The Son and the Rene. The Btin, who smiles wherever he go**. Till the flowers ili smile again. Fell in love one da; with a bash fa! Rose That hth been a hud till then. So be pushed back die folds of tbs soft green hood Thst covered her modest grace. And kissed her as only • lover ooukl, Till the crimson burned in her face. But wo tor the day when his golden hair Tangled her heart in i Ml. And wo tor the night of dark despair, When her cheek with tears wss wet! For she loved him as only * maiden could. And he left herrrnshe I snd weak, Striving in vain with bar faded hood To cover her guilty cheek. iii " . Farm, Garden and Household. FATTKNUW Snmtr IN WINTER.— The indication* are favorable for this bnai news. Select the Iwst three or four year-ohl Merino wet tiers that rnu be found, give them good grass and, it need be, a little grain this mouth, preparatory to abutting then up to fatten. Chey should gain mote this month than dur ing the two next. The profit come*, not from increase in weight, but from the extra quality <uid the increased price of the mutton next spring. Much money ha* been made in this business, but a person who has had no experience should not rash into it on a large scale. To Drrri T SULFHTO IN Coat GAR.— _ Vlex ha* publisliod a simple process of detecting tlie presence of sulphur in ordinary illuminating gas. The flame from the gaa is used in a Bunwm burner to heat a clean platinum dish containing water. After evaporating about a pint of water, the outside of the vessel will be found to be partlv coated with an oily fluid, which can be distinctly ahowu. by •rdinarv qualitative teste, to he sulphuric acid. The same author states that the white incrustation which sometimes makes its appearance on the inside of lamp chimneys, consists of sulphate of ammonia. Coax-STALKS. —Hat will be scarce and high 'lie coming winter, and we ought to take extra care in curing and preserv, ing corn-stalks. Half the corn-stalks even in sections where farmers profess to think a good deal of them, are ren dered comparatively worthless for want of proper care and* attention in curing and sticking Farmers know hom this should lie done, but do not sufficiently realixe its importance. In this case, as in ao many others, they need exhorta tion rutin r than precept The point is to cure stalks as rapidly as possible, and to draw them in a* aoou as the sap is so much reduced that they will not ferment injuriously in the stack or barn. In this case, as with hay, the water or sap that is in the stalks not half so likely to canae mold aa a little water on the out aide of the stalks from dew or rain. TSFECTIOS.—It is not so generally known as in ought to be that a human being ia liable to infection from a glan dared home. Numerous such cases have bon recorded in medical works; and only a few weeks ago a man named Martin, who lived in Washington coun ty, Md., suffered a horrible death from this cause. While attending to a horse which had the glanders, aome of the virus from the diseased animal's nose or mouth iound its way ir.to a cnt on one of his thumbs, and shortly afterward* he was taken with which were succeeded by severe nausea and uttei prostration. Although medical as sist&nce wus immediately procured, and the man bad every reasonable attention, be live only a few days after the infec tion manifested itself. Before dying his body became a mass of ulcers, and at the end tlie flesh fell in pieces ftom his bones. When s hone ia found to be giandered. it should be killeil st once, and proper measures taken to disinfect every object -that has been in contact with the animal. BREAEINO OXKX. The education should commence at one year old. A suitable yoke and IKIWS are provided : the tails are tied together by the tufts.that they may not turn round and reverse the voke. A rope ia fastened to the near horn of each steer ; these ropes unite in one a abort distance from their heads. They are allowed to stand in the yoke often when not in exercise, and are ex ercised daily until they are familiar with the different motions and words and signs used to control them. They are then yoked to a pair of wheels only, and exercised with them. To teach them to beck, strike them quick blows on the nose with the palm of your hand, using a4 the same time the proper word. Quiet ness and gentleness should be used during the lessons, anil a little salt will pacify them should they be inclined to become unruly. Never unyoke them when they are excited ; let them eool down first It should be borne in mind that whatever L learned now will be re membered, and the lessons should be given with the greatest care. MATERIALS ROB MANURE. —The manure pile may be augmented from many sources outside of the stables or barn yards. Much waste matter ia lying around in every village or hamlet iu the country that might be gathered up at very little expense. We do not know a country town of a hundred or two inhabitants in which some one would not be glad of a job to gather up ashes, leather scraps, tanner's ofbl, tan-bark, sawdust, chip-dirt, straw, and refuse generally; all of which would make valuable additions to the coin post-heap. Old boots and shoes should be reduced to charcoal by covering them with a pile of chips ard burning them slowly, keep ing the ashes Lee pel over them. Tliey are then easily reduced to powder. Old woolen rags and waste from a shoddy factory is very valuable as manure. Bones, above all things, should not be overlooked; nor oyster-sbeDsi, which, when burnt, make a valuable lime. Thousands of tone of such matter go to waste every year, not because it is not worth the cost of gathering, but because burners do not rpi reciate how valuable this wsite matter is. BULKS FOB THE CARZ orSmnrr.—Keep sheep dry under foot with litter. This is more necessary tlrn roofing them. It t them s and or lie in mud or now. Drop or take out the lowest liars as the sheep enter or leave a yard, thus saving broken limbs. Begin trrainincr with the greatest care, and use the sma 1 st quantity at first. If a ewe loses her lamb, milk her daily for a few days, and mix a little alum with her salt. Give the lambs a little mill feed in time of wpnning. Never frighten sheep if possible to avoid it How rye for weak ones in cold weather, if you can. Separate all weak, thin, or sick, from tho'•strong in the foil, and give them special care. ii any sheep ia hurt, catch it at once and wash the wound with something healing. If a limb is broken, bind it with splinters tightly, loosening as the limb swells. Keep a number of good bells on the sheep. If one is lame, examine the hoof, clean out between the hoofs, pare the hoof if unsound, and apply tobacco with blue , vitrol boiled in a little water. Shear at once any sheep commencing , to shed its wool, anises the weather ia too severe. THE SUGAR CROP.—The Louisiana ' Sugar Boiel says : New Orleans mer- , chants and editors are making wild and ' injurious estimates of the probable yield of the present sugar crop. As we nave 1 constantly been traveling among sugar | planters the entire year, and riding over i the cane fields in various parishes, we < think that to calculate the yield at 160,- 000 hogsheads of sugar would be a rea sonable estimate ; but from all we have seen and learned from reliable sources, ' we fear that it will fall short of that of < last season, which was about 145,000 > hogsheads. The crop is much worse ] than that of last year, and the almost > general failure of stubble cane will make 1 it necessary to reserve for seed a much < larger amount of cans than usual, which ] will fully counterbalance the increased i acreage on which our New Orleans friends 1 are making calculations I < Great Flreu f the PMI. Ainoug tlw gnvt conflagrations of (he past that of London in HoptMibtf, 1666, will always stand pre-eminent for its terrible iV*tnietiveiiese. It followed upon the great olaane. which hail oarrvil off one-third of the population in the previous year, and swept over nearly nve-Mxth* of the niece included within the city walls at that date. It lasted four tIAVH, and the nrina covered 436 acre*. Itdestroyed eighty-nine churches including St. Paul's), the Royal Kx change, the OuhmdUNM, Guildhall, Zion College, and many other public building*, besides 18,'ittO private houaea. Four hundred stnvts were entirely laid waste, and about 260,000 of the inhabi tants of the city were obliged to eueatup for aome time in the open fields of Islington and llighgatc. The most dia j acUkma ffre iu Lonoou siuoo that date occurred on the 26th of March, 1746, when 200 houses in the Corahill Ward destroyed Mauy destructive Ares have occurred iu the British mettv|H>lis at later dates, the most recent worthy of special note being the burning of the cotton and other wharves of Tooley street in June and July, lKril. The fire ci|tinued raging with great or l<* fury for nearly a month. Several per sons were killeil and WOnnh was aca troved to the value of £1,000,000, On the Mh of May. 1842. a fire lirokc out in the City of Hamburg, Germany, which raged with greet funr for four days, destroying about oue third of the citv. Sixty-one streets, containing 1,- 74t houses, wet* utterly laid waste and thousands of people were rendered home less. Then* were few public buildings of value deatroveil, and that portion of I the city was quickly rebuilt iu a much more substantial manner, thau tiefore. Iu this oountrv great Area, especially : before the day ol improveu fire-engines, have been eomjwretively frequeut, and ! Sew York has hail her full share. In ; September, 1776. soon after the city came into the hands, of the British, 500 houses were destroyed, forming at that time a large part of the town. Ihe buildings were rather huddled together at the lower end of the island, and were month of wood, and the district west of Broadway and below Cortland street was swept bare. New York was visited by another great conflagration. the greatest in its history, on the 16th of December. 1835. Six hundred ware houses, and property to the extent of over #20,000.000, were consumed. Our oldest inhabitants still remeuiWr the horrors of that terrible disaster. On the 6th of September, 1839. the city hail another severe visitation, when forty-six buildings and property valued at $lO,- 000,000 were destroyed. The next con flagration of large extent in this city cook place on the 19th of July, 1845, when 302 stores and dwellings in the lower part of the city were destroyed. These, however, were of comparatively inferior value, the whole loss amounting to $6,000,000. Four lives were lost on this occasion. Since that time, owing t the increased efficiency of the means employed to prevent and extinguish fires, they have generally been ooufined | to a single building or a small group. In the same year of tlie last great fire in New York, 1845. Quebec suffered terribly from the same destroying ele ment On the 28th of May a tire broke out in the Faubourg St Koch which destroyed 1,500 buildings before it could be quelled. Several lives were also lost. Exactly one month latter 1.800 buildings were burned, and by these two conflagra tions nearly two-thirds of the city was laid in ruins. The pecuniary losa has been stated at $8,000,000. In the same year, on the 12th of June, uearly the whole town of St Johns, Newfoundland, was destroyed, and 6,000 people were rendered homeless. Albany suffered from a great con ; flagratiou on the 9th of September, 1848. ' Six hundred building*, Iwsides steam boats, piers, and other property, valued ; .iltogetner ut $3,000,000, were burned. Twenty-four acres of land within the tv limits were covered with rum-. St. Lonia had a great fin- in May, 1 1849, when fifteen blocks of houses and twenty-three steamboats were consumed, causing a loss of over $3,000,000. Philadelphia has been fortunate iu having few great tires, but oue occurred in that city on the 9th of July, 1850, which destroyed 350 building*. These were of inferior value, and the whole loss was but $1,500,000, though twenty five persons were killed, nine drowned, ani I*2o injured. A large portion of San Francisco wus destroyed in 1851. On the 3d of May s tire broke oat which consumed nearly 2,500 building*, causing a loss of §3,- 000,000 and several lives. A little over a month later, on the 22d of Jnne, 500 more building* were burned, valued at $3,000,000 or more. i Twelve acres of land in Sy recuse were burned over on the Bth of November, 1856. About 100 buildings were destroy ed, and the loss of propertv amounted to #1,000,000. The scene most naturally recalled by this fearful disaster in Chicago is the terrihle celebration of the Fourth of July in Portland, Me., in 1866. The leading facts of thAt great event are still fresh in the public mind. The fire, be ginning in a boot store on High street, swept north, and destroyed in its course nearly one-half of the city. The pecu niary lorn was abont $15,000,000, and one-fourth of the population were ren dered homeless. It seems probable from the reports thus far received that the terrible fire in Chicago has no parallel iu modem history, unless in the conflagrations kindled by war. Even the great fire of London, though relatively more de structive, did not equal it in absolute extent The London of that day was little more than two-thirds tlie siie of the Chicago of to-day, having less than 250,000 inhabitants ; two-thirds of Chi cago ia in rains, the desolated territory is far greater than the five-sixths of London said to liave l>eeu laid waste iu 1666. Items of Interest. MEXICO is tronqoil, although Juarez is surely elected and lacks now only the formal action cf Congress to complete his triumph. A nsHiors accident happened to the Hon. John P. Hall. He was knocked down by a runaway team and hod one of his knses fractured. A MAN who has been in jail for eleven years under sentence of death died at Philadelphia. The warrant for his exe cution had never been signed. THERE are twenty suits against the Staten Island Ferry Company pending in the city court of Brooklyn for damages occasioned by the Westiield explosion. THE Grand Chapter of Royal Arch Masons, previous to adjourning, at Bal timore, elected to meet on the first Tuesday in December, 1874, at Natchez, Miss. COMMODORE ASHBUBV'S proposal to mil a series of twelve yacht races for the "Queen's Cup" won by the America twenty years ago, was approved by the New York Yacht Club. ONE hundred families have been burned out of house and home by the terrible fires in Wisconsin, and at least one hun dred other families are still in danger. The fire has extended across the Fox river, and covered 3,000 square miles of territory. The entire country is devas tated and starvation threatens the in habitants. THE aggregate State debt, us hurt offi cillaly reported, of all the States but Mississippi, West Virginia, Nebraska, and Wisconsin, which have no outstand ing obligations, is given by the Chicago Mercantile Journal as *844,090,787.90. Virginia has the heaviest, *47,390,869.- 96.—part whereof, however, belongs to West Virginia—and Oregon the least, $106,333. _ A SEVERE DROUTH. —About a year ago New England was suffering from a drouth. This year Illinois is similarly afflicted, and to such on extent that plowing is impossible. These dry sea sons are, for the most part, attributable to the destruction of timber, aud close observers in Illinois say that the disap pearance of even the meager amounts of forest growths which some localtities have known has had a perceptible effect on the annual rain-fall, The Hre Flrrtd. There seems to lie no and to the suffer inga of the people of the West from file. While it destroy* the larger cities it Miarc* not the smaller towns. Sweeping through the immense pine forests of Wisconsin, Michigan and Minnesota carrying aw av evervthing before it. The little town of IVsiitigo, Michigan, built up> from tlie himlicring resources of the vicinity ; and one of the most thriving of the luutWring town* in the Green Bay district has been swept away entirely. One of tlie inilla of tltia place, owned by the tigileii Company of Chicago was callable of aiming a quarter of a million feet of lumber a day, mid otlier mills were of large .upooily. All have been burned. It ia estimated ihat over three hundred lives have Usui lost by theae ttnw iu the woods, and tlie amount of suffering eu tailed ii|Hin poor people who have lost their all ami are now iu a desert from which they cannot escape. is frightful. The hand of charity should lie opened to them at Otiee. Hundreds ami thousand* of poor people are now in danger of actual starvation iu the lumbar regions of the North west. The news from St. Clair and Huron counties, Michigan, is of the most dis tressing character. All that portion of the State east of Saginaw liav and north of a point forty miles above Port Huron has been completely swept by tire. A uumlier of peraous perished, and it is feared we have not heard the worst. The flourishing villages of Forest villa, White Hock, Elm Creek, Sand iieaeh.and Huron City, are entirely destroyed. A steamer which left Port Huron for relief of the sufferers, returned with about forty men, women, and children, Ave of whom are severely burned. The revenue cutter Fauemlm, which started for I'ort Austria, picked up a sail la sit on Lake Huron containing Isaac Green, priucipal owner of Forest villa, together with iiis family and eighteen or twenty others, who had escaped the flames at Forest vi lie. The telegraph operator at Forest ville escaped through the Art* I tack into tlie oountry. All the telegraph offices along the ahure have t>een dntavjtd. Five children are known to have per ished near Rock Fait a. It. B. HnbUrd, at Huron City, aliot all hi* fine horses alul cattle to prevent their |teriahiug by fire. He lose* very heavily, having had a large store, mills, docks, me. At Holluud, Ottawa Couutv, the east shore of Lake Michigan, the flames made a clean sweep, scarcely a building Iteiug left. Professor Charles Scott, of Hope Cob lege, perished ; also a minister, whose name wo not ascertained. A dispatch receives! from Gnen Bay, Wis., stated that a steamer had arrived hriugiug a report that 325 bodies were buried at IVshtigo, and as many wore were missing. Seventy-five person* were burned to death at Little Sturgeon Bay, and the suffering throught the night was terrible. With the exception of the destruction of property, the calamity is HIO-V ap|>olling than the burning of Chicago. Further accouuts of the terrible cal amity have been received. One hun dred ami tlfty men were burned to death in a large barn at Peslitigo, in which they had taken refuge. Hundreds of p*ople were driven by the flame* into the river, where most of them perished. A later dispatch from Green Bay aava, a fire broke out iu the Belgian settle ment of Brussels, iu Door County, Wis consin, destroying ISO houses—all the place contained, except five. Nine per sons nre missing. It is supported they, itenslied iu the flames. The inhabitants lost everything. Active measures for their relief are being taken from Dululh aud other places, but before assistance can reach them they must sutler severely. A fire broke oat in the town of Mu istce Mich., and raged all night destroy ing SlOti buildings, six large niilla, and a vessel lying at the dock. Half of the entire town is burned. The losses is es timated at $1,300,000. A Mr. Brady of Detroit, who was in the village of White Bock, Huron Coun ty. where it was bnni.il, says that, after vainly striving to keep the fire out of the town, the inhabitants, hastily gathering the few valuables that came nearest to linnd, fie 1 to the most o|>en places, away from the houses, and, driven from these, nmhed into the water itself, and even : here were not safe from the scorching effects of the heated air without occasion al plunges Itencath the surface or freqnent washing* in the stirf. Mr. Brady was iu the water eight hours, lying part of the time on a log. over which fee light surf dashed. About him were mn np to their waist iu water, aud holding chil dren iu their arms, women but poorlv protected by their clothing fmm the chill of the water, which was their only secur ity against the burning heat of the air. The inhabitants, of course, saved almost nothing. Not only were their houses, feuccs, banis and stocks destroyed, hut their furniture and elothing, and even the deeds by which they hold their lands, and their insurance jKtper*. From their painful position iu the water they were released by the suleidence of the fires, but there was neither food nor shelter within miles, and for mnny of them nanght but beggary apparently remained ( when shelter should la* found. The fire at White Book occurred Sunday uight and it was not until Monday afternoon that the sufferer* were taken off the ahore by the steamer Huron, which took tliem on Imard, and, .aiming down the shore, releasi-d from similar straits other* who had lived in Forestvillc and Cato, which towns were also burned Sunday Bight. The steamer, after takiug on board as many as she conld carry, left many for a second trip. The sufferers were* cared for by the citizens of Port Huron, and the steamer went brick for another load. Beside the towns named it is supposed that Center Hailmr and many other smaller villages were destroyed, and it is feared that the loss of life has been considerable. The pecuniary loss at; White Ro-k is more than 8250*000 ; that at Forertville is at ill greater. The New York Thieve*. The manner of the removal of a quar tette of New York thieves at Chicago, is tints tokl by a correspondent Aaron and Tracey went to Chicago and put no in the hostelry of Tom Foley, on Fourth avenue, where all the western mob of thieves stayed while in Chicago. Daring the progress of the fire they, with Mun day ana Brown, who had joined theui, went out to rob. They struck through the burning streets, and last reached ('lark nod Randolph streets at the Sher man House. Tins wss Is-fore this mag nificent hotel caught fire, but the flumes ware rapidly sweeping toward it There was a large jewelry store further down, and * bank nearly opposite. The fire hod touched these ami the doom hail lecn broken open to let the firemen ruu their hose through the buildings. Tracey and Aaron went for the jewelry store, while Brown and Monday struck for the lank. Both parties were captured. Two lamp-posts were convenient and some of the citizens' special police elevated Tracey ami Aaron thereon, but a sweeter fate hefel Messrs. Monday and Brown. They were captured by some of the infantry from Omaha, men who speak to a thie with the bntts of their muskets, and askf him where he is going with the muzzle. The consequence was natural. Munday and Brown were stood up with their bncki, :i gainst the wall of a house, and the rifles of the soldiers did the rest. So ended the Chicago career of tlie Aarou gang of thieves. A Chicago reporter says that he saw the body of a man suspended by the heels to a lamp-post in Butterfleld street. The man was dead ; bis brains hail been beaten out. The same passenger saw a man lying bleeding iu the middle of a crowd, no one of whom would assist him. He had been shot by the police for stealing. It is said that the sage-bosh lands of Nevada, which have been popularly sup posed to be worthless for agricultural purposes, huve all the elements of fer tility, and that the valleys of that State which but a few months ago were covered with a heavy growth of sage brush have this season yielded magnifi cent crops of clover, timothy, and alfal fa hay. PHILADELPHIA has one hundred and sixty citizens who fge worth from one to ten millions. The (hlcaire Fire. Our iadcrs arc already familial with uianv of tlie details of the great fire which ha* m arly destroyed the eity of Chicago. We give below and but inter esting incident* of the fire, which may well IHI termed a national calamity : Nail, indeed, are the incident* told of i the fire. Women in the pain* of child birth, and patient* who had liecii moved from IHVI* of sickness to save their Uvea which at the ta<*t were nearly qmut, were all OXJHMAHI to the rain and the cold ma wind*. Several death* occurred at Liueolu l'ark, and three women brought childieu into the world onlv to die. Train* were loaded to their /ulleat ca pacity. taking jmiplc away who, in many lUKtaiuwM, have no place to go, yet they cauuot *tav here; and every train la obliged to leave five times as many Jo senger* aa tehv carried awav. Kverv pre eauttou waa taken by the AUtlioritii* b> I guard the people. A journal describing the scene during the conflagration. any* : Ihe akv wa* lighted up for mile* around, autl the ! river looked like u *trcaiu of bhs>d. Hardly had the families which occupied the district time to escape with their lives, aud a* to *a> iug their household furniture, which to must of Uiem waa | their all, it waa not to lie thought of. | Women, half-clad, ran screaming In the stiwts, a Why in one arm, while little children clung to titeui with torror. At every attempt to *tav the flame* the flremen were driven liuek hurtled and dis heartened, vet they worked manfully and disputed the ground inch by inch. Over the furniture which strewed the street* all went running iu the wildest I'oufmaon, each person lient only on aaviug himself aud fuuiilv aud caring uothiug for his neighbor, klany iu their w dtl endeavor* to eseajie were kuH-ked down and trampled upon, and some even hilled. Many cartiuen aud draymen uutnrally strove to tiicir utmost to save their horses. Hut in case* of Are horses . seem to lose all the instinct which uudcr ordiuurv circuuistauces would save them from danger, and stand *t<*-k still iu their stable-, tlieir flank* and *idr-> nhak iug iu tlic agony of terror, ami utterly i refuse to IK- driven from their stable* * which, jHH>r beast*, they have always considered their place of aafety where no harm cwu reach them. Ou this aw ful night, aUive eveu the roar of the fiames and the crash of falling timls-r*, could 1h- heard the shriek* of the home* ringing out in the night air. They would not tie driven away, but, stnpefie.l with fear, fell down iu their *tahies and were roasted alivc.aud the aickcniug odor of burning flesh waa mlded to the iude seri table aud nauseating odor which ar cotnjsuiie* burning building* when water haa taeu showered upon them. A spectator, a ritizeu of Chicago, iu j describing the scene, say* : We could think of nothing else but hell. The flames in Home places like huge wave*, dashing to and fro, leaping up aud down, turning and twisting, and pouring now aud then a great column of smoke and hundreds of feet- in the air, like a solid imrjH-tidicular shaft of molten metal, u other places it would dart out iu long -treaks like mammoth anaconda*, with hissing, fiery tongues. Then the ser pentine shape* would atoop down over tin 1 blazing path into the yet uuburut building*, which seemed pierced aud kimiled iuatautaneomJy. There wen also billow* of thunc that rolled along like water, submerging everything in it* coarse. Now and then a* some explo sive material wa* consumed, the pla-e would seem like the crater of a vast vol cano, puff* of anioke and flashes of light and million* of ]>arka and cinder* scattered in every direction. Sometime*, the air would be full of them, and gnat* of wind wonhl float theni hither and thither like flock* of firv-binia. (V-co j aionally there were cinder* of more tiian two feet in length. Shower* of these were falling - actually raining down everywhere. Our facea were atnug, and our clothing now and then set on tire, until we got wet umbrellas and held thqgi a* shields over us. There was a terrible fascination in muting upon the scene. It wa* un<\irtblv, hideous, ter rific. (lor eyas seemed rivet**l so tiint we could not withdraw them. There wi re miles of fire, mountain* of Aame, wave* of light, flashes, clouds, brilliant scintillations. With the aid of ghuwe* ; we conld see the street* throng—l with people flying for their live*. Children were carried, screaming with terror, women were shrieking, men shouting, aud all mnuing. We saw some old anil sick snd helpless earned on stretch er*—some apparently demented or stu jiefii-d were dragged along. Cloee to their heela. in hot pursuit, tame the belching, roaring crackling flames. In some place* they actually advanced as fuat as a tusu ran. The most awful of all was the thunderous roar that acemed to roll npwarvi and outward from the centre of the bnge holocaust; now there would be a report like the l>oom of dis tant gun*, again came a -napping like the rattling of muskctrv. Horses niahed like maniac* through the atreeta. One splendid team, attached to a coach, rru over the Van litiren street bridge, wliich had been charred and w. akencd ; just a* thp mad horses had jawtscd the centre it i gave way,and they plunged down through the lurid glare into the scarlet river IH-- j low. Tlii' following reliable anil graphic de scription of the fire has been furnished by a gentleman who participated in the work of subduing the flames during tlieir continuance : None but an eye-witness can form an idea of the fury and power of the fire flend as he revelled among the palatial buildings and warehouse* on the south aide, with the wind blowing a hnrrieaue. At times it Neemed bnt the work of a moment for the Are to enter the south ends of hnildingN fronting on Randolph Lake, nml Water streets, and reappear at the north door* and windows, tieleh ing forth in fierce flames which often lieked the opposite buildings, and then the flames issuing forth from the build ings on both sides of the sireet would unite and present a solid mass of fire, completely tilling the stni't from aide to aide, and shootiug upward a hundred feet into the air above the housetops in their mail career. Thus was street after street filled with flume, aud the exulta tion of the fire-fiend was given over to in a roar which can only be equalled by combining the noise of the ocean when its waters are driven during a tempest uiKn the roeky beach with the howl of the blast Hugh walls would topple and fall into the sea of fire without apparent ly giving a sound, as the roar of the fierce element was so great that all minor sounds were swallowed up. and the fall of the walls was only perceptible to the eyes. If the reader will recall to his mind the fiercest snow-storm in his expe rience and imagine the snow to be fire as it surged hither and thither before the fury of the wind, they will la- able to form a foint conception of the flumes as they raged through the streets of our doomed city. Many of the buildings situated along South Water street buried their red-hot rear walls in the water of the river, into which they plunged with a hiss. The heat was so intense at times from some of the burning building* that they could not be approached within one huudrod and fifty feet, which accounts for the manner in which the fire worked back, and often against the wind. The fire, after reaching the business portion of Randolph anil South Water streets, leaped the river to the north side in an incredible abort space of time, and thence among the wooden buildings on thst side reached the lake nhore, after touch ing block aft6r block of dwelling houses with its fierce blast. A scene of such utter powerleasness in the faoe of an enemy WHS never presented tlian that of this people trying to combat the fire fiend, for the combat was not of long duration—the people bowed their heads in anguish, and suffered the fiend to have untrammeled sway. On Chicago avenue, a father rushed upstairs, to carry three children away, when he wtis overtaken by the flames and perished with them. The mother was afterwards seen on the street on the Northwest Side a raving maniac. In the same neighborhood a family of five persons perished. In Wabash and Michigan avenues, and in all the places where the richer eloM of citizens live, when the fire came the distress was awful. Women who had never known what a care was, and consequently were, as one would sup utterly inoujmbh- of Ikiariug with equanimity auolt a calamity <u the dc •triictiun of their IIUHIM, yd here there were many instances of heroism and love worth* to Itn song iu atior, Mr*. L -d, of Wabonh avenue, had Wwu dt-m-rfml by her servant* as noon M it la-came certain that th<> house *u* doomed ; they hod noiu< of, Inking with tbrui whatever tltfj' could lay their hand* ou. Bho, Iter daughter, and her invalid luiahaud were alone iu the hu*c, and the domes were rapidly approach ing. There waa no help to IK> expected, for everylkkly waa la-nt only on aaviug what he could of hi* own pro|w>rty. '['here waa not a moment to *|>are, and the two women actually carried Mr. L d away in their arm* and hrought him iu aafety beyond the reach of the Are. Such instance* were liutuerou* alike among rich and poor. A* the fire approached the river it be came evident that it would cross it, and at HI ii that f.wr waa rtwlizeil ; for the wind carrieii brand* aero** the narrow atreaiu to the uortheuat aide, and tliere, falling ou the wtHHh-u building* adjoiu iug the gan-worka, w<t it ou fire, aud then the flatuea, having secured a ft*it hold, rusheil ou to their work of further destruction. The goa-house M th atroycil, aud the city wa* lighted only bv trie fires which wereiviuaumiiig itself. '1 hen came a panic such as a city haa rurelv ma n. Vague rumor* of pillage filled the air, and deed* of violence .and horror were more tlmu drended. Th peiiple rushed |>ell uiell from their homu-a rather thau remain within theni iu dark neaa the most hatod and detested tiling iu time* of disaster and catastrophe. They ran iu crowds about the street*, meeting crowds rushing from opposite direction*, and, iu their fright trying to push their way through the dense iua**c* wliich encountered them, were trampled down aud many of them crushed to death iu the de|H-ration of the moment. The vtvatcls in the river then took fire, and as the fiames noi up their meats, seized the rigging, and danced like fiends U|H'U the sjiars, leapiug about frvau one yard to another, the scene wo* Ileautiful and terrible beyond dearrip tiou. But tliere wa* little though of the picturesque among those who witiuna ed it—all waa horror and dismay. Men who were millionaires vcsn-nlay moruiug, arc jicuniloaa to ilm ; but more terrible than all i* tin- awful cer tainty tiist many human Iteiugn have |i<*rt\ictl iu the fiames—how many, uo out* con tell. IVrhap* uo one will ever IH- able to tell; but it ia known tliat some have perished, and there is only a heart nickeuing fear that the victim* of the fiery m<u*tcr may IH* couutxxi by mvires. Huntlreds of horses and cows have la-en burned in stsldes, snd on the north side mtiuU-r* of uuimsl* though rt h-aat-d from coufinemeut, were *o be wildered snd ouiiluxnl by the M of fire which surrounded them that tlicy rushed witdlv to and fro. littering erica of fright snd psiu until mxtn-hed and killed. Any attempt st dewrijitiou of the tip jtslliug acr-nos of this direful calamity wouhl IH< idle. The simple fact that tin once great city of ('hif-n. oin nearly de stroyed, that hundred* of millioun of active capital have vsuidlcd. and that an imnu-nvc nuiulwr of Chicago's iu linbitaiita are hoiiM'lcss, i* -in>ugh. Any attcmj't to cmlM-llisli would Is- s m<*-k --erv. \t is gratifviug to notior that v.-ry city of tiic I'uiou. ss soon as it wa* known to wlist fearful extent the |**tplc of Chicago nuffcrt-d.sl once took mtwrnmn for their relief. Hundred* of thonkniid* of dollars, provision* of alt kind*, cloth ing and nnvasnt* acre st once ill*- mtcued to them, and it ws< all needed. Wc may imagine, but uite cannot attempt to Jiwrilw tin* situation of a groat city tike Chicago in ashes, tin thousand* of people in the streets, homeieas and j iiouoelcrat; the city without gaa and with out water, and theae ix.iplc huddling together in the dark, dismal night. It ia a frightful picture. There waa of course, a heavy insurance on the property burned, Chicago ha* lieeu built up so rapidly that most of its business block* were tuortgowed and of coarse inaured. but how much will IH realized from this source it is difficult to telL The risks were iu Eastern com pa niea and they will sutler *o severely tiist many of them must break down. Thero were proltsbly go.UMI.OUO worth of grain and provisions stored in the city at the time of the fire, nearly ail of which was dostroved. Different report* have Ivan given of the origin of the terrible calamity, but the following is believed to be correct : Late on Numlav cvt-ning a boy went into a Stable on Ih-koven street, near tiic river, on the West Hide, to milk a cow, carrying with him s kerosene lamp. This was kicked over liy the row, and the bunting ffuid scattered among the straw. This wua the IM-ginning of the great fire. Sr'versl men. caught in Uie act of firing boucA on the West Side, were arrested and immediately hung to lam|*-pnsts— one on Twelfth at., near the nver, aud another three miles awav on ('lay borne ave.. North Side. This snmmary action checked the thieves and murder era. A carotid survey of the insurances, shows that there were jkilicie* on the property drvtrovi-d amounting to over £*¥1.1100.0(10 ; add another fiti*l.ooo.ooo to (his sum and a fair estimate can be reached of the km. It i* fearful to think of the loa* of life. It is conjectured, and with good canoe, tliat nearly 500 jiaraon* have la-en burned to death. Four men were seen to enter a burning building, and in a moment they wen- overwhelmed by a falling wall. There was a crowd of men around the corner of a building trying to save prop erty, when the wall fell, burying some of them Wneath it. About twelve or fifteen men, women, and children, rushed into the building of the Historial Society (a fire-proof building) for safety. Iu a few minutes the flames burst out. and they were burned to death. A lady of ('hieago writes: I MW some women and children and one man exhausted lav down in the gutters to die iu the hojielesanees of d-aj K-ration. Others would seize and urge them along. Mmokc aud cinders and flames and scorching heat tilled the air. Children screamed in terror and begged for water. Nome would catch up water from puddle* near hydrant* and moisten the month. " This is bcH-flre 1" " This is the day of judgment!" " This must he the end of the world 1" were the exclamations hwtrd. The degree of sympathy that j prevailed wa* wonderful. There seemed to IH- one instinctive throb of feeling, and the strong hel|icd the weak. I be lieve that thieves had a great deal to do with tiie fire. If they did not start it in the first place they kindled flames in fresh jilaces. I saw houses that hud been deserted entered by ill-looking fellows, who ranaucked bnrenti* and doseta. There wa* no time to sjH<ak to them. Once or twice wlieu they were spoken to they professed to have ln-cn sent by the owners to save things. Many jeoj>le in the haste of their escape abandoned everything, eveu to jowelry and money. I saw one feilow'a pocket half full of jewelry and watches. I spoke of it, hut in an instant he loot himself from my vipw in the crowd. I saw a villainons-Tooking man with a lady's chatelaine chain susjtendeil awk wardly at hia vest. The little girl I hod walked until the hot jiavementa blistered lier little feet, thou we carried her. "Is jiapa and mamma burnt up. Is Neddy burnt up dead ?" the piteoualv asked. 1-Ate at uigbt we found them all safe. It was nearly morning before we obtained shelter and food. All the banks in the city will, with scarcely a doubt, lie üble to resume bus iness. A number of bank vaults have been ojiened, and their content* without exception w-re uninjured. Every hank in the city claims that in time it will be able to pay every dollar of it* indebted ness. The total loss of grain i Dow definite ly ascertained Four vessels were loaded with grain for the East to-day, and the Eastern move ment will continue, as there are fully 5,000,000 bushels now in store. About five hundred people escaped on a barge which fortunately kj iu one of the slips in the river, floated out and down to a pier, where a steamer towed them into the lake, where they remained until yesterday. Among the aaddeat scene* of the ca lamity waa the appearance of hitudrcda of men and loys in a *late of beastly intoxication, around the atreeta of the North Diriaion. where the saloon-kaep -1 era' stock* of liquor* were emptied Into the street, thu* furnialiing a convenient opportunity for lbs gratification of their slavish proiteiiutiea, and there can hard ly be any doubt tut that many of theae pour wrutchea found their death ill the tlamea, from which they were bio help lea* to escape One pinir man had crowded iuto Ue water litaiu, near the Water Work*, but the fire found htm even there and he waa burned to death. The re|Hirta state with grave horror the methods adopted to preserve order. I'hierea, pillagers,.and incendiaries were not arrested. More titan fifty have Iteen shot down iu the streets or swung to the lamp po*U st five minute*' notice. For mer rejsirU with refniwuce to the prolta ble h*is of life aoetn to la- confirmed. Over one hundred hlscketo-d corjtsea were removed from the ruins where a HUIHU portion of the burnt district ha* boon aeurelied. Dwubtietw there are many who will never be diatiuguiahivl from tin- hca|>* of ashes iuto which they fell. Meanwhile nud rojNtrta are reach ing u* of death* iu large atiutliera from exposure and over-exciU*ui<-nt. The end of a human ghoul is thus de *crila-d by an eye witueaa: One uinoug the thousand ruuior* that were flying t ih kly about, and tile wildest it would •eem it must be, waa of tile audden ven geance that In-fell a liohl thief. Seeing the cashier of one of the 1 tank a ruah into his office us the flames were bearing al most upon the building, he watched hi* exit. It was not long before the offi-nal up|ieare<l with some money packages aud IMUIII*, and no sooner had he appeared titan the thief prostrated him with a blow Upon the side of the head, aud grabbed a portion of the treasure. A policeman iu an instant saw what was done and gralilxxl the villiau, who drew a pistol aud "hot the faithful officer through the heart, and then sprung through the ex cited crowd brandishing his pistol and endeavoring to make gmid hu escape. Hut the sight, with all the surrounding circu instances, had maddeued the by "Under* to frenxj, ami they fell upon the wretch like so many tiger*, tear ing htui limb from limb, and Titi-nrlly ilis emlMJWi-ling him. That which is everywhara apparent in *pite of the horrors of the scene and its w-id hopelewsues*, wa* the indomitable pluck which the Chicago m-n showed, all which no losses could damp and no wretchedness siilidne. "Chicago will IHS hard up for a time," said one, "but we mutt try and pull through." "It will take a long time to build it up again," aaid another. "I thought I was pretty well off vesterday," **id a young man, cheerfully muoking a cigar ; '• uow all I have in the world i# the *uit of dothea I have ou.'' " I think I might ham saved my law library," aaid a riaiug young lawyer, "but, by Jove ! it did in* seem toe thing to do, when evry l*ody else'a property wa* burning op; so 1 picked up a lew jwpeni in my office, took Nome volnmea of Kent git mi me by a friend, took off my hat to my old books, and left them to burn." The territory burned over comprises about 2,5tm acres, and upon tin- only three building* ore standing. Here and there a portion of a wall remain*. It ha* Ik-eft ascertained from official report* that 50,(IIX,(KJti feet of buulter were destroyed, leaving 'J4,UUO,(XIU feet still on hand. The loss of life will probably ros.-Jb as high a* SUO. but it will lie luijxuoaihlc to ascertain the exact number. Flighty dead hobn lay in the Morgue at one | time. The Corouer held an inquest on sixty-four bodies. In the private office of Mr, Cowlea, the buaineas manager of the 7Vifcio<-, ] wa* a large Krujip shell, a relic of the siege of Pari*, which exploded, making a breach in the wall* lo feet wide from the foundation to the roof. Ratianal Care far Fmploiee*. The largest retail haainemi establish ment* in England and Ireland, where huudmls of young ladies and gentle men are engaged, tiaard aud lodge their employees ou the premises, and this system is found after a long trial, to work admirably. The young people arc, in litis way, kept continually utuier the eye of their wjwiorv in position, and have k-n* chance of getting into trad company and loose habits. Their home is made quite cheerful and ploasant. They are allowed to play all sort* of j liartiikw games; a reading-room *np plird with the princi|>al journals, s lurgc j library and a flue billianl-room forming features of some of the establish torn to. Every jHswible step ia taken to induce the young men and women to atav at home, but when thev do go tmt, the rules are rigid as to tLcir return- The | door is locked when the house-clock sta tioned in the hall mnrka precisely 11 l>. ni. No allowance is made for the va riation in clocks and watches, but he or she who is not within the door before the clock strikw the eleventh hour is fined half a guinea. The second of fence within six months costs the offen der his place. Rraatix Pnovmuis. —Every fox praises bis own tail. (to after two wolves and you mil not even catch one. A good beginning is half the work. Trust in God, but do not stumble your self. With (tod. even across the sea ; with out Him, not even to the threshold. Without cheating, no trading. Money ia not God. but it shows great merry. The deeper you hide anything the sooner yon find it A debt is adorned by payment Rogtirv is the lost of trade*. Never take a crooked path while yon can see a straight one. Faar not the threat* of the great, bnt rather the tears of the poor. Hend a pig to dinner, and he will put his feet on the table. Disease comes in by hundred weights and goes out by ounces. Every tittle frog is great iu hit own bog. Be praised not for your ancestors, but for your virtues. WHY Tnm WAB THUS.—Guest—"H<>w come* this dead fly in my soup?" Waiter—" In fact, sir, 1 have no posi tive ides how the pool tiling enrae to its death. Perhaps it hail not taken any fatal for a loug time, daxht-d upon the soup, ate too much of it. contracted an inflammation of tin- stomach t hat brought on death. The fly moot have a very weak constitution, for, when I served the soup it wa* dancing merrily on the surface. Perhajw—aud the idea pre sent* itself only at this moment—it en deavored to swallow too large a piece of vegetable ; this remaining fast in his throat, caused a choiring iu the windpijie. This ia the enly reason 1 could give for the death of this in*-ct." A PnuioßOß. —Tlie Chicago Th'Aioe, of Nundar morning, thus prefaced it* account of the fire of Satuntay night—a preface that events have itiveek-d with a character of portentous pronbecy : For days past alarm lias followed alarm, but the comparatively trifling losses have familiariziHl us to the jntaling of the Court House bell, and we had forgotten that the absence of ruin for three weeks hail left everything in ao dry and inflam mable condition tliat a spark might stait a fire which would sweeji from end to cud of the city. Fort CHIMNEY*. — The Toledo Com merciat very sensibly says : " As the sea son ia again at hand when Area are eon ntnntir niH-esmiry in dwelling-houses and {lublje buildings, it would nerlmji* not w out of place to suggest tlie good old practice of burning out the chimneys, which, if attended to, will undoubtedly prevent many losses. It is doubtless a fact that many fires annually reported as originating from incendiarism or 'un known causes' might he charged t<x a neglect of this kind." Rt'saiA.—Russia in no child in size and population. Her population is 80.00J,- 000, and her area u nearly 8,000,000 square miles, or one-seventh of the land on the earth. The area and populations of Russia arc hence about double those of the United States. Symptom* f Idler (awplalnt, end ef MIME of the DIMNMMM produced Iry 11. A sallow or yellow color at akin, or ycllowiah brown sputa ou face am! other l>arto of hody ; dullneaa und drownineaa with frequent hi*ada*he ; dizxineeo, bitter or bad taste in month, dryness of throat and intcruul heat ; |ad pi tat ion, in many ■-lute* a dry teoaiug cough, with sore throat, tiUMtoady apatite, raising of food, choking aeuaauon iu throet ; dio tresa, lowvinesa, or bloate-J or full feel ing about stwiiach and sldis, latin in *idea, I>ack or breaat, and about shoul ders ; colic pain and soreness through bowel*, with heat ; constipation, alter nating with frequent attack* of diarrheas ; pile*, flatulence, nervouaiiesa, coldness of extremities ; rush of blood to bead, with symptom* of apoplexy, numbnee* of limbs, especially at night ; cold chill* alternating with hot flashes, kidney snd urinary difficulties ; female weakuees, •lullneiwt, low spirits, unsociability ami gloomy forelMtdinga. Only few of above Hymptimis likely to He present to any case at one time. All who uae Doctor I'ierue'a Alt. Kxt or Oolden Medical Discovery for Liver Complaint end its Complications, are loud in it* praise. Sold by all first-class druggists. 667 " I lielieve that mine will be the fate of Aliel," aaid a devoted wife to her but* hand, one day. " How ao f reidhil the husband. " Because Abil waa killed by a club, and your club will kill rne if yoa ccntiuiie to go to it every night" Ciimi'iuxoo,—lt will be gratifying information to |-r*ona affiidod with Cancer, Scrofula ami all utiier blood dia eaaua, to learn that a supply of Ci'*D KAKUO, the newly discovered remedy for theae iliarwaea haa lieen received by Da. D. W. lii-ias, who, it will be rememlier ed, first demonstrated the efficacy of the liark iu the treutouent of the mother of Vioe- President Colfax. Ei|rinaab warrant the belief that Crxm uwo is as much a specific in oases of Cancer Ac., as quinine in CVMM of ague. Perfection haa lieen obtained in the manufacture of J. Monroe Taylor's Cream Yeast Baking Powder. All ladies who have used it universally exclaim, " there is uothiug tike it" For Dyspepata, Indigestion, depression of spirit*, and general debility in their varioua forma ; also, as a preventive against fever and ague, and other intermittent fevers, the •* Ferro-I*hoibor*tcd Elixir of Cali saya," ma<le br Ceawell, Hazard A Co., Ni-w York, ami sold by all druggist*, ia the Iveat tonic, aud aa a tonic for patients recovering from fever or other aickneaa, it haa no equal. " WHAT I Kxow, I Know," said the great surgeon, Magendie " Qive xne -itubUirn facta—l care not for theories." This ia aonud doctrine. Possibly a meil* seal martinet might lie able, in a plausi ble war, to show why Da WXLAKHS VIMKOAB llrrrnw *m to cure indi gestion, Headache, Ncrvouaueaa. Liver Complaint, Muscular Dinouei and Mias matic Fever* ; but aa they do in erery instance effect that object, hia fine theory would lie a waste of words. Aa Magen die said, the world demands facta, not qieenlative opinions A Missionary just returned, says he regards " JUBNHOX's Axonra* I^nmaxTr" as beyond Ml price, and efficacious l>e yond any other medicine. It l* adapteil to a great variety of special cases, and ia the liest pain killer in the world. Fever* seldom make an attack without j warning; and may often be thrown off by soaking the feet in warm water, j wrapping up warm in bed, and taking two or thr<-- of " PAMOX'S PIMATRVE Piixa." You should write to Mr. If" Hintirr. No. 7 Wall Htreet, New York, if i vou wish to buy or sell any Railroad Hond*. FIffANCIAL. IU| Ai HrlO** Jxt cnaas A On., m s*w *•* nn*l w * pnSulA* sad **fc •■>**i*i Mr all -li.n.i, Ik IVm XMWwi lA* oai Dm* ml l* Xanhrra ISnßc ItulfMl lV—|i*j. I—nil Miaul IW-TatiUi | iur MM gmld an w* mmn lh*a C |H* Mat. IWIM* . a*4 —,M*a hrlnl *•* aslr ■ r—M as Uu mm RoM knd I*||'W*|. *sd *• MM* An wa.a** Arm* ■Jt L**4 Is H*r Mttr *f MS. M a*t Am* taud u mt* H.M* Bas4. Tk* Ma* Ml unul roe* wUI W laid tor C S r**-T*aUM. sad *1 oUwr uxrtr mill ' annuo moimd t* eeehesa*. PMlliloM. *l|n sod | fan MlimoolMa, M wrdl u Uu bosdi Iknuriro. i 0 to i fsroodud as MWauM b Jit OnU A 00., Pkib. i Mgia, Sr York sod WmMszua. and bt *M Dull , tad lUilm Uiraaaboal Uu oaaa f ____________________________ i The Market*. *rw vooa. BrrrOrn.K—Prune to KX. BuOocAr 1.11 A IS PVrot QUUITT ILVI ll* Mr-Hiua or lair qn*L IC\ .Ul* < Irdimrj Uitu iWUIr .Id * .!•, lofr or tow** and*. .a • a q Xiu a Oow* ii no .< ; UooM-Ure .•r an, ihiMid .a* • ids Mar M • .o{i, (Virma—MtddUnc IB a .9*l* I rmrs-Eitt* WmM*. TOO I.l* (■Ml* Exuw. I*o i7 Waiuv— Amkor w cn-ru. l.do • IS o SMI* LH • IAS Wluv Oroeuo Extr*'.° I*o tin Mo. 1 B|irlnz l. 0 I.SS KrU—Wrote r* .9* a 1.10 twaurt-Matr 9* s s Han—Mixed Votm M a JS (Inv-Wfrtrni *3 ■ M tnU-Xm IX Ml ]*** Li U> 9 • .11 PcraotATM—Crodo IIS Recants* PI mi ana* n • JI ot.io w k. It a .9* •• Fujot M • .M Wndorn Ordlnsrr... .19 a .11 ivnnavteial* Par It a .3* Curocec-State btort .U a .1* Kkinitued 07 a .1* Ohio I* a.! Eaos—Wale U a .IS Serrano. 1 Bmcr I'tnu t.T> a IJ# i Saritr XCB a SO HCHXO—Lire 4.9* a &.> 1 Pimra A** a 1.40 WBSAT— So. 1 sprtug 1.9* a 1.44 Ooaa w a o<n 9* a .4* Rti 7* a .79 Hour .7* a .*3 Liiui 1* a .q Auumr. WNKiT t.a a l.as Rva-suie 9* a M tXika—lilted 79 a .7.1 Biaunr—(Hake 9S a I.S Oil*—Slate.... .44 a .44 rMn.inti.ruiA. rxoca-Pran. Kxtr* AW a ail Vxbr-XntH* M - 14" a 149 Whit*..... IK alia TeUow W a .9* Mlxad M a .*7 rmmxtw-Cradt lTt*haAoed.9Sq Btr r CiivUl a.*> i 9oaiWi KI. h u -Soperftae SX.S* a 9.19 Kxtr* Sit a T.T* Ooaa 19 a M iM a .17 Clara IMu U.M a9C.*O la*t> .11 a .Uq I Bri-rwa -CooiMoa .9S a .3* 'Chuicr lot* 3* a .43 rar** 19 a.!• KlHl*— Wtwlera I* a .1* Keetero 1* a .191* Qham suur—iVoVc 1* a .1* TimoUiT aa a an* Red Top a a a9S Hat —l holre 90.00 a9O 00 c.uumen 90.00 0J9.8S nuwtai Onvtwa—lxw MuMUtir, 1 a .1* Fu-em—Kxtr* I S a a.W WsKiT—Aabtf 1.99 a l.as 0oa 79 a .M Oil* 49 a 97 vfwmxx j Ix-MMpMod <il Uae bo eeaeubh iamidlenui UM diapea ~vr oi H*lar htrstahee Their/alee* ire extrarled i* * wmj whirh pneerrM their u*diminhed MMH<*I |M tort:**. MiXma ll ooe M tbe itolol olMii—rt id the blond I hat !• or eu be pot toaether Aa Ao.-bor 4a Wl4rri ll i rood toaiaaaidCp, whea th*..- to noeon to expect l>M*y oeetlMr. o drop r saehor to iad* -ed. We we la the BidM *1 the Mm q| ehilto sad hose Th* rare preeraUra of thlr dtolr*Mtn nuladv to Hoete*- •er'rStumsrh Bitter. A jomtm ot thet wboleenme Tepe- Übie tonic vtU reader an AttAok laporaibto. Tekc the hint mlilnfo eicier > rlerhrent Weak rtomnche kre moet liable to be dtootdmed lit* m the rataraa. when the kMoo( temper*tore an mtrked end fmjuenl. Holeltor' Bitter. fortiSce the Motnich saainet th* effect* of tlieee vurlMiaae. lot dmepUc* make * not* ot th* f*ei, rod diopra *attor M nOtonrf, The UTM I* more eMuitlr* whea th* westhar to eoatta u*Uy *ltarnitin( bctwra* the *mth ol .ummer tad the cold of einter then *t *njr other period of th* jwr. ; Tbi* to peculiarly the Muoa ot rach alteration*. Let th* bilious remember that Hoetetter'l Stomach Bitter, to *M*nt icily an anU-bUiou* mediein*. and deep an ee •ior I* iciidMii Th* utiM* ptoa to to forestall eriL. Th* next beet thlua to to A mot . For dtoonlen of th* AtoMich, ir racularitiM of the bowel- and ail pMiodioal feri, tax*, , M won a* th* eoiuptoiat deratop* itself, HoMattar * Stoouteh Bluer* CHICKERINC&SONS. PIANOS oi Easy Torn of Paymeat. U. KOTMI at a alarm tb. Mlyto. jU |w.m oftin Pl- wX *** *" **** Sar didara w tMW baa OmmmlmM apwa I • .•' •—* taaa, '•' ** *.*_ hat au May iiiyllaatiirtr I1an, a* !••♦ Ua iwMO la adopt Una Ma of C> of a UHUUMUI owe*. wiUau* UonabUd to a Mm ch> Mom, harm* • roar*. turn. liwH* w pa* tar Ok Wa petal bod oar f—IOCW fmo 4 th. Prfaw >i fW *•'-•; any raV —W* n oo i /k'* i—.w, re, Wamealm m. further aaaafity nrni'|i*l7 ***** ™"®dH d ma nail ; ia^ rt^ T tggLfrg&S for th- uerpra. of auhiea Lara* Iw!UaU *2r ynn KM f* p""® l ' am lr la aai. M.d do t ~. 1 tin Mm V—'.y <r mMiaO 0 and ia waryfrom* Planer —ld a|a lira Orrttii* pofaioui aywem am SSS^4C329RS laaOrroM —id Maraam IM rod toy O Mirfraaa PMaar n laMil to mmpam uwr anwm ae.,l ton** o*h Uwaoaf aahar arah iMflr wMmMoft 4Mhdiwg, Hmmtfar a Cmatxfm fmbtf full potuemlmr*. GHICKERIHQ 1 SORB, 11 East 14th St., N.Y. 1 LYID TIB IMF PUaaBBBT fUH sjany. adaaamßn ltWwa,Og I Bmawaay. P. T. m _ , , ■ j HOVELTT CLOTHES WBDIGEB I m—A twtarfm I CSL h SGVSZ hold aalba Wnomr. So m ■■dal.rm dam aat mat bar.- Tb* arm at e'othiay to af aaaab fflmafar tfflpar , Ma. It laofem maiinufml *al>-V at ia# laataia bat ai Way oto-e wr—y ia a WntnarjgTwiiae agj i "/LoT j IV Satallj WrlMor.—Ha. binmi aa Mia- I paambta Wail lain ■ta itTa lab af jaaii'trt Aad * : SsL ,^xctßSS&ss: ; ;af afmi-rW pr*n,.. marl la*. lodaad. altar aautr J MM ioi BUMBI LU aU* til Mtr**a fMfcilf. VSMV M*RS*M ; i 4 im+on# u%* Sv* <<>>■:> %a Mwri< UM IMMRBM I jSpSTwl cr* **'* r>itm^* •S"DS'yWSMU , 4* SDBIS •▼••"jnwll N. B. PHELPS 4 CO^ GK.VKKAL AGENTS. tO Okakan St_ K. T I NATORE-S HMEDTV mmipo I TM[ QmT Bu)j)o ftantiyr A wHaMi laiim a—a—A. far raraarraa U>a >■>. ran fa* bbapanaaoaM anOrß liiianiM Minn bar Moiaarfuaa at Mm bVaA aocti aa •oafUa. MaraMilaaa Hamr, Ca laaar, Caa lino Baa n ■ EryUfaUr Caakar, laU, Ehraa, rioyln ml Baaan <oa lb Paaa, !>#•% < aagbi. € aiarrk, BraarblHr, \rarai|ta, Ibra. worlaor. fa bar la lb* Mate, •rmana, C—ilyaMaa. CaaMrrotH, I*l la a, •mp *9 tliT lUBTii. Fain fta (lit , Klfary I aaiyUiialr, PaiMola Waab. ■MMM BAHI CMMMMTMI ftfSltllJ &EPOXT FROM A FRACTICAX.. Che in Ist and Apothecary. fbwtoai. stay ha. Mn. I> ir>-Tr. a tataaufj thai I haoraaU at rami, a*v-thraa Amu (M* M af yaw Vmwfni -m *ti )3tb. um. aod ma Wmb aay 'bat if lurm U; j JKlaS"laayMm! 1 tfly laaltaa' af annal mm af v ,*,-m W, balm < I laraMbr Vtwrrtat alaaaiathi. rMM%. To H. B. unrram. Ra " •THE ORE AT BLOOD PURIFIER. Prrpuwl by BL R. BTE7EVB, MHTOX. MAM. Frb* Ml .M. *-* i by all PimatMr ' PUBLIC NOTICE. TV MmaanflV RIAL UTAH KSTRtMTMI OF MEMPMU FWIS7I a -- - * a- - nB*P GfUlOtviy Tuesday, October the SI et !^^;; R i^;^Tb.^^SLr r yJK 1 MM to via dp rhW inc TRESIW MEMPBIITBBATBr, Oaaatavratmalal tß.es. J W b.. wn a .um, aay rrprraartatim ia"ti> t ho. turuor ma <bn aoaabat MdM liaMaaa mfrtrtaj of UM 1 "■}'£ Bra) RMtaor afll hr tamaya* la ha niamra la Ma I MMfir. twa tram all iraml*i*.ial * HUBIII __ Tot.) aaroaar of i*T~trto hr fi*ta Mr oa tb* MM f Uctobar. I<m. SMkiar. Trba SMMaaMu FblMa. Mrafraaa af biaalul laar aaomrt em Mm eiab. af Mrr. mylas * (twin r*h For rrlan. I rhrta, or ar inhriritiß, hMtm bf I l*rr a* anoly * param la rAHbMtiBSTRt'Fm. Aala>MW nn. If Aitun 111.. Mrmph> Tma : 1M hMm M.. ' Stt WR ** yj-J^ I HmbtSU Fmrtna. al b<r Uh-t (Urnrr. Xaraaf llaiiMiaa. | !My mow. S V.: Fra. FTtVri, Imnm aw* Bra) ha- I ta' \#rnt. oar. Mala w 1 Sb. BuSMIa. X T | IF Bi lamairlb). Aa.ai. *uM IF t aim il 0i.1.0r lr a.li.ritaaM that lVblM ail) tab. plao. rreardlr-. of Um aaaobrr af UiV mS j m tb. il-i al < vt.ih#*, m 4 thai ib<- wb af MAm vB (tor hi lm|i oflirra or ihr |**ief Oatahar. r*a*MOBES mvrrni, W* the iifanaaaf. etUr.rwaf MmuAia. Ub m KfturtiL Z222&& : Mrißßlu. Irii EaT.ro rVrraim-nna Ut( Via lab. : >!<■> oa Um Mm of rv-r.twr. ITI ami with pMoQBr. to* . nanru.) I bam .. nrtan of ambily rod amanty. M •Moor r.uriaaat.Ui> ir Myliran ybn laMir ,„rc J-mamrm. Marr* of MripbU ; W. M. \ Hiticßtujra ■ >i> Altornat: FPUS W. Mnuavraov. CM I Taifv'loon*: L R Rk-ian. r'rto BrgliilM : L* •* I IVkimiu. Winatn CtooVr of (muina. of Mna afaa : Jt. A CMLK. (Vak aad Mat* ia <' baaarry : W. | M MrIJUI Mala cad (Vmblu (VlWor : t. D. I lb il LA, I lark hrrwadf rraii iVarl; A. wiwmab j I mti Trorfor : J. J. Xdfat. ITliliiflMl MaiaafiV II ta tn)wlMrt arilb lb. malMm of IV abwra aauirrl r*aUr<aaa. M. MM. P.mMnaat M Brm* and caaaidr* ibma .>••*. mwh : J. W lunun, ChaV al<\aHly ( mrt. Ttir oborr rpratol ia liaaBnaV ad- ! I to that of utar baataaai nra aad ulltaim gianaily. , j i. ma ym. v mTF^^ lfmrma. Taaa. ; Will All Tte ffio Suffer -rnoii- CONSUMPTION! -tm- COTJGH, —FUtABB— Head The Follswiai Letter from a Wpll-known Drßgfiit T ' OBHUMW :—I horf oaoaf mu i Miuanw ap—k to .ucb hiJ> lmi of AUm'* Lena Balaa* M da*- Ural I tlioualit 1 would rl to jrou tb* .aboraaee ofSv Molo to.nt Ho M)M hi. tuotbor. who t* new W yoaio al < *•• ha. jtrrnaucc with bawmiaiiftm M anuul ! iKAtt.. and ha. baenaDil.t tb* caia of ah mr bM phya. Iriaitb but aarw nmairwl aay imutint lint ml: Mim ■ha rroortcd to mat rr.tr band of Conch aad Laa Bai- I 'max that rowld ho promrad far bar. but aD to ao aiaiL ; hb Mi)t (row wan*, until mo waa eoahatd to bar bad ; mt whoa Jt. wa. aoiaad with a iiannymi of oouihiaa. ! •h. woutd loao tho iw of ra*|wr*ti.>n aad they war. | I onmpetbd to nwort to rarioaa tnoaaa to tiwtor* hraalh ta. : and wktl* ml aowabod m hard aha amid aot aa- j pectoral* aaytfiina. and thrfaaaib aad frioad. badatron up all hopo. at bar rwwwj: h.r wa aatioto the "*- • lMMn.nt of A llm'. Laaa Bal.tm. awl Kmc thoufht. I thay would procuroanj tr> it. TTMJootaananad cmaa | bar tin llaUam at u otoek p. m.. u unacted, a dear *r- , MJ hewr. IMf BifMtabt; thoa aho took aMfaar UMjJ tf , ouoahinc. aad mU' r.tml a moathtul of dark, rtftow j . matlor. which wa. aomothioa Um had aot bam.aWo to dolar ww. nam Ikw tmtiawad to cue Iwt tho 8.1-jam jam aaUl anrutaa, aad tbm alto bo*an to ai*Tto ; fraalyr. and wtthia two hoar ah. ht . n-xKutom Ihro. pint* of Btocoua matter, which pat* bar laimiltiltory- ( ; bat, and Uaeo that Umrkaaa mtinoad to tmmaoa. Bb. SSI mora Of the BaVam to-day. aad he V 11 uuiameadint It I wui rwiKHiiniiiy, I ■ ' A. C, JOHNSOX, Bwlat ALLFN'R LUNG BALSAM I form, aad Ha am V BaraUam to the meet daumto. Mr Pireellnwe aoaampaay eaoh bottle. J.N. HARRIS & CO., ! PropribtOTßi CINCINNATI, OBIQ. , 1 49* It le mid hy all c... lu. Porta** 1 ' **—*,FwyMMM. Alt Mmwoate * *T*r\ Wwadorfwl Csfrtwp **??• tvf an MB s *B* Nesdf |fHsk * Umm. Whlabar. JmrnS that Vad tba Mfißm *ti to dt a at toMlefblM.iiuf* frwwt the Vafir* Beeta tef N p-rzzjzis:** srss ?~- A Lira airiM ranyw a parted Bamrator vad latU-wfar wf tb* --. e* _tj rrdt PilW MMI IWtimiiE to a beaitbj eoedlum B* pwam mo *m tbaaa^ tan aeeerdlap to dbawtt.ri avd y*fw 0m aa daattwfad bf ' * i mt ***** • ypuradleg-s Taalf puMoatnap. Ada, tb# pemßaf ■*•• al ***** apowt ia Hi*rlaffCmp*ftoß laSata* matbTdOto UMf. vd B *d*WaaPM Omsaa, ,? rMAWCNrui*m^;mß 111 mmL Ymr f •(UanMiis'T ASHI Siwiww* ..-TO- .. IMTOM oero. Dletotot " **" **" r * amtanadV Vllidfwd Blwwd, wtnm topmaiwllf pywdmafl by dUJu:imuit af tb. Dfpadf >e 9umm. OWPKntIA o* 1B04OWI* W t -^ r pyt. tm t <" i' b-ai immiimmi. ii-ipf RfiprtusMMMi sfl UM -f ■ Bad Taato hi tha NdBM, BWiew* altodl, Fafptta'toa at iTan f if-- -- " Fotojo^tham , awav IWWBL. am lira aeeartaua af UroMFda. Thntodawmtotbeßto—m^dhmdatoUMtoyd Uawr aad Setnfa. Teh faaaar ttd* d Bd* dtawr to d-dto. the hfaod af all VMddflaA aad Id mattm mm Bdabd oipm to *ha what* ayatavi VON UM IS eiMRAVEM. BmpUddSbdar. Bdl IVm, Btefchm Bmfe. ff-l Id. f-la'd Btu. Omr ESs^Bgajgsa^. CtoaeM UM Ftttetod Bhmd wbmaawr FBI *ai M* h awrttu. buratto* thmaphib* dm hi Fleflu. *• Umear Boem; dmam M whmyawßadlt *Miartil aUdawto <• Sd *tM: nfimaaa Nwkr M MBaB. aad r*m fadtap* ariß toflFrnwdm. Beep the blm papa, awd th* hmBB af IB* #et*i wtl: taCow. rta. Ta**. bd Vthwr Wanm dXuoa i vfmsm pf 90 lOMhf tfttosnaiL w iatfraprti S^FEsSsjEr>saer~ M*|"|ll'l|-*I |_ 1.. TU lit— J. VAUtBA. Nyrhha B- B. Mr* POX ALS * 00. H- n ntdi ddil AdaatlA hlh SlhMddi'iv -1 ' !i •' ® -nF* ; 4k> ufa aadTT'OowwiMoio mrUt fillroaA. TBOVS BT AM MttjefWWß ABB Nim RUPTURE ! 53SEi&^HiS5 8 O'CLOCK. __ ■ J M VlLToil^SiSSg^^? VXOB tALK.-rarw vT lie A mow. (toad i M* dr Paey. Oram or fVLbtowrwa. ftowd m •>*- aaU* near, at lenamrtf 800 Binniad Har alt m* Agents! Read This! "to ILL FAT AfiPTPI A e**-* ■ * tart* Jbliuilßl yrowTapMti.aj'ii geaeyttoußA iad daotiaf. mmaiar yewiwi tew* aad riwU* t- Immlw> ATiejb,- jUtoV Meto draw JJBnYlinralGkS. Cbartosj7v*aml FREE2=S"Si3^ torn T ybk> 9* j fff Baud Mr Salat Sa> ha ofYss^&ejss^ftm ! m tAmm ■■ s. eotjmooe. ckuda> M*** m®&gM THEA-NECTAR ■ AIM BLACK TEA Co5BE™Sr Jha WB fb* fkaw. Too MHPA Urol Tm .riTfcßC wm'rvw JVamntoSbr. FABMEBS' PAINT • . BURDSALL'S ARNICA LINIMENT. Aa laaataahV Oar# far Burn*. tkM*, Spralßb BBFI MATNH. IXFLAMEATWI, dto. A nafl. npplKwUoa ahay. the Fen him a bwra tho NO FAN3LT —WIN WX. WITHnH 1 ! r* IfUOk AGITTI W A\TI.B, n (tab raw nr* a xt> mrviAß tnuuta. KNOTS UNTIED ik, Tu Hxplht* lm or Atuoaui Data, ii It dtorloara tho whdoDotocttraayatoaa. Tmtyttmiaf ■lylii nU la bhbty dayw. A PILGRIMAGE i TV ma Brtt Lawn, by Mr.. K U Onroold. Htm work 1 pVaajmrerjwriraor, dartuf atoarmam Bur,we #od •he EaoL i* caaapaay .M 'Swt Tw ' *d the ICUNDURANGO! Bliss, Keen I Co's Fleid Eitract. TEX WOXDERFTL RF.MEPT FOB OTHER CHBO.TIC MI.(MID DINKANKM. Dr. F. T. KKSXE bartae i*n ratwraod frraa BaaaVr aad bmurbt tmh him a qoaatby of Mfwd. raadw rail* Rark, aoearod threwah thr oAr -at raeam-c-e --dUMia aad w.iMliira of Hi* KiwllriiqrjV Ftowtdoat of ' Reaadnr aad tb. tin i niaal at that lipiMb. aw am iw—iaiwd to Ml mdonftir it. to a Uautod oxkrnt. aad at a add .bout earn- t ttor of that which thaood of th* Hid ram mad maaty oompetioo aa to rharm. _Our Fluid Fafroa* topmpired tram tVymo, (•admfaum Meu-b from Dowador. aaaared by awuMamw of tb* aathiHritl*. al that o >entry Rdo by all Druaatoto la plat hoflM*. taritu m thrm oar aaiua. trad, awrk aad fall dirorthm. for BML Frioa. flu. Ulomaj No. a. C-rtar St, Jfow Vwk BI.IM, K 11 1 E A tj ee f odar nr., Sew Va< h. D. W BUM. M. D 'WaUtuwim. D. C.JL E. BUKO, STa. WwwfSfc; F. t. KKKNK M. D KowVmf^ nik •am*a wad CdataOa IMlbr, hut thom , dh—n ton fn-m thr poroi imiwij,!*. that a swat mrdletoe V a gnat hioMUao. We hara many of thorn bie—,mm. bat ammd th-m afi, ta thr proriarw to which it belong,, an grmtorthaa Trnmat'i Managua At Seltssr Ap*riat. A oedema wonld not raffle* to momerato the albarmr kw which it V untwribrd h> phruoito of the tic' J •Uodiog It tWodLlinTinbe Ld^ termed patent medk-mra. hot H V eaarpele haeed oa ra(- eaVAe aaalgtu-. aad will ataad the teat of tue aharjwot and meet ngtd <umUmJ < nuciem a* a cathartic, a amia •''"fv • aajt lobr.V proaaratiou aad aa admirable remedy for all btKnut oompiaint*. Let there he a* —"*• REDUCTION OF FKlf'fX TO COSFURM TO REDUCTION OF DUTIES. Great Saving To Consumerß ■v Gsrriso it cirß*. | toruarNrw H ,e Lint and * tlab turm w-U THE GREAT AMERICAN TEA CO •l AW Vid£t *TBt.rr, P_9- RtalMK NEW TODD T. K, U. Oet St Mo
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