Pun rage to do Right. We may have courses, all of us, to MMHW mil war. To meet a foe, protect • friend, Or ftice a cannon-ball ? To show the world one hero Uvoe The f ircmost in the tight— But do we always manifest The courage to do right? To answer No I with steady breath. And quick, unfaltering tongue When tierce temptation, ever near, Her BTrntamaoug has wjm | To cure net tor the b'ntcring tone, Content if wny-jn .tub- have The courage to do right? To s Ileitis of Interest, ST. PETHWBCRO has about tho popula tion of Philadelphia ; Moscow abyu* Vuat of Brooklyn- TRK United Stot*. Treasurer holds as 'or national Uuk circulation, $379,^600. ADVICES from Ilindnatan tell of a dan gerous rising of Sopors at Oao and great damage by floods in Bengal FITTEKN persona were more or lesa in jured by the upsetting of u train on the Pittsburg nud t'ouuellsrille Railroad near Newton, Pa. THR cattle plague, which Ims been very prevalent iu the territory of Cochin Chini, is decreasing, but its ravages have been severe. Or the doxen expedition* now besieg ing the icy fastnesses of the Artioregion, only two* have received aid from any government. , THK people of Wisconsin, at their late election gave a majority of over 30,0tt0 vote# in favor of a constitutional amend ment restricting special legislation. IN future go white horses are to be em ployed in the French Armv. They were found to be such exoellent guides to the Prussians where direct their fire. THN total imports at New York, for the past week were f3.'J&\o3 1 against 53,- ■sfil.6l7 the previous weak and $4,374,- 65h for th© corresponding wet k of last year. TUN Union Pacific Railroad is threat enetl witli suits by Han Francisco mer chants who hart* lost heavily bv the de lay in the delivery of their holiday goods from New York. TERNS survivors of a Japanese crew, whose disabled junk had drifted for nine months, ultimately reaching Alaska, have just been taken to San Frantnsoo, on their way hume again. THN seven days beginning with Tues day, th© 19th, and ending with Christ m is, the "doth, are the tutted days of the year—the suu rising at 7:30 and set iug at half-(Mist four. PEXXSXXVAXIA reduces its state debt gradually. Four years ago it was more than forty millions of dull irs. It was re duced more than two nnibons during the year ending November 30, last. THR Chamber of Commerce, of New York, have received additional siiliacrip ti >ns for the relief of the West, amount ing to $43,'78 13. The gross receipts have amounted to $1,001,848 83. FRANK MATS, was hanged at Grenada, Miss., for the murder of his wife by ratsbane last April. He had been twice respited. He was overcome by fright, and had to be carried to the scaffold. A number of the meteorites, the larg est of which is said t weigh twenty fire tons, were discovered in Greenland by the Swedish scientific expedition which has lately returned from that country. PRINCI BISMARCK has sent a despatch to Baron von Arium, the German reprc aeotdtive at Pari*,setting forth the feeling of exasperation caused in Germany by the outrages perpetrated °u her aohliera in France. J. A. HOWARD, an American physician, charged with aiding the rebels in Cuba, has been tried, eoovieted, and sentenced to eight years' imprisonment iu a peni tentiary. His case is to be submitted to Yahnaseds. THE Russian papers have long leaders on the subject of the Graud Duke Alexis' visit to the United States The papers rejoice at the safe arrival of the squad ron, and at the reception everywhere given the Duke. A MICHIGAN women, named Loosing, who stuffed red pepper m her niece's eye", because she did not eat fast enough, has been sentenced to pay * fine ef 8100 and confinement in the Detroit House of Correction for ninety days. BISMARCK has sent a strongly-worried, not to say furious, despatch to Baron von Arnira. the German representative at Paris, in reference to the outrages perpe trated on German soldiers in France. He threatens very severe retalistorv meas ures. THE St. Petersburg Messenger, an offl cial organ of the government, announces for the first time the removal of Minister Catacazy from Washington, owing, it says, to"personal difficulties which might prejudice the good relations existing be tween Russia and the United States. N RwrorNDLAXD. is just now enjoying an era of great commercial prosperity. The capture of the almost fabulous num ber of 500,000 seals in the spring of this vear, and a most successful eod fishery, liave been followed by the reappearance of mackerel on the coast after an absence of forty years. ASTONISHING progress is making in the political and social revolution in Japan. Among the latest projects are the closing of the Buddhist temples aud compelling the priests to enter the army or earn their living in some other way, and the send iug of twenty yonng Japanese ladies to be educated in America. * THERE is excitement in Curaeoa abont the arrest of the Attorney-General by or der of the government. The people ob jected and assembled to demonstrate their objections, whereupon the troops were called out and ordering to fire np on the crowd. One person was killed and nineteen wounded. THE Shoehonee Indians of Nevada hare been accustomed to ride free on the Cen tral Faainc Railroad freight trains. A number of them, including three chiefs, insisted on riding ou a passenger train, but the train went off and left them. The Indians now threaten to tear np the track, and it is feared they will do so. THE excitement caused among the Spaniards of Havana by rumors of an impending war between the United States and Spain arc by no means abated, on 1 the contrary, apjear to l>e on the in -1 crease. The Dona had become quite i bellicose ovei the subject, and, by talk at . least,were giving demonstrations of ti.eir readiness for the fray should it come. D.'et and Exercise. Dr. Pnrkcs, while investigating the ' effect of diet and exercise on theelimin ' ation of nitrogen, had for his subject n very healthy, powerful, and temperate you ng soldier. He conducted one series of experiments in whieh the man was fed on ordinary diet, and the amount of nitiogen content was kept as near an possible constant. In a recond series prepared foot! was given so on to keep the amount of nitrogen introduced per fectly constant; and a third series was : made with non-nitrogenous food. These I experiments showed distinctly an in ! creased elimination of nitrogen in the ! period of rest after severe exercise, con firming Dr. Parke's former results, and supporting the statement of Liebig on this point, in opposition to that of Yoit. Whether it was diminished during exer cise or not was not clearly shown by the experiments. The non-nitrogenous diet for five days neither raised nor lowered the temperature in the rectum of the pa tientf but rpparently did not effect the health, nor did it alter the frequency of the pulse ; hut the heart's action became weak, and the pulse soft. The experi ments proved that force necessary for great muscular work can be obtained by the muscle from fat and starch, though changes in the nitrogenous constituents of the muscles also go on, which have, as one effect, an increased elimination of nitrogen alter the cessation of the work. ROMAHCE ASD REALlTY. —Washington Irving has epitomized the strange in congruity of a graveyard in the midst of a great city, where the " waves of active life are beating against the very walls of the sppnlchre;" but there are other sepulchres—even the sepulchre of the human heart whence buried hopes sometimes come forth and present as strange a contrast to the unsentimental rush and whirl that environ them. Wit ness this mournful waif, picked up on one of onr busiest thoroughfares : " My eyes with ters is red and dim, Cause he lores she sad I loves bun, But they'll be better by-and-by. Wlicn ehe 'cuts' bim and he loves I." Poor heart! SJie evidently thinks little of the price of pork, or the proba bihties of a war with Spain. An Ifalian newspaper laments that after the liberal subscriptions made there for a monument to Garibaldi, that agita ,tor will not take the bint. * Chrlftmui In tho Danish Manila. We found, writ©* a correspondent, that Uio Christmas holidays were celebrated iu both ialnuda in a rntlmr peculiar mis nor by tho colored people, and for tho entire previous year from tlieir m<*t cherished anticipation, na then for more than a week they are completely exempt I from labor, and devote tnedaya with un paralleled ardor to the pleitaurc of dauc hig. They commenced at two o'clock on Christinas morning, while the stars wort* in tho sky, to parade the strvatain pangs numbering from twenty to a hundred, males ami females, preceded by a drum, which is sometime* accompanied by an seoordinn and triangle, Ui tbesounuaof which they march or done* along, sing ing in chorus a shrill and monotonous refrain. When the* think they have thus sufficiently exhibited themselves to admiring spectators, they udjourn to some house which the* have hired, or [i irt of a house which lias been loaned or the purpose, and there trip the fan tastic aud generally bare toe with an un tiring energy, only equaled by the sur prising length of time they are able to | continue the exercise. They frequently march or ilance for days together with wiuvoly auy cessation, and instances I have been kuowu of deaths from were i exhaustion and fatigue. Koch party has ' a ibis.u on ecu, attired according to her ■ own or collected means, who has always more or fewer maids of honor. In oou , formity to the importance of the crowd, on® of whom incessantly rings a hell in : front of her as they walk through the streets, while her train is held up by others, sometimes as many as six sup porting her sable majesty's skirt. The royal toWs are mostly crwbile tuuslin ; but on New Year's l>.v, of which they think evea more than of Christmas, some of the town queens are gorgeous in silk and satiu, and occasionally, byway of I ostentatious oru-meut, will have seured on the bosom of the drees bank-notes and gold doubloons, which arc woru with very much the same pride as theiuigm as of au honored order are displayed by i its uirmbers. Many of their dances were brought by their an oca tors from Africa, and transmitted through geuera- , tious of descendants with scarcely any . change iu the figures and motions, and J always araouqianied by the voi<-e. Some j are quite rude and primitive; others 1 more intricate iu their evolutions, and almost barbarous in -ff ct, such us the j " Bo tubals," having a curiously exciting influence oa the performers ; while one, tho " Quelby," a sort of shawl dance, is graceful and even elegant. Where Heaven I*. M. Figuier, the French sown!, has written a new work entitled " The To morrow of Death, " in which he ts good enough to defiue the locality of Heaven, for the benefit of less enlightened mor tals. He explaius that the fluid which astronomers and naturalists call ether, begins at an elevation of 30 to 40 leagues (120 to 160 kilometers), above the earlh, where the atmosphere terminates. It is a real fluid, a gas analogous to the air which surrounds us, but infinitely more , ratified and thinner. It is distributed not oulv about the earth, but about the , other planets. More than this, it is in all space; it fills the intervals which sep arate the planet.". In fset, the planets, which, with their satellites, compose our solar world, move in ether. The comeU also, in their immense journey through space, circulate in ether. The chemical composition of planetary ether is un known. Astronomical phenomena have taught us that there is such a fluid, but nothing is known of its components. We may conclude, however, that ether can contain no oxygen, anil we should not wonder if planetary ether were com posed of hydrogen gas excessively rare fied ; that is,of a gas extremely light of its own nature, and infiuitely subtilized by ! the absence of all pressure ; and of this fluid above our atmosphere, M. Figuier ssvs:— "It is beavfrn. There then, iu the place commonly termed heaven, we fix the residence of supcr-hatunu lieings. In this matter we concur with the pop ular belief and prejudices, and we gladly e-tablish this agreement. These preju dioes, these misgivings, in many cases ojatomize the wisdom and observations of on infinite number of human genera tions. A tradition which uniformly pre vails in all countries has the w eight of a scientific demonstration. Language and tradition agreeing, the most wide-spread modern religions—Christianity, Buddh ism, and Mohammedani-m— .assigns to heaven the home of God's chosen peo ple. " " And so, ** adds M. Figuier, " science, tradi ion, and religions join hands in this matter; and the holy priet who, attend ing the reval in rtvron the revolution ary scaffold cried, 'Sou of the holy St. Louis, ascend to Heaven,' uttered a ver itable scientific truth-" Xakiu? Shoes. In Massachusetts, Maine, New Hamp shire, and Vermont, where the Storm King rains, snows, tliaws, or freezes a considerable portion of the year, tlus in habitants naturally keep a vigilant look out for their toes against forever-advanc ing Jack Frost, who is no respecter of persons. The inventive faculty of many active brains naturally runs npou shoes, and consequently they are fre quently bringing out new devices for keeping feet dry und warm, and patting leather into forms that neither rip, leak, not wear out till the purchaser is out of sight Sewing by hand is an exploded idea in a town in which thirty thousand boots are manufactured in a single week. Of course those are designed for distant markets. Pegging has had it* day, l>e eanse they shrink in dry weather and drop out, leaving holes for wandering water to rnn in. Rut a desideratum has leen achieved which nuts all former de vices for keeping soles and upper-leath ers in contact. Neither waxed thread, wooden pins, iron nails, nor copper brads are employed. That is not all that is curious about the matter. A machine, small, compact, and strong, works auto matically, us though it had an eyo to business. Instead of any former kind of fast ener. the whole is doweled together with leather dowelj. Sole-leather is rolled between huge cylinders till it is as com pact as wood. Strips are then tucked into a hopper. From thence it is paid out, by either a crank or steam, cut into the shape of pegs, and at the same instant driven through nil opposition, thus clinching every thing throngh which it jiasse*. The sole of the shoe is per fectly flexible, the leather pins swell and hold on like a detective to a pickpocket That is aU, and the work, theoretically, will last forever. A Trivial Cause fsr War. There is on old saying which run* in thin wise:—" Behold what o great tiro o little spark kindlelh." The " misnnder stonding" between Prnnsia and Brazil \ ■ccma to have been on illuatration of thia j fact. A tavern brawl acorns to be a tri-; vial thing to cause trouble, if not war, ■ between two great notions, and auch is! said to have been at the bottom of the 1 matter. It appears that seven or eight' Prussian officers, tieiug in a coffee-house ' at Rio de Janeiro, got intoxicated and 1 then got into a quarrel with some Brazil ians. Hard words arose, a general fight ensued, and the Prussian*, having ejected their opponents, went to work and smash ed everything in the bouse. While this pastime was in progress the police ar rived. Toe Prussians resisted the offi cers of the law, more fighting took place, wounds were given on both sides, aud finally the beligerant foreigners were cap tured and taken to prison, where they were locked up like common vagrants. Among the prisoners is said to be u near relative of Prince Bismarck's, and the whole business looks very disagreeable. A diplomatic correspondence has l>ecn exchanged, and the prisoners have leen set at liberty. But the report from Ham burgh that a German squadron was fit ting out at Kiel for Brazilian waters, Beetns Co be confirmed, and it is not im possible that serious complications will arise from an absurdly insignificant oc casion. HEAVY storms prevail all over the Slain*. There is much rain and snow ere. The Mormons soy it fs the sever est weather they have experienced for many yeaps. Winter Toilette#. A New York fltaMen Journal notice* a few of the winter toilette* in that city. One (if the moat elaborate toilettes i of blue, exqpfotelr hprflnfed with nu ' embroidery of white silk, with fringe of heavy atlk and fine chenille combined. The corsage of the Louis XIV. at v Ic, ! postillion*, closed at the throat with a dem> frill of very beautiful point d'Ai | iiuulo luce, falling iu a spiral knot over ; the fuiute.ot tint of roae erepe de chine. A fair young bride will perceive in the record to the l>rida! drama tint of white, with tha pink creamine*# cost over it, an j if from a glowiug sunset gleaming apou i a bank of newly fallen snow ; trimmed with tulle frdla at the edgiug of the an tuple.HUH-'VC*. The (iirmge cut heart - *ha|>ed. tilU d in with Maty folila of l full#; jwHiuin and orange bloaaouur for ' theOiffure, uiiugled with a laee of the most trati*parent texture, covered with 1 tiny knots of chenille. The trained over-skirt wra* a maas of narrow ruffiea, draped U|OB either side by large rosettes of silk and laee ; a little apron of tnauy wrinkles fwfcl reached the top of the four tlouncsa of the under skirt, and a brood sash of faintly-tinted faille finished this charming costume. The jewels were of largo rose pearls—bracelet, earring, and pin. A very elegant dm*#, completed for a regal brunette, is of a warm. niby gros grain ; the long over-akirt of a shade lighter, is lashed at intervals with iueertifins of the darker shade, edged at eacli puff with uarrow black Chaatilly and jiaaiwMUMiterie. The Wsque has an extren*ly loug Louia XVI. vest of du-k ruby velvet, cut square, grunduh with laee; a collar and sleeve of exquisite jKiiut d'Aleueou. Jewels of rubies and diamond. For evening toilettes flowers rival lace and the exquisite lightnes* of the mam I bout Young ladies oomhine silk with the moat diuphouous materials, render ing lea# obvious the heaviness of the | former. For example, a drew of peart oolorcd groa grain ha# three over-skirt < j of shaded rose color in tarletans, niched with tin- ame light texture ; these skirts are long and gracefully loofied at iu tervals with brilliant Austraiu rose*, mixed with white marabout, the same flowers forming the banquet for the neck and tho hair. Another costume of water grera, delicate a* the foam eamxd wave, was arranged with skirts and ruchiugi of misti>' tulle; brood puff# are placed on the upper skirt, separated by sprays of eglantiue, with pale crystallised leave#. A straight scarf of the silk, covered with tulle, is gracefully draped over the breast and caught at the shoulder with a spray of the eglantine ; coiflura of the same flowers. A magnificent dress of whits groa grain wax literally covered with black laee, the dusky fabric so Spanish in its suggestive nam that, as oue looks upon il, the vision of a dark-etcd donna arises oa te ita rightful owner. Still black l ice is becoming to all, it shade* and relieves the trjp proHonc a, aud vet letida a newer grace to the most fauldevly elegant. A Terrible Tale. A Mankato (Wisconsin) correspondent sends the following horrible tale : Last Sumtuor a family consisting of husband, wife, and three iiltle children, went from this city to live upon a cluiui situated near Herou Like, tu Noble Couutj, and about fifteen mile* inita from Okakous. On the lit iiist, the husband, who t given to drinking, started fur Jackson ostensibly on business, but only to in dulge in the pleasures of hia deviliah np|>etite. He hft his wife and children of tlie open prairie, in the dead of the Winter, with scarce n stick of wood, aud what is still more incredbilc, while she was Jnily expecting confinement. The day alter he left CSJUO the fearful slortn, and whan that was expended the poor woman found herself without fueL She knew that she could scarcely ex|ect her husband home for several days, as it took that time generally for hint to re cover from his sprees, and the couviction came to her that her family would agon freeze to death unless succor could ta had frutu ilia neighbors, the nearest of whom was three nolo* distant So this desperate woman, at that time in so delicate a coiKlition that ahe might l>e confined to her tail, started out in the fierce cold for help. At least such istta supposition, for tue next day some of tlx* neighbors found tar body, together with that of tbo new-born babe, stark stiff, in u snow bunk, where she had fall en faint and perished. Horrified, they Kicked her up and carried her homo. and ere, horror upon horrors, tliej found the three little ones also frozen to death. How Turr FOUND IT.— lf we may le --liave s Detroit, paper, u singular affair took place there recently. A man fell ovrbourd in the river and ores drowned. Attempts were made to Bod the body in vain. While the men were thus engaged, a buyer of jntil stuff, an Italian, watched them for a while, and thou proposed to get a loaf of baker's bread, put some quicksilver iuto one end. and seriously asserted that on Wing thrown info the water it would float to A point directly over the body, and then stand still. He was hooted at, and told to go nbout liis junk-buying, not a man believing in the old woman s whim, a* they ternr-d it. The Italian went away, but returned in n Utile while, threw a loaf of bread into the river near where the man went off the dock, and in a moment called the aboli tion of two men Itelow to the fact that the loaf was spinning around like a top. It went partly under the wharf, stood still for a moment, and tlum went half n block down stream, turning right and left, and, as vouched for by five different men, stood nearly two minute* against the current, which was floating driftwood right by it. Very much excited, the Ital ian shouted to the searchers to drag over the spot. They we BO further down, and it was half nu hour before they passed over the spot, but when thev did it was i to hook into the alothr s of the drowned sailor, and he was hauled to the dock. NOT BO FMMT FOB Time—Not long since on a railroad train a young couple seated in a car were so affectionate that tiiey could not keep it to themselves, iimoh to tho annulment oCsomc and dis gust of atiir pfUhe ptssflpger*. The couple bad aflriicted a good deal of atten tion on the iMMiuigo by their affectionate kisses and embraces, and the conductor concluded to play a trick on them tliat would, perhaps, operate beneficially. Ho telegraphed ahead to the agent of sta* tiou to have a clergyman at tho depot. Tho train came in, and the clivine was prompt. When the train slopped, the minister entered the ear nud the conduc tor pointed out the couple, who still sat nflrctionntely near each other. The cler gyman advanced toward tiiern, aud in a clear, slow voice said: Are you the eonirte who desire to be married ! " They made no answer, Imt spi>eari'd to le ut terly confused and dumbfounded, while the "passengers, who now first knew of the trick, could n>t roe train tbeir laugh ter. By atul-hy the whistle sontidcd and the train left, carrying the lady and gen tleman witti it, while the minister stayed behind. The affair was explained to him the ncft day, and his feo paid as if ho had performed tho oeromonr. During the rest of the trip, the couple were less affcctibuoto. Fnrrziso op Wateb. —ln a recent commnnieation to the the Academy of Sciences at Paris, M. Bouasingnult de scribed some experiments, showing that water is not liable to freeze, irrespective of the degree of cold to which it is sub mitted, as long as it is not allowed to ex pand in order to change into ice. In one instance water inclosed in a strong steel tube wiu exposed to a temperature of —l3° Centigrade without congelation. This, however, oecnrred instantaneously on unscrewing the steel end of the tube. The fluidity of the wuter was made man ifest bv small steel spheres which moved freely inside of the tube during the wliolo process, and would have been stopped by congelation. HEAVY RISE. —It is atonishing to note the influences which cause real estate to rise and fall. The value of. property of Monaco, which will be next year tho on ly place in Europe where public gam ing places will bo opened, has so in creased, the Prince of Monaco, whe formerly asked 81,000,000 for his princi pality, now demands double that sum. A Chapter on ( wasting. TT-nWWard Beecher haa written far the l4iUi*r a chapter on coasting, in which he any a : Of alt ixmitiona, the worst, the most inexcusable is what owdlo bo called a M/y-plumper, or when one Una down up on lu* sled, with head to the front, steer ing with the U>< a. The position is un gainly, the head I* thrust forward and ex posed to danger, and iu care of uood, Uie body is iu a helpless position. Next ia the aido-aaddle posture, or when the boy sit* curled up upon the rear of the sled, with oue leg under him, and tlie other projected backward for a rudder. The upright posture, with legs extend ed over the sides, or carried forward be tween, aud even in front of the runner*, is the true position for the bold boy of the slef He lit* the #e of his whole body, 44 fclm perfect control of his #l*l ; and if route* to harm. It must be set down to that Isrge account of profit aud loss which every spirited boy rnn up. Let no man revile the joys of ice-bound hill*; or ridicule the task of tugging a heavy sled up the hill for the sake of rush ing ihiwn agaiu 1 Ah, yea—but that downward rush is ecstsoy. Clwir tlio coast! Here goes I Right behind if lirivul sled. Away we go, eve ry yanr the rate ; we come to the Jumtxrt, aud flv through the air s* if shot from a-catapult, and strike down again with a jar that makes the sled creak. Clear the coast 1 here we come ! The bgnf* draws aside. Neck and neck we go ! iduHoua 1 There is a sturdy old farmer who tierer eouUl flu*! out wk*t boys vfere made for. He won't get out of the w*v _ not he ! He shake* his cane as a warning. Too late- —we strike him just above the ankles, sud he goes over our hmdfltte a shadow, but wo her him come dowig behind like a subetenoa 1 In a second vd an* away aud out of reach and liorifl. Of course there ia a fuse, and a erf re called uo, and the master, with ( a (Mlikle in his u*. aud *ays uv must say we are sorry ; and eve rybody *ays served him right, the old •urnnidgeon, he ought to have kept out of the road ; and we find ourselves Uie heroes of the school. Then who will f -rget when our pretty oouiiu WHQUHI to take u cruino on our sled, and how our siHters, too. ware the ffuetfUi of proudly polite boys, and how the courtesy of the hill-side waa shown to the girl* M ardently and disinterested ly nv ever it could be in after life on more important occasion* I ..... Perhaps tlie teacher w as willing to show liis cusdiwxaaioo, sud take (xui*age on a double ]WlirOrvat was the hurrah raised for him. ( *"<>,• the yell universal. •Whcn. I-r turn nt the IsUtom of the It ill, the sled went out from under him. and he made the few remaining yards of distance without help, aud turn ad up quite like a heap of dirty snow . The tljpsy Spider Paace In Madrid. Mr. A dec's •; Types of CVlilian Va grancy," in the January hi uuiVx-r of Lip contains tliia graphic little sketch: , , ; 1 A strolling band of gypsies have made | their way to Madrid from their savory hauuts afar among the orange groves [ and Moorish ruins of Andalusia. _ They have pitched their tent* just outside the 1 Arch of Carlos HI. in the vieinire of the bull-shambles, and are new fixed for at least and at most a fortnight 1 hey came to town with one eye to business, th<> other to thieving. Jlut very pictur j ctaque and comely are they here and everywhere, singing and dancing aud nitting among looks. There are tnen ■ and women—children in plenty, too, but ttay are left at home, wherever that may ta. The men are habited in breeka, shirts, j tekets, leggings, sashes and round pork pie hats, all of brilliant tints; the wo men in kirtlea, waist*, gay shawls and showy stocking*, with their black, glossy thrown back anil tlwkfd witu a bright ribbon or flower. The men have guitars and bandoiins, the women cas tanets. which thev rattle bravely. They ' are about to trend tbo mazy measures of the danea in concert. Away start* the music of guitar and Castanet. Q tick a* lightning, the women, brown and Iwau ttfgl, catch up their skirts tatwten I thumb and forefinger, and bound into a I waltzing action sideways, without turn ! ing. Those of the men who have not instrument*, caught by the infection, spring foi ward and join the women in the some wild movement*. Clang go tta guitar* aiifl bandoiins. click the Cas tanet*. Swaying, stooping, gracefully j keeping time with head aud body, twist ing, ogling, making at each other, glid [ ing coquottishJy out of reach, whirling . dodging. now gently, now fiercely, with r her* hate, there fondness d atasys j 1 the delicious rhythm of motion and • music in it, those wild, handsome peo , pie'personate all the mail infatuation of 1 passion in its fruition. It is the terrible j Tarantula, tbo spider dance, lull of auta t j tie poison to the sen*e. Doos XSD Surar.-Dogs will worry i 1 *beep, for "*t • tbeir nature to." No dog, after he lias once enjoyed the ex qui site satisfaction of killing and eating his owu mutton, is to be trusted. Ho i may pretend to bo reformed ; be may carry himself like a Quaker in the very presence of the fleecy flock ; for all that, he is all the time intent IIJH n another | taste, and is merely watching for an i opportunity. This year, iu Berkshire j County. Muss., these wicked dogs have murdered sheen valued at 81, IK) for which tlio County Commissioners must pay. out ot a fund raised by licence; taken out by dog-owner*. There are several wars, however, of convincing dogs that sheep-stealing is a losing busi ne-vs. A halter is extremely persuasive ; so is a well-loaded gun ; so is strychnine, well rubbed into cold mutton. But what would Mr. Borgli *y to these 1 If lie love* tlio dogs lis well nn tbe shoep, he must live in a state of chronic moral bother. Tan WOK AM Qrwmov.-Cov. Camp bell, of Wyoming, in bis message veto ing the set* to repeal the Woman's Suf frage law of the Territory, says: "In this Territory women have manifested for it* highest interest a devotion strong, ar dent. and intelligent. They litre brought to public affairs a clearness of under standing and soundness of judgment which, considering their exclusion hith erto from practical participation in polit ical agitation and movements, are worthy of the greatest admiration, and alioye all praise. The conscience of women in nil tiling* is more discriminating and sensi tive than that of men ; their sense of jus tioe not compromising or time-serving, but pure and exacting ; their love f order not spasmodic or sentiment! 1 merely, but springing from the heart. All these, tlio better conscience, the exalted sense of justice, and the abiding love of order, have been mode bv the enfranchisement of women to contribute to the good gov ernment and well-being of our Territo ry" TnK Doswkr Fata litt.—Tho heavy frill of snow in the West recalls the sad ufloir at Donner Lake in 1849. A large party from Illinois for California stopped over night with the intention of sending forward soma explorers to see if it were possible to scale the mountains hore, or if it would ho necessary to turn hack a few hundred miles. The next morning, instead of being able to proceed, they found themselves literally hemmed in by the snow aud unable to move in any direction. They remained here, subsist ing npon their entt'e, roots of trees, and, finally, upon each other, till but four of the large company of emigrants lived to relate the incredible hardships and the horrid strait into which they were driven of eating one another. tivi Yon Am Monet to Lose ?—lf so, says a New York paper, contrive to walk up Broadway and slip. You will at onco be taken in hand by a gentleman deeply interested in your welfare. He will express regret at tho misfortune of your fall, and even go so far as to brash the snow from your soiled garments, and during the operation will ease you of your pocket-book, if not of your watch. Such light-fingered gentry are now prowl ing nWt j our principal thoroughfare seeking whom they may devour. Tan Spanish Minister of the Colonies has aqnouaggd his intention to reorgan ise the Haltli Volunteers. War With Hpala. The flnanish Journal, Kl fVoai'afo, of New York, discuasee at length the result ! of a war between the United BUtes and : Spain, It saya that nearly one-half of Urn whole commerce of thia country with Uta New World cornea from the Spanish Antilles, and that thia trade figures up StM.UUO.OOO. If to this ia oddod the instantaneous depreciation of iM|er money, which would lie unpreee tented, especially in view of the alarm whieh would seise upon the commercial men at the prospect of a naval war, aud we should ('aid, it aaya, that tha loss of *82,1100,M00 would be the smallest item iu the bill of tosses for thia country. The paper concludes .(a article as fol low#: Three frigates, with threw oilier wooden, aud eight or teu smaller ones, would blockade effectually Boston, New I York and Philadelphia, and there being Jo marine strength here sufficient to raise tch a bt: ckade, it would be easy to see what would lie the immediate conse quence, aud at the same time bow the oouutry had been brought to such es tfemity by the folly of the journalists, i And if two corsairs, with tla-eeof our j ordinary war sliipa, should liegiu to scour the Aoniean coasts of the Atlantic, burning down town# and seising ujsin j everything floating an American nag, we are inclined to think that the hum bugging idea of getting ready in ten or twelve months (as soon aa anything could be done), would not prevent the imme diate catastrophe that would follow, nor tile ulterior oonaequeueea, gloomy a* I Uiey would lie. which this country would experience for many years. As Spain has a Mediterranean coast and holds the Canaries (whieh is the us turai route to the Ktruit), and as our ports in Calabria are not i-r from the paling stations of England and France, ,'Uid a# we hold the Pltiilippines oi the Btst India coast, the Cape of Good H ipe, Fernando Po, Cisco, and Anda j Am (nil of which are strategic points, md arc our exclusive property), we say ! we should lie happy (if it would please ! the American press to tell us), to know how the shipping of this oouutry, whether commercial or naval, could es ieape the clutches of Bpauiah men-of war. To these considerations may be added the farther fact: tie* ill-will of the South ern States toward* the Yankee*, which would be evideueed at the first shock of war; then let these journals say what would become of the great American nation in a few months, and whether or not it would not tic compelled on bended M#e* to sue for a cessation of the war to we are daily being provoked, rjfk'e should odd that the American navy consists of forty-seven vessels, and of tbuae not one cau withstand a tempest or is fitted for a combat .according to re port of Secretary of Navy last year); while the Spanish navv numbers 157 war steamer* of the best kind, all of which are noaHy new, and moat of which have been tried iu conilmU, and passed suc cessfully through tempests. The Cuban Massacre. Among the pepers sent to Congress by tlie President, i* a letter from V ice-Con sul-Geueral Hall to Assistant Secretary of Stale Davi*, dated November 28, giv ing a circumstantial account of the alleg ed desecration of the grave of Caatauoo, the Key West martyr, a* he waa held to i be by a portion of the Peninsular impu tation. The me iical student*, be says, did not break, but merely ma lea few scratches with a diamond upon the glaas plate that eneloaea the niche, and remov ed or destroyed the wreath and replaced jit with one of their own selection. The government waa utterly powerless and thoroughly intimidated by tlie volun teers, and was finally obliged to com promise with them by ordering a drum head court-martial to try the piisonera. It was found ueceasary, to prevent a more serious conflict, that some at least of the young men should ta sacrificed. The court martial, eomposed of equal nam tiers of regular and volunteer officers, commenced at 2 o'clock in the morning, and at noon Uia sentence* were given I out. The execution took place sin the ( afternoon, up to which hour the volun teer* kept up their demonstrations be fore the prison and the palson. Through oat the wool* of this affair the govern ment displaved it* utter kelpleasnc-as in dealing witn such emergencies. The regular force at it* command was in*ig" nifleaut while that of the volunteers was large, readily concentrated, and, a* in this instance." when nearly unanimous of purpose, over-powering. Mr. Hall con cludes by saying that during the commo tion great alarm prevailed among the Cuban* and not a little among foreign era. There were well-founded apprehen sions that a general massacre of Cubans was intended, and to tkia p. ssibly m-y ta nttritrated one of the motives for a compromise with the volunteers and the sacrifice of the young men. The International Pisiform. Many of our readers have no doubt been iu s quandary, as to the platform of the *• International*." An officer of Ue society in New York gives a city paper, a synopsis of this platform, as follows : 1. The total alKuition of all class rule and all class privilege*. '2. Complete political and serial equali ty for botii sexes. " 3. Nationalization of the land, and of nil the instruments of production. 4. A reduction of the hour* of labor, no a* to allow more time far improve ment and recreation. 5. Education to be undertaken by the State—to be obligatory, gratuitous, ami secular. 6. Religion to be ignored, a* being n speculative subject concerning the in dividual. No religious differences or creed to be recognized. 7. The substitution of a direct system of taxation, hased upon property, instead of the present system of levying taxation upon industry ; the taxation to be pro gressive. 8. The abolition of the standing army, as being n provocative to war. !). The adoption of the principal of associative production, with a view to the complete supercession of the present system of capitalist production. Turn Tim YBBU. —In New York the solemn ceremonies of a religions •' profession" were performed in a disp el of the Sisters of Charity. Tlio occa sion was that of a young lady taking up on herself the Order of Mercy. At the commencement of the service the novice prostrated herself at the foot of the high altaf, while a choir of nuns chanted the Litany of the Saints in her behalf. At the communion she arose and slowly as oended the altar steps. On reaching the platform upon which the priest stands she again knelt and devoutly prepared herself for the reception of the holy sac rament and tho taking of the three relig ious vows—chastity, voluntary poverty and obedience. The voire Wing taken —the vows which are believed to lie per |>etually binding—tho professed uua resumed her potation at the foot of the Altar and again prostrated herself, while the choir chanted a solemn and appro priate hymn. The hymn being finished she arose, and accompanied by several sisters, went into the sacristy, where she was divested of all her adornments, to don the humble lmhit and cowl of a Sis ter of Chanty. The ceremony was con ducted by throe priests. In the Dark. An accident at tho gns woa'ts in New York left the portion of the city between 84th and 79th streets entirely in the dark during Holiday season. By this accident thirteen thousand householders were eompelled to burn candles or oil at their holiuuy festivals. In the district are nearly one hundred churches which were lighted by candles during the week. In tho stores candles, were struck round iu the windows in aV sorts of hastily impro vised candlesticks, such as old bottles, pieces of board with holes bored through, potatoes and turnips cut in half, the flat side of the vegetable forming the base, wliile a hole rndely scooped in the round part received the caudle. That portion of tho city locked gloomy enough. A 'Western journal offers this induce ment : " All subscribers paying in od vauoe wiU be entitled to a first-class obituary notice in cose of death." The lllnghamptou ItethelMij's Hall. Tha Committee employed in inveatl gnting the>lleged cruelties committed at the ttiwquehsuua Valley H<>m fr CWl drew, near Binghampton.fN. I. by Sup erintendent Van Eppa. have made public their report, oenunug tha Superin tendent and Hoard ( Manager*. Ac cording to the evidence given at tha tn vcatigatioQ, boya and girle at the Home liava been strip] ad milled, then taken in a damp and chilly collar, called the bath room, and subjected to a cold bath, by 'oelug plunged into tha water and having it daahad over them trrnn paila. Home timea amart-wrad switches hava been uaed upon tliam while in fha bath. Thia Van Eppa called, " healtlifnl aa wall aa diaeiplinarv. By thia man'a nvatam, the xhildren. after praying in concert at tha foot of their hada, arr pot to bad by ona another, Van Kpp* leaving them after performing the piooa duty of I intoning to their prayer*. The laager baya oudreaaed tha a mailer onaa who could not undreaa thamaelveo. No adult waa left iu charge of them, ee in caee of ickneea they ware compelled to help ibewaelvaai a best they might. They were not permitted to have a drink of water from supper—4 o'clock—until the neat mnruiug. Their food waa measured out to them, and no child dared aak "for more, " none of them poaaeasiog the as surance of Oliver Twial The food wea conrwe and common, and, aa Van Bppa iiaid. " not what he would gtee to board iug-eobool children." The aanitarv oon* ditftm of the Home in reported good, and the arrangement of the beds, the ventila tion, and the clothing of the children are commended. Lest Children. In New York City there is a station house devoted to the reception of those who have been picked up iu the street* by the police. A reporter who visited the place aaya : A policeman came in with a little boy about seven year* of age, with a bruised and bleeding face, in tears, in rags, dirty, mid a lanentable figure generally. "Who is this 1" said the matron. "His name is PADDY WOO LA*, and be doesn't know quite where he lieea," replied the police man. "His father and mother are having a drunken spree in the house, bhving beat each ether and the children, and driven tin m out of the bouae. I found him run ning, out of breath, and panting with fear and fatigue, and I've brought him up here." The matron nodded with a sort of troubled look, wiped his eyes, pre sented him with a piece of bread and butter and gave him a cup of tea. 'Thia treatment abated h violence of his grief, and though he sobbed a little aa he munched, yet the sea of hia emotion waa evidently going down. " Are there many such case#?" inquired the reporter, " Too many, only too many," she an swered ; "ualf the poor children who are lost have in reality been diiven out by oue jiarent or the other in a buret of drunken fury, in two or three dara thay win come for bim, pretending the deepest grief, but I aee the boy watch their hand* aa if expecting a blbw, and ready so dodge it" Tha world little knows what there children have to em dare in their miserable homes, and how the parent*, by their vieea, perpetuate iu their offspring defects character. Terrible Experience a a Raft. A young blacksmith of Fart Smith, Ark.,* named Engleberth Shutar, not long since discovered a canoe lodged on a drift nils in the Arkansas River, and resolved to secure it For thi* purpose ke tied two logs together with grape vines, aud pushed out into the stream, which at that point ia very deep and rapid. Atast seventy-five yards from the shore his craft encountered one of those huge wayfaring logs so common in Western streams, and was driven in pieces bv the shock. Shnber, as his only chance, leaped upon the slippery log, and clung for Lis life.* A companion who saw him start out went back to town for help, but when it arrived it waa nearly dark and a Northern hurricane had set in, dualling the icy waves over the log wlaeb was the vouog man's only salva tion, and though bis friends attempted to reach every scow and fiktboat which was put out swamped at once, and thev were obliged to leave him to the almost certain fate of a lingering and painful death. All night be remained upon the icy-coated log exposed to the gale, and to* the wave* until be was encrusted in a solid armor of ice, and tumbled about by the currents of the river. The next morning it waa reported in town that he wa w*n on the log stiff in death. When i hey reached him, however, he was found still alive, but with his face and limb* fearfully frozen. He had been eighteen hours on the log. Railroad Bond*. For several mouths past the Northern Pacific Bonds have been selling st the mte of a million s month, a*d Messrs. Jav Cooke & Co.. the agents, report a brisk and unabated demand thus far in the month of December. This must be highly encouraging to the company who are building the second great highway to the l'aciftc, but it ta not surprising in view of the attractions which these bonds present. A good railroad and ita traffic are usually considered security enough for a first mortgage bond, yet the Northern Pacific Bonds are not only a first lien on the Railroad and its pro perty, but is tMrtiUioH are a first mort gage on valuable lands in Minnesota and the Northwest at the rate of 23,000 acres for every mile of rood built, or upwards of 50,000,003 acres in the aggregate. Every bond of the denomination of SIOO, for instance, lias 50 acres pledged in its support, and it is sjiecinlly pro vided in the Company's charter, that the {lroceeda of all land s.des must be applied to t':e cancellation of the bonds, as long as they can be ltought at a price not ex ceeding 10 per cent, premium. The Kinds, worn used in purchasing the Company's lands are worth 81.10 now; and it will probably not be long before they reach that figure in the market. Their present price is par and accrued interest in currency, and they War in terest at the uuusually high rate of 7 3-10 per cent, per annum in gold.— Com. FROM all tne information received, there is every reason to believe that Dr. Livingstone is alive, and though age, fatigue, hardship and want have laid their marks upon him. yet he lives, and the labors of his years will yet enrich science nud add to the general informa tion of the world. The Markets. wrw tors. Btw Cinu-Priar la Si. Rulkcb S.IIHK -UK Flifrt <,uallly U .111k Medium or (Mr qnaL .lOlfa .Us (inliuo Uiloiwa.. .10 • .K'V lnTr or Icwwt grada. .€ • .09 Mora Ookr * 18.00 *70.00 Iloo—Uv* •* • -H Dmwd 00 • Sneer 08 • .05 •. Ootids—Middling *• .i;\ Fuca—Exits' 1 Wiaism. o tl (Hat. Knit. aao itll Wheat— Ambw Wrrtaro. I.BS a I.SO state 1.00 a 1.(8 Whit. 0.np Extra 7 90 • 1.18 No. J spring. LW LIS Bra—Wtwtora 00 a .08 SttUT-HU1*...., .'. a .00 CVias—MUl 79 a .BS oi W a .90 PORK -MM* WW W(M LAMO • ••• a • aaaa aa .a.aa aaaaaa •• il • *ll CKTaniam—Orada... ...IS 1 * RtlstMi IA a .80 Ohio SO a,! 9 •• raor u a .as WMrt.ro Ordinary." .11 a .10 JVumilTanla One ......... .S3 a .8* Chuck—state Factory .19 a .IS •• bktmroad 0T a .10 Ohio 10 • -U Eooa—Mala M a .11 srrrALo. ditr Cattls IU a 7.90 litur 5.90 a B*o -W • >■> Ftotra 9.50 a 890 Wheat—So. J Spring I.SO aLa Cork " a .91 a .79 USD .0 a .10 ALBANY. Bra—Mat* IS a .00 Ooas- Mixed 70 a .19 Bibut —Mute SO a .90 Oai*—Mate W a .91 PHILADELPHIA. Flora— Penu. Extra 817 a 9.90 Whkat—Wetrn Bed 1.6* a I N While 1.66 09.68 Ooaa—TeUnw OS a .73 Mixed - 73 a .74 PcraoLKPM—Grade Maßned.SS* Cloves Seed 11.30 aILSO Timothy 6.00 ■ AI.IIIW Cottkt— Lew Middling* IS a .18 Fior#—Extra. 860 a 800 Whkaj- Amber LOO a LU COUK 06 a .70 Oata A U • .96 Counterfeit*. It in ao easy matter to dittiwgniah tht gtmuin* Dr. Sage's Catarrh firmed* Iron the spufiona imitations in the market the urn Hint Wing printed oil lb* out aide wrapper ths word* "B. V. Pierce 11. D., How Proprietor, Buffalo, N. A 100 hue upon wrappst the Doctor"* pri vale U. 8. Government stamp, boarinj upon it hi* portrait, nam* and address which of itself is psrfset ywtranirr u Us gtnuintm. 670 ■ Pot-mcat STATH I'inmniTSiw 1871— The following is ■ list of State Con ventiuna thus far called for the coming year: New Hampshire—Borah. January 3. Connecticut--Labor Reform, Jos. 3. Missouri—Liberal Bepnb. January 34. Indiana— Republican. February 22. Texas—Republican, Jans 11. CUM KAJTOO, t NEE, rough akin, pirn plea, ringworm, aiUt-rbaam, and oth* cutaneous affections, and, and ths akin mod* aoft and aroooth, by using the Jo in trm To* Soar, made by Coowaix, HAXAJID k Co., New fork. It ie more convenient and eeaily appliad than other remedies, avoiding the trouble of the graaey einapoanda now in uae.— Com, Pan AM IUAITATBO TBBOAT, Cocoa or Cold "Brown's Bron kutl Troches" ore offered with the fulleot confidence in their efficacy. Tbeg maintain the good reputation tkej have justly aoqairod. Any person after using half a can of J. Monroe Taylor'* Cream Yraat Baking Powder, if not satisfied, ran We their money refunded ; we call this a fair pro position. Try it—flaw. TH DAT AJTISM A DKBACCH the parch ed tongue, nausea, shivering and febrile symptoms, prove that ttaieon has enter ed tue veins and eru nes, ood bedh cir culated with the blood through every organ. More slowly, bat not leas oar tainly, the use of the Alcoholic Astrin gents sold as medicines, depresses the vital fluid and wreeka the nervous sys tem. Touch them not, taste them not. In Da. WAUCCB'S VIKMOA* Brrrat you have a pure tempemnoe tonic, blood depurrnt, alterative and laxative, of un ijaraJlelml efhcscv, and absolutely harm less.—COM. The importance of giving Sheridam's Caoaby Conditio* Powders to honea that have Iteen out in Use oold rain, aUmd in sold wind, or drank too much oold water, cannot be over estimated; no man should be without them who owns s good borse.—Cms. We were pleased to see, not long oiime, in one of our exchangee, some pretty severs remarks addressed to several per sons who, during an interesting lecture by Rev. Jno. 8. C. Abbott, kept a coti- Uuuooa coughing, which prevented many from brariu x. People who cannot refrain fiom coughing, hod better stay away from such "places, or else take a bottle of Johnson's A nod/At Lutunenl with them.— Com. The (rtrvl af fptlritl—j-ftmiw Of Otadan imM. • aalUaraad n!k Bad baoanftiHy roandrd va< tn BO dooW Tor? BIO* tolas* to U*o BBD LADIM RTW J>O*0B0 UMBO BfcßflO hBOO •won IO bo thankful to MoUur Batata ; J* ado* BIL UM B>Mt outoroUßC of SU acaaaair ebanaa >• S Mia. f>ob tad brtiuanl < -anptriMn. TMooa**rla lita fcoclaaitoe BUT lad} B|r aacart b aai HOOTS"* LLTEAOUO HUM. IBT ataadard liaiartifytoa pmrnMi of tk* atasot.l ir. Ittobrtfroß oil ordinary ooamatira la torw moot **ai OB*I titrhaa lon TNTM&UEB it ccottotoa Bo Injarlouo losrodl • *t> doao 80l coaOrart or oßrtool too okta OB it too aatria*t>t •• bloc***,- " taOoaa,*" and ••Bowdoro*" • ooßtuo lo do. I m radawß B Marine lnoilaoM bjr improving too boaJto of too okte. fed** tto pou ottoa 100 ultimo of too opldoctoa tuootoa* *aor. and to* oortoco ootl at oolnol and omoott w or rotou. Frotaraa cum bo CB*ll||. bat oomph* loo* caa. aad it la qatva oonain toat a ladj alto BO otoor dun* tbaa • frroh aad my cam&rtum, wt'J itt'Bct Man ais>ration la oomjaay toaa bar aoigtbor with a Uaorjc tote bat a aaiknr okta. QmoXoo to* Oil OOUJSM * OO.M. COOT BTM3. Fuo. aabr HMi aato For tafonaattoa boa la ctoato tono. addroto OtAtot d Oak. HI IW rtrooc )Uo Yorta Firtt-clam Railroad Bond* are the beat for invf*tm*ntn. Write loCutut W. U*mun, Na 7 Wall Street, New York. —Com. i ■.... ruiiOiL loTOMtaoal Bwanuro. J*T Cooes a Co.. an aoa mUmf. aad imonoiot ta o prodtoUo aad *ato tn*artaoaat fat aB ofaaaa, too FloM Monaaso TJM Ootd Baato at too Hartotom FoaMr Kofi rood Company. boaitoc Sooaa oat Ttoao-Toatoo ; coat cold ittorooi aoro toaa • par toot. HOJUBI\ •ad ooearad br M aad oatr oaortrac* oa to* into* toad aad oeatpmoata. aad aa mora toaa H*W iaa at Load *o o*o*7 tote of track, or tot Aoro* tf Load to *aob *I.OOO Road. Tbs t.M oanoat prieafcißbo paid far P. . IwTwttn.t aHothar iiaartetahlie IwiriMpmdwd m HiiiNi Bartjihlete. ■ope and fe3>af inrtia.aeeaßuium toairtad ee andmUeai W M Ooon d Ott.. Pkto dedpfcra. Sear Tart >ad WirtKMa. awl fcy ert beak and Haakon Ikmtkm the oanean. TMcmri leartaxriedyad hr ail ataaeaeaf poeptete hatha hart aid taaot reliable biaad perthar ta the eertd. To (Jonsumptives. Tho adoortorr. Heotaf bwa pormanojttlr eared af that pr Ktrrtm aood. (tree M <*ult art Ikt *•"*• fir |rp,. 3FR* LSI *FIGPR~ Tor 'aautr of Rodah. lariat of Labor, FraaaaM front Oust, Durability I Cltoap" naar .-uljr unrltralod. Beware af Wortktea. Inltatica*. trader ether annua bat reoomblUrjc oar*la chape asd oOee af Wrapper, intended ta deceive. Tho Utah* tea IVIIrt ta hett, fcr creae denim m at twelve rente per poaad—tweatj-'dhn jdMr pound heica. "Chaapar thaa any ether Balk IVlrt KcaalUt? MORSE BROS., Prop'rt. CANTON, MASS. iaay,gsrsgg t'vlASo'w., M ■MgtßSaSgißSi p^LgKPiyi.n;agi&ste ___ M BrUliV B.wtoa. Caaeoiaad. Ohrt UVBIMCSS rcn WiXTJEß— Weteepeeef Peh D ibelaar lor IW*il sad Bmmn On of .*> cm In and turnip I U M u> any tddnis a wopt for the tboWhlacksein* ■ . . „„„ . _ ■t.&Jggtto. FREE TOS-aSfS _~ _ ___ JM* oooutaiae onr xsuuix sswwte AGENTS VMWI 111 Juu. saws gtsgre —• .fttrfWhVtTrtWKaa d*r-. KATURE'S BEMEUT. X YEGETIHESD [MCAEATBtOODPUAinCR^r A rsloetrte Indian ooaapooad, Mr raMornc ths hseMh, tad (or the permanent com at til dtaatMt aritiag from ■apart! tea of the blood, taeb at hero ruin, do ro Oil oat Hoatr, Ctmr, Cm. crrtti Ilwst or, Erysipelas, Cttker, ItH, K'irum, rim plot and Uun mm Mm rut, CMrti (oaakt. Cturrk, Bronchitis, Kttral(ls, Hhea atatlaat, Psltt ta the 'do, l>yt(trp>la, renal I pat lea. CoattTcncss, Piles. Headache, Dtsalaeee, \ei 1 sasaesa. Palat aeaa at the ateasaeh, Palas la the lath, Kidney ( taplaltu, Feaaale Weak aeaa, and deatral DebUUy. This preparation n scisotitonlly and cbstatoslljr com. I iaed. sad so strongly ooneeotrsMd front roeis, hsrbt and barks, that lis rood effects an naltaad tmmedlateb after oommeneln* to Inks It. Thsrs It as disease of Uu human yW for which the Vtomxx eaanot b msad with rxttrxcrr tarrrr, as It does aot ootttaia soy metallic ompound. Foe ersdierttac ths tystaat of all Imparltiee ot ths blood. It hat no equal It has aim failed to aCsot a eon, civtnx Mas and strength to ths system debilitated by disease. Its wonderfoJ effect* upon these ootaplainU an surprising to att. Many ban been md by the \mitni that hare Wed many other raaaediaA Iteaa well be called THE GREAT BLOOD PURIFIER TMZTAXU) BY H. R. STEVENS, , BOOT K MAM NwILU, Sold by all Pratfiat 1111 i -*.. raaw-. * mmm. Whisker, Prvef nptrtf Irff lIRNNR'Ni'* lARA ***® 9m9 r m T _ we— gaMfcMNMl ** TfNrfDA*" "*su*4 nilw.H l Bfi "*** **?. TB. MOW — Hwf tZZZTZTrZ:* airaheiw Srt-e --**KSJEEZ ' "'fry, ' IHCTI 111 WL * o-n Oft Uw fWM * *S*A*2_ Jl Ther are a (WIMIS LSRA*f rejig laMwrasOt spaii' • 1 "" ZZZ7ZTZ."'*.u-vnmrweam-a rmsiaLl .I,#. taSa r to*. u -*' rr ImMommmiort mm* CM ratals : tfm mod UsmU psesra sr ; HlMms. BesHus ssS Uiiiartsm w ! HImS. rims tspwsvHr **"***9 dmmtsmmd Ut O. OlfSl" Craaes. .. . mararwiA on ; -s* RI W ta.m.siiw.tWs. J : OmmH- lillflM'X* l"W ffif #M*RNm* n*A Tsufit Ut i%m HmtiM. mm BUmßm, .a.twafw. tstSsw ;X.- So a—rs . ssw wow wwW^WWs- I urn aat aie.li. vtos. ss* *"*^7^ ; MOSS swrMhraSvwwieUMi SSSW ; rot MM IN OISAAVS*. CissawUw Viussw atssS Wfcn i.ir f sra—sa j nMM aswiiaa tkisesatas as ahsiahw ; ussssv Osfw{ eissws H rtamW.SW I SAASSNWLI IB LIS FS4S.:SWES.W|WE*W. wIrM'MwiSHMUfMWMt be Ihs !•■• paw. s*4 UT# OSAITS SO* INILIIIS rtm. Toe#. a4 ethsr W arsii *wlclaele*e mus st ss sossv tS.swsln, aw nSWt w*ir Swf • rS I. WAUL to. RNWISO h- ■- MI>OKAIJS * on. J=trCi t. AC ' toraou* at tlx ASS nsAL.mi. tTtMsl asl 1 ; ' : ■ SO'CLOOK. 8875 *JS2f*; >waMv*asw W ? STHEANECTAR is a mint BLACK TBA *^. T *TL3ILLW S'SW sS toO fci.l I "M.*xrrCs-aswv*jSX tr. A oKBAT orrmn REDUCTION OF PRICES. Toanvotsio REDUCTION OF OlfTftß. Great Saving To Coma mere IT SlTTtta TP t LCBU. -ks'-^SSSmrSS | aßffti KC Ul fiBNMMNMMTV flbMi fW*Bt6*NWr laaMh Can far Burtv*. 8 alda. Bpratn* ■■KTHiTM, HtrUIMPATWk. rte. Anarf.jMK.: aattaa aJaya tto |M *Mhhhah thh ITmnn m ■ *mn tt Aonm wiim rem rat HISTORY OF THE WAR IN EUROPE liaieSFilBSfEETysHE Tiwi^r'iCttwC -- t .a am v itfi * AMil HHHk, JmMMI Hf " ■■ K!m WkSTKB, em/ aha.a. C ■ Home of 116r(xf s People. TW piiWiii 1 H I iMr&n t iiiii ■ ■ •< • ui miMns It * Mart? *• i A ~r-ss;sS3 ■oam no to mede aoeoy min"t awto •• i K to UUoa orOn ta AW roMMa tMtootNniod Mate aak ni k ko* *o. to arte nwf eon tM Or* rtnJun %eaa hwfart ta ail i or totsrtoe weeoat ae—o, fcn aXiua 5n troatttanQTocfcmi a oa,—rtafcsw.a. 8R166S & BROTHER S CtU'acte or Flower ( TttctiHi SEEDS, VeasSlMl U<{33 rt.~ m •ok*-. Wu OMah "pt|A SSubs: tnggSßfeSfi Uub l. Ib. prtMl t%}jrs fc.. *"<"!• ■m*l Em ima ■■mi i■ii i< wttiinif "■■ • pscferta. prt *b j twMktame ■£ H t t to , |^ Yn *li w • H if too A Ml ■>•• aw OrHWw befeea S-rmsgeAsieyreer —tlx Wfcyat Imml, BwMm4 Fwuial Fteaie, MONT KLMiVT TLAKiL wwniililij y* f7twM*^r^' """ BRICCjHk BROTHER, BwMU*' _ KwMiHr, K*w Terfc. Everv Day Brines Strong Proof GREAT TALUE OP ALLEN'S LUNG BALSAM. * Da. P. Krtrsrm. aflico. Ho. ISWortfliMh Stawol, Mataaaa foliowa :- „ Cnraonun, Oct L n. Mfcama. J. K. Haasta A Co.. e+tu.—About on* r I took aoeM vkwh aetltad on mj luaa- A Tioiaw* eongh w*. U 0 which feirjvaaad with eoaoriu. I fx peetorafed largo quantities of phlegm ad matt rt. During the leal *i&- OT. 1 baeamo to much reduced thai 1 tut mr fttxd to "WW- Th disease ww attended with oold thilla aad wMtt-yweota. A diarrfccaa set in. Mr irtcade ltmbi 1 waa in the last etegua at t'oaanmpti w, nedeeaM not Kibl gat wall. I waa recommended to Mr aOAMir'i a BALAAM. The foimaU ww alown to 80. which unlaced me to gteehetrlal; and I wiU eni, add, thai BJM cough it nmrrty cured i aad I ob now able Boat, tend to B7 buttocaaaa nana'. Toon roepcotfullr, P. MEREDITH. BRONCHITIS, OB THROAT DISEASE. tooor Amaoriß wtu. rain a bkkbvy at ALLEN'S LUNG BALSAM. „?**:■-} hawtwwiaflliawd fea ton ar twoitepraiw with lon;ad I faol iter duty to ear thU much tarmp me oano, ao that othorayp to/it. **"* b Mr. W. A GRAHAM A CO.. •^SSSS^^SSESr" 1