Ottlf * Famine Thought. 'Twasjpily a passing thought, my friend, Only s passing thought. Thst csmuoVnav mind like a ray of the ann In the ripple of waters rung tit; And it seemed to ms, s I aay to thee, ThiAorww, and ahsme, and tin, Might a!wipj>osr from our happy sphere. If we WHaf but lo begin— -11 we knew Wtitbew to profit By wisdom dearly bought: Tws. nnknaiwa thought, my friend, Onlv i pam.iigtboncbi. Why e#lllfTThe' rnitlon fight, my friend, tviiy l ","!.! not warfare ceaee t And wo(M wonl i repose In —i mi in r and peace. 1! s t aay to thee, The weak may yet be strong; There weeds hat the tore or breath and faith To rijfht the weary wrong To right the weary wrong, my friend, Throughout tin* world mietaught; Tea- only a passing thought, my friend. Only a passing thought, Bui though only a passing thonght,my friend. You know as w. U as I That thoughts have a fashion to grow to deeds Un.ta# the npolling sly. 8 a pi alt on : let it walk or run, Ur Hf on the wings of the wind. Or, hotter stiU, on the wings of the Press. For tiw service of mankind; For the serviced r-snkind, my friend. That needa hut to be taught: Teas only a passing thought, my friend. passing thought. Farm, Garden and Household. GM IN SHKUT. Tobaceo-.vrook* blown np tlic nostrils of the aheep has aometiiuea been effectual in ilislodginß ; the gT'.ibv ; if is not often that sheep die with gmlvt though they are often an noyed by them. To prevent them, keep the abeep'a Qoaes smeared with tar dur tbe the warm summer months, when tlic fly abounds. Lni* axis iiat.T MTXTT**.—" D. V H.," Washington Co., IU., asks bow lime and salt should be mix. A for apply ing to w heat, and whoa it should be ap plied. Slake the liuia with a quantity of watr in which salt has been dissolved until it can take np no more, sufficient to reduce the lime to a tin© dry powder. Five or six bushels per acre of this mix ture mav IK' spread early in spring over t" TV-'O. I'V effect is generally to stiffen th© straw. Cotui.—Nothing is more important in raising coru than to secure "good •tart." It is half the race. A line, m*l low soil is of the tlrst importance. Ihe best wy to secure this depend* on cir cumstances. Every farmer must deter mine this matter for himself. As a rule, we seldom harrow the land sufficiently. Corn can not thrive among clods. Our own pncllts, whe i planted in hills, isti' soak the corn from twelve to twenty-four hours in warm soft water, and dry it with plaster. By exercising due precautions, the same thing may be done when sow ing with a drill. BEST METHOD WITH OBSTINATE BCTTKR. —A Virginia contributor writes as fol lows for the benefit of a farmer sorrea ponJent who detailed his troubles in churning and asked 44 how to make the butter come quickly. ' Having been a sufferer from the same annoyance, and having discovered a very simple remedy, and one which in our" ea>e has proved entirely successful, 1 think it right to make ft known. It is simply to place in each two-galloci jar of cream one pint of buttermilk. My wife, following the good old Virginia stile, delights in tak ing rLarge of the dairy department after it comes from the stable to the house. She has the milk skimmed into gallon crocks and placed in the cellar for twen ty-four hours, then skims the cream, which is put into two-gallon jars,to each of which one pint of the buttermilk of the last churning is added, keeps the cream at abont a temperature of sixty five degree', until it gets to the consis tency of clabber, which generally takes about fortv-eight honrs, when wilh but little trouble the old-fashioned dasher brings the golden butter. How TO PRESERVE EGGS FOB HATCH ING.—Having been a long time in the business of raising fancv poultry. I, like mauy others, have suffered much from the eggs being chilled at about this season of the year. As fancy eggs are now in demand, or soon will be. it is of vital im portance to the breeder to know how to preserve his eggs which are now being laid, so as to be able to supply the urgent demand ; for every person wants eggs at about the same time, and wants them with the germ of vitality uninjured. This is is a very simple process. I am, and bare long been, a breeder of fancy poultry, and this is mv method : Let every nest have a good bottom of waste paper, which, of course, is to be covered with straw ; look sharp after the eggs, and after allowing the animal heat to subside about half, pack in a box in a cellar, in a dry place, with any kind of dry waste paper. When you want to ship, procure pasteboard boxes, and oack the eggs in paper shav ings ; then wrap in as much ai a dozen thicknesses or more of paper, and tie tight; this pi events to a great extent, concussion, which destrovsso many egg* shipped to a distance. EPCRS thus packed may be sent through a zero temperature without dsnger of being chilled in the transit. AU intelligent persons know that paper is a non-conductor. Let those who do not know this fact place a com mon newspaper or two between the bed clothes and remove a heavy blanket or quilt at the same time, and they will s on satisfy themselves beyond doabt.- Cjuntry Gmflemnn. BUTTS FOB THE SEABOX. Sod Land can l>e plowed after a soak ing rain earlier than fall-plowed or stub bles. And a steel plow will make a clean furrow slice where a cast-iron plow will clog. But it is doubtful whether it is o is not advisable to avail onn-elres of these fact*, bod laud is just as wet as th atul>bla land, and if one would be injured by plowing, it is not easy to understand why the sod land wonld not be injured also. T> is one of those points, however, on which we need more light. Oats tan be sown on a great range of soils, from a black ma-k to the heaviest clays. Of all the sma'l grains tbej wilt stand the greatest neglect, but well re pay good cultivation. They are sown on new-plowed sod land, and occasionally do well enough to induce farmers to con tinue the practice, notwithstanding the fact that in niue cases ont o r ten the re sult is anything but satisfactory. Better plant corn on the sod land, ana sow oats after the corn. * Peasiu many sections are so much af fected by the pea-beetle, or what is im properly called "the bug," that their culture is almost entirely abandoned. There is at present no known remedy. Getting seed entirely free from bugs, or dipisngtbe seed for a moment in boil ing water, are popular remedies, but are not based on any satisfactory reasoD. Lntd solving is to a certain extent a rem edy, bat the crop is almost invariably a poor one; Better sow as early as possi ble, and try to raise a great crop, and feed out the crop to pigs before the bug eats out much of the substance of the peas. Potatoes do ranch better on a rich clo ver tod .thop on rich stubble land. It is time wffiaid more attention to enriching the noii fflCJbi* crop. The labor of dig ging an acre yielding only 90 bushels, is nearly or ijpite as great as digging an acre flwt will yield 250 bushels, and if the mi is m. good condition, the latter yielcMin be safely calculated on, with a gooiCgfriety, and good cultivation. Ma nures! thoroughly rotted and well work ed info fte sou, does not increase the diseases Planting in hills three feet apart s'SHrVnj, saves seed and labor in planting, boring, and digging, and where land isihMa is undoubtedly the better plan? BuPfiamtfng in drills, three feet one Mf, and sets dropped from 12 to 15 inched is the row, will, provided the land i| ,rich enough, produce a greater crop {* acre. Clover seed on winter wheat should be sown already. But we have sown it as late as the middle of May, and had a good crop. Much depends on the season and the Condition of the land. We prefer to delay sowing until the ground is dry enough to barrow. Gram anok to their shoulders, and wash them frc qucntly with cold water. Working oxen should le well carded every day, and l>e liberally fed. They ; have a much larger stomach than a horse, and do not need as concentrated food, but they require more time to cat. Cows can hardly secure enough green grass for their support yet. and he is a ' fortunate farmer who has pleuty of man j golds for them. Put bran end good bay, with a good carding ovary day. to ke p j I open the pores, will keep s mdeh rot in : givvl condition. and prepare her for giv | ing a large mess of milk when gr*-"s I amies. Raise your own calves, and let them I have good cure, nutritions bvvl, ami plenty of it, with the kindest treatment. Cows will be bigh again iu a year or two. j Good cows are always scarce. Ponltrr. —Clean the house, sprinkle j with crude carbolic acid and water, tar bolic soap, rubbed on to the roots, finds j its wav to the feathers, and kills the lice. , , , Sheep, bkecows, in the northern lati Hides, will hardly fiudcraas enough yet. Nothing tv better for sheep than clover hay. Let the breediug ewoe have all 1 they can eat. And those with a lamb at th tr side should have a jsmud of brau each per day, in addition, and a fw roots, if they can be spared. Make a MU&II poo in the tarti, with alftts nKmt | ten inches aptu This is oue secret of I raiding,good lambs. Ihgs —ljwt fall's pigs should have a ! liberal allowance of oora-meal and man golds. to keep then, growing rapidly Ull l they can get clover. ' Clean oet the Cellar. —As health is the S greatest of earthly blessings, cleauing th- cellar from all decaying vegetables. I and other impurities, is the most impor ! taut work to be done now. Whitewash the cellar walls, pig-pent, sheep-sheds, horse and cow stable*. A Sugar Plantation. A partv of Americans ia Cuba, visited s sugar plantation. One of tbe party says: A turn tn the road suddenly brought us in view of the cane field with the bands at work. Men.women, and children, negroes, and coxites, the men nakrd except as to the loins, were toiling amid the stalks, laying them low with each blow of the sickle. At dis'anres of a few rods, figures in broad-brimmed bats, sat silently on horseback, with their lonc-!*ahed whip* lvin* crossed on the sad lies before tbeui These were the driver*, and their business was to see that the slaves lagged not in their labor. The place we visited was called Santa Rosa. It belongs to a son of the late Senor Aldama. President of the Cuban Junta in New York, and is under soil ere, and run by the government. An administrator appointed by the civil au tborities is in charge, and occupies the tine mansion of the Aldamas with ins own family. He i a Spaniard. The administrator abandoned the break fast-table when our party arrived, and after reading the letter of introduction politely offered to become our cicerone himself. Sugar making, though somewhat compli cated in its various proce-ses of grinding, boiling, refining, Ac., b very simple in theory. The cane just cut on the planta tion ia carted to the grinding or mashing mill, through which it pase* thoroughly pressed, the tefuse being thrown out one war, while the juice runs into troughs, which convey it to the boiling kettles. After going through the boiling operation the syrup is transferred to pans to cool and drain, and in time it hardens into sugar. It ia ground to the pulverized state by another machine, and wrrk d i over by the laborers with hoes and scrapers before being finally put into hogsheads. The hieing stage is not calculated to itr- I press the visitor with a favorable idea of | the cleanliness of his coffee sweetings. ; Negroes nearly naked and recking with : perspiration, trample over the sugar in 1 their bare feet. " I know now," shrieked a lady of the party " Where the too nail* come from which we find in our brown •ugar at heme." Alas! it is too tine. But then how unhappy we would all be if we knew exactly how everything we est 11* prepared, and Is it not better that we shut our eyes to the stern facts and accept the legendary "peck " without a murmur. There are about five hundred hands em ployed on the Aldama estate. 20 per cent, of them being coolies. They arc worked sixties boon per d*y during the gather ing and grinding season. Sunday is a par tial bolidav. The finer work in the mil! is done by the Chinamen. A Boston engi neer has charge of rbe machinery, and there is another lueigner in the same depart ment, an Englishman. The machinery is new and costly, and his the i mprint ol English and American makers. AN EAGLE ATTEMPTS TO KIDNAP A CHILD. —Jacob Decker LIVING near Rhode Lake, N. Y., has a little dsnghter about three years of age. One day while she was playing in the yard, her slionts at tracted her mother. Going ont Mr*.l>erker found a large eagle attempting to carry ■ ff t>e little one. Almost frantic with fright ahe seized the child and rushed toward the lion e. No sooner had she caught the child in her arms than the eagle showed fight It followed Mrs. Decker, perking •avagely at the child, several times touch ing her hair with its beak; hut by rnnning rapidly and shielding the child a# best she conld, she managed to resell the house in safety. Enraged at being thus chested of its prey, the eagle flew against the door and I eat furiously at the windows, as if determined to effect an entrance, nntil Mrs. Decker, fearing it might break in. hid her child in a closet for greater securi ty. At night the bird flew* away. Eirly the next morning the eagle again made its appearance. After flying wildly around, it perched upon a tree hard hy the house, apparently awaiting on opportunity to re newt'eattack. As soon asshe diaoovercd the bird. Mrs. Decker notified the neigh bors, and it was shot. It proved to be an American eagle, measuring seven feet be tween the tips of its wings. AN ANCIENT RIDDLE. —The multipli cation table can scarcely be said to be a fountain whenee noetic inspiration can be drawn. the thing was done one hundred and sixty odd years ago, in a publication called Lidiea' Diary, in which a mathematician "drops into poetry'* in this style : When first ths m arris re knot was tied Between my wife snd me. My age did hers ss far exceed As three times three does three. In the year (17091 following the pub lication of this verse a solution of the sum, by a lady, was made as follows : When first the solemn knot was tied Your wife was jus* fifteen ; Yon by proportion forty-five, Which is as three to nine. But when your hoary head arrived To ten and half ten more. Your youthful bride saw thirty years, And you conld tell threescore. Thus have I told, without delay, What was your ago o' tb' marriage-day. ANOBT ABOUT IT. —After long years of persistent persecution, the editor of the Indianapolis Evening Journal thus gires vent to bis pent-up feelings : 44 Nothing so infuriates an editor—we speak from experience—as to have a great, loose jointed galoot stride noiselessly into his stnetum, pick up a paper, rustle it for a moment, and then slam it down, crea ting an "atmospheric concussion which scatters two hundred and seventy of his small clippings—the gleanings from sev en hundred and forty exchanges—into tho spittoon and waste-basket. The editor who can keep his brows from corrugating, and repress the convulsive contraction of his biceps, atsugu a time, is a spiritless milksop, whom it were base flattery to call a pbeep." Hems of Interest. A row has died of hydrophobia iu j Maysville, Ky. < Oxg planter sold iu Petersburg, Vs., i 800 bales of cotton. Forn thousand men are engaged in this ! country in the production of steel. Ci.KROtMKN must take out a lieeuse 1 under the (xvuliar license law of South I Carolina" i At the Yarmouth mills, in Maine, , brown piqx r is made from spruce logs iu | twenty-four hours. ANOIUW Joiixsos'a claim for income ' Iu paid on his salary as MMM amounts to St,Bo4.thi, A. T. STKW *KT. of New York, says he i will build the haudsomrst theater in the , World on the Niblo site, j f A rnraTH in Dsrlw, Conn., has had nine pastor* within eighteen years. It ia not a Methodist church. Tirana ha* Wen great and uusual mor talitv throughout the burnt district of W uavuisin during the winter and spring | PIUMIIKXT GRAST ia < \o< eted to be ' present at the reunion of the Army of the Tennessee in Madison, V is., July 4. Tilts proposed constitution for West Virginia, makes persona in the employ of railroad* ineligible to the State Legw ture. lr is rumored iu London timt several of the Kurile Islands in the North IV eiflc are to W leased to the United States. A rnotuxaxT business mau in Milwau kee, Wis., has discovered that he is one of Antteke Jaua'a hcira, and he wauU IS.OOfi.OOO, Oxa hundred and fifty merino sheep, valuvd at 818,000 were shipped from Nashville, Teuu., via St. Louts, for San Francisco. M\>>-Mtu.tXEK Worth is sai, belong ing to otoe farmer alone, and many flock* have been scattered and driven to the mountains. THE total number of hoes packed in the West during the past araaon was 4,782,413, au increase of 1,159,413, over the previous year. The cost of the hogs was $65,800,000. , JAMAICA is becoming a perfect asvlum for American invalids. Every vessel ; brings numbers to the islaud ; not cveu the prospect of a summer iu the tropics detening them. NKARLT every farm in Western Oneida oouuty, N. Y. affords bright clear springs and flue streams for tront, ami there is nothing to prevent erery farmer from engaging in fish culture. ENOUBU law compels a married woman if she lias money or the means of making it and her lord lia none, to support him, be be ever so worthies*, that the exjiense of his keeping may not come upon tlis parish. THE Washington Ckronich says that a resident of Sew York city applied a day or two since for the interest on S2oo,oli> worth of bonds, on which interest ceased to accumulate on the Ist of December j last. Gov. PARSER, of New Jersey, has . issued a proclamation on the Sidling question, claiming jurisdiction over that i pan of the Delaware ltiver between the States of Delaware and New Jersey, ; which is easterly on the middle line of Said river. A DETROIT man had just painted his house black, his doors a bright red, nud j the window sash a skr-bme. The picket fence is to he ml, wliite and bine, and then lie evjieot* to have a place that will attract attention. | GREAT excitement prevail* urnong steamboat men at Milwaukee, Wit. The j boats of nearly all the lines have been i stopped by the United States Supervising ! fnvjx'ctors, thus making a complete blocks*]? in the freight business. THE first sensations iu the 1 jail-fieldl were the defeat of the Bostons by the Athletic* of Pbiladelhbia, by n score of 10 to 7; and the defeat of the 6 dtimoiv nine by the Mnhtals of this city, aftei playing ten innings, by a score of 11 to 9. MELBOURNE has suffered severely from enormous floods. Four hundred people have been drowned. Added p> this fear ful loss of life, great doatutonob Is look ed forward to by the citizens, as the growing crops have been almost de stroyed. Tn* master of the schooner Oliver Bridge reported: 150 miles from C|o Ann. fell in with and board- d a schooner from Yarmouth, almost muter j water, with both mnsts lying across the deck. The dead bodies of two men were fonnd in the cabin. THE Itev. E. P. Wadhcm, for the past 22 years s priest in Albany di*ce, was consecrated Bi-liop of Ogdensburg nt the Itoinan Catholic Cathedral, Aibwnv, by Archbishop McCloskey of New York, assisted by several other bishops from various t eetions of the country. A DISPATCH from iiolden, M says : " There is the best assurance for saying that, if the Sheriff cf Cass County fails to perform his duty, the United States | authorities wiil arre*t the assassins of ! Stephenson, Cline, and Duhrol. in the fare of Gov. Brown's proclamation. ADVICES from Zanzibar linvo lice® re ceived. This island bad been visited by a terrible hurricane. One hundred and fifty vessels of nil flosses were sunk or strnnded on the cost. The town of Zanzibar was very badly damaged, and the losses woe estimated at 510,000,000. CATERPILLARS stopped railroad trains at various points near Memphis by lying on the track in vast numbers. The woods on the river bunks opposite that city ore literally stripped clean of their recent green foliage, aDd the same con dition is reported of other localities in that section. Tnr. St. Paul (Minn.) Preu says that notwithstanding the fact that the stream of immigration has commenced pouring into the State nt an earlier date than was ever before known, the demand for skilled labor is not uiore tlinn half sup plied, and many are complaining of their inability to secure help when it is most urgently needed. A LETTER from Mr. Wendell Philips was read at the meeting of the Reform Leagne in New York, in which the elo quent agitator expressed prophetically tnat the coming campaign would be the last in which the Democratic an! Repub lican parties, as such, would engage. " Whichever party succeeds," he Bays, " both die in the effort." THE experimcntof causing the engines to play upon a disorderly mob in order to disperse it was not very successful when tried last week in a town of South j Russia. The people resented the insult ' by attacking the police and demolishing the tire station. The troops were then called out and were stoned, whereupon some of the citizens were shot and the reef decamped. • OUR F.WPIHN LETTER. Climbing th* M< nntaln of Rhlgl- Sunsst and Hunt in* aa Rssn Prom th* Summit A Swiss Locomotive—Lake of Oomo, etc., etc. At 2 o'clock in the allcrnooti we took the boat for Weggis, where we arrived In hall an hour. We found homes utul guides waiting for us, and mounting our steed*, started off for the ascent of the Khigi. The sun wa* tearfully hot a* we drew near the top, hut apart I nun the heal, the day wa* delightful, and the view grew mere distill ing every moment. The }>ath wa* well made, about live feet in width, graveled, and whsrw it was requisite, protected by a j band rat!. Firt we went through orchards,! and alter leaving them began to climb up the mountain. Sometimes across meadows,, then again across tlis face of the rocks, dew n which came slresni* of water; soms , Umes under the cliffs of conglomerate pud ! ding stone ; once through a natural aich | way or tunnel formed bv two etiorotou* ituwrs of stone, under wince friendly shc-l Lr " the best ol her sex " and mvself were j glad to seek refuge lor a tew moments from the beat of the sun. Hut, aa the lougest I sue has a turning, so the highest mountain ha* a top, and in company with a crowd of equestrians and pede-trtans, we rod# up to the door of the Hotel du Khigi-koulm, thoroughly tired out and exhausted with our ride. After petting off our gallaut steed, we lelt as though we would be obliged to take our meal* off of a mantle piece, standing, for several day*, our eques trian exorciso not agreeing with us. To use the language ol A. Ward, horseback riding up s side bill "is not our forts ' We found our telegram sent th# day pre vious had been received, tuid our reoui was ready for us. After taking a survey of our quarter* tor the uigbt, we walked to the blow of the mountain to view tboaoeiery. The summit was cover#*! with peopfe, all attracted by oue cominoo object —to view the setting sun. The tisw is said to em brace a circuit of nearly three hundred mile*. It is said that oh-ven lakea can be seen from tho top of IHugi, but we were 1 only able to count nine. The Lake of the Four Cantons i* so close to the foot of the uinautain we wer# on, that it seemed as it a stonu might be thiown mto it withcut any exertion. Just as the sun was going down, an indifferent performer on the Al pine horn, an instrument about seven fret long, awek© the echoes, and sorely tried the temper of b> bearers by bit ill-timed uid unmusical exertions. T'.K evening * comparatively clew, and >t aflurdcl us au excellent view of a perfectly clear botixoti and a u.osl magnificent panoiama. Mmm tains were to be seen on every band. Snow, did summits, raeb with its name and bis tory. and at cur feet, apparently, were towns, villages and lakes, although they were in reality many miles awiy from u*. Alter tbe sun had set for us, we could yet <• it lighting up the snow-capjictl top of some of tbe loftiest mountains of the Alps. Gradually it became duker and Jarkcr, the mist commenced rolling up from the valley, and as tbe r became damp and chilly, we oil returned to the tiolel to partake of tbe up]om*rejue#ting tbe guests " not to take tbe blankets off tbo lied when goiag out to see the tun rise." Half an hour bcJore sunrise .3 a. *i.) we were awakened by tbe sound of tbe Alpine horn, which was blown by the performer of the previous evening, through all the hallways of the hotel. At tbe first s-jand of it we were up sud drutstd in a few mo , menta, and were out <>u the summit lout I Ix fore msnr of tbe disciples of Zoroaster were out of bed. All was WM, bustle and ' e infusion. Tune, represented by tbo aun waits fur no man. aud that Let being patent i to every one in the hotel, tbe result wa I that some verv singular toilettes were to i be seen, the principal cuttnme of the ladies being waterproof rlotks, that covered a j multitude of shortcomings in the toilette. .Many atood, watch in liand. waiting for tbe first appearance of tbe great luminary. They reminded me <4 the story of flii-coun , try man who bail just purchased a watch, an 1 was waiting, as we were, to see tbe sun ric. After looking at bis watch a f*w moments and then turning his gate to the east, be remarked to a ft tend who stood near him. " Wall, if tbe sun is not up in five minutes, he's late " He evidently had more faith in that watch than be had m tbe sun itself. As wt atood waiting, the crowd kept coming out of tbe hotel, and in&ay were seen struggling up tbe hill who had been obliged tc sleep at the hotel fur tier down the mountain side, not being able ;to procure accommodation* at the Khigi- I Kvutin. For tbe time being, the gnat I hotel was without a guest. We should judge there wrre about three hundred per son* on the summit at sunrise. Just as the fust faint streak of light iu tbe east proclaimed tbe birtb ol anotlwt day. a party of Swiss peasants, male and female, mm uunoed singing a hymn, which sounded vrry sweetly. A* the sun rose higher, the hi rttoti began to redden, over tbe eastern tange of mountains, and then tbe dawn to!e on in sueb a sureession of deepening tint ■ . that nothing but the due- ol the preceding sunset couKl be compared to it. But then is this great difference Ist ween sunrise and sunset, that the hues of aunset are every moment deepening as you look upon them, I until they fade into darkness, while tlioo of the suntise gradually fide into tbe light lof day. It is difficult to say which is the j ow*t beautdul. The obpet most cons pi cu ous as the dawu broke, and indeed the moat exquisitely beautiful, was the vast, enor mous itngeofauowy mountains of the Obcr ian-i. staiuiing out sharp aad clear upon the horiron. undiintned by cloud or mist, the Finsti raarhorn at the left and the Jung fntu and Silberhorn at the right. i>ck after peak and mass after mass glittering with an arctic wbitcncsa in tbe gray dawn. One lull of tbo circumference of the honxon, before and behind our view, was filled with t nese peaks and masses of snow and ice, then lower down the masses of bare look, and lower still the earth with mounds of verdure. It is on this section of the bori r/m, which is filler! with tbe vast range of the Oberland Alps, thru almost due west from tbe sun's first appearance, it is on their tops that the rising rays first strike. As tbe sun rose higher and higher, tbe for #*t, lakes, hill*, towns and villages began to revesl themselves. At lasttlie sun sud denly burst forth lmm behind the moun tain- iu all it* majesty, flooding tbe whole of tbe snperb landscape with light and warmth. We took another view of tbe lovely panoiama befoie us and then re turned to tbe hotel to breaktsst. At 7 o'clock we mounted our borscs and slowly and carefully made our way down tbe mountain to tbe railroad depot, which Is situated nearly a mile lielow the hotel. We purchased ticket* to Vitrnau, which it tbe terminus of the road, and after waiting until time was up, commenced the descent !of the mountain. Tbe engine which drew the car in which we were seated looked like a huge iron bottle, standing on a low platform, which carries cylinder*, cranks and other locomotive gear, and is mueb lower at one end tfian at the other. This difference of height imparts an awkward ness ol appearance, and tbe immense bottle, which is, in feet, the beiler and chimney, leans to one aide, as if about to fall. When the engine ascend* tbe mountain, the floor becomes level and the boiler Is on tbe per pendicular. In front of tbe boiler is n railed place, in which baggage is earned. The engineer and fireman stand, as usual, in the rear, the fuel is coal. The ear wc were in was about ten feet wide, with nine seat* placed transversely, and when filled would hold about sixty passengers, who find their comfort cared for in the shape cf ttie seat*. The car is open on all sides, something like the Tbird avenue ex i cursion cars in New York, wbieb enabled n* to hare an excellent view of fcbe seine ry. The car* ami locomotives are built at Olten, a hnay cenire of Swiss induatry. The railway giiac® ia ftveleet ; thealee|era are longitudinal and continuous aa on our city railway tracka. Hel worn the two ralla i wh it may te termed a heavy iron ladder, with thick ate pa. On ihia ladder the lo comotive walka, hv mcana of a heavy cogged wheel, fitted beneath the floor of it. There are no train*, unlraa a niiiglc rar ami engine ejn Ikj called one. In attending tlio road, the engine ia In-hind the car and pushes is Instead of pulling It up hill. Passengers who arc nervona had better ait in the middle of the ear, *o aa to avoid the sight of the gillfa and preeiph-es over which the railway paaaea. The lineal view either aacendlng or deaceilding ia on the right hand aide. The apecd ia about twice aa fa*( a ordinary walking. Aa aoon aa we left the depot, a aignal man atarted otf i ahead of the engine with a red llag in hie | hand and a bugle *wung at hie aide, and ran In-fore of ua all the way to Vitrnau. i Ilia principal huaineaa ia to ace that no ! obstructions have fallen from the up|er j slopes on the track, and ea|n-eiully to pick ! out any stones that limy have fallen on tha | atepa of the iron ladder or cog-way. Trav ! dors who have been tin Mount Uighi know that it ia a uuoa of pudding, with million" lot atones tor pluma. llenee, constant watchfulness ia necessary, for a atone in | the cog way might probably throw the engine from the track. We noticed way watchers at short distances apart, whoaa duty it was to ree the track waa in good order, and each of whom ia responsible for i liia sect ton of the road. A" ail additional j precaution agaiust accident, each car is t'.lted with an exceedingly atrong brake. The liue stretches in one continuous alope i up the mountain, with but "light depart [ urea from a straight line, and is very simi | !ar to the one on Mount Washington in the | White Mountains. There are no rig-rags, as on the road over Mount Cenia. Halt way down the mountain the engine stop ped at a water tank to take in water. We | then slow ly but surely descended, and in a short time were at the end of the road. About 10 a. m tho steamboat slopped at , the wharf on it* way from Lurerue to ; Flueleu, to which place we purchased tick ets after getting on board. The 1 ale of the Four Oantona is ona of the iuo-t beautiful of the Swim lakes, and the anil on it wa* one of great enjoyment. After leaving Vitrnau, the mountain*, with f.w exceptions, csiue sheer down to the water's edge, aa on the l-ake of Conio, The lAigth of the lake is about twepty-five mile*, and is distinguished above every lake in HwiuerUud, perhaps in Europe, by the beauty of its scenery. It i hardly i less interesting from the historical recol ■ lection* connected with it. It# shores ara to all Americans, classic ground- the sane tusry ofliberty. On them took place those memorable events which gave freedom tu i Switzerland. lb-re the first confederacy I wa formed ; and.above all,it* borders wer* the scene of the heroic deeds and signal vengeance of William Tell. 11. M. Intelligence ®r Cow*. An aßTictillutral writer r'iuarks that a title traveling iu Italy, aeverol year* ago, bo happened to atop at a form , house one afternoon, when the cowa were about to be milked. Ho S|*eak> as follow* of the intelligence of cowa : '•A herd of I v< r MM hundred were grazing homeward. The women took their position with atoola and p&iia clowe to the liotue, and aa the cowa approached ■mart were called out, which at first we thought addressed to the milkmaid*. • lloaa, i'lorenza, liiulia, S|HISS, aud many uamea which were nut noted by n* at the time, were called out be the overseer or one of the women, ami the writer was a*tonilu-d to aee cow after cow cease feeding or chewing the cad, aud make direct, sometime* at trt, for the woman that usually tutlkvJ. The practice, we found, wo* uot confined to on farm *, all the row* on each farm knew- their re spectrin names, and took ap their po*i. tiona in the open fields juat aa readily aa the individual member* of aoouc large herda in this country, turning from tin fields, take u;> their places in the sheds.'' Tho Ponghkeepaie Ptru, aiieaking of this same inlipet—the intelligence of cows—say*: "Ouoof our farmer sub sen tiers recently purchaiwd an excellent ( cow and put her in the yard with other*. His help went out at night to milk, as usual, and act down In-foro one of the j other cows. No sooner, however, had lie done *o than the new comer made for | him and drove him from his seat, nor ■ would abe let him proceed with the milking. The proprietor's attention wa* called to the at range conduct of hi* new purchase, whwm bis man considered dan io TO us. Mr. I*. went into the yard and began to aoothe the animal with gentle * handling, ami then sat down to milk her, i when he found her aa meek as a lauib. [ After that she was perfectly satisfied if she wa* milked flr-t, but no one must presume to alight her in Una respect. She holds literally in her own case, to the scriptural mention, " Uiat the last khull be first." Ax I'xrn rrrnt.B Ikiiinat —Tlie Weldon (N.t'.) .Vein say* :—A most mar velous feat of eating, and one that aecm* nliuost incmlible, bat which it vouched for bv a doziui witness**, occurred in this plsre, a few night'* since. One Torn Weaver, colored, a rather small man.nnd seemingly of ordinary eating cajwcitii-s. was induced to cat a good " square uieul" at Noah Hick*', some other jmrty agree ing to pay seventy-five <• nL* for a* much aa he could eat The following amount of eatable* were actually devoured by him. and, upon a wager, will be eaten again at any time, an honr and a half living occupied in the arduous duty. •'Twenty-four pounds of ham, two pound* of sausages, one pound of butter, fifty two bu mits, twen'y-one sup* of coffee, one pound of roast meat, throe and a half doz n egg*, one quart of oys ters, and taking six drinks of whiskey, nnd one quart of cider in the meantime, nnd immediately afterward eating an or dinary snack olfhv.ncd elsewhere, INEXPENSIVE OIINAMKNTO. —There isno ornnineiit itiKide or out of our house so cheap and tasteful n* plant* nnil flower*. Few pause to regard the architecture of your rooms or your house, but the beau ty of flowery shrubs, or the living arn liesque of n thrifty creeper over your door, are lessons of tatc nnd beauty. Indeed, suburban residences are sadly deficient without these simple yet beau tiful accessories, always within the reach o f to*to nnd refinement, no matter how empty the purse. As the real nccessitic* of lifo require the least exjeudittire of time ami money, so the object* which tt nd truly to satisfy the love of the beati- Aiful in nature, nro within the reach of our humblest children.— Mitnouri Demo trot. DASOEBors.—It is dangerous for fl wooer who is not exactly in earnest to brag of his property. The English news papers tell of a farmer at Lord*, who. not long ago, wns mnleted in the sum of £4OO for uot marrying a yonng woman after he had promised to do so. Hia at torney, seeking for a reduction of dama ge* in the Common Flea*, doelared that £4OO wns more titan nil the property the defendant bad in the world. But, un fortunately, it had appeared in evidence that the farmer, while paying his courts to the plaintiff, had told her that he wns worth £2,000. This admission did not help hi* case nt nil; and all lovers who aro not sure of keeping their word are warned to be careful haw tliey boaz' about their property A Pulaski bride for several days re cently was the subject of constant at tncka from an unseen foe. Whenever she was in the vicinity of a window or near the door, stones flung by invisible bands would come crashing through the glass, or the door would open nnd a rock fly in. She was wounded severely by these mvsterions missives in various parts of the body, and finally each attack sould throw her into convulsions. Her persecutor is supposed to lie a young man of that city whom she jilted. A Philadelphia editor, who exclaims against people calling on him who have nothing to do and nothing to ray, nnd think that ho has nothing to write, and are foud of nothingness in general, puts the following in tue frontpage: "We have rented an office in the top of the shot tower, nnd have planted torpedoes and spriDg-guns ajl the way up the stairs." UNITED NTATEH CONUKKMit. UK STB, Mr, Trumbull offered tho Amnesty bill, but it was rejected, by a vote of M to 22. Mr. Hutntier called up hi* Civil Bights lull it# au amendment, which wna also ugaiii rcjccti-d. The Election bill paused by a vote of 8§ to 17. The Henate paused the Italtiinore and Potomac Depot bill after rejecting aeve rul amendment* which were offered to it. Various bills *cre reported by the Com milters on Indian Alburn and on Public Cauda, A reaultitiou to erect nb eques trian statue to the lute tieu. ltawlina was ; also reported. The Henate diacuaaed at length the re , port of the conference committee on the , Deficiency hill, and passed it by a vote r of Bft to 34. I llot'Nß. Tlie House passed tho Fortification hill, Mr. Niblack showing tliat the liar ' Imrs of the country were many of them in mi almost defenceless condition. The > hill provides for an appropriation of sl,- ' 905,000 ultogether, variously distributed. An amctidiiicut of iiutlcr'*, removing ' political disabilities from nil who |iartiri • pa ted in the rebellion, except the mem 1 | iter* of the Thirty-sixth and Thirty - 1 seventh Congresses, officer* in the juil ' ieiol, military, mid uavy eervioes, heads of departments, and foreign ministers, ' Wun panned. 1 To a question of Mr. Roosevelt as to j 1 whether lit would nupoort Mr. Qreeley I j in the event of hm indorsement by tlie Haiti more Convention, Mr. Toorlieos j • | who was addressing the House at the '* time replied that he waa not tho hehit of - voting agaiunt Democratic nominations - uud would stand hv the man wtio repre * nented tlie principles of the D- mocratio . party. I | In the House the Tariff hill waa dis - 1 cussed. The article of quinine was act it down for a ten par cent. tax. The book t and (wiper question next name up, and . the uuly wa* plu -ed attweivs and a half t c ut* per pound, with aouie exception*. > which go on the free list. Au effort to - j have the House adjourn until the last Thursday in November, was decided out f of order, and the House determined to J adjourn sine die on the 3d of June. • ;. | The m-saiou to the Central American li *tat. I objected to it, mid it a- rejected. e| A resolution offered by Mr. Book, r making one third of the customs duties v receivable in legal tender note*, was y passed. Quiniue ws* placed on the free - - lust. Cattle in Trxa*. Cattle-raising in Texas it character ised hy featutcs peculiar to that State. The buaiuas* is pnucipeliy in the bands jof coin)uxrutively s few men, who con duct their operutioua on a scale of great magnitude. In IWW 10,000 head of cat tle constitute 1 a hrgo stock ; now 25,- 000 and M 0 000 are not nucoiumouly own ed by one inan, while in the branda of some individuals are iuclnded as many iu 50,000 and GO.OOJ. It is said that an unassuming Irishman named T. (/Con ner. living in ltefugio count v. n (he lar gest cattle-owner in Texas. lie doea not Snow precisely how many he own*, hut his stock is estimated at about 00,000. In Texas when a calf 1* weaned from its dam and cannot be identified as the projiertv of any body, it liecotura the chat tel of whoever first braudsit This gives a great advantage to the large owners, as small stock raisers are not able to em ploy the necessary labor to ke* p their t>toek brand*d up, and what they l.ise usually becomes ill corpora led in the herds of wealthier men. During the war, when nearly all the able-bodied men in the Slate were in the army, the wealthy stock owners employed Mexican vmjue roa, who were exempt from the draft, to look after their herds, jihilo the cattle belonging to poor men strayed where - ever thoy like*. The eonsequenoe was that the "small stocks became to a great extent absorbed in the larger ones. Over one million cattle wi-rosbippod or driven from Texas during the past year, hut tlie trade is iu a very depressed condition now. Owing to the low rates paid in the Northern tuaikets, a great proportion of the droves started last year li ire beeu held over and wintered iu Kanaaa. wait ing improvement ly prices. Several mil lion dollars' worth of cattle, it it esti mated, have been driven over tbe line into Mexico by organized bands of tliieTfa. JtKIY TORI lIKY (iOODS MARKKT. The Xcw York Dry Oooii Market continuv* without important change, though tin 1 rctii demand has somewhat improved since our previous review. Mnuy lmusc* arc left with good Btocka on hand, (Specially in cotton*, sad a falling dfl ia pricra is ntitici|t< 4. Woolen go.nl* market remain* quiet, slow of sale and nominal. Brown sheetings and ahirtinga ore in light request. A reduction is noticed of 2ic. per yard on i'eppcrrell w ide goods. In bUwhcvl sheetings and shirtings the demand i* restricted to the limited requirement*. htri|M-a and tick* are without cajiecud snimslinn. Prices remain firm. Printing cloths are firm at 7|c, for ClxtH's on the sjiot. In prints, the market lacks buoyancy. " Dolly Vardcn " styles are in good de msnd. Thin dress good* are active. Fine MIVS for summer wear are in active demand. Linena nrs dull. White goods are in request. Other goods are strong. BRAM STiMri.AVTS.— Human beings aro tho only one# that crave sad contract a love for stimulant*. It i*hardly possi ble to make nay nunual takeapiritajef anv kind. If compelled to do so, a morbid ajqietite for it is nut develojied a* in man. Howeverthirsty. they will resist the flncat artificial drink*. Water is the only fluid which they demnnd. and fond a* some of them may tie of milk, water is with them n positive necessity, lirain excitement— something that "quickens the nervous system—lis* always been found with ere ry race of people. If they have no inge nuity in any way t! at betters their con dition physically, they have way of x hilirnting themselves. Tlicy ferment tha juice of fruit*, the sap of plants, make tens of nn intoxicating quality, or lastly, like the Tartars on tho borders of the C'jvpitin Kon, w ho have no vegetables that meet that morbid demand, make themselves mere savages by acidified mare's milk. It is a msrvel in the or n atitutinn of humanity that this propensity for excitement by nftifioial menus should lie so genornl all over the world. Civili zation does not overcome it; laws only hold it Slightly in check ; moral suasion is a feeble instrumentality and the ques tion mooted is—what is the next move to be ? The Magazines. Tnx Asmara** 0D FEIAOW f.r Mar has ikTkral lesntifiillv illnstratcd articles • stories and sketches: a rasv aceoanl of an Odd relies '• travels in iretsnd ; Rumors f the I>* : Choiee Poetry; Pietorisl deaonption ef Moi nt Tornon; Department* for the home .-irale ami Dane-liters of Itebeksh; Seientifi* and Curiona Faets; Agrirnltttral and Atate Departmi nt* ; all the news of the Order. Ac., A*. This puhliaation has a greater variety of first-elan* miscellaneous reading than any other magazine published. 13 M a rear, including s superb premium ple ture. Address A. 0. F. Association, No. 87 rark Row, Nw Tork. No lUiutoAii COMPANY in the Country is making stronger eflortn to keep ap with the wants of the traveling public, fli.in the Eastern, which In connection with other prominent lines forms * through channel of travel from Bo*hm through Msine ami the provinces. The re ad I* supplied with the hand somest parlor and sleeping roaches and no efforts ara spared to make traveler* comfort able and hapny on the line. The Eastern tat es passengers n-om Boston to Bangor without change of oar*. Cox. Ozonoz F. Finn, the fion. Passenger Agent of the Company, No. 184 Washington St., Boston, *lll be pleased to give travelers *ll drsired information shoot lines and routes. A well-to-do farmer in Peabody, Mass, bad a daughter die of consumption re cently, and to save expense dug the grave himself ; and, after the funeral service at the house, placed his hoo and shovel in the hearse, and when the coffin was deposited, took his tools and filled the grave. The Dulutli Em-nltf apologizes for hav ing advised a married man to get married- Hthought he was a widowor, We clip the following from tho Troy (N. Y.) Whig: , . . ftoma three month* atnoe Dr. It. v. Picroa of Buffalo, N. Y., commenced ad vertising In tho Whig, an article called " Dr. riK a Catarrh Remedy." Wo be lieved at that tiroo it waa on of tho many catch jieniiy arrangement# to swiu'dle people out of thoir money, but during the |a*t few week a havetxicome couvineed to tho ooutrury. We know of aeverul prominent citiwna who have suffered from that loatliaomo disease " Catarrh," and they pronounce Dr. Hag**'* Itcmedy no hum bug. and in aev oral instance# iiayc lieeta entirely cured. We dcoiro to givu Dr. Pierce the lieucflt of the aaiuo.—&l>H. f'kimibAt* Ninutcr,—Th# martinet# o the medical profession Insist that It Is be neath tlie dignity of a regslar physician to *d verti*#. If s member of the rm-diral fac ulty should discover mb absolute remedy for any disease, it would !•# a breach <>f profes sional decoram to offer the specific for sale through the journals of the day. Kcorniug such prejudices, on# of our leading practi tioners is now making known to the public, through the columns #f over three thousand newspajiera.oneofthe moat eotnprebeaelv# remedies for disease that has e-er assuaged lite sufferings of humanity. Da. W aLBBB's Oaltvobbia Vinboau Brrraaa, a'tbough a comparatively new medicine, ha* already attracted the attention of million* in both hemisphere*. It ha* been advertiard through all the channel# accessible to ad vertising enterprise, and the result has been the picservation of thousands of live*, and the prevention of an nutold amount of phy aica! torture. Dr. Walker think* that the "gre->ta#t good of the greatest number "is the true object of medics! science, and hence he steps I a.ld It out of the contracted circle of professional delusiveness, and place* hi* Great Restorative within the reach of all. It# beneficial effect in case* of chronio dysphasia, biliousness, kidney disease, gout,*di#asea of throat and lung*, r hen malum, nervous eowplainU and all disorders of the accretive and excretive or gans, is beyond all estimate.—Ota*. THE MXU>KK or THE IK WEE.—THE •lark flowing tresses of the uiuidena of the Indioa is attributed bj traveler* to tU oouatant UM of eoauanut oil. In Jiur nrlt'a Coooaine this oil scientifically nnd elegantly oombinad in a form porn liarlj adapted for the toilette.— Com. Mi NY of the largest advertiser* in tbr country make all their contracts with ueuspapert through the Advertising Agency of Geo. P. Howell A Co.. No. 41 I'ark How, New Xork. Their faciliiuo for the transaction of the busings are not excelled by those of any similar e tabliebuicut in the country.—Cbia. JItVTTK* can be cared without suffer ing. EUatie Trusaca are superseding all ether*. Before buying Metal Tmeses or Sup|K>rterH. send for a descriptive rtreu l*r to the Elastic Truss Co., 6W brood wajr, N- Y.—CVa*. Till parol tad wretwt Cod-Livrr OU In the world • lime' * rwwmV, ma le on the aea shore from fttwh. selected livers, by C/uiw*jX, lUtob A Co., New York. Il la *tolatrly pw aud trrrrf. Patients who have onoe taken il pre fer it v> all other*. Physicians h*vs dwudr i it superior to any of Uie oilier cats In market, -tbm. There are seisral kind* of vsraas which trouble borons ; the ,:ia-worms (panted at both cuds, are the most rum moo and nun (Ungar * us. HA RAMI K CAVAIAT Ccrwrw* Power** til to > Irk days epct the wortna, and the burse will begin to thrive. Faebiriew and machine khope ehoald not be allowed to ran a day wftbeut Jbavsona kao orss UstaaxT. In case of a euddan seesdml. an immediate ua • of it may save week* of suf fering. aoid perhaps a limb, or even life. Humana share With Horace the twueflte de livable Irnai Uw a< UH IK I bat taw weoSeooa halm an-ria the rain* kOLthiaa and kraling mSuatire kn J 10 the human raUrle. thai il duaa la caaea of Sfso to foaodrrw. rmghaoa. poll aeil. aendrhea wind . and Taw- tor Dyspepsia OonstopSUim. Debility Hick • Haadae b<* BUwu. iliac la. and ail derammamu of I iver. Stomach and Bowels id j oar Druggist (or It. Brmart l/IkHKioW A sunllai Troth l-Tbwwad die aaauailr (raw >..(. ; • .1 . h> aad eatda, wh.. h aaaa npea 10l . .anuaptwa orUw -juail, i.laldwaaaa. ot ih. 'ana, Whaa I J lb, I M'i) aa* a toil's at Or. Wuat. ■ iratow V < away ibau ina have boa vmkiil is a cress old ace. Mporlol Notice#. P-* - ~ ■ •■■dN.i-wai "'l ' " *■*." "I*" ■"—*o' '■ maionani HI- W kal Ik* W**l> Hm4. Wti do tbi drbtliuiod and Ixkir dmd Ik* nwwr" It to bKWH kMI u *a iikuCM ilinmt, ul ibrj Lial 111 mad 'loo to tow th. # dm * •* UiMr luutoJ aratoaat. which tba; tbwfc tot* towW) mwinm with tb* vara wralbar. Bat cannot tto ml lootmatod f Moat todmbitoblp itaaa. Vbuika rankling* occd-to tort, a bat ntnr-tonth* to a* a*ad < thia arnaon—t* an anrnation ul t kr>xal ritw. aad Ulto Mmlaa oaa b* utaud. *k sbaolato aartatatr. bj a ewra to Ik aitkbat. fat nuMaat. at all wpttkh toauoa, UtoUltor • hi anacb BIt Thoond at man at ktawa, wahuiM aad |wto** I tan! tn. break down. partial?; or wbolljr. madrr lhw •umnrr labor*. banana* Ur; baa* angloctnd to te.nfomtb* pownrato aalur* in Una v To prraona abo a*r tbo crlabratod innparant aad eortwoU** ragn larty to bat wtatbar. tba rcbanatooo whtck •imaw beat *IH to prwlaaa aadar otbar aronmaunoc* to unknown. Tbtjr aa no*, iroablrd with nanar a. tbrir appetlto* art food, tbrir digratooa autofenl aad tbatr habit at bod; all that ran ba daniwd Tbi* lor tvrnt; ;rtra baa baaa tb* oailona trrUtnon; ol all who baa* Ultra IbaßiUaraaa a aonuarr tank aad altoqdto*. Ito •fflcao la da- to tbr ear* and arrnpntowr ddalit; to tb* trwhtng* of rtprrlmmtalaelrije*. with which Ita inrdi cm.l tngrrdmU ba** brwto mUrd tram lb**nfrtabto kingdom. tbr admirablr proporuao* to wbtob tbr; at* oowbiaad aad tb* ttarqaallad punt; ol IU atiatolaUro bar to- Itaggrd riocling* an I protruding toot ar not aora a lort wbor* SILVER TIPS nrr WW PamH twmrni hrr thK tbr; toat *wko aa long - Per aa<* b; all Ikaalm _____ _____ ________ Tt. wad* atrraaia. climb tmrnnuin*. aa wall aa renaUal o to dig. braard mat. U> CABLE SCREW WIRE Root* and Shoos ar* Ut# boot —Sot atfrrtrd h tb* ooatba*. larntor* aad ta 1 abaalrj. try chrr*_ . TO < O N St M !• I I \ I s TO roTBt urnvcL Tb* adrarUaor, baring born prrmnarntl; enrrd at that drrad diww. Cen.oraptiaa, by a alrajO* ratnrdr. la aai 100a to! Rial* know* to Sto (*ltow asfltowr* tb* taran* at rata. To all wb dratt* Ik b. will arada arr* to tbr prracnptica oard. (In* to ebargri. with tba directum* lor preparing and aaina tb# aain*. whtrk tl-.rr wdll find a crag rtnit Jnr nnrmmin*. dartuta. Itoojuauito and all lbmt orlnog d ®nt)tic*. .. . IN PfM.lml.wailMibnrh. N. 1 ThP Market*. urm rows. User CATTta— Prime toXitm • ■JIk 1 •} VIM qoaMy >• ->*** fterooi, J'M -J* Ordinary thin CettJe.. .11 V WV Interior W •.."i? 1 * Mnr* Cow*. ..... *■„ *' 2w aoM_i4T*. 22; Prweec-R*tT* Weater* J J® Rut*R*W* J* Wheat-R4 We*tern 1• • •• But* MJ • *•' Rte-Weetrrn 1• • 1 n*t*T—(tut#.. a • -JJ On**—Mlcml Wee Urn .**>• •* o*l*—W*Urn , • JT nr * 1 *• • l - M tauW io *l.i Hon 'TI * W• TS—"7o"* IS • .99 n?* ii*i woo "WJnn C" - •> •** rmmuw-Crul* wv ■* Obi* W. R. W • .S ■< * • wv Weetrrn wdln*rT 19 • -JJ lvnuy!**ni fine M • .ST Din>-lt' nolorr W • WV •• ftktmiued U • •" Ohio " • W Eon*—State W • •> mnu. Btcr Cattlh •J* •J * 2 * Boo*—Lira •' KS?T7™ ""M. WOO S SprtM lg • '* Con* -"V M ;£ • *2 Kt* - 160 • 100 "® • • L*5rr....."... w • •< luin. :!.f. Oon*—Mixed..... ]* • iiA*t.*f—bum 2 " 1- i2 Oat*— • • PHILADSXPHIA. Fh0tm—.......... y............... 5-W 10.f9 Wheat— Weetern iZed. JJJ White *-* *SX Corn—TeHow T 11 • -W Mlxwi • -W Petholeom—Ornd* Wt< r*Bn*d. K ClotebßEED ....... 9°o * 8.60 Timothy J.7ft IALTHOBI. 00-rro*—Low MlddllUß . rinna—-Extra '.W 8-79 Wheat— Amber S*9 * !2 A young man in Philadelphia we# the victim of mit>laced confident* * abort time ago. He WM particularly %W?t on a very young lady, and called one even ing, having jueviotibly paid her eevoral viniU. The girl'e parent* tliinliiug troth too ynitug lo keep oompitny witl| each oUui, ga* a gentle hint to that effect —flrftby calling the oirlont of the room, •nd binding her to lied; and aecondly, liy the lady of the honae bringing into the room a huge ali.-e of tarred and but ter, aprearl with jam, aud aayiug to the youth, in her kindeat manner, " There, take lliia and go home; it ia * long way, aud your mother will lie iiurkma.' Per Beauty of Polish, ftnetn# Labor, Clg*w lineea.Ourubiiity A Cheap#*###, Unequaled. tenant o aorrau-M ima under atoe aam. feoirceewbl ogoori "* ald*lw of w rapper lade .doo lllmin. THt HIWM. M rouae • erui. far ■>**• dealer* """ynf' grave atv uwee* iwa-l, eaa*viif ! srnir^stJW'Js.s."!^ a MOeaa HOI., Prop'rak, Cantor*, Mann. ■ lU* nT.MHtMi' y SSiW.'tSMSft .MMR "Tm |-M" Baking rrafariaehoa bagßite ■ |„1, Ma ,M I Uih, "Giito Worka. PefawaiO, Q Nonpareil Mills. ,iswl ,rI a • e Am I.tKL* *TOC"k ft UwskwWß Wtuiwwi ~ta t &£niF m nl.li tl I |fl( tOMari. fcajnre GL^&IiiSFSSE 160 Per Gent. Saved. #•1 /tower ialk# frMaPnh# drktrpw law*. *-ad mr uThnl sewtlke Tee* rg*(fr I M ,in ■,-Twßaawwia^'O f•< I? any ii..r'-. -•V;" A ""~ ra Chfauent m et T FaitadetrbH*. Fa yui.Bira.,in*ii uh wintWr ei : ~ Ml. oO. harped b !• opptklu* I Bmrnmif Br arttrao U I la knlMUuk Uel'le. | AM l '!. Jerfaraa, UMM, p, , otu*. i ThaAdinsuoai rwiatow*••#■ nMnwaMi. Mill KT ,nM T AUn-B't ■ taw < a. e. n T 11 T 1.1 II KalaivM •*4}impfJ*£ peg* HI li isiaasflSßWcs I I V aSfHMJwitsifc?' X UXI Lneh tna S. UiMrUv(, I*4. Vr. S. S. riTC'IPH New 'Family Physician/ i (Miiiioi ni* tot !*>• MMrel*#!!# T(t h T?5 IWi'S I V*',. • ,i.,r , n .• d*r A TEP 1 uaucptartH.. Ti c Pun! kl.k. iy Kre' SIB ' 1 1 1 <. mMo b< Swa Vow TEN UOLI.AItS A HAT TOkAOENTS .tctllag Ibc AuwUkwtapby of Ikua'l b. I ILDEBRAN The tiraat Mlaetwrl Bwbwhecke*. U Uea.tiicaninl.MrMM. it. leflbfrtmlM iiUKAt-E WfjJaJX., Jeflaraoe CStj. Uw A GREAT OFFER!! Ilancc Haicn. 4*l Bieedway, W. •nil ef tut tl! Hit, -lA> • *. MkL.OMU.UW, mm tran tea of , Srrt-cinw m.kera. la-ladia. Wa* . *> '•wk Waw/WaM. to a mil i ar edß Aabt fr. xn S4 t., fTi month:, caul paid 1 Uw .awe to Wt, aad net iwM if yewbtawf Aw ktad •# Puue Oa.ta. the wort iMclil J Myicaad prrfortuwc rwu •■acnauwruaaiW Newlen Mm V*t. Ttres lean in a lai-Trap. i nayum Ic " I*l Nuania 4 lUa-It - *| T. a Aaim a lurtaat pepni" at laabi antof*.' aw rt4a. It > awm amt at b.aa# aiiaf aad wllita ••*•#• rarttal of a tbrw-yram lit. tea city it. m ••>,<, to MM ito pIWM ptartwod w f -r. t. • •• 1 newer '> Apply far ta i-rnc aad A STIT. rn.. PaVuSw. rb iMt . BHH Thea-Nectar IS A I'L RJ. Vltb to tow ?le fliw. The %' wrt Tea IwiHartad. iUt mAtmmr a • - Gmi Attaail. aad W ffSl-yll I'acia. Tea tto >- tW V-'tt m MKM ' A i*l • " '.'•* hk NHTTork ltl 1 ' ' m 1 tl. Una .VMte. yi-i. r-w hwAr. v. Thr II an* of tlwrra net lrd to fdlMr ftprnag. Man dtonorrrwd tu brWleaa , .rtaw CWan in O'.c tl t It. I'll am npruitßoeait la ti.e twtakiwr of aa oyc fmw 1 uuutft ErrtttoVar SatTl.. ArlJintirT Tc wowaat Uc powdw >• iagwAad. rwey •ar try* and i-lm! n( Wani ef Uie otrmal Spa laaacM lUna- ia toerbWt. aaul tp4-.r*wn.n tnlwto aw c nrtipotaia. kr wfio!.; r Ut. flight aadri Um rpwao of ta, "• igtrtnl dranrM. BY AIX PRPUOISTA Tie Comißi Clmrcli Isslc Boot. To be Ready July I at. The Standard. By L. 0. EMERSON, of Boston, and H. R. PALMER, of Chicafo. PRK'E t?1.0O. Aalb.pnrtmieeMrb.ef toe>ceat)Mamha.had rrry marked tmrr -aa la ,b< K' aa! in the WK to ooatiag book man 1 fail t* be to Htvrew orTus 8u I OLIVER DITSON & Co., Rf)TOX. >fnine. AOEXT* WASTE 1 * FO SIGHT C ensationO OF NEW YORK. A wuck 4-am ipt.tr l Use Pila of >• Vark in all tt. ratio-.,. tAa-oc ttr .v 1 -—!r-.. a-d wrote rdorw ? ike (ugh aad U'W W* : He mar. : • rW a-d d.k am and t® iciej> i ii>ar myn . 'ae-iM ,S n™ -V.W- .Martm-. Illa.treir* a. Ik# aeari) titl Fin, #>(rnrley>. M - 'Pa, s , ,! arm. ead • Adl A I -iliWw Of tkr rO-k. AdtRWW. NattttMt. Pi atat'ioCi.. Bh.ladeiphia Be . ttuatgn. 111., or Hi. Un . M". Ta Adtrrrllnrra.-VI pnewia'whr caelnaplale mean,* roatreci. e.-i nenepn tar to Wearuiw ef Ad 1 Mtcnai -.ia eboaU! end ke GraPßjwEu|g for a Gircnlw. cw farfaee V ccaw k* that t*ac U •rod INibo TniapMdc, rautbat of WW Nowewinere and oetimalW eUnrtac to coat ef ntmW. ic* many n-cfol hhfe to ediwtova. and erase nr. oraat nf to rx,'rr,eno* uf rnoa wko are kaoa a* *ao roaefkil Ad.rrtlwrr. Tkbtnair. p-ieatnuel to Aworawu .Vynpeprr AdrorUeUig Afoa.-y, 41 p Gumr& isMm ta siz^&sKa P*wavt!fblbt W*t#k rldß lowa aid NiMa Laifls FOR SALE BY THE Burlington & Mo. River JR. PL Co. MILLIONS OF ACRES 0# ti# Ton Credit #t 6 pbr Cbnt, latenst. No part ef priwrpxl dne lar tea ytar*. and Usenoe only ona-nVtb yrarty till paid In foil. l*i adaota a,,!i pay for MJ and ua protein en te within to H i It 01 thfa penerooe errdll. am- Belter term, were n over offered, are not now, aad profieb y norrr will be. . .. . . n ROI-LA K# giving fall perlicuhr. are esmplied grmkia ; any wiehing To indttoe oth.ra 10 emutral* witli them, or ko form a nMoay. are InnWd kaaak for all Uiay Ral to dtsiiihtitf ..._ - .mm . Apply to BCO. K HAKKIik IAD 4 Btßoi r, Wanted This Spring 1 10000 Farmers To Improve the land* of the lowe Railroad land Ooai pan,, now for ealc for eah o* oa king Uxae at pre mil raloo, with au per eent inbareeton deirrryd pavmeoU. Thew landa compnee foor^Goearmato railijad graaU on the linen of the hioux Citi aad l'acrfc and to lowa d meson, of to Chicago and Northwoattni asad IU. Oen txsl lliulway o. are not inortga#*d, nol cnuloo, and aro looolod Tnlhc Middle Eeslon of Western Jowa, tfrted for tto eklnhrlooa cMmate, b#bWßb noil—a W. fci cult oral atxto in the ITnion. NOW IS THt TIME TO •fCONf A HOME in the beautiful and luxuriant eailey of althor to Boyer. the Maple, the Soldier, the LitUeSsoux, at Stand ft P Tnu[oO> eeree are for diapoal in 40 or awe Iwni or in compact t • acta of 50> v aerea or mor® daairsd h trwrtmd ™ or at I hie offioe rec -i > elilo for land purohaeod. Send !-B \.*£JJTSfCS- , say land furniehed free. Add roes JOHN B. CbLHOVI,I*sd Commiawnart; CedarßblMblm, S8 Vm.nr Blttora aro m # *S Bb#3 ' e.iud" IVgUfi, " Arpt'l*** EIISII a* ' t La Ify4 li* ItfbttltlP MlO dfWM!•■•••• M'i I?". •*• fe—* l '* ot*a roa —j be of Cahkerukajfre* bora AkrshrJ* They at. ilw G<**i * '... 1 (h J Humu*. a Prrtbo lUimii" aad |ow.ora#w "" i'' r mMuu maile. *>xl roar>"# ioT" - a '""t," *•**. r**-'- rrprf *StoWBJS3S3 W3 * - a—' - Pawm piwi'*.a* a te>4'o4 <3*a> paiafo' ayepaeia*, SsSHSit? ' > Per uitiiw Md Cwo.,Oyata^w lu-i.iwe -f i ■■a**' hl^ B.mA lien, 8#72? * m*t€' -•**** jcl •■•••■** . v.'iu i i•'iooA ■hah ** — fly raotoaadby 4*r.ae. "Viirr'ar* • tig t to* t^rft 1 *•*** "■ naito. ih Ltm **l Vattgrii Orpwa • * "rtoe'eM .bo Wtttotoi Hto.4 Mnwtsm#* bwt *# rmfKntm bwWW ScSSi jwr.2ssSSs^aiß *f>iw* Mhr Woraw. ok"4 rr-A wTaKiMiir 7 tt,yo4 ao4 aaiet S*y Ud wrid t Tbort k uenah a. *■ < "idipl tpae Be faapßl gch W bwly faaw tto f *iaA I. u aw *w t& hooHb. Www < ha >w4y ttot ami pbM. but lUMe 0 4*o4 howw* m 4 Lwe Aywa ih* twoJ *bw. lw ■■ Mi rfiiew Moebswkcel OIWM. Fw# ngda Paha pt MnwrokL wm# un n.T) J inwa% (M* touorv ib waato# Kwirawi htkwtoM- M>v . pnpaore. .ewtlM a piMafai >"*£ MPae !tow rwhw* argm. ia wamiklty uMMtofjr. Iton a Mcwtwre. ar &.!■! HI Meat wfPa. f. R inert V;aca RiTTMs M iMv all apewbij . MW k. c'*" - > b ti ir* a c rw tytirw ric RffS . Wil *>' Vimei* Brrreaa aw Aparicar. Utopbowe* wdUiawaw. Knuitwea, Lwae'te. U wi<- todatir*. Cwutlyr-lim ttat. Sodortic, Aftwmtire, and Ao-B::a*. Tb* Aptrlrel aod m.'A Lowi'tt imnto ft D* W*ut.' Vieu Eime an to tow wai goard h-i eaow of mpw* "f n%n ton# , S ®r-s;?r2 aKn pad* • *to w w i,aw.*to.l .aU bbw** rtor fcoai wftawnutwa. iaX toik, WV* THr.r Cwi.tar l.na-t ••*- rfUSm tHroottoif titavanw Tw Hwrror pap'tw aon to tod- T*T, eonoain afi ortt-ain; tto -'-o of to we. Ttoar Ali I < ltiliinri p.-rriwuliTT ito IhO k Uar oowa i,. (bto. and. dmbwgn Utfwath to itoij too*, and wo Mpr-ror '* a3 nanedik' {•!* feb to ten < StU.ua few, fmr wad A for. o*c Korllf) ibo bod, og>ia>( donwaea lab. bold W a ayMow tow IptotoH .Tto ••or, Uw atowash. to boeola. to k torya. a:., lb. WW wo roodeaod toaa w | roof try "h-* io* atog 'mrorllewa. -Tto of to Jttora *3 cototo bod at onto bow a to# renal nito Wwulaatoi. EM good Boaoatont twdl aa Uw atcak. awaa . • *. vowan. new btoC tod' aag.ttoek, awt alw . ixn-door fttre* Ttoy arr ooejiani 14 |xMy nat ib'e Uicrru r.*•;t: xud (ciu r. iw# >. IVIUft.K- R h .oov4*fe- UrwLCtoaatoOr- Aie.toitiaoiwWKwtet ar SOL" BY At.t * T ■ C-topß *a H ; iigßvnrafJffcUra A OKk -ra WeeioA.-Ae.oa. oato wn> waeif THE T I'll ■IAT.-lWbin.ae , Mwp I .too*. J w*,,.'.,.i!w#WriOa'aMe> , Uw. Wwk. Bron Imi't obto twaa Kwtoi' wow ..t&r SinmftSE I 1 1a ,1 1 toe t. jiyuy^|p^g oiy Boar Tarkler w w graorsl - .aw khnwebaei tbr V. AAm _JL . race I* owd by tie tornuwal M IBtt<*PMoOCMtor.Wa.aktOgtOa. < msSfZ VTeii'tn y F Brw'vtiv v-a. p wRPp/ innwnr ualan ugaed lVtia " *,,+ —OB—— THE NEW BOOKS. *** a ■ M Brick Übm.—ObwlO book by ' RnAPameee," t.ae BreHj -By W Uoorth. wMJkoy •'W.roick," l.n Whet I knoo of I .r;nr ,* —By Ifonm Giy*l#y. IJO t* K!OW R. It n'rOagt>ir,— A •-peafoot. , (.# Mra. U>l) • .Vm Ook Book A romulaork- AM Lore (1, Am-nr -Hichelot'a pool Pro-wtt arufk. IS# H.bitai f i.tolSMt rt' - A lawmatin* book, Ltl Art of tlonroroot oa.—A *ty toUHMIk Thr Artoot VfrUi' t. Ablm nd HpOßluba, ljM vtke' b -oka Wo .11 baattUfatlj piintiT, and booed In h-arv rloih - w, od -oat by awtl har G. W. CAJtLirroy A Id.. PnSli.bry. yB Tork. Cheap Farms 1 Free Homes I M IIS LDVB W Hfl UNION PACIFIC RAILROAD. A U TTAI or xa,000.000 AORIM or nee Bnt Farwtag aad Hiarrml Laad. ta Awerlea. 3,000,000 Acres in Kebraakai CREAT PLATTE VALLEY, GA-RDKX OK THE WEBT, ISXo-w toy Sale! Throe land, aro la to central portion of the TTailol Stow, oa the lat dere. of North ttoitode, to cJntS line of to rreatTewpMate W to Aw^ton^SS 3^(S l ife"&sCfSjS • eonrenleat I. market ton can be toaatt FKEE Homesteads far Actual Settlers. THE BIST LOCA7IO9B FOB COLOKIES. IOLBIXBS BXTITTEP TO A BOBE •TBAJB or tap ACKtI. Wm PMMI 10 PurrhMert f Umi.