The Tridli of Chinese School Children. A class of thirty Chinese Sunday school olioiiri winch has been lornud in Cmcinrmii hold a Cliilstmng temivm One of ilie f.iitnrc of tlir evening wn fin address by Chan Pon Tip, n iteiiolrir. in which hn thus pointed oil', how hrd a thine union to school is in China: " We have more le'lers in the alphabu in our language thnn you could count, iut y nse from 3 01,0 t0 3 60o tn' i V rt0 not commence to learn the alphabet first, hut learn it as we o along in our reading. The first tiring we Biufly is to read Confucius, our re ligion. The children who first start to ecbool take but very few lessons from Conluclus. They are instructed by their icnuin in now 10 ociiave ana wnat they oujrur, to do tor tlieir parents, and how to pay pood respects to strangers. lliev must hnw onri call a fltrnnirnr a tuanhaiti ti.. v ,. j iui I lie name of teacher is held with great re- bi,. xnaj scuouiteacner lias full charge of the children, and the parents have very little to do with them after lucjr uuiumtncu iu atiena tne Softool. The tencitipi acou t.ha nlillHA w,.n -"w 1 UJUi0 auu SO underfltflnoii t.hpm hot tor enj a. them in the wrong, so they can correct mem ucLLr tuna vueir parents. Alter the first six months they begin to study ConJuciuf, and they study until they got through the lour Kings. Perhaps the r.hiMrun pun rpt. ihi.iiii r t :.. - and the four Kings in three or four jctun. iucn iuey go ro college, it they can afford it. The four Kings are written by the disciples of Confucius; he had icuij-nvu, wuere (jurist naa twelve. You can never get thtoutth colloe un til von 111 P. llllfl OH nlUnaM If .. i . want to become an olttjer you have to leave coIIpitp. "it is much harder for us to goto ov-uuuj nucu we are mwe. wo Have to be in school in the. we cau see to read, and when the teacher comes we have to recite our lesson, and if we do not know it, we cannot so home lor breakfast. After breakfast we practice writing two hours. Then the writing-books are takeu up to the teacher. We are not allowed to pluy or taik to any cne in the tchool. We all study out loud at the tame time and on different lessons. The teachers are very strict, and when it gets late and one nuuuu oto iu ruau men school is out. We are not allowed to ttop on the way lionie. and it we rin nt rin 1 i, i.... ' v. m0 uc icauci say s then we get a g.ed thrashing with a u.Uvt email Bwuuues nea tuteifter. Xou will notice that the Chinese when tiiey pass alODg the street eoauietlv snri mind their own busimss. It is because mi- were Drought up iu that way." "Sklntillatinit." There is no telling whether a Colorado mine will turn out a bonnza or "peter out." " A man can't see very far into uib grouna,-saio an "oia hand," ex plaining why mining is so uncertain. Some settlers take to inrminr. unpin ft that the mining camps pay Inh prices or jooairr thousands oi men and beasts. But even fanning, though the crops are abundant, has its risks, as the following muiji ioiu in iur. uayes JNew UolO' rado," p ainiy shows: " I was minins? up Central City," said an " old timer," "ana there came along one day a man with onions to sell. Wt were clad to eet veeetablt-a ahnut. thi-rp " W ell, sir, I didn't say anything, but I allowed that farming must be a oetter business than mining, and 1 had better go into it myself. Sj I quit my claim, ami struck a ranch, and hiied a man at 1 100 a month to take charge. Well, my vegetables began to come up. And onedav. Tim Ewuil. & unrr. m marketman, came along and stopped to umner, ana i Knew lie w;.s counting the cabbages in one of mv fields. "'Then says he, 'Joe, I must have tnose cubDages,' and he offered me V i.mw lor the lot, and 1 xok him up and he Dulled out a hn.r nt o-oiit.rini But I didn't want it in the house, and 1 told him to put it in the bank, and give uie a I'ueua wnen no iiKea, ana to send for those cabbages anytime. "At nny rate, theie was $30,000 in that crop, and 1 begau to feel tony, tony, sir, 1 tell you." " Ani as I was building my castles in the air, the sun whs kind ot obscured, and I looked over Table mountain, and saw a queer kind of acloud. And while I was looking, out camo the sun, and the air was full of millions of diamoud points, just skintillating, skintiliating, sir. "And What was itP (iriisshonnnra wing! And they settled down, some inlaws ueep.on my ranch, and outoi my $30,01)0 worth, 1 had one hatlul oi lettuce that was under glass! " A Kara Curlosily. Scarcely less than a black tulip or a juui-ii-avi-u eiiUiuruuK is the amazing natural curiosity now being exhibiteu in the Benin aquarium, to Ihe material augwinmiion oi that institution's dailv receipts. A inilK-while raven, with pink eyes a .d red legs, has received ad mission to the great central aviary in nuiuu cuuira ui ueauuiui oiras nuitei and chirp and build theii nests in com parative ntedom ; but his presence there SPreau SUCh uenurul DHIliltumnnir tlio r mmuing iumuiej ot the vonere that it has been lound necessary to remove him iu u otpmaic cage, orange as it may seem the other birds instinctively recognized lhul thia liivH m uKnn and ibtreiore ternole. Many ol them ucauic iuioi auBiaiaers iroui lood and drink through sheer Irigut, while he shared their quartets, aud huddied to getutr shivering, at as great a distance Horn the lianui anouiaiy as the limits oi thtif prison would permit them to attain. In ail respects, save his extra ordinary hues, the raven is as other ravens. His appetite is apparently in satiable, and he ministers to it wuh a formidable beat. Neither in tone nir delivery is thtre any unusual mellow ness or tenderness about his croak. UU pink e.yes eouid not be more steadfastly engaged in contemplating tho main chance weie they as yellow as burnished gold. He t as louno, with a coal-biack brood ol brothers and sisters, in a nest built by his parents whose surprise at his appearance must, we should think, have been considerable on the topmost branch ol an old tree in the Georgeuthal, Valley in Thuringen. Doubly an an achronism, the snow-white raven is at present one of the " lions "ol the Ger man capital. Puritan Title-Pages. The old Puritan preachers cf Crom well's time delighted to spread the Gos pel by means ot books and tracts. No sensational pulpiteer of our time could devise more striking titles for his works than those composed by the Roundhead clergymen. "Sports that Kill " and " O.d Wells Dug Out," sound tame when compared with such head ings as the following: "A Most Sweet, Delectable and Per fumed Nosegay for the Saints to Smell At." "A Pair ot Bellows to Blow Oat the Dirt Cast on Jamas Fry." "The Snuffers of Divine Love." "Hooks and Eyes for Believers' Breeches." "High-heeled hoes for Dwarfg in Holiness." Orumbs of Comfort for the Chickens oi uie covenant." " A Sign of Sorrow for the Sinners of Zion, breathed out of a bole on an earthen vessel, known among men by the name of Samuel Fish ." Tho Groan'nv Tree. The history of the groaning tree is this: About forty yours ago a cottager who lived near the center ol the viliMgn I Radesley, near Ly mi hit tort,, heard fre quently a strnnjro noipo behind his house, like that of a person in extreme agony. Soon nfter it caught tho atten tion of his wife, who was then contined to her bed. She was a timorous woman, and, being greatly alarmed, her husband endehvored to persuade her that the noise she heard was only the bellowing of the stags in tho forest. By degrees, however, the neighbors on all sides heard it, and the thi g began to be much talked of. It was by this time plainly discovered that tho tronning noise pro ceeded from an elm which grew at the end of the garden. It was a young, vig orous tree, and to all appcaraiue rer- feet.lv aniittri. In n. fn w wpnka lha famn of - - iniuu nlHlA nf.Aanin Iron nr n a Bn..nJ rM . J w: to ide, and pi ople from all parts Hocked uear iu. Aiuung others, u, nttracted p cnrinallv nf ilia ata Phlnnn A the Princess of Wales, who resided at that time, ior tne aivantngc ot a sea bath, at Pile well, the se . t of sir James Worsley, uicu bioou within a quarter oi a mile of i i ue groaning tree. Though the country people nssicned many superstitious causes for this strange phenomenon, tho naturali t could assign no physical one that was in any degree satisfactory. Some thought it was owing to the twistine and friction of the roots. Chers thought it pro cceded from water which had collected in tho body ol the tree, or perhaps from pent air. But no cause that was alleged appeared equal to the effect. In the meantime the tree did not always groar, sometimes disappointing its visitants; yet no cause could be assigned for its temporary cessations, either from sea sons or wenther. If any diffdrenca wa9 observed, it was thought to groan least when the weather was wet, arid most when it was clear and frosty; but the sound at all times seemed to riso from the root. Thus the groan ing tree continued an object of aston ishment during the space of eighteen nv t.wnTi!v nmntha f all tl.n sim..,... around; and, ior the information of : ., ... j uiaiuuu yui us, p.'tiupuiui. was urawn up conlainine a particular account ol all the circumstances relating to it. At length, the owner of it, a gentleman of the name oi Forbes, making too rash an experiment to discover the eau?e, bored a hole in its trunk. Alter this it never groaned. It was then rooted up, with a further view to make a discovery ; but still nothing appeared which led to any investigation ot the cause. It was rni- vrrsnliv. Imvpvur huliotrd H.of was no trick in the affair, but that some nnurai cause reaiiy existed, though never understood. "For&t Scccry." A Diver's Training, Before a man becomes an expert diver he must undergo a course of severe physical trainirg. The atmospheric pressure on the suriaee is uiteen pounds ior every square inch of the body, and on the average man is something like dtteen tons, but the outside and inside pressure being equal, this immense weight is unnoticed. At every thirc- four ieet cf descent under water this pressure is increased one atmosphere, or the additional pressure of fifteen pounds to tne quare inch, and as it is absolutely necessa y lo have the air pressure in the armor fully equal to that cf the water, some idea can be had of what the diver must withstand, even at the moderate depth of thirty-four feet, alt houuh the inhaling of this compressed air in a measure relieves the unpleasant sensation. When the distance ia in creased to a huudred or a hundred and fifty feet the sensation becomes almost unendurable ttie blood starts ironi the eyes, curs, mouth, ai d even from the pores of the skin, and on returning to the surface extreme exhaustion is the result. Some men ate so constituted physically that tliey cannot remain under water at all. The greatest depth that is ever attained is one hundred and tiity feet, and then the most experienced diver can remain at this paint but live or six minutes without serious njary Divers eo to this depth only to secure articles of great value, rrmaininc loni! enough to attach a chain or rope. At a nunnrea ieet an old diver can remain about an hour, and at til'tv feet from 'our to six hours, according to the strength ot the diver. Asiatic Cavalry Tactics. A correspondent at Bucharest reports tho introduction into Europe of a mode of hghting which has hitherto been con lined to Asia. A squadron ol Rju . aman cavalry showed the prince at jcasi. some thing not yet tried even in Germany. A body of cavalry ealiops toward the eu!iuy, and th.n, instead of charging, halts suddenly and lies down, horse? and men together, the bodies of the ani ui.ts forming a breastwork, from be hind which the men open hie. 1 hough the particular action on tae occasion ol ilo prince a luspwuuu wouiu on oi mue use. for horses aro lar too ex pen sive for a breastwork, it is clear thai animals tiained to lie down by word ol 'e rnmand would suil' r on the average much less frcm the enemy's lire than cavalry does now. The most conspicu ous loss, both ut cavalry and artuiery, is always in hordes; yet seime ol Hit gunners who fought iu Atghanistan were trained to work the guns in a kneeling position. To hii.lve the height of a tar get is to decrease very greatly the chance of its being hit; and, besides, the usua fences and walls in any country arc enough concealment for auimuii ljica down, Lut not for the same animal ii -landing. It is to b-i hoped that the d IK JUHy of makin t the horses rise again. otherwise, their previous docility might lead their riders into a not corner with out much hope of getting out of it. The Man-Slujer. A man who had committed a dread ful murder U d, and was pursued bv the officers of the law and the relatives of the murdered victim. On reaching the river Nile he saw a lion on the bank. and, being dreadfully afraid, climbed up a tree. He, however, discovered a ser pent in the upper branches ot the tree. and. being greatly alarmed, threw him self into the river, whero he waicarrlid off and eaten by a crocodile. Thus the earth, tae air and the water, alike re fused shelter to a murderer. The fore going fable was written two thousand vears aeo, ana teaches us how it is that times change, and we change with them; also, that not (very change is for the better. it the murder re ferred to bad been committed now, instead of two thousand years ago, the murderer unless he were a poverty-stricken, lrienaiess wretcn, a mere suneiduous human quantity in stead of fleeinir from the sheriff, would have hunted him up and given bail, in order to be better able to assist his at torney in procuring continuances from term to term and tampering with the State's witnesses, stealing or squashing the original indictment, procuring changes of venue, appeals, reversals, re mand ments, and otherwise securing his complete vindication when, in the course of time or eternity, his trial came off, if it ever did. This fable teaches us that there was once a period when the murderer was regarded with such abhor rence that even the wild beans and the elements refused him protection. It is com toning to know that there was such a period. QalveUon News. The Congrtssional Bicord cost $130,000 during the past year. ABOUT BEARDS. iomi Interettln IlUtnrickl and Phyil cil facta. When Moses led the children of Israel through tho wilderness thry were com ma ided not to mar tho corner of thtir beards. If every man of them had had to shave bnloro ho received a grain ol uinnna, Moses would have been spared soino exceedingly unpleasant scenes. Alexander was wiser. During his campaigns the bnrber was mora regu lar than the ration. Having shown to the world tho beauty of the human countenance, a beauty-loving race hko the Greeks did not hesitate to appreciate it. Shaving became the fashion, and the young Athenian spent his morning at the barber's, where he met his Iriends nnd exchanged goisip. That disagreeable person, Diogenes, sneering.'y asked a handsome young man, whose face was fresh as a rosc, " Ate you angry at Nature becnuso sl;c did not make you a woman?" The beard, which had been' considered a sign of wisdom, was carried to such an excess by the would-be philosophers that the shrewd Athenians were apt to remark, "Has wioom stopped at his beard ?" But when A true phi losopher arose he shaved Socrates is sp jken of as " magistrum barbatum." That great general, Seipio Afrlcar.us, introduced shaving into Rome. When the Roman youth first shaved his down was placed In a box and offered to the gods, nnd the day was celebrated as a fete. The American youth, having re cently purchased a razor, seeks a seclu ded spot and holts tho door. After ward he Slips off' to a retired restaurant for dinner, not daring to meet his little brother at the dinner-table . The beard, in its theological aspect, is of considerable significance. Jo the Turk every hair is sacr d, each having been given in charge of an angel. The Tartars not only possess a religion of the beard, but a peculiar cue is essential to salvation. The Persians, who preier an other fashion, they call iniidels- These chronic wranglers, the fathers, held a variety ot opinions about it, each doubtless prompted by his individual success in I eard raising. Clement ol Alexandria held to beards. Tenu ian brought forward a canon commanding them. Tne council of Barcelona decided in their favor. L?o III. who ould raise no beard, declared them snares of vanity, and prohibited them. The Latin priests, who were looking unusually patriarchal, rebelled, and the church was divided. The Latins went as clean-faced as babies until SJ63, when Pope John ven tured on a beard, but he was deposed. The council ol Lemago left the question to the piiests themselves, but Gregory VII. renewed the war, and though re sisted by the French clergy, beards were doomed. In the sixteenth century the question arose ag.-iin, owin to the luxuriance ef the French kings who wound their beards with ribbons But what the council could not effect fashion did When Louis XIII. ascended the throne a beardless youth, courtiers aud priests sacrificed their beards. The same thiny happened in Spain with the succession of Philip V., who having no beard, commanded them to shave. But they obejed. but murmuring the while. '"In io3insr our beards we are losing our souls." Anion!; nations the fashions of beards was generally established by the sover eign. There is a quaint little book, "Revolution rle 'la Barbe." which de tails its vicissitudes. The French have always taken a gre.it iateresc in beard. The incroyabie of the s'xtcenth century retired wit i his beard in a sack, lest iu iu elceanee it mit?ht be disturbed When William the Conqueror landed in England the British spies reported that he h'id brought an army ol priests, so closely shaven were his men. it was aid by the French tl at William was born to give beards to the English, as the Ssxons were compelled by him to .eave or shave. Uharles 11. shaved his beard ar.d piled the hair cn hi3 head. Onorge If. invented the mutton chop. We all remember the snow white beard of Sir Thomas ft) ore, who begged that it might be spared the block, saving ' it had committed no treason." Nature is a contrary female. The ot'..er sex is pciiectly willing to relinquish all right to this masculine feature, yet is oiten oniigea to wear it Margaret of Parma, who governed the Netherlands, hada tine irrowth ol which sue was very proud, and Charles XII. fjl Sweden had a famous female trreuudier wl ose beard measured a yaid and a halt, in the museum at atuttgart there is a portrait ol a famous bearded wo man named Barbara Graetje. Macbeth had no rtason lor doubt when he said to the witches : " Yuu should be wo men, yet your beards forbid me to iu terpret that you tire so." Many women have that faint 6U2 aostion on the upper lip which the b Tench especially admire, making a vir tue of necessity. Tne last epoch of beards began with the French revolution. The still' formal ities of tue court lilo and the caeiully irimmed whiskers vanished with the ii cad of Louis XVI. Long hair nnd ample beards snowed independence. hLu lib u conservatism revolted at a rench radicalism, an , the matutinal cup ot water became an important part ot the Englishman's existence. The Crimean war brought into favor the Arab'd mustache aud the Zjuave dress. Napoleon HI. revived ihe T shape in bis mustache and imperial. During the civil war G.-neral Buinside was tne originator ot a very popular cut, and the Grand Duue Alexis gave particular bias to American whiskers. The popular shade ot whiskers is lawny, Tuis is due to novelists ; the words look well in print. The coior is a muddy ye.low. The Wild Goose. The wild goose spends its winters in the Sjuth.anu light the. e is where we are cjiiipeued to acknowledge tue supremacy ot the wild goose over our powerful and lutel.eciuul self. Still the wild gooso uas its drawbacks, and while it may be shot on the wing, in an tntiiely unex pected manner, we may not be snot fur several days, after receiving u note from an irate subscriber or a crooked politi cian to the effect that our time has anived. And that's where we Oov. the wild goose. Providence has done its best at equalizing matteis. Steubunwl e aeraiu, The livery stable business is being concentrated in a tew hands in New xork city, two or three firms owning a coz n or more stables apiece in differ ent puns of the city. Tue increase in toe number ot stables alter the war brought pr'ces down, and froze poor managers out of the business. In Hungary it is a practice of Ions standing to store grain in vaulted cel lars or cisterns, occasionally, in plow ing, u peasant comes across one ot these cisterns, tilled with grain hundreds of years old, forgotten, no doubt, after some war, when the whole community was cut tin. A narrow ph.ii era ntilrnsrl ia tn hn Kutlf from Chattanooga, Tenn ., to the top of Looaout mountain, and a hoiel to ac commodate 1,000 guests will be built on the mountain. Apples are worth tJ.60 barrel in England. Eye Memory. Look Bteadilv at a brlsht object, been the eye Immovably cn it lor a short time, and then close them. An iuine of the object remains; it becomes, in 'act. v sibie to the closed eyes. The vivldnest and duration of u h impres sions vary considerably with different individuals, and the power of retain ing them may bo cultivated. Be sides this sort of retinal imnse thus impressed, there is another kind of visual imnee that may t e obtained by nn effort of memory. Certain adepts at mntal arithm tic use the "mind'.-eye" as a substitute for slat" and pencil by holdnirin visual memory pictures of the figures upon which they are operating, and those o their results. in my youthful days 1 was acquainted with an eccentric old man, who then lived at Kilburn priory, where he sur rounded l.irmelf with curious old furni ture le iuteit to have originally belonged to Cardinal Wolsey, and which, ai I was told, hfl bequeathed to the queen at hisdeath. He was the then celebrated but now forgotten "Memory Thompson," who in his ear y days was a town traveler and who trained hims If to the perform ance of wonderful feats of eye memory. He could close his eyes and picture within himself a panorama of Oxford street and other raft9 of Lmdon, in which picture every inscription over every Bhop was so perfect and reliable that he could describe nnd certify to the names and occupations of the shop keeping inhabitants of all the houses of these streets at certain dates, when postoflice directories were not as they now are. Although Memory Thompson is forgotten, his special faculty is just now receiving some attention, nnd it is proposed to specia'ly cultivate it in elementary schools by placing objects before the pupils for a given time, then taking them away and requiring the pupil to draw them. That such a faculty exists and may he of great service is unquestionable. Syste matic efforts to educate it, if successful, will do good service to the rising gen eration ; and, even should the proposed training afford smaller results than its projectors anticipate, tho experiments. if carefully made and registered cannot fail fo improve our know ten ?e of mental physiology. Get.tleman t Jugvnne. Portrait of Uncle Sum. In personal appearance, Uacle Sam is a till, bony, healthy-looking man, up. parently of 45; for, though born in 177d he bears his ace well, and seems to be ectting younger every day. He loves to brag of his establishment, and puts bim sell on such an equality with the people thpt a train of hangers on are always at hia eiao v. mere are always at his ta ble a number of ara -headed old fellows. who were his companions in youth, and of whose service he continually speaks. He loves to boast how Tom Surh-a one saved his life at Bunker Hill, and how Dick Simebody whipped a fellow that assaulted him at Etitaw. He often, too, wipes .lis eyes when he looks at the pic ture of a tall general, hanging up in his parlor, who, he says, whipped a fellow named Pakenham, who once tried to tike away one of his sirls and a cot'.on bile. On these occasion Uncle Sam wili become creatlv excited, and. taking off his cocked hat which, he says, was the gift of his old friend Georre Wash ington will swear he has the best land in the world, and can out-run. out i rum and wtiip any man on the hill. In iruth. these are but eccentricities of a charac ter which is so mixed up with generous virtues as to be excusable. Though in clined to peace, he can sometimes play the braggart, and is ono of tiiose who, while he will give his life in the way of friendship, in the matter ot bargains will stickle on th' ninth oart of i hair. At auv attempt upon him of this character, he will shoulder his cano and act out as many maueuvers as a half-pay lieutenant ot infantry. O.i the whole, lie is one ot those who wnl cud gel his best friend in a cause in which he is engaged, and embraee his bitteret enemy in whose conduct is observable tho smallest principle ot magnanimity and honor. Sjvt'itrn Literary Uazctt: The origin of "foolscap." as related by an old paper maker in Lee, Mass., was that a tiaf-wiitcd youth sat upou a rock on the top of wtieh was a shallow depression containing some water. In this puddle the boy dropped his linen turban, and, with a stone, too iishly and idly pounded it into pulp. The sun driei the "stuff" or fiber, which ha'" spread itself through tho water unon th bottom cf the puddle, and soon it whs luted out : sheet ol paper foolscap, in tact. It is t fflciaily sta'ed that 193 165,791 ncre3 of land have been granted by the united .Mates tor ran ana wagon roads it would make 1,33,638 farms ot 16i) acres each, ai d us area is greater than that of the five States of Indiana, Illi nois, lowi Kansas, and Minnesoia. Its va.ue at $2 per acre would be $39d.331, 583. The laws of Mexico are a bit curious It takes only fifteen minutes to con viutamanfor stealing a horse, but if his offense is murder it takes about four weeks to convict some one else of it. Detroit Free Press. The laboring classes of Switzerland are out ot work, and are much d:s tressed. THE MARKETS. W TOBE Beot Oattl-Mel. Native, Uva wt . . W V'A 0!ve Good to Prime Veali OS 4 Sheep..... HI A LtiutM OS (4 fcO! Live 04 Ys Dressed...... OS c4 Floor Kx. Mute, Rood to faaoy.... 4 10 8 Western, good to fancy 6 06 A 8 Wheat No. 1 Hod 116 (S 1 No. 1 WUite 1 12'44 1 Rr State , 07.V4 harluj Two.llowed Htate ttu (4 Corn Unprailed Western Mixed.... 6 (4 Honthern Yellow 6.14 Oata White atate 6V4 Mixed Western.. 'J A Hay Prune , IKS (41 Straw Long Bye. per owt. ......... 1 OS (4 1 Hops State. ItSJ..... 18 (4 Pork Mesa oM 13 OS 13 Lard Oily Steam 8 80 14 8 Petroleum (Jrude ....... 00X407 lie fined batter Stat Creamery SI (4 Dairy ii (4 Western Imitation Creamery 2 (4 Faotury 14 (4 Cheese 8tate Factory.... 0UJ,' 4 Hkiuis 06 (4 10'., 111 o. Oil OS',' 0v 60 50 IH'i 14 98 &a 64 f8 45V 4:i 61) 10 111 60 Oil 14 t6 W 2S . 'it 18 08 l'i.'tf 8 87 Western 10 14 EgW State and Penn 80 4 Potatoes State, ubl Uarly Koae.... 1 75 Qt I OrTALO. Steers Extra f 5 40 d $1 Lamb Weateru 5 25 (3 tf Hueep Western 4 6) (4 6 Hurh, Ooo I to Gboloe Yorkers 4 6 'ii i Flour uity Oronrjd. No. 1 Suring.. 6 0) ej 6 Wheat No. 1 Hard buluta 1 2S 14 1 Com No. 11 Western 64 (4 Oats State 87 14 65 01 63 76 ii 61 38 60 Harley Two-rowed State It a BOSXOM, Deef Western Mes 9 5) (310 IIoks Live 06V, 00 Oil Hofis City Dreaaed 07 (4 Pork Extra Prime per bbl 10 00 (a, 13 Flour Wisconsin and Minn.Pat.... I 26 14 tf Corn Mixed aud fellow 41 (4 Oata Extra Whit 60 (4 Itye blale 1 07 (4 1 Wool Washed Combing k Detains., 49 14 Unwashed, " 86 14 WATKSIOWH (MAS! ) OATTLS HAbSIT Beef Cattle live weight 0.iX (4 bueep....... 04V4 Lambs 0.1 ( 4 HotfS 06). raii.AUKi.raiA. Flour Penn. good and fancy 89 91 Wuat-No.alted 1 11 ; State 04 ,4 Corn utate fellow 16X 4 Oata Mxed 414 butter Onamery Extra 86 (4 Oliec" ,w York full Cream 18 (4 Peuwiaum tirade ......... Oo o1,K Kelaai 07 4 75 tJ H 6'i 07 60 88 04)4 04 06 Oi 71 JHX 04 (8X 8 "X (MM Olevalsnfl (Ohio) Herald. k nam mock's Wild Wa, An Illinois exchanee feels called to thus deliver itselfi "His hammock swuntr loose at the sport of the wind," and tumbled the Hon. J. 8. Irwin on bis head, and but for the annlicatlon nl St. Jacobs Oil he might have pone " wtiere tne wooooine twinetti." Kven so dear Beacon as many others have gone, who failing to nse the Great Ger man itemed? in time, lor tneir rneuma lism nnd other dangerous disenses, "hav.i paid the debt of Nature." Rub is our motto. A KlAttalnn, T.rttfnl V, aa Knon tar.0tlT.1v rtrorlrrtl.r tit l.hfl ftpp. nf flnliiefl. Tr. Iin.4 a depth of more than tight hundr-d feet, and contains twelve species of fish. The majority of these snecies have the singular lianit of uatcning ineir eges and sheltering their young; in their mouths. . St. Pa.nl Pioneer Press. What We Hate. We hate orowline. no matter the eource or cause, and recommend here, with the remedy. Use St. Jacobs Oil and laugh at pain. It will do tne work every time; A man in Warren county drives an ox team that once belonged to an intem perate man, and that got so used to stopping for him at saloons that now, when pt'fsing a saloon, the animals will not move until their new owner goes in to get a drink . He doesn't care for the liquor, be says, but lsoonea loorina to tret his team along. He has refused $5,000 lor the oxen. " Tiieue is cot a corporation on tin rouud globe whose specitio gravity 's greater than that of the old iETNA Life of Hartford. If is solid as Granite and an true as gold.' Weekly Item, Phila. A hollow tree in Southern California hn9 been converted into a dwelling Djors nnd windows have been put in, and floors built for eiaht stories, the en trance to them being made by means 01 a ladder. Outside tne topmost rom is a small balcony, shaded by tne foliage oi tue tree. Firtnr Va ft . Closo oonflnemunt, Citrelul uttnttonto.ll Iriotory work, gives the operatives 1 allid faces, poor tippeiite, languid, miserable feeling;, poor blood iuHOtivo liver, kidneys and urinary troubles, and nil the physicians and medicine iu the world cunnot help them unlt-as Ibey net out doors or use Hop Biiters, made ol the pure-st and best remedies, and especially lor such casts, having abundance ol benltn, tun. shine and rosy chceki in them. None need sunur it tliey will use them Iree'y. They cost but a trifle. See another oolumn. The representatives of Dr. Le Moyne, the former owner of the cremation fur nace at Washington, Pa., are said to be overrun with applications for Its use in ptrspective Wo reach tor riches and we grap a mill stone, unless in health 10 enjoy them. A cough or cold q'lickly works our pliys col ruin unless we m e carelul. Use Dr. Bull's Cough Syrup. Price 25 oenta. The total number of licenses to sell liquor in Boston during the past live years has been 10 145. and the receipts therefrom SI, 155 816. G1IE4T 1111E MEIUCIiVrc. DIl. TOBIAS1 VRHKT1AN HOUSR MN'IMEXT In pint liottin at 114 t ruts; 32 )'ar ctt ,l'lslic.l. It I the U'st Iti the world for tliecu-e ol t:nllieMS..rei.Spr:i!ii. llnilsn. Sore Throats, etc. T01!I.S' OiiiNDI I ION I'owDEHS ere wirr-rnteil to cure DUtenitKjr, Fcwr Worm. It ta; Blve a rlue coat; lncre se the appetite .ml cV:itu., the urinary orj.'ani. CcrTIIlt.il to l-y O.'l. I. McDdi Ifl, owner or 6ntne of the fa.tput niiinln'i bows Iti the worid, anl 1, 01)11 others. 25 cents. Sold by drug gists. Depot 14 Murray Street, New York. HOP BITTERS. (A Medicine, not Drink.) CONTAINS BOPS, BrCIITT, MANDRAKE, DANDELION, Ax thw Purest and Hrst Medical Quixx T1H Ct ALL OllltU DlTTSBS. THEY CURE All Diseases of OieStnrrmch, Rowels, Wood, Liver, Kidneys, and L'rtnury organs, N'er- vuuBuuBS. niremeBsnt'BBnuii especially Female Coinjilaliiu. Si ooo IN COLD. Will be paid for ft case they will not cur or UVip, ur ior ii) in i ii imiiure oriUJUTlUUt louud m tliura. Ask your drupRlst for Hop Blttertand try them before you alecp. Take no other. D I- C. I an aisolute and Irresistible cure for jjruukuuut'sa, use or opiuia, utwieco aua tiarcotici. BKMD FOB ClBOTLAB. All abort iold hw AracriiU. Hop BltUrt Mfg. Vn., ItAfhetUr, N. V.,4 Toronto, Ont, ' t-m-qpfr f ' r if -HMH 1 1 Wri I, BP Wi T ha ( '. rou i -Mir THE BOWELS, and tho KIDNEV9. .v11?? Breat orpin, aro t-ie fcntnnu cli-arseniof r.., ,7r -I ' 7"' T'1' will titipcr- hf.n?SPih Vfi,V" 1'1'.'"rt " P"i..ned witbth. V!iJh.r.c f,'11 "" o?"e. Kni-ni'l h.tvo len iirfd.avflsMm.iTW;. rorsaln 1 '! 'i-UL'.l-tsT NA "S1 U His but In Wis World. It Ii absolutely rare. It Is ths belt for Mellclnal Purposes. It la the bett fur linking awl til family Uses. Sola by all tlrusgltts and Uroceia. PENN'A SALT MANUFACTURING CO., Phlltv THE COLUMBIAN SlflSS tli finest, moat elalwratc. costly and beautiful II, ,11. lav cut ever presentM tn Hie Aincni nn rie,,pe. A Specimen (Jrmj can be seen at Una oillce and st every poaioilke slid news Stmul Id the lulled Slates. One cent h c py everywhere. TUB GREATEST DISCOVERT OP TITE AOg, MtTll; t lltK Foil Itllbl'M A IVM. A eoinp't'te cute git irant ed by ukng one buttle, bent on reti !pt ..t price. $i. Address i. U. Dr.CaU.il CO, Hid fc. 7H t li at.. New Vor . Ateuts Warned ror ins Handsnmest snd CHEAPEST BIBLES laA "Tr'- CASH PREMIUM : I ELEGANT A"l AUTISTIC CIIRUMO J IU 1.1M CAItliK Id sets of one doxea sasurted stylet. Price, R cents per set. sent pnst-liee. Addxest W. JKNNI.MiS UKMoRKST, IT Eml Htb Street. Sew Tork. PAMP1ILKT of ear PATENT DRESS REFORMS, couumiiig- HifOiiUin In Underirarments. Corsets, tt aiils, Skli t and 8'wk.iuK Supporters, Shoulder Brace. c, ful rallies Children. Seuaible. clieup hesltb conducluu Hrs.A.yietther Co.. 1 K. Htb bl.N.Y. Free to A .1 IO II HA1.E Merchant, Grist tod Saw Mills; Store, Posti'lhije, '1'wo Dwellings, etc. Near Wlncheater, Va. Apply to A LFKKO PAHalLNii, Ptrkmt' iluls P. O, Frederick Co., Va YflllMl MEN f-rn Telegraphy. Karnt) tolinot 111a.11 month. Uiudijiu-sguiiiunteedpajuig olllcea Address Viumim linos, JanesvlUe, Wx S350 NOITHI AGES'TS WANTKDI 'Ii Heat Selling Articles 10 the world, t sampleres. Jat Hhumow, Uetiolt, Allen. $ 7 7 7 k A TEAR snd expenses to agent. lutut Hit. Addiee ' O. V1CKEIIY, Atmusta, statue. A liI.KHJ'S Itraln Kood-cii'ei Nerrotis Debtllrj Btud for Ulr I'r to Allen a Pharmacy, a 1 J Plrat Ave. OPIUM Morphine llavbli rird la Id !. J. biju-AusMs, itMuwa Oliia. 500 OKAiV let v it NM ay free to AueDtt AUOJee. tUV. o. T. JdtC-tw Lf wiaburtfbt. Hfl i 00 A Was) !. . Deacon WiMer, 1 want you to tell me how you kept yourself and family o well the past sea- on. when nil the rent ol us have been sick to much, nd have had the dootors running to us so long 7" 11 JItother layior, ino nuowc, m f unn R.mra in time, and kept mvlamily well and eave;l large dooror bills. Three dob lar worth ol It kpt us a'l well and fti.le to work all the time, and I will warrant It has ooat you and mo9t ol the neighbors one to two hundnd dollars apiece to keep aick the same tune. 1 guess you a tana my xneuiuiuw nwie alter. See other column. A lew vrn.ni nan a Jinanese publisher brought out a "Ufa of Washington" in lorty-five volumes.with illustrations. ; M.!,;,,!, M,alr.lliA. tf 1,1 a nminl.rv in represented in modern dress, wearing a accompnnied oy a skye tenier. I have no tnnre doubt of the beneficial efTooU ol Warner's Sale Kidney and Liver Cure than 1 have that the Oenesoe liver empties into Lake Ontario. Kev. 1. E. Kan Win, D. D., Washington, P. O. Hunters from Plensanton, Tt'xas, found two bucks with their horns securely locked. One of them was dead, and the hunters killed the other and brought away the horns still locked. It Is No Exagoeratiow. Ely's Cream Balm is a cure lor Catarrh, Hay fever, etc Muny cures have lieeii madn among my customer. Cream Balm should he resorted In hy every one fins nlllicted. With mo no other renv dy has ever equaled the Balm either in good results or sales. A. J. Odonwelder, druggist. Ka ton, Pa. Ely s Cream Balm ia the best remedy I have ever aold for the cure ol Catarrh, Hay Fever, etc. It piled a care in almosl every o:tse, and g vosrelie! to a 1 who use it Wilhoul hesiia lion I tell tny ou9tomeiw it is the beat remedy in tho market lor what it la recommended. Y. F Umkely, Jr.. drugiicl, Pliiili sbnlg, N. J. Klv s Cre-.m Balm lor Catarrh has given the very best ol salitlnctiontomy customers, more so than ti nt til any other similar preparation I have ever sold, isaao C. Chapman, druggist, Newhurg, N. Y. Price, 50 cents. Ely's C:eam Balm Co., Owego, N. Y. Will mad it lor 60 cents. Vegetine. No medicine has attained such a great reputation as this justly celebrated com poo rid. Vegetine. Tho Barks, Eoots and Herbs FROM WHICH TKGETINB IS MAOB IN POWDER FORM, BOLD FOR 50 Cents a Package. VEGETINE. For Kidney Complaint and Nervon jueimtty. Ulubobo, Mt., Dee. SS, 1677. iPttir Sir I had had a cm,h for eighteen yeare, when cnumii'ncej tnkln tlie line. I w.ih very lows in vHli'Tti wns deljll'titti'd liv Hstiie. 1 li.i'l the K-i'liit C'iiiiUint(anU vvry nervoutr conuli ba'l.nr tftfrTL lieu I ntii uihrn vue umiu: i h'iiii i. n ,ib iiiu.iik mv It baa help' J my counh, and tt streuuthrns me. I am irm able to no my work. Never liuve fuuii'l an tiling like Uie Vegetloa. I know it la everything it ia return mtndeJ tob Una. A. J. PNOlfiTON. Dr. W. Ross Writes: Scrofuln, TAvcr Complaint. Dyspepsia. KheuiiiaiiHiii, WcuknebS. H. R. Btktess. Itnaton: I hnve been pr.uiuitiK medicine for twenty-flTe yeara, and as a renip.ly tor Scoiula, l.iver Of-iiiplaint, Dvspe.t tin, Kheuinittism.WeakncBH, uU ulUllsciist'S the bl o, I have never found its equal. 1 have sold Vegetine foi 'ven years and have never had one bottle returned. I would hesixUly recoaimeud It to those lu need of a bluoJ puiiflor. Dn. W. BOSS, Dnitrfst, WiiU.li, Iowa. Sept 18, 1878. VEGETINE PHEPAKED TIT H. R. STEVENS, Boston, Mass. THE NEWSPAPE. ABLE, WEVVSY, GOOD and CHEAP. WEEKLY COnmER-JOHRNAL. The publishers of the f .'ouitien-JnDRr.L (TTon. Henry Watterson. e.l'torj cairn that as a n-hable and valuable newspaper it has no aiii?rltir in this country or In the world. It Is able, brlRlit aud newsy, contains tliestron cst editorials, the inuht eoiiipktfsnumiMry of the news of the worl.t. the best roiretf-iidciiL-H, lull turf and stuck reports, market reports, lunliioii reports. Sermons, splen did original stories an 1 uovelt tUs, poetry, department forchildren, answers tn correspondents, etc., ttcj In a Wfird. everhnu to make It a dellubt to the family circle and invaluable to the man of bushiest, the fsrmer, the niiM-batitc an'l t lie laborer. l:are Inducements lu the way of cash commissions and va'iublc premiums are oiT red agents, pusluiastere and ciul-iasers who send snbSLTiptioiia to tbe Wsuli Col KlKH-Journal. SubsiTLbeiscan srtcme any one of the leading periodi cals of the day, a haiidsom book, or some other valuable priiulumfora veiy small amount nf money. Ourdstol premiums to all subsciibers who -r.d us Two Do. bars will be round to be wuithyof e?pe Ul attention. fcpr nieu t o. an fJ t aui Iptlve cir cular v,t Irrc ou ill't-atl:ii. lSulaci Iptiou t? in it iu0 free, are for Hhi1 , 51 J; -niir.y,94; Week ty, with prentii.msj-a; with ul i rinluiii, 1 no. Any one kemliiitf four r-y nl.erl bem at wt lx litai win he mltleit to an estia copy of Uie Weekly 'ui Icr.Joiu nal one year, irre i -tiy IUrra. dreaa V- 1. II A llKni 1N( f resident Cuuiter-Journal t o l.o.n ville, My. To h.T. read this notlc. .bont twenty tliura blor.. Bui dm you a.er set uuod Ihe aunse Uuu so often saadf, nama'yi To aak any lex. nn.l alio, dealer for oooia with ;oolrlch's Patent liter Steal lllvet l'rulecteil Sole I Omranleri lo outwear any Sols sver malt, ir you ban uui, Uo ao IneTery a il tints you wai t b.iots or sltoes with soles that will wear Ilia bun andaava repairs, and don't ion buy any other. " My referei ces sr. any SewlrjS Machlns Oompany at their agente In lbi country. . . u. ii c. tioonmrn, J ft Cnnrch St, Worcester, alajL, and 40 Uorns At CUIca., IU. RED RIVER VALLEY 2,000,000 Acres Wheat Lands bMt la th World, lor sal. by thm St. Pail, Minneapolis & Manitolia R.B, CO. Thra. dollar par aora allowwl tfc.a.ltJn far bnak la aad sulllf atwa. tot parUoalara apply U D. A. McKINLAY. -ait Commla. loner, nt. Paul, Minn. B. W. TATXE & S0XS, COltltRG, IT. T. xaTAiifciauao laao. Patent Spark-Arrflstlna Uiv einvs, mounted and on sTilds. Vertical Knglnes with wro't boilers. Kureka Safety pow i s with Sectional boilers an1! ba .spluded. All with Automatic, Cut-OAs, r iom ISO ti $2,000. Band fn, PI .-..nl Bf . fr srlii jou taw tills. PURE TEA! AitaiiTirflited s.-e 3'wnrs a, 1 1 ae.i Ui riullie., hotels uuu w I iure ('iiiiimeis; lame.! iu.K 111 ma i'ouiil,., ; iiia, i au.l leini. uie urn. t;otl'i try .tiirekeueisili'iu il ur wrllu iHK WaiLLS 'laA C'tlMl'A.S , iulfu tun St., S, Y. If. O. Iloa lion. u K H Y. Skunk. Haccooo, Wink, bought for Oa-hi . 1'rltea. bi'ii.l lor utrcutar, lull tai ticulaia, K. C. HOl'UH'lON, S Howard iu, S. i MkltVI.AVll FA II MM, 97 to st'Jft per act.. abort winters, brersy summers, heaitkiy cllmata. Caiaiguejrefc 11. P. CUIaMBLHa, Feacla .buiii, kX p 1 sb's c u r e"k arasKai, MRPHONK.arAi Teffetlne In Powder Form 1a aold by aM drn- filsta ihI uvneial Rt(in-a If yuu cannot buy lto. Hu m, ncloee fifty cents In postage tnnis for -n p ickai-, or one dollar lur two packaea, aud 1 will leud it b return nail. . m . I 1 rw THB GREAT GERMAN REMEDY ron " - "Niil'lsiriiBiini. NEURALGIA. iir fT!!!n!ii!?niTin!;i:Hi!niit 1 SCIATICA, LUMBAGO, BACKACHE, SORENESS or TnM CHEST, Un uiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiui'iii'' , rlii!).,.. ...,ilf 13 5i" l'i mm m nil' :!jnii0illilluiiij I miiiiruaniiP' SORETHROAT, ! ! QlUIIUIiilUilUiUr QUINST, SWELLINGS aud SrRAINS, FROSTED FEET AND EARS, SND OCAIiDS, General Bodily Pains. TOOTH, EAR AND HEADACHE, AKD ALL OTHER PUBS AMD ACHES. ! I'll!! i I1 ITlll... altlftl! i ill if mt, iiiiliPii IjipijirnpiiiiiiliUuiiil llilll fio rreparatton on sarin cquaia pr.n.". nn. siari-R and cheaf External Reuirilv. A trial entails 7 . ..' i. ..iiin.n..,l.,ff nf .MPrT nn,l nr.r one iuflerlna; with pain can have olioap and )05itia uroolof iuelaiml. iiniEl-riONS IK EI.ITKlt LaKUlAtiES. SOLD BY ALL 03UC0ISTS AND DEALERS III MEOICIIt A. VOGELER & CO. Ballimoro, M1., V. S. A. NTN V 1 70,030 SOLD YEARLY. The growing popularity aud iiaefnlnesi of CAKIlVKT or PAltl.OH UI.Af9 I a ho wn by t H e f ac 1 1 h t V. V I N 1 1 T I O V BAP, Hat a sold yearly In the Unltetl Slates. The best are the MASON & HAMLIB wlilth hsT been awarded aiannsi biitikctioks rot DiaonsTSiTio icrtniouirr st irsnr os of the OKEAt WORLD'S In.luslrial Eiulbltlons for thirteen years, ifV out sm ftftvte excrrlio. NEW STYLE9 Ars ready this season with Import, nt Imrirovcmfnts, FOR LARQK CHUltClIES, splendid organs, wltb rrest power and Yarli-ty, at tt8o, $'.0, and less prlcesi FOU SMALLER ClltllClllLS.S.'llUUIJS,t.:,tt to$2 and upward. Sl'PKRH DRAWING KOnM SlYI.F.a al 1200 to $510, snd upward. A lillKAT VAIUI'.IY ol SMALLER OllllANS of tqunl ci elltnoc, tlioucll lev capacity, or In p'.ain caifs, at $M to 2tio and upward. Alaofurnlsbed run soMiiir or acartiEiiLx ramsNTS, $1 and upwsrd. 77Nar OTVrtt nr certnhift xmHmlrt In ij-c,,7jnr.. ,ift tr wiceM art 14 much Liylu.r tlian tliote y very tt rior titruz mitt. Ili'furn purcb.islnir nny O'ra i arn1 for If'ttst ILLUS. TKATK1) UAtAi.tKil K pi. .). com in ns full ifrciiptKn. .nd pili-. a im- u tin: m w a'y.,-s. iin.l iiuicri usvful info nt .t'l.ii lor tin' pur. luisi'v uf auv oii; in. wln,-n w II be sirite n,.d imtrnid. MAS.i.N & II.IMLIN ultGAN Ot).,.4 Iicili.'iil Str-rl.lillM'uXi Jit Kail 1-lth rttrret, KKW iUKa. MO Wab.isii a.veuui, iiimi;a(;ii. . PAttNiS WANltU tJ(i 1 HE ZCTORXAL HI STORY of the WORLD Eninrncitif; riill nn l nutliPiiile ncconnta fr everv ivitfoo of nni'ieirt umi inmliTn In in s, un t in'ii,'iiii'j ii ii fitt.:y ii t'ic i use mill full nC llif tiic-'i; uu I i u'.ui l.tupirt a. tli lil.liii' l ;f''l m c .. w Wk.iul.cto. i ii ii 1 U th i iili i. s'.., it. Si-iri iiiiiil;p anvH. Hit' i-uwiilfi. Uv I l.fii, tin tl.rki vfiy an . it it, im It cinitiiina i? e tint- l,st ; ,. m bt oimilrtf II iKl'ti -v tlit- W ior spucUiii'ii puM'ri an t .ti.i t-:nis V Si. U'V ii ri. Iil'Z J.ESTEY&C5 B R ATTLE D 0 R0 VI Literary Revolution. 3PCMTG eaili, fo-nioily l.itii to f i.3Aracni Vbll I O I. Mit.-uul.i.v's l.uV ot Kiclcritli ihe tirc:it. 11. (J.irly e's l.ifeoi l.l'tr lluit, - hi. 11-iimrtin-l.tfeor M.oy Hiu.-n.f S.ot. fV. Tlios nu'hf Miinlincs e OiSMTC e u ll f'Tim.T.y ifLW uf t.'lirii,t. Vtl I O.jiih: 1. rii.) ti'ft I.U'lil uf Aam Ii. ijol'.bin tiri Vnar f W.iUnu! I. III. l.jron Muinliansi-n's Tt-im-'sj nirl Sv , A.-."i1n K-t I X K t s: ;.iiiv - nv i;it mi's, l1! .-:(.,. -U iKlruTi CiitMlnUllB ffiit In f. A M ','.ilU ' V N I OOiv I', " 1 1 A H Y.. Juhu U. Allien, Mini typ . . I'i i line llltilui. York . Ifalr f ve lathe S 4FKST ;in i k.n i ; ;t mis Insinnt.v h'-.-tift .p'(. iiiunfi the lnol iiiitinal .-liinlr- u( It ru k or Cimwn; tlnvH N- T STAIN iiti- .SKIN, anil is itlly M t-l. it 6 a iitai;'lanl I1' 'MM nMon nii'l a IrtVnrttA ni.i'V.MV Wilt ill P'il'tyJtol" JrV or l.ii'lyur (i-nl eman. - -'I by hut in ta an I ivi.'il hv lluir hrt'hsp t. i f'pi it, WH l.nnSt ,X.Y. C. a. CKITIKN ION, Ast IHE COLUMBIAN 8"or t the a.iv- at.ve, PurenUl OoTemmeiit i'apT, levnt l t t!ie ln Wrehlsnf hthicAtlon, Wai.ol.iil.iir an-l Ptmlurtion, "Tin fliwliil purpose of The Colitmhian ta to p!lmin;ilo fror the inctlio'liof American Fenpiv tint uu;uh ilalt ra) oj D Hholisin the wilt SMtem. uspIpm inl.T li' im n. iinjntl t iMtH-.n ana monopoly. A Hiic J h vU u he cl- Tue Coichhian nt e fantlv u luuit.usly lluBtf.iteit. ant iuM by every now lealor .unl at every pout ftlce tn th lDl at the uniform pnee u one ceo i ample copy my be teca at every pustufllce. GELLULUIkj EYE-CLASSES. Representing the oltnicent selected Tortoise. Si. ell and Amber. Tbe lightest, liamlsomeuit, and strongvBt known. So il lv O iticn and jwolere. Jludo by SPENCEIt OPTIC A.L M FG. CO., 13 Muiden Lane, New York.' SAPONIFIER Ittht " Original " Oona-ntrate'l I.yt and RellaMe Family Soap Maker. DirtctionK at c.n.p;uiy tmh On fur niakinji llnrtl, Ntft ana Xnilvt rtu-p qnkklv. It w full wfiht Ami sirt-nvih. Ak yuur gtoctt for WAlUxl KX lIC. aU take do otherr. PENN'A SALT MANUFACTURING CO., Phila. ThU Clalm-llous lUCablUUea lHOr). ; PENSIONS. New Tbonssnis of salillera and heirs cntllled li.iiiui,a .uie bai kto disdiiuge ur Ucutb. 2 tine LuuiL AdJrei ltli stamp, P. O. Draws- Waal.lu Jton. nn Deafness. Ear Diseases, Catarrh Ir. C. K. HIIOKM .4 li K II. tli. well-known ,n rleueed A oral burseoii. Aull.or, an.l Writer uulieaUiV. L" u",.?.b .'"S"""1 b aor l-rsiia!lv at his oib. No. H. Walnut t . llrniilnir Ia it!. .. i''f.g"Vu JJfe.lJit''sor the hur ami luii is, slCuULrib, atid Uuu pilfer Wealmeuli p,ic t!?b, tog orTskiiT.NO 00, nertl' Ot. Baoetasler-sslaa.1. a7P. o rw.u,, A i,r Iran BI-ASS-POLITI-CtJSS a. II appearsa when laosTlJkfirWt r.VnV- is'l of'tliU 'Jin,' .'!r;ln.tl"i ime""t 'r the imblU:-;, i?e m 5 of t his wp,-r and at every .lilli e m llio l inie.l s,rt,-a t.fn '' ' Voo may uever UK auulher . tipot. tunlti aud it uuy do uu guud. . . . EWkQYMENT-k-V.W?ISS! AU SALARY era..uth. All EXPENSES atraerd. ttitlt. prumytlr liald. 6 LOAM a la, VUS ueui si ki. i. laru... r lllllIIimiffllAi!!!!!!!!!:!! ffi 1 lliilll I Iftrr. I II H'llltllg Via Z MRISTAD0R0'S 4 fS M,USTACHe & VVHISKt-h