Farm, harden and Horn* hold. Fxnox*.—A bone felon ia a had thing, and there are numerous so-called reme dios for it Donhtleaa an appliestion which is successlul in one caae may, from some unknown cause, fail iu an Other. An exchange says that n sure cure ia dry rock-salt, pounded snd mixed with spirits of turpentine. Put the mixture in a cloth, and wrap arouud the part affeoted, and change when it gets dry. This ia said to kill the it -lea in twenty-four hours. TitottoroHßßXDft.--Joseph Harris savs that no farmer should engage in tile breeding of thoroughbreds unle he i* prepared to bestow more time, thought, aare, aad labor on their management than ou common am mala. If faithfully, honestly, and peraeveriugly carried C'l, there is motfey, pleasure, reputation, and honor iu the business, but when one man suooeeds ten fail, all owim; in good degree to a misapprehension ol the principles here alluded to. Paying high prices for choice animals and then leaving them to the care of oonuuoi hired men will not insure success. •• Wiu FARMING PAT?'"— This topia has been disouaaadby the different ogri cultural jourualsuntil worn tlireadb. 1* There is ouly one answer to it, and that answer is embraced in a single word-- Clt wiU pay if Uie famer know-s ho inest and it a business man. I, K doee uot pay it is because he does ;. know hit business, and is not a busine - Man—that is, he does uot know whattl.i aoil aud the crops he cultivate! require, Bor the business metlnxli and require ments involved in the buying and sei.hu t . which every farmer must do. This > the only sane answer that e*n be usee to the inquiry, CCBXNO Mess B*xr Procure oak cr white ash barre a, perfect y c ean sr . sweet. No cask that has been used U1 storing water, apples or vegetab'es . : any sort will keep beef. Use nothic, but new casks, or such as hare been used for pork or molasses. To 100 L>- of beef use 16 lbs rock salt, pulverise-. , and 1-2 lb. saltpetre; pulverise and nv.x thoroughly with the salt—first a !*\,; of salt, then a layer of beei. Pack' • compact as possible, and continue t. pack a layer of salt aud then a laver ot beef until the cask is near y full. * Die card all bones containing morrow. 1_- \ on a board and a heovv stone cr tv Leave .*,t to make its own brine, and yc -a wall hare teef that wiU keep in any cii ■tate. When the beef is used out :a summer or autumn, mutton can be aon.- ed in the brine and ho first rata. FBBXCB GMAM-CAJEF. —Beat the vo'l F of six eggs; add two cups of sugar at atir but teu minutes; then stir m time cups of sifted dour and four table, spoo'i fals o:f milk or water; add ths'heat.v whites of the eggs, and a little nutm , and, Lastly, twv and a half te*poour.i.> of baking powder. Stir bruk.lv, ara pour out into four pie-pana. B*ka hah an hoar. When you begin to make tie cake, put one pint of milk in an eartht-n vesaal on the back part of the stove to nimmer, and while the oakth are baking make the following cream. (Dun t hur ry, for there is plenty of time.) Tatw; beaten eggs, yoik* and whites together, add a scant teacup of sugar, and stir; then take two scant tuble-spoosial* ot prepare,! starch or inaiz.-na thinned with oola miik, stir into the sugar and sex*, , and add tiua mixture to the milk onTT stove, which may now be set forward Stir it ounstautly until it thicken*, SJ C < then add a half-teacup of butter. Wnu the butter is thoroughly melted, remrovi from the dre and ffsvor with littlo mor than a teaspooafu! of extract of ienica. Split the cakee while warm and t-prt . the cream between. Leave each aa.t on a plate by iteelf, as piimg them uj soon renders them too moist. How to BCXLD A CSZJLT FARM GAT*.— A correspondent of the Ohio J'amu •ays: "The old practice of buiidi . farm gates with heavy foar-by-foni •cantlmg for posts and end pieces and •ak boards riveted together, tenanted, *c,, .causing an expen-e of from £3 to $5 a gate, and an everlasting trouble u keep the gate when hnng from sagging, I long since abandoned. As a snbsti tute and aa forming agate that haa nevei Bagged for ten years, I take five piece* of inch boards each ten feet long, one eight inches wide for. the bottom strip, and each of the others four intfheawic. I then take one piece four inches w; It far one end upright, and one piece eight inchee wide for the end piece* where the hinges ought to be. These strips are four feet long, that being high eaongl foir any gate for ordinary purpuat s Now lay down your end pieces, th : {ilace the eight inch wide ai.d ten fv -' ong strip for tlie bottom, nail it at each end to the upright with wrought nai e: Bow take three of tlie four inch will strips and lay them on parallel with the bottom one, dividing tlie spaces so as tc leave four inches between the lower rive boards, and tux inches each space le tween the upper ones; nail as before. Now turn the gate over, and take the remaining strip, lay it an anglmfrum the bottom, at the hinge end, to the top a' the latch end; cut it so th it it wjll at if and lay close to the long strips; nail . Now bang the gate with strung Ling.w and yon have a gate that is light sid will not sag, and just as perfect protec tion against cattle as one made by tht joiner, and oosting, as named alvwe, from $3 to Any person can put to gather and hang the above named g..le m two huura." The Serf* of Raisin. We are told by Mr. Leona Levi tht in Russia " the people are yet in a low condition," and that " the ms*s of the peasantry recently emancipated las scarcely risen from the position of serf dom. ' The indnstrial classes, he savs, are "ill-paid, ill-fed, and in the deptl of ignorance;"' whilethe " middle class es scarcely exist," and the nobles "do not exercise much wholesome influ enoe." £tt!l Mr. Levi's observations ir Russia lead him to think that she will become both free and educated, an J that "the Russia of the future will b< far different in power, inenbghtenmeut. in commerce and industry from the Russia of the past." That may be; but a study of the statistics which he 1 ai furnished produces the impression that very many years must elapse before the natron can possibly attain a state of de velopment in any way companblo witi the more civilized and enlightened peoples of Europe. Professor Lev: travelled 700 miles, from Warsaw to St Petersburg, and had thns, as he telle us, ample opportunity of seeing a con siderable portion of Russian territory And this is what he partieu'arly noted' "The low aspect of agricu'ture; th< sandy soil; the stunted trees; the rarity of farm-houses, and the total absence o. sheep." Therefoie, though there mm be nine universities, three lyceunis, and 21.0J0 schools eetab isbed in Russis. and although a million students, we are told, attend the public schools, the pro gress, social and materia', of the ooun try, can scarcely avoid being extremely •low. POSITION I* SLEEPlNG.—S'eeping rooms should always be so arranged, L possible, to alow the head of the sleep er to be toward the north. Frequently, in cases of sickness, a person will fine i impossible to obtain rest if the besd is in any other direction, and often i cure ia retarded for a long time. A Vienna physician had a patient who was suffering from acute rheumatism, with painful cramps running from tli< shoulders to the fingers; and while his head was to the south he could do no L ing toward his reliei. Ou turning tin bed however, so that. the Lend wat tjward the north, the patient utterec expressions of pleasure, and in a few hours a great improvement bad taken place, and he was in a few days almost entirely cured. Many other cases are given by scientific persons; and people, in building houses should always have this in view. BVXAKINO. —What bitterness of feel ing, what trouble and anguish, would be saved if everybody would heed tin following maxim : "If yon your lips would save from sii; s, Five filings observe with cars— "Of whom you speak, to whomou speak, And haw, and when, and where!" ~ Rvevcry of a Captive (Vnai the Indian*. Thn following story la from the To. pe\a (Klin.) MWwmomtWßWk Many ottiaana of Toneka will remember a whits* haired olu man that represented Butler county ui the Legislature two winter* gv\ and whose Htt wwa con tested bv n Sir. Baker. This old gen tleman, Vr L. 8. Friend, a large dealer in Texas cattle, lia* for the hud five years been unremittingly ongopvl in an endeiivor to recover his grandchild, who has during all that time been a captive among the Comanche Indiana. Tire grandfather ha* in Una labor of love travelled over fifteen thousand miles and expended over #5.000.. The otliei day lie paaaeil through Wellington with his grandchild ui liiw poaaeaaion. his mission of year* an aooumphahed fact, hit toil repaid a thousand fold. The rirental!tanee of the capture and release are übstantinlly these : Tile boy, Lea Temple Frirtid, was living with his father, John Friend, Llano ftonnty, Texas, in IH6S, and w* at that time eight rears old. The predator* Comancliea made that section their raid ing ground, and Mr. Friend finally had an awful visitation from them, in which the boy was earned off. After many trials, the details of which would form a chapter of almost as pathetic interest Mr. Feggotty'a seuch for Little Emily, Mr. Friend became satisfied that Ins hoy was alive and was adopted into ihe tribe. It has been the policy of the wild Indians of the plains to hold w.*- mau and children captives, to be ua> d is hostages in any serious euiorgeuey. Such wss the relation of this little fel low to the tribe, and his pale skin might seal hit doom to tny savage freak of his captor*. In this fearful uncertainty the fsther and grand-father lived five years, lecturing to themselves, no doubt, tin larling of their hearts subjected to tryrsnny and torture. All the agencies that Could las emploved to reach him ware unceasingly used, and many times they have been upon the very j>aiut of success, when the Indians would bre;.k into small bands, separate their cap tive# and send them off to the wild of the West there to elude capture. In the latter part of the Fall, how ever, it seems that the band that had this bey were attacked by a party of troops under Major M'Kinnev, of the F ited States army, and badiv cut to pieces. Svnie twenty-five of "the war riors were killed, and about led of their women and children captured. This forced thc.3 to come into Fort Sill and irive up their captives, among others. Notwithstanding his loug captivity, lie s a bright, intelligent hx>kiug boy m the face, hit walk and actions being iika those of an Indian, and he talks Co manche like a native brave. He being roung it will require but a short time to bring back to hi* memory the recollec tions of the past, and to divest him f 'he actions and hahits he has acquired by his long captivity. Can Steam Set Tire to a Hansel This question is earnestly discussix!. and there is a wide diversity of opinion as to the important point at issue, Mr. Alfred E. Baker, formerly Fire Marshal, assumes the negative, in a communication to the NEW YORK TIMES, is the course of which he says: At the suggestion of several fire un derwriter* of this city, I have been in duced to submit my experience of steam- UHng apparatus setting tire to build nga. I was the first Fire Marshal in Sew York, originated by mvself in 1354, ior the investigation of fire*. and the _naunu.ee couJUanies paid tlie cost. I x>ntinned in office nearly fifteen years, luring which many fire* occured in ouildings heated br steam heating appa ratus. I devoted considerable time £ad care to those particular fires, know ing the importance not otiiy to the own er* of tlie property, but also to the uu- Jerwriters who insured them, and in no natanoe could I diacover the origin of fire to occur from a pipe heated by steam. I hail often found wood, on which steam-pipes rested, browned, or, .xx other words " baked," giving it an rppearanco of being charred, but, xi fact, it was saly in appearance; the wood had never been on fire nor charred. From all mv examinations of steam heat in pipes, t was unable to trace the rigin of any fire, and in this judgment I have found myself supported from time to time by intelligent practical engineers acd professors conversant with the subject in question, and I do not believe it possible to set fire to p'am wood from the heat of steam-pipes, lin es* you besmear the woixl with phos phorus or other like combustible matter. A M iclacd Joke. A practical joke *bich had some un pleasant consequences was recently played upon Mr. Jaoob Knous, of Hart -tord. Mr. Knous had been for some w -eks stopping in Boston, and wliiVe hi aaelf and a party of friends were pnr :a ling of a Christinas dinner at his ho ed several persons came in who were not acquainted with him, and the ques tion "Do you know Knoua ?" usked of each as be entered, came to be a stand ing joke from ita repetition. Knous >tarted for home, and nis friends, think ng to send the joke along with him, ibout the time he shonld have reached home sent these telegrams : "Do you xnov Knous ?" and "We have found a man who don't know Knous ?" Mr. Knous was snowed in at Worcester, and his wife, concluding fiorn the telegrams that her hosband had met with a nul road accident, and some one was want ed to identify him, at once started for Boston, aoeo'mpanied by a friend of the family, named Mr. Seymour. At Wor cester they were obliged to wait, Mrs, Knous suffering the most agonizing sus pense, and while they waited the Bos ton train passed, on which was Mr- Knoua, alive and happy, nnoonsciotis hat his wife was but a few rods distant. He arrived ia Hartford to find his friends in suspense over his fate, end his wife in Boston to learn from the andlord of his hotel the true character if the painful delusion under which nhe had labored. The family is again united and happier than ever. TKTEBXAX. REVKXTK STATISTICS. —The following, from a comparative statement orepared at the United States Internal Revenue Bureau, shows the increase or iccreaae of collections from different sources for the first four months of the present fiscal yenr. On spirits there is m increase 0f*51,952,764 ; on tobaees an increase of $574,006 ; the collections of the tax on banks and bankers has de ceased 8199,620 ; on adhesive stamps a decrease of 81,503,526; on penalties there is an increase of $29,834 ; and on sources formerly taxed but now exempt, he statement shows a decrease of 83,- 123,083. The decrease of receipts on he above mentioned sources, where a mllmg off in the revenue appears, is solely due to legislation. Tho total de irease is on repealed sources, and nuounts to $5,330,231. The total in crease from other sources, taxable alike n 1872 and 1873, is $2,875, 956. The iggregate of internal revenue receipts ,'or the last quarter of the calendar year if 1872 is $26,330,025,20, a decrease from the reports for the quarter ending De cember 31, 1871, of $3,032,532,57. ALEXIS. —The foreign newspapers are ust now making merry over a story which is going the rounds relating to he Kussiun Grand Duke Alexis, and •vbicli ia doubtless, to say the least, founded mostly on fiction. It appears, iccording to the story, that during the triumphal course of Alexis through this Niuntry he waa the recipient of hundreds A letters from smitten females, oil breathing devotion, and all of which be •eligiousiy preserved, with a lot of arch local baggage, were contained in a large which was put in special charge oi a confidents! valet, at Havana, to convey to St. Petersburg. This valet, seeing a good thing, confiscated the letters, ana, sending the remaining bag gage along, disposed of the correspond ence to a Belgian publisher, who has just announced the novel volume con taining it There ia nothing like hav ing a good advertisement for the sale of i worthless book, a truth which the pub ishex aforsaid appears to fully appreci ate. ____ Seventy-six per cent of the weather predictions for 1873, made by the signal service of the War Department, proved to be correct Fire-Proof Building*. A new idea in reference to these ia mentioned bv a scientific paper. If n house could fu made in such a way that each pillar, block, lintel, and aiU—each separate part of the atnicture could be instantly, on an emergency, couverbnl into a steam boiler, eva|*>mtiiig water at atmospheric preaaure, such a struct ure would withstand any heat that could lie brought against it, iiud preserve moat of its contents NO long as the suppl* of water for evaporation was iiiaiiituiiicd. More than tins, the exact iimouiit of water necessary to preserve it for ugtv.it time under a heat that would keep the water lading could le accurately com puted. The temperature of nopaitof the structure could rise much ala>ve two huudrcd ami twelve degree*, at winch few materials 111 common use, and stored in dwellings snd warelumsi**, would IK* much injured. As a matter of interest mg aompntation, let us estimate the amount of water necessary to protect a building one hundred feet long, thirty feet wide, and seventy feet high, having the ordinary fiat roof. The au|H*rfit*oe i>( Midi a building exposed to tire would be equal to the effective heating surface of a 1,937 horse |H>*er boiler, and one that will evajK'rute 1,937 cubic livt per hour ; so that, admittiug all sides to IK* equally exposed, the amount of water would keep building and content* down to a temperature of 313 degreea if Fu'i reubeit. Practieal'y, however, only tin < lid* and top* of u building in tin* cen tre of a block would need auch pivU e tiou, unless the building next should take tire so that, in most eases, only aU>ut tks cubic feat jvr hour would IK* necessary, supposing the heat on the euda aiut tap to be intense enough to keep all the water Innling. It would IK* clear!* impossible to burn a city ma.le of such building*. A KufllauV Terrible Fair. A dreadful iustiucc <.4 nummary jus tice occurred at Yixalia, t'al., on niaa Eve. A noted ruffian named Jaiuc* MeCrurr, who hud ulrettdj kilhxl some four or five per*.>iis in thut vioiuty, *h >t au mt limit friend named Charlc* Alien in cold blood and without the aliglih u provocation, firing deliberately five limes till he killed him. Vfter a tk s- I* rate tight with the police Met'rorv wt wired and conveyed to jail, but the citizen* \vt re ao incensed that tliev de termined to lynch him. The jail * m successfully broken into, the Sheriff and his deputies overpowered in spite of iJI their efforts to niamtuiu the law, n: d the pnisoner dragged out of the prison by an infuriated crowd. Tbev threw a rope around the villain's neck, pull-d him along to the Court-street bridge, aiul after tirinlv securing the nq>e dung him over the railing of the bridge. He iell a distance of aonie five feet, and, after waiting to sen that life was totally extinct, the crowd dispersed, leaving tlie corpse in its semi-nude state with the ram pouring uj>on it in torrents. Coat.—Frsf. Anstod mentions, say* the Cvrn/till .Voi/ariwe, that a quart r of a million of square miles f the earth's surface are covered with Hand stone and nliale of the otrbomfcruns period, among which coal is buried: and this coal is for the most part ueo.-* -i --ble. Now, there are upward of 3,tk>>,- 000 square yards of surface in a square mile, and assuming an avenge total thickness of 10 vard* for the distinct scams of er.ch eoaJ-flelil, we tind for tlie total number of cubic yards of available coal the enonnon* figure of 7.stW.tH*.- 000,000. As a cnbicvardof coal weigh* 1 ton. wc sav that there are in round numbers 7,000,000,000,000 of tons of coal available for the use of th<- huiu.ui race. If wc took the average unmWr of human being* living at each moment during the next 3,500 years to lx •i.Otfcl,- 000,000, and the annual consumption for all purposes to he at the average rate of 1 ton per human being, the sup ply would last for that enormous period. We may add in confirmation that a valuable coal mjne has licen dinoovnb] about tweutv-five miles from Virginia. Montana, a ninch-uoeded "find" in that part of the country. THE FOOD QntsnoN IN ENGLAND.— During the interval between the har vests of 1872 anil 1373 it is estimated, by competent authority, that England must pay ont $175,006,000 to foreign countries for wheat alone, anil abent <50,000,000 more for com ami other food. The condition of ufiairs iTua given rise to an agitation against the laws which prevent considerable of the land from being cultivated. It ia al leged that several millions of acres of the very best laud in the realm are de voted to oruuiueutal parks for the aris tocracy, and still more millions of acres are reserved for hunting purpose*. In this way the means of production are circumscribed, and the dependency of the population on foreign sources of supply increased. The indications are that an attempt will be made to modify the land and game laws, and Parliament has got to meet the question under the influence of a great pressure. England, unlike the United States, cannot afford to maintain millions of acres of land for ornamental purposes, in view of the un certain tv of its harvest. Sclerous.—The past yenr was fruitful in sniefdes as well as accidents. In 1870 112 perseiis committed felo de se; in 1871 the number had fallen to 108; while in 1872 it had risen to HO. As there was no great financial disarrangement we must attribute the increase to the severityof the weather, which has been so destructive of life and property and consequently a producer of despair in many hearts. The deaths from acci dental causes have hern steadily grow ing for the past three years. In 1870 they numbered 781; iu 1871, 851; while in 1872 they had grown to 944, exclusive in each case of deaths by drowning, which follow the same ratio, that is lf>B, 179, and 2Of! in these years respectively. Tnn BRIGHT SIDE— Look on the bright side. It is the right side. The times rqsy be hard, but it will make them no easier to wear a gloomy and sad coun tenance. It is the sunshine, nnd not the ohmd, that makes the flower. The sky is Aue ten times where it is black once. You have troubles, so have others. None are free from them. Trouble gives sinew and tone to life— fortitude and courage to man. That would be a dull sea, and the Hailor would never get skill, where there was nothing to disturb the surface of the ocean. What though things look a little dark, the lane will turn, nnd night will end in a broad day. There is more virtue in one sunbeam than ift u whole hemisphere of clouds and gloom. CATTLE TRADE-TIIO cattl* trad.- in New York for the past year has been heavy. The prices of ail classes of live stock have ruled more uniform than for many years, Beeves never going below 10 1-4 cents on the average, while the highest average at any time throughout the year was 12 1-2 cents, an was the case toward the close of June. Sellers of live stock were, on the whole pretty prosperous in their" undertakings, and the immense amount invested in this trade has paid a fair profit. Taken at 11 cents per pound for the net weight of meat, and rated at 7 ewt. each, the amount of the cattle sold in New York will make the enormous sum of upward of 833,000,000, or, in correct figures, $33,032,070. But little intelligence IIHH been re ceived from the Cottonwood, Utah, ava lanche. It is asserted that twelve men are missing. The slide came from the mountain, u distance of a mile, with frightful speed and force. The storm prevented any warning of its approach being given until it was upon the lines of teams passing at the point where it crossed the rond. Men, mules, wagons, and sacks of ore were washed awny like wisps. The body of snow where the force of shovelers are at work is very large, aud exoavation is very slow. Alex. H. Johnson, the engineer to whose want of sobriety the reeent terri bfe disaster ou the Western Railroad of Georgia is said to be due, lias been arrested and imprisoned in Macon, and will be tried for murder. Till: W It 1.4 R 01" TIIK HOLDE* IIIMi. Frightful fiuflaring* of tha Craw. With a crew of twenty-one officers mid men the ship tlolden Hind, com niaiuled bv Captain ltobhius, left New York oti the 12th of February, 1*72, its destination I wing Hun Francisco. in the rough weather of the ensuing miireli it encountered for nearly a month u series of heavy gales from the westward, but battered na it was bv the sea, tjood bravely through tin- whole, until at hud, off the western coast of IVagonia, at the Pacific (-iitranee to the Straits of Magellan, on the Mth of June, the rud d-r waa iorti from its fastenings and earned away. Hurriedly a temporary steeruig apparatio waa fitted up of spare spars, and while tnx-derato weather eiu tinned answered passably the purjsise, but Jum- 20th another sweeping gale earned ofl' at its first assault the inake slutl and left the ship and couiputiv drifting miguided in a lu-avy sea, with the rocky shore of I'atagouia close by. In two (lays more that shore came in sight they struck it; the poor ship, ita last voyage done, Wun januneU between two rvH-ks fore and aft. There was lit tle time for preparation. Under the iHiiuuling of the water the wreck could hold together only a few hours at most; and the men hurriedly too hurriedly, as it proved, and yet it waa only a choice of deaths put on double clothe*, got ready a small stock of provisions how small it vv:ts the terrible details further on wdl tell lowered their boat* and la-gan their hand to hand struggle with the sea. Captain Bobbin* had one bout, Mr. Saville another, and Mr. Webb, second mute, the third -seven men in each Mr. Webb, confident in his knowledge of the coast, parted fnun the other lsmts. and the latter lav till morning under the lee of the land. When morn ing came nothing of the (loldeti Until was left but the floating morsels of h.-r wreck. A search lasting two day* wis made for the boat which had left the party, but nothing w.is found, and it waa concluded that she had awampeil and drowned the whole crew. Seven gone. Thus disastrously did the js-nl oua adventures of the little ill-fated party begin. Their comrades' fate being perforce agreed upon, the survivors turned tin ir attest ion to their own condition. They uumliercd fourteen. F<>r provisions they had a small IKX Hiid a bag of hard bread, the latter soaked in salt water, twenty cans of beef, ami a little tea and coffee. The allowance determined oil ut first was one cracker a day bleach man and a can of beef to the fourteen; but as the store decreased, the steward grew less liberal, and at last half a cracker and lieef once a week was full allowance. In the hurry of embarking the nautical instruments were all left liehiud except the compass, whi h li I been hastily lowi red into the Captain's lsat. Only a few days j>ass< d ami the Captain's iamt was swamjied ntul the compa** went to the bottom. Without giinb* but of the sun and stars the sin gle loat with its double crew attempted to make Sandy Po.nt, the coaling sta tion of the Pacific Mail steamers, a Chilean convict settlement about tw .- thirds through the Htraits. June is midwinter in that region, the mercury vwus constantly below- xero, the hi.ls along the coast were <•• ivered with i 'e and anow. The overcrowded ojien l*.t was not able to ride out heavy we tlur, so it hugged the land, and when the celd tempest*of the sc. n roughen* d the sea, landed and went into camp. If was terribly hold in the bitter winds of the const, but the ui it < gl ' th < !d well. They put up a tent of the law'."* sail ami a spare one, making the frame work of oars. They built a fire in the centre, of the scrub trees ulong the coast, and the fourteen men sat crowded annuid it the night through. All could not lie dawn, the tent w:is too small. They could not leave the fire for h .ir of freeing to death, so they sat awake or sleeping what little they could, with the luqielossiiess of their cotuliuou oxer be fore their, mitula tco active in those half-froxcn Ixnlie*. Some variety in their food wa* offered by a supply of ahellti*h like muscles, hut the-osioi enrsl at la*t the whole party,and their ch -ice of diet went back iigau to tlie crusty or soft sides of the hard craek> r*. When the weather ■ fair the cr--w pulled all night Us well tut all day, hold ing out tui mint lily till the twentieth day; but the lota of sleep, tho nixuill ciencv of ftxxl, and the bitter cold, IH>- gau to tell upon them. Their limb* became swollen and diacolorud, their extremities frostbitten. and the general debility of the crew made camping for several days ut a time l eoessary, even when the time with their fiu-t-Mukiug ntoft'ft was (> fatally precmus. At last the allowance eauie t< a quarter of a cracker a day, and with heroic self-di-- nial the men sometimes would eat noth ing that the general stook might h"ld out to the last moment. In all this distress there was no sign of mutiny, no eoiiiplniinug. and no greed, although hunger hud made them ougcr-eyed and disease was creeping slowly into all their famished bodies. Through nearly all of that terrible July they pulled more and more slowly in what they believed was the direction of Sandy Point. Oucc they met an In dian and two aanaws in a ranoe who gave them a duek in exchange for a little tobacco, They hud nothing more and no ether human Icings were met. Tlie crew shot one duck, but the sea wet their powder. Tiny found one dead duek among the roeks and shared it eagerly. Prolonged tempests in the last days of July drove them into their hist encampment. It wnn a bleak, roekv shore of little promise, but they could go no further. Their provisions were gone. Tin re were even no more shell tisli on that steep coast. They found some lcrrio*, some roots, a little celery, and every man ate what he could fttnl, knowing and earing little whether or not it was poison and might not end his wretched life. They saw seals, but were too weak to catch them; water alone they had in plenty. The men t>egnn to be terrible sick; their legs swelled past wearing clothes and they wrapped themselves loosely as best thvv could. Bono were too weak to walk, and at length a seaman named White became delirious mid died. The frozen ground they could not in weakness open for u grave, so they carried the laxly away and laid it hidden in the bushes. Another called Pan was taken with the delirium of hunger and in three hours was dead. Then the Car}(enter died, an Englishman; in it, a German seaman, "Charley," and an other sailor called "Frank." All of these deaths occnred within ten days, and all the corpses were laid side bv side in the bushes. Tlie living wrapped themselves a little more closely in the clothing of the dead, but no one had a mouthful of food. It was a desperate ease, and life is very sweet. Tho stew ard went into the little cemetery, and when he returned he brought slices of ineat. They were roasted over the Are, and the survivors nto them, asking no questions. Everyone knew what it was, hut what could they do? Nearly all of the last laxly was gone—and what ques tioning then arose among the crew who can tell ?—when there hove in sight a schooner, the Eagle, of Port. Stanley, in the Falkland Islands, as it afterwards proved. One of the men dragged him self to ft prominent cliff and waved the American llag with the union down. The schooner, n seal fisher, saw the token of distress and rescued tho worn out, frozen, starved baud, who, with the memory of their awful history upon them, found that a pull of sixty miles further would have carried them to Sandy Point. The Chilean Governor at that port provided them with every necessary. Eight in number were they wha hiul survived at such a cost the forty-eight days of the direst want con ceivable, out of the full crow of twenty one. The good man sprondeth ashes on the icy sidewalk in frontof his mansion, leßt perchance some fellow man should slip thereon, and falling, injure himself. The wise njHii scattereth ashes likewise on the fey sidewalk in front of his place of business, lest pcrehanee a customer should fall and, instead of coming in to purchase [goods, should go away curs ing thajdealer. \II|HI|COII In MM brair. More than 'JfI.OOO |>er*cna, Including Trince Christian, the Prince of Wale*, and Prince Teek, viewed ilic IHMI.V of the late Kmperor Napoleon while lying in atate. (Jucwu Victoria did not attend tin- funeral in peraon, but waa repre sented on the mournful occasion by llight Hon. the Viscount Sydney, land Chamberlain of Her Majesty's house hold. Although ten ti'elok was the hour designated for the prooewsioU to move fnnu the Ist-' residence of tin- Kuipen r, it waa thirty minutes after that time when the lu-nrae which was t< convey the remains to the cltu|M>| drew lip a front of the grand entrance of the ma i- Mun. A deputation of Part* workmen, who were to walk at the head of the procession, arrived at the same tiiue. They wore immortelles in their costs ami carried wreaths of yellow flowers in their hand*. On Isith nidi* of the hearse were the Ini|M*iial arms, sur mounted by the letter N. A gr> it crowd, which steadily increased, sur rounded the hearse. The fuui-rul prooesaion started for the (-hs)iel at eleven e'clook, and moved ill the following order: A muii hearing the tri-eolor, lairm- on all ash stick cut at the last moment he fore the cortege moved ; the deputation of workiug-uieii from Paris, with un covered heads, hearing their wreatln; the chaplain of the family, bearing aloft a golden crucifix ; the heart--, drawn by eight horses, driven by a pos tillion, and the mourner*, who numbered 800 m all, and included the I'riiiee Im perial, who went uncovered, Prince Je rome Napoleon, Frinee Joachim, i'rin Achille, Si Boulier, ami many distin guished Imperialist*, English noble men, l'aris priests, and others. The l'riin-e Imperial was very pale, and exhibited traces of the *uguisb he has undergone. The Empress Eugenic was too til to attend the funeral. The coffin was covered with itumor telle* and violet*. There was 110 funeral sermon at the chapel. The Bishop of Honthwui'k sang a requiem mass over the remain*. He was assisted by Father (iwddard, the spiritual adviser of the late ex-Em iteror, and all the prints who were ehajx l iins at the Tuilertea during the reign of Xajsileon. M l.utx, the organist of St. lieorge'a Cathedral, London, w ~ pix sent at the eha|H-l with hia choir and conducted the musical |strtiou of tin* service*. The relliallis were deposib d ill the saeristv, which lius been formed into a mortuary elnipcl until the removal of the Issly to France for final inter ment- The procession was very long, and the lienrae was at the chapel liefore the end of the cortege had left the family mansion. All the carriage* and iM-destriun* were drawn up three abreast across the roadway, ami in that order proceeded to the chapeL The l'rinee Imperial and Frinee Napoleon n'tiirm-d from the ehajK-1 ill a carriage. Tli'-v were cheered bv the crowds tbrougii which they passed. Idling Very tlu-aplx. Younp uieit often write to na stating the amount of their aalarv, or profits, and ticking if it in *afe ami prudent for them to pet married on auch an income. We haxe endeavored, in reply to ndi iliqufrica, t.i tuoculate the doctrine that the |Hiint of find imj*irtaiice iu repanl to income wa* to keep the ex}**n*c* in the ripht relation to it ; that with g<*l uuuiapeuieut, people emit live pretty well on niiHlerHte incomes; and that thorn who mnke more than tlicv attend are, in a certain sense, alwnt* mde peudent. In the following roiumunication, which haa In an addressed to 11*, we have it fair statement of the experiment of marrying and nipimrtinp u family on u comparatively small income: *" Til tfu fulit'ir €•/ thr t.ril'ff P." 1 fre quently not.<*' in your paj>cr lrtt--n> of itupitry from young meti wantmp to know whether tliev an- in a jHiailiou to support a wife. '1 hey commence petier ally by stating the amount of .-alary they receive, which i often alxtve a thousand dollar*, and inquire- of yon whether Ton think they, with tlii* small -alary, a* they call it, can maintain a w-f N#u to all *uch inquiring younp men 1 would give my experience, l'p to the time 1 wa* twenty-four year* old 1 wa* nearly the only *npi*irt of a widowed mother. At that tiiu* she died. 1 f'-lt dimwnleatcl aud lonely after her death, and I came to lie- cou rluaiou to pet married, and did HO iu September, 1*V. At that time I wa* receiving SSOO salary for my servient in a country "ton-. The n-vt year my sal ary wa* rained to gtiflQ, mid at no tune ha* my income averaged more than $70(1.90 : ami yet with tin* MIUIH amount I have managed to furuinh n* room house comfortably but plainly, and have u balance of Some mipht *ay that I liiive lived moaulv ; but I have not. I have never deprived my --•■lf or family, having one clnld, of any •f the necowtariea of life, and I will guarantee any of mv neightior* will say that myself *ml family have always dressed neatly and comfortably. 1 com menccil this system of wiving aism af ter I wa* married by taking tlve share* in a building ami loan a*oc.ition, and a- my aalarv wa* merea*cd 1 iner-a*c.l my tuck in the iiKsoeiation. And if any young man will do the *ame thing, he will stain find himself in possession of a few hundred dollars, ami will hard ly kaow where it came from, besides having cultivated a habit of saving which will luitnmlly grow upon a man when once commenced. There arc plenty of young men who think,'Oh, well, whut'- Hie use? I can't save any thing out of my small tnflnrv ;* when, if they would carefully consider for * few minutes, they w.>sid tlml that they spend dollars foolishly." This leMiw show* that all depend* upon prudent uiui economical mansge nient. If a young couple start right in life, they wain acquire the esteem and contldeuce of those around them. And the nutiinil tendency of this is to in creasc a man's hits in*** or income. So far as means of siip|x>rt are con cerned, married people in the Tinted .States can generally obtain sufficient if they try to; and in fliis rcupoot we have gr .t"y the advantage over the countries of the old world.—l a fl r. lot** of Fifty IJ vex. Five vessels went down near Amble, on the Northumberland coast, our Eng lish paper snvs, and all the crews have perished. The weather was thick, nun fell continually, and the sen ran mount ains high. T(ie first ship showing sig nals of distress was found to IH> the bark Father Mnthew, Watson master. She drove on shore, but before reselling the land a terrible sea engulphed her, and she was seen no more. Half nn hour afterward another brig got among some rocks, nt Hansley, where the life boat Was launched, but assn as she got into the njten sea she wns driven |on shore like a piece of straw. Rockets wore fired, and the life-line was on the point of being worked, when a heavy sea broke over the voascl und she wns seen no more. She was the Russell, bound for Littlrhamptoß. The third brig, the Ocean, from Wonderland, cap sized near the shore. The other two vessels were the Matchless of Whitby, and the schooner Rracer. Both vessels foundered in sight of land. At the time of telegraphing no bodies had washes ashore. SlHtlatit'*. The nie of yellow spectacles iiwteml of green or blue is proposed by recent writer, on the hypothesis that yellow in the ray having the least actinic or pho tograpliio power. This error boa orig ieuted in n want of knowledge of the fnet that, of all the raya, yellow hoa the moat jajwerfnl notion on carlton com itonnda. Since the eye in ita eonstruc tion involves the uaeof such compounds, it followa that the yollow ray of all oth ers w ill have the strongest notion on the eye. This agrees with our actual expe rience; for the yellow is by far the most powerful light to the eye, and the uni versal preference for green and blue glasses is owing to the fact that these, by shutting out the rays that act with the greatest energy on the carbon com pounds of the retina, produce a milder mid less irritating action ou the organ when by disease or other cause its sensi tiveness is increased. Family Attachment. One of the aaddeat things about a large family who have lived happily to gether under the old roof-tree, ia the aciittcriug to diatant homes, which takes place as they grow up, one ly one, to years of maturity. it ia often the caae that in the cares and bustle attending on business, letters grow more and more •infrequent, and finally brothers and sister* will entirely lose sight of each other. These kindred tie* are too ■acred to be thus lightly severed. It takes such a little while to write a let ter, and the expense is *• trifling, there can hardly lie an excuse for the neglect. A hoing family circle, thus widely severed, adopted a curious but lienuti ful plan for keeping informed of each other's welfare. The two mot remote on the first of each mouth write jmrt of a page on n large sheet containing the principal news of tin- month, and this is scaled and sent to the family next in order. Home member of the household adds a contribution end sends it to the uext, and so on till the circle is com plete. Thus the family circle goea round twelve times a year, and cat-hour ia kept informed ml the jova, sorrows, plans and pursuits of ihe other*. Family gathering* are frequent in such hntiseliohis and the old home attach ments never grow cold. Home in par ticular, away from home, arc apt to grow neglectful of letter-writing. Oh, if they knew how many heart aches such neglect often causes to the loving breast that pillowed their tired head* in ehtld lUKKl, (hey would not IM- so thoughtless If tlrey knew the jov that a letter brings, ami could see how its lightest words ?re dwelt over and taikod by the fireside, they would not be so spar ing of the messages. Surprised llim. When Jano s il Munlock, the actor, resided a few- year* ago on Ills farm in ! Ohio, and tilled the soil like any other ' old farmer, he one day rode to the vil : luge, carrying some calf skin* to sell. I>riviug to the tannery, he met the pro prietor, of whom he inquired, " What an- you joying for gd calfskin* to day ?" i'lie tanner, to whom Murdoch was a stranger, took a chew of toltaeco, put lioth hands in lus j*H-kcth, and sard, ' with a lnxy air, that he didn't know— he wasn't sure that lie wanted any oalf skins. M unlock'a anger wu* aroused id the fellow's mixture of impudence and indifference, and straightening him self into an nctiug attitude, he deliver ed a splendid piece of vitu|M-ration fnun one of rtluiksja-an-'s plays. Tin- tanner soon changed hi* iudifference into hard drink, but probably for tlx 4 * first time in the history of the liquof traffic, it furnishes a homestead to the family of one of it* victims. This uni que J (1 stice has I M-CII obtained by a Mr*. Priestly, of l>es Moines, low*, who has recovered, tinder the new law of that State, a hontertead wortli fl.SOll from the dealer who sold her hnsltand the rum that caused his death. \ FWSD FACT IV PHARMACY. AVn aidering the uiultituile of diseases, it is imaging that we live. In view of the •tuintl. • remedies for them, it i* won derful th.it *!• die. I'ulortnniteJj, howevt r, all th<> diseases arc rratitir; whcrei* mr. -r,/ tlietr rtheary by * (<•* of many rear*, suit have re ceived testinvaiial* from eminent men who hwe used them 'Vim. Iwis.ntAST iw Htawna.' lnflammwion " ■* spt'lied. Presh Wounda, Caulk*, ttrn-i •. are'trwst down *i*t Smleal w-itlmnt m flsminatasi. S.-i*leti<- San.M reek*. 8* eilingw. •ud eum! br m few a)it4ien*ti*. A thorough use will alnn ewre Sweenev. Poll EvQ, tuiil Latnenee*. from whatever nam. Sec a lveriisctnent in tlii* paper. Cimi. Have the leader* of thi* paper ever nsed any •f i'lMisVi Pratuntnt Pn.i* r If not. whv not V tbor are the boot family plivme. Wositle* lietng the greatest auti-bilioua remedy there | in thi* ootmtrv [Com. A *tyln Ht>r AOUNTLTT RAI. I'ddEU. Tlie Week ly N". Y.Hnn. Kight page*. Jl l year. Send tronr Dollar, ■JVK Itler I'IiUTtCAL PArKR. ILIA Weakly N. York Bun. liido]x>inlont and faithful. Apd nat Public Ftmnler. ft page*, yl a year. Soud wr Dollar TBK It IT Nr war Aram Tito Weekly N. Y. Hint. ftpsgoa 91 a roar Send yrntr Dollar. llt Au. Tltr Nrwn. Tito Weekly New York Sun. ft pages. ?!syear. Sendyotir Dollar. THK IIRSI STony PAPKB Tlie Weekly N Y. Hun. ft pages. ?1 a year, ftoti'l your Ibillar Tur HBST FIFMOY ItrroßTn in the Weekly N, Y. Ssn. ft page*. ?1 s year. Soixl your lb.liar. Tn* IIKST MABKBT RAROBTS in lite Weekly N. Y. Sun. ft pager. ?1 a vear. Send votM- Dollar. Tar. liner CITTIA. itrroam in the Weekly N. Y. Sun. ft pages. ?1 a year. Send vnur l>ollar. Tur ltrsT I'AI I Rin F.veivllespect. -Tlie Weekly N. Y. Hun. 8 jmges. ?1 a year. Send your Ibtllar. A.Wress, THK SDN. New York Dity. t.iko f.ighlntag Are Tlie Miraculous Cure# effected with Ft *(Mi s Ixsrixr Rrurr. Arties, pniitx. H|italtts. IWwel Complaints, etc . . xnot niirr if tiiis great medicine is used. Relief warranted, or money returned. If your horse is lams, sore or galled, you should use Joassos's About** l.t*t*K*T; wasli tho part with caslilo soap ami warm water, rah dry. with cleaa cloth, then apply tho l.ini mont. rub in well with the hand. (i'om. A Talk About Tonics. The object < fa tonic It to Inrrrtt* the rlarttctty ttid ttrrnglh of lbs mutultr ftbrs, and to Invig orate the grnrral tyttcm At a meant of acoom pllthlna thctc nude, tt It expected lo Improve Ibe Appetite end the digestive power of the atomarh. Thete are certainly important ronaldetaliont; bat bM-ure ilytprptla, bilious elfecUolit, chronic dt bilily. Intermittent fever, and other complaints In t olving dcixngcmentt of Ihelivtr, the bowels, the nerves, and tfca aecrntlva organs generally, tomb tl.oig more than a mers tonic It required. Il< ttet ler'a dlomxrh tiII ISFX may be tafrly pronounced the beat and inott wholesome Invigorant extant, but Ibe other special medical properties which belong to this remathablr vegetable restorative have as mm-h lo do with the wonderful results It produces ■a Its tonic virtues. For rssmple, It hta certain alterative qualities which literally change the haldtur constitution, re-estsbllshlng the healthy function* of the body without causing any undue evacuation by persplralloA vomiting or purging, lit entire effect Is to pot the whole machinery o life In perfect order, to purify all the fluids, In cluding the blood and the bile, and not only to ope rate as an snttdots tn disease, where it sxltts, bnt so to strengthen, regulate and otherwise Improve the condition of the system as to render tt proof against vlriittt'idea of temperature, change of w xter. Infected air, and other predlerv-slnß cause } of liver "I bowel jiisturhHiices sod rpldeiuir die' older*. Heme It it H medicine tor all season* and climes—useful alike t® the traveler and the resi dent in *u unhealthy legion, and hn Invaluable safeguardagnlnst the physics) disturbances which m t rucTrntn cold, damp, Isclement weather, as well its cgulust Iho mental depression which la apt to overwhelm the weak and nervons-at this somewhat gloomy period of the year. I lomlrtcd by a Dwi Wad. The Austin (Tex.) Matof tau tolla this: Ben Hhelby. Arthur Kbelby, Ball Wood*, and William Hmitk were omi vieted of murder in tli# firal degree, in BurtietOouuty, tliia week, ami acutrneod by Judge Turner to 1m hanged on Fri day, the fifteenth of January next. 'Hie prosecution WHS conducted by JiMlge* Terrill and Walker, mplujfil by the friend* of the murdered luau. The can* waa one of the moat intorwating in f lie aiiuala of eriiuiual trial*, aiul the evi dence, though conoluaive, waa entirely circumstantial. lien MrKecver, Ib murdered man, wmrahot from hi* horse at night, near the IMidtOM of the Hhel hya, hi* throat cut, and hia body curried on horseback three mile* and thrown into a cave in the prairie IfiO feet A large rock waa placed on the tdoody a pot where hia throat waa cut, ami ap parently every precaution waa takeu to avoid detection. The appearance of tint rock iudicated to the Iteeu eye of tlw frontieraman that it had le*ii recently placed there. Close by it waa a pajwr wadding that ka, and an other jiece of ]Hi|ier that hml evidently I wen fired from a ahot gun •** found tinder ahelbv'a doomtop ; in (he hwu*e waa found tin* Chlmnt t/ ( bmn carefully placing the pnper found where the blood hail I wen covered by tin- mck, and coin |iaring it with the wadding found in Shelby's gun, the following enigma could be reail from one paper to wnoiin r: With jHeow of l-atwr -f a •'Late. Hit round (he Bra both large uat small; A Wt make, tlnue ait Wight, And uo you aae what <**<** ail. Well Hone. An exchange paper describes *ll amusing encounter in a railroad ear, in which a lady came off more than con queror ; "Sometime* I feel like thnering those tobacco-chevpug fellows out ml the win dow," said a conductor of a " through " sleeping-car, not long ago. "Wego b a great exja-nae getting up the<> ears, and just U isead off these fell SUB we pat a big spittoon in every sect ion. but it don't do DM particle of good. Win-n --ever they can choose ls-twe-n a new velvet carpet and a spittoon, they're sure bt make lor the carpet! I waa tickled enough the other day. One of these rhewc-r* waa at it, and getting tired of hia own side of the ear, he to<4 Id llr w1 yon. have been , cttrad mii'T. lx Uialr grati tude have lan lhatr tixrnee In nx. that gutTerlng bx mxxttc cxn raxd thatr evtdencex xxd betteve Don't (•apartment with iiaw xnd xntrtad mixture#-you ran |xol nfford It bat try xt onca tbta Invsluehl* nrttrla It In warranted to braxh np tha moat trou blesome Coxrb In x fax hoar* If not o# too lons standing It la wxrrxntad to give anttra exllefec tion t mil oaaaa of t.nng and Tbroat difflrulttr*. Ax an Ktpaatorxnt, tt hxa no equal. rusoi.iciTKn FVIARXCK or ITS MKRITS. acxn rn> rot.tcwiao: WHAT WKI.L-KXOWH nsroorsTs SAT ABOFT AM.KVS i rso BALSAM. Sraixorrxt.s. TL*I., Sapt. It, WT. Oantlaman - shf p na alt doaan Al.l.R*'* Lrwo RAL •nx at onra Wa have not a bottla I aft tn car atora. II haa mora rapntxttnn than any Cough madtctn* •( hara prry X"ld, and wa have barn tn tha drug bnatnaaa twenly-eeven yaara, wa maan Jnat what wa aay abont tha Balaam. Vara trnly yours. HTRn A TARTAR. Again raad tha Ratdanra from a "trngirlst who wan enrad ba nab of tha Balaam, and now arlla tt largely. L. C Cnttrall. Pmgglst al Martr.a City. Mlehigkn. wrttaa. Sapt 11. Iff •• I am no . of Ai.t.ta's Lrso 11 nl." nn ; xand ma half a groat at toon tt ymi can, I would rxthar ba ont of any othar medicine tn my atora. Tha Lrso BALAAM never fatlt to do good tor thota afflicted with a cough," It It harm last to tha moat dallrat* cMld. It contains no oplnm tn any form, git It told by Medicine daalart generißy CAWTION. S# not deceived. Call for ALLEN'S LCNO BAL SAM, takitottku. Direction! accompany each bottle.' J. N. RABBIS A CO., Cincinnati, 0.. rioraimu. riHRT DAVIS A SON, General taenia. PrWTtdence. R. I. Bold by lf Medicine Dealer!. 4 roa s ALA HT JOHN Y lItNRT, New York. OKO. C. GOODWIN A CO., Boat ja. JOHNSON, HOLAWAT A CO Phtladelpbta TO LET a #i>u> HATE ITA OWE WAT LI to a •flat la Ins the foundation of Conaamptlon. To cure Ihc molt itnbborn Cough or Cold yon hare only to tee judtcionfly tr. Jayatf'a Expectorant. ' | " " ChMTAIMmo's Kli'UMtll flAIh PTE id UtS . u><-ei sum MM) ivxnplots pmpsrsUoo at Um Ua4 ' In tha world j Its effmda am msntosl. fis nhkrsc . tor lianatafls. Ita Unln n*tral. its <]tts)iUoa an , I during. | "Thfl Quflnn'a Toilet, fur tha oomplatioo. in |iro|>srad from dm (H-eecrlpUonof a tret)-known jihyalrtfln.—Ossw. Hr. I'lorra's (ioldou klndkwl Umnwjr will cure a CotigL to utie lislf the Umo narimsary to 1 cure it wtili any nlitar inodicloe M( U dors U. \ ..( Ly drj/ing it up, but Vy rrtmtirtng the ryrtup- - eu'etuifi'/ Ih irrttaltnu owl hmttnq ihr aJfeeVc.l iHirts, For all caeoa of lmryng)Hp.'H r the Mitt, the Faem, and the Fire; A Sirh Frsirts Paataraga and natural Meadow, j watered by elrae Lakes aad ranfltag stream# in a ; healthful ( haute, aheee Fever and Ague ia as.- i known. (IBAIX can be shipped bene* by labs te mark el a* kekply aa from Seal era l-a* or Central llMneta Cars aa>w run ihr.-agb theae tends bam Lmfce Pa per tor to Dakota Price of land rloae to track, 0434 I Ml 4P as pv> acts . farther away grja lo a* <£ flarvaa . Taaav* i (Mir Warv>aiee Deeds *dv now seUicg at nar. ,nerved 1.., lend at $1 te H Other amenptod lands praaent sack I a" eat le# (" ••eder* (WlLlrlkk* wider tbe hew Law (Marsh. MTB got Mo acres I KKg near tbe latiroad, by one ana two yaara' reaidence. TaASaPtIBTATIO* AT REDCCBD MA TBS far | *i*k*4 bum all pi tact pal petal* Bast to pairhaaora j id Bailc-ad Lands, aud ta Settlers ue Oeverameet ' Menareteada Purrhasers, their wives and ebtidran j carried free ever the Northern Pactflr Road Bow { is the tame Per hettlrra aad Cehwtes ta got Ratlioad , Lands and Oceerament lii mralrads rinse to Ihr j track bend tor Pamphlet containing fall InfErrmattoa map aad eepy c* Hew Heaaaatead Law. Address LAXD DEPARTMRXT. XORTHERN PACIPIC H AILEOAD. BT. PACL, MIEB . OR B FIFTH AVEXt K cut Sth M, BBW YORX .$75 to $250 per Month, ® (fvif *w leteeOlnee tha a j eugerers the means of core. To all who desire U | he will send a eopy of th* piearrtpttoa naed. (free I id charge.) wt'h direct toot h.r preparing red aaieg , lb., enttir. abut the* alii And a Hens Crag feu I ('iiiirsmn*. Aernn*, Bauat smt aad all Throat i or Lung TNtbntiiM. * Parties aiahu (he nreacrtwtion wtU please ad drrea E*v FDWARD A WILHOX. 1M Pens St . WilMunabnrgh. X T. MOTHERS! Doot tail to procure MRS WlJf SLOW s HC'IHIWO SYBOF rOH CUILDBEM TtETH ma This valuable jwenarattou haa been need with XRVER FAILIXO St CCBfS IX TMoCSAXDfI OF CAHBH it not only relieves tha rhlld from pals, but Invtg. orates (he aiutttarh and boar la cor rests actdttFeSafl gives lone and energy to the whole system M w ISI also instaatly relieve Griping of the Bo art W and Wind OaUc. We believe II tbe REST and StMIRfIT RRMRDT IX ; TUK WORLD In all oases of DfIcxTRRT AXD , lIIARtUKEA IX CHILDBEX. whether arising pom I teething or any otbsr cause Dep*e.d Upon it. mothrrs. It win give rest ta yoar , selves and Behef sad Health to Tow Bt sure and call for MRS WIHSLOWS'SOOTHIMO STBUF " TMv.ng ike fao-aimile of ".CrBTIS d PBREIXW M lhe e. fc laid* wrapper. Sol by Praggtsle tkrowghoat tha World. OR FAMILY USE. THE H ALFORD LEICESTERSHIRE! TABLE SAUCE, the Best Sauce & Relish < iMade in air part. Of tie World FOR FAMILY USE. Pints 50 Cents. Half Pints - - - -30 Cents. For Sale by aH Grocery. Cheap Farms! Free Homes! Oe, (he line of (he VXIOX FACIFIfI RAILROAD. IS.in.im Acrea of tbe beat Farming aad Mineral Lands In America. SJRSI oro Acre* In Xebradka, in the Platte Valley, sow fcr sale. Mild Climate, Fertile Soil, For drain Orowing and Stock Raising unsurpassed bv any In (he Colled Stales. ("NSAt-ss I* Fates, more favorably terms given, and more convenient lo market than can be found elsewhere. FRKE HomKtcadx for Acta*! Settlers. The best lewatlon Rir Colonies-Boldlers entH led to a H.mi. stead of IX Arret. Send f>r the Hew Descriptive Pamphlet, with nsw mar*, published In Oermau, Swedish and Danish, mailed Iff* everywhere. Address, O. T. DAVIS. Land OomT O P. X. S. Oo . Omaha. Neb K n COfl P*r day! Agents wanted I All rtassr* #3 10 dtU of working people of either aex.yonng or old. make more money at work for ns is their spare momenta or all the time than at anything else Particulars free. Address O. STIXPOX 4 CO.,rort laad. Me ißSfijfiaaiM The a-Nectar is A rrkk J®'. y VKRVJ' BldioU T XIjJV * I 1_ e-m*. ""iiruijr beat Tea Imported. For tale i -sTL tigat everywhere. And tvr tale e wholesale onlv by the GREAT •C? ATLANTIC A PACIFIC TEA.CO. • iMioSja No Wt Fulton St. 4M 4 Church v*_T,' Ssf.>/ BL, New York. P. 0 Box, \SOS. S4SI. spsssSssfes i*..'" iE m 2 •*" , ,-., A i'*.'"•. i'.V • i — ■ ""u 111 U no Myui. •**■ Iwtii* wtß IT"* '*"** •"■*•* antes nf it* w* (taut • i"* 1 "! t*'™ - ■*• , - Z&^.-w^Jyswtt shW&fSK'rm Httiwrnd-gta* • 4**Aod m i.fwawcs <>■*< • m*ihs4 iipwuwwii w* Kr tibi 9m, I a Mamma awry •* Cist—lfl **••> ■matlssw mtd MMH. Biiinltwf ssd la***. m>*M #*•/*, DI in III■■#* fts#4 Uhm L Kjffgsyl irsk ftstfagguto; '"•nTr *•* m'ommSt rwp&MH wsll *s _ V ,|, „ 1 ,.,v-- t rUrtr rVr I - •* —-f * 1 1 r:r~;. ~ •-.- -- - M t^nM maJT Wlk< t- m4vSmXl Ofgsat,4 Mi Msgs 'Vw'tkla WMft, E aatl.aa. Twta. Ssfc isSSSaStog t*:B Ji.k SeuW*, l#,c*;wAfiCies< iU HWWe rWftw* *<* Sktft. vi I—> KMW# awhmralr dug Pff "* •f*"" " * Mat lime W* the MM of Mm# Hi"* _ _ bmlrfal THi.M.nmM* pwriatm itmoas T --tbsw th# wea tmatdetfiii latuwmagf da* seer KSS^kskkis*®: BOLD BY AM. DRUGGISTS it PEALtklk ' jar.' x. p.". w'o. "" ' ' jEp R. R. R. RADWAY'S READY RI-:li KF CrtH t lui Wori®t Poina if ?*<*! OK TO TWJESTY lUHUTE6. HOT OSS BOUK *rrsa sham** tm UMIOTMBMMT Mewl any cue Sufer Pain. Raimay* Jtmmtf SaUef Is nut ftrsvery Ta. If Vil TSK rtftftT AXt> IS THE ONLY PAIN REMEDY that Instantly tFn ** tflfll esrrWvtaMr# allays l-flame-was m*IWI I Anh. M #t*e I fbe adkek *< >k of other i.'t*nd# avrfu * t e flppdrmnan, i rui we w mm nwrm, an Httrt heat vtihi r i wr KnwWMM ll** fie tha Utt'liTlC. ictus OIaMA *- vote, Xiafatg.e, rmine* with fltnM may Mitt RADWAY'S READY RELIEF w:u. AVTQKI) IMSTAMT CABS. laSusaUf *-*■• i **• Tewi l lleytto h*K irt*tr<# ester tl!ls* fnw erlt.Mfi • ten* ft WBfS, o* *rßaefe, Besithsn*. so.k llflfame, fanife. Ktwufi, rehr, Wtmi I* tl*- h>i so 4 all I*f*e TrseeßMe *t*eett J-*f 'rr fcM' ■*!• WAT-e KABT *W.l*r eitktlem A I-* "PA i Ktr *II !*■#• tm tit' inwrftft'ff i** * A Cwaßi tmm'W* •feeler. II ie belter Ikulnwli I UjM Mi ters as • stiateluit. FEVER AND AGUE. rmr* A*V sor* free r t eeetS. .Teres IS six a riJiKi *fret te <*• e#etl iA*i Freer aeS **e. exS ellsther MeterfceO. Aostlet. Tephmf Trßw. setf -■•* F 'et i'M he BSBTriT** MLAe tehk eS ftAOWAYY KfcAIH KKI Ifh swe—s* FIFTY CBNTo PtH BOTTIiB HEALTH. BEAITY, 'W^NP 9^ DR. RASWATS Sarsaparilliaa ResolTißt Tul MMtrins, that' Every Day aa Increase in Fleah and Weight is Seen and Felt The (Treat Blood I > tirifU?r Ir| Arop f the AASBAfAaiLLIAS IWlf VKJtT nanaurifi IpfoO* Ihe hll 11, heeet. I'rlne. SttS tlhet H u.de en* jeUSSlthe nrewse Ihe rvf< wt life, he U rrftrs the estes of the ertth ere ul SIShS suOerteL hnOK TfFhthe. CxsseaimtMi. ChreWe Bysffts. OteefeUr 4>- easra, fleets in the threet, Ihsaih. Tyo.—• >-* r <* la the Otaaes ahf NI t*.*■ ;udCltee. B'tvht's Diaeeae, hltwMtnut I. and to all t*M . a here there are Wt< k ifr t deyeaiia,ar the wafer is thick, eloadjr, mixed atth Batatas"# like tha • white r/aa ewe. er threads like w hue aitk. there ■a a 'ilt*. lath. bOxeia ai-faraaee, aStahrah t.Mlt deyewlta. aed when th<-re Is a yrteklaw, t utrane aaoaattw-% when oaattndr water, and yatn ta the Small if the ha. k and ah-if the Loins- Tumor of 12 Yean' Growth Cured by Radwafs Resolvent PRICE SI.OO PER BOTTLE. DR RADWAY'S Perfect Protire ail Eeplatm Fills, yerfhetly tasteless, tlehjtilly rested with *wsh* ■uaaynwe. Nvuialc. unTtfy,cleanseahusand Tyih"l4 Fevers. liflanusiatlhs e* tha level*. Piles, and all I>e rah ye wen ta wf tha Internal Vis-era Warranted l" rflrct a positive rare. Pure ly v. -rMe otaliuncno mereary, minerals,ar del-tert.-us drnfS. Ohadrve the (..Uovtrf sytantcms resnlUny frcas dis -rders ot the Illfetlve Urea-a: t -ratlpa ties. I .ward In Us Fsllaets of tha Blood la Ike Head. Acidity of the Utotuach, Vausea, Beart-kara. Ptafnet tfp. il, Falleesa or W.lfht in the Stom.tch. Hoar trmian-e*. Btnkinor Flattsr ttill at the Pit of the Bt* letter stamp to RAIIW AY * CO.. Xo. H! Warren St., X. T. I..formation worth thousands will bell ant yon. Dr. Whittier, m i?S5r?S Er LesflSSt eitfxfe.l and most snrceaafarpbtfiasu of the as*. Consultation or pamphlet free, Csu or anrtte._ d>l fW\ REWARD B RISOW PILE " cwrtlU RKMKPT tails to cure. It is prepared expressly to rare the Pilsa and nothias else. HOLD BY ALL DBCOOI9TS. PBICB BL Sent hv mail Sir 10 rents. F. B. FCOTB, *. D..t IX Laxtnytoa A vs.. Bsw York City. (tl r A VAT.nABT.X—Send three-cent stamp hr tbDU DOB 9° w ' UATXBS A CO., THE NEW SCALE dfßC^h TP' VMM J| V i MM / W ■fli i 27 Union Bquar, N. Y. Send for iCircular^Hhmtrstloni. ■ Prices ranging M 350 to 7i)o Mm I tVory Piano WARBAjWKD for y Yaam 4 COR 10 * m V* r *Md • hy any laas fl 9aO .'l.ifm a.l.t in si* n 'bs The u-.at wan- W derfttily rapid-selllns art I He ever Invented for mat ried ladles' use. Address _ _ Mas WILL LAMB. I*3 Fxlvaa St.,*. Y. P.O. BoxXX fl ■ "%P YhlBU II s%{hit it.'i* J