Sherman's march to the sea and was honorably ranging from 35 cents to $2.50 per dozen and incorporated in the Morrison bill. sisal grass and other vegetable fibres burlaps, On the Becond day the reports of the department discharged in July 1865. Four steel ingots, blooms, die blocks, blanks, bars, English, and the Chinese are developing not exceeding sixty inches in width, of Mr. Hewitt'B provision abolishing the office bands, sheets, crank shafts and pins, stampshapes,' commander and other officers years afterward he came to Minneapolis, flax jute or hemp, or of which flax, jute or an activity in trade that is carrying of merchant appraiser and providing new gun moulds, steel castings, etc., were adopted, and the Women's Relief and for the past six years he has served as hemp, or either of them, shall be the component valued at 1 cent a pound, .4 cent per pound methods of appraisements are omitted The Corps were requested to co-operate in the deputy sheriff of Hennepin county. He their language all over the East. material of chief values. Bagging, valued at more than 1 cent and not more adornment of the permanent soldiers' home entire system of damage allowance on imported has been specially active in Grand Army tor cotton or other manufactures, not Chinese merchants are as active along than 4 cents, 45 per cent ad valorem, now buildings. The retiring officers were work, and his purse and hand have invariably goods injured during the transportation r- specially enumerated or provided for in this 45 per cent on all values less than 4 cents warmly commended for the zeal and all the Pacific coast of Asia and in been opened at the call of his is abolished The period for which imported act suitable to the use for which cotton bagging per pound, and from 2 to 314 cents per energy displayed during their terms in advancing less fortunate comrades. This fact accounts is applied, composed in whole or part merchandise can bo kept in bonded the principal Pacific islands as they pound on higher grades iron or Bteel beams, the cause of the order. A resolution for his popularity in the order. of hemp, jute, jute butts, flax, gunny bags, warehouses is extended from one to three posts, columns, building forms and other was unanimously passed reimbursing are on the Pacific coast of America. He was elected senior vice commander gunny cloth or ether material, provided that structural shapes, .6 cent per pound, now years. The duties on boxes, cartons and Commander Wheelock the amount expende of George N. Morgan post, and as to hem and flax jute, jute butts, sunn and 1*4 cents steel or partly steel railway other inside coverings of merchandise,which j«for railway fares, and a motion to sisal grass, and manufactures thereof, except was advanced to commander in 1884, wheels and tires or inerots on the same, 1*2 pass into the hands of consumers are revived hold the memorial service on the last Sunday A careful estimate places the number burlaps not exceeding sixty inches in officiating in that capacity during the national cents per pound, now 2 cents wood screws^ width and bagging for cotton, this act shall in May was voted down. The Minnesota Duties on packing charges are revived. encampment at Minneapolis that 35 per cent ad valorem, now from 6 to 12 of Syrian Arabs already in the United bake effect July 1, 1889. senators and representatives in congress year. In 1887 he was elected junior vice What is known as the cents per pound. Iron and steel wire remain States at nearly 3,000, and evidently were requested to urge the location commander of the department of Minnesota, IEON PLATES. unchanged, with a provision that no "similitude" clause is re-enacted Ii on or steal sheets or plates, or taggers' of a pension agency in Minnesota, and the and from his first connection with it duty shall exceed 60 per cent ad valorem. ^he immigration of these most ob jec[tional with such wording as to make clear iron, coated with tin or lead, or with, a mixture passage of the dependent pension bill has been a liberal and devoted friend of his when unenumerated articles can be classified foreigners has merely begun. of which these metals is a component COPPEE, LEAD, ETC. Framed by the national committee of the order and old comrades in arms. His as assimilating to enumerated articles. part, by the dipping or any other process, Old copper and copper clippings for remanufacture, LT. A. R. and now before congress. The family consists of a wife and three children. They are filthy, mendicant, thieving. ana commercially known as tin plates, Importers' declarations are substituted for 1 cent per pound, now 3 assistant adjutant general was authorized Out of them it is utterly impossible terrne plates and taggers' tin. Beeswax, cents. Ingots and Chili bars 2 cents importers' oaths in all custom matters, and to Iprepare a full roster of each gelatine and all similar preparations. Glycerine per ponnd, now 4. Rolled plates, sheets, importers are authorized to make declarations post in the department, tojbekept at headquarters *'iO make respectable citizens. Upon (crude, brown or yellow), fish glue or rolled pipes, etc., 30 per cent ad valorem, as long as a Grand Army man exists before notaries instead of at the custom .their nature and habits civilization isinglass. Phosphorus, soap, Btocks fit only now 35. Lead ore and dross, s4 cents, now Death of W. W. Corcoran cf Washington. in Minnesota. It was further decided house. The recommendations made as for use as such. Soap, hard and soft, all of 1*2 cents pigs, bare, etc., for re-manufacture, that the department will pay the traveling can not make any impression. No which are not otherwise specially enumerated to protests, appeals and suits by Secretary 1 1^4 cents, now 2 cents sheet, pipes expenses of our delegate from each post to or provided for. Extract of hemlock W. W. Corcoran, the successful business sooner do they land than they resort and shot, 2±4 cents, now 3 cents sheating Manning in a special report to congress two iuture encampments, which will be so numbered and other bark used for tanning. Indigo, extracts man, capitalist, and above all and alwayB and yellew meial 30 per cent ad valorem, yar ago are all adopted. The penalties are to begging and other makeshifts which as to recognize the encampment held of and carmined. Iodine, resublimed. now 35. Nickel, ore or matte, 10 cents per the philanthropist, is dead. He died niuU,' more striking for bribery and feeing 1 tinder the old organization, provided the licorice, juice oil, croton hempseed and pound, or nickel contained therein, helped them to eke out a miserable without pain or a movement. Dr. Garnett, inspects of customs or any irregular inspection legality of such action is approvep by the rape seed oil flax seed or linseed oil oil.cotton now 15 cents. Zinc and shelter, who remained at the patient's bedside until existence at home. of baggage. The government is judge advocate general. seed petroleum alumina, alum, patent in pigs, or for manufacture, 1^4 nearly midnight, predicted that the alum, alum substitute, sulphate of alumina authorized to bring suit for the value of cents per pound, in sheets 2 cents per pound, Among those adopted by the encampment end would come before sunrise, and the and aluminous cake, and alumin crystals or now 1*2 and 2 cents respectively. Hollowware, meichandise fraudulently imported after were the ones asking the legislature household accordingly prepared for the ground. All imitations of natural mineral 2*2 cents per pound, now3 needles The displacement of coal by gas in such merchandise has passed into the hands to designate memorial day a3 a legal holi3ay, end. C. M. Matthews, Mr. Corcoran's waters, and all artificial mineral waters. of all kinds, 20 per "cent ad valorem, now and authorizing the department commander of the importers. Theatrical scenery and nephew,Miss Eustis,his granddaughter,and one county of Pennsylvania per day Baryta, sulphate of or barytes unmanufactured. 26 and 35. Pen knives, razors, etc., 35 per to publish that portion of the wardrobes, when intended for temporary use Miss Jones, his niece, were all at the death Boracic acid, barate of lime and cent ad valorem, now 50 per cent pens, "35 is estimated at 20,000 tons, which is state laws relating to the burial of deceas3d bed. Since the stroke of paralysis last borax. Cement, Roman, Portland and all ia the United States, and tourists' wearing per cent ad valorem, now 12 cents per soldiers. summer it has been only a question of equivalent to 500,000,000 cubic feet others. Whiting and Pari3 whits. Copper, gross type metal 15 per cent ad valorem, apparel, are exempted. The following, offered by Judge E. St. sulphate of, or blue vitriols. Iron, sulphate time how long he would survive. now 20. Manufactures and wares not of gas. One of the Philadelphia companies' Julien Cox of St. Paul, was adopted: of, or copperas. Pota«h, crude, carbonate of, specially enumerated, composed wholly or THE TOTAL REDUCTIONS. A few days ago a slight cold was taken capacity is 545,000,000 feet or fusel and caustic potash. Chlorate of potash in part of copper, 35 per cent ad valorem, Whereas, Memorial day is one of solemn The latest estimates made by the committee while driving. Ordinarily it would have and nitrate of potash or saltpeter crude. and of other metais, 40 per cent ad valorem, significence and subdued reflection and retrospection daily. The effect on manufactures, Sulphate of potash sulphate of soda known on ways and means of the reductions is a been of no consequence, but in his enfeebled now uniform at 45 ad valorem. Cabinet or to the living survivers of the as salt cake, crude or refined, or nitre cake, condition it proved fatal. He grew such as steel mills, iron-pipe mills, house furniture, wood, 30 per cent ad valorem, total o- about $53,000,000. This total includes ?reat war, both in the past and in future crude or refined, and glaubersalt sulphur, now 35 manufacturers of hardwoods, rapidly worse, and in a few days was lying about $22,250,000 on account of the one by the living devoted to the memory of ^_blast furnaces, glass manufacture, refined in rolls wood tar coal tar, crude 20 per cent ad valorem, now 35. Wood motionless and senseless on his deathbed. comrades who have joined the innumerable free list $17,250,000 on account of woolen analine oil and its horaologues coal Dar, manufactures unenumerated, 30 per cent ad brass wire, fire brick and other wellknown He slept most of the time, passing from caravan in it3 march to the silent goods $1,600,000 for china and glassware products of, such as naphtha, benzine, benzole, valorem, now 35. halls, and, sleep to a comatose condition, and almost enterprises has been to increase $750,000 in the chemical schedules something dead oil and pitch all preparations of imperceptibly from that to death last Whereas, the day set apart for this observance SUGAR, soal tar not colors or dyes, and not acids of less than $500,000 on cotton, $1,500,000 production 100 to 300 per is too often turned into a day of Saturday morning without a struggle. not above No. 16 Dutch standard, is as follows: aolors and dyes logwood and other dve on flax, hemp and jute, and sugar about William Wilson Corcoran was the richest Tank bottoms, syrups, etc., not above amusement, frivolity and levity. cent. The fact is that so enormous woods, extracts and decoctions of spirits"of $11,000,000. Chairman Mills said to-day man in the District of Columbia. His 75 deg. polarized, 1.15 cents per pound and Resolved, by this encampment, that we turpentine bone black, ivory drop black and startling has been the effect of that internal revenue changes had been purposely for every additional degree .03 cent per earnestly urge upon the comrades of the great start as a capitalist was made during and bone charcoal, osher and ochery earths, pound. Above 16 Dutch standard and not excluded from the bill. The Democratic the Mexican war, when he bought government preceding discoveries for the past fifty amber and umber earths, sienna and sienna posts of this department and the public in above 20, 2 20 cents per pound. Above 20 bonds when they were far below earths, when dry. members were still considering that ueneral that all unseemly conduct, conflicting years that an industrial revolution Dutch standard, 2*2 cents per pound. The with a due and reverent observance par, and held them till they were redeemed subject, and it was not possible to say at present duties ransre from 1.40 cents per OILS. of Memorial day, be avoided. at their face value. After this speculation may now go on almost unnoticed. this time whether the reductions would result All preparations known as essential oils, pound, below 14 Dutch standard, to 3*2 he spent his business life in banking and in The afternoon and closing session of the in the presentation of another bill dealing sxpressed oils, distilled oils, rendered oils, cents por pound for sugars above 20 Dutch the care of his property, which is reputed encampment was principally devoted to alkaline, alkaloids and all combinations of specifically with the internal revenue or standard The lower grade of molasses is to be worth §3,500,000. an exemplification of the secret my of the foregoing and chemical compounds unchanged, but that testing above 46 deg. is in the inclusion of some provisions bearing The commissioner of agriculture has work of the order and the election Mr. Corcoran's silts to the cause of education, by whatever name known and not reduced from 8 to 6 cents per gallon. Confectionery, upon that system in the present bill at some religion and the care of the poor' just issued a report upon the number of officers. The principal contest was specially enumerated or provided for in this 40 per ceut ad valorem, now future stage. aggregate §2,000,000. Mr. Corcoran was on the election of a commander, the nominations act All barks, beans, berries, balsams, 10 ceutB per pound. All leaf tobacco .and values of farm animals in the various being as follows: James born in Georgetown, D. C, Dec. 27, 1798.— buds, bulbs, bulbous roots and excrescences, unmanufactured is fixed at 35 cents per states as compared with the such as nut galls, fruits, flowers, dried fibres, H. Ege. Minneapolis R. R. Henderson, His father was a native of Ireland pound, and the present distinefcfon between grains, gums and gum resins, herbs, leaves, Sumatra and ordinary wrapping tobacco is Minneapolis J. J. McCardy, St. Paul who removed to Georgetown in 1787. Robert Burdette Declines to number and values in 1887. In the lichens, nuts, roots and stems, vegetables, abolished. Starch, 1 cent per pound, now W. P. Spaulding, Brainerd Thomas Montgomery, In 1847 Mr. Corcoran porchased the 6ite Run the Universe. country at large, there has been an seeds and seeds of morbid growth, weeds, from 2 to 2*2 cents per pound. Rice, cleaned, St. Peter and E. St. Julien Cox. of Oak Hill cemetery, Georgetown, expended wood3 used expressly for dyeing, and dried 2 cents uncleaned, II4 now 214 and II4, St. Paul. Two ballots were taken, the about S 120,000 in improving it, increase since January 1887, in My son, there are just two things in insects. All non-dutiabie crude minerals, respectively." Rice, meal or flour which wid first resulting in 117 votes for Ege Spaulding, and presented the cemetery to his native but which have been advanced in value or this world that I don't know about, horses of 667,192 mules, 74,586 pass through a No. 10 brass wire sieve, 20 93 McCardy, 69 Henderson, 9 Montgomery, town. The Corcoran gallary of art he established uondition by refining or grinding or by other per cent ad valorem the present duty is the and you have just asked me about 8 Cox, 1. Maj. Henderson, then milch cows, 334,331 oxen and other in 1857, spending "about $300,000 process of manufacture, not specially same, buc the condition is not imposed. withdrew his name unconditionally, and one of th em. I don't know why there in fitting it up, and in addition snumerated or provided for. All Paddy, cent per pound, now II4 cents cattle, 886,613, while in the number the second ballot gave Ege 153 votes is trouble and sorrow and toil and establishing an endowment fund of earths or clays unwrought or unmanufactured. raisiuH, II2 cents per pound, now 2 cents. Spaulding, 88 McCardy, 60, and of sheep there has been a decrease of nearly a million dollars for its benefit. China, clay or kasoline. Peanuts, cent per pound, now 1 cent poverty and sickness and death in Montgomery, 6. James H. Ege Another of his large public gifts is Opium, crude, containing 9 per centum and 1,214,559, and in hogs a decrease of shelled, 1 cent per pound, now II2 cents. this beautiful world. I used to know was declared elected, and the Dver of morphia for medicinal purposea the Louise home, which he founded in Mustard, in bottles, ground or preserved, 6 when I was much younger, but I find 266,311. The values of farm animals Iron and steel cotton ties or hoops for baling cents per pound, now 10. Cotton-thread, memory of his wife. It is intended as a announcement was enthusiastically cheered. that as I grow older I don't know a purposes, not thinner than No. 20 yarn, warps, vaiue not exceeding 40 cents has changed very little in the past There was no contest over the other home for aged women or refinement and wire gauge. Needles, sewing, darning, knitting per pound, 35 per cent ad valorem valued great deal more than I used to know. officer, which were filled as follows: education, who by reverses of fortune have year. The price of hogs has advanced and all others not specially enumerated at over 40 cents per pound, 40 per cent ad been reduced from affluence to poverty. I don't know why the best people Senior vice commander, Edward Dunn, or provided for in this act Copper valorem the present duties ransre from 10 about 10 per cent, but the difference Rochester. This building cost $200,000 and has an seem to have all the suffering and the imported in the form of ores, regulus of and cents in 25-cent values to 50 ad valorem on endowment fund in addition of about Junior vice commander, James Compton, for horses, mules and sheep has been great sinners have all the fun. I don't black or case copper and copper cement, old cotton valued at $1 per pound. §300,000. Mr. Corcoran also made largeand Fergus Falls. copper fit only for manufacture. Nickel in know why innocent men suffer for the very slight. valuable gifts to the Washington Chaplain, Rev. J. M. Stanley, Albert ore, matt, or other crude form not ready for COTTON CLOTH AND WOOLENS. wickedness of guilty men. I don't know" orphan asylum, Columbian university and Lea. consumption in the arts. Antimony as All cotton cloth, 40 per cent ad valorem why the man who cast the faulty columns Medical director, Dr. Wilson of Pipestone many institutions in the South. He alsogave regulus or metal. Quicksilver, chromate of provided tarletans, mulls and crinolines county. $100,000 to the Church of the Ascension iron or chromic ore. Mineral Bubstances in in Pemberton Mills wasn't shall not pay more than 25 per cent ad The Bankers' Magazine ventures the of Washington. To the University of a crude state and metals unwrought, not valorem. The present tariff divides cotton The old council of administration was crushed when the mills went down. I statement that "state indebtedness is specially enumerated or provided for. cloths into thirteen classes, with duties ranging re-elected, and the following were elected Virginia he made gifts amounting to about can't see why my neck should be Brick vegetables in their natural state, or in from two and one-half cents per square delegates to the next national encampment, $200,000, besides a library of 4,000 volumes. becoming a thing of the past," but broken in a railway accident because salt or brine chicory root, ground or ungroand, yard for less than one hundred threads to to be held at Columbus, Ohio: One of his latest public acts of unselfish this "pleasing fact" has scarcely come a train dispatcher sends out a wrong burnt or prepared, and ail other articles the square inch, to 40 per cent ad valorem on Gen. E. M. Pope, Mankato Col. William magnanimity was the bringing hither if, used or intended to be used as coffee, colored cottons exceeding two hundred yet. The states still owe in round order or a signalman goes to sleep. I McCrory, Minneapolis Senator C. J. Edwards, from a foreign country the remains of or substances therefor, not especially enumerated threads to the square inch. Spool cotton, 40 Spring Valley Perry Starkweather, John Howard Payne, the author of don't see why my neighbor should numbers $163,000,000. One-sixth of or provided for cocoa, prepared or per cent ad valorem, now at a minimum St. Paul, and Judge L. W. Collins, St. "Home, Sweet Home," with whom Mr. be cursed with ill health and suffering manufactured dates, plums and prunes duty of seven cents per twelve spools. this is owed by one state, Virginia, Cloud, Corcoran was intimately acquainted during currants, zante or other figs, meats, game Ducks, linen, canvas handkerchiefs, lawns just because bis grandfather was a This closed the business of the encampment, Payne's residence in Washington. Mr. and five states, Virginia, Tennessee, and poultry beans, peas and split Deas or other manufactures of flax, jute or hemp, rollicking, hard-drinking old profligate. and many of the delegates improved Corcoran was a very plain man, living in a pulpa, for papermaker's use. not specially provided for, 25 per cent ad Louisiana, Missouri and North Carolina, I can't see why I should have the internal before the camp fire in visiting quiet,unpretentious style,with no taste for valorem and linen collars, cuffs and shirtc. the soldiers' home at Minnehaha Fall3. neuralgia just when I want to feel at ostentation or notriety. In politics he owe one-half the total state indebtedness BOOKS AND PAMPHLETS. 35 per cent ad valorem now uniform at 35 About forty ex-prisoners of war held a was a Democrat, but not an intense partisan. Bibles, books and pamphlets printed in per'cent ad valorem. Max, hemp and jute my best. I can't understand why of the country. The New other languages than English, and books and meeting. Twenty new names were added to yarns, 25 per cent ad valorem now Garfield died and Sullivan lives. I pamphlets and all publications of foreign England and Middle states are, however, 35 per cent ad valorem. Linen thread, twine, the roll. On the last evening there was a don't know why some people starve governments, and publications of foreign etc., 25 per cent ad valorem, now 35. Oil rousing camp fire attended by 2,500 people. almost free from debt, Massachusetts, %. 1 while worse people founder. Well.you societies, historical or scientific, printed for cloths, 25 per cent ad valorem, now 40. The entertainment consisted of The Creat Burlington Railroad with $8,484,262, and Pennsylvania, gratuitous distribution bristles bulbs and. Gunny cloth, 25 per cent ad valorem, now say wouldn't it be pleasanter if all speeches etc. Strike, bulbous roots, when not medicinal feathers from 3 to 4 cents per pound Bagging, 25 these crooked things were straightened The Woman's Relief Corps held a meeting with $5,861,381, having the of all kinds, crude or not dressed, colored or per cent ad valorem, now 40. Tarred cables The great strik between the Engineers and elected the following officers: out? Yes, oh yes! And wouldn't manufactured finishing powder grease, largest debts. Two of our largest statesNew and untarred cordage, 25 per cent ad vallorem. and Fireman of the Chicago, Burlington President, Mrs. S. E. Milham of St. Paul !i* grindstones, finished or unfinished curled I run things better if I had the running now from 3 to 3*2 cents per pound and Quincy Railroad began on the 27th, York and Illinois, are now debtfree, senior vice, Emma K. Ogden of Detriot hair for beds or mattresses human hair, Sail duck, Russia sheeting, and unenumerated and last accounts was still on. The number of them? Ye-e—hold on a minute—ye—I junior vice, Sarah K. Clark of Winona raw, uncleaned, and not drawn hatters' fur, manufactures of hemp and jute, 25 per if the money in the treasury of who quit the road is several thousand, don't know, really, that I treasurer, Mrs. Jessie Nye of Minneapolis'. not on the skin hemp and rape seed cent, now from 30 to 35 per cent ad valorem. and of course the roai is in bad condition. the former be deducted from the debt. want to try. There are several things The president's appointments were: and other oil seeds of like character All wool, wool on the skins, shoddy All freight business is suspended and the lime garden seed, linseed or flax seed. Secretary, Miss Mary H. Kendell, Minneapolis: waste, etc., are placed on the free list after to consider, when you want to run a The public local debts of the country, passenger traffic is very difficult. Marble of all. kinds, in block, rougrh or July 1. On flannels, blankets, woolen hats, counsellor. Miss Lulie Becker, St. universe. Now,you are very kind.but state, county, etc., in 1880 were squared osier or willow prepared for basket knitting hoods, woolen or worsted yarns, Paul inspector, Mary A. Brearley, Minneapolis. I will most respectfully decline the makers' use broom corn brush wood and manufactures of every description, ....... $1,056,984,146 butasthe large cities appointment. I find, on looking into Another great fire, involving a loss of a plaster of paris, when ground or calcined composed wholly or in part of have all reduced their debts since rags, of whatever material composed rattans worsted, 40 per cent ad valorem. the varied and trying duties connected million dollars, has occurred at Buffalo,. and reeds, manufactured, but not made The present section relating to this class of N. Y. The chief sufferers are James E. then, the aggregate in 1890 will be with the office, that my bodily and Important Army Changes to Come. up into finished articles paintings in oil or goods excepts such as are composed in part Curtiss, gloves and mittens, No. 47 and 49 mental strength would not stand the less. In no other country in tKe The Washington Capitol, whose editor is water colors and statuary not otherwise provided of wooL Woolen and worsted cloths, shawls, Exchange street Bickford & Francis, great tax that would be laid upon for. But the term "statuary" shall be authority on army news, says: and all manufactures of wool of every description, the! leather merchants, the ticket office of the world but the United States has understood to include professional productions madd wholly or in part of wool or I hear that Maj. Gen. Alfred H. Terry is them. While I am in the heartiest Michigan Central railway and the-offices ol great burden of local or national debt of a statuary or of a sculptor only. worsted not specially provided for, 40 per really going to retire from active service accord with the administration, and the Eastern freight agent of the same road Stones, unmanufactured or undressed, freestone, cent ad valorem. The present duties on when his present leave of four months expires, grown lighter, and the difference be-tween the Express newspaper. MatheVB& Northrup's wish to giveit,and to the extent of my granite, sandotune, and all building flannels, etc, range from 10 cents per pound and that President Cleveland will printing and lithographic works, the the national blanket mortgage or monumental. All sirinsrs of gut or any poor ability to give it, my most earnest and 35 per cent ad valorem to 35 cents per therefore have the appointment of a Empire fast freight line, the Buffalo Upholstering other like material. Tallows. Waste, all not pound and 40 per cent ad valorem, and on support and encouragement, yet I major general and a brigadier general in here and elsewhere constitutes great company's office, the papei specially enumerated or provided lor. woolen cloths, etc., from 35 cents per pound the army. Although Gen. Miles is, as much prefer to do this in my capacity ware-rooms of Richard II. Thompson, and odds in favor of American industry. and 35 per cent ad valorem to 35 cents per usual, making an active push for the raajorgeneralcy, SOMS rtfPOBTANT CHANGES. as a private citizen. the Queen City Shirt Manufacturing company. pound and 40 per cent ad valorem. Bunting there is little doubt that Brig. In addition to the free list the following '..&bi? *&i"\ %l .' I y^itk ^Mm %£M:- :iU- '4wi'- •ft™ IMS4/-SC.-I&UJ* Si!w^WS£^«aS &&.'