Chicago and Boston. On Sunday evening October 8, 1871, as the irowMpper* in m City of Chicago wore retaining u> their homes from their respective churches, the tire alarm broke upon their ears. It had been ringing in cessantly tor several days, and the people had come to look upon it a a daily visita tion; end, notwithstanding two entire blocks had been consumed the previous night, no serious tears were created by the fresh outbreak. This alarm was the of the city's doom. The tire spread with fearful rapidity, continuing all through the Sunday night, Monday and Tuesday, being only extinguished when nothing kras left to burn. It de stroyed all the theatres, all the hotels, nearly all the churches and every public building of note. The loss tu property, real estate and personal,covered more than two hundred million dollars; 150,000 per sona were rendered homeless; the com merce of the city was for the time swept S* IT ! tiie ..'rain intercts were almost killed, and the flourishing siui beautiful Queen Oity of the West was left mourn lug lier desolation amid the ruins of her Clnes*. A disaster so sweeping and motive in the ki story of conilagra lion* swept upon the country like a tliuu der bolt, and when the crisis was passed men fervently thanked God that auch a visitation came but once iu a centory. On November 9,1872, the mighty heart of the American Continent was shaken by the fearful intelligence that Ho*ton, the sedate, the staid and the conservative capital of the New England States, was enveloped in dames in all ita husinees part, that the Chicago tragedy was be wg repeated, and all that was finest, noblest and best in the far-famed hub of the universe was threatened with a sweep ing overthrow. Iu some respecta the two tires in the Western and Eastern cities have a wonderfttl similarity to each other: in other* they w-r-re widely different, aud. as your correspondent has had the good fortune, or bad fortune, to have been present in both cities iu. the period of their destruction, a comparison between the two and the manner iu which they were assailed ay the ffatnes may prove interesting. Boston is one of the oldest cities on the Continent, teeming with historical recollections and impressed!? associated with the growth and the great ness of the American Republic. Built after the old English model*, Us narrow streets, crooked lanes and winding alleys have long been the ab. initiation of travel er* accustomed to the more noble thoroughfare* of New York, Philadelphia and Chicago. Its buildings are const met - ed with a view that they should endure for centuries, and its tpassive blocks of bricks, granite and marble met tbe eye of the stranger on every side. No waste ground has been left by the designers, and every available spot is covered with structures of every kind down to the water's edge, the warehouses and stores extended, and the whole city presented the appet .wnce ef a compact masa of masonary and brick work. During all the changes of these centuries the salient feature* of Boston had not changed until an element burst upon it, which teepee ted not antiquity, durability nor historical associations, but enveloped all in one common ruin. The Chicago ot the past was in every respect different from Bos ton. It resembled it not in the formation of the streets or construction el its build ings and public edifices. It was, in the first place, the youngest of all ike cities of all the West which has risen to greatness, it having though youngest in the race, outstripped all rivals in the struggle for supremacy, and gained the proud title of Queen of the Western portion ot the Con* tinent. Fortr years ago the Indian hunt ed where one short twelvemonth since stood the monument which enterprise had risen to science, commerce and art, and adismal swamp flourished where since a city has been raised on foundations of granite. Modern in its growth, Chicago was modern in its appearance, and though it had many drawbacks in its design, as iu sudden destruction had proved, it had many excellent features for the transac tion of trade and commerce. Its streets were spacious, lengthy and wide, and the buildings which lined them were elegant, handsome and commodious. The public edifices were erected with lavish bnt prudent outlay, and were designed to be fireproof, with what result the fire has long since shown. In em- respect Chicago was infinitely inferior to Boston, that was in the more fragile nature of her dwelling houses, which, springing up at an early period of the city's existence were mainly composed of lumber and boards. This was tbe fatal cause and origin ot the fire, and from it a valuable lesson has been learned by the architects of the new and more flourished community which is rapidly springing up from the ashes of October, 1871. In another re spect it differed from Boston; it covered a larger area of ground in proportion to its population, and the buildings it con tained were scattered at wider intervals from each other. In hotel accmmodation it wsa superior, and in this feature was unexcelled by any city of the continent. There is a wonderful resemblance to he traced in the condition of the weather in Chicago on October 8, 1871, and in Bos ton on November 9, 1872. The Sabbath evening in Chicago was calm and placid refreshing and beantifnl as a Summer eve. Before the fire broke out a gentle breez was blowing, which was delicious after the beat of the day, and the streets were crowded with pedestrians of both sexes. In Boston, on the evening of tbe fire, the weather wsa a trifle cold, but not cold enough to be unpleasant. TLo streets were thronged with people, shopping was going on in endless variety, acd all went merry as a marriage bell "until the deep funereal knell from the brazen-mouthed voices of the big alarm bells anuouncd the near approach of danger. It was on a tnoealight night the fire broke over Chicago. A beautiful moon shone in tbe heavens over the city of Boston. The harbor looked a sea ot glass and the tall masts of the shipping stood ont like sentinels of the deep. The wind in Chicago was blowing from the sotthwest and in Boston (r.iu the northwest. Neither cities bad been visited with rain for several days before their respective visitations. The ground in loth was parched and dry and the atmosphere singularly conductive to sudden conilagra • tioa and combustion. Another point of resemblance. The Fire Department in both cities was partially demoralized for eome time previous to the firee. In Chi cago, the incessant demands which had been made upon the firemen for more than a month bad completely worn them out. The fire bells never once ceased to ring. The horses attached to the steam ers had become nearly worthless acd the men themselves bad tost all discipline and had degenerated into a disorganized and disorderly rabble. The inhabitants of the city v j-e thrown into a state of nnusnal trepia.U'on by this overthrow of a department on which the safety of the city so mach dependod; but in the fire of the 7th of October, the niglit preceding the great conflagration, the manner in which they exerted themselves partially restored to confidence which was rudely dissppated on the succeeding day. In Boston a similar state cf things to a great extent, prevailed, but not through any alt of the firemen. The presence of the dreaded horse disease had so weakened the" horses attached to the Fire Depart ment that they had to be taken off, and the engines have for several days been dragged by hand. This was a fatal blander on the part of the authorities. Better that the lives of a hundred horses should be sacrificed than the city be left to tke mercy ot an element which is no respecter of time or circumstances. This brings me to the -irigin in the two cities, and "here there was a great want of similarity. In Chicago the fire originated in the meanest and least valuable portion of the city, from thence extending to the wealthiest portion. Of Boston, it broke out in the richest, and was strictly confined within the business centers. The exact cause of the Chicago conflairation has always been a mystry. Popular fiction attributed It to be the action of Mrs. O'Leary's cow which kicked over a kerosene lamp while being milked by its mistress, setting fire to the barn, from wbich the flames com municated to the suroujuding buildings and so spread. This fanciful story has undoubtedly been looked upon as a good joke by ihose wh# were present in the doomed city on the fatal niglit. My own opinion, strongly fortified by corrobora tive proof, is, that incendiarism was at the betted of the whole thing, aided of, course by the favorite state of tht waatli ar and th poetllar drynoas of the •tmo aphero. _ An Irish Witness In the lies. "Yon belong to the Church ¥ * eaid th* agent. "I f" said the fellow. "Do you not f" demanded the agent. "You soy I do," win the answer. "Conic, "sir, •newer—what I* your re liginu ¥" "The true religion." "What religion ia that *" "My religion. * "And what's your religion ?" "My mother's religi 'u." "And wh.it was your mother'a relig ion ?" "She tuk whiskey in lior tay.' ! "Come, unw, I'll tlnd you out, ,-uu aiur aa you are. "You bless yourself, don't you ¥" "When 1 etu done with you I think 1 ought-" "What place of worship do you at tend r "The most eouvaiuyaut," "But of what persuasion urc you ?" "My persnoaiou is that you won't And it out." "What is your WUef ¥" "My belief ia that you are pu sated. '•Do ynu confess ?" "Not'to you." "Come, now I have you. Who would you send for if you were likely to die f' "Dr. ClrtwUn " "Not f* r the priest V" "I tuuat tirst get a meanengor." "Confound your quibbling—tell me, then, what your opinions are—your conscientious principles, I mean V "They are the same as my landlord's." "Ami what are yotu landlord's opin ion# r "Fail hia opinion is that I wou't pay him the last half year's riut, aud I'm of the same opinion myself. Execution of Siamese l'rtae*>c*. j The iWrM J4(irtJtii say*: —"There | are rumors that three or four prince*.*** of ■ Siaiu acd two servant* have l>een accused 'of stealing gold chain*, diamond*, and i precious stone*. The gold chains, dia j mood* and oilier precious * tones that were ' attached to the King's sword had been ' taken away, and imitation chain* and •tone* had replaced them. These depre | dations, it i rumored, were made during 1 the late reigu. but have only receatly been j discovered. Some say thoae accused of I the theft have received ninety lashes ! each. The servants are to be executed, I and the princes#** to be disposed of a* | the law provide* for persons of their rank |it found really guilty of the theft. Other* ! say the ladies ot rank who are implicated are being tried, and it is not yet known what their punishment will IK. If there is any basis for the rumer*,aud the princesses should be implicated aud found guilty, their sentence* will doubt leas be death. The execution ef prinevs or princesses would he at some prominent temple. They would be bound and fasten ed in a bag. a block of chanwood of tri angular thane would be placed en the ground, anu the fastened body turned face down ward,so as to bring the neck below the chin on the triangular block. At a given signal the first executioner, after raising his chanwood cudgel, would strike the fata! blow on the bock of the neck, and the three other executioners, similarly armed, would continue their blows on the body until it entirely cowed to qiivcr. The bag containing the body would then be weighted and thrown into the river. This, it is stated, is the way in which his Koyal Highness Kroiaa Luang llak Kaunas sett wo# execated in 1849. How Humors Fly. We learn from the (S. C.) -Wei come events eonueoted with the late fire,a!>out which our papers have been unaccount ably silent It appears that a drunken wretch, the night after the liv, was detected in an attempt to set tir. : . the gaslionsa near Charles town Bridgt. and was seized by au (infuriated crowd and instantly hanged to a lamp-post It also appears"that "three men were buried under a falling wall on Washington street, leaving their heads only Ttsiblo. Efforts were mode t< > rescue them from their perilous position, but in a few moments the remainder of .s and 817 for clour. Iteel—was in fair demand and firm, Ita-au—wat quiet an the pot at 80, for loug clear. tilt Me* more active, ltaw sugar dull at 9 3-4*loe. for 'air to c.sal rellniuy. Refined thtH at 12 I-2c. for hat da. tiraiu—Wheat dull and heavy. Cora lower at 52 1 2e, not strictly prime at 62 X 4c., and prime, la store, at 6St Oat* Aimer, at 50 1 2aslc ,in store lor old W eat em uiued; 5Se, aloat, for new No. 2 Toledo; and 50aaS*> l-2e. for new black Illinois. barley dull; #1 16 for Canada and Dfatoc. lor Western. Itve—Western at BCe , in car loaiia. Petroleum wa quiet for retiue.l at 27 I-3c; with more l)iiiuea in crude at 14c„ in bulk. Strained rv*in *• moderately active and quoted f3.75a#3.b. 1-2 Spirits turpentine sold at 62c. Wool ha* generally been quiet hut price* ateadv. Stearic© iold at 8 12c. lor prime in tea. Hop* were quiet but tea IT. Tallow sold at 8 3-4i.Sc. tor Western and city. Whiskey lower at 93 l-3a'J4c. Cottan.—The tiaisaeliou* in cotton on the spot have l>een fair, limited par tially by the scarcity of freight room ; market steady ; middling uplands 19 1-2 v., and low middling do lite. Forward deliveries in fair request at iufc. higher rates. Sales 10,700 bales, closing, by official report, at 10 3-18 c. for Novem-1 her, 18 15-ltio. for December, 10c. fori Juunarv, 19 3-l6c. far Febnuirv, 10 3- Sc. for Mwvh. 19 5-Be. for April, and IV 15-lOc. for May. Why Men Don't Marry. Rev. Heury Morgan lectured ia Bos ton on " Why men don't many." Bis headings were these : Meu dou't marry —first, because they eau't; they can't get the one they want ; bachelors have high notions. Second—Because many of them are cowards, they dare not face the music: they dodge the question. Thirdly—lk•cause they are skeptical; they have no faith in woman ; think mairiage a lottery. Fourth—They are selfish ; they caunot yield for auotbera' good ; can't support a family ; want the awed* of life without bearing its bur dens. Fifth—Woman'* extravagance. Here the speaker showed true cause for wau's hesitating—expensive living and extravagant dress. It coats us much to launch a woman on the sea ef weddrd life as it would do to fit out a small schooner. As to sail#, cordage, pen unuts. streamers, the difference ia in favor of the echeouer. Next, whom do men marry ? Women, of course. John Howard, the great philanthropist, married his nurse ; lie 25, she 52. John Wesley married a vix en. Peter the Great married a peasaut girl. Humboldt married a poor girl be loved. Shakespeare wedded a farmer's daughter. Byrou married for money to pay his debt*. Robert Burns married a girl whom he eoartcd ia the plew-field. Milton parted trom his wife. Napoleon Bonaparte married a widow. Froukliu marriid the girl that saw him with the rolls nndcr liis arm. Washing ton married a widow. Andrew Jackson married a weman whose husband was living. Edward Lytton Bulwer married a shrew, General Fremont married the daughter of Thomas Ronton by eloping. Martin Lnther married a cue. Father Hyacinth* married a convert that finally converted him. fa GIUMTI Doonm f—The Chicago Are prored that iron and freestone pre seutv# no abstscle to the spread of a great conflagration. The Boston fire equally condemns the me of granite--at least of the sort used ia that city. It ha* been suggested to us. however, that all et the varieties of that Lsndsotnest of materials fer large structures ought not to fall un der the same general condemnation. The granite used in Boston is of coarse groin and when exposed to a great lieot decom poses readily while the finer* grained ra„'.tes have far greater rc-i-ting power*. For instance, the latter sort of granite has been used much, if not exclusively, in Richmond, Vs.. and we are told that all of the granite structures there withstood admirably the great tire which devastated that city near the end of the war—the Custom iiotite in particular. This is a subject which needs investigation by ex pert*. We ehould not like to sec granite banished from use for large public build ings and other stately structures and if there i* anywhere sn abundance of hat material which will stand fire, the f.iet •tight to be universally known. TOXI.NO DEATH COOLLY. —Penal reform has evidently been making progress in Italy. Witness a recent occurrence at Chieti. a citr in the province of Naples. Ten brigands were brought to trial in a batch, and nine were condemned to death while the other was sentenced to imprisonment for twenty-five years. A writer who was an eye witness, de scribes the scene when these seven ien tences were solemnly pronounced by the court. All of the convicts manifested the greatest ainnsenieut; jokes were fre quently exchanged ; a stint! box was passed around and one alter another took a li*urty pinch, and all were nt groat pains to show their contempt. Then lielore leaving the dock they asked tho names of Uio jury and of the prose cuting witnesses, and one of them pleas antly added: " In March or April we shall meet."' All of which ahows tlmt the humanitarians ol Italy have succeed ed in their work so far that tho criminals with which that country is overrun have learned to regard sentences of death ns 'i'.tle pleasantries that tho courts occa sionally indulge in for their own amuse ment. 15EE STATISTIC*. —The Masaacha -ctt's Piouyhman has been writing np hoe statistics. and give. them tlm* : Uncle Sam lma bees enough to give lis all a sting 1 There are 2,000,000 lxo hives in the United States. Every hive violds on an average at a littlo over 22 ibs of houcy. The average price at which lionej is sold is 25 cents a pound; that, after paying for their own board, our boea present n* with a revenue of over $*,800,000. To reckon if another way, they make a clear gift over Ilb of pure honey to every roan, woman, and child in tie vast domain of the United States. In 1800, over 23 and a A million pounds of wax were made a"d given to us by these industrious workei a. The keeping of bees is one of the roost profitable investments that our people can make of their money. The profits arising from the sale of surplus honey average from 50 to 2'JO per cent, of the apital invested. It is recorded that in 1790 a 81 I-onis merchant was a man who in the corner of his cabin had a large chest which con tained a few ponnds of powder and shot, a few lenives and hatchets, a little red paint, two or three rifles, a few tin cups and iron pots, and perhaps a little tea, coffee, sugar and spice. There was no postoffice, no ferry over the river, no newspaper. Men often criticise girls' flgnres; but when a girl has a few thousand of her own, tliev generally think the flgnres about right. < ure Tor HUmmsrliif. 1 Some year* age any* I>io Lawia, • ' famotia professor cams to town whara we weie then residing, aud announced that he could •• cure Ilia worst caeca of I stuttering iu ten minutes without n sur gical operation." A fui-ml of our* was HII inveterate CM*, aud we advised him to mil upon tin- wonderful magician, j He called, was oouvtuced by the teati | menial* exhibited, struck up n Iwrguiti, poul the fifty dollars, end soon eidDd nt our office talking straight at a rail road truek- Wo wove greatly astonished, and asked our frmud by what miracle bo hud tweu to strangely and suddenly re heved of hiu life-lung trouble. Ho moat j provoking!,** informed tit that ho hud : inude a MMM pledge not to reveal the process of euro. Wo kuow two othor had oases- ladiou j —aud ealliug upou them, r|H>rtod wlutt had come to pn*. Thoy wero soon at tho professor'* ( rooms, come away greatly elated, raised tho hundred dollars, wvut tho next day, I (taid tho iHo.h, aud iu half an hour were ready, had the question la-su popped, to >u\ •• Yea" without a jerk ! * we were oon made acquainted with I several other cure* quite as r* workable, j aud roaolvod to put ou on r sharpest wile I aud wait upon the magician ourselves. He wciuul an honest nun, aud in two i daya we had made up our luiud to pay ! Uiui u large fe and It-aru tho strange art, with the privilege of uoug it to | cure whoimoever we would. Those who bad Wen cured by the professor were aulrmnly 1HUIHI not to reveal the aeeret to auy cue, but ou* contract gave lie tho privilege of using the kuow ledge as we pleased. And now wo propose to givo the read ers of this jouruid a simple art whieti hua enabled u to make very happy many unhappy statuutem*. Iu our own hands it li! often failed fo effect the de aired result, but in three-fourths of the eases which wo have treated the cure has been complete, i The secret is simply this : The statu - 1 merer is made to mark tho time iu bis i speech, just as it is ordinarily dune iu singing. Ho ia at tlrst to heal ou every syllable. It is at the drat lesson to read some simple composition, like one of David's I'salms, striking the ringer oil tho knee at every word, then . read iu a uewspuj>er, beating each sylla -1 hie. Yau can bent time by striking the fin ger ou the kuce, by simply hitliug the thumb against the forefinger or moving : the large toe in the baot. We doubt if the worst case af stutter ing could contiuue long, provided the sufferer would read au hour or two every day, with thorough practice af this sim ple art, observing the same in his con i"° ' ""a ™" ,w ' vw , vernation. As thousands havo paid fifty aud a hundred (or this secret, we Uke great pleasure in imparling it to the patroua I of this jonrnih X TliLll Waif. The researches of the Tinted Stabs j Signal Office hate just been rewarded by a beautiful and highly important mcteo ! mlogical discovery. On the coast of ! England fratu time immemorial the phe ; nonaction of the great November atmos pheric wave ba- Wen the speculation of wieutisN and seamen, but sir Jih Het schcl and others have supposed that it was peculiar aad ouiiflne.l tw Eaghunl and Western Europe, which it reaches from the South Atlantic, and ever which it rolls its long-eontiuned undulations from October to Janunry, constituting an importaut clement in the phraMßeoii 1 character of Enropoau Winter. On the 12lU of November a sitniliar atmospheric i nave began to break over the shores of ' Oregon and liiitih Columbia, as shown y the woutksr telegrams. By tbe'even ing of the I.lth it had sprer. l over nearly j | all of the Pacific Btatc# and Territories,' Nevada and Utah, and at midnight was pouring through tho passes of the ltocky Mountains. On Thursday, the 14th, it descended noon Colombo, Nebraska, Kansas and the Indian Territory. On Friday motuing it extended in uut>r<>kru . magnitude and magnificence from Ore-1 j gon and Washington Territory eastward j through the great trough or depression |of the ltocky Mountain backbouu in Idaho and Montana, aud stretched thence 1 , to the bower Missouri and Low. r Missis : ' sippj valleys and over the western shore t tlie Mcxisan Gull. This discovery* will enable meteorologists to anticipate I | by many day % the approach of winter, iu it advance* from the Pacific coast east ward in the great current of westerly • winds. It serves to clear up the old ; mystery of Aoeiidtn Winter storm*, j showing that they originate iu the Rack? Monnt tin*, nion whose eld and loftiest summit* in Nevada, Ttnh, CslonJo and Southern Wyoming the vapor-laden tor of this wavu, coining over the wurin Pacific, is now seeu to be eoadensed in the overwhelming snows of the fortv* . first parallel. * As tbi" vast aerial wave is | probably, like the English wave, con | Poned in successive undulations for two ar three months, it av a< it in explain ing th*i comparatively high trmpemture and light precipitation in Winter along ' Paget Sound and eastward. New York Dry Hood* Market. The wck nntlt r review bmj 1c char acterized as baring hctn aatibfactory in a busincßK ioint of view. The market for the week has l>e<*n strong both for cottoiii and wroolcDß. Cotton gotvls have been firm auJ continue so. Ilrown sheetings and hhirtings have been in considcralilc activitv. tV.n **t>- gas. Stark* and Pepperells have Been severally advanced |c, per ysrd. Bleached sheeting* and "hirling* have qootl connnmptive demand for all popnlnr styles. Canton flannels have been in excellent demand. Frees, although firm, arc un changed. In Brown Drills lie demand is for home consumption and price* rule ctcady. TUks. Chocks snd Strip** rc stctily in price, with an advance on n-inc makes ol ticks. Boiled Jacorels were advanced to 10 l-'Je for mott nukes, and there has leen a fair demand. Prints have met with a fair distnhufion Dress goods lave shown considerable animation. There is a good demand fcr plain colored cords, reps, crapes, etc. Hosiery bts been in good request from first bands and jobber*, especially for shirts and drawers. Knitted and fancy goods have not been in much demand, and prices are irregular for them. bbawls have been vciv quiet in Hot bands. Prices continue irregular and low. Woolen* have been fairly active. Beavers have been taken freely in moder ate parcels, and there lias been an excel lent demand for ropcllants, many makes of tvbi.-b are in short supply. Wool Flannels hove bean very active, and stocks in first hands are unexception ally light; most ol the comrab'ion bouses have large older* ahead, and the advanced Cricec. arc fully sustained, and some nukes ave a tendency to advance still lurtter. Blanket* hvvo been in very good de mand for the advanced period of the sea son, and price* are very firm at the higher rates established since the B "ton fire. PiallurcH in Sodt'lYs Bociety in fnll of failures that need never have l>een made ; full ef men who have never sueceedrd ; full of women who in the first half of their dny did nothing hot eat and sleep and iu[wr, and in the last half have done nothing hnt pel pet ua to their folium and weak urg es. The world in fnll, I my, of sneh people ; full of men in every trade and profession, who do not amount to any thing ; and T do not apeak irreverently, ami I trust not without duo charily, without uuiking due allowance for the in evitable in life, when I soy that God and thoughtful men are weary of their pre sence. Every boy •tight to improve on his father; every girl grow into a nobler, gentler, more self-denying womanhood than the mother. No reproduction of former types will give tbo world the )>cr fect type. I know not where the Millen ■ium is, as measured by distance of time, but I do know, and so do you, that it is a great way off as measured by human growth and expansion. We have no such men and women yet, no age has ever hud eny, us shall stand oa the earth in that age of peace that will not come until men are worthy of it. Jtev.//. Murray. tin ladling Emigrants. > Nearly 8 :; t destitute Italian ami i grants landed at Castle (lard en, Row I York, who have been defrauded of all f their money by a band of emigrant robbeia. It appears that the emigrant t robber* aro net alone OOtiAood to New i Voik, for the Qommkaiuiier* of Emi gration now hare a ease under consider . jution which exceeds in extent uuy kin .! dreil outrage over perpetrated ou tin* I aide the Atlantic, i A bogua colonisation society in Ilavro j have been acudiug Its agent* throughout I * Italy, and they have boon repraaenUug * uiuuv fabulous advantages oflbrnd to colonial* in the lb-public of itueuoa Av rea and in the United Hie tea. A* I the result of a thorough canvas* these > agents succeeded iu Colieetillg at Naples nearly throo hnudrnl emigrant , prinel > I pally on loot* for Haeuoa Ay Ma. Jio on raptured wr> the |KMisautry that they sold or mortgaged their cottages aad small gardens to procure the paa saga ! inouey to a laud In which they had been I led to expect to And fortune* awaiting their arrival. They parted with their friend* lu the happiest manner, and i those residing iu legions ajwit from the i thoroughfare* of travel set ont with I their tumilies on foot, and thus uccotn !pi is lied the enure journey to Naples 1 Many voung men left home for the now j ) world with barely enough money to defray tho eipaie* of the trip, ladiav ! ig that in the unknown land they ] would have little ueed for what exiitcd | ] in such marvelous plenty. [ They were told that the agent* of the ureal ('olouiauUon Society woald meet i them at Marseille*, at Havre, and at j their final destination, to ahow them every courtesy. They purchased their | ! through ticke* for Dueno* Ayrea, to the i ! number of ISO, paying fur them, in' I mauy instance*, borrowed money which ! | they had secured at usurious rate* of; interest, aud which they hoped to io- ; j fund alter a few weks" sojourn in the j uew country of plenty. They sailed j from Najdo*. aud after several d*ja of) ; rough weather on the Mediterranean, I i reached Marseille* uudauutod and amre j eager than ever to go forward. They, ! were received at this port by men re- j presenting Uiamselves a* agcut* of Ihii t I colonisation cempany, but several any that they believe ihsui to have lieen ibo , same agents who had sold them tickets m Naples, aud who had followed tbam 'by rail. A long and tedieu* trip through the entire laugth ef France, in an iim-. gr..nt train, occupied almost aa mucn i I tune aa the ar* voyage, aud materially! ileploted their already aaauty puivcs. ' Ou reaching#lavre the emigrants, num bering about 2tMt, ware told that it woukl j be many day* before a vessel would | leave for liueuoa Ayrea direct, bat they ; were assured that auch were tho conuec- j ; tious of Uie Bocwty upon tin* ade of ' the Atlantic that if lh.*v would proceed !to New York they would bw forwarded I thence to their distittatido free of til ; expeuse. Few of tho emigrant* knowing where Husuos Ayrea was situated, anil iceoti nitiug in the general U*rui of America at least w pail of the domain of which they were iu scarab, ail were induced to saltl m the fteaiuskip Holland. They did aot realue that they were going thou sand* of miles out of their course, but • ' began the passage in tho steerage with ' the a.tounu.c<* tbat tiicy would meet iwith poisons iu New York wuo won Id procuro them sin-edy trauiqortaUqa to a ' southern-bound steamer aud rnpid di*- jiatch. ibvy reached New York and upon laudiug a) C**tlt< Garden presented their letters of introduction and reiterated < tueir confidence in the ngents of the i Colonisation Society. The avsiusccos : of the Commissioners of Emigration , that no Snail society waa in existence did not eulir.lv open their eye*. They sat j down on the benches in Cadle Garden | to await tir? arrival ,ot the ageuU, who,,, a* they *,iid were t otaing to take care of j them* They wo e sure of it bectu* they bad been told ** I The scene iu the large hall of the J , Garden was a strange osc. Gathaml., around the two large stow**, which, ) heated to refines*. K*ce a cheerful glow j 1 to the otherwise d anal quarter, when* . these wretched Italian emigrant* who, sUct.*hcd Upon the floor or seated upon _ the rude benches, apjwared perfectly in dillerent as to the futiifr. While this was true of the great majority, several oi-eii were noticed which were extremely ad. Mn-t prominent among the group was an age i (nthcr with n large family | who clung to him for encouragement,! and besought him for soma explanation j —to tell them why they did not leave ( tach ehtxrlflM be.nstiftil country which they bd bcattl sc mneli about. Hi* agooy appeared too ' terrible, aad ha neither hed tear* nor offered to his wife or children any words ' of chear. „ j Many oru without any Iwggage. this hsritig been *i-nt fi>tn Havre direct to IJtieiK * Ayriw by aaihug veimeL Friend- ■ les and without money, they have ap pvran'ly determined to remain where * they are until something is done for them. They are evidently coti-rincod j that they have already done too much in the hope of improving their lot The , ( Euimigration CommWiooera have fnr-11 assist •.hem with proviaiona during tlie j past two davs, but ore unable to protect', them against tha chilliness of the,. weather. The women aad children, who j, are nuaocuatomcd to weather as seviTe I , even a* the present, are suffering greatly, j J Hnaerintendent Gaiaaerly of Castle Gar- , den has written to the Italian Enibassa- . < dor at Washington, Ins informed the j { Consul in thi* city, and haa made appli- . cation to Dr. Ccccarinl of the Health i Hoard for the employment of n portion of the men. If no "other provision is ! J made for these destitute emigrant* they , t will lie iw nt in a few days to Ward's Is j, land, and be maintained at the expense j • of the dir. The Commissioner* are j naturally verr anxious regarding ilie re , suit—A v - Y. i'aper. \ \ Tlie Steamboal Law*. j Tne United States BuiM*rvltng In*pcct or-fiencral ol Steamboat*. Mr. Joseph Niutmo, submitted hi" annual report .to the Secretary of the Treasury, lite re port, in beginning. refers to the delays that vero unavoidable in carrying the new steamboat act of Fab. 28, 1871, lato full effect, so that it has now been admin istered a little less than eighteen month*. In regard to the practical working of the law. the report *ays: " The general result* wt the law are tu some measure indicated by the following statement compiled from statistics for the calendar year I*7l. as compared with the average of similar statistics tor the three preceding years. It may be remarked, however, that the present law was really in force only half of the year 1871. The statistics for 1872 will soon he prepared, and it is believed that the result* for that year will be even more favorable. Uatieral staiansenf sh.'wint ih* lose#* of Ilia and proiv actyocea*mu*t by maualtien on sleem vseae adnr lu* Iba ycir I*7l. aa arm pared srtih tha average ef turb boau dnruqi the thtse preceding yeere Somber of raeualtice by flro, exploal.m. and wreck during the ymtr IS7I 65 Average during the threw preceedlog year* (I Value of property destroyed by oaaualUee in ts.l ga.diP.MJ Avrtage during the three preosling years M V.6JI Kntnliar of lives Vat by rssnattlee la I*7l. Average during the tluoe j.ienedUig ytart. 7T S imber of steamer* itupeisd In 1*71.. . IWI A erage during the thi "• prorodlag ycara. 1.110 Sitmlier of liren-rs lasui d to pilot* and englneersln IWI lI.TM Avcraßc during the Ihier preoeittttg year*. . Tha forrft-finft ytstrmvnf shows that the avernffw ntiniher of oftsnftliie* tiuriiig the year 71 was thirty one per cent, loss than thv avtraga for the thrae preceding years; a) o that the average loss ol prop erty was nineteen por cent, less, and the average loss of Hie four per cent. luss. At the same time, it appanrs that during the year 1871 the number of steamers in sported was four per oeut. greater, and the number of licenses issued to pilots and engineers was eighteen per cent, greater than tho average for the three J (receding years. The total loss of human ito on steam vessels from all causes dur ing the year 1871 was 883, while the average loss ef life during the six preced ing years w&s 843. TUB EAST RIVER BBIDOE. —The New York and Brookljn bridge, when com pleted, will ha\o a total length of 5,862 feet, and a width of 80 feet, ths central span will be 1,600 fret, with an elevation of 130 feet above high water, and at the base will be 184 feet. A Msteor In Arkansas. Atntl twelvn miles south ei Ifuata *lll#, Madison Geunty, eecvirred lb* most wuudurtul anil startling phenomenon tbat baa evar been witnessed by thu citi cvna of that neighborhood. Near the farnt af Captain hmitli, sheriff of ths ceunty, aoinc of tho (iti/cu* worn start l*d by a frightful noise lika tka ruabing of u canuuu Iml I through tho air, On looking up, they discovered something that looked lika u aolid column of flu* Easing with trcm*ndmis velocity through o air, with a whirring, bluiing sound, something like that of a shell, but many fold londvr. It nppearod to lw from fight to ton fret in length aud frona four to Ave feet in diameter, bat It waa pas sing with aueh awiflneaa that it may have keen many timea larger than it appear ed. Whan flrat discovered, it seemed to ln Several hundred feet above the earth, aud waa inclining in ite courae toward the grouud, profuaely emitting great aparka of Are. About a minute or Fw# after it pa*cd out of sight, au awful explosion waa heard, that shook the earth tor inilea around, aud waa heard at a dlatauoe of fifteen uuhwi. The truth of (hit statement is Vouched for by evv. eral prominent eitixena of tho ncigblnir hood. fkyettm/ie t ,-trt.) iVera LARAAXAL HLVXKI*.— L". S. Commit* | doner Douglas has matured a substitute | for tha proposed lonwdulation ol internal | revenue district*. The Coanaiasioner proposes to lay it before the Ways end Mean* and Fiiimce Conunittees as soon at Congre** assemble*. Th# I'rtsideut has expressed hliMtdf iu it* favor. The luaiu leatures of the plan are the abolition ot the office* of A*st*aor and Asitaut As sessor, and the transfer ol the duties now perforated by tbrro to the Collectors, sud t* tha luteniul Itevcnua Office itaelf, As there aro 230 Assessors, cost.nr. with thor office*, an average of &S.UOU per anuuui each, the reduction of rximniliture on thia item alone would be 91,1&0,000. There are I,SUO Assistant Atstaaors, who aversge $1,600 pet annum each ; a<*d tliia would effect a further saving of $1,950,. oyo ; or an aggregate on both item* ol up ward of $3,U00,000. Tlii* sro ild not be wholly a net saving, but there is no ques tion but that the nggtegate reduction of tho expense of assessing and collecting the revenue would be over $2,000,000. Casta ftaew Win Boom aso A wufd of explanation tusy not bo out of pise*, ft. catlo * ire acta a* a screw, is stroog aod arm. and at lb* same tunc is elastic and com forut te. It ia atucb preP-rsbie to the old aietbod of peiitfini*. *nd quite a* soft and rlss- U- at sewed mark, but much elroager and lrss lisbie to rip, sad murb iowa expensive. We bsv* tried Uie coble aero* shoe, wlooh hsa proved all tbat i* claimed for it. The lucreaae in this new method of OAoafacturinx boot* and stiowe is very rapid, and promisee te oapersode the wood peg and waxrJ thread The Van tir.t, 6 hwogu. Ii nyvMpst*. tnaikceiioß, Ucpreesion •( •pirite sua ptncral aehility in xliwtr variuus rurins; also, '*• a preventive ac*mwt fever and sipe.aud otherintcnaitlest fwiera,lbs"Ferro tli -epsoraled lititir ofi'siiwsys," made by lb well, wsaard A Co., Nsw York, and sold by all Jruggisu, i* ihq beet tonic, and aa a tauic for paticute reeovertnn (rota lew or other sick neee. It ha* no equal.—'.Cm. i Millions of pairs uf •V-es U|>*d will) met*!. rv s -id iitrt year. For chil.lt t-u's shoes thy are absolutely ui lupcoashlr, unices one can slTont Use watte of buying two ptir*. when only I on# would Ims needed ; sod fesr est) safely sol>- itui to su. h s constant lesk. With m l jK-nple : It is lb little ccottoiaies of the household thst supply its members with e nsf.-rt, sod st the ssme time make the load of lbs f*( tier u! merlrvt*>uua auSera In Uit nstu-al tletn-wu ot levatiaeas. hat It mast be OMKVde.I tba! the dlr brliaa bail BudrretaaJ Ihe in ef prracmoc sad their pervoosi Isssp lbs neat perfect fratare* I-as hslf Ihttr altraethm aaieu (be eomjXritoa Is property cared tot, and If the pretty gtrts of the rural Uslrlria wish , lo ota tmparts to lbs akut a dt-lloate. psari) anetniwt. aapo-dansabls by soy other prejatattoo i ttadsr the sua. Ka mstur bow ths roltclc may has* ; bean rnugtieatd Pyetposare or discolored by the son. ths Italia will render It soft and j l-ahla. and re- , moves every WBatah.—<<>>■. Beat aarllHttret Family Mast let me. —.Was. Ibr#' tsser J.eip, afar.—A porsly VffeUW* CaAar. tit and rente—(lw ttrspspata. OtostipaUon. Debility. Hk-k btodarha. Bill.-vis attacks, and all dsranaetneata ef Liter. Ntumarh and Ih-asla. Ask your Drogfitst lor B. ftesrt / ißtUa-voas.—lCom.l Do not be dccaivcd with Inikallou collars with folded edges, hut oak for ike Elmwood with all the edges fbldtd.—(l om. Prvw Coinj.U ti -ua rcotorvd, and good O tn nlrxiona reuiuod, by using ' The Quern's _ lid lot."—(Corn. Trv Dooley'a Yesst Powder, jou will aoor tlud it not only the boat, but also the oleanest Baking Powder. Put .J full, net waigkt.— fCom. Few Peoole omei,hrrioltr> f *!• et lb- ti*ntttr el Ire* In lbs bland, but sll lMif SltMMh. 1111 l "rMliee ef VeetrtßS up tfc napt'lji. fiwdsbllitj. di".sil death *r **r te telln* ebe* Ibe uuutht) liecnmea too much reduced. The i'erurlMt r*p i* broioa.de of I'on'. soppliea this OUI clement, uJ liw cored msn* chrome du -Mes. CrisUdoro's Hair l>ye stand* uor(!ed sal slam- Its atenta harr been so *m**r**Ur aaknoniadgwt thtl It would ha s soprrsroratln* Vn dsacsnt on lhant nj further—oothlnt ao beat It — OM ItlttS* OP TIIK BLtIOD. roa sjtt-T aire CM tirrtwsi, sr*u> WWAE, rrr. (-*§!.— t hare been troubled for the last thlrti rears rll!i Rail Rheum en lay bands. Thar ban bean eo st time* that I hare been unable to ua (hem for any fmrjeiee ft wbtch they were intended I w*e adriard by a friend of mine, who bad tiaed the K. of the B. to try it. I did ao. Haw ua~l aeren ttolllee, and to all appoareuors my bauds are welt. They look and I eel as Un-ugh aa entirely UOW klu bad broo foniisd. H. L. HPUSVBT. Drnffist, II South St.. Ptba. Write for l iivulare. to I) Itatis 18. Hao k lb nitflhlo, K. iOom. rutm' loMeut Ilalbf ha* Stood tarnty years last 1, warranted to glretMmeiteet, i*Ny to all Rheamstle, Kca. ralglc. Head. Kir and Bark aehea. Or Money Refunded. -Oss. —'*"L 1 1 llumbttK Dlwrrtsd. Qnxnt a. 1 Barton has fsrored u with aa "Anatomy of Mclanrh dr." hut who aball dlwect lbs melancholy fallacies and Bba with whlah knaraa and faaatios an deavor to delude the eiak end feeble AT Ihl* leaeretioa. Charlatans, through the ae|.epor preee. recommend to the elrangthleai figllra of dlsetee oont alslas purge litre which. If taken, ere aura to turn hie debilitated ar*iem almost LOETDE out. and aiak him into the attar laioet depth!ol belpleeeneaeanddeetndascy 1 Fanatics, en the other head, oore she pmUrata patient that aa medicine son taißtag a dlffnaita sttmnlsut our HI U> pass bielipt. If he electa to' he (ulded by the adrlce OF IM poetore and lunatioa, let him make hit Bill tod order hi < tolßa ; but if Ihrra is a spark of common aanae LA his earn poet t oa. let bim resort in hit stlramity to HOE taitar'E Stomach BlUers, the most potent of vegetable Pontes and altarativee— the purest sad most entirely whaleram# af medicated stimulants. Tha wsoderful sure* ef dyspepsia, biUontnew, rheumatism, physical prostration sod malarious freer* which this rare specific bta F Hooted during the last twenty-two years, ere the meet conclusive answer* that can ba given to the ene mies ef mankind wbe effer ve'eeniv estbartios as lonics, end to the mistaken beings wbh waul.t refuse a med.OTU gt stlmalant ta a goer, kraksn-down invalid, whs Is literally dying by inches for the want af Judicious stim ulation. Temperance, pcoparly nndaistood. counte nances ne snob leily is this The State laws enacted te pat dowu the abhorrent vie* EF drnnkenness, provide for tb* SAL* af brandy, whisky, and cthar liqnors as medi cinal ; ami if THEM adnltaratod liquors af trade are accepted VY tainiMranee legislators sa leuesdioa, what ought to be Hit general verdict ef tb* temperance public as ragard* the peerless vegetable tonic based upon * stimulant absolutely pure. Huuoue Lewia Hnmdela, peddler met two Manhattan rille mfflant in * •eolnded a pet near lb* Boulevard, K. 7 They demaudwd hi* tnoney and valuable* whereupon bo turned end lied, but tbe highwayman overtook tiim, and Attempt ed to rob him of e Urge amount of jewel ry anfl money. He iought desperately, and hie criea for help eo frightened hie eeaailanU tbut they took to their beds. Maui wis informed the Manhattan vtll# Julio*. and officer Hterone captured ohn Ore lien and John MeOue, Tbe prisoners were committed, tbe flret named in default of $1,600 and tbe latter in default of SI,OOO. They i*ay tbey were "only joking." Firal elaa* KnUtoad liondt are the heat for investments. Write to Cifxttusa W. HASSUUI, NO. 7 Wall Htfnt, N. Y. * MAUINK DIUHTUI AID Loaa or Lira. —lnformation hsa liern received in len -dou thai the hark Samuel Ltrrabee, which sailed from Savannah on the 9th of January La*t for Itrrmen, and the bark loiucreoat, which left lUltimor* on the 19th of February for lielfast, were lost at so* and every person on board the two voasels polished. Tux BocatmwL I'm reiet**.—Dr J. Walker la achieving an eminent distinc tion aa a beaefactor of bt* species. Home stigmatiso a!) patent medicines with the odiona epithet ol quackery. But Pa. Wsiaati'a CxtJiroitKiA VIWSUAB BITTICIM have the endorsement of the meuioal profession. The editor can eoioeien tionaly and cordially recommend the medicine, tiocause he knows he baa found great benefit from its use. Fur nearly twenty jtwrt he baa auflercd from da rang# incut of Uie stomach. And though the discs* has lieeome chronic, he has already obtained great relief from thi* remedy. A physician left at hia death a large volume, carefully sealed, and sup posed to contain a fund of medical know ledge. On being opened, it waa found to contain onlv this simple novice: " keep your head cool, your feet warm aud your bowel* open." Bui there is a whole volume in tuia maxim. Vrxnaan Birr*** set ax % mild enthartic, leaving the system iu a healthy condition. It. If. McDouaid sn experienced druggist, associateil witli I*r. Walker, is a tusn of thorough integrity and practioal know ieslge of the art of comooumliug medi cine. They have a valuable medicine, and they know bow to bring it to the knowledge of the public by judicious ad vertising. We are bappy to give them oar happy indorsement, and bid tbam tiod speed in relieving the ills to which flesh is heir. —lAckteood OmimiU, Zfcc.2o, I*7o, Tut Sroiui-—The lata storm in the North of Europe waa frightful in its ravages upon the coast of Denmark end I'niasta. The Prussian fortified town of HUaUubd w n* eonmdersbiy damaged by luundstion, md reports eighty vessel* wrecked. The Lslsud of hugen, jo* o|- posite, hail tta fishiug-lxmU doatrojed and its fields flooded. The little I*htnw , s mt Ziugst Darr, and Hiddensee lest all their fiahing-Bmarka, and hud their homca damaged by high water, while ualf tba town of Praoato was prostrated by the wind, and Ihe small 1 aland of Botoe, with all fta inhabitant*, waa com platclj aubmerged. Mpocinl Mnniv>s. A CHALLENGE Is attended te the world to | lens betas, tbs piFil a I,it,! > oa'J Lotfg iwsoif Uses Allen's I,waftj| Balsams. VZSILY IT EATH NO ZOUAL. Gonsumptives. Read! WW4 rna cars thst f.atraaw> Cft. sad Uour hart thai hsslthy ttfut ult uttsly plaated us yotir riiesk* If you *ssld. d, sm Asia# i fur. set yew set sear,. It sill be too Is us Alien s Lung Balsam Is poor t-Bps. It has haaw trtsA by thonaaiiAs ssseb as yets, bbo bass toss eswed . must, is ths.r pw iis'V, esse Isft their asmss l tss that SBysn,# uaraaatt/ ess isst ilsa essSspsseo tad Wlsss Dssl erpsrlmeet sMn ... an# ssi.BJ BSiitsnw— yswßati isstaSsrA >t— but try at was this latslaibs ansds U M surmalM u krsak a# lbs asost true Lissome Ceaak la a Ice ksMsrs if sm of has ls| sUsdisf- U ss esirsstsd te e.tv saurs sutsfaatsaa us all at ot tool end Thrust doß cttltsuo. As sa Liinsimui it has as eowaL raKslicltcd Eildcncc of It* Merita. RKAD TUB FOUiOWIXO: What Ws>ll-httrsvrn tl'UßWl*!* an}' alMtut Allou's loin yknlastttit. Brwrsortsiai. Tra* . Hot* H. Itn. a ih.n any t loach aasdiclas er base • >SM M id. and as have boon la ths dra* buaeaas tßeats ssrsa yssrs . we mean )u-t s bar w* astr L.i ths Kail. 'uivTi TAXxmi Aa. * read tbs Bstdsssss I'Bsa s Dmtrsrt wba was cwrs.l by us# el lbs Balaam. bd saw setts it bwasuy. t. (I CMUra". Dmuuiss si Mm IDS I ty Nmass, er.lo, Sept. ILUQ: "I SIR eat at Alxra s Lt so Kit.- 1a . —ad ass ludl a ytuas as snm as ran uaa . 1 ward rs-Nr. be sat aI aar ♦* er assdx-tae la say etnra Ths Lrao ttsiasw aswse faih ts A* fwA lor tbuaa sfltw ied with S Ooagb." It Is Hnrmstsaa to the msost Dellraie ChlM t It raatalßS no Oplstsss in assy Farm. AW* Dtrectloas aaeeatptey each bat Us. C AITTTOB— CIatt Ist Allen's Lung Balsam. J. X. HAKIMS A IT)., Prop's, CINCIMKATI. OHIO. Far Sale by all Motftcint Dealer*. FOR BALC BY JOBS r. EEIOtY, Ksw York. OXO. C OOODWIH * CO.. Bostoa. lOHltaoX. HOLE WAT A CO.. FktladalpkU 1 is Lraos maa Brwiunso t*o Rmrs*> \;t a pssmsa lea, n***fc. the #eaer; sUvacth wmsad. swd sa iara rstw smarms.** estebi.sbsd tb-rsby Dr. Jaras . I.w iaraal was rfartiv, reta.Ar tar < #! sad >w and ase-te s hsaaßrtal < et as ths Palmoaari and hrea ebtal ttasaaa. TO coviarii rTivm. Tbs advartiasr. harm# base psr*MSs ttr ewrsd ot thai Amad dissues. ■ as*as|t -sa. by simple remedy. Is eat mssto make Imuwa la bis Isllss esJTarere the mssos st ears. To mil who desire It. be eti) asad a m>tw of tbs fwessvipuoa tmsd. .trsssf cUet. aim Ihe *ls<:as far prspario# sad amln# the sasas. wbwk they *t" Bed s stmt l-i-aa iss Oaostntrri m. Avns.tu. Hamfirs, sad all thsost of leas d. Aire lima. .. r -'— Ist l-sna Brest. tl.usmsbarsk. R. Y The Market*. HEW TFOELE ' ijargcsnijs—Frtn* 0in.... I .JS'w* •'* First quality, ISM •}'• a€atk4.......... • .n#is .t*H Ordinary thin Cattla.. .vT a .10 icUeOtif.••••••#♦••••# • •*' H.umCowa HOM-TM DriiM4..*ssMssMsss*Mw 1 .... .**• .#\i Oonu* .'l**l v*X Fvot a—r.itx* Western •" • Stale Extra • J-JJ wr*t- {.£ l\% Ko. I Spring - 1-M " tiw-Weeiam ■? •r. H.IUJSV— 1 * • '-*? Ooas-Wted Western 'S •urs - HI1 Mn. v; V *> • ■ ''• IMLS EE"**". PrnHMJttr '*X *J[* Bcrna-wata £• • •" Ohio, n *> * •*; u Yellow .1* • •!" Western urdtnary JJ • -J* Pennsylvania On* • • Pnwaa-etsu rsrtrr • - I ** • Kkiuimed a • . OHK> 1 • •* aenrato. . J" • • * *■*"? *! j? Fieca 700 a a.M Warnails.'. I Spring t • I j® •* * •!? BRA •" • 'I 5 . F* • *!? I.* .............. I* • .W ALSAITC. vrt4T—White i • } Kia—State '.<2 • '-™ Oans-Stal# 18 • ruiUßtusn. Flora— t M aW.TS WHlU*— Western Bed. 1-TO a L.TS Corn—Vellow 88 • J 8 M FrraouECW—Crude W S r^ B * 8 ' ,7 ®X CwtvsaHaan J" 8 * f"!2 Timothy •.'* i-t* i tLimoat. Corvos—Low Middling ..—. . JJMe J*M •■J® 8l ?2? WHEAT 188 • J " OOBH- - • M • F 8 OTM. - 4 • 17 MrCH practice hee sivao great valua to the advice of the ■ Bd s*|"^yo^uF|i fn MU, * c,s|"l - St Lew, tlolemhte. I.*nestw 0.. Fe. AOKWTS Wsntrd. W emi!"rmert thr sil. MM r es#.l jl *} r J|*,ooo or more s v**r ! Now eoikshjf Mrs. H. B. Hos t, ou! others. Siqtert JPrrwKwms Otes. Away. Money md oe. wainiKt, Hss^VtSf 1 - Lonrest eoesawl. end mort ernKswrful rpysioien of &<• tie. ConuHtlon or psmphlet free. 011 or write. . liS^*m■ i" > S6O arwa m>: XkKMD rt ?* fctlfl I IHWIIi. P rtHAm -.:"*< f(rf ■ •imp. Ao "Vtf How to Advertise. II |Mf wlrtl fc a4.rm a. ltlM> part' j lila *aa4 fcw •* t >Uß'rr I■ ■ ~l>- t. R* M,• art wbJrttaSSfßSßlk, ioßQiivjßzsra NJBW FOR WOKEN TO no. >vX. • art Kafe* Mamy W/*CjN Art*.**. ** * imp. Nv* i. n -*•. .%•• Uit iiir Cheon Farmsl Free Homes t •.- lb, i.M at Ma (TRIOS WACme *AIMMAt lift wee# .tNesi Aiftss iff die IMMM. FSveeMm MMB H issFst I Uulaii laaiM pjaMfP## A**aa la NartaWa, m Ik. Italia t atlap. j aaw few a>ia. Mild CUmftto, Fartila Soil, j r Earta* iawwrawrt hp *V ni.rM la^ta^.jamfai.riit^lii^gMg^aagl FREE llowstradi for Ada*! Set iters. Tka paM t.*ii*a for CiSmtm <.tdtan aauM.4 ta a HI MI.MI oI If* law. fr tii. •<• Panpbipt. an* aa mm. -.Mirt-rt la EartWfc, Oaamaa. b.aPMI art Pu a . -.*) fraaa iai>iii Ait..-. o. F. Allia. I.i.a lata*. V. f. H. at. Cau, lUmmhm. Kaft. R. R. R. RADWAY'S READY XI- 3D 3Ls 3* 3D 3P® Cures the Worst Pains OHS TO TWZXTT XXKOTSS. NOT ONE HOUU , j aria* uaMPa rata tvruni.mman Need any one Suffer with J'ain. JUiw*fs B*a4? Bahafita Cart far rmryFaUk *# tiip nut .as m THE ONLY I\klX KKMXDY tkal Uuflaetiy autpa U. taoat aarnaertupf pataa, al ia*. IsiauiaiatJuaa, art attraa "ifr'a a balk) I at iba Laa- Sbamrb. Hawaii. ar Ukm fkmtom argma*. Oj ma apiiUaattu*. IN ISO* ONE TO TWDTTT JUXCTU. pa atauw how vrtlaM or aacrucutipp Ilia pals lE* UUtCMATIC. Mottaa. laifp. CrtppM. Ear*. ' owi, Pmmsly*. jH'OetrslMMl wttii (Usesss aa*y f auSar, RADWAY'S READY RELIEF f WILL AFFCRO IKtTAN? (AN. . latuapaUaa of IP* KlAftajra. lartanwail.a mf (Pa ITTinf fir, latauiaaaaa aCtaa Wawata. , m nmt. \! f.tliallurilMEWt, * ■ jatarlu.Craap. IMpiAarta. . _ t.urM, Kdami. Ttsof HarAss* umw, • S j CalA CUK Atw INUU. * j Tlm apptbaUxai o( tka READT KtUEPpIkaMH I' appai*. vkaralhapplßOSSMttraKAU wulaSort ' aaaa ami aootfarL Tarenly drop* ia tell ■ Muabtor of wafer wffl Is • *. < i N • iaaai kni MMWI : H-arlfetru. Hwk UndMikt. inn-fin*, Draamfery, I Cote. Wind to tte BuwU*. aad *ll Infernal Falsa. Traratara aJway* ®a"T • batti* of AaJJ. WAVU UUDY KCTJJET wtto item A tow a. CFTTESIKBDRABUXUX RCSKLLVEKT toausnnloafe. Usr u.ii lb. Blood, Sweat. trtna, and tor fluid, and infer, ml Uw ajrnra U> vigor • ■fi.fr. for tl repair. tu wafeaa of tte body witonrw : ou4 BudrmL Acrftfatak. RypSjUi#. Omimt tii.se., OaTusSc Dysp*pds ukusOui&r dJHNccs.lJk'iets is ' tu. tor-at. UoatATasuora, bote, la tte Ohtodt and •Iter part, ml Us. arMaia. t t* uan-M front tte Kara, and Ite worst tor-ma of SKla dmraar*. Kreptloaa, fmrmr per**. baste Hud It irsfl * <*-m, Sa.t Übfe-tn. Br? t;pefe* *c, Ufeafl Woro ta lb. 1 .oalk. Tl>b> -a. Onwin in lit. >. and all waaketttag led inltttol dta karfra. Kip Ist BwaaU. Ltea of tj*rm and aU *# eta ran sr. ran*. of tUa wonder of Modai* Ctesstolry, aad afawda>.* naa will pro** to any pwa mfeug it for aibr mt tow (unat ofdfeeaa* Ife potast pewar to awr. titans. If tb. pattool daily teeming rtdnor-d bp u* wnafea an t deeoakpoaiuoo that ta *>s.uouaßy tarw graaaitsg a Bread, la arrawtiag th<* waafea, and mm- i pair. Usatuo witb na* material made fnw Lnaltby tstood-and tola tte fUKHJJAEitLU* will a.4 da. aMora—a • woiuach. Nanae* Heart. I bum. Dtarat of Food, Pttllneaaar Weight id Ik* Stomach. Soar Eroclntlon*, Wnktttg or riotfarioe at ; th* Pit ol lb* liuiniv h. Swu, mm* of the Hoed, ■ anted and Dfflrolt Br**thli g. i luHrrtrg at lb* , Heart, Choking or ftniJWaung rwoaattoaa tW la * ' Lying Poatnra, Dunne** of VUdnn. Put* or Vrba bo- U Wtbe Sight. Perec and Doll Paid in lb* Head. De | •rtaoerof INuiptratmn. Trltowoem of the Skin and | Etna. Pam Id to* Bide, Cheat Uala. ar.d auddaa fla*hra of Boat. Burning to the IMI A few d oaw of BADWAtW ITI. I .s wUlft** UtearaMm (toenail Iba abor*nameddiaonteio. price 29 cent* per Rox. Sold by Druggists. BEAD FALSE AND TRTP." Beed eoa lettor mop to HAD WAY A CO., No. >1 Warren St.. K. t. | lnlormaUon worth tbouaaada trlß be aaut yon. I /fi()I^ANIOK\ ~o< PAPER TOR s YOUNG FEUFLp THU eOMPASION aim* t* be afarortt# la aratr, |H family—looked tor eagerly b tb* young folk* and read with latere* bp the older. It* imrpoa* ito intereet whit* It unot; to be Jndwioua, ptaeMeal. e#**ible j aad t* hr* ra!U permanent worth, while >t attract* tot the boar. It I* handeowety Illustrated. ul bat for contributor* earn* of tb* nut *ttraetir* writers |n the country. Ameof Usm* ar* : Prof. Jinne* DeMtlle, Loniw C. JtMbaa, I .on ten M. Aieott. Sophie *np." Or*MOi*awMd, £• u Itrtorr* H. Dart*, Rnth CheyterSnld, erSsEF- SsisiEto. It* reading i* adaptod to Ibe old end yormr, I* *wry .trial in It* diameter ! aprlghtly am aotartelnlnc. It fire* tlorlM ef Adwemtnre,Start*# ef Mom* end Lrlt*r*fTnv(k _ B S h *'ll *4,™! "A'itWAl'r" *—SK&SB® e~u- Bjisaißsase .jsasa. UeUgioii* Artiele*. Fnete and Inntdnnta. Subsertptluu Prtee, St.lo. Spaaimea to*,** Man ire*. Addraaa, PERRY MASON & CO., <1 Tempi* Place, Sdataa, Mam, W Paaaaaa <• **• ttMW SM*fW •*•*! lag m Awactma ami 'tata lone *■, pmW Mr Wmmw an art ikuroyad b* anai! pataa* a* atfcrt ifeSa Mawiß. Ite AjtatPp ra^wjma#*; H*t. {.Maauttm rt x% lft #* |M rt tPa al a IwaAnA lrt j-awrti arufMrt. M tba rtbrttwga rt ftPPlin. Aa. cmpMrta A Raaoaat|oa[aiMiamlrtlla oW • Urt g*u aatM -4 it. purta liwa a a4w.rta.mwrt, Par ranaala faawlalala, la fom m M. zziri; SEtesaat taioanc. Dat a arnM rtaaaaf fat aaa* pcrr "pu tuEaaumalaiT Obraala Rfea** mutant art Swi, t.M.. t art Im mtiant Kania, Dtmaaa JC Wart, Katoga art Elartor. tfc- <-•• a*a m mpu. , pb *♦- aau. art ca#lir V tbatrt B'-oij*. tafftN • aoa*ilp prmiMM l bp —■&■■"' <* b. PlrtWil lOt|m Tk,y aara ft b.ail. tagaiit. •• wall mm • VaaalA, Prtaaauat .&.' m t afWl ma ft artUrtiw.* 4 il ftrt'rttti art # f •irtV', C 418# JtsJWWa*- SS • P*S*' " "IS"* 1 ' '• "f ■ "''"Ri 11 "7 wat' t tM Lmr art VMomU ttgatu.art ia Bwaaa Ehaaia, BtMuit, Sprta ItaiM JWtt Wi, Can- *% .sT2b^2ltSAtrtߣ^ mil#:.#"-, ! ■ •, Srfwiife.llaiwn ewsfmessSV imR Km*pirs art rpaaaaaa td rtr S*rt, af aAaaaart mm * ppftftrt' arairtrrtprt* apM 'rtrtat U ON qm la a Mmlftewa'AmlliHrt „ _ m UraUfal TbwwatU jaatrtiai Viaaoaa Bm aaaa rta aaau waaAarrt Jp%prtai thai awrpartrtftrt Cfflßttasessisssae ffrtotwp y Au* wtPeotCT a j||f I"!—He ## 263 RECEIPTS 'S? $135 t,.E MP. OR. WHITTIER, r *** ggßSllflgßgpg M> A DE* OHA.N<-V Irt Aa>KP-Aaart, ■ft wa 0l tap r, frt p* ajk • .art, a. MI WIU. rtft *.,.(■■ C I'ltnr-. --4 art •- p.aa.i pall A. Ort'Ctrt i a or AflAi f& " V • f Imp fjfee SHvesui At t*r fbtMS HAS t* ■ rtSBrtJNB rt- A lOAiSraaatlrt. Krt. Tart. yUSSmiiftff J:- I *!* „ Iron in the Bl&^ The Prrurian Syrup, a Frtrtoe#- ed Solution of tk*> ProtojeMe of Iron, is so combined as to ham Ike character of an aliment, a easiiy ingested and aesimitatctt with the blood as ths simplest food. Jfi incrtmmM f Jw? fffhiwtifif of Nature's Own rtiaJiziny Ayeni, Iron < the blood and cures lAoamwrf Ms," simply by Toning up, Ineigarativg ana Vitalizing the .Stf*fci*. The en riched and vitalized blood per meates every part of the body, repairing damages ami waste. searching out morbid secre tions, ami tearing nothing for disease to feed upon. This is the secret of the won derful success of this remedy in curing Dyspepsia, Liver Com* plaint, Dropsy, Chronic I>iar rhcra, Bulls >* err ous Affcotion v. ChiUa and Fever*, Humors, Lom of Constitutional Vigor. Diseases of the Kidneys and Bladder, Petnale Complaints, and aU diseases originating its o bad state of the blood, or ac companied by itebititu or a lota state of the system. Being free from Aleoholjin any form, its energising effects are wot fed— lowed by corresponding emo tion, but are permanent, infu sing strength, rigor, ami new life into nil parts of the system, and building up an Iron Con stitution. a Thousands ham been changed by the use of this remedy, from •coed t, sickly. suffering crea tures, to strong, healthy, and happy men and women : and tncatids cannot reasonably Itcs- Uate to give U a trial. See that each bottle has PERU VIAN SYRUP blown in the glass. Pamphleu Free. J. P. DINSMORE, Proprietor, Xe ee ey •*-, Xw York. Sokl by Dniffln. saatoriaiigr. THE NEW SCALE 37 Union Square, *.T. UiioaMeily 16s I st Sanare Plana Baft. • Scad for Clmt Jt WTO IHoatratlons. Pricet rauiii Il 350 to 300 Mars. Brerr Piano WAX BANTED tow Piro Team. Mothers! Mothers! I Mothers 11! Don't ma an prwenr* M KB. WISILOWt wtTwifw iTiur fob inauttu TKBTBEEXO. It net onlr rwltaeet tba olnld truis p.iie. bat ir.r ,.r --ttea tb* ttomacb and bow*U, turrmtt acMilp, and airet tene and energy to tb* wbale a*atom. It *itl ateoSn. itantly ralwrc Crtplug In the Bawb and Wind toll* jjStSSars: Tisf DIARSUKA IN CUII.DRE*, nbather ariatag (ma* teathin# or any otharcana*. Depend open it, mother*. It wffl gto* mat loyowraelra* ■nttnl and Ifrailtb to Yew Inthota. Be tain and eafl tor " Mrs. WUiltw'i ri etbtng BywwStoT U'irlf ♦lm (rf M m tbacamKlvwMSpOb " SM by Drwgn Ul. tbc* wg be at Ik* Wa* M