Farm, (Janlcn and Household. Prsrtteal Recipes. CotiCAWwoK.—This popular Irish dish ia usually made with cabbages and po tatoea, bnt cauliflower will make a more delicate diah. Take half aa much cauli flower as potatoes, both of which must have been boiled previoualy and com pletely cooled. Chop theiu separately and very fine. Put a little milk and butter into a saucepan, and when tail ing hot, turn in the potatoes and cauli flower well mixed together. Plaee a flat tin or dish over tliem, ami let them warm through. Then roniovatho cover, and add sail and pepper to tho taste , make tho dish tailing hot, and serve. Another wav is to* prepare it with strips of salt pork. Cut the pork into strips an inch long and as uarroV as {x*aaiblo, and fry it to a crisped brown; then turn in the chopped cauliflower and po tatoes, and mix well with the pork strips and fat Heat very hot, and serve on a platter. It is a d'elicimis diah ; and a little vinegar is considered an improve ment to* it. Orakor Jriat.— reel of two Seville and two China orange*, two lemons, the juieo of three of each, a quarter of a pound of loaf sugar, a quarter of a pint of water and two ounces of isinglass. Grate the rinds of the oranges and lemons, squeeze the juiee of three of each, strain it, add the juiee to* the sugar and the water, and tan uutil it almost candies. Have ready a quart of isinglass jelly made with two ounces of isinglass, put it to the syrup, and tail it once up. Strain off the jelly, and let it stand to settle before it is put into* the mould. Notxin-oham Pramo.—Three large apples, one ounce of sugar, half a piut of batter for pudding. Peel the apples and take out all the core ; fill them up with sugar, anil place them in a pie dish. Cover them with a light tatter, and take half an hour. Makr a Xol* of It. Farmers have been urged to keep ac counts with their several fields, charging each with expenses, and giving credit for productions. But only a few will do it They say, first there is no use, and second, that it is impossible; that they are doing the best they can any how ; farms ig is their business, and thev are going to keep at it, and no bookkeeping will add to* their produc tions. To keep s set of books charging what is Joae to a field would require manT pages, and it would include what thinking is done ; and more than this, such fractions of work are often be stowed that it would require several entry clerks and a first-class bookkeeper, whose would be worth at least $1,500 a year. A farmer can keep a memorandum book in hia pocket, and when he does anything for a field, say Xo. 1, he can charge it in hours, or in a money sum. And when a crop come* off it is cosy to estimate its valae. We don't suppoae that an exact balance can be obtained, but we know that with a series of fields an average one can be had. The great advantage of keeping accounts is in ac quiring a habit of investigation, which is precisely what fanners need. All science is based on observation. Let a farmer bring up hia boys 10 become close observers. It is astonishing how many farmer* aw the Tietims of all sorts of swindlers. They can be induced to bny fruit trees of agents whom they never saw before, and pay two prices."with tlmprobabili ty that the fruit will be small and taste less ; they will listen with open mouths to a smooth-tonged fellow describing a worthless invention or patent-right, and they will almost sign their names in blank, by which they get swindled ont of hundreds of dollars. In fact there is no miserable game in which farmers cannot be induced to engage. Bnt it is to be said that these victims do not read, and that they despise agricultural pipers. An authority asserts that there are many thousands of farmers in Uli * nois who have never seen an agricul tural paper,- and this is true of many farmers even in the State of New York and in all other States. A few years ago hundreds of farmers were induced to sign w hat turned ont to be notes of hand, with the inducement that they were to become agents of some wonder fully profitable machine. The only reniedv is for farmers to become inform ed, and to do so they must lake some paper which is devoted to their interests and read it every week. The time so spent will often save them more money than all their labor can bring. An Slip*rlntent In Feeding Horses. The London Omnibus Company use six thousand horses. To economise in feed is an important matter, and has led to several testa, the result of which isrecorded as follows: Toeach of three thousand of their horses they gave a daily allowance of ground oatc sixteen pounds, ground hay seven and one-half ponnds, and cut straw one and one eighth pounds—the hay and straw being cut into pieces about half an inch long, and well mixed up with oats in a little water, and so making twenty-six pounds of food for each horse. And to* each of their other three thousand horaea they gave a daily allowance of whole or unbruiaed oats nineteen pounds, and uncut or whole hay or straw thirteen pounds, without any water, in our old fashioned wav, making thirty-two pounds of this food for each horse. And what was the result? Why, it was soon discovered that the horse who was fed on the twentj-aix pounds of ground oats remained in as good a condition and could perform just as much work and do it just as well, too, as the horse did who consumed thirty-two pounds of food as aforesaid—thns showing a saving of aix pounds of food per day in favor of bruised oats and cut hay. Bark Splitting of Apple Trca*. What is the cause of this very destruc tive evil, and what the remedy to be used for it ? When it once begins, ap parently bnt little can be done to save the tree. Last year we had five beauti ful trees totally destroyed. The bark split np the side of the tree faring the south and southwest; not one showed any injury in any other aspect. We tried binding up and various curatives, but all of no use. The trees were also killed ; only one plum tree was, how ever affected in a similar way. From 'the aspect of the tree invariably facing the sunny side of the tree, I becaqio convinced the evil rests in some way in the son itself. Had it been otherwise the split would have occurred in varions positions. The evil cannot be due to too much moisture. Our orchard is well underdrained, and, being situated on sandy soil, could not well be sup posed to be affected by this cause. In thinking over the trouble I became almost convinced the splitting of bark was due to the heat of the sun's rays falling on frozen trees. Consequently I placed pieces of board against the south and southwest side of the tree. Aft c thus shading them no more splits ting took place. Cor. Canadian Fanner. Oil Mral for Calves. A correspondent <4 the Ohio Farmer relates his experience in feeding oil meal to calves, which he found highly beneficial. The calves were tAken from the cows when threo days old, and at first taught to drink sweet milk, on which they kept until the stomach be came strong, when milk that had stood over one milking was fed twice a day. At this time he commenced feeding oil meal, stirring it into boiling water and afterwards mixing with the milk. The quantity which he could hold in one hand was used at first, and, aa the calves became accustomed to it, this quantity was increased. When too much was given, scours were produced, which was readily controlled by reducing the quan tity of the meal. This feed was continued nntil pump kins were ripe, when they were substi tuted foi milk and meal. Afterward good hay was given until February, when bruised oats were added until the pastures were ready, when the grain was dropped and the calves were turned to grass, and on Oct. sth they weighed 2,210 pounds (tie pair on which the ex periment was made). This showing is a good one surely. The stock to which the calves belonged is not given. The Piegan Indians are again on the w&r-patli. Whleh Was Boutin! Wo were tay* (ogvthn, George Gib son and I. Wo ww employed a* sales men in * grewy store. Business being quito dull our employer gzfVe ti* per mission to otoaa tho store, that we might Ittcnd a hull to l>o givou that evening. I had been paving my respeta to Mim Kato H. by Edmund Yates: Who is this that cometh, not with banner and priest, as Tennyson has it, bnt with a composite manner, in which the gravity of the tmsines% omri strives with the unction of th# tap rirttiit and the hiftßor of the rarefrttnir —• man of middle height, writh his bald head firm ly implanted on his broad shoulders, with but little interval of neck—a uiau of small and twinkling eyes imbedded behind high cheek bones—a well out ( nose, a great, sweeping mustache and a curling imperial, both pleasant; his well-cut, closely - fitting suit of clothes is tlie dress of an English country gentle man, tint his head is the head of an old French marshal Put on him a j shako and he would pass for IM iisaier or for old Bugesuil, of whom the Chasseurs d'Afrique used to sing : As-tu vn U caaqnett*. la casqueus. As-to Tit la eaoqnetta du Pore ilugeaoJ ? He could sing it himself, too, and in accents that would do your car good. For this is the famous Sam Ward, one of the fineet linguists, cleverest classical scholars and men of widest reading on . this Continent, who has seen life enough ; to furnish material for a dozen novels ' and who is not merely the king of the | lobby, but the prince of good fellows*. What freak of nature threw S. W. into this age and into this country ? He , i would have been thoroughly happy un der tlie Roman Empire, when Horace would haTe been charmed with his wit and Apicius would have envied him his skill in ordering a dinner. Somehow one can never th rule of Sam Ward nud ' the stern simplicity of the Republic s going together in unison. City Rivalry. A esse now pending in the St. Louis courts gives an amusing illustration of the bitter rivalry between the merch ants of 8k Louis and Chicago. In the former city there ia s hardware dealer who has been doing a large bnaineea in the sale of steel buggy springs at two ' dollars a pair. A Chicago firm, also en gaged in the hardware line, flooded the region around Bt. Louis with circulars ofiering to sell tlie name article at $1.25 a pair. Tlie Ht. Louis man at once be gan purchasing his springs of the Chicago firm, who, it is claimed, were selling their goods for less than cost to , entice Ht. Louis trade to Chicago, and then sold them to his customers at a handsome profit. The Clusago man. encouraged by the demand for springs from Ht. Louis, made a further reduc tion in prices, offering them at one dol- j lar a pair, when the Sh Louis man tel- j egraphed an order "for 2,000 pairs, at the same time sending a draft to pay for them. By this time the Chicago firm began to he suspicious, and refused to send the goods ; hut one of the firm, being in Sk Louis shortly afterward, was sued for a breach of contract, dam ages being laid at $5,000. The St. Louis journals are joyful over this capture of one of the Philistines, and ernltingly call attention to the fact that the public enemy must defend the suit in their own courts, which of course they con sider iu finitely mora hour si than those , of Chicago. New Arctic Exploring Expedition. The movement of the United Scien tific Societies in England to induce the government to nudirtake the expense of an arctic exploring expedition, is already well advanced. We learn, from Nature, that Sir Henry Rawlinson will address a letter to the president of the Royal Society, urging that that body take the lead h advocating the cause. In the mean time, it is stated that Mr. Leigh Smith proposes to undertake a third voyage of arctic discovery in the spring. He has a fine, strong steamer, the Diana, well adapted for the pur pose, and will undoubtedly achieve all that can be done in the way of discov. ery in the Spitzbergen seas during the seaaou of 1873, Mr. Smith having now become a veteran arctic voyager. In 1871 he made the most remarkable voy age in that direction since 1707, discov ering a large extent of coast-line, both on the north and south sides of North east Land. He also attained the high est latitude that has been reached in a ship, except by Scoresby and the Swedes. In 1872, during a second ex pedition, he succeeded in taking a very important series of observations of sea temperatures at various depths. The anticipated expedition in 1873 will be more fully equipped, and undertaken in a steamer insteau of a sailing-vessel. CHASGI.NO A HOUSE'S GAIT.— In Bar bery, pacing horses are held in such high estimation that the method of mak ing a spirited trotter shackle like a boat in a chop saa is reduced to a science. To make him rack easily, a ring of lead, covered with leather, is put around each hoof; a oord from epch weight ascends, and is fastened to the saddle, front and rear; next, a strap runs horizontally from the fore to the hind foot on both sides. Being rather short, it is impos sible to male a long step. Restraint compels the animal to practice a new gait to progress at all. As soon as a habit is established of going ahead thus tethered, the desired amble is fully and permanently accomplished. The Catastrophe at Smyrna. The Smyrna correspondent of the Levant Herald gives an account of the mfAqnrhrhr %eoidcnt in that town, which was brioflynj jled ill the cable despatches a dav or two later : "On Sunday uigbt, the Cafe Kivoto, built upon piles over the sea, broke down suddenly, during a performance given by a company of acrobats. The proprietor of tlie rale says he only sold lIW tickets, but the people saved declare there were 'JiHI persons present. Most of theiu were of the i>. ..iter toktss, and there were MM MSESthadS i loud cracking was heard, and within five minutes the entire cafe bad disap peared under water. A few of inn l*erson near the entrant• ' effect their' eretp*>, ind AoaiitperaoM' saved themselves bv jumping through the wimlowa into foe *e*. The boat i men rowed up iu numbers, but thi-ir , effort* to save life were in want. Hureya Push a, the Governor-General * Ibrahim Agna, Chief of lVhec, and Talur Boy, commander of the gendarmerie, who where at unco on the spot, exerted themselves strenuously, but fruitlessly, ' with the same otoject. The profound silence which succeeded the piercing cries of despair tolvl 100 plainly the terrible character of the disaster. The Catholic and Greek Arehbishopt were on the spot early the following morning. Ye*tenlay forenoon tlie workmen of the Quay Company were actively engaged iu removing the rotf of he submm-ged cafe. The search after tho (lead tadie* was a sad spectacle ; the acrobat* were s withdrawn from the water in their showy costumes of the previous night ; the limits of all tho Indies wwr* con tracted with paiu. Two hearses were engaged the whole of the day in con veying the remains discovered to the luwpital. Of the fifty tadie* deposited at the Greek hospital, twenty-eight were claimed up to 4 o'clock vMWrday afternoon, aud cleveu were claimed at tl* fifapital. l>ivera were bffa# Ot werkfcdlilay, ami every minute a fresh body was brought up. To-day they reconunewced. their melancholy ; task at daybreak, arid twenty mora bodie* were found. The to>tul number 4 Ital lea found up to tin- pres. t is eighty, and it is supposed (here Are still fifty more iu the water. An English Etain, two Turkish merchant*, a ng maatof gitpd Jbonß.qJjou*, an tan ewpOaio, a telegraph alOrk. ami some commen-ial clerks are auioug the victims. The feeling of grief and con sternation is general, aud the ball advsr ' Vised to be hekt tn *-- ■" >- rM ei>untermanded. The police have iaiiikod alt the Oilier Cud* bndt upon ' nifes oil the sew. &Jb idwli savoilniad Ixx-n rendered dumb. The company of acrobats Cv*iXfistod*f awn-n persons, of whom IbyeaVwrw wwawbn. aud one of i theao Uvtur only survives. The Govern ' merit will Institute proeecrlinpca against tlie proprietor of the cafe, who did not pay heed to tlie warning of danger which was given lum in tnue. Shooting-Stars. It has been calculated that of meteors bright enough to be visible to the naked ' eye in a clear moonless night the nnm ' berw that entqr our #tinwpl*efe il.uL- Can not l*Fb tli.'iP Sevai a Luff millions, and if we iucluue those that I would be visilde in a telescope, the cal culation would exceed fonr hundred millions. As thfre je no reasoq to lav, hfve that the rag:. n in iriiiiji i>sr eorfh mow* more tluekly bcm'kwjdi meM* orie bodits than other parts of the solar | domain,and as tho apace swept through by the earth in a day is a mere point compared with the whole exteut of that , domain, tlie total number of these bodies that mnSt exist nrrarmd-ttoeimw is boxond conceptiop. The hundreds , of millions yearly burned tip in our et- J mosphere, nnfl niC sinies offtomeH wwf, ' it is estimated, one thousand tons j weight to our earth in three years, will ( never be missed ! Besides the stray meteors, of which . half a dozen, more or less, may be seen any clear night by watching the sky for an hour, there occur every now aud then brilliant displays, known as star aliow era or meteoric ahowera. It has long l*e observed that some of these show- ! era are periodica!, recurring on the same day of the rear, either annually | l or after a period of years. The in vet remarkable thing about a star shower is that all the bodies coni)siaing it seem to come from the same limited region of j the sky. Those that appear in the een- I tre of the space blaze out and die sway without so-ining to ncrr: tho farther the appearance of a meteor from the centre, the longer and more divergent is its path. The paths proceed (rum the centre in all directions like rays, 1 and hence it is called the radiant point of tho shower. This radiation of the paths, however, is a more appearance, due to perspective. The bodies are re ally moving parallel to one another ; but the one that ia coming directly to ward tho spectator has its path reduced to a point, while the paths f tlie others all round are seen more or less fore shortened, and all converging backward ' toward the Tanishing-point. An Ingenious fonilcf. The cooTict Smith, who recently es caped from his fell in Sipg Sing Prison, made use of a most ingenious device for nnlocking bis cell-door. It con sisted of a bur of wood, about eighteeu inches long, from the end of which an- ( other bar reached down at right angles, about four inches in kngth. Tfi the , lower end of this shorter bur a rocqpta ( ! ele was hollowed out for the purpose of holding a cunningly-contrived false key, and on the lower bar was arranged a twisted leather belt, passing over up- I right pins, and worked by a crank so j nieelv adjnstNl that bv turning the crank the key would also be tnrned at the other extremity of the bar. Haying made these arrangements, he qnietly awaited an occasion when the regttlnr keeper was absent and a relief keeper locked np the cells on his gallery. This keeper having rfiirvinred himself thai Smith was knj|aie|l(s>sqpri|l on jt in awl plausible theory is that while he was thns engaged Smith thrust the machine through the bars of the square gcqting i above the lock, dropping it till the false I key fitted in the keyhole, and then turning the otftil, übk>4kl'orao x#u, and the ifaßxva, or council-house, was stripped of all its trophies, lings, and feather ilresses. "WhiM," says the traveler, "we stood ;>qi'ulaUng uu what had become of our friemls, a sound fell upon our ears that seemed to l**ua hum the depths of n distant cavern. We could tell it to* be a churns of voices, chanting j some sad or solemn refrain. Aa we listened, jit grew kinder, aalf Uie chant ers were drawing it carer; and in the same degree it was hocuiutug more joy ful. All fit once a procession appeared appr> aeiiiug tlie spot, men marehuig two ami fwo, with (Ilea of women tuter uiirigled.i "As if* head emerged from among the thick-stauding try* triuiks, w>- rec ognised our old Ztuumate friends, drqaaed in all the gala of a grand hofi 'day with plumed circlets upon their heads, feather armlet*, and garters of the si*iut\ girt just below Uie kaee. "Gu reaching the uialocca, tbey broke ranks, at tlia asm** tune burrtiug , into- j*eals of joyous laughter. Then surrotindmg, Uny ral raped as, Uit chief in a spetcii again uiAing us wel come to their village.'' They were returning from their an nual ceremony of sun-worship, to which , every person, young and old, in the Til ' lageTiad departed. \etlvit) of tllf African Mare Trad*. A correspondent The J.aiuiotk Times, wfi" ha* 'WtoU'SlMfd w tle hrero 4 aitlyslliVr trfde ii isriMi $o Zanzibar, writing on Jan. 1., sa\: It is a striking iuatanca of the impuuity with which tho natives still fancy the Slave trade can l*c carried on that oven now, winle the who!c p qndstion of * tIH'M tofiands is in a state of uncertainty and excitowneUt to* the ultimate re sults of Sir Uartle Frere's mission, each of the uiea-of-war lathcw hot hot iia> a , prize dhus Mg *!.!fi4a hd lff *np- ! tared,.and the slave market is in full apparently doing a prosper on* hiisiuge*. From 150 b> Ikk) slaves are paraded for sale erery ilay. From 4 i*. n. to 7 r. m. seem* to be the fssh ff ronable hour at which to attend this j, finmau Tattersalls. and certainly it is a |j htrickiug and nltogi-ile t tmphwaV' l sight when visited * fiiat. ever much the visitor's mind may have , Wen prc|*uvd l*y ofl-read descriptions of its appearance. To an Englishman landed straight from England it ia Vvry ' stsrtHiig u* • rows of human beings seated on the ground, standing np, or * walkedjiinpt t>r ifspacOiomikwv i * Owifer shoutoig ottlheif prjgß. artl n j initiating on' their good points, and to . iuiuw that these wretched creatures are for to* the first man who will satisfy the cuf>idity of tho seller. Bnt it is still mure painful to* see and to ac knowledge the lopkof dgg£4<'d| at'l alt solute indifferefire that, wftn hwrflly ah exception, characterizes all the stolid heavy faoca. which hardly show signs ' of iiitercst even when their owners are '• l*eiwg pinched and pulled about by a I possible purqiiast'C It is nut difficult. U> imagn-yfbeJWng f-WuWi of suffer): j that has "or fhew taicn all ih!• rest Ond all hope out of life, or to read in their apathy a history of homss destroyed, children sold by theirnricats, suffering, misery, disease, and death. Even now . hows, tkmr on 1 bOOVd at Kilw4t prevjMs IS thd firii c 4 January, run in and diarharge their t cargota on the beach. Tk ry was one yesterday which discharged 40 slaves, all remaining out of HO shipped at Kilwa, the rest having uied of disease beach so ill and so wretched as not to be worth the Cuztom-hoaoe dntins de manded for them. Tho French Mis sion here, active in well-doing, generally takes these wretched castaways tinder its protection. Wornoth. The correspondent of the Troy Titnh> says that, with all his acts, Wsrmoth |is a mau of brains, of tact, of good breeding, am! Rtf remarkable personal ' magnetism. He has been catalogued ' .w the handsomest man in Washington I by more than a million ladies ever since i hia arrival here. Instead of being shunned, he Ims l*een courted. He is a ! lion. Knowing how to* make the most \of his personal attractions, shrewd [ enough to conceal his inordinntc vanity, | lie lias made his stay here a continual ovalaoa. In the lobbies of the Capitol he ia always the centre of a crowd. Per haps they are not admirers in theirsaul, but externally they are, and it nnswera , the same purpose. He has a j"ke and a retort for the Senator, the Congress man, and the layman. Ho speaks of the oliaos that crushes Louisiana as > little affair doWn there," and to jfts laugh there is always a reaponsive laugh. In the taltroom, which he af : foots, he ia atill the centre of a circle.. The wives mid the daughters of the and who can blame them? " How i.cUarmiiig Bfirl ho&dsottie he is, to be fsirw and *0 wick*! beanie* V-that is flic furmtiln whenever Waruioth is tlie | topic. Tlie fact of the wickedness teems to bighten the fascination. To be pre to* Warmotli, in proper style, is as great an event in the history of a I voung lady as to be presented to the 1 President, and if he smiles and shows j signs of being unusually interested, oh heavens, what bfias 1 Water In the Karth. In years pant an impression prevailed very generally tbat water rtonld ha pro- Mhi by sinking a abaft in the earth at ■inmost any point. A v.ist amonnt of fruitless labor and useless expense was V|v result of thin belief. Hut now sci- Wro haa advanced no far that men are ablo to tHI with almost unerring cor taiuty whether water ran he obtained in anyj^r^^l^^hjL turn relative w 11 are the preroqinHittpdffc ie .v Wat ;rfii d> its way from tire surfiv r of <#■ ♦<> tho interior through crevices and ohftm<||k ths tsocka Uianiaulvoa wheu tlmv aro porw. In nearly all gaologiaal formations there wo certain strata, often for down, which are water-tight, and these form the beds of the subterranean streams. As the water presses down from shove, it forces the streams along, and they citheT hurst forth in springs or remain locked in huge reservoirs. When a well is sunk until it strikes one of these or hits a mpi l eumit, Xkt procure irirm the water to the surface, exactly as in our cities the fluid in the storage reser voirs is forced into our bath-rooms and bed-chambers. The geysers of loeJand and of the Yellowstone Valley are afc ! tribntabty jn part to the same agencies. rbme fwm natural artesian wells, probably of vast depth, for the water in | many oases ia ejected at boiling heat. t Btoain, as woll as hydrostatic pressure, i is often the power that operates these t extraordinary fountains. There are 11,600,000 square miles if i the earth's surface still unexplored. j A I.Akcar'a Combat Willi a Shaik. j We had not long come into the road ' I aland at Mndrna when a oircumataiioe i occurred which 1 cannot help relating. >, There waa a Lawcur on onr nhip who was > , very expert in handling a catamaran, a J kind of raft made uf three stack* of ; ' wn<>d lashed L>gethor, and liaed iu the aurf, which in this place rolla iu Very heavily. Tina man had a little child, a : boy of eight ytiara, and while we lay i j here he would take tliia boy and ahow htm how to handle the catamaran, it . i la-rug hi intention to bring the lad up ! to thi pursuit. Now it happened one morning that, going out very early, aveu before the (lay had apritiig, the eatamaran ran foul of a pnliu which waa waahiug aahorc, and overset, throwing the tuuii and the i I*7 into the water. The man roae i' easily enough, for he swum like a duck, i and lU*da for the raft, vhicli lie had wiriv reached W iieli ha saw a huge i { ahark seize the child and make to urn I witli its prey. i The man, na may be auppoaed, viu 1 horrified at the sight, and for a moment j dated ; but he noon recovered, and > drawing a long kuife which he earned i | in hia vauiiiacrbuud, plunged after the nhjirk. j waa on the beach at the time, , j atnl nint the whole affair. The man uUapia tred, but rone again, the tdiark near hits, ami IM it It apparently engaged jin a dabp>-rate Oouriict. Tina Mated several inuuu*. The wat r then began to grow kol , tl man roae two or three 11 tunes iia quick succession, las knife still m hia baud, and striking with great force ami energy. This lasted 'several second*. Then the shnrit rose suddenly, and, throwing its hn|o form half way out of the sprsy, sank with a heavy plunge, dyeing the waters with a deep crimson as it disnp , peart ut preflntly he eante to the surface, aiul j swnnt tbieotly to the shore, lie was very much exhausted, but his body was w itmmt n wound, s strange circumstance, seeing the (longer lie had encountered. After he had rested I asked htm to relate the jiarticulars of his cuinlial witli the sea monster, which he did. 1| soul I that as soon a* he plunged into the water h saw the shark in the act of de * child ; that he made toward I it and gave it a stroke with lus kuife; i tlipfh the shark tifkinwl and snapped at him ; but he, diving, evaded it* jaws and coining up kindert its heliy gave it a "tub, and the knife tanning along pre dated a wound over a yard in length, which, iu short, mude an end of the i/ouster, Ou receiving this wotutd it raged about in s llurry for s few second*, tlmii careening on its side drifted ut the mercy of the waves, a mere piece of lifelcM matter. Hlidb was tlie story of this brave man's etmi>nitter. While wc were talking, 1 heard a great clamor tuuung some of the Maaervolsli boatmen ou the beach, said sent one of our men to Imru its occa sion. lie came back with the tidings that the shark had come ashore and the noise we heard proceeded from the na tives alio were anuued at it size, which was indeed enormous, and tho number f <4 VA if ul* it had nxa-ived ; ou hearing ttli* 1 proceeded toward the place where it was stranded, taking the Lascar with ms who by this time had thoroughly regained hi* encrgie*. We afiproached the monster. It lay on its side among a lot of sen-weed, the blood still (Hiring from tlie woumls witli which its body was covered. The size. tun I have übtrmd, wa surprising. I ' had wen sharks of large prop >rtions, but they W TC small compared to this ar**t*ire. I did not measure it careful ly, but it was near 30 feet its length, and it* big round as the main mast of our ship. It liad made a bold defence, and was not couqucred till ita life gushed l-ftrom s multitude of wounds. ' Wfter satisfying my rurioaisy, I had the monster opened, when a ghastly j *]M>ctaclc ass presented. The child aa* fbtind iu the stomach, but utterly di meudiered, the head ticing severed* from , IHHIV, and the whole so ground U>- r-llicr m In k' scarcely recognizable, was greatly overcome at this melon- ' choir night; even the apathy of tin- , , Hindi HI gave wsv, and as he gazed on the remains of Lis child, his sorrow j burst forth in loud lamentation*. Th-- wheeling of a School i.irl. An czclnuige gives the following de tails of the shooting of a school girl at Salisbury, Md.! , Mary A. Htiockler was returning, in #omi>ony with four small children, to licr home fro&i the district school, and was met a short distance Lrvmi the school , house by a young man named George W. Hall, who carried a gun in his band. Hall addressed some Words to Miss Sliuejtlcy, which caused tlie young girl I ♦* paise, and thereupon ensued a cob loquy. Hall xsked Mi*s Bhocklcy why) she had not ahawcred a letter ho hm'l | written hsr the week before. She ro- i plied that she couldn't, implying she WTMI unwilling. He then ssi.i she could [ have written to him as well a* to some others he knew, and expressed a deter in inatiou to shoot her then and there. ! To this the young girl fearlessly re plied, "Pshaw! George Hall, von can't frighten me 1" Hall then asked the children if Misa Hhockley'a brother Elijah—A lad of sixteen years—was on the road, and upon receiving a reply in • the negative ha told a little girl who • was standing near hia victim to move j aside, deliberately raised hia gun and j ahot Miss Shock lew through the heart, and then ran rapidly away into a piece ' of woods. The poor death-stricken girl ejaculated "0 Lord I" ami fell to , tlie ground. Two of the children ran j back to the school-house and informed their teaeher. who hastened to the seenc ! | of the tragedy only to find his favorite nnpil lying on the'gronnd weltering in j OIIHHI, which was pouring from aghast ,, ly wound io her side and gushing from her mouth and none as she apuxmodi- I rally gasped in the agonies of death. I He raised her head and asked her to i speak to him, but tbongtl she made an I effort to do so her strength wn* unequal to tlie task, and she soon ceased to jireathe. | -flail and Misa Hhocklcy went to the j same school together until a few months j ago, when the former put aside his koks and went to work on his father's rm. Hall had long loved his vielini and ' pressed his suit vigorously, but bis af fection waa not reciprocated. and upon being convinced that she would never regard him favorably he determined to time her life. Since the murder evi- j dence has appeared establishing the 1 fact that he had long entertained nn in- j ! Untion to mnnlsr her, and was only de terred from his hellish purpose by the presence of her brother ns she passed to and from school. Misa Hhocklcy was ahont fifteen yera 1 old, of sweet and even temper, bright ; and intelligent, and was just budding into womanhood, tlie brightest and most benutifnl girl in her neighbor- 1 hood, aud her tragic death has created tremendous excitement here. Both of the actors in this tragedy are of very re spectable families and both moderatelv I if 8 * RETIIIINO FIIOM BrsiNEHH.—Bays Pio jffLowis, retiring from business, common and popular as it is, is a great humbug. . ,i tfo man should retire from business un til lie retires to the grave. When liia j faculties become slow and dull from age, he should reduce the number of hours in his daily work—reduce them juat as his strength declines; bnt in no case should he change hia occupation or drop it unless disease actually compels him. ITe may purchase an estate in the conn trT. to which ho retires at an early hour . in the afternoon, and he may postpone , his morning arrivsl till two or three t hours after the younger people have be gun, tut he mußt not quit or make a radical change. We know of nothing [ more anre to lead to dyspepsia, insanity . and suicide than retirtiifj from huslncAt. A REMARKABLE INVENTION. —One af , Hi* most important improvements ever per fected in musical inetmments has lately been m trod nerd by Geo. Woods A Co., in their im ' proved I'arlor Organs. It consists of a piano > ef exquisite quality of tone which will never re quire timing. The instrument wae lately in troduced at a musical eoiroe to Jlaltimore. and . received the cordial applause and indorsement ' of tho many eminent profesaionals present. - lio/on Journal. Executions In Illinois. John M. t>slirne,who murdered Mrs. Ad. ha 0. Mathews, at Yates City, 111., on the Oth of last August, wa* hanged iu the jitil yard at Knoxville, 111. The murder was a brutal one. Mr. Mathews, tho husband of the deceased, wont to a urighlioMtiK farm to work on the morn ing of the day of the murder, leaving lus wife at hotue aud alone. Ou hia return at auudowu lie found the dead body of liia wife in the collar, with the throat cut and head crushed. Suspic ion fell upon Oslxiruc, and he was tried I and fount! guilty uf the terrible charge. Several clergymen were with Osborne all the day and uight before the execu tion. During the night he was taken from tlaleHvule to Knoxville, telling )vwd stories all the way to thoae who accompanied him. At the jail he ate a hearty breakfast, and was dressed and ahaved. At one o'clock he was taken to the scaffold in Die jail yard. His manner aus cool and collected. lie suttled even to the momeut when lie stood on the fatal drop. His neck was uot broken by tlie fall, and he died Willi the moat terrible and agoniziug contortion*. The drop fell at ten min ute* punt tme o'clock, and eight and a half minute* uflerwards life was declared extinct. The night before the execution, Os borne made a confession, which, for deliiwrate brutality, ia not equaled. He I said Mrs. Mathews waa engaged in get ting Litii souiethiug to eat. She went down tlie cellar for butter and, he aaya, 1 went down and talked with her a little while, and us she stooped down, ) picked up a brick aud struck ber on the back Of the head, a lieu she started to run, and 1 caught her by ber dress ; f pulled her buck and struck her again, when she fell. I then picked up a small board aud struck ber ou the aide of the head. She groaned and 1 thought it wan done. 1 then went up stiurs, and to make a false motive I rummaged the drawers and found the money, and thought I must take it to prevent the true motive from being discovered. I put part of tlie money in each of the poAets of my pants, aud then thought I would go - down and see if she was dead. 1 saw her eyes looting at me. I wrent up to her, and bending over her, said: Adelia." Hhe raised her eves and looked at me. I mud: "Do you know me f" Hhe mode no reply. 1 asked hsr agoin, and she said " 1 do." 1 asked her who 1 was, and she ixuil "Mr. Osborne," reached her hand to me, and said, " Why did you do thi*?" 1 dropped her hand aud turned away, and looked at her again a moment, and felt that 1 would give worlds to have her well again. 1 then took my kuife and cut her throat. She never moved or shuddered. I then went up stairs and left. George Driver, who killed liia wife on the morning of the LtUi of last No vember by shooting her with a pistol borrowed from his son, was executed in the county jail of Chicago. His last night was sjent mainly in prayer, liia attendiug physician being of tlie I'res bvteriau faith. Almul m-ou he express ed a desire to converse with ltafTcrtv, another murderer, who is coufined in tall under sentence of d<-nth, and who iss IHH-11 granted a supersedeas twice. Driver tqioke with him long and earn estly, advising him to make hi* jwace with Heaven. Rafferty laughed sthim. The children of tlie doomed man acted unfeelingly throughout ; they talked aud laughed with atranger* aa if at a levee. Shortly after two o'clock Driver was taken from the cell where he was praying and brought to the scaffold, which he mounted firmly and without hesitation. When asked if he had any thing to say, he addressed the crowd stating that whisky had brought him to the gallows. He advised all to shun liquor as |K>i*on that injured the body and mind. The drop fell at twenty-four minutes past two p. M., and in eleven minutes lie was dead. Eighty-flie Mile* of Solid Ice on Lake Michigan., Tlie. propeller City of Fremont left for Grand Haven for the third time, hut waa compelled to return, after having penetratol the ice belt a distance of only fourteen miles. During the high j easterly winds the ice was never at any time out of Mglit of land. At this point since th* n it has oonatantly been added j to, so that it now once more fill* the l>ay. In view of all the facta that can be ascertained, we have no hesitation iu saying that Michigan at this point, where its width is eighty-five miles, ia now entirely bridged over with ice vary ing in thickness from one to twelve feet. Never before in the roemorV of t the oldest inhabitant has this been j known to oecnr. It will require a high southerly wind of at least one week's duration to break tip and drive this formidable l#lt towards the lower end of tlie lake and enable the steamers of j the Engeiman line to cross. In the | meantime tho Mauistee and Messenger remain in the condition reported last week, off Whitehall, and receiving oc casional supplies of food from the shore. A society statistician calculates that if all the yards of silk in ruined " last season's drcssea" were sewe.i together, they would form a band as long as the Pacific HAI 1 road. For Joss ot Appetite, Dyspepsia, In- Atgeati >n. llaprwii'U of N|iirits and General I lei s lit r, in their various forms. Passii-I'Hos rseiuTEn KI.IXIS of CAIMAXA mmlc |,r Giswtia, Hutiso A Co., New York. sn twst tonic. A* s stimufsiit tonic for |*Ucnis, reO'ventic from fever or oilier aickiiea* it has no c]ttai. If taken during the reason it iwevents fe\rr and ague and otlirr mlcrmittcnt fcTcrn.— fYwn. CAITION !—ln ourchangeable climate, conghs. colils. anil direase* of the throat, lunge and cheat will a)war* prevail Cruel o.vuautnp tinii will claim ita Victim*. Three direaare. if attended to in lime, can he !■* arrrelod and cured Die remedy ia l*r. M'utrtr'i llaUam Of ll'ikl i 'Kerry Com. THE BROWNS AND BLACKS produced by thai sterling |ireparnli.m. CsiT*noso's Kxciu.- atns litis iMr. cannot be excelled Inr Nature ; its Unia challenge cmporiaon with Nature'* moat favored productions, and defy detection Oris. Vegetable Pulmonary Balsam. Donbt- ICMS the IWt Cougti Medicine iu the World. Com. THXWKZU.T BUM. Only II a Tsar. • Page* Tint Hirer FAMILT Paraa.—l'he Weekly N. ¥ Han 8 pngre. Ala year. Solid your Dollar THS HWT AoaiccLTtTßAi PAPKB. —The Weekly N.Y.Hun. 8 pagoe. #1 a year. Bend your Dollar. Tits PEST POIJTICAI. PAPEB.— Die Weekly N. T. Hun Independent and Faithful. Again*! Public Plunder, s pages. Ala year, hend your Dollar. Tns I tzar NEvcsrirs*.—The Weekly New York Hun. 8 page*. 81 a year. Hend your Dollar. Itas Aix Tns Nsws.—The Weekly N. Y. Hun. 8 t>agre. 81a year. Hend your llollar. Tnr llraT IrenT N. Y. Hun. 8 pageit. 81a year. Hend your Dollar. Tnr. EKST FAMOUS ltKroaTsin the Weeklf N. Y. Hun. 8 |mgn*. 81 * year. Hend your Dollar. Tns IIEST M ASSET Ur.roßT* in the Weekly N. Y. Hun. 8 page*. 81 a year. Hend your Dollar. THE IIEST CATTJZ ID COST* in the Weekly N. Y. Bun. 8 page*, glayeor. Hend your Dollar. Tar. BEST PACea In Every Respect.--The Weekly N.Y.Hun. 8 pages. 81 s year. Hend your Dollar Address THE HUN. New York City. FLAOO'H INSTANT BELlEF. —Warranted to relieve all Rheumatic Affliction*. Sprain*. Neuralgia, etc. The licet, the surest, and the quickest remedy for all Diwe! Ootnplaints. Re lief gusrsnteed or tlie money refunded. Com. ARK your grocer for Dooley's Ycsst Powdor. the heel Rsking Powder for preparing niecuita. Roll*. Ilres.l. Griddle Cskea, Waffles. Ac. Depot fill New Bt., N. Y. At retail by all grocers. -Uom. A UNIVERSAL REMEDY. —• BROWN'S BSONCRIALTROCHES.'' for Cough*. Colds, and bronchial Affection*, *tsnd first in public favor and confidence; this result has been acquired by a test of many year*. —Com. Yonng man if yon want to mAke an impression on your sweetheart, wear either the Elmwood or Warwick Collars.—Cots. More than forty years have elapsed since Johntont Anorlynr Liniment was ftrnt invented, during which time hundreds of thou sands have been benefitted by its use. Prob ably no article ever became so universally pop ular with all classes as VoAn*on'< dnodyn* Ltnt- RTWNT.—COM. Pills which contain antimony, quinine end calomel, should be avoided, an severe grim ing pain* would be their only result. The eafc nt, surest, and beet pills arc Parsons' Purga tive or Anti-Bilious Pills.—Com. A prudent htuuiW men will IM> SB rtrffnl to liunrn hie life M bia goods. Insurance ia abaolute protection when secured in good companies, Before closing any contract to insure yaw life examine the plana and look into Uui prnctinsl workings uf the old New York Life Inaurauce Company. If there ia an agent of lite company iu your vicinity, invite him to your puce of buaineaa and he will give you noma interesting facta, and, if not, send to the home omtm. 348 and 'MM Broadway, New York, for a atatemeut of the vaat huaiueaa dona, anaeta, and dividend# paid. —Com. The J'ull Mall Uatttlm of a lato date reports that aixty-aeveu Uidiea of the victims of the Hinyrna cafe and concert hall disaster have lieen found, and tliot many more still remained in tlie deep mud* into which they sank when tlie building fell into the sea. A ri'Rß FOR C7OZMOUA MXltri*. I*l U—.rs* (Sol . •*' ■nor* ftl4u< m of f a*l l*rll tb*u ALL.ES I Lt SO BALSAM tbi. ao*UAl*4 •nwWw.l *Ol rmiM >< uusi uf IS* tbruat, !■*•. "> all 4laa* of UwMinimtil M(n* >' lutrwSuro* (o Ik. *uff*r- O.H tub)!. *Jlrr It* BtMll bj, IS* OH Of **lS l it.a buu fulif I**l*4 b IS* tvmUf. 1 be O r-.<.****Olly. IwoSIMIll*! b|r l>b*. •l. i*i.* alio Uo Imvui. *o|uauil* WHS 114 g'Mt •SACSSS. WHAT THE DOCTOR! BAT: n* Wilton 4 Wtf4, b.lrt*fi* *u4 4roU in# flow C*i.rb***4 ALUM' ■ LUMG ROIMM. *u4 II t*llt rtfiSlf *• '• f.raeoco.* I'b> .1. !.*. *• nrll u di umnttA. *4 •S* |.|**l.l* in ••• •llieri4(Sa S gisst rtWMly, •tub u ' Sou* ibit %u In." Dr. Ltnr4. f Ohio, a*>f*un is Ibtsrmy 4irli| lb* war, from *|* **r*. .*Ot. I*4 cobnkmpHatk. H*>t|l "|b**bu br.lltl. Iu *lA(l*g lb*l It •u Ut IS* U** 1 1 jroor Lunji llalun lb*l I sa> Sue .lit* **4 eujujlnk (j. o4 bc.llb " M*th*ntcl Htfrtt. of Ml44Ub*rrr. VL, **r* " 1 K*v 1.0 doubl II nil •<• Ur- J* • . IWlol ••*••- 41*1 **•*! Ib* • Of* of *ll 4i**tl uf the Tkrssl, ttiusdisl Tub** ai4 Lut.t." A toot Warily. M n , of K-tciutrt Co , I*4 , t*yt "Fur Ibic* >r*i. |.tl 1 S*t utr4 48**'* / "# IUMH ttiabtltcly in *) yrtnin, *<>4 1 at taut Hot tk-ie it uo bclltf w*4lcm fur laaf 4uetc is *M>." Ffcytirlabt 4o not leMtatnf t sis4lclßS wkUk bat so merit W'tiat tSy tty about ALLES X LCSO BALSAM r*B bt taken a* s fact Let all *S!itl*4 t*lt It *1 tact, *a4 b* a. *4 of lit rati mcittt. At a* eii'*c.rnt II hat nc cxual II M karml**t l lb. taoti 41Ileal* ckIKL It ouutaina no ogiius U say form. plruUiuu tmutywr ok butt!*. CACTIO®.—CaII for ALLKM'M L VXO PALS AM t. H. HARRIS 4 CO . CtDctSBSH.O Fkorsisroaa riRRT r AVIS A SON. Oesarsl Agtolt, Frotidotxw, R L Bold by sU M*4i< la* Doators. ros taia sr JOHN F HEKKT.Btv Tor*. OEO C. aoonwis A CO.. Rotwa. JOHN SOB, HOLOWAT A CO. rkllaielfkls. The MRrketa. mrw iimi' bcrf Cattk— miw to I'.ttr* HuUockri .IBls* .I(l< Ftr*4 qua1ity........... Jl ,t .11 Racusd quahty II 41 onbituy Ull CtUb... .Ml a .14.* liilrnor or lowo*l grail* .04 * .11* Mtk* Cows *o.ao oTi.se U—U* 4RRO .0 Drmarl.. .V* IbKT *l4 (VHloo—4tl4iUlng. IS',* .10^ Flour—Extra Wcauiru 4.01 a T.ll SUI* Kurt IM t !JI WLcal —Hag Woat*ra. IM a 1,44 go. 3 Bjurng l. a I.J Ry M • M Barlcj Mall l- 0 a l. (urn Unci Weotcru .SSlfa MX Oat* Kiud Weotcrn .4*0,4 f S H*r I M S I.U Mm -*4 a 1.8 Hut* Uwsoaae-Tiw.ie a.(*>, !*ork llro 11VI a14.1T Lad .esita jm\ IVtrnlruttt—(Viola .4%* IX EiiwIIIX Mutter Male .44 a .*0 Ohio, Fib* .SI a JO ~ Trlk-o 1* a .14 WnHfßi .dinar* 13 a .14 femwyltanl* An* .10 a .34 CAwo Wat* Factory .U S .14 - Rkiauacd jn a .14 Ohio .14 a .W Eggs—Stato .S 4 .37 KIMIR BmCCstU. .. 4.1S a 4.131* Khacfi IS 4 Hogs—Lire. B.JT|*a iM Flour T.4U a10.44 Wheal -So. TBjirsng 1.40 a 1.0 (bra Jl a .K Oat* 43 a .43 Ry. .as a Jd Hart*) *' a 1.00 Lad .44*4 .04 luonr. Whoal - LW 4 X* Rya-Stale S a. Oura• -Mitd. JJ a .74 Hariri -ttlal* .SiSO ,V OaU-Hut* U a Z rniUMi rmi. FW 7.74 a 4.34 Wbat Western bd 1.95 a L.47 Oora- Trlkis 44 a .401* MHd .So a .41 renrnlmitß-Cntdo 13 lUSndISV Ovtsr o*d 4i a 4.3 V Tunotby LSI a 3.44 StLTUtOBR. Cotton—tn* MbUUlng 13*14 .I*l* Four-Kiln.. S.7S a 4.T4 Wheal .... I.HO a 3.10 Corn .34 a MS OkU 43 a .44 ISO Ptr l Rulitr*PMl>n.rw|Miin ai.d Arm It Audi< it 1. flu m*ltdnrr. Waraaw Ob in. RrROPK.tS CLAIM* Art dally brill* n Irutlcd tor mllvrltM to J F FKI EAi rr. Attorney.! Laar. Columbia. ra. j A Wrf k Oaarulf< ; |irolluHt nfloT' • t> " I Drill . mijr of IrtrKlr . tatnplr Hi rircu In trill fire AMnu ullklrttt tMurn tlarop. V *oo* i ro.tx Wain Rt . K T BITSIN KSS. .fMrm ~ '• nvrn tnblioti lonito a tamiiful mil la tall ni. trr oFrr4 tuprrtor factln.i-t fi.r arrnavtnr Ibrmaalrrt >1 tbr M'FSCKItIXIt BrMITONcOL- I.BHK Xilwaubrr. Wit. (litaptil I'lnMltuArwlni Marhtnr ! I Only *4O. Ifton'l pay M. nittwf >iiturklw. a hrn yon ran buy oar tor #, dolor all thr runout aama Vin.li of work I ilk tor •'TttK CKVTEK KIAL." warranted Idtrrii Oatmntal" traiif Urn blue r. ir par r. 1..'04 rbrileul M . rinluSrlj hi. Apron Wultl Ihronßb 'be I nlted toilet. \*r L'TTJTV * n " wosD**rri. -apfaei- VV riJ IVJLF riOR BUS 08." Th# K rrait 11 optical pur tie and dilution rtrr prodm-*"" kba- Iniely Inrtpltrabla. Tbr it pnatlr av rarnot-Y. AM tillered impi tritn|i|raU| oorabinttd. Tbr (real- J etl •'Woaoua or rm Vntu " Rrnl frrr. bo*r4. ana full direction., prepaid fir rla rati Wbu I only from Itualrr A Co.. Rlnililt. B. 11. THIS IS NO HUMBUG. Br •eudin# rii , villi iff. hftftit, color of #yc ana hir. fa will rwitp * cofrw |tctrr of y*r ftatar# kailunf or wire, villi cam* and dale of mar ia# W POX. B O DrtvrrH.rtllMiTint.il T MASON & HAMLIN Cabinet Organs. Tuc nwi Y AmnHcaa Mwaaal Instiwimwl* af I "C UIVL.I iicb ritni n.Hilary ami rccngnl*. rd. et.vrlleace a* In command a wide *al* In Kurojw n..| .Hi.lauding c.iui|UUon Ihera with pedncU ol cheap latior. Al U/AVC awarded hlghr*t premium*. Imtnd- MLTf 810 tug the Mdal at ll.< Iwrt* 1 xiutition. Of hundrd* of lodidrla] Ethltstuma, three hat* uot I wen *ll in ail Where any olhwr organ* have bn> [ltefarrd to three. II Alll/ETDC A I I Y reeomnwpdd by eminent U 111 V CnOnLL I niu*lci*n**p< woellig>!■ crllcncie* not attalod in any other*. See opinion* of GNE THOUSAND, In Trelinwmial Circolar. CYPI IIQIVPI Y employing revere! tmpor LAVLUWIILL I Um luvruUou* end rm t .racing every reel Improvement. THE MOST EXTENSIVE St rt*e tn the world, pnlwcing Iwitcr work at lee* 00 t than ot'vrewla* poeaible. PDIPCC riven t 9ll ** • B,r • cenririrn* rniwCO lIALU With rerupulom rmploj roent of only Iwri malreial *nd workmanattlr. lU.rsTlt.iTKt) CAT.iI.OaCE AYD TEST!- MOM.it. CiHi VLAR. WITH JMfIiKTA IT f.V -BYiwjg.tr/ov ABorr ORUA\S WHICH MAT SA VEII'IieIIA SEES EROil /i/.v.l />/Y(/ .\ TMKA T IS EC EC HA SK OF mrHMIOR OK VOMTUUtB* ISSTkCMKATs OH CAMEST Uf UHIH PRICES, SKAT FREE. ' MASON & HAMLIN ORGAN CO., l. p d TSEMONT ST.. Ik.wtt>*; 35 UNPIN AQFAEr NEW YORK ; NO AND 83 APAMX ST., CrICAQQ. I'RE lb* Rruinger S**h Lek and Support 10 FASTEN YOUR WINDOWS ! No |T'a **h at any place iirir*il, and a rlf-f i*lener ebon th* ah ladown. Sinl *l*mp for rlrriiUr ClrruUr and *lx ropper hromrd lock* ACnt to any addrr** In lh* V. 8., poll paid.on receipt ef HI el*. Llbcr*! Indncrmcnt* 10 ih* trad*. Ag*nt* wanted Adilr***. Rl*lnger ■aah l.ock Co., No. 418 Market *t , Harrtebiirg, Pa. (For lllnalrailon of thi* (hrepeet *nd bc*l lock.*** H nod'* Ih'tutMd Mnpurine, .V. I*. fd*p*rfc*f,etc.l ftP^IHTAHI.K Soda Fountains, • 30, RAO, RTS aud RIOU. 0000 OUBABLE, AND CHEAP! SHIPPED RKADY FOR CSE. Manufactured by J. W. CHAPMAN & CO, Hsdiaon, Ink. —Send for Circular.—" Sewing Machine Is the BEST IN THE WORLD. T. OXEY UadeonpiMy wllh Stencil 4 Key Check Outnt*. Catalogue*, aamplea and ralljmrttc nlar* Frte 8. M. Bpencer, 117 Hanover St., Bolton. A Mormon Funeral. htxn HtenhoiiM*, in her lecture on ' Mormon life, told the funny atory of i Hieter IMcknil'* funeral The follow ing u Hiahoj. lUrdj'a nenaon: " Wal, bruthmn and aietcro, you are all here, I a'poMi, and ao we'll begin. Wal, our aieU* ia dead ; let her real. Our aiater haa Buffered and made othera auffer, but now ahe'e dead we'll let her rent, Hhe Q|ieued the dm rto the derila and let them in Ave yeera age when licr hnaband took hia young wife. I told her then they would kill her if ahe did not take care, and now they're done it. Hhe waa a torment to her huaband, and I gueaa if he'd a ktmw'd that ahe'd a bin audi a torment he'd nerer married her. Ain't that ao. Brother Picked 1" "TThat'a ao, Iliahop." "Wal, Brotlter Pieknel, hare you got anything to aay ?" " Not a 1 know'd on, but I I ought ter aay aum 'at, and if I do I ahull tie aure to offend aome of the aiatem, ao 1 a'poee we'd lietter eloae the meetin'." Thua ended the funeral Mr rice. Tli* AtMawapfcara r lfrta|. With owf taaa, Boaiattar'a btoaaaafe • liar a ara aaarpekara piararaMa; aa la Iba Mbula ranpa of raaa#4t<. tat pravntiaaa praaarlk •a tr tka tacalty ar tra maaaadarf Ikraail tka praaa, ifeara la aalaai tkal eoaMaaa fa tack aa aaataaei Aapraa praai iftnaatfaal parfacl karn- Mtaaaat. jt ia a poatwtw aiutau la Malaria Wboat* 4 tafcaa it katutaallp May Wcaika Um at •aoapkata of tka Moral fa'ar Ml apoc locality With out dwarf Dtap ao * rkllltap MlaPa auk* Itttta ar ao IMpraaakoa aa tka arpaauanae lankmo wit* ilia puMatfal areata Ma 10 ripuiaal, aa coa aapwaaUy una pood aafapaartf apauiat aaLkwa aaopha. ooMa, aaa otbar palamaarr auaplalata li aaarriaaepfcrtklalaUarrMaa at aoalatflaa. Mil ataiplp aa a aaaaea at (trarptkoa ■ap iba ayatraa apatMi tka wilal aaaOiUooa a*.< rktnera m kick ao uptru pri.J*r Umm. Aa a tpriap loatporaol and aiiaraura it will ba fOaak aatramr ty Iranaacialto pta -oa vkoara parolUrly araai- UretaeekeattkpetetaapLarlr laflaaarra ataA OMaal Faaallr Hraoiar. **** * Aoar Anapurrlv. a parrlr VrprtallaOafkar ' ar.a tVair tor Drapr ia-a < . ..aupattaa.DaMliia, *trk tcaAaoka, n.houa ana.aa. ana all 4raa<- aaaaia . f Llaar, at. Ma.k aa4 KcaaU. Aafe yr-vr Dmeipat turn tt. *•(. y mhMiww. Want Wtmaa roa a Cot oe-• as po aa It raaM r >ea afiaa apMiap tka aaoaa at Coaaaaipuuo. Baltar ttj i etn Dr. tafaa i tifMlartal, a aar. amra tar al! Coapfca Ml C< lit VAM'Abi.tt rtn* arsoa and ngoKa oirur AM AI -Ttiw i|iwiai apiM ilikt tain -1 Aa Hot a JneaaAL *alauuap arar M papra | raluakla iwolup irr. lUortialaP Milk Aoprma.' ptrMP.rw PuilPlopa Sierfe, Poultry, p* ■*---*- f- ti- 1 r pi-k ipa af reaarta ■ utan kiaaurirota, lapi..i WhilaOtT*aa ALaiaaor LraaaaCkorka. will kr aaan PBCbtoall •£• la. a lamp, lor p- .tap a Ale... H. F Dorr> a Ckrtirr Co.. It W n M tot Car pa, Illaairatap, Dapertptlaa Prlca Lta J S |j lioL. Hrt (vara. Piao la rlt . il.t.r) kurf k r aira ' *"?-*' prtrra. Gaoa |l M pare rtaioM 12,000,000_ ACRES 1 Cheap Farms! Tkr Ckcapaat UaA la Narkat, fur aala by tka UNION PACIFIC RAILROAD COMPANY. In lE# CHEAT rLATTI VALLEY. ;i.(i,aaO torn in Oatnal Siknik# bow (<.i ..I# in irtrii . f f,.n, arrra ai.d nnaaio tm *r mm* urn ,ar. rtadil M MC imvl- Mo AH.aac. rr, lr <-l Mild an# ■ff.MAf.l <1 mate, Pcrtll# toll, an IHE HKET MARKET IE THE TMT' TH# prrat Miutac to >gin, r.iorada. ClnE mm* Ji.ffM. to.n, b> IE. tarmir.u tt. rum Viuii. •OI.DIKRa ErriTLED TO A HOHfc- MTKADOP ISO ACRKE. THE REST LOCATKttH for COLOMEK. HOMEB Ml ALL VtlUnaa to irm to rtoir. ii.Tffrnnffnl Itoi rp#n tor ffnlr, nndar lEff Eaoliil Mff.ini IEI# Onto Btiln.ad, tE rto ffiiilm, u.l all lE# nttcawufficfu cW inurt rwnntr, li!?. pM "* pafbaarra to KatlreaA Laada. toflioH.l Mapa. aEonta® IE. Land, alto . adt " PaaapEUt u or. Hap# ■ailtofr.# i-TarmEara. AMtm, O. p. DA TIE Ln*H ( wanlntaarr C. P. K. R.. 11| _ iNaahai Br to. SSOO IN PRIZES. to-a RXTK A K IRLI VRE EOSTT. Tm h> , _ ®'iE..l .f tEaa Earl,E< to. Raan K tf\ nann.lt Protoncti.r and to I X- W rtLUEET rHVUH. Hl| A poanda b, mail, puaipaid. tor il.ta. mm CHEPTOSE HI KPKIKK. •* Ito ffj *• Itor Arm. A llulr latrr Nto Iban Karl, Rnaa. E#eal la qaal I, 13 rH b puna*. b, aaail, pnalpaud * S-VOO mUk.an.rdffd.aa rEEHH H* f \ Q Iboa# ak prodac lE# l.atpr.t yaan- W HI, fi-al.topoaud tttorrtpriffaC'ircn- L, !■ lara to Ibff atoffa, tnib l.ito 3M ran. [Jto B UrttoPutalom. IttolnalL K O p^ e t~v e i2a , cfiß2%s Cj #to Tltoiti.tE# IRLOWTUk. Un paik t. Prito.ak. B. K. BLISB & SONS, ft Part Plarr. SfW Yuri. Sgk' taai.) jWjWclob. b Orlffltluß. >Mauteelarera of Saws, •rrr.Rio* to all OTHER* ir**r saw h-ausa-vta/i. S HI.FX HFLTINtt ft * UHI\KKT. LIBERAL PIUTOrSTS. m. m. I* m Ui> aarf OrraUrs free C/> WELCH A CRIFFITHS, ■ _ Boston. Warn , ft lift. SCHENCK3 PULMONIC CANDY .Riakrmi la a great drtmill the principles of f t.krork'l rulaoult lynf,a*4llil a* pleasant b, Ike palate at tks purest eoafocUona.il* medical I properties render it effectual la t<ataaMr|a>tiagl|Mßakl IraakfraadL I •.<. nth mmt Mat MBk . HrrOUNO A CO~ M Purl la art I f.KawTack. OPERATES like A Sawtaff-Machina Engisa. AGENTS WANTED 1 RY DEB. U Ana 8 irart, Nw Tork. Dr. Whittier, Ixtifrtl atttaßad and moat aact rsafv.rf btsivtaa ;of lbs age Cvoaultati.ui or peiupklci flee. Call or j wrtte GREATEST CURIOSITY *' weekly. Frier *5 ctrstt. Ho bnmbu*. A4lr .rou A H % ut> A Co.. He. tin to DIU Thea-Nectar Blftcit TDA a- trBHFF Maidjrta tk itk tßa Otran Tea V lav or. r.t ccutrutitr The beet Taa Imported. For 3kABBMP*Ok aala everywhere. And for aala iwjWHjft, .X uh. 1.-aala only by thr ORKAT NT ■afl ATLANTIC A PACIFIC TKA CO. Cm Nu. ll Fallon 81 dfdl Cbnrrh ■a. IfWPI w at . Raw Tork. F. a Bos. MM. Win #9(l par llay: Asania wasted! All classes ■ lMww of w< .ktngpeople of either sex.yonng ' arold. atrka more incut at artirkAr nam tbatr spare moments or a'i thr ttma than at anything alar. | Parti nlara fraa. AdiirsssO. OTIESON A CO., Fork land. Ma. The Wheat Field of America ! Healthful Climate, Free Homes, Good Markets. TUB KORTHKRN rACIFjC RAILROAD offrra tor aala Lax oa r* CB*rhjn. A* tna* Kixxbmta, embracing: 1. Th brt of Wheat Land; & F.xcel- Irat Tiiatorkf ikr Mill, thr Farm and tka Fire l 1 Run Pram* Pastaragt and Natural watarad by clear Ukea and running atrrama—do a healthful CI mat*, whyre Fever nod Ague la un krowa. DRAIN ran ba shipped heoee by lakr to market aa cheaply aafroth Etatrru foaraorCentralllKntHa. Cart now rnn through thraa land a from Lalta Su perior to Dakota- Price offend close to track 8100 to B*t fin net arre ; further away SISO to $4 00. Bar ax Texas'Uitxnrr; Warrantee Droda; Northern Pa- S!s • nrh advantages 1 vlllcr, BOLDIRR* under me Near law (Marco, 1*721 get IS i acres AfiAA.xear the railroad, by one and two yaaraf raelda- re. TRANSPORTATION AT SEDUCED RATKB fur utahed from all prtr.etpaJpolnta But to purchasers of R.ilrond banAa. arid to Settlera on ©overnraeui ' Homesteads. Purchasers, their wives and children carried free oyer theNortltern Pacific Road. No v | N the time for aettlara and Colonlat to get Railroad Landa and Gorattnurnt 11. ui. if oad< '' -■ to tlir traak. Bend for Pamphlet rontalnlng full .nformation, map and copy of Nut liomeatead Law. Addreai, LAND DEPARTMENT. NORTHERN PACIFIC RAILROAD. ST. PAUL, MINI . 4 Oa, riFTH AVENUE. Cor. th St., NEW YORK jJLjir,,, K®B. kino of the blood. m in. fmomrom r.iM. m TBMaSSNaSfASSfS' kelfe—aemwa eowjaaeel, aedCwwe* -M WJMT toctfiiKffiSfeKisu KV-aw.aeaW ftaaH.teD Five Noma am aoee leewvad Djr an jwwoltU Dc-irfgaet - arorbnlir Dtaeeaca, DaMrrN, o' or liettgb hSS.M Wanam !>• war, "SSS "Ba!ssgiasir*tt?ggs Zym JmZZ* I*""** ■ "** ni! Jir lk.wU and K*>wyy„. . , . JFruiti tare te at* lnMlea wl!) hr f-aat EmSVcori* ESTtb-nadw. V rrHj•* batlleawOl mm *•twha bailee wtt a,, M two te fr Ixittt— whl "w Wiaea tare l ® ••• fcotUe * '"Vatee'# I rw NUl'i ar • took* farffc. J feud L j all DragM* • D. AA\m>M, Mitt*, rtn^% ftaataetimoetala to tonaleataam. •■•, S. f. IT! C-Na It THE GREAT REMEDT FOB CONSUMPTION which can bo cured by a timely resort to this stand* ard preparation, as has been proved by the hundreds of testimonials received by the pi-uprietors. It is acknowl edged by many prominent physicians to be the most reliable preparation ever in troduced for the relief and cure of all Lung complaints, and is offered to the public, sanctioned by the experience of over forty years. When resorted to in season it sel dom fails to effect a speedy cure in the most severe cases of Coughs, Bronchitis, Croup, Whooping Cough, Influenza, Asthma, Colds, Sore Throat, Fains or Sore ness in the Chest and Side, Liver Complaint, Bleeding at the Lungs, &o. WlstaFa Balsam docs not dry up a Cough, and leave the cause behind, as is the case with most preparations, but it loosens and cleanses the lungs, and allays irritation, thus removing the cause oi the complaint. nmin t EETH V. FOWLS * 8018, Baata* Maaa, Andaold Er l>ruggM*amdlmlmgi—nr. MSKOBAVf'I 6ARSLIN6 Oil IS GOOD rOK * B.n mm* banlAa. UhrnmmmMmm. I li mil l.i NMHnW4 to Ht* RUnto#*, Bar ■ riMk wnnnto. ma—. M int. Epa.tnn f-lt.ml Pilmaa. Bii iEi.to toilaai, •mm* Crmm l*. totoawEnlt. PI >, t-.IL to All Kttofe. Tmft* mom. *>•*—". ft"*"* *••* rvril Evil. Ptod Mi * A.1..1 A I—l mtrnrn. *•■ * <•■*. _ TmiMi*' ■ to. toe- I— Una*. ton. ton ItoifetiMßl-00; UrdiaaMc ; Small 83c. attnLT777to mZZ tot t —.tod Ml*— Mitoi. totor I towMiaaw tW Oil. , . . >■ tv |H< OB li to aa ft to> I ' ■ to l< A. ton- ... - _ * mt, ...... to. to. 1B a A ■ mm l , mm ar (taiHutoto. " • JtEBCHAKTS WOXX TABLETS ** tol (to tol lt—al toto *P. aßdHiij ' ■ Baton n KmtowMl st l-wA.H, B.T.V ■EIfHIUS CIRCLING Oil CBIPT JOHN MOOCS. INfH*T piNt MOTHERS! 8001 kik*o stiifiplros cmibiSffffiff' Thia valuable preparation kaa bun oaad With NFVF.R FAILING SUCCESS I* THOUSANDS OF i CASE A It not oaly reßyyre the child from pain, hwt Invtg nratee the atowuw k and kowela. roraacta acidity, and { gtyea tone and energy to Ike whole ayitrm. II will alto tnatastly r allay a Griping ef tke Bownle sad WiaiOdis. We heheve tt the BEST and SUREST P.ENBDT HI , THR WORLD in allicaaae of DYSP.NTREY AND DIARKIIRA IN CHILDREN, whether anting frota teething or nay other rauae Depend upon tt, aaothera, tt will gtve reel to yonr aetvee and HeHff pr>4 Woalrb TU Be tnre and call for "Krs. Window'! Soothing Sjrrsp." j Baring the far aimile of "CUBTIS * PERRIN'S" on the ontelOe wrapper. Sold by Drntnrtgts Oooßghoat the WoeU" EMpa, • Dr. Sagc'a Catarrh Rf irtcGy effects cum upee ■lf atwnufic princtplca, by its w . \ tt:.i4 healing properties, to ,il which the dineaac rradually ff yield., ahenthe ryatem haa Ar oeen nut in perfect order with Dr. Flrrre'i Golden Medical Discovery, which ahould he Ukea earned)-, to correct the blood and syalem, which are aiway* at Omit, alto to act apecihcally, as it does, upon the diseased glands and lining membrane of the aoae and in communiearing chambers. The Catarrh Remedy should be ap plied with Dr.Plerce'a Nasal Douche, as this is Ihe only form of iastruaMnt yet invented with which fluid medicine can be carried At>* */ and ftrfketly applied to all pans of the affected nasal passages and chamber, ta which tores and ulcers exist, and from which the discharge gener ally proceeds So successful hat the above course of treatment proven, that the proprietor offers 8 SDO Re. ward for a case of " CaU in //mf Oatua or Catarrh which he cannot cure. The two med icines with instrument, for fit, by all druggists. Dr. Whittier, Longest engaged and moat anceessful phytietan of the age. Consultations and pamphlets free. Cat or write. qi nnn reward VyXsl/VA/ For any case of Blind, Bleed- - l-ng, Itching, or rkwrated Reward JiavSvU: J'Si preparad aßDseeelv to cure the FtUe amd nofhiog rise. BOLD BT ALL DEUGGXBT3. FKZCE tl. !fe , 7 < 2l aa lAoa wiKK-.iann vaitid •P ! .UVI Busiuess legitimate. FnrWoli fee. i. WORTH, st, Laoie, ao., Box hn.