A IlS AKh AilLt. STJUJ. The following narrative i3e'.f-extlaratc f . The letter wlucii precedes it is a true copy oi trie onirmal, ana was sent to as toeewei with the details, by an olEccr iiow in lb LuileJ Slates Navy. United State Flahip Xomad, ) lSavy Yard, Boston, Mage.. January 10, l-i-. ) .Vy oVrcr Friend Yoar kind favor con taining; corxrintulationa in my restoration to health is before nie. v lien we parted thirty mouths airo little did e imasriue tint either would be brooprlit near death's door hy a dis ease which seleitn for its victims th-e who i resent an internal field of con-tilQaona! weakness forits fir-it attack, because youand 1 were in those davs the iiersonihcauon ot health and can claim thisto-day.tliankU'id! U hy I can do so will lie lold to-morrow,wlien we meet at yoar dinner, as yon only know that 1 have ssed through a terrible illness; my de.ivery from death belli-' ane to tne wonderful discovery in medical science. made by a man who to-cUy stand iu the front rank of his fellow worktrs-ineonnled by any in my own opinion. That L, who heretofore have ever bten tle most orthoJox believer in the old whool of medicine, its application and results, should thus resnnt in favor of that which is sneered at by old practitioners, may startle yon, but "seeing is believing," and hi-n I recount the attack made on inv old haik. how near I came to lowerinir my colors, and the final volley which, throinrh the atvnrv alnive mentioned, cave me victory, you will at least credit me with just cause for sincerity in my thankful ness and belief. I will also spin my yarn anent my China cruise, and a!toket!.er, i-x-lct to entertain as well as be entertained by yon. With best wishes, binceruly yours. Rear Admiral C. S. Navy. Hon. Genifil Wrann-i, Smcliir l'lace, Boston. An autumnal afternoon in the year 1SC- f.mn.l the taut U-i-mIiid Aomad ruuiidmtr the treacherous and da!iL"erotis extremity of tutli America. And this day certainly in- teadi'd to place jise.f on record with Uiose ot its predecessors marked stormy, its nasti ness in wind and -weather piving all hands on board the flagship their fill iu hard work and disoomfons. '1 he record of the Soma I on this cruise, hic!i she was now complet ing on her homeward tiourul pasae to Bos ton, had been most di-ajreeable. when con sidered in the lit'lit of heavy weather work. From Suez to Ad -n, then on to lioinbay, I'omt de (ialle. Smtraiwre. lions Konu, Siiaiiu'hai, NiVisaki aui Yokoliama, t!ie balance sheet siood largely in favor of old Neptun 's rotiifli cluiracteristics, but wilh remarkable evenness the health and original rosier of the ship's company stood this day as it did nearly three je-irs ao with one exception. Throughout the diverse and vaned extiosnres incidental to crnisinjr over the Asiaue station, here cholera, fevers, liver complaints, malaria, and colds of all deirrees reurn iu full force, none of the craw bad suffered more than U-miiomry incon venience, and thus it seemed very hard that now, in the chsiuj days of the cruise, the'-e Hjd nine chances fur, to one aminst, a vic tory tn-ii! at last scored for the destroying ancel Death. When the Somnd reached hhiiuirhai iu the early portion of her cruise her adniind was the healthiest man aboard. A erand siiecimen of iuanliojd was he. Over six ft in heiyht. wei-liltli.' two hundred tMHmds. broad in chest and stronc in limb, le rihtly claimed for himself a f till share of Nature's blessings. While returuint late one ciLTtit from a uipiomatic reception it u. . Consulate at Shanghai, throuli overheat ing and insufficient protection from the dan gerous itfects of the iectilifir dump and a chiiijr uiuht nir, he caught cold. "Oily a cold," remarked the admiral to tiie doctors of his ship, "and easy to cure." bo though, tire med;eal otiicers, but with a quiet though insidious progression, this cold clunir to the a linir-J in spmrof their best efforts to erad li ite it, and when the time came for leaving Yokulinnia. homeward liomiil. the avlmirai re-ali-l thai his lung and throat were decid edly out of order. 1 lie doctors advised re turn, nj home by mail steamer to S in Fran cisco s i that irrcater means fur enrinj this itersirV'iit roui.'ii uiiiriit 1 found in the Xaw Hospital their; but the admiral re- ferretl to suck to his ship, stiil i.n.'ih'.iiiui; that his trouble would eventually be over come l.y the doctors' treatment. No one who I.xike 1 at the admiral even in those iias imagined that he woul.l fall a victim tolling trouble. ilut it was the old story a-am tyr-ilii-d in this cae. Only a cold at first; and in spite of orthijox treat ment the pecuii'ir cliini'tic edicts of China nursed it, and ha-tene l the sure result of such a de-i --seated trouble. 1 nepaed after leaving Yokohama for Boston, l.r n' u' varying syinj toms in the adinirars case. and the doctors imagined that they held the dis ease in check at leas llut with the forma tion of tuliercles, indt-s-jreats and the son rpil consumption of lung tissues, which had set in with alarming symptoms, the pa tient realir.-d that hi4 cold had laid the SceJs of tl.at fed a'ent of lvath, ronsiimp'uiH. The hacking ci oh if the admiral had in its-lf tKM-n t-uthceiit food for serious consid eration. and nnir, as in the warm autumn days ihe flafjsl in gallantly nnlo over the blue waters f liie I'acilic, bound for Cape Horn, the doctors hoed much for success. But this lioi-terons afternoon found trie good ship stiutJiliii with mijautie se;is set off from the Cae by a fierce northerly win 1. Leaden were the heavens and aid the hearts of alt a?oard, for that mornmsj tha nsnrtl bnllettn ofc the medical Oihcers tiad set forth this intelligence: '! he admiral is in ame condition as report d last uieht. biirniiiir fi-.er has beeu sliirhtly rednced. while oi her symptoms sre as hei etifore an nounced." All undcrstotl these words without uuestionilij.. The be'.oveil admiral fcaa auruii; Uic past iwo weeks siuik very lo . Ihe symptoms ot bloo 1-poisoning. a torpid liver, intense pains thioayhout the body, eyesight and mental faculties afected. appe tite gone, throurju inaction of that great reg ulator tiie livt.r. 'lhise were tiie means Inch had tedu -ed the admiral from the I liufcle f f health to the valley and -hadow of Jeatli. t'ii-iimiK.n held full sway now, and the well-known skill of naval d ictors was in this iu-umce at Uat comiletely foiled. The admiral had issued orders for the flag ship to t'Hich at Montevid. o for coal, and it was the int ntiun of the doctors to laud the aimira! there for tie itment. lint one man in the siiip was wrfiped in the gh-o n of de s;iair, as standing by the we:ither n.'g.njj on the xiop dei-k he pied absently over the seeti ing waste of waters. This was the ad miral's son, a lieuten int, and atta hel to his father's stall. He feared that the wear and tear of ship lite would sap his father's t-trength lieyond endurance, and before the ship could re:icli Mouteideo. Amonu a group of sailors grit! lered around one of the great gans on the spardtck stt Ithe cjiptain of the foretop, itrown. a slight but healthy looking man. His companions were listen ing to a recital of Ins suff 'ring's from con sumption, which had deve'oped while be was attached to the s'oop-of-war AVoiyrr, lying in the hartiorof YoKuhama a year ago, this yarn" having leen started by a discussion almiit the admiral's comliti .n. The men h id just returned from some w rk around the deck, an order for which lal interrupted brown's story a few moment previously. A year a'o this ilat I w is hove to in the Vill liiau's' sick bay in the littnrier, then otf Yokohama, an' i tell you, pards, 'twas no use pipiu' my nnm!er, 'cause 1 was nigh on l-assin in my enlistment pajiers for a Ions cruise aloft,'' contiuued Bron. "Con sumption had me flat aback, and the doctor ays it was no use to stow away his lush in my hold seem' that my b Hows was con demned by a higher power than he could wrastle witiu" "How did you pucUer out of it?" asked a gunner's mate. "Wa'all," replied Frown, "my Chinee wa-, man came to me one moruiii' an' he bays to me, "nie hab uot ailee same Mdiean man medikin. do y,m heap to d.' 1 stiys. bring it o!f, Chang: 1 buy all the same.' 1 h it afte m sin Chang h ive op with fourteen bottles of a lash, enough to kill or cure the whole ship's crew, an' that lo iked f rcsh in their nice wrappers. Sais Cirtug, "China man dictor hab jt.ot pleitiee more, he u ake heap good well with my sick, this nnuiher one tin diten nl!ce same through oko'iama.' Wa'all. 1 took the bottles an' told the doctor I w:is gom' to try one as by the sailin' or ders on the bottle, and the docl. r he haighed and said 'tvrxs no cixmI, but 1 d me as the regulations sacs from the fcrst, an' here I am, a'in the doctor's iui as to bes ire!' With this triumphant . as-ertion Brown looked al-out the circle. 1 hi n. lowering his voice, said: "liovs. I've four of lnose precious bottles leit ain't goo 'em ail sway jet i fter I was cured an' if yon a I tlm k that it wou.d not I too free With toe old man.' si:pose 1 go to his sou there on the poop deck an' say what 1 have to yon, an' askin' hi pardon, say we wa it tlie ad miral to try the stud iu my bottlos, stW tliat they cured n y conrumi tain." This idea met with appro- al from all Therefore Brown walked off for an interview nn i:.e Hd una! s sou, w.u no little anxiety in Ins gilbd heart as to tiie re mit of his mU-ion. Appnach'nj the lieu tenant. Brown saluted, am! a-kid for per mission to stite his reasons for doing so. 1 his was readily granted, and Brown sjioke out. " rieeinj thr.t I was once cured of con sumption, heitenant. I make Iwld to aK if 1 can tell you how. an' why I've the rea sons for wi hng you to use on your father what was my salvation." ... In a few moments the lieutenant had Brown's story out. and n n -h to the hitter's trratilicatum, granted a rt a iy j-ermiss-on to F.im. It did not tike Brown long to run to hisdttybox,pet the bottles of medicine, and return to the lieutenant with thein. " l'm a feared that the doctors will kick ig'in the ase of thi blessed stul, an mbat will job do, fir," stud Brjwn. as b plncf d the nifriiidne m tre catirn otxleh-j ti::t31s v es WF.en inio me stiua wi s room. " I will attend to that, B oil, and rest as tnred that your reme-Jy will hare a fair trial in spits of any opposition. It will not harm my father, judging from ynr statement and Ihe CD in 'on of the Medical otfiotrs ot the l. ft nfier." 'i hank von. sir. an' God help the admiral to weather h'S trouble, is the prayer of all the shin. Biud Brown, as the lieutenant inmed to enter the cabin. There was no cessation in the s'o-m that evening. The galo howled through trie rig Ring in wild, di-cordant tones; tlie great ship labored through tha white-capped moun tains of water threatened to engulph her With each burst of their stor.n-wlupiwd crests. Within the admiral's cabin the Ar irand Khts. the comfortable furniture, and the numerous evidences of tlie admiral's wanderings over land and w ater, as displayed iu choice bric-a-brac and trimmings, gave to the room a warm, snug appearance, most iileasing tins wild niglit to those within. Iu his stateroom lay the admiral, made .inn. fortab'e by all that lovii a..u mllui j hearts could snggest. tv lia- ia -HI .-. 4 son, w ho in qmet voice reootintiui- his fattier the interview ulii I5-iri,. .intf ti..t opposition met with from the doctoi-s when the idea of giviug this new medicine was brtiached. ' Yon were sleeping at the time, father, and therefore missed 4 'anghabls scene, made so. in spite ot your .audition, by tha intense dislike displayed t; the doctors for this 'new-fang ei stuff,' tin.- "patent liquid,' which they declared with their consent should never be gi'en to you. Well, I cut tiie matter short l y saying th.it I would take all tlie responsibility, aim w tli your iwm..-- aion would administer it. That I obtained when I found you awake, and now you art under way with the first bottle as ier airec tions. I in s-itistied. dear father, thnt ! will do yon good, a premonition tilling my heart that at last we h ive found the meant of arresting tiie burning fever and hacking c iu'h w in h have len troubling yon so niticti. The admiral's rep'y was cut short by a severe Rieil of couching, during which h spat blood, and when finished sank back ex hausted. But the grateful Itxik which be lie. stowed oti his s m was an additional assur ance of belief in that which the admiral had at first sight dubbed as a possible but doubt ful me ins of doing hi in any good. But lay ing aside his dislike for any but old-established remedies, the admiral acquiesced in his son's niiie-t, and now, i,f er this last spell, admitted that the effect of the dose hud sol tc tied tlie dreaded severity of the racking cough. Three weeks lafer found the Xnmad mak ing the harlorof Montevideo. After severe and prolonged weather she had rounded the Cape and was now standing iu the harbor for the pun se of rocoaling and watering. To one given to the study of human bi:e menu the faces of those aboard tiie fiagslup this bright morning would have afforded in finite scojie for such pursuit. But the source of each man's happiness flowed from the s ime fountain of g a eful joy. The beloved adiuiial was the cause of litis. And why': If you could have seen the admiral tlaj bright morning, dear reader, your answer would have beeu easily found in his face. A changed man was he. Victory was perched on his guidons! the dread enemy was s owly retie iimg! I he tight was a severe 01 but with no ces.snti m in vigilant action ana care fi.l ap) lii-iit en of the contents of four I -o: ties the adinirtil had turned tlie Hank of consinnpt on. and was slowly but sorely driving him oil tl e field with a power which astound d tiie doctors and tilled ad hearts itt joy and iht ukfuii ess. hat was tiiis then that had won the vie lory for the Seaman Brown, and was now It ading the admiral's shattere J forces to the same grand result? When a-iKed this en.-s-tion by ore of his ofTc rs on duty, in Mon tevideo, the admiral, sIoaIv lilting las hand, replied, "1 w.Hil l that in letters of gold, and so placed thai all the world could read' them, the name of this gnat remedy conld be shoun. co'p'ed with tlie genius who discov ered it 'Tui! roi.i'Fv; Mkoicat. Ltiscovuht! lr. Vm-e, of Builalo. N. Y..' the man who has given to his feltow men the grentvst la bel from nil ilia that mortal riVi-.Ii is heir to!' "This is il e name of the contents of that l"l on my ta! le, and (Jod bles the man wl o has found ttie secret of filling it witli m mcd cir.e at otice purifiing and s'rengi hon ing, w loiesoiue atid thorough in its results. and ciatnunir. in n,y humble opinion, noth ing for i'-elf tint it cannot re isonahly per f.irm. Natare'i ally ag ui.st ths abue of nrn!" e'l might t! e a l-niral sin" the pntses of that which h:d -o unexpectedly rescued him from a fatal ill less. i,u the ship miclioie.i tiie ri'St co:iiTiii.-si in b-r tiie iVnir;:l s son to OTernto whs a I tr,re purcha-e of I t. l'u-rce's tfoiilcn .ue lied lii-irterv, winch, as the ad miral sa lly a tmitte.l. he h i I s-'en in every jmrt the ui.-ii 1 aiotind and had oniy admired s an eviiictice 01 ti.e energy ami enterprise of an An e 11 an w ho could thiLS place his Gol lea .ic. in al Discovery in every nook ami comer of tlie globe. But now 1 e waa one more to testify 10 the wonderful power f tins meli.'ine. aul certainty did so in M mteviite 1, by praising it up to all the high otticials who vi-iU'd him. A week la'er ntid the .01n1d sailed for Boston direct. What the condition of the ndii in.l was when she arrived tliere is shown in I. is isr.ier aix.vo. ljet it be recorded to tlie critlit of the doctors on the flagship that they were completely cured of all d.s!ile for theOoIilen .Veil -al liscovery, nse.t it faith fully on the vovage to Boston, and I mde.l, thr ingh its wotiiier'ul toer, the admiral completely restore.!; and morethan onp or fellow wli 1 started out in the sick bay of t'ie SiunntL Vhat stanch friends the Golden Medical Dlscoery made in that ship! The ab ive, reader, is nn outline of the story, sp in by th admiral to his friend when they uu t at the uintier. We will not timh on otiie-ir,ions of h s interesting rcci ai of his cruise in general, our aim being to re cord his testimony for the greatest wonder in med c il soience that this nineteenth cen tury of tnrpraig developments has pro uuceiL From the wonderful power of Pr. Tierce's Goiden Medical D.scoiery over that terrib'y fat: 1 disease, consumption, which is scroful 1 of the lun-TS, when tirst offtnng this now world-famed remedy to the public, Ir. Fierce thought favorably cf calling it his "consumption cure," but abandoned that 1 a r.e as too restricive for a medicine that from its Wonderful combination of germ-destroying, as well as tonic, or strengthening, w'.ur tive or blood-cleansing, anti-bilious, diuretic, pectoral ana nutritive pro;ierue-, is lineipaale-l, not only as a remedy for con sumption of the lungs, 1st fur all chronic disia-es of the li er. blood, kidneys nn 1 lungs. Golden Midicid D.srovery cures all hnnii-rs from the wo st scrofula to a com mni blotch, pimple or en p ion. Krysiie las salt-rheum, fever-sores, sca'y or rmg skin, in short, all diseases caused by disease perms in tlie blood, are conquered by this owerful. purifying and invigorating medi cine. Gieu e iting ulcers rapidly heal under its benign influences. Ks-ecia!ly has it manifested its potency in curing tetter. r.e rash, boils, carbuncles, sore eyes, scroftilour sores and swellings, while swellings goitre or thick neck, and enlarged glands. The blood is the life." Thoroughly clean-st this fountain of heilth by using Golden Mi d 1 al Discovery, and good diges tion, a fair skin, buoyant spirits, vital strength and soundness of coiioutution are ei-tabhi-heiL For weak lnncs, spitting of Wooc?, sbort bre-ith. is,nTin-.t ne night-swea's and kin dred sflectinris. it is a sovereign remedy. In tlie cure of bronchitis, severe coughs and eonsninption. it has astonished the medical faculty, and eminent physicians pronouiio- it the greatest n.edical discov-ry of thj age. I'he nutritive pronerti lossessel by cod liver oil a e trilling w hen compared with tlnise of the Golden Medical Discovery. It ripi lly bnilds up the system and increase Ihe fle-h and weight 0" those reduced belo the nsoid sta udiird of liealiii by waiting di" sases. The render will pinion the foregoins di iression. fircmptrd by onr admiration for a remedy that performs such manelous cores, utd iiermit ns t mv tleit when ttie admira. retari.ed to bis tiome in New York the only c.oud cast ufion ti e happinessof the reunion run his family w as caused by the continuen llnessof his el lest son. a young man of tienty-fonr, whose diseas-, when the ad miral sailed from Monteveuio, had been re- ported as succumbing to the treatment of the family doctor. But his father thought it oih 'rwise: the unfortunate young man waa sr. fferirg severely from chronic dn-ea-e of the kiduevs sn:i bladder. Before leaving Boston tiie admiral h id purchased a copy of Dr. 1'ierce's book. "The Feople's Common i-ense Medical Adviser." He rial this val nab'e book thoroughly, and upon his arrival h me had made up his mind as to the future treatment f'ir his son. The latter was sent to t! e f imons Invalids' Hotel, at Bntfalo. N. V-, coitdnctcd by Dr. R. V. 1 ierce. and his comi e tent sial of si ecialists, w here, under :Ki!!t,il treatment, the sutlerur soon found e.ief and a pcruianeut cure. A noerVy in tlie ntiltzilion of wire feices coin-ifcts in iiif-n Sating one of the coutintioiis wires, unit connecting its ends with the opposite poles of a battery Animals coming in contact with this wire will receive a tl.ock from the eleo- trio'correiit, which will effectnallT de ter them, it is said, from attempting to break down or over-ride fences cf this descripticn. 7 one ear, the left, for example, be fatiKUcd ly listening to s lonfr, pure note, and the hearer then try to esti mate the direction of the sound, he will imagine it to Le further to the left than it is, and vice Tersa. L;fe la th texks Wilds. A pair of bnckskin legjtU.g art aching to the waist and fringed on the ooter Kins a blue flannel shirt and jaunty black tie, a leather belt exposing the bone handle of a dirk-knife and the ivory handle of a Colt's seven-shooter, conutiinted, with the exception of a hat the txterior outfit of George W. Symonds, a noted Texan ringer, who srrrived in Philadelphia on the 12th of May. The broad sombrero, worn farther back on the head than is usual with the head ornament iu the North, was of heavy pray felt, with a band nearly three inches deep tf twisted silk cord, surmonuted with silver orna ments, the lower and upper surfaces of the wide brim bting ahto decorated with a silver band. In appearance Air. Symonds is of a slender and wiry build. of medium height, with thin, prominent features and bright, intelligent eyes. giving an amiable and gqod-natured ap iiearance to his countenance. His straight black hair, parted high in the forehead aud combed back, falls down over his shoulders. When he strolled through the directs he was au object of much curiosity and ot much interest as he told stories of frontier life to a knot of newly-made friends in the smo king room of the hotel. In conversation with a reporter he said he had obtained a short furlough from military duty and took advantage of the opportunity to come North on a hasty tour of lDhpection, more with a view to the enjoyment ot a holiday tluiu any other purpose. He is stationed at Camp King, about fourteen miles from i ort UuviH, with Compary V, t rontier Battalion of the State troops, and in also in the employ of the licderal Govern ment as a bcout and guide. He antici pates a discharge from the former posi tion, on account of the incompatibility of the double employment. When atked if he could throw any light upon the presert surroundings of General Crook and his command iu the Sierra Madn Mountains, for whose safe- tr in the present campaign grave fears are l'elt, he said that while he was fami liar with the country he was uncertain as to the prec se number of the lntiiau engaged and their chiefs, lie thought thtre were about one hundred and titty 'bucks, with their squaws aud pajio- osts, compoeed entirely 01 renegade Apaches lroni the Mexican reservation. When an Indian crosses the borders of a reservation without a pasi-pjit, ana tsptciullv if he be aimed, it ia the pre sumption that he is bent upon some warlike expedition, at least is actuated by dangerous motives. He said that in his t pinion the apt rehenhions express ed as to the pessible tretchery of the In dian allies were entirely groundless. 1 understand, told he, "that lio Legs, a Seminole, aud Juan Jose are the chiefs of the Indians under Genetal Crook's command and they are thoro ughly reliable. J nan Jose is a Sankawa, a mixture of Mexicau aud white with a little lndLtn." "A 'greaser, tlieD." sug gested the if porter. "A 'greaser!'" re plied the Texan. "It would t be well for anv Le to suv Jnan Jose was a greaser." That is his sensitive point. It a newspper called him that he would depopulate a city rather than let the guilty man escaiie. He is friendly to the soldiers, but touch him on his sen sitive point and he would be a bad out fit.' " "I think he is IioLfst, though," con tinned the scout, aud he bus with hint now, under General Crook, two com paiiusof White fine Indians. They are Eerviceeble aud good fighters, al though tney are now 'caballo,' that is they are foot Indians, not mounted, as the others are. Yes, 1 have more fuitu iu their being able to pnt down au In dian outbreak than I have in the tioons although General Crook is a brave man, lull of ambition, and fully posted on the devious tactics of Iuuian waif ire. Branching Ho the subject into a de sultory talk aliout tha cuttouis of fron tier life and its attractions to men whose personal characteiistics displayed no peculiar tihuity, and of tiie peculiar methods of the hostile Indians, r-y-mouds said that he was first lib lit. lied with Uonipany E, a troop of Texan Bangers, under Captain Xtvill, who killed Sam Bas the notorous despera do and for years one cf the most dan- geious men in the Stat 4, At that time tue part of the country in the neigh borhood of Camp Davis was full of In dians and there were 110 settl ments outhide of the posts. The company of hangers, 25 in number,' were stationed at Mootkie's Kanch, six miles from Fort Davis, tue county seat. On the night of their arrival at their new barracks a ball was given in the towu in their hon or. "The guetts," said he, "were Mexi cans, cowboys, gamblers and the re gulation frontier crowd, who come on horseback as is the ciistom, and tied their animals in the corah A bonndti ful supper was provided on tables out side and the dancing was in full blast upstairs. During its progress au Indian walked in, took a general survey of the surroundings, measured the 'outfit' pretty thoroughly in his own mind and quietly departed. While the music was playing aud the 1 oL-e and laughter was at its height in the ball room a party of Indians stole down the mountains, collected all the horses of the revelers and gathering up the super departed as silently as they came. The baud was led by Victorio King Victorio, as sty ltd himself and he waa the greatest of all the Initi al) chiefs. It is said that he not only could talk Spanifch and English, bat he could write tliem, some people even declaring that he was educated at one ot the missions. Tt is the custom of the tribes to travel at night along the tops of the mountains, so that they keep the can y or sill full view, and they would nut cross one if they could travel twen tT-five miles to avoid it But in lbSO Victoria, with 250 bucks, superbly mounted aud lnily armed, made a de scent fctra.gbt through the canyous. de- lymg tlie soldiers and the forts, lie b.vouacked ou the plains and made no attempt at cone all; g his presence. Ten of us, with Cup lain Xeviil, started in pursuit, and wneu his scouts reported that the Big Texans were in the rear he tbanded bis plans of pillage and retreat ed into Mexico. He waa more afraid of the Big Texuiis than tho American army. .He was afterwards killed in Mexico by General Terressas and his. band dispersed, the remnatt of which w overtook and killed. By the way, Hi j par, the collored graduate at West t'oiijf, who was cashiered from the army is now a brigadier general in Mextco and receives tiie honors of a Casliltan. Wheu a peon speaks to a Castilhui be not only doSs bis hat, but throws it ou the ground while tlie conversation lasts." "Assassin" is a a corruption of thej Wind ha8hhaheen, a name applied to a notorious military and religious sect that flourished at the time of the Cru sades, because they were suppised to be addicted to the use of hasheesh, or Indian hemp. The supreme bead of the Aisasi-ius was called a de rcbt! n h 1 h was corrupted into the "Old Man of the mountain." When he required the service of any of his people, he first ii- toxicated them with hasheesh; and, when the fumes of the weed bad trans- poited them into a fool's paradise, they were ready for acy deed of blood. 1 he Assaains nourished in Syria until the end of the thirteenth century, when they were extirpated by Bibars. AGRICULTURE. Milklno. If there is cause for par ticular care and watcbf alness ou the part of the husbandman who employs help it is most assuredly with those who do the milking of his cows. The men ner cf milking has a more powerful in fluence on the productiveness of the cow than most dairymen are aware of. A slow and careless milker soon dries up the best cow. The first requisite f jr a good milker is otter cleanliness; the udder should therefore be carefully washed before milking if the cow has been lying in a yard or stable. The milker should begin gradually and very gently, but should steadily increase the rapidity oi the operation until the udder is emplitd, using a pail large enough to hold the milk without changing. Cows are very sensitive, and the pail cannot be changed without leading the cow more or less to withhold her milk. The greattst care should be taken to strip the last drop, and it should be done rapidly. If any milk is left it is re-absorbed into the systtm, or else become caked and diminishes the capacity of the udder. If gentle and mild treatment is observed.the operation is one of plea sure to the cow; but if an opposite course is pursued, if at every restless movement caused by pressing sore tetit the adimal is harshly spoken to, she will be likely to kick, aud thus form a habit which it will be difficult to break. Avoid change of milkers, and I c loth to part with a good one Kindness to Stock. Occasionally we see domestic animals that are as wihl as foxes, and' at the approach of man manilest the greatest alarm. This is usually caused by ill-treatment on the part of some one in the past. It is a positive disadvantage to have animals treated unkindly.it mat (ere not whether they be horses, sheep, or cattle, the re sult are the same. They will sot eat so well; they are likely to be restlesii; they will not grow as last as they should aud there is a constant loss from this wholly unnecessary cause. Therefore, we say. treat your animals with the greatest kindness, and don't allow any one to strike, kick or abuse them. Tour auimals will always give you a cordial welcome wheu they have no reason for expecting abuse. Treat them kindly, and they will reward you well for it by briugiLg into your pockets more profits for tiieir keeping. Care of Wagos Wheels. The sever est strain in the cart or carriage comes upon the wheels. The felloes especially aie exposed to alternate mud and drought, according to the prevailing went tier. The paint soon wears off and the wood absorbs the water from every mud puddle through which the vehicle is driven. In a dry time tlie wood shriukB, and the tire gets loose. The remedy is a new setting of the tire, and a bill lroni the blacksmith. It is much cheaper to ciean up the carriage occa sionally, and giving the wheel a dres sing of linseed oil us hot as it can be put on. The wood will absorb a good deal ot the oil, and will swell the rim so as to make the tue tight. It will pre vent the rotULg ot ihe wood, aud make long-lived wheels. Wheu the wheeli have soaked up all the oil they will take, put on a good coat of paint. It is an injury to plants to frequently w-iter ou the surface: to wati3i thoroughly when the plaLtt require it ia essential. Ki flection will convince any one that a 1 ot full of soil and a mass ot roots in the centre cannot receive sufficient wa ter to wet the roots thoroughly, if ap plied on the top of the pot iu moderate quantities daily. I. is time saved once a week to place the plants in a deep ves sel of water; keep lu U e water until the air bubbles cease, and itlso syringe over and uuder the leaves; it wid keep the 1LilU healthy, as does the eveniug dew. In feeding lambs for the market it is less important that they come early than that tney are kept growing without ch.ck from lack of food. After the lamb is ten days or two weeks old it wid usually begin to eat something besides it's inothet's milk No grain is bitter tnau w hole oats placed in shallow troughs where the lambs can ruu aud the old sheep cannot. A very little grain fed in this way will bring greater profit than if fed to any other kind of stock. The best lambs arc always salable at fancy prices, wliile stnntea specimens are ot teu a drug aud do not pay expenses. Chickens, when first hatched, sbould not be burned out of- the setting nest. For twenty-four hours at least from the time the earliest commence t- show themselves, it is better ta leave them uuder or with the hen mother. They need no food for from a day to a dav and a half usually. When they get strorg enough to venture from beneath tlnir mother's wings, it is time to move the breed. When cows are fvd with a liberality that develops a full now of milk, they will not overload with a food so little concentrated as green grass The fact that they do overload is an evidence that their previous food was too scanty for profit, and consequently thnt loss had beeu endured ou- account of it. When a change is to be made the herd should be admitted gradually tjthenew feed, aud they should be supplied wilh all the salt and water they desire. When- the sulisoil is loose, open and gravelly, bubuoiling is unnecessary juiiou such laud it is generally sufficient to tnrn over the fertile surtace soil and to go no oeeper with a plow than the soil can be manured. Cirailuaily. as 1 soil can be enriched, the plow may go detper, but much injury my result by plowing a thiu, gravelly son too deeply at first. Tiie cattle of the Pampas are compu ted at 20,01'O.UUO. They are the descen dants of a bull and eight cows, which were brought there by two Portuguese brothers in l-3. It is only near Bue nos Avie- that ihev have been crosred with liner stock. Tiie old Lerds are ill shaiienl and ngly. Layerim) consists sitiiply in bending down a btanch ami keeping it in contact itti or buried te a small dei th in the soil, in1 til roots are formeL The con nection with the parent plant may then be served. Many plants can be far more easily propagated thus than by cuttings, Mix one-third 1 lister of paris with two-thirds of com meal and place it where the rats (but not the chicken?) can get lk It causes death by absorbing the juices of the stomach. In many parts of Spain fanning ope rations have made little or no i n trress siuce the expulsion of the Moors. The same sort ot plow is used now as then, oxen tread out the corn after the ancient Oriental fashion, and women separate the chaff Irom the corn hy tcssuie: the gram up in the air during a breeze of wind. . Xorthern manufacturers and capital h-ts are sending their agents to Georgia and other Southern States to buy up for est lands. Thirty thousand acres of wood'sud m one body have been bought in .Northern Odorgnt.lt is suggested tnat the Legislature should pass a law to prevent the wholesale destruction of the forests. DOMESTIC. DEticlora CofeK - Tii conae-grow ing countries, where the berry makes but a short journey from the bush to the mouth, this process is not necessary; and in the mountatns of at. Domingo, the native darkies make coffee in very quick fashion. They take the fresh berries and parch them for a few min utes, then crush them in a mortar and for each person put a tablespocnful of fragrant fragments into a conical-shaped bag: the exact number of coffee-cups full of boiling water is measured out anil poured twice through the bag. This completes the process, iuj the result is "nectar." But some tne comes for ward with an air of authority and aays: Take a coffee-cup of the best Java coffee broil ned to the color of chocolate (not scorched), ground not too fine, and mix with it half an egg. Fat this into a coffee pot, or boiler, (which is as clean as the cup you drink from) and pour over it one quart of boiling water, stir ring as you put the water in; boil slow ly for fit teen minutes, thin stand the boiler en the back of the range ten min utes to settle; turn all coffee off from the grounds al once into an tun or coffee pot that can stand upen the stove to keep hot. Coflee loses its flavor by standing on the grounds longer than half au hour, an 1 should be very hot to be good. To Maes If eocs. To every pint of port wine allow one quart of boiling water, one-quarter pound of sugar, one lemon, grated nutmeg to taste. As this beverage is more usually drunk at child ren's parties than at any other, the wine seed not be very old or expensive for the purpose, a new, fruity wine answer ing very wtll for it. Put the wine into a jug, rub some lumps of sugar (equal to a quarter pound) ou tne lemon-rind until all the yellow part of the skin is absorbed, then squeeze the juice and strain it. Add the sugar and lemon juice to the port wine, with the grated nutmeg; pour over it the boiling water, cover the jug, and, when the beverage has cooled a little, it will be fit for use, Xegus may aiso le made of sherry, or any other sweet white wine, but is more usually made of port thau of any other beverage. Sufficient Allow one pint of wine, with the other ingredients in proportion for a party of nine or ten children. Cbeame Patissiere. Put the yelks of six eggs and two teaspoonfuls of sifted fieur iuto a stew-pan. Add gradually to it a pint and a half of boiling cream and a pinch of salt; then place it on a moderate fire, stirring it with a spatula till it begins to thicken, when you tike it off, continuing to stir it, in order to make it perfectly smooth. Then put it back on the fire, stirring it for five or six minutes, until it is set Put a quar ter of a pound of butter in a pan ou the fire, skim it, and continue it on the fire till it has acquired a light-brown color, when you instantly mix it with the cream, after wliicn add to it a quarter of a pouui of grated cocoa paste; to gether with four oun'TO of macaroons coarsely broken up. You may flavor it ' with a little maraschiuoor orange-flavor 1 water. In case the cream should be too ' stiff add a little more cream; if the con trary, the yelks of two eggs. Silver m constant use should be washed every day iu a pan of suds made of good white soap aud warm water, drying it with old soft liuen cloths. Twuni a week (after this waahiug) give it a thorough brightening with finely- powdered whiting, mixed to a thin paste with alcohol, rubbing longer and harder where there are status. Then wipe this on aud polish witn cleau, soft old lineu. The plaid flannels which are offered at surprisingly low prices at this season of the year make desirable covers f jr comforters. They are so firm that they do not need to be t-iekeu very closely, and can be easily ripped apart and washed wnen it is necessary. Although one would preter to be engaged in sew ing on muslin and summer garments, it is nevertheless true that it is a good time now to consider tiie needs of anoth er winter. Insect Dsvstroykr. We see it stated that the best insect des trover knowu is alum water. All you are required to do is to put the alum into hot water and let it boil t.ll all the alum is dissolved. then apply it hot with a brush to all cracks, closets, bedsteads, aud other places where insects are found. Ants, bedbugs, cockroaches and other creep ing things are killed by it, while it has no danger of poisoning the family or injuring property. Tee staintng or bricks red is effected by melting one ounce of gluo iu a gal Ion of water, theu adding a piece of alum as large as an egg, one-half pound of enetiaured, and one pound of Span ish brown; redness or darkness is in creased by using more red or brown. For coloring black, heat the bricks and dip m fluid asphaltam or in a hot mix ture of linseed oil and asphalt, Durable and pretty covers for bu reau are made of drab aida canvas, with the edge finished with deep scallops crocheted of macreme cord, or make the cover so large that the edge will fall over the edi;e of the bureau. Alter the canvas is fringed to the depth of an inch. overcast the canvas so that it will not raveL A narrow border of worsted above the fringe is a pretty addition. Picki bo Eogs. The eggs hhnuld be boiled hard (about ten minuter) and then divested of their shells; when cold put them iu jars and cover with vinegar in which hive been lioiled the usual spices for pickling. Tie the jars down tight witb oiled brown paper. This is au excillent pickle to be eaten with cold meat, etc. Hard Pomatum. Lard and mutton suet, ol each one pouud; white wax four ounces. .Melt with as gentle a heat as possible; skim and strain, and clear irom the dregs whieh are deposited on standing; and one ounce of essence of bergamot and pour in moulds. Bepellino Moths. If fine cut to bacco be sprinkled under the edge of carpets, and under tnose places where bureaus, book-cases and the like make it dark, the moths will be prevented from laying their eggs in them, ss it will drive them awav. Cheam Tea Cakes. One quart of tlour and a teaspoonlul of salt, oue pint of sour cream, ana a half cup of melted butter, half tpoouful of sal ratus in a spoonful of hut water. Mix lightly in dough, mould in small caked and bake in butteted tins. Stair Bods. To cleau stair rods, use wooieu cloth wet with water aud dipped in silted coal ashes: aiierwards rub with a dry cloth. The effect of the vibrations of sound is very peculiar. Here is an example: A plate of glass or metal may be neld between the finger aud thumb at one corner, having been previously strewn over with fine sua, then a fiddle-bow be drawn near one f its angles, the sand becomes agitated, and finally resolves itself into the form ot a Laiiu crota. If the bow be drawn near the middle of one of the sides, a St. Andrew's cross will be formed. A m&n, or one of the lower animals. cooiiieiled to breathe for half an hour an atmosphere containing 1.779 cf car bonic acid, absorbs that gas in auch quantities that one-half the red blood corpuscles combine with it,and become incapable 01 absorbing oxygen. HUMOROUS. Two New York era, travel in Sou th, ..,-., .' tha leoot at Memphis, wcuv ""'""ft " 1 .1 . 1 ii,;n .hnni ih needs 01 me I1UI MUAU15 ww. , South, and they had been at it three quarters of an hour, when long-haired man in an old sombero and an "over flowed" look in his fac?, stepped up and "Gentlemen, tou was talking about the south?" "Yea, air." "You were talking about her pros pects, progress and needs?" "We were, sir." tVll now T ain't SO well posted on her prospects and progress, but if you want to know the great present need of the South, just invite me out to take a whisky straight I Auvanee step In Dentistry Havana, Cuba. The mist popular dentist of this city, Dr. D. Francisco Gar cia, member ti the Koyal University, states that in all cases of trouhUaome neu ralgia, arising from the teeth, his patrons are reco-nmeuded to use SL Jiob's Oi', and the most satisfactory cures have lol lowed. It is a specific ft toothache, ear ache, bodi'y pain and proof against household accidents. "What time does the State road train leave ?" asked a lady of a railroad man. "Two forty-five." was the ready reply, "Well, I declare," she said, with a pnz zled look covering her face, "Atlanta is the strangest place I ever" saw about giving information." "Why so?" asked the railroad man. "Because, just now I asked a gentleman what hour the train left, and he said a quarter to three, and now you say two forty-five; I can't understand it to save my life." The man walked off leaving her to study out the problem. Eat Citt. Jlicn , Feb. 3 1880 I think it my duty to send you a recom mend for the benefit of any person wishing to know whether flop Bitters are good or not. I know they are good for general debility and indigestion; strengthen the nervous ystem and make new life. I rec ommend my patients to use them. "K. A. PKATT. When Bass moved iuto an apartment bouse. Fogg remarked to Mr?. B., "Quite appropriate, Mrs. Bass; sweet to the suites you know." Fenderson, who was pienent, thought it was a pret ty nice compliment; so when he saw Bats next day he thought he would try i. "I hear you have moved into a family hotel," he began; "quite appro priate, flat to the flats, you know.' And Fenderson still wonders why Bass should get mad over a remark that had made Mrs. B. smile so sweetly. Gentleman "You ask me for a small gift, and do not even take off your bat from vour head. Is that any way to act?" Beggar "Excuse me, most hon orable sir. I dare not do it, for yonder stands a policeman. If he should see me take-mv hat off. it will occur to him at onoe thAi 1 ln ggar, and he will mB- Ai P'eem. e arc mi., he merely supposes that we are two old acquaintances having a friendly chat.' An -!l1oiTrlltMwr. lal. A. M. Vsibrhn.e liter of t ie "Hr.enm h Bertow," Ci i-iiwuh. O.. w.'.Un : La.t Juitury I met with a fery a vere acriileut, raiu-M bv a run-tway b r-w 1 us-dal;iMtee.-y kiQdf ailveto h-al the wounds, which tiir.ie.1 to niuDinir mreo, bat fcand nothing todonieauvffijoil t U I w r c.mia-iel.xl Hm.r't ii-rt'ir hiy. 1 b-iu-ht box mi.d it h-ip.-d ma at once, and si rhe end of tw mouths I w am cimip.et.-ty welL It is the b-s- ss v-in the uiirket, and 1 n ver lad of t ltnir tu- friend abja. it, sad ur.-o thetn 10 use it whenever they nr xl s sslve. Da'-rei' Catarrh Swiff rnres all sllecti. ona of tbs Doom meuibrsne of tin bssd aud throat. "1 tell yon, said a man whose char acter is way down below zero, "that it doesn't do no good to compel children to read the Bible. When i was a yonng kid they used to keep ue at it half the time. I knew it all by heart afore I was fifteen; it don't do a cliild no good I tell jer." It was the unanimous opinion of all who knew him that his argument was unanswerable. llensman'a Peptonized beef tonic, the onlr preparation of beef containing iu en tire nutritious properties. It contains blood-making, force generating and life austalning properties; invaluable for indi gestion, dyspepsia, uervous prostration, and all forms of general debility; also, in all enfeebled conditions, whether the result of exhaustion, nervous prostration, overwork or acute disease, particularly it resulting bom pulmonary complaints. Caswell, Hazard A Co., proprietors, Hew York. Bold by all druggists. Chables Moon, of Denver, swallowed a live bull-fro,?, six inches long nd two inches across the breast, and afterwards drank a pint of whisky. The saddest thing about the affair is that it was the frog that died. Almost as depressing was OLe of the pipers of the city calling the fro;? swallower a "full Moon." Per haps the word "full" was a misprint for "fooL" That 11 untamil ol Mine ta three times the man be waa before he began using- Weils' Ueailh Kenewer. 11. liruggiala. We learn frDtn a fashion item that it is low the correct form to use a little pompadour slipper filled with white dowers. Instead of the proverbial old shoe, to throw after the departing bride. t rom certain legends we have read, we infer that the new idea would be much safer than the old one at a Chicago weddinsr. The bride would be les liable to have her skull fractured. Thoe who use Carbohne as cow im proved and- per fit ted, the great petroleum hair renewer, are always distinguished by the beautiful soft texture ot the hair pro duced by the use ot that most exquisite ot all toilet preparations. A maw in California reports having seen a rattlesnake with two legs. The fact that it didn't also have two heads is evidence that the whisky might have been much worse. But perhaps the California man took only six drinks." Fr.x-r le Grease. One rrtoaoni; Iate two weeks; all others two or three .lsv. Io n H be mpos-d on bv the bnmbng stuff offere L ' ak vour ceal r for Kra- xer a. wu h laoel on. -aves tour bone labor and 0'i too. It r-ceived tint medal at the Ge 11 ten Dial and Paris Einosikoae. Sold evervwUeTd. "Joint is a mighty mean man.' said Bifrgtt; "he sold me a tnb of butter that was stroDg enough to go aioue. but I got rid of it. I sold it to my brother ; and tiie best of it is I gut more thau 1 paid John for it." Toccoa Crrr, ts. iir. J. p. Newman save Biown's Iron Bitteraare very popular aud tamr nae a.wsjrs results saiiaf ac.oriiy." "Osz toaob of nature," etc. Street preacher "I now ask. brethren, what can I do V move you in this world of wickedness ? Array "Send round the at. guy'Lor. That'll move 'em." Waixott, the gentleman w ho ate thirtv brace of quail, in thirty (lays, waa relieved roru any ui.sairreeable atutuai-ii trouble bv uaiuK oA.-i i huk, Mini loo a noiuinv ei.se u tir ing the tank. Sid by drili;ils. "Cotocsd thedou! he said. 'Til settle his bash for him when I go down t here to see nate to-night." And he proceeded toaaturate the seat of his pants with strychnine. "Three new asylums lor the insane are to be built at once in Indiana." We didn't snppose that dadeiam was making converts so rapidly in that State. . .v- incemotU adapt Uorofele a - onmnA A Wife roue. ESS TrounYthe ten, of the throtUe .i i the eneinc carries a weignt which U held in pla.r. rest, u whole arrangement is su.u that tne . oiwtria current along passing ox r r:----- the wire reies- " "-- : - ,v weight to fall. The tension thus thrown upon the wire rope acts upon tne uiro tleValve, cute off the supply of steam, "1 .iZ-nnentlT slope the machinery, muttons with wiie connections are placed in different parte f the works, Km pressing any one of these the passage of an electric current acts as mentioned. In any factory these electric buttons can be placed in eveiy room.or several of them in a Urge room as may be required. Should any one happen to be caught by tie machinery, ...ri;,nirreasinrof a button in the most distant part of the factory quickly stop the whole. will Th model of a'Datent compound" ex presi steamship." intended lor ocean PngeVandlreight traffic, has bee" exhibited in the Produce Exchange in New York. The steamship will have Jhree hulls ;the boilers and coal-bunkers will be in the two outer one, ainoa in the central one. There be propellers, so that the vessel carries either way with equal facility. The up per deck will be curved fioro bow to ftpm no as to shed the seas that may break over. who had an lmperme aid.. ..rictiirn of the cullet was saved from starvation by having masticated fnn.1 introduced into the abdomen by a syringe through an artificial opening in the abdominal waii. In a paper read by Dr. C. W. Siemens before the .Uiglisn xwyai -'J . taken that all the neat and energy sent from the sun find their way back to tne great, sow i.:..i. ), unfTi-ra no diminution of Its forces. ' 1 nance of Mind. I declined to insert your advertisement of Hop Bitters last year, because 1 tnen thought they might not be promotive of the cause of Temperance, but find they are, and a very valuable medicine, myself and wife having been greatly benefitted by them, and I take great pleasure In making ihem known. REV. JOU.1 BEAJiAa, Editor Home Scn'inel. Afton, N. T. The other day one of Atlanta's chronic rag-pickers went into Swartz's junk shop with a bag full of miscellaneous rags to sell. Swartz looked dubiously at the sack and then exclaimed: "Py chiminy gricky, vich shell I veish vot you got on, or vot yon got off?" Then the pickt r got insulted and went off to another shop. Baltimore, iim-Kev. . H. Chapman save 1 Urriu Hi own a Iron Billets a most n.uaoe tom-i lor general ul-aealto.' A teacher defining a transitive verb as oue that expresses an action which is "passed over" from the deer, gave for illustration "Ihe doir wasrs his tail. Whereupon a youngster arose with the criticism: "Please, ma'am, the action don t pass over; it stays in the dog." Skinny Men. "WetisTlealth RenewerTeatores health and vigor ciucs ijspf pais, impotence, sexual icbi;ilj. al. Her fattier stood at the gate talking witn a gentleman, and the seven-year-oldmiss threw out several hints about supper being ready without success. At length, anxious and impatient, she call ed out from the side stoop: "Pips, if yoa don't come right into supper tue ice cream will all get cold V Pr. Kline "a Great Nerve tceatorer Is the marvel oi 1 ue aye iot an nerve uiseases. Ail Ota stopped tree. 0cuu w n ami aireev, ranaue-poia, l a. As Ohio physician says that the fife. flute, cornet and other wind instiuments, if played vigorously, will cure weak lungs. This may be true, but the man who tries the experiment may meet with a fatal accident before he effects a permanent cure, unless be resides on some isolated island in the Pacific ocean. liaities and children's ooots and shoes cannot run over if Lyon's Patent Heel otiffeners are used. "My home is not upon this earth,' was the pious remark of Deacon Crow. foot; "my mansion is in the skim wu. replied tope. "I would not advise you to move into it until you find out what kind cf neighbors you are gomg to have. i.niory'8 Little Cathartic Till bel made lor Liver Complaint and Biliousness Tasteless, harmless, infallible. 15c Willie has a 4-vear-old sister Afsr who complained to mamma that her Diut on shoes we hurting ntr. "Why, Matue, you've put them on the wrong feet," Puzzled and ready to cry, she made answer: "What'll I do, mamma? They're all the feet I've got" Why don't vtrn nae St. Patrick's Salve' Try it. toe it, 25c at all drugitist. "Eubop ia treading on a volcano " reads old X. in his paper aloud. "Ps pa, what is a volcano?" asked the youngest. "Why, it is something to tread on, my boy." For Thick Heads, Heavy stoma h. billons conditions Wells' Hat Appie fms-anu-bUious. calaaruc lUandaSc. Fooo says that he has bottled up enough health during the winter to last nearly through the two weeks which he intends tending at some health resort next summer. Shon d yon be a snnen.r .r. .. cation, malaru or-..,. " -."Fvp-w, moi- bj brown. lixButerT cure,i A-ish may be aralr-l ir.n.1, i first aijtpmg them in scalding water for minute. The Bad and Worthless are never tmidued or amirmu .- eapeoui., trae ol . famHv nhctna. Z DOSltlve nmj ih.o. . . 11 his-ieat V. Z. T. rcmnj fMotnt a, of the -a. rr:i.u,?"o:ew0r;l tb p Bute , son most Taloable famlls medicine on mrr. . " J aad tne peopie of the eonntry had expre,, ,T . '"''"" tnetrn alt Instead. devi.1 Mlooaij the .on, WltS ..TSaT Tooch none of th. tt . . wr" or "em. UopBitte T7JZ flop on the whit. 01 t" lirureim, sn.1 .7rsre".r: .BO,hln !ae. Autnia WANTED i.r,1.." 1-Iu.iiu.b, r Mow to Aclaulr. H w Hewttta." Retails. ttftX ri1W" leutn Slree PtuTpiiiat ?at " Nortn wigontattrea. AddrM laL-asT, OoAajcusta. sia I 10 1 lum JL?"? l d by drniri.,. M w rw Tl ir nne.a.. REMEDY FOR PAIN. Belifvrasndrar, KlirXJIATisi, Neuralgia, Sciatica, Liinbago B 14 Kl HE, ' HEADACHE. T00THACH1 SCiRE THROAT, QL'IV-Y.sWKLLUtGA l"attlSH. i Soreness. Cuts. Brusta, 'lt(-TliiTlM, Rl KX. wrALD-t, And allottwr bodily acta. Slid pains. FIFTT CE.1TS I BOTTLE, Soldhyall DninrhBaj. IiaU-r. Inrwanis la 11 huuruaavn. The Charles . Voetlay t MWll'IIUilll atHnaam.la.i.a.a There has never been n tnsta?K In whirl, thu frteriins invifertrant svou antt-rcttriie ihmmiii h&t failed lo war. off tne complaint, when taken -lait ait proiet-t.on attain, ma i aria, midiirviis of phjsl'-Uns have altniouMt all the nnViiiai f if- tonic for chills nl fever, as well at i.jirii4 anil nervoui affections, liottftter's iiiUen u tue ispe-!flc jou oetl. X or Salle of at.! iruvKiAU J,' irait r! cfaerij. HEALTH IS WEALTH! TREATMENI 1 ML K. C. WtNI-tt Mfc AX llAM THh t rife W. . rn4vraivert wrlfS- lor H t-lav tmiMrs C-av -( ipa.P fa, Kwrwooa carlirs, BsvtaM-ha, N-r-v TS) prtiat.i ru I hjtib ant) oT sviot.sol i.r .: rr. Wkfn.i.. M-r-t .i 1 prxaawioaa. So la-a i ng of tarn Hiii riiir in to.,.!. n-t lr aftin c U tntawv. -- afei lo.vUw ; Pn-mti u J ., Bavrt'wiksMam. Lam tf i.r tu itii-r sari Itttiatui.tan L -- aivt &vrmi"rrbt ? tv T-r-s) ti. at stf Uti brat. If-wVMa or nvvr-iavt rM-. K fwi kni n.oti:i, ne bimd'. ai tlKUrniait. ! Iwat. IffU UfXe Iwr t,rat tUaui trs. fi'i n rcywVtf pric. WE CUARANTEE SIX DOXES IS car, sot rav. W tt nW rtrva, by ta fr t (wsm. .CTraiau ia wiib f wm 11 1 amit tlv pttrr'.a i.-n-ntli saaVTsvBtac tort'ia i t'a mBr (l Ita. La waumtul J --I t-t cur. ntrsntrlsnw aj Lj KISXI.1C I'UI'LsstX, SarUrvStrwKrI-iM. r. TH r1sfrs)tT rSflL.9 SHwoat Cariiv. K tTmf ram Hn4iiw, rMi;plkMa, a'anHaws IK Sav.ax. iw..-i rt Wlrra atM-U r--ir-t ol i svf a, I uaur-J (..i c-""- EISNER & MEXDLSON, 330 Kino fitrget. PriiladHphia. Pa. CHARCOAL PnwtW rVmlfalT prrar!. for the XI .11. Trtlitiv. th tW-tia, tsavi iitvnrh. Or-UU. 31 L. iin II iMrasJ dlaVr-AtaVM, IMtUmW KMttM DIJS. i. . aV 4. ii. 1iu151-:..vH l. Til 'SS ArViv.KD WI I'il llri E'KM'IS OF .-El-r'-.,iiL-K Al M Ei:c'I' RU LIZ i 'l. Sfiool I ui t tl.a t.ie t (Mil J. N. au l J. ft. 11. 1. BEN.SACK. ot art Nur a .e. oo.l tive', Pinii.i-i- p.'iiA. euuvr hv iua i or b pr-i n. 'tnrt'ij; tie Uoura Irom A. M. lo S P. M.. an.l to i P. M. A iv.i-e ire. Wii i.vt-r woul.l know his ronlw tioa and th? wavto irnimve It snou'd read "WlNin.M - a M'l'MlEIX. Sent on rit.t oi -:ent a. aiup. STOPPED FREE frwaa Pernor fiestfjrH fl Dr. KLINE 3 CHEAT aV NERVERESTOREff rrrp.t,LiLat ti Ua-ett as direrrtM. A tts afrrw ist dry' t ar. Trr ;rfs5 tnt $m trill hf!e hrr r Fit patMrnn. thtrr pawirtaT expreAchAreeonbOB wbm - eivfil. Snd irtr v. P. O- n't exp-rs nUrfM oat if!w-tr.1 Pr KLINt-.ait Artt St.P-luJ:ti;a.rav. taeUa.ii- Of dJVTAIlbti fJLdi, "THE arST is ruriBrtTM .STHRESHERSlSii 1 CloTtrHillen (anftprf to an m-iur.a . Writ for aifc.s: Bins. PamrHiat aa at iAykw Csv. Mar.oaid. cav ndl-rioasiolASABlln ayne's Auto..iatlo engine. I mriansal wtstan an aV Uwwat. "I- ttm i aai i YOUNG REN to wat to herrnia TFI.B- nt'rL't - , fuaraulnd suiiuorment. a.idrua V. . K i 11 Aa.u. EEE tfffZSZ "Health Helper" TUE SUi B5AMY,ELONS miZlLKr.'.'.1' tb. . in r.U'l. "ml.Ha.i Li i . wuui, .ir s var. irr l,!r u. , U.i. a. ..HULAVD, PnNiah-r. Sew Tor City. PETER COOPER. Cornea iBMariHoaif.sioHr.ee Kolan .-,."r,I' . An it. GiiM-mith. Koheri Uurtla, 1 u I1IIL1V...U r .1 1. ' nuwu. f?1'-.l,ulsav.r. IS Voy S Yotk. A Door ilZ wJj. '. .r " tni mm A a a auaJL. isvM Axsunsl at., ht. iaiuis. Mil ".ai KlDOERSPASTIUFsi? ITc fcoa dJ 1 U.B.V. RisiL .-"Jrwrll t Co. .'tlsrktrtuwn. '1 t! rT. 'n TTTO-own town, lerms and oatat 'frae. Addreas H. Ho im a 1 i. .?... A duo lt-r "avBj tuiu Dium mctjaj cv IsC-SQ M DOT OHBt. ATaOAwaVl. FClL CO. Phli.ljV- i FREE! BTHFTFRN M I1A fn H. ,n 1BKHS CCTTISCL.' of Moody's Nkw Tailok ,-vl. m of i. Hoouj Co-,ai . yUuLui- CUlllitl-. ' . V0Z'tXZTr'rM' rM-n.Sewrk. S.J. Twins rvwinmiji lor T.l,.a:. w nw lor circulars. Si7 on MOKPMlB HABIT. No pay till etired. Ten Trs established. l.ooO earwl. Ststs naft. Or. Aiwrsa. Quaucj. lich. $65 iZlOt TH an1 lB Thrown county. itrtML r i" iair". :"" IjkI i' ouint lrw. id- 1- luiadtlvnia, ta. Tn .Ka . " IA t -y, r. K D-. C XL 1 hT WIDE- S - "IK 1.K BV ALL UUI1..It" Itwr m Ami AM Will ,,.,,,p.,,,iasWJ ' tltwawSaaaawa -v.rirv TOR ik STOMACH 05 mtf .4 s. : aj iu uc wsaritf rttsui w u Kr tfx aw .vr' ful. Fim;4r. iVnt S-rw Surv E, atWaVtarial llaaw, CaWawrt l al Apprtir. Frmal CowptAUl J. mm. 1 KUasal 7 Jl9 liif-aa. ft. It smw lavila. All rfmzxi'U ami f4 J-"t coairtrw sttvre kirpm a-ll It. B. ft. wHru tavt I 1 . aaaawhas, Bwrttm 9iattamtltrmtm a AiaoUi.f..iTlr "' '" d ai ra. or,. -. L.t u. Lira or T iT w "nilBd: iin,ri'iitl, - anocii .k," '"-.Vft miiH Ward. . . UE.stKT.n v';.'. .' Al lii'iymu. . . . I- K M W m.n , j a fa 3 tbs advwrtlsaw wad tha tavw awav tfeasi1 Za
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers