FAMOUS DUELS. A Newapaptr Article Thiit Led In Terrible Bloodshed In Florida. An old resident told a sojourner in Florida the following storv of some tamons and sanguinary dnels'tliat occur red there years ago : "In the Seminole war," said Mr. Zabran, evidently am bling down a well worn groove of con versation, " Governor Call, of this State, commanded a crack regiment. One morning he received a note announcing that his wife was quite ill. He at once repaired to her bedside. During his absence a battle waa fought. Shortly afterward an article appeared in the Cfirontcle and Sentinel, of Augusta, in sinuating that Governor Gall had pur posely absented himself from the battle. The paper containing this cruel article reached the camp and wna at once the subject of comment. Lieutenant Au gustus 'Alston determined, in the ab sence of his colonel, to protect his honor, mounted a horse aud plunged through the woods for Augusta. Beaching that city he made his way to the Chronicle office and demanded to know the author of the offensive article. It turned out that it was Governor Reed, of Florida, for a long time a bitter political enemy of Gull's. Lieutenant Alston at once sent him a peremptory challenge. Gov ernor need replied tnat lie would be happy to accommodate Lieutenant Als ton with satisfaction as soon as he had concluded an affair with Lieutenant Williuras, of Gall's staff, who had al ready favored him with a note upon the same subject. Alston thereupon had to content his soul in patience until the af fair with Williams was over. He did not have to wait long. A meeting was soon arranged between Reed and Wil liams, the conditions of which were that they were to fight with bowie knives, until one or the other should bo cut down. At the meeting the men came upon the ground, stripped to their shirts. They advanced until they met each other. They then clasped 'their left hands together in a firm and dead game grasp, standing too to toe. The keen and shining knives were then placed in their right hands. At a signal they dropped perpendicularly along their legs. At the next word they were raised into the air, and then the terrible fenc ing began. It was a brief, strenuous struggle. The long knives cut and gashed and wheezed through the flesh of the combatants and clashed and sparkled against each other, now buried in vital tissue, and now whipped out with a dim, bluesh moisture veiling the blades, nntil at length Lieutenant Williams fell, hacked almost to pieces. Governor Reed escaped without disabling injury. " He then turned his attention to Lieu tenant Alston. Being the challenged party, he had the choice of weapons. He selected a murderous weapon, now happily obsolete, but then of common use and known as a yagar. It was a broad-mouthed, funnel-shaped, smooth bore gun that carried a handful of shot and was warranted to hit everything in the neighborhood of its aim. The duel was a most unfortunate one in its direct and remote results. Captain Eenon was Lieutentant Alston's second. The principals were posted with their backs to each other. As the word wheel ' was called it is claimed that Alston slipped and stumbled. The command, 'Fire one two three !" followed al most immediately, and before he could recover his gun went off into the air. Governor Reed took cool aim, fired promptly at the word, and Lieutenant Alston dropped dead. Thus two gallant young fellows had already fallen in defence of the honor of an absent com rade. But the cruel feud was hardly opened. Colonel Willis Alston, then living in Louisiana, heard of his brother's death aud became impressed with the idea that he had not been fairly killed. He claimed that Governor Reed should have withheld his tire when he saw his brother's gun spring aimless toward the sky. Indeed, it is said that a sister of Lieutenant Alston had the lead taken from her brother's body and a new bul let molded, which she sent to Colouel Willis Alston and demanded that he should come and avenge their brother's death. Colonel Alston came as fast as possible to this hotel. Governor Brown met him as he rode up to the piazza and at once divined his purpose. ' You have come here to challenge Reed ?' he asked. Colonel Alston assented. Governor Brown then begged him to be very deliberate and cool and quiet about it. On the very night he got here he was sitting near th fireplace yonder, with a large cloak around him, and his hend bowed upon his hand. He hail been sitting there only a few moments when some one brushed past him rather roughly. Raising his head he discovered that it was Governor Reed, the very man he bad traveled so far to challenge to deadly combat. In an instant he was ablaze with excitement, and rising, ex claimed : ' You have murdered my brother, sir, and now do you presume to insult me ? Draw and defend your self, air.' As quick as thought Reed drew a six-barrelled pistol and fired, tearing away Alston's third finger, just as the latter pcured a broadside into him from a horseman's pistol, lodging a ball in his sale. The fire was repeated, each man receiving another bullet. Colonel Alston was then out of ammuni tion, having only two horseman's pistols. Throwing back his long cloak, however, he drew his bowie and closed with his antagonist. In a few strokes Governor Reed was cut to the floor, and his op ponent sank in a fainting fit It was in that melee that the bullet hole was made up there. "The two men were taken to their beds, and for several weeks were con fined to their rooms. Colonel Alston was first to recover. He was much em bittered by the contest that had taken place, and said that he intended to kill Governor Reed on sight. A few days afterward he met Governor Reed on the street. He went home and loaded a double-barreled shot gun, putting in one of the barrels, it is said, the bullet that his siBter had moulded with the lead taken from his brother's dead body. Seeking Reed again, he fired at him on sight, tearing away his shoulder with his first barrel aud riddling his heart with the second. This rencontre created the intensest excitement and led to some legal proceeding against Colonel Alston, which, however, did not result in any tbirg. Colonel Alston shortly after this went to Texas. He had been there hut a short time when he heard that Dr. John MoNeil Stewart, a man of promi nence in Brazoria, bad commented dis paragingly upon his affair with Gover nor Reed. Meeting Dr. Stewart upon the prairie a few days after this report had come to his ears, he handed him a letter containing the offensive language and asked him if he was responsible for it. Fending the discussion of the mat ter at issue they fell upon each other with great fury. It appears that Dr. Stewart was armed with a pair of Colt's pistols and Colonel Alston with a bowie knife and shot gun. When found by their friends, Colonel Alston was found lying at the foot of a large tree, with our bullet boles through his body! Btewart was lying near by, with two loads of buckshot in his heart, stark and stiff. Colonel Alston was so badly wounded that he could only be carried in a blanket, swung hammockwise be twoen two men. As he was being borne into the town in this manner his friends were met by a company of armed men, who fired iOO shots into the blanket, killing Colonel Alston instantly." A Damp City. " Ozias Midwinter " says in a letter from the South to the Cincinnati Com mercial, that the dampness of New Or leans upon a wet day impresses one as something phenomenal. You do not know in the North what such daiupnt ss is. It descends from the olouds nnd arises from the soil simultaneously ; it exudes from wood-work j it perspires from stone. It is spectral, mysterious, inexplicable. Strong walls aud atout doors can not keep it from entering; windows and doors can not exclude it. Yon might as well try to lock out a ghost. Bolts of steel and barriers of stone are equally unavailing, and the stone moulders, and the steel is smitten with red leprosy. The chill sweat pour ing down from the walls, soakeB into plank floors, and the cunning of the uauer-haneer is nseless here. Camels become so thoroughly wet with the in visible rain that they utter songhy marshv sounds under the foot. Con- seauentlv few houses are carpeted with' in, and those good folks who insist upon carpets soon learn the -.folly of putting them down on more than one for two of the upper rooms.' Matting'is the substi tute even in the aristocratic houses dry crisp, neat matting, faper-nangers and carpet-layers would starve to death here, If yon even lay a few sheets of writing uaoer noon vour table at nichtfall voti will find them qnite limp and rebellious of ink in the morning. Articles of steel must be carefully laid away in air tight drawers. The garments hung upon the wall, the coverings or beds, the well stretched shirts in the bureau seem as if they had been rained upon ; the stair carpets become like wet turf ; and f mouldy, muuty k smell prevades the at mosphere. Fire is the only remedy possible against .this invasion of moisture and mildew,aud fires are absolutely neces sary in all bedrooms almost all through the winter. During the daytime, in winter months, doors and windows are generally left open, except on exception' ally cold or rainy days ; the fires are al lowed to go out, and the winds are in' vited to come in and keep things drv. But when night falls, chill mists invade the city, and exhalations of dampness rise from the moist earth. This is the case even in clear weather, and Louis ianians would not think of sleeping without a nre in tneir bedrooms to dry tne air and banisn tne spectre of damp ness. HJven in tne neat of the summer the night-news are often heavy like heavy rains. In the ;North you place open vessels of water upon your heating stoves that the warm air may be kepi moist. Here all possible efforts are made to heat the air so that it may hold in suspension as little moisture as possible. For the citv sits upon a marsh, and swamps lie about her crescent boundary. Carpets become an affliction here, Save in the house of the wealthier, wnere continual nres keep them dry. they absorb tne nnliealthiuess of damp ness in the wet season. They fill the house with an odor ,of mustiness that makes one think ' of bacteria and vibriones, and divers other horrors of the microscope. I say " houses of the wealthier, because nere there are few families who can anord to maintain good fire fight all the year round with the swamp dampness. The National Fawn-Shops of Italy. The consul at Florence sends to the department of state, Washington, an interesting sketch of the use and work' ing of the goverment loan institutions (Monte di Pieta) of Italy. First intro duced by Bernardo Da Feltri, towards the close of the fifteenth century, for the relief of the indigent it at once achieved success. The first establishment started with a capital of $2,891, which increased through governmental and private bouu ty to some 38,uuu m 1KJU. Profit in excess of expenses were divided among the pledgers, or distributed to the city poor, t or lour centuries, through po litical and social changes of Italy, the institution has prospered and enlarged its work of aiding the poor, but not en richmg itself at their expense. On the 1st of January, 1870, the op erations of the Monte Di Pieta, of Florence, were greatly enlarged by the opening of a new edifice, especially and completely adapted for tne reception, storage and sale of pledges. It is in charge of two stewards only, responsible under heavy bonds, and appointed for two years. Business is conducted in two sections, each for a term of two years, the first year for the receipt of pledges, and the second for the liquida tion of accounts and sale of unredeemed pledges. Each section is in charge of its steward, so that the receiver of the one year becomes the lender the next, and at the close of the second year his store' rooms are entirely empty, and his bal once sheet prepared for submission to the government, with such accuracy that the deficit for 1870 was but thirty-four francs out of the total business of 9,800, uuu francs. The institution is of great utility to all classes; even the higher social classes resort to it without hesitancy for relief from temporary embarrassment, but the indigent are most especially benefited, the low charges on their pledges not being enough to defray even working expenses, in marked contrast to the ex orbitant profits of unscrupulous private pawnbrokers. The Length of a Minute. Few persons realize how long a minute is. The New York World relates this of a witness who frequently used the ex pression. "several minutes:" "Now. Mr. Small," said the judge, "when you think a minute is gone say now.r I will say now when I wish yon to be gin." Mr. Small nodded his entire com prehension of the plan and looked confi dent of his ability to guess well, " Now," cried the judge, and in a dead silence the court waited. The witness fidgeted abont his chair, and, with a great clock-face staring at him from the wall, stood the suspense as long as he was able, and then cried "Now." "Just twelve seconds," said tiie judge, amid a .chorus of laughter. A Sweet Plant Who was the member of the Agassiz Club victimized with a Christmas pres ent of a " Norway Sensitive Plant ?" a little brown thing stuck in an old flower pot leafless, but promising " sweet per fume, if kept in a warm place and water ed carefully," but which after weeks of watching and waiting was found to be a dead mouse buried head foremost with its tail in the air. Lafayette (Ind.) Courier, AN ARCTIC M AIL, Hew In Mali In Carried In Winter In One Nlxth of the Wnlfrn Cnatlnent-The Lire of the Hlrda-e IDrlvera Thousands af Mile oa know-Shoe. Down upon the ice of the Red river of the North, below the walls of Fort Uarry, writosa Winnipeg ( LSntisli Amer. ca) correspondent of the New York Even ing rout, there began a few days since dog-sledge journey which supplies mail matter to at least one-sixth of the Western continent. There were no swinging-conches, neighing horses, or huge pile of leathern mail bags to be seen : only the every day spectacle of a few dogs, a few turned-np boards, and half a dozen half breeds in their pictur esque winter dress j none of the usual belongings of the civilized mail service. The boat brigades of the summer carry a mail in addition to their freight ; but in the long winters, when the waters are locked hp in ice and the Plains covered with snow, leaving scarcely a landmark discernible by which the day s course may be steered, other appliances take the place of plank bottoms ana sturdy oars men. Every year about the 10th December, when the. landscape is clothed in its winter raiment of white, and the rivers ana lakes are covered with thick ice, there starts from Fort Garry, bound north, thin accumulation of mail matter, known as the Great Nothern Packet Through its agency communication is had with every post in the territory, The appliances for the carriage of this important packet are suow-shoes and sledges. The latter, generally four in number, are drawn by dogs, of which there are four to each sledge, and ia whose trappings considerable taste and ornament are displayed. But thongu gaudy in appearance and decorated with clinking and shining bits of metal, rib bons, file. . tliev are. nevertheless, nentlv- fitting, simple in design, and perfectly adopted to the purpose for which thev are intended. Little bells. ringing clearly, attached to each harness cheer the spirits of men and animals through the long runs of the day. Their drivers, one to each sledge, lightly clad for running alongside their trains, are shod with snow-shoes. Each alternate sledge is loaded with white fish as pro visions for the dogs upon the joarney every animal receiving a single fish at the termination of the day's travel and pemmican and tea for the drivers. There is bound upon each of the re maining sledges a pair of stoutly con structed boxes, measuring about three feet in length by eighteen inches in width and fourteen inches in depth. These wooden mail bags, when properly packed, contain an astonishing amount of printed and written matter. These receptacles being secured upon the sledges, the party sets forth upon its long journey, the dogs running at a reg ular trot from morning till night, aud the drivers accompanying them on foot, at the rate of about forty miles per day. The route taken is generally that follow ed by the boat brigades in the summer, shortened whenever practicable by cross ing points of hind jutting out into the lakes, and striking out overland from bend to bend of the rivers. But the ice forms the general roadway, and the whole length of Lake Winnipeg is tra versed to Norway House at its northern extremity. This post constitutes what may be called a general distributing office the entire packet beiug over hauled and repacked, so as to separate matter going north and west from that going eastward toword Hudson s Bay. Before the institution of mails connect ing points inthe United States with Fort Garry, all excess in the amount of mail matter transmitted through the winter packets was so jealously guarded against the carriage of newspapers, as creating additional weight, and not of vital im portance to the service, was prohibited, with the single exception of an annual file of the Montreal Gazette, forwarded to the headquarters of each department for general perusal. The fifty-two copies of that periodical circulated over the vast country from post to post until, worn out by much service and obscured by much patching and pasting in order to hold them together until yet another reader might obtain a perusal, they finished their course in a lonely station, in latitude sixty-seven degrees thirty minutes north, where, I am credibly Informed, certain ancient fragments cf them are yet to be seen. At this date, however, newspapers, once so rare and highly prized, form the bulk of the con tents of the company's inward-bound packet. In fact, many of the officers are regular subscribers to daily journals which reach them from six months to a year after date of publication; so that, with the exception of the events of the year just passed, the dwellers under the shadow of the pole are as well iuformed as we as to the doings of the great world. The contents of the outward and inward-bound mails of this sparsely settled territory present striking differences in appearanee, which add to the many peculiarities of a peculiar service. The difference lies in the presence in the in ward mail of newspapers, periodicals end other printed matter, bearing a gen eially soiled, postmarked and frayed as pect, contrasting strongly with the pure white envelopes which constitute the sole contents of the outward-bound mail. Occasionally, too, there appears a strangely gotten up parcel of the inner bark of the birch tree doing duty as writing paper. Again, a particularly white and thin parchment will bear news from some isolated friend, who wishes to make his letters memorable in more ways than one. These latter styles of correspondence are, however, but some of the many ways of passing the time in the interior country, wheri a great part of the year is passed in idleness. The runners in charge of the mail packets are generally half-breeds, whose capacity for rapid traveling has been tested. They are not unimportant men either in their own eyes or in the eyes of other people. But, with the excep tion of physical endurance of a steady trot for days at a time, thtir necessary qualifications are not many. In travel, ing they skirt the shores of the water oouises, selecting camping-plaoes for the night in some sheltered thicket, or un der the lee of some projecting bank, to escape the fieroe winds which sweep over the level prairies. The snow is scraped away from a space sufficiently large to admit of a huge fire and the spreading down of blankets by means of a snow-shoe used as a shovel. Dry wood is collected in large quantities, the pemmican and tea served, the sledges turned up to ward off the blasts, aud tho runners, wrapped in a few blankets, re tire for the night. The warmth of fire and blankets is augmented by the vital heat of the dogs, occupying the bed with their masters. A regular episode of the uight, however, consists m the oldest dog of the train howling a dismal soprano solo, in which the remainder join in varying chorus, until stopped by the whip-stocks of the drivers. Before daybreak they are awake, and with a further consumption of pemmican and tea the day's travel begins. They pass through strange scenes tipon their journeys withered woods, through whioh the winds howl and shriek shrilly, and endless level ex panses of snow, the glare of whose un- trained wnitencss blinds tne traveler. The solitude of the vast region is un broken, save when the dog sledge with its peal of silver bells in winter, or the swiftly-passing boat brigade, resonant with the songs of the summer voyageurs, intrudes with its momentary variation on the shriek of the all-penetrating wind, tho ripple of the stream, the roar of the thunder-toned waterfall, or the howl of the wild beasts of the forests the undisturbed possession of the In dian hunter and his prey. From the morning when the packet left the office at Fort Garry to the evening when the solitary dog-train last of many drags the same packet, now reduced to a tiny bundle, into the enclosnre of La Pierre's House, more than one hundred nights have been passed in the great northern forests ; more than three thousand miles have been traversed ; a score of different aog trains nave hauled the packet, Bending off branch dog-packets to the right and left. It was mid-winter when it started : it arrives iust as the sun shine of nv'd-May is beginning to carry a faint whisper of coming spring to the vaiieys ot the Upper Yucon. VICTOR EMMANUEL. Sketch of the l.lfe and Relirn of the Dead Kin ot Ilaly-IIla Knrcenar. ittorio Emmanuele Maria Alberto Eugenio Ferdinando Tonimaso, better known as Victor Emmanuel II.. king of Italy, was born in .Turin. March 14, 1820, and was the oldest son of Carlo Alberto, of Sardinia aud 'Theresa, daughter of the Grand Duke Ferdinand, of Tuscany. He received his early edu cation from the Jesuits. In 1842, being then Duke of Savoy, he married the Archduchess Adelaide, of Austria, and six years later took the field with his father in the war against his wife's kin dred. At the battle of Goito he was wounded, and at Novara won great ad miration by his gallantry. The latter battle resulted disastrously to the Italians ; and Charles Albert, believing that his son's matrimonial alliance would be of service in treating with the conquering general, abdicated the throne. Victor Emmanuel surrounded himself at the beginning of his reign with able ministers, including Cavonr and D'Azeglio, who gave him aid in his diplomatic negotiations with other sovereigns and in quelling the spirit of insurrection that had begun to show itself at home. He began his reign under the most unfavorable auspices. He had to overcome the consequences of a disastrous war with Austria, to sub due faction, and to preserve tho const i- tntion, to aunul which, it was said, Austria attempted to bribe him with the offer of Parma, by which his troops became the comrades of the allied armies in the Crimea. The same year he paid a visit to the British court, and received an enthusiastic reception from the English people. His daughter, the Princess Clothi'.de, was given in marriage to Prince Napoleon, cousin of the late Emperor of the French. In 1859, after a series of sanguinary battles with Austria, in which the Austrians were defeated by the allied French and Sardinian troops, Austrian power was driven from Lombardy, which stato was annexed to the Sardinian crown. He concluded with England a treaty of commerce, and obtained a treaty of peace from Austria upon comparatively easy terms. In 1855 his monarchy acquired addi tional consideration through the conven tion signed with England nnd France, and other important states of the Italian peninsula voted for their annex ation to the ret of Italy which acknowl edged the rule of the Sardinian monarch. After the annexation of these provinces to his crown, Victor Emmanuel assumed the title of King of Italy. In 18GG, after the " Seven weeks' war," Venice was added to the Italian dominions, and in 1870 the Papal States were incorpor ated in his dominions, thus bringing about that unification of Italy, for which the Italians had long struggled for, and which we see to-day. In 1871 Victor Emmanuel moved his capital from Florence to Rome, and took up his residence in the Inomial palace. The king's first wife dying in 1855 he afterwards contracted a' morgauatio marriage with Rosa Vercellana, whom he made Countess of Miraflore. Tho reign of Victor Emmanuel was very eventful. He possessed a stubborn, iron will, and was noted for his personal bravery. He was regarded as a man of small mental capacity, however. He had strong friends and equally strong enemies. He leaves two sons and two daughters. His eldest son, Umberto, Prince of Piedmont, is his successor. He was born in 1844, and is consequent ly thirty-three years of age. lie was a major-general in the Italian army, and is regarded as a man of independent mind. It is thought, by persons who know his purposes best, that any modi fication of his father's policy he may make will be in the anti-clerical interest. He was married April 22, 1868, to his cousin, Princess Margarita, of Genoa. Prince Amadeus, Victor Emmanuel's second son, was King of Spain from December, 1870, till February, 1873, and is now living in retirement in Italy. Pia, the second daughter, is the present yueen of Portugal. Victor Emmanuel's fatal illness as sumed a form at first which caused no especial alarm, as he had often suffered similar attacks and rallied speedily, llis extreme corpulency made mm a victim of many disorders which men of lesser habit escape. It was necessary to bleed him freely at times, and his fondness foe hunting and other open air sports were encouraged by his physicians as a necessity of his peculiar constitution. . I)lnea.e I.mwi Anaer. Like an ill wind, aud c&xnot be mastered too early. What is a trifling attack of sickness to-day, may, if unattended to, become a seri ous case in a week. Hmall ailments tuould be nipped in the bud before they blossom into full blown maladies. If this advice were at tended to, many a heavy bill for medical at tendance might be avoided. When the liver is disordered, the stomach foul, Ihe bowels obstructed, or the nerves disturbed, resort should at once be bad to that supreme remedy, Eostetter'a Stomach Bitters, a few dose of which will restore healthy action and put the system in perfect order. It is a wise precau tion to keep this iQoomparable'preventive in .VA tiAnan a.nAA . ..1.....1... UU 11 wo uuum iiuue iv i.uov.1 witu umivaiiet. promptitude, disorders which breed others far more dangerous, and in their latest dovelop- luouu in lueiuseives oiien xaiai. Caution. We caution onr readers to beware of diphtheria, pneumonia influenza, bronchitis. congestion of the lungs, coughs and colds at this season of the year. Get a bottle of John sou's Anodyne liniment and keep it ready for Instant use. It may save your life. It has avea mousanaa. The constantly increasing sale of Burnett's Cologne, confirms the opinion of the. best Judges, that it is equal, if not superior, to any domestic or foreign. It also received the hlgu- esi awara at the Centennial Exhibition, .... .MI"rablo Being is one that is fihoas. Get from your druggist a package of ftuhk's Irish Tea. Pries Mot Honor In III Own- Land. Rays Comelv in his recently lasted wrrk, Toe Hietory of Sew York State, ' The dy has passed when the benefuctnrs of humanity were allowed lo live in ign minions povertytheir sacrifice, their labors, onreoompensed. To day, the beD.ef.ct ts of the prcple the men who devote th-ir lives and energies to the Interests of bomaniiy thoe ara the m n whom tha world delights to honor, and whom itrewardswith princely fortunes. As an anient worker for the welfare of his fellow men, Dr. B, V. P erce h-a won their warmest sympathy and e teem.- While seeking to be their servant only, he has become a prince among them. Yet the immense fortur.e lavished upon aim by a generous people he hoards not, but invests in the erection and establishment of institutions directly oontribntive to the publ'O good, the people thus realizing. In their liberal patron age, a new meaning of that beautif"! Oriental custom of oantirg bread upon the waters. Noted in both public and private life for his unswerving integri y and all those sterling virtues that ennoble manhood, Dr. P erce ranks high among the few men, whose names the Empire State is jastly prond to inscribe npon her roll of honor. Ambitions, yet movd bj an mbition strictly amenable to the most dis criminating and well-balacoed Judgment, his future career promise to le one of unparallel ed activity and usefulness, ably snppleraent ng the work he has alraady accomplished, by a life at once noble in effort, enviable in its grand results." While Dr. Pierce's genius and energy have won for him so enviable a position un the records of a cation, having been elected Senator by an overwhelming majority, his Jnstly celebrated household remedies have ?;in d for him a yf t more desirable place in he hearts of a ereatfnl people. His Go don Medical Discovery and Favorite Prescription have brought health and happiness to ten thousand households. Women dispute about other matters, but all agree on the merits of Dooley's Yeast Powder as par excellence the best of all. Grocers throughout the country keep it, and find it gives supreme satisfaction. By using it the housewife is sure of delicious bread, runk, rolls, biscuit, buckwheat cakes and all the deli cacies made from flour. CHEW The Celebrated "Matobxiss" Wood Tag Plug Tobacco. TBS PtOHKES TOBAOOO OOMPAKT, Mew York, Boston, and Chicago ' As Ounce or Prkvention, Etc." Sheri dan's Cavalry Condition Powders will positively prevont all ordinary diseases common to horses, cattle, sheep hogB and fowls, besides con stantly improving them in appearance and in value. The Greatest Discovery of the Ase is Dr Tobiu' celebrated Venetian Liniment ! 30 rears before the public, and warranted to enre; Diarrhea, Dye entery, Oolio, and epaamfl. taken Internalljr ; and Croup. Obronio Rheumatiam, Sore Throats, Gate, Brniiel, Oil Sores and Paina in the Limb., Back and Cheat, externally It has never failed. No family will ever be without it after onoe airlnu it a fair trial. Prtoe 40 ornts. Dr. TOBIAS' VENETIAN HORSE LINIMENT, in Pint Bottlei, at One Dollar, is warranted superior to any other, or NO PAY, for the oure of Oolie, Cute, Bruises, Old Soma, eto. Sold by all DrucgiaU. Depot-lO Park Place. New York. Forty years of anccess ia sufficient evidence of the value ot Bohenck'i Pulmonic Syrup aa a oure for Consumption Coughs, Colds, Hoarseness, Sore Throat. It contains no opium ; ia pleasant to the taste. For aale by all Druffsiata. The markets, aaw iobz. Beef Cattle Native G9V W Texas and uneroae. ut ( uv MUohOows .0 00 (0.70 30 Boss Live. OtHW 01 IB meseea Bheep. Lambs, C5 08 06V ia, udhod miauling. ..,.. 11H Floor Western Good to tmoloe. . s eo Oi, t CO State Good to (Jholoe Buckwheat, per cwt as s 1 40 , 1 81 (g, 9 21 t. 2 60 b I 41 1 81 Wheat Red Weatern No. a Milwaukee. Rye State Barley State. .., 74 75 7 cam yuan C8 70 f5 88 6 46 Bucawnoat Oats Mixed Woatrn Oorn Mixed Weatern 37 (s a Kfoi 66 r flay, per owt.., Btra-x. per owt, 40 & 11 C4 none w's 02 uetu ....vo-e 18 Pork Mess ..It 10 tall 60 Lard City Mearq 0fXC 08! I-ian -Mackerel, No. 1, new 18 00 !l 00 " ko. J, new 10 w (j i uu Dry Cod, per owt 6 6' (a. 6 75 Berrlui;, Scaled, per box ... . 17 tA 13 Patrolenm Ornde ..OW&OtX Refined. wool oaiiroruia rieece. . 30 (7 25 80 c 84 44 (,, 49 41 C 44 80 ijt, 87 20 (i, 21 20 (0 12 (a) 16 12 & 13 10 vi 11 09 10 22 ( 23 (80 (g 8 00 1 83 1 42 i 4 65 31 ,4 81 78 Ci CO 82 (S 83 80 81 Texas " .. Australian " .. Dnt or State, Westerr -Choice .... Weateru (iood U Prima,. State Skimmed Weatern' Etfga State and Pennsylvania. BUFFALO. Oorn Mixed. Oats Bye... Barley Barley Malt . PHILADELPHIA. -Extra,... . Beef Oattl Sheep 07X Co 64 C8 U6X 0SH nogs ureas ea Floor Pennsylvania Extra, Wheat-Bed Western....... Rye 08 T 12 1 62 66 60 60 Ot T 26 Ca 1 63 of. (7 Oorn Yellow. 61 61 94 Mixed. v.h mum , .... Petroleum Ornde OgifOuW C2 Befined, 82 (3 21 IS 81 (9 11 n ooi uoiorauo. at 81 4) Texas California, BOSTON. Beef Cattle C (S. 08 Sheep WXi l7fc Hogs na i 9V noor Wisconsin ana uinnesota.. I II a 7 76 Oorn Mixed , 66 (A 60 Oata 43 id. (IV Wool Ohio and Pennsylvania XX. 68 oi. f uauiornia rail 46 f 61 WAIBBTOWa. atASS. Beef Cattle Poor to Oboloa 6 60 ,a a so Bheep 7 00 Of, 1 76 Lenibs .. 7 (10 m, np Nnfeiy lolCNtand fre. Don't spill, spoil pens, or soil fingers. Write American Brok Kxchunre, N. Y. EYE It EMTOK E KM better than spectacles The beat reduced to jt I. Circulars free. Addreaa Bai 78H. New York. CLOCKS E. INC4KAHA.1I tfc '0.H ara luperior la design and not equal lea in quality, or as time keepers. Ask pour Jeweler foi them. Manufactory Bristol. Ot. THE NEW YORK Commercial Advertiser. 89; six montha, 4.50; three months, Mg.ii5; one month. 75 centa. Weeklr, one rear, tj I ; six months, SO oenta. Bpeoi men numbers sent on application. An extra oopj to Club Agenta for clob of ten ; the Dallv forclnb of thirtr. The Commercial Advertiser ia the best Repub lican paper published in this oountrr. Ita Weeklr edition is unsurpassed. Special terms to Agenta. ah letters euoum ne sent to HUU J. HABT1NUH, 1 20 Fulton St., N. Y. City. IMPORTANT Clerks, salesmen, foremen, I III I VII I nil I . etc., in all departmenta of labor, who are nnemnloved. or those who desire lo better their positions, in any part of the United States, at their own business, shonld send their addrets (incloainR slanvp) to the U. 8. PROTECTIVE AGENCY, Weat Killlnglr, Conn. (All oommunioa- iiuua aineiiy counueuuai). AN EXCELLENT MEDICINE. SPBINQFrKLn, O., Feb. , 1W. This Is to certify that I have need VRGKTIN R, manu factured by U. R. Btevens, Boston, Mass., for Kbeunia twu and General Prostration of the Nervous System, witn good suooess. I reeommenq, vnuitiMisn. as an xctiUnt MMJicinfL for such oomplaiuta. Yours very trot tt'W. VANDKGIMFT. Yegciliic ! Hold by AH lrartf. "The Beet Polish in the World." t mmmm NAT ORE'S REMEDY. "N Th 6"CAT Bioon PuwncrVr w - - -Maw Know A new Medical Treatise mTwt Botckcb or Lrrs, on SkiJ PRF.SERVATIOn," a book fol THYSELF every man. Price 91, eon by mail. Fifty orirtn.l preeortp, tions,either one of whioh woru) ra tiroes the price of tba book. Oold. Medal awarded Ihe author. The Boston llrrald says: " ' he Kclenee of s: I'hn Kcleti HEAL ,ife is beyond all onmparuon tie most eitraordinnry work en Phyloloiry erer published." Fllus. Pamphlet . 'M f ree. A1 s THYSELF PR. W H. PARKER, N. alfineh Street, Bos on, Ma Gold lines anil LanOs Goal COLD MINKS AND LANDS GOAL SILVER SOLD. OIL LEAD COMPANIES ORGANIZED. STONE IRON MINING AGENCY, COPPER MARBLE Itoe 8. SEVENTH STREET, LIME COAL PHIT.Anr.LPHIA. MIOA MARL sav A. H. WYMAN St CO. GYPSUM LOVERING'S NEW MILLION DOLLAR BOOK SALE. Tht 4rnnilfat nnb Hnli tli Wrrld aver MW. J2-;(),000 in Pranpnts to ihe buyem. Your choice of A M llion Hplendid Bonks for One llallnr Knrh and mi Klmniit rrrnrnt with rvrrv Book, inoludinn . . u"" pr naioDea ana oiner mrKnirt AfticlflS rill frpu. If you want it Piano or Watch Irse, send for "OataloRua1 of Hale. AridrpM. nnn A. V. MtVf-.ltINC?, 3ff Washington Street, Boston, Mum. The Bret True without metal nprmfra ever invented. no a urn Dug eiatm 01 ; tain radical enre. bat a S antee oi a oomfortabli enre and aansraotorr aDoh- nfl. We will take back and tay fall tfrire for all that do not suit. Price, flingle, like cut, JM ; for both sidei, $U. Sent by mail, post-paid, on receipt of price. N. B. Thia Truss WILL cure more Ruptures than any of those for which eitraYasaiit claims are made. Circulars free. POaUJCUOY TllIJHH CO., , . 74Q Hroadway. New York. Dr. Warner's Health Corset, witn Skirt supporter ana Belf Adjusting Fads. I'lipqunlrd for Bennty, Wtjlf nnd Comfort. APPROVED BT ALL PHYSICIANS For Sale 6 LmUg Merrhant. RnmDlns. anv size, br mail. In Satteen. $1.641 ; Contil. (1.76: Nursing Ooraet, misses' i;orset,ll.w. AGENTS WANTED. WARNER IIRO'M. 351 llrnndwnr, N. Y. Cough, Cold, or Sore Throat. Becmtrea Immediate attention, aa necleol oftentimea results In some Incurablo X5inr disease. BROWN'S BRONCHIAL TPCCHES are a simple remedy, and will almost in variably give immediate relief. SOLD BY ALL CHEMISTS and dealers in medicines. POND'S EXTRACT CATARRH. Voiul'" Extract Is nearly a Spe cific lor thin disease. It can hardly be ex cehed. even in old and nbntinate canea Ihe reliel is bo prompt that no one who has ever triod it will be without it. CIIAFPEI) tfAMIS AMI FACE.-Pond'a Fjrtrni't Hlimud be in every family this lxnitfU weather. It removes the soreness and romrhneBR, and softena and Ileal the skin tiromntlv. RHEUMATISM. During severe and changeable wcainer, no one Biiujeci to KUoumnuc Puius should be ono day without Pond vainn ..-l. ;..K i-.n 1 MORE IXNi;:-. CONSVJIPTioN, COllfjllS, Oi,I)S. Tina cold w.-athor trioa the l.uiiKi aorely. Have Pond's Extract on huml always. It relieves the palu aud euros thp clisiuifto. CIIU.ULAINM will be promptly relieved and ultimately cured uy lmtlilnsr the afflicted Mirts with l'nml'H Rvlrnn. FROSTEIi LIMIii-l.-Poufl'ii Ext rnt-t Invnria bly relievos the pain and nuuliy Cnren, HOKE THROAT, (IISV, INFLAMED TONSILS AM AIR PAriSAUl'! lire promptly cured by the uao of I'oud'n r-.inin, ii never miiH. niSTOItl nml I'hps of Pond's) Extract, i ... LM''l,p't"rm'eut free m application! I'OXI)'! SXTIIACT CO., H BInldcn haul New 1 i:rk. fciiiM by DriwnstB. IRON IN THE BLOOD Is Nature's Own Vitalizerl THE PERUVIAN SYRUP THE PERUVIAN STRUP A protected solution of the Protoxide of Iron, is so c bined as to have the character of an aliment, aa easily digested and assimilated with the blood aa the simplest food. It increases the quantity of Nat are's own Vitalis ing Agent Iron in the Blood, and cure a thousand ilia, imply by Toning up. Invigorating and Vitalising the system. The enriched and vitalized blood permeates very part of the body, repairing damages and waste, searching out morbid secretions and leaving nothing for diseaseto feed npon. For a Spring Medicine It has no equal, Stimulating without reaction, it effect are fzbhanent, differing in this respect from all Alcoholic Toniee. PERUVIAN STRUP PERUVIAN SIRUP CURES Dyspepsia, Debility, Liver Complaint, Dropsy, Chronic Diarrhea, Boils, Nervous Affections, Chills and Pevers, Humors, Loss of Constitutional Vigor, Female Complaints, Etc. From a Well-Known Writer: From Mrs. Marr Francis, wall known as " Margaret Blount." Briohthank, Woodstock, Vt, Oct. t, 1K. 8ETB W. Fowls A KrtKn, Gcntlemrn Two lours exo I beaan to lake the PERU VIAN hVHIJP. I tu in a languid. halLaliva state, through inaipient dlsDensia, a.nd defective circulation of theTilood. Three bottltxof the PERUVIAN 81 HUP Chanced thlt to arlowinv. houndin hearth. I have a fine appetite, sleep soundly and can walk fire miles Nn. wuuuui. resnnjc, or ousy mraeii ouioi aoora all day long without fatigue. A lady oouaiurwhu resides with me, took the Byrap dunnc her recovery from eerioua illness of some weeks, nhe has been an invalid for years. Five bottles of the Syrup have so built up her sysUm that she now eata quite heartily, sleeps well and can walk three miles (in fine weather) without fatigue. I ooneider the medi cine so valuable to peraona of sedentary pureuite, or to those who sutler from languor or low spirit a, that 1 relate thia periMmal experience of ita etlecta to yon, leaving I.. ,uv wua. uw run ' m. ui my leiwr. a' oure. very ruDMOtluilv. MARY FRAN 018. PERUVIAN STRUT PERUVIAN STRUP From Chas. H. Colgate. Esq., Of the firm of Colgate A Co., Manufacturers of Flavor- WSJ MMWU, a 1 SUOaWOBS Dire, OOStCBa. Somebvili.1i, Mate., Deo. f ,1871 Uuaii. Beth W. Fowls A Kns : ' ' &ntfm Laaat Bprin my little daughter, aged five, became very much emaciated with loss of appetite, ana great prostrationof strength, so much so that we wtue obliged to take her out of school. This continued through the sumu.tr, and oaused as much anxiety. Atter trying various remedies without deriving any benefit our family plusioian reoommended the use of PERUVIAN BY It U P. After uoing it one week we saw marked improvement in the child's con dition, and la a month she was rapidly gaining health and strensth, her appetite being excellent. At this date she is perfectly well, with round, plump cheeks and healthy color, and is again attending school regu larly. 1 oonsider her rt-stortttion to health entirely due to the PERUVIAN BY it UP, end leal that 1 oaniiot too frig h iw reowiumonii it aa a tonie. Very gratefully yours. ' CHAJi, Ua COLGATE. 1 PERUVIAN STRUP , PERUVIAN STRUP laprepareaby BETH W. FOWXE cfc HONS, Boatew, a4 said by stealers caaarmliy. a l aaa ax. I SHI 2 RrKTrS." TRlTOAH5 nr own town. Term" "i'.l". . - 1 S. T Mltflt fl n , . ifTT CO . rvrtiana, UUH3 Gnt WMtont Oon wowfi""' - ) . . im.TK CO.. Ceico, 11. PIANOS Retail P mlV,8:i Parlor br,.,prioe W3 4 O onl raRjr DaniKL F. BeattY, Waahinaton, N.J. WVU Address JAV TtHONHON. Detroit, Mien rraaC3UlJAddreaaJ.WoaTaa.0o. Bt.Lmila,Mo. SWINDLERS C" . .i.vrBTisr.ns for detnuJint th. puhlie EXPOSED. "WATiTStlljrT, fr DETEC.Tiyfe4.nJ . W J." X fX. - V . , nin 1-s.nt. A MrMf. P lib 1 A in cr Iran rlmlnul Omcttcer, riiichatlajl,, WORK FOR ALL In their own localities, eanvaaelna; for tha Flrrnlna Vlxltnr. (enlarged) Weeklr and Monthly. l.nrgMl Pnp-r In tne t sns, witn mum morn ua T Bier Commissions to Aaents. Terms and Ootflt Free). Address P. O. VIC'KKRY. Anannta. itlwlnn. . $10 to $25 A DAY SURE made B Airenta sellinaourObromoev Crayons, Pioture and Uhre mo Cards. IMS samples, worth fHi, sent, noet-oetd, n. sa finntii. Illnstrated va.ilo(rn free. J. H. BUFFORD'pJ HONS, ' ..ton. fKsUhllshed 1U BOSTON WEEKLY TRAHSCWPT The best family newspaper published ; euiht page ; nrtr jU onlumna reading. ! Trme 2 oer annom: elaba of eleTen, lo pf annum in 'tlwnot. ,. amia ISflB THE WHOLE LOT, Th.l Sol. unit cheated me out of NSO, clean, for t eonld ha.a bonxht a better Five-Ton Waion Soale for S50, on trial, freight paid to my own door, of JONES OK P.INGHAMTOX, Binnliamton. N. Y. - HQSPHO-NUTRITINE. The best vitalizing Tonlo, Believing Mental and Physical prostration; NERVOUSNESS, DKBIUT4. rEHALI WSAKRBSB, And all Impairments oi jsnua and Nerve Byatem, Drussuu. Depot, S Piatt Bt-.a.. Read tlie. IHIGAGQ I EDGER A laire IH-Cnlumn Fnmllr Pnper. only fl.oO per tiik i.rimmt. tiiiemro, How, When, Where, ToGetaFarm. Bend for our Catalogues. A. H. WYMAN & CO., aoa sovTir sei'ejth street PHILADELPHIA. irV.TilP'H HIIIIITW. KEKP'S Patent Par!lv-mde Dress Sbirta, best qoall ty, only plain seams to ftoish, 6 for 17. KKKP'8 Custom Shirts to meaaure, best qoahtr.e to IP, delivered free. GnarHntoed perfectly satisfactory. Undershirts and Drawers, best quality, Jl.w) eaoh, WhitA OTamiAl ITndnrvests. beet ouality. Sl.W each. VOanton Flannel Vests A Drawers, el. heavy, 75o. eenr 1 willed oillc uronrellas, paraaon iraraes toencu. Best Gingham, patent protected ribs, fl each. Oirculsrs and saiiiolea mailed free, on apphenr it Sbirtsonly.deliTered free. KICKP MANU FACTUM INQ JOMPAWy, l(j.nO l7 aiercer oirem. ixpit inn, thrilling history AUtnia vvAnicu i of tie war wit CRAZY "l-r, BULL tattles ot the Hi Horn and Tkrry'R nmrch to his r scttfi. Mountain Advrnti:rr, and perils of Fnon tibk Life. 6tHl pilars of w mdnrful romancn and deep interest. Finely ilhifltrnted, and sells nt sight. Buyers terms, address COLUMBIAN BOOK CO., Hartford.Ct, ir plaaKefl. Agents makr monf.y. ror extraorainarj Ae-rnts also wanted for a standard work or imo pages. A copy to canvass with sent, prepaid, for iBILjifK P AGENTS WANTED FOR THE ICTORIA3L, HISTORY of the U.S, Than arraMfr. Inrnraat in thm thHHtnff tiiatorv of Onr ftonn try makes this the fafltent.se! tinn hook ever published IX ouiiuiinB Q"r into iiiowjri ji ruitri.viii)(i ins I 120 page. It bpIIs at sight. Hond for our eitra terras to Agents and see why it sells faster than any other book. Address. NATIONAL. PUKLISHINO UU., x'h.ladelph.a. Ia EVERETT HOUSE, Fronting: Union Squaie NEW YORK. Finest Location in the City. European Plan-Restaurant Dnsnrpassei KKRXEK Jt WF. A VKR, Proprietor BABBITT'S TOILET SOAP. Pi UnrlvalUI for the Toilet aoti tli Bath. Tim artificial and drctptW odors to oovttr comtntAi and dajleWrlOU tDfTtdt' oU. A fUr y f ot rttntific Hiriieant ths iDaniitftctBtr ef . T. BaMiU'i B9 omp bai MrfcctM ind nstw oflt-r lo tbt Kblle The FINEST TOILET SOAP In the Werio. iV tA yurtti 9ctbit mil ud in iU tMt-.vr. Worib Un lTut4 It coil to vary osotbr and latully lDCurUatlm. Samp. bos, voDUInlnft S cskm of t om. saca, wut frttt to say adW dmtea mript oi V onU. Addmt a is 11 tat In tha yurvtttrw lt hnt aifi Fflusl. Be TiBABB TT. NeW TOMC City, wssm. couNTERaTformg0nt&aCk MAMASAFF&SCMECO. 365 BROAD WAY. NY. THE $5 tO $20 C'STINSoTiCoVni' . (intlH and vJT JkJLs i coirs 'Sii'rsJi MAII GOOD OLD STAHD-DY. Mexican Mustang !Liniment FOR MAN AND BEAST. EaTiausmm 85 Yeune. Always snree. always aadr. Always handy. Has new yet tailed, t Atria stfluoM aaee tl ii. Tha whole world approvee tha glortoasld Mnatanc tha Beat and Cheapest Liniment InsxiaUnoa. U5 oanta a bottia. Tha al oaten Liniment soreewhen nothins else will. BOLD BT ALL MKBHIIKI VFNngRK Sandal-Wood A positive remedy tor all diseases nf '.tha Kidneys Bladder and'Urlnarj Ora-ans; also good in Drep. aleol Complaint.. It never prodooea etakaaea, certain and speady3a italaotloo. It la faaf snpwj:. all other semadiea, Bixtf oapaolea ears In. six a a (b daye. Ha ethec wiedinine ma do thia. - Mew.ra al Ianltatlsaa, be, etrlag to Its (Ta anoesss.anany hat been oflwed ; aom are moat danar ooa, oaoaina piiea, etc tDCNDAa) DICK V tlO.'Si SanwiM aV ta anlaas tow Oil 9 anwil.lis d asM ai all dr staraa, a or Irtuiar sr aa soaaetaaiawdl aTeealer aSraat, Jv Fork. H VNU L