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•IWWJfflWWWW wmm SUMMARY JF CONGRESS Senate Sessions, 188THDAY.—Mr. Plumb presented the po- tion of John A. KirkpntrielMi pension bill in whose favor had .bsen vetoed. He usks the Senate £o,pass the bill over the veto.. Re- ferred.... The Chair laid before the Senato the message of the President vetoing tho bill authorizing the construction of railroads through the fedian territory iu Montana, The message states that similar bills had been presorited to him dur- ing the prosent session and had received his reluctant approval, but he had hoped that each of them would be the last of the Jcind presented. This bill invited a general invasion of the Indian country, I t did not sufficiently guard ajainst an iuvas'on of the rights of the Indians ;nor was he satis- fied that tho Legislation proposed was de- manded by any exigency of the public wel- fare. On motion of Mr. Dawo3, the bill and message were referred to the Committee on Indian Affairs. lliUTH DAY.—The resolutions under which a so-called State Legislature had been organ- ized in tho Territory of Dakota were indefi- nitely postponed.... The resolution for open executive sessions, on motion of Mr. Piatt, was made the special order for Wednesday, December 8 The Sen- ate resumed consideration of the River and Harbor Appropriation bill, the pending amendment being to reduce the appropria- tion for the Kentucky Rivor trom §350,000 to ?1U(),CH0. Mossre. Beck and Vest argued against the amendment, which was lost. The amendment appropriating .?8o0,000 for the purchase of the Portage Lake Canal and the Lake Superior Ship Canal was adopted .without division. The Hennepin Canal amendment appro- printing S30U,000 was stronglv advocated by Mr. CuTlomand opposed by Mr. Vest. Pend- ing action the Seuate went into secret session, and when the doors were opened Mr. Gor- man announced the death of Representative W. H. Cole, of Maryland, and, as a mark of respect to the memory of the deceased, ad- journed. HOTH DAY.—Mr. Riddleberger's resolu- tion to hold executive sessions with open doors was laid on the table....Mr. Sewell, from tho Committee on Fensions, presented the report in the case of the vetoed bill granting a pension to Margaret D. Mar- chaud, widow of Commodore Mar- chand. The Committee recommended the passage of the bill over the President's objections. Referred.'. ..The bill to establish agricultural experiment stations in connection with agricultural col- leges was discussed without final action.... Immediately after the doors were closed in executive session an order was made, upon motion of Senator Ingalls, that the public be excluded from the upper corridors, lobbies, and cimmittee rooms, which .order was car- ried into effect at once. This resulted in elbsing the, offices of the Associated/Press iahd'.tho felfegiaj.hcompanies and the eject- ment of a 1 the rep ;r;tersfrom their quarters in the Senate win<r of the>Capitol, 141KT DAY.—Mr. B:air, froni the Com- mittee on Pensions, submitted a report on twenty-three pension bills vetoed by the President, and recommended that the bills be passed notwithstanding the President's objection. Mr. Chandler read a report giving the views of the minority of the Committee. The reason assigned by the President in veto- ing each of these bills separately did not, the minority report said, c all for gross criticism or for the censure of the Senate. Mr. Kenna moved that the report, views of the minority, and all the papers be re- committed to the Committee on Pensions for consideration by that com- mittee. Mr. Teller sustained the motion, and Mr. Blair consented to the re-committal The Senate adopted Mr. Hoar's resolution calling on the President for information re- garding the seizure or detention'of American vessels in foreign ports....The River and Harbor bill was discussed. 1J2D DAY The Chair, b y request, intro- duced a bill to stop all' payments of public money \to James B. Eads, his associates or assigns, for past, present or future work at the mouth . of the Mississippi Rivor until further ordered by Con- gro:s. Referred The House bill granting pensions to the soldiers and sailors of the Mexican war .was pas3ed....The Sen- ate then resumed consideration . of the River and Harbor Appropriation bill—the ponding qnestion being on the Hennepin Canal and the Michigan and Illinois Canal amendment. After fur- ther debate the amendment was agreed to—yeas 31, nays 22.... Mr. Allison, from the Committee on Appro- priations, reported back the Sundry Civil bill, with amendments. Ordered printed. Honso Sessions. UOrnDAY.—The Speaker laid oeforo the House the twenty-one veto messages trans- mitted by the 'President yesterday. The first message lvsad was referred without comment to the Committee on invalid Pensions, but tho disposition of the next message vetoing the bill granting a pension to Edwin M. Har- rington consumed more time. Mr. Jackson (Pern.) attacked tho veto policy of the President, who, ho declared, was not ac- tuated by any regard for the worth anil merit of private pension bills. His rea- son for vetoing the bills was not that they were unworthy. His reason was apparent on fhe face of his messages. Ho was in sym- pathy with a party opposed to pension- ing Union soldiers, and he did not propose that any Union soldiers should ho pen- sioned it' he could avoid it. Mr. McMillan (Tenn.)—The President has signed more pri- vate pension bills than any other President in tlif same space of time. Mr. Jackson— And he has vetoed ten times more good ones than all oilier Presidents put together. Mr. Bragg (Wis.) was glal to Hud that at last thore was a man in the Executive chair who had the nerve uud courage to place his ban I upon legislation when he thought it was .Improper, whether it was pen- sion or railroad legislation. The message Was roferrnd' to the Committee on Invalid Pensions. An animated flobato also took place on the message vetoing the granting of a pension tg Catharine McCnrty. which was also referred. 161ST DAY.—Mr. Swinburne (N, T.) sent to the clerk's dosls and had read a letter from Mr. Glass, of Tonnes eo, stating that he- had been paired with Mr. Swinburne on the Bar- tholdi'Statne.amendment, and that had he been prosent he would have voted \no\ ou that proposition Mr. Compton (Md.) submitted a series of resolutions ex- pressing the regret with which the House had heard of the death of Wm. H. Colo, late a Representative from Marylund, and providing for the appointment of a com- miKeo of seven Representatives and throe Senators to superintend the funeral cere- monies. Tho Houso then, as a mark of re- spect to the memory of tho doceas3d, ad- journed. lliSn DAY.—Mr. Grosvouor (Ohio) spoke on the motion to refer .to tho Committee on In- valid Pensions, the message of the President vetoing the bill,granting (^pension to Sally Ann Bradley. The speaker denounced the action of the President. Ho then detailed the facts of the special bill under considera- tion and commented on the fact, as he as- serted that the President had approved the Fits John Porter bill on the very day that he had vetoed the bill granting a pension to Sally Ann Bradley, the mother of four sons, two of whom bad died on the battle-field, and two ot whom were/in the hospital, disabled. Fitz John Porter would go on the pension roll, while Sally Ann Bradley would go to the poor-house, and this was the Government which undertook to say that it was dialing generously and liberally with its soldiers. Mr. Matson (Ind.) remarked in reply that he had just learned that in the Forty-seventh Congress a Repub- lican Commitlaj of the Senate had reported that the woman ought not t o be pensioned, for the same reasons that the President thought she ought not to be pen- sioned Mi - . Long (Mass.) suggested that at that time the woman had a husband living who was in receipt oE a pension. The bill and message were then referred; yeas, 132, nays 111 Various other messages were read and referred until the veto message on tns bill granting a pension to Francis Den- ning was read, when Messrs. Boutelle (Me.), and Brumm (Penn.), made speeches attack- ing the President and the Democratic party. Mr. Curtin defended the President, saying \this vituperation and abuse of the Presi- dent is all wrong.\ The last veto message was one vetoing the Dill granting a pension to Joseph Romiser, and after debate it was re- ferred. 163b DAY.—The Speaker laid before the House a message from the President an- nouncing his disapproval of a bill granting a pension to Daniel B. Ross. Referred to the Committee oh Invalid Pensions..,; .Mfc» Con- ger, from the Committee onjlnvalid pen- sions; submitted reports *6n the President's >ve'bes' of bills granting pension* tovEHza- be:h Luce, and' Catherine Mewarfihy. Ordered printed. Mr. Belinnnt from the; Committee on : Foreign Affairs,' re- pented back a resolution requesting; .the President to transmit t o the House all communications relatingto the imprisonment in Ecuador of Julio Santos, an American citiizen. Adopted Mr. Morrison, from the Way arid Means Committee, reported adversely the Randall Tariff bill, and i t was referrrd to Committee of the Whole. Mr. Breckenridge, from the same committee, reported adversely the bill repealing the tobacco-tax. Committee of the Whole... .The Appropriation Committee reported the FortiftcatioD Appropriation bill. lGiTH DAY.—Tho House went into Com- mittee of the Whole on the Senate amend- ments t > the Legislative Appropriation bill. In neaily every case the lecommendations of the Commutes on Appropriations were agreed to without debate and the amend- ments either concurred or non-concurred in. Tin Penal e amendments increasing from SI,'OJ (o $5,0(0 the salaries of the Commis- sioner < of Pensions and Patents were con- cui'ied in Mr. King introduced a resolution providing for the appoint- ment of a beard consisting of four experts, civilian, and one naval o£- fber to select a suitable form and structure for steel chvJ, unarmed rains of not less than 5,000 tons displacement, with the most im- proved steering gear, and capable oE steam- ing at a speed of not less than eighteen knots an hour. ^ SEVEKE HAIL-ST0EMS. Crops Almost Totally Destroyed— Killed by Lightning. ' Ruiu and desolation mark the course of a hail-storm through the section ten miles southwest of Kankakee, III. The storm moved in a path three to four miles wide,destroying every species of vegetation in itj path. Lux- uriant fields of corn, six feet high, were cut close t > the ground. Timothy and oats were mowed down a? though the harvester had passed tbrou fh them and scores of farmers are raking u p these crops which have never felt the touch of a sickl3. Not only are iheie crop? .cut to pieces by hail, but they are in many cases fa'rly pounded into the ground. On many farms SI would be a big price for the remnants of Ja?t season's /labors. Every window on the north side of the buildings on the ti a sk of the storm is riddled. Hou-es and barns were unroofed and stock killed. A'lam Fritz, in Pilot Township, was struck by lightning and killed. In Essex Miss Kate Shannon was prostrated by a bolt which passed down the chimney o; the house and seriously injured. An electric storm, accompanied by hail and rain, passed through Dixon, III., and vi- cinity, doing great damage to crops of all kinds, especially fruit. Buildings have been blown down in various places throughout the county. JSpwfflt'a Budget, Fort Plain, N. Y., for March, 18S0, siiya: In the multiplicity of medicines placed upon the market, It is sometimes •». oult to distinguibh between tne.morlfcnHonaand the worthless. There are at least two excel- lent remedies widely used, tho oflloionoy of which are unqnostibhod. Wis refer to St. Ja- cobs Gil and Red Star Cough Cure. A CHIOAGIO Jeweler has invented a self-wlnd- Ingwatch. By an arrangement something like the carefully balanced lever of a nedometer.tho watch is wound by the motion of the wearer \vhen walking. A walk of seven minutes will wind the watch to go for forty-two hours, Solloitor of\ Patents, F . O; McCloary, of Washington, D. 0., says the only thing that did him any gpod.when suffering with a,severe cough of several weeks' Btanding, was Red Star Cough Cure, which is purely vegetable and free from opiates and poison. The average London inhabitant eats thirty- two times as much fish as the Berlin person, and Paris, with a population of 3i200,000, uses more fish than all Germany, with a population of A7i00J;000. Where Are You Going? If you have pain in the back, pale and sallow complexion, bilious or sick headache, eruptions on the skin, coatod tongue, sluggish circula- tion, or a hacking cough, you are going into your grave if you do not take, stops to cure yourself. If you are wise you will do this by the use of Dr. Pierce's \Golden Medical Dis- covery,\ compounded of the most efficacious ingredients known to medical science for giv- ing health and strength to the system through the medium of the liver arid blood. OWIKG to the drought, the corn crop of Lou- isiana will ho fifty per cent, less than lastyear, and the oat crop seventy-five per cent, less. Life seems hardly worth the living to-day to many a tired, unhappy, discouraged woman who is suffering from chronic female, weak- ness for which she has been able to find no re- lief. But there is a certain cure for all the painful complaints to which the weaker sex is liable. We refer to Dr. Pierce's \Favorite Prescription,\ to the virtues of which thou- sands of women can testify. As a tonic and nervine it is unsurpassed, All druggists. A HISTORIAN of California sums up the qual- ities of that country as: \All in all, it is a land of solid realities and glittering frauds.\ Sick and bilious headache, and all derange- ments of stomach and bowels, cured by Dr. Pierce's \Pellets\—or anti-bilious granules. 25 cents a vial. No oheap boxes to allow waste of virtues. By druggists. A POLL-TAX of $50 a head is imposed.on all Chinamen entering South Australia. Can Consumption be Cured ? Wo have so often soen fatal results follow the declaration that it can be cured, that W€ have y ^consciously settled down inthobeliel that this disease must necessarily prove fatal. It is true that occasionally a community hai witnessed an isolated case, of what may ap- propriately be termed spontaneous recoverVj but to what combination of favorablo clroum- stances this result wa^ due none have Mthortp been Ipuna citib to detorniirie; *' , \ We liave ,*>w theifccatify'lbE fact to announce that the .'process- .by which nature effect ihia- wonderful change is no longer a mystery to the medical-profession, and that the'changes brought.about in the system under favorable circumstances by intrinsic causes may be made' as certainty.and more expeditiously by the usi of the proper remedy. In other words, nature is imitated and assisted. Tuberculous matter is nothing more or less than nourishment imperfectly organized. Now, if we can procure the organization of this food material so that through tho process of elective affinity it may take Its place in the system, we can cure the disoasa. This is just what Piso's Cure for Consumption does. It arrests at once the progross of the disease by preventing the further supply of tuberculous matter, for while the system is under its in- fluence all nourishment is organized and as- similated. It thus controls cough, expectora- tion, night-sweats, hectic fever, and all other characteristic symptoms of Consumption. Many physicians are now using this medi- cine, and all write that it comes fully up to its recommendations and makes Consumption one of the diseases they can readilycure. The forming stage of a disease is always the most auspicious for treatment. This fact should induce persons to resort to the use of Piso's Cure when the cough is first not'eed, whether it haa a consumptive diathesis for its cause or not, for this remedy cures all kinds of coughs with unequalled facility and promptness. In coughs from a simple cold, two or three doses of the medicine have been found sufficient to remove the trouble. So in all diseases of tho throat and lungs, with symptoms simulating those of Consumption, Piso's Cure is tho only .infal- lible remedy. The following letter recommonding Piso's Cure.for Consumption, is a fair sample, of the certificates.received daily by the proprietor of this medicine: AT.BION, N. Y., Dec. 29,1835. I had a terrible Cough, and two phvsicians said I would never get well. I then went to a drugstore and asko.-l for agood cough medicine. The druggist gave me Piso's Cure, and it has uonomemore good than any thing 1 ever used. Ido not believe I could live withoutfit. LEONORA VERMILYEA. FO B DYSPEPSIA, INDIGESTION, depression of spirits, general debility,in their various forms, also as a preventive against fever and ague ana other intermittent fovers,tiie \Ferro-Phosphor- ated Elixir of Calisaya,\ made by Caswell, Haz- ard & Co.,New York, and sold by all Druggists, is tho best tonic; and for patients recovering from fever or other sickness it has no equal. A Most Liberal Oiler! THE VOLTAIC BELT CO., Marshall, Mich., offer to send their Celebrated VOLTAIC BELTS and Electric Appliances on thirty days' trial to any man affhetod with Norvous Debility, Loss of Vitality, Manhood, &o. Illustrated pamphlet in sealed envelope with full particu- lars, mailed free. Wrilo them at once. No lady should live in perpetual fear, and suffer from the more serious troubles that so often appear, when Dr. Kilmer's COMPLETE FEMALE REMEDY is certain topreventand cure Tumor and Cancer f here. As a hair dressing, Hall's Hair Ronewor haa no equal. Ask your druggistfor it. The only warranted oure for chills and fevei is Ayer's Ague Cure. In from one to twenty minutes, never foils to ro- llove PAIN with one thorough application. No mat- tor how violent oroxcruolntlnst tho pain, tho Rheu- matic, Bedridden, Intlrui, Crippled, KervouB, Neu- rftlBio, or. prostrated with dlionee may suffer, KAB- WAY's BTiADy RELIEF will afford instant case. ' IT* . : BOWEL COMPLAINTS, DYSENTERY, Diarrhoea, Cholera Morbus. „i, t n w J!L5 I i.?,F ow ».™ lnut011 '^'!™ f«ke« Intornnlly, §J™ W>sr to directions; cure Cramps, Spasms, Sour ^SS^lStSSlSSiSlSSS'- collo, Wind in THE TRUE RELIEF. BAvDWAY'S BEADY BELIEF is the olily romorllal agent in vogue that will Instantly atop pdto. It In- stantly relieves and soon cures Headache, whether sick or nervous, Toothache. Neuralgia, Norvousnesa and Sleeplessness. Rheumatism, Lumbago. Pains and Weakness In tho Back, Spine or K dneys, Pains around the Liver, Pleurisy, Swelling of tho Joints. Sprains, Bruises, Eltoa ot Insects, ana Pains ot aU klnta.R-ADWAY'S READY RELIEF will afford iSS medfate'ease.andlts.continued uso for a few days, effect a perment euro., - MALARIA IN ITS VARIOUS FORMS. FEVER AND AGUE. Thore is not a remedial agent in tho world that will cure Fever and Ague and all other Malarious, Bll- lous. Scarlet andother Fevers (aided by RAD WAY'S PILLS) so quick as RASDWAY'S READY RELIEF. Price Fifty Cientg. Sold by Druggists. DR. RAD WAY'S (The Only Genuine) The Great Blood Purifier, For cure of .all clirontc diseases,. Scrofula, Blood TalijtB, Sypbilitfo Complaints, Consumption, Gland- iitar.DJseane, Ulcers, Chronic Htieuniatinin. Eryaip. elas. Kidney, Bladder and Liver Complaints, Dya- P' psia, Affections of theLuiiKs\ and Throat, purlflea the Ulood, rcstof ing'health and vigor. THE SiKnv,. After a few days' use of the Saraapnrlllian, becomes clearand beautiful. Pimples, Blotches, Black Spots and Skin Eruptions are removed; Sored and'Ulcera soon cured. .Tersoris; suffering from Scrofula, Erup- tive Diseases of the eyes, hiouttf; cars,''lejy3, throat* and glands, that have accumulated ana spread,, either from unoured diseases or mercury, may rely upon a cure If the Sarsanarillian is continued a sufficient time -tomake Its Impression on tlw system. Sold by DritsrfffotH. Si per Bottle. f * Qrihecu!i^f>aiJ&^r&^ owel».3Kldnevs. Blazer; Merronet!is«ale«rJioxa ofi Appetite, Headache/ Ooativeness, Indigestion, Bil- iousness,, Fever, Inflammation of the Bowele, Pile* andaUderarigemeutsioftho.IateriiftlVlscBra. Pure- ly vesr table, containine no mercury, minerals or deleterious drugs. Price 2 5 cents per box. Sold by all druggisto, tarSemt a letter stamp toDR.RADWAY «fc GO., No. 3 2 Warren Street, New York, fop \False and True.\ V3E SURE TO GETRADWAY'8. N Y N U-~2> Ladies! Those dull tired looks and feelings speak volumes! This Jnemedy corrects all con ditionB, vestores vigor, anfl vitality and brings back youthful Dloom and beauty. Druggists. Prepared a t Dr. Kilmer T sDis- _ -* ^.FENSAmr, Bfnghamton.N, Y. fejt,y Letters of inquiry answered. ' Si Guuleto Health(SentFreo).. IhATeapoiltlrororaodyforthoahOTodlsearigibylta ' use thoueandoof caaosof tho worst kind and of long fltaadinjc have boen euro d. Indeod.fcootrnnglsmy faith mltsefflcflcy.tlmtlwill aondTWO BOTTLES FREE. together with a VAT tTABI.B TREATISE on this dltou * to any.sonoror. GWt oxpreaa xnd P . O. address; »B. T. A . 8L00UM, J81 JPoarlSt., New York. ** L'.PI'SO'S'..ea.RE: FOR CURES WHERE ALL ELSE FAILS. at Couch Syrup. Tastes good. Use | .in.time. Sold by druggists. . I CONSQM-PTIPN' FACE, HANDS, FEET, and all thatr imperfecUoni. including FftclU, Development, Superfluous \«I>\» Birth Marks, Mole), Wurti, Moth, Freckle*, R»<I Now, Aran, ! BUcV Hearti. Scan. Tittlmr iind their treatment, ^ , Dr. JOHN H. WOODBURY, 37 N. Pearl St. Alb-mv, X. Y. Eit'bM.lijTO. fiend JOc Ibrbook. fisfi'SSIOOTHPOWDER Bleeping Teeth Perfect and GMIIM Healthy, for DYSPJSPStA ft INDI- GESTION. Address J. JL SHELLY.Charlotte, N. O. SURECURE VI A \V* E? IVI *1* C Obtained. Send stamp for MA I C. lM I O Inventor's Guide. J^tmor I UAM. Patent Lawyer; Washington, D. Q. Olios taken the lead fa the sales of that class of remedies, and has given almost universal sattsCic- tion, . - MURPHY BROS,, Paris, Te r ©haswon the favor of thn public and now ranks among the leading Medi* dnesoftheoiltlbin: A. L^SMITH. , Bradford, FA, Sold by-Druggists. Frloe«i:Vwi .AUf.uperleBoo. BOTartobHaiiJqiaokonret. Tri»l»«t - Pr. WARD & CO., MMJISUJfA, KO.