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SCHEDULE OF STAMP DUTIES,

IMPOSED BY ACT OF CONGRESS.

(CORRECTED 1869.)

on

AFFIDAVITS, exempt.

acting as such, for a sum not exceeding $100

.02; exceeding $100, .05. Certificate of record of AGREEMENT OR APPRAISEMENT.

a deed, or other instrument in writing, or of the Agreement or contract other than those men

acknowledgment or proof thereof by attesting tioned in this schedule (or any appraisement), for

witnesses, exempt; certiticates other than these every sheet or piece of paper on which it is

mentioned, .05. written, .05. If more than one agreement or appraisement is written on one sheet of paper, .05 CHARTER PARTY, or any letter or memoranon each. Renewal of agreement, same stamp

dum relating to the charter of any vessel : if the as original instrument.

registered tonnage does not exceed one hundred

and titty tons, $1.00; trom one hundred and tifty BANK CHECKS, DRAFTS, OR ORDERS, to three hundred tons, $3.00; froń three hundred

for any amount, on any bank, banker, or trust to six hundred tous, $5.00; over six hundred company, at sight or deinand, .02; for tons, $10.00. Renewal of charter, same stamp as amount exceeding $10, on any person other than original instrument. a bank, banker, or trust company, at sight or on CIGAR LIGHTS, made in part of wood, wax, demand, .02.

glass, paper, or other materials, in parcels or BILL OF EXCHANGE (foreign), or letter packages containing twenty-five lights or less, of credit, drawn in but payable out of the United

201; in packages of more than twenty-five and States, if drawn singly or otherwise than in a set

not more than fifty, .02; for every additional of three or more - same as inland bills of ex- twenty-five lights, or fraction, .01. change or promissory notes; drawn in sets of CONTRACTS. — Broker's note or memorandum three or more, for every bill of each set, where

of sale of any goods or merchandise, exchange, the sum made payable shall not exceed $100, or the equivalent thereof, in any foreign currency,

real estate, or property of any kind or descrip

tion issued by brokers, or persons acting as such, .02; for every additional $100, or fractional part for each note or memorandum of sale, .10. (See thereof in excess of $100, .02.

SALES and AGREEMENT.) BILL OF EXCHANGE (inland), draft, or CONVEYANCE OR DEED OF GRANT,

order for the payment of any sum of money, not where the consideration or value does not exexceeding 8100, otherwise than at sight or on de ceed $500, .50; from $500 to $1000, $1.00; and for mand, or Promissory Notes (except bank notes every additional $500, or fraction, .50. and checks), or any memorandum, check, re- ENTRY OF GOODS, at Custom House, not! ceipt, or other written or printed evidence of an armount of money to be paid on demand or at a

exceeding in value 8100, 25; not exceeding $500, time designated, for a sum not exceeding $100,

.50; exceeding $500, $1.00; for the withdrawal of .03; for every additional $100, or fractional part

goods from bonded warehouse, .50. in excess of $100, .05.

FRICTION MATCHES, in parcels or packages

of 100 or less, .01; in packages of more than BILL OF LADING, or receipt other than char- 100, and not more than 200, for each parcel or ter party, for goods and merchandise exported to package, .02; and for every additional 100, or fracforeign port, each, .10. (To British No. Am., ex- tional part thereof, .01. For wax tapers, double empt.)

the rates herein imposed upon friction matches. BILL OF SALE. - Bills of sale, by which any FISH, SAUCES, JELLIES, &c. - For and

ship or vessel, or any part thereof shall be con- upon every can, bottle, or other single package, veyed to or vested in any other person or persons,

containing fish (ex. shell-fish), sauces, sirups, prewhen the consideration shall not exceed $500, pared mustard, jams or jellies, contained therein, stamp duty, .50; do., when the consideration and packed or sealed, made, prepared, and sold, exceeds $500, and does not exceed $1000, $1.00; or offered for sale, or removed for consumption exceeding $1000, for every additional amount of in the United States, on or after the first day of $500, or fractional part thereof, .50; personal October, 1866, when such can, bottle, or other property other than ships or vessels, .05.

single package with its contents, shall not exceed BONDS, of indemnity where the money ulti

two pounds in weight, .01; for every additional mately recoverable thereupon is $1000 or less, INSURANCE POLICY, on any life or lives,

pound or fractional part, .01. .50; when in excess of $1000, for every $1000, or fraction, .50; for the duc execution of the du

when the amount insured does not exceed $1000, ties of any office, $1.00; of any description other

.25 ; not exceeding 85000, 50; exceeding $5000, than such as may be required in legal proceed

$1.00; fire, inland, and marine policies, or renewal ings, or used in connection with mortgage deeds,

of the same, premium not exceeding $10, .10; and not otherwise charged in this schedule, .25.

premium not exceeding $50, 25; exceeding $50, Bond of administrator or guardian, where value

.50. Accident insurance policies are exempt. of estate is $1000, or less, exempt; exceeding LEASE, where annual rent is $300 or less, .50; $1000, $1.00.

where the rent exceeds $300, for each additional CERTIFICATES, of measurement or weight

$200, or fraction in excess of $300, .50. Assign

ment of a lease, same stamp as original, and adof animals, wood, coal, or hay, exempt of ditional stamp upon the value or consideration measurement of other articles, .05; of stock in of transfer according to the rates on deeds. any incorporated company, .25; of profits, or any (See CONVEYANCE). certificate or memorandum showing an interest in the property or accumulations of any incorpo- LETTERS TESTAMENTARY, if value of rated company, for an amount not less than $10,

estate does not exceed $1000, exempt; exceeding nor exceeding $50, .10; from $50 to $1000, 25;

$1000, .05. exceeding $1000, for every additional $1000, or MANIFEST FOR ENTRY, or clearance of carfraction, 25. Certificate of damage or otherwise, go of vessel for foreign port, if registered tonnage and all other documents issued by any port war- does not exce three hundred tons, $1.00; froin den or marine surveyor, or person acting as three hundred to six hundred tons, $3.0; exsuch, .25. Certificate of deposit in any bank or ceeding six hundred tons, $5.00. (To Brit. No. bonds, notes not negotiable, and of all her instruReceipts by express companies for the delivery ments the assignments of which are not particularly of any property for transportation are exempt from specified in the foregoing table, should be stamped stamp duty.

MORTGAGE OR PERSONAL BONDS, All official instruments, documents, and papers given as security for the payment of any definite issued by officers of the United States governinent, sum, from $100 to $500, .50 from $500 to $1000, or by the otficers of any State, county, town, or 81.00; for every additional $500, or traction, .50. other municipal corporation, in the exercise of their Assignment or transter of mortgage, same stamp ordinary governmental and municipal functions, as mortgage for amount unpaid.

are exempt. PASSAGE TICKET, by any vessel to a foreign

PENALTIES. port, if of less price than $35, 50; from $35 to $50, Penalty for making, signing, or issuing any $1.00; and for every additional $50, or fraction, instrument, or paper of any kind whatsoever, or for $1.00. (To Brit. No. Am., exempt.)

accepting, negotiating,

or paying, or causing to be PAWNBROKER'S CERTIFICATE, .05.

accepted, negotiated, or paid, any bill of exchange,

draft or order, or promissory note, for the payPLAYING CARDS, for and upon every pack, ment of money, without the same being duly

not exceeding fifty-two cards in number, irre- stamped, and the stamp duly cancelled, with intent spective of price or value, .05.

to evade the law, $50; and the instrument shall be

deemed invalid and of no effect. For paying, nePOWER OF ATTORNEY, to sell or transfer gotiating, or offering in payment, or for receiving

stock, bonds, or scrip; to collect dividends, inter- or taking, in payment any bill of exchange or est, or rent, .25; to vote by proxy at any election order for the payinent of any sum of money, drawn for officers of any incorporated company or soci- or purporting to be drawn in a foreign country, ety, except charitable, religious, or literary soci- but payable in the U.S., without proper stamp, eties or public cemeteries, 10; to seil and convey $200. For selling proprietary medicines, cosmetics, or to rent or lease real estate, $1.00; for any other &c., matches, &c., fish, sauces, jellies, &c., without purpose, .50.

proper stamps, $50 for each offence. For forging PROBATE OF WILL, or Letters of Ad- of stamps or dies, or for using or selling

forged

or counterfeiting stamps or dies, or the impressions ministration, where the estate, undiminished by the debts, does not exceed the value of $1000), stamps, dies, or impressions of such, or for fraudu- | exempt; not exceeding $2000, $1.00; for every instrument or writing, or for fraudulently removing

lently removing a revenue stamp from a stamped additional $1000, or fraction, .50.

the cancelling marks from a revenue stamp which PROTEST OF NOTE, DRAFT, &c., or has been used, or for fraudulently using, selling, or marine protest, .25.

having in one's possession stamps which have been

used, forfeiture of the counterteit stamps and the PROPRIETARY MEDICINES, Hair-Oils, articles on which they are placed, and punish

&c., Periumery, Cosmetics, &c., eacli ment by fine not exceeding $1000, or imprisonment
packet, bottle, or other enclosure, not over 25 cents not exceeding five years, or both.
retail price or value, .01; not over 50 cents, .02;
not over 75 cents, .03; not over one dollar, .04;

GENERAL REMARKS. for every additional 50 cents, or fraction, .02.

Instruments are not to be recorded unless properQUIT-CLAIM DEED, to be stamped as a con- ly stamped and cancelled. veyance, except when given as a release of a mort

No instrument is invalid for the want of the gage by the mortgagee to the mortgagor, in which particular kind of stamps designated, provided a case it is exempt; but if it contains covenants, it legal stamp of equal amount (except stamps apmay be subject as an agreement or contract.

propriat: d to denote duty on proprietary mediRECEIPT. – Receipts for the payment of any cines. &c., cigar lights, &c., canned fish, &c., and sum of money, or for the payment of any debt playing cards

is duly affixed. due, exceeding 820, (not being for satisfaction of

Postage stamps cannot be used as revenue

stamps. any mortgage or judgment, or decree of a court, or by endorsement on any stamp obligation in for denoting any duty imposed by this act, the

In cases where an adhesive stamp shall be used acknowledgment of its fulfilment, all which are exempt,) for each receipt, .02. Provided, That person using or aflixing the same shall write or when more than one signature is affixed to the imprint thereon the initials of his name, and date, same paper, one or more stamps may be affixed (year, month, and day,) upon which the same shall

be attached or used, so that the same may not again thereto, representing the whole amount of stamps required for such signatures. (The term money

be used. includes drafts and other instruments given for

No deed, instrument, document, writing, or the payment of money.) Receipts for the deliv- paper, required by law to be stamped, which has ery of property, exempt.

been signed or issued without being duly stamped,

or with a deficient stamp, nor any copy thereof, SALES.- Bill or memorandum of sale, or con- shall be recorded or admitted, or used as evidence traet for sale of stocks, bonds, gold or silver bul- in any court, until the proper stamp or stampe lion, coin, promissory notes or other securities, shall have been affixed thereto and cancelled. when made by brokers, banks, or bankers, re- The party to whom a document is issued from a quires stamps equal to one cent on every $100, foreign country, or by whom it is to be used, shall, or fraction of $100, of the amount of such sale or before using the same, affix thereon the stamp or contract; when made by a person, firm, or cor- stamps indicating the duty required. poration not paying special tax as broker, bank, Proprietors of cosmetics, medicines, or proprieor banker, and when property is not his or their tary articles, may furnish private dies, and are own, for every $100 of value, .05. A memoran- allowed five per cent. on all purchases of' from $50 dum of sale or contract must be made by the to $500; over $500, ten per cent. seller to the buyer, and the stamps affixed thereto. A waiver of protest or of demand and notice

written upon negotiable paper, and signed by the EXEMPTIONS.

endorser, is an agreement, and requires a five-cent

stamp. No stamp duty shall be required on powers of A mere copy of an instrument is not subject to attorney or any other paper relating to application stamp duty unless it is a certified one - in which for bounties, arrearages of pay, or pensions, or case the certificate should have a five-cent stamp; to the receipt thereof from time to time ; nor on but when an instrument is executed and issued in deposit notes to mutual insurance companies, for duplicate, triplicate, &c., as in the case of a lease of the insurance upon which policies subject to stamp two or more parts, each part has the same legal duties have been or are to be issued; nor on any effect as the other, and each should be stamped as warrant of attorney accompanying a bond or note, an original. when such bond or note shall have been duly A marriage certificate issued by the officiating stamped: and whenever any bond or note shall be clergyman or magistrate to be returned to any offi; secured by a mortgage, but one stamp duty shall cer of a state, county, city, town, or other municipal be required to be placed on such papers, provided corporation, to constitute part of a public record, that the stamp duty placed thereon shall be the requires no stamp; but if it is to be retained by the highest rate required for said instruments, or parties, a five-cent stamp should be affixed. either of them: nor to any endorsement of a nego- Written or printed assignments of agreements, tiable instrument.

as agreements.

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BIRDS AND INSECTS. The attention of the agricultural world has of late been called to the dangers which' threaten it from the unchecked development of certain kinds of destructive insects. In this country to a limited extent, in Europe to a far greater one, the losses in crops have been 80 serious as to create an anxious solicitude, both as to their cause and the remedy. The canker-worm ravages the orchards of New England, New York, and Michigan, Cotton-worms, army-worms, and other forms of destructive caterpillars, inflict great injury upon the crops in the Southern States. The grasshoppers, and the Colorado potato-bug at the West, are already evils of portentous magnitude, and threaten worse results in the not distant future.

In Europe the losses occasioned by different insects, in different countries, are, not unfrequently, national calamities. The cockchafer occurs in such formidable numbers in Central Europe, as to destroy the entire crops over large extents of country, involving losses to the extent of millions of dollars. The losses occasioned in the years 1852, 1853, 1854, and 1855, in the Rothebude forests of eastern Prussia, by the ravages of the larvæ of the nonne, a white nocturnal butterfly, are said to have exceeded eighty millions of thalers. Thousands upon thousands of acres of the best timber land in Europe were utterly ruined, and the loss was nearly total. The cabbage-butterfly of northern Europe is a source of serious injury to a large variety of esculent vegetables. Several varieties of caterpillars ravage the foliage of vineyards and orchard trees, often causing very serious injuries.

It is as important for our farmers, as for those of Europe, to investigate these phenomena. The hidden causes of these occasional excessive swarms of destructive insects, and the means of prevention, are of the deepest interest to all agricul-turists. The calamities that now befall Europe may be repeated here. The light, which science is now seeking to open upon these remarkable occurrences, is as full of suggestions to us, as to the tiller of the soil of Europe,

One of the principal causes of this great increase of insects, has been the great decrease in the number of those birds that are the natural enemies of these kinds of insects. The investigations in France, made with special reference to the value of birds as insect destroyers, demonstrate several very important natural laws, which, when allowed full and harmonious action, preserve an equipoise between the insect and the vegetable world. They show that, during the season of reproduction, all land birds are, without exception, insect eaters; that their young require to be fed with animal food, and that this is almost entirely insects; that the season of reproduction is always coincident with the great abundance and increase of insects; and that our most destructive insects are those which usually have the greatest number of enemies, who, if unmolested, would effectually keep them in check, which man is unable to do. Many birds whose natural food at other times seems to be seeds, at this critical period, unite in a universal warfare upon insects. Thus it appears that the whole feathered tribe becomes the great natural counterpoise between the vegetable and the insect world, otecting the former from the excessive increase of the latter, Where man destroys or diminishes the numbers of certain kinds of birds, the wise equilibrium of nature is overturned. The check upon the development of those kinds of destructive insects upon which those birds feed is removed, and is followed by their great increase,

The destruction of sparrows by the royal edict of the great Frederic of Prussia, and the immediate increase of caterpillars to so great an extent as for two years to destroy the entire crops of small fruit in that kingdom, is a case in point, pertinent and historical, of cause and effect. Our most effectual destroyers of the canker-worm are grakles, cedar-birds, wild pigeons, and other birds of that style; tarie doves and domestic fowl, where we can have their services, are of the highest value. Blue-jay8, golden robins, and cuckoos destroy our tent caterpillars, the first named making a clean sweep of this pest where they can have unrestricted liberty. Bo too our American crow, who so annoys us in our early corn-planting, is our only effectual friend in resisting the increase of our cockchafers, the pestilent, copperheaded muckworm, Gulls keep in subjection the grasshoppers of Utah, where, but for them, crops would be an impossibility. The yellow-headed black bird does the same service to the farmers of Kansas, sweeping them off in their spring immigrations. The Bob-o-link, said to do so much mischief in the Carolina rice fields, is the deadly foe of their cotton-worm, and has been known to render signal services at a critical time, saving the crop where human aid was powerless to avert the impending calamity. In view of the fact that the researches of the French commission have led M. Provost, who has been its guiding spirit, to the conclusion that all birds have their mission of good to agriculture, that none can be spared without just so much loss to the farmer, we of America should be slow to condemn any bird, without positive evidence that it has a record of unmixed evil. We certainly ought not to destroy those birds known to render invaluable services by destroying our worst insect-pests, where the harm they occasionally do us may be prevented without much expense, and without taking their lives.

It is quite time that our more intelligent farmers awake to their own interests. They have much good to hope for from the services of our native birds, and but little to apprehend; birds are the farmer's best friends; treat them as such; do not persecute them, and thus favor the increase of your worst enemies. Remember that every insect-eating bird whose life you take is equivalent to half a million

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THE NEW GAME LAW OF MASSACHUSETTS.

(Approved, May 10, 1869.) SECT. 1. Whoever, between the first day of January and the fifteenth day of August, takes or kills any woodcock, or between the first day of February and the first day of September, takes any ruffed grouse or partridges, or within the respective times aforesaid, sells, buys,

or has in his possession, any of said birds so taken or killed in this Commonwealth or elsewhere, shall forfeit for every such bird twentyfive dollars.

SECT. 2. Whoever, between the first day of April, eighteen hundred and sixtynine, and the first day of November, eighteen hundred and seventy-two, takes or kills any of the birds known as quail, or Virginia partridge, in any way whatsoever, shall forfeit for every such bird the sum of twenty-five dollare. And whoever shall, after the first day of November, eighteen hundred and seventy-two, take or kill any of said birds, except in the months of November and December annually, shall forfeit for every such bird the sum of twenty-five dollars.

SECT. 3. Whoever, at any season of the year, within this State, takes or kills any of the birds called pinnated grouse or heath hens, or sells, buys, or has in his possession any of said birds so killed or taken, shall forfeit for every such bird twenty-five dollars.

SECT. 4. Whoever, between the first day of March and the first day of July, takes or kills any marsh birds or upland plover within this State, shall forfeit for every such bird twenty-five dollars.

SECT. 5. Whoever, between the first day of March and the first day of September, takes or kills any fresh water fowl, shall forfeit for every such bird twenty-five dollars.

SECT. 6. Whoever, at any season of the year, within this State, kills any fresh water fowl or sea fowl, either upon the feeding for roosting grounds of said fowl, shooting from any vessel, boat, or craft, or chases or pursues and captures said fowl upon or from their feeding or roosting grounds in any boat or vessel of any kind whatever, shall forfeit for every such bird so taken or killed, twenty-five dollars.

SECT. 7. Whoever, at any season of the year, takes or kills any undomesticated bird not heretofore mentioned in this act, except snipe, hawks, owls, crows, jays, and gulls, or destroys, or disturbs the eggs or nests of such undomesticated' birds, except the nests or eggs of snipe, hawks, owls, crows, jays, and gulls, shall forfeit twenty-five dollars for each offence; provided, that any person, having first obtained the written consent of the mayor and aldermen of any city, or selectmen of any town, may, in such city or town, take or destroy, for scientific purposes only, such birds and eggs as said written consent may specify.

SECT. 8. Whoever, between the first day of April, eighteen hundred and sixtynine, and the fifteenth day of December, eighteen hundred and seventy-two, and thereafter between the fifteenth day of December and the first day of September, takes or kills any deer, except his own tame deer kept on his own grounds, shali forfeit for every such offence twenty-five dollars.

SECT. 9. The mayor and aldermen and selectmen of the several cities and towns of this Commonwealth shall cause the provisions of the preceding sections to be enforced in their respective places; and all forfeitures accruing under these sections shall be paid, two thirds to the informant or prosecutor, and one third to the city or town where the offence is committed.

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THE PUBLIC CREDIT.

From the Providence Journal. The Public Credit is the strength of the Government. It is army and navy, for it is that without which an army cannot be put on foot or a navy atioat. It is the highest economy, for the public credit, maintained intact, enables the Government to borrow money at low rates, for all needful purposes. It is the public defence, for high public credit so strengthens a nation, that other powers are slow to infrinye upon her interests or to insult her honor. It is what Burke called chivalry, “the cheap defence of nations." To assail it is to assail the Government in its tenderest and most vital part. The money which the Government owes to its bondholders, was loaned to it in its greatest extremity. It was not the contributions of the richi alone. It was largely the savings of the poor and the blood of the brave. Nothing can be more sacred..

Leaving out of consideration all questions of honesty and good faith, it would be the worst possible policy to defraud the men who thus came to the rescue of the imperilled Government. It would add greatly to the danger of future wars, and would make them doubly expensive. Why is it that our bonds to-day, bearing six per cent. interest in gold, sell in the London market for less than the English bonds, which bear three per cent.? Simply, because the purchaser feels certain that the English interest will be paid, and he is alarmed by the mutterings of repudiation, and is afraid that we will not “protect the Government debt." This, it is which makes our debt just twice as burdensome as that of England. If, by one act of stupendous fraud, the Government could repudiate its debt, and relieve itself of all its obligations, it would be the most expensive measure that a government ever adopted; it would expose us to all the dangers of a feeble power, as well as to the reproach of a dishonest one.

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DRY EARTH CLOSETS. The value of human excrement, or night-soil, as a fertilizer, has long been known to every farmer, and especially to every market gardener; but hitherto the methods adopted for economizing it have been rude and imperfect. No proper and adequate means have been employed to render it inoffensive and easy to handle in its application to the soil for the cultivation of crops. Even in China and Japan, where it is saved and applied with the most scrupulous care, no pains are taken to modify or avoid its offensiveness. The absorptive power of common dry

earth, though it had been known,

perhaps, for some years to scientific men, was only recently explained by Prof. Way, the chemist of the Royal Agricultural Society of England, who, by a series of careful experiments, demonstrated it beyond all doubt, and reported its results to the society for publication in its journal. This power consists not only in the absorption of moisture of decaying substances, and of all animal excrement, but likewise of their odor and offensiveness. It is due in part to the clay in its composition, and to decomposed organic matter in soils, especially when dried and sifted, or otherwise rendered fine,

It is a somewhat curious fact that this characteristic of the earth was recognized in the old Mosaic law, as we see in the 12th and 13th verses of the xxiii. Chap. of Deuteronomy, and it is a matter of common observation that instinct teaches animals of the feline race to bury all offensive excrementitious substances.

Now the results of scientific investigation, and a knowledge of this power of absorbing odors, have led to the adoption of what is called the dry earth system in the arrangement of closets, after a plan invented by the Rev. Henry Moule, vicar of Fordington, England. The plan is capable of a variety of modifications, but the idea is in the main due to him. It has been tried in numerous instances, not only in isolated cottages and country houses, but in public barracks and other places much frequented, and has given such satisfaction that it will come into pretty general use in England, and eventually, we hope, in this country.

The apparatus consists of a kind of hopper-shaped reservoir, behind and above the ordinary water-closet seat, for holding a supply of earth, and forming a back; a water-tight vault under the scat, and a mechanical arrangement designed to measure out the requisite amount of dry earth, a pint and a half, and throwing it forward, on pulling a crank not very unlike that of the common water closet, to cover the material and absorb the moisture and odor. It is simple, not expensive, and little liable to get out of order or to be affected by the frost. A common tub or box full of dry earth, and standing by the side of the seat, with a scoop to be used in throwing the earth upon the deposit, would, of course, be a cheap and effective modification of the system, and attended with only trifling expense. This, indeed, is often adopted in prisons and workhouses in England. It may be used in the sick room, to mitigate, if not to overcome entirely, one of the most offensive accompaniments of sickness.

It is easy to see the agricultural importance of this simple system, for by it we might economize and save without inconvenience the most valuable materials on the farm. We might remove the objection to its more frequent use, since the mixed earth and soil, when dried and pulverized, is free from any unpleasant smell, while every particle of fertilizing matter has been retained in a perfectly available form.

It has been found by repeated experiment and by actual experience, that the same earth, after the “soil”' has become decomposed, may, by sifting, be used over again, and that it acts as a deodorizer, like any other organic matter, up to the eighth or tenth time of using. The quantity, therefore, which it would be necessary to dry and store away for use, is not large, and by repeated usage it will become equal to the best Peruvian guano. ,

The advantage of this system to the health of the community would be great, as the exhalations and drainage from common privies are a fertile source of disease, and we hope it will be generally adopted.

STATEMENT OF THE PUBLIC DEBT, SEPT. 1, 1869. Debt bearing interest in coin.

$2,107,936,300 00 Debt bearing interest in lawful money

64,780,000 00 Debt bearing no interest :

Demand and Leg. Ten. Notes $356,114,913 50
Postal and Frac. Cur.

30,711,799 87
Certificates of Gold Deposit 23,047,580 00
Debt on which int. has ceased since maturity. 4,648,486 64
Accrued int. and coup. due, not presented for pay't 38,814,790 30
Total debt.

410,474,293 37

$2,626,653,870 31 Amount in the treasury (cash, sinking fund, purchased bonds and accrued interest thereon).

150,691,368 81 Total debt, less amount in treasury, Sept. 1 .

$2,475,962,501 50

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