Fin?, Harden and Household. Slftnfklnf. The question of deep versus shallow ploughing is receiving new notice of late, the shallow ploughing theorists— perhaps it should !x said also exemplars —seeming to be gaining now accessions. But in all that has been said and" writ ten, and in all the practical testimony adduced, we have seen no reason to dis trust or abandon what experience has taught us to lie the true practice in ploughing, to wit: 1. Beep ploughing is useless on light, porous soils, unless there is a atiffor sub-soil with which the surface soil may IK? intermixed to produce profitable me chanical effect. 2. Except in the ease where it is de sirable to mix stiff subsoil with light surface soil, a trench plough should never be used in deep ploughing. 3. It is a positive gain to all stiff, tenacious soils to plough shsllow in fall and follow with a subsoil plough, lift ing but not inverting the earth as deep as may lie ; and on land intended for com or potatoes, where stiff clay soils are cultivated, this snbsoiliug may be done profitably in spring. 4. We do not recommend deep trench ploughing (that is, inverting tlie soil! in spring, under any circumstances. If this is done at all, it should always be done in the fall. Nor do we recommend using a plough iu preparing the seed bed in spring for grain ; aa a rule a two-horse steel-tooth cultivator ia far better, because it pulverise# and com minutes the earth more throughly. l>fd from • An*. A pair of farm horses will consume in a year 6J tons of hay and 270 bushels of oats, their daily ration heiug IS pounds of hay and 12 pounds of oats for each. It will take 14 to 16 acres of average laud to raise this amount of fodder. A cow will consume 18 pounds of hay and 6 pounds of corn meal daily, equal to i 3} tons of hay and 40 bushels of corn, allowing for toll for grinding it, per year. This will require about 4 acres of average laud. One acre of good corn land will produce enough grain and stalks to keep a cow during a year This estimate, wnich ia deduced from firactice, accords elsewhere, ss gathered rom statistics, which prove that eight acres of land are needed to support a horse during a year in Belgium and Holland—countries which, as regards the supply of food, are self-sustaining. There would be no practical difference between the crops mentioned and others that might be chosen, for the reason that more prolific crops requires gTcater amount to be consumed to rield an equal sustenance, with less prolific, but more nutritious crops. The most econ omical single crop to raise for fceding animals is corn, when the whole stalks are well cured and properly used. -.V. Y. JYibune, Frail In Tin Cuu. The Boston Journal of Chemistry says: The impression prevails among those who use freely fruits which are put up in tin cans that they are injured thereby, and this impression is in rnanv eases correct. We have long contended that all preserved fruits and vegetables I should be stored in glass, and that no metal of any kind should be brought in contact with them. All fruits contain more or less of vegetable acids, and others that are highly corrosive are often formed by fermentation, and the metallic vessels are considerably acted upon. Tin cans are held together by solder, an alloy into which lead enters largely. This metal is easily corroded by vegetable acids, and poisonous salts are formed. Undoubtedly many per sons are greatly injured by eating toma toes, peaches, Ac., which have been placed in tin cans, and we advise all our friends who contemplate putting up fruit the coming summer to use only glass jars for the purpose. Sail for Cattle. One thing cattle need they do not get, is plenty of salt; they "onght to have some every day, but i" fear many do not get it once a* month. Our plan of feeding is to give from four to five quarts of corn meal, or corn and oats ground together (the finer the better), well salted the first thing in the morn ing ; the roots, after which the cattle are turned into the yard, where they have a feed of straw and stalks to work at, and plenty of water to drink. At night, they get what good hav they will eat They keep in firstrateortW on this. Last summer we fed four quarts corn meal right throo&h the snmmer to our cows, each morning, and they looked well right through the season, but they were none too fat. It is something we" neTer did before, but I think it paid well in the extra quantity, and also in the quality of the butter. Try it one sea son, and see if it don't pay yon. Don't forget the salt. Separatlax Howry from Bee Bread. A lady correspondent of the California Agriculturist gives the following con venient and old-fashioned way of separ ating honey from bee-bread : Put such pieces of the comb as have bread in tbem into round tin hotter cans (those a little flaring at the top are best) until nearly full. Then set the wash boiler on the stove with water a few inches deep in it, bnt not enough to boil up into the cans ; then lay a few pebbles or an iron chain evenly on the bottom and set the cans op them, pat the cover on the boiler and let the honey steam until the wax is melted, which can be ascertained by a small stick or wire. The honey must be stirred if wished clear. When it ia all melted, lift the cans out and set away carefully to cool, and when just abontmilk warm, with xr.ife and fork, lift the wax and bread off the top, and your honey will be-clear and nice in the can. Economy of Pad. A correspondent in The British Work man tells how to build a fire as follows: The person laying a fire should fill the grate up to the top bar with coals, put ting large pieces at the bottom and smaller over them, then upon these, paper enough to light the sticks, which should lie laid upon and not under, the coal. Cover the sticks with the cinders remaining from the previoua day's fire; these will soon become red hot; the coal below will be warmed sufficiently to make it throw off gas; this, passing through the hot cinders, will burn with a bright flame, instead of going up the chimney in smoke, as it does when the coals are laid on top. The fire thus hud will require no poking, and will burn clear and bright from six to eight hoars without the necessity for more coals to be thrown on. Made It Prodwetlve. A correspondent of the Ohio Fanner " having nothing to start with," pur chased, on easy terms, " one of the poorest farms in the township," and made it productive. His plan is as follows : First,' plow deep, then seed with wheat ; in the spring sow clover on the field; the summer after I take off the crop, I pasture one season, and the next season I let the clover grow up and come out in bloom, and when the heads begin to turn brown, I take my three-horse plow and break up the land nine inches deep, and then sowin wheat again. The year following, in the spring, turn up for corn to the depth of nine inches as at first. Harrowing Wheat In Spring. If ground for wheat has been proper ly prepared for seeding in the fall, and trie seed has been drilled in, or if it has not been sown too thickly, we can see no advantage to result from harrowing. If it is too thick on the ground and it is desirable to thin it, harrowing may be the mode adopted for so doing, other wise we see no, and never saw any, gain from harrowing fall wheat in spring. On lands that are likely to heave by frost, we should rather apply a roller than a harrow, anyway ; and we certain ly should not harrow fields seeded with grass the previous fall. Forty years ago a revolutionary soldier deposited SIOO pension money in a New Hampshire savings bank, and in each of the two folio wing years added sls more. Neithpr principal nor inter est has ever been drawn, and the amount now is $1,228,81, with a share in an extra dividend about to be made. Warfare In Cuba. Bva llir WoMtwUd aisnßhtrrrd In tlirlr Tracks- O'Relley, the Jfrrald oorresjiondent with the Cuban army gives us tlie follow ing description of a Cuban battle : 11c says a detachment was sent to kill cattle in'apofrrro or entile farm close to the town, a service they accomplished with out interruption. It was evideut from this circumstance that the Spaniards would not oome out to nttsck the posi tion at Canadon, so a for,*,, of some three hundred armed men aud alnnit one hundred af fifty convive-ex* ami servanta were sent to complete the de struction of the cattle farm, with in structions to carrv off as many of the cattle as they could catch, and in any case* to kill as nisnv as possible of the animals, so as to deprive the town of its chief means of support. These or ders were faithfully carried out by Colonel Hanebei ami the trmqui under his command. By half-past eight the potrero was in flames for a distance of a league, and tlie cattle either dead er driven iuto the woods. The soldiers and the unarmed uien were laelen with the meat, and orders wore given to form a line of march to return to the encamp ment. At the eutrance of the potrtro the road is slightly decreased, and a wood extending in the directum of the town forms a semicircle commanding completely the outlet from the potrero. The Culan forces had reached this point when tiieir bugles sounded silence. Scarcely had the sound die,! away when a volley was delivered from a Spanish ambuscade, distributed in three divisions. By s miracle none was touched, and the Colonel, dismounting, ordered the men to advance. In a mo ment tlie sacks of meat fell to the Cund, and a rapid and well sustained was opened on the Spanish ambus cade. It was their turn now to be sur prise,! ; for the Cubans possessed pleuty of ammunition, and were confident in their number*. The Spanish forces did not number over one hundred and fifty, and by a strange freak of fortune their three buglers had been shot, one sfter another, as soon as they sounded an order. Notwithstanding the disparity of the forces the Spaniards fought a itii valor and tenacity, as they always fight, but wore obliged to give wsy before su perior number*. A movement of re treat in the face of a Cuban force is disastrous. The moment tlie soldier* perceived that the Spaniards were re treating they advanced with a rush, sml the defeat was turned into a rout. Then the horrors of the situation were de veloped. The Spanish soldiers,Jost in the woods in the darkness, fell an easy prey to their enemies. So dark was the night that it was accessary to inquire whether the person encountered was an enemy or a friend before striking. Tliis did not last long, for what re mained of the Spanish troops were in full flight for the town, which, fortu nately for them, was close at hand. The moat terrible and inhuman feature of this awful warfare was, fortunately, hidden by the dark cloak of night. The wounded Spaniards who had fallen had crawled into the woods to save themselves from the vengeance of their foes. Here the Cubans followed them, groping in the dark and listening for the sigh or groan of the wretched men to direct them to where the help less wounded lay. In most cases tlie unfortunates were discovered and the deadly machete finished the work of the rifle. "Ave maria, me matar!" exclaim ed one poor fellow as the heavy machete cut his con! of life, and the appeals for mercy of the helpless were the more heartrending that they were made to ears that were deaf and to hearts steeled by the bloody memories of four years of war to tlie death. It was revolting and disgusting. My heart sickens when I think of it, and I am thankful that the sight was spared me. Is liberty worth such atrocity. I thought It pains me to have to record deeds of snob dread ful barbaritv, but my mission is to tell the truth, plain and unvarnished. My instructions are to spare neither Spaniard nor Cnban when condemna tion is demanded, as well as to award praise where deserved whether for Spaniard or Cuban. Therefore I must pronounce this butchery of helpless wounded and prisoners what it is—bar barous and inhuman. The material re sults of the victory consisted in three bugles, seventeen rifles,the boots, clothes and other effects of the slain, and the sentiment that the men who had fallen a few nights before were amply avenged. The loss of the Spaniards in dead was estimated at twenty-five killed on the spot and thirty wounded in the retreat, who had not been discovered in the dark ness of the night, or owing to the prox imity of the town bad escaped. The Cuban loss was one officer killed, two wounded and six soldiers wounded. The morning after this success the Cu bans quitted the encampment, accord ing to their custom, so that when the Spanish troops should come to avenge their comrades they would find no one. The Coming Comet. An astronomical friend well up in stellar matters tells us about the coming comet It is the old wanderer known as Bena's, which was thought, like Niobe, to have changed into a shower of mete oric stones. Comets do, it appears, reach an earth stage or opaque charac ter, on the principle that a body when frequently electrified becomes magnetic. Our earth was once a comet; but its tail is now exhibited only in earth currents of electricity, which are indicated by the Anroa 6orealis and by stoppages of the telegraph. All astronomers aqd geologists admit that the earth was once on fire, but have not remarked that this means it was then a comet Our friend informs us that a comet may fall into the sun, as Newton thought, because it is attracted on its side next the sun more than it is repelled on the opposite side, as the electricity escapes from its tail. But as the earth retains and elec tricity expelled from the sun or moon, she can never fall into the central orb, the two synchronous tides exemplifying the attraction of one side of the earth by the moon, and the repulsion of the other side. The modus operandi is the same as occurs when a body is present ed to an electrifying machine. It be comes negative, and rushca to the ma chine to regain its due share of the elec tric fluid. But the earth, being per fectly insulated, is as much repelled throughout half its extent (as the tides show) as it is attracted through the other half. RED TAPE.— In the days of King William the Fourth, of England, when a pane of glass or a cupboard door in the scullery of the palace wanted mend ing, the chief cook had to draw up and sign the requisition, which was coun tersigned by the clerk of the kitchen, who took it for further signature to the master of the house, wlio sent it to the lord chamberlain for his authorization ; from whose office it went before the clerk of the works, under the office of Woods and Forests, by which office the broken pane of glass or the cupboard door was mended in the oourse of time —perhaps ! SHIPPING. —Things happen strangely. While the Atlantic went down, drown ing 700 people, for the want of a proper outfit of coal, Mr. Plimsoll, 31. P., was lashing English shipowners into rage by exposing their stinginess and inhuman ity. What he says about rotten ships, starved and beaten and ill-paid crews, and vessels sunk or wrecked for want of ordinary care and provision, is enough to make the average ship-owner keel over, if not to throw him on beam's end. Of course he was denounced as a mere sensational exaggerates It would almost seem that the Atlantic sank to confirm his story, and point the moral of his tale. UNITED STATES COINAGE.—' The new coinage act which went into effect on the Ist inst., abolishes the silver five cent and three-cent pieces. They will not be coined hereafter. The act also increases the weight of the silver dollar to 420 grains, and styles it the "trade dollar," to better fit it, with its new weight and devices, for the China and East India trade, for which it is more particularly designed. The San Salvador Earthquake. lltUlli aflk* Tsrrtfcl* AllWtr. This little* republic of Han Halvador, writes a eorrespqmlent, lis* "Wrnu time a milTi'rpil senoualy from carthquaks shocks, but the fact had nearly disap jieared from UM nind* of moat ol two people, when, oti the 19th, it was vio lently moved by throe tremendous shocks, at the second of which the whole oity v bud in ruins, leaving for ita successors to expend their deal mo tive force upon but the quivering earth, already relieved of ita superincumbent houses. The shaking commence,! almut midnight, the iuhabitanta, aa i the ens torn in those countries, being all aaleejt at that hour. At the first aliock, whieii was of an oscillatory character and of short duration, everybody was rudely recalled from dreamland, aud, snatching such garment* aa were nearest at baud, , fell pell mell into the *ti*orta, ami so many lives were saved by the rapid escape of their owners. Many persons were more or less injured m their flight out of town, by falling bricks aud alanles, but the" greatest loss is un doubtedly in the tremendous destruc tion of property, not a house hardly being left standing except the National Palace, which is constructed entirely of wood. The brick and adobe edifices fell like card-houses, uot even a wall remaining standing in most cases. Most of these houses were built many years ago, and were cumbrous and stout enough m their walls to inspire a feeling of perfect security against alnumt auy onslaught of man* or nature. Hut whosoever trust ed to these treacherous walls received a cruel enlightenment upon the iiupo tcncy of wau'a most solid contrivances to resist the earthquake. All the sugar estates in the vicinity of this city re ceived serious injuries, and will be pre vented from completing their harvests. Moat of the foreign residents ami mer chants escaped with very trifling losses. The total damage to property in the city and environs is calculated at $1,000,000, but it is not so easv to determine yet to what figure the damage to the whole country by interruption of the harvest will ascend. An address to the Lord Mayor of Ism don has been prepared, and g>es for ward by the present mail, ami I cannot do better than furnish vour reader* with a copy of it, which I append hereto: Sir Sidney Waterloo : Mr LORD : It is with feeling* of the deepest sorrow that I undertake the melancholv task of communicating to your Lordship the sad account of a great calamity which ha* befallen this republic. On the night of the 10th of the pres ent month, San Salvador, the rapital of tlie republic, was visited by three dis tinct shocks of earthquake" so intense and destructive that almost before the unconscious inhabitants could fairly awaken to a sense of their imminent peril, many were hurled violently out of their liedsj only to be buried in the de scending ruins of their homes. At the second shock, the dreadful visitant hod left no roof standing, and what an in stant before was a brisk and prosperous city of some 30,000 souls, was rendered an immense accumulation of loose bricks and mortar, a scene of desolation and a complete wreck. I shall not pause, my liord, to dwell upon the details of til's dreadful calami ty, nor permit myself to describe to you the wide spread "misery which it must entail, and the hundreds of cases of terrible individual suffering which it leaves to mark its destructive course. The pen is no competent exponent of a calamity so pre at as this, which, in deed, can only be understood in all its dreadful magnitude by each one's taking it home to himself and so approaching nearer to a just realization, of the full measure of its appalling import. Nor is the effW-t of this calamity eon fined to the place of its occurrence ; its mfluence is sharplv felt throughout the whole republic. The harvest had just begun and by the destruction of this city, which was the central point of ditribution for all of the country, it will be completely thrown back, even where its utter abandonment b not rendered necessary. People who were rich only a few days ago are to-day thrown upon the world houseless, glad to accept any shelter, any help for themselves and their wives and their children. The considerable sums of money that were invested in houses and other perishable property have been wiped out as though they never were, and the resources of the"country left so crippled that prompt pecuniary assistance from abroad is rendered indispensible, not so much for the restoration of the ruined city as to keep from despair the thousands of suffering families who are thus suddenly confronted with want in its most press ing shape. The percentage of mortality.considcr ing the magnitude of the calamity, is very sraall.a fact in which the survivors , clearly recognize the gracions inter ]K>sition of the Almighty, who has thus mercifully liglitcnea the tremendous burden of grief with which this suffer ing people is cruelly weighed down. The purpose of this communication, my Lord, is to appeal through your Lordship to the British public in be half of the beggared and houselesa thousands of men and women whose substance has been suddenly snatched away from them by a great convulsion of nature: in behalf of all classes of the population, for this untoward visita tion has cast down all distinctions, and rendered the rich poor, leaving the poor Btill poorer. | The British public has never been ap ! pealed to in vain, lias never shut its ears | against the cry for charity, and when that cry comes from a whole eonntry, a country whose principal city and centre | of wealth and commerce has been laid in the dust, I feel that I do not exagger ate in my conviction that all England, ! as indeed the whole civilized world, will feel a great throb of sympathetic compassion towards those of their fel low creatures in this distant land who so sharply need their aid. In an emergency like this every mite helps to furnish fw water, would Ih 50,5*4 cubic vartla. A coffer daiu, placed be tween high and low water marks, was commenced in July, 1 HiU, and in t>eto ber of the saute year the main shaft was ojKOied. This shaft, pierocd through the solid rock, is 150 feet by 70, and HH feet deep; from this, which may be (HUBpared to the handle of a fan, radi ates 10 mam headings, which are agsui divided up bv eleven more, as necessar ily the radii of a circle diverge more and more as they approach the circum ference, and because, without these ad ditions! headings, the chambers at the furthermost part would IK- too far apart. These are intersected by the galleries, which deacritie circles from the centre, which is the mam shaft. The entire length of the heading* aud galleries ia now 5,000 feet, by actual measurement; a mouth ago it was 4,710. It is difficult to state exactly how many additional feet will lie driven, but it is possible that it will l>o 1,000 more feet before all are completed. So far fully HO,OOO cubic vards tif stone have been removed. When these uiaiu galleries and heading* are tiuishcd, a laat gallery will be driven all aloug the extreme outside, us a flual circumference, ao that when the explo siou takes place the present work will lie entirely severed from the main reef. But even when thislastgallery isthrown out, the work inside will not lie con cluded. Then the floors will have to be loweril following the outside slope of the rock, aud the more delicate task w ill have to be accomplished of paring down the supports of the roof, or the piers, so that though strong enough to liear the weight Of the eriiiug and that of the river, when the explosion takes place they will offer the least resistance, which, compatible with safety, was nec essary while the work was going on. Xllrxi-glycerine will be used, and tin piers will lie perforated by a system of holes or I*.rings made iuto them, the explosive .fluid being introduced into mm pipes of about two inches in diam eter. The quantity of uitro-glyocriiie for the Anal explosion has not vet been determined on, a* the exact calculations cannot lie made uutil the whole work is finished. To study the exact shape of the rock, no less than 20,000 sound ings have la-en made, and over the whole area of the rock it is safe to nav that there is not a single foot of it below water which has not been noted. The Massacre of Surveyor*. The facte of the massacre of a survey ing party on the Bed Fork by Indians, wen- brought iu by a Mexieau employed at the Aray>ahoe agency, who has been staying at the Cheyenne camp, near Camp Supply. From him we learn that Whirlwind, with about thirty warriors, perceiving a small juwty of three eom lass ami chain tneu measuring ofl town ship linea on the bank of Red Fork, thev crossed the stream to bare a parley with them, and the men fleeing at tbeir approach, the Indians shot tbeiu with tbeir rifles ami buried them in the sand. This same Mexican reports that the Obeyennes *' feel bad" at tlie loss of thirteen of their warrior* who were shot early in the winter by a party of Kan#** scouts and buffalo-hunter*, who buried the slaughtered Indians in the sand. They declare they will kill nn equal numln-r of pale-face* and bury tlieni alao in tlie sand. It is a very unusual thing for Indian* to bury tbeir mur dered victims, but this reprisal for frontier violence accounts for the un wonted proceeding. The nomes of the murdered men are given as Eddie M. Iteming, of Lawrence, Kan. ; l>aniel Short, also of the same place, and Robert I'oole, a young Englishman, vrho has no friends in America. They and one other had started out in the morning to complete the survey of a township about twelve miles south of the Kausa* line, aud failing to return at night three of their companions went to search for them the next day. They strnek the trail of the missing men aliout ten miles from camp, and after following it for three miles they came upon the trace# left by Whirlwind'# party. These they pursued till they reached the town line, where the miss ing men bail finished their work, and adjacent to Uiis they noticed some fresh mounds of sand. A hasty removal of the surface revealed the laxly of Eddie Deming,theeompa*a-man,thu# realizing their worst apprehensions. Being in close proximity to the Cheyenne camp the explorers sought no further, but hastening back to camp they revealed tlie fate of the missing men to their companions, and the next morning the whole party set out for Arkansas City, distant 150 miles. There being other jiarties out, an expedition of thirty or more surveyor* and citizens was quick - lv fitted out to apprise the other* of their danger and also to bring in the bodie# buried in the sand. TIIR BITEB BITTEN.— A man in the •Iron* of a workman was lately walking in the streets of Berlin witfi a packet in hia hand, sealed and inscribed with on uddress and a note thnt it contained 100 thalers in treasury bills. As the bearer appeared to be at a loss, he was accosted by a passenger, who naked him what he was looking for. The simple countryman placed the packet in the inquirer's hands, nnd requested that he would read the address. The reply was made as with an agreeable snrprisc: "Why, this letter is forme! Ihavelieen expecting it for a long while!" The m>Bsenger npon this demanded ten tha lers for the carriage of the packet, which was readily paid, with a liberal addition to the porter. The new possessor of the packet hastened to an oliscure cor ner to examine his prize ; but, on break ing the seal, found nothing but a few sheets of paper, on which was written "Dona!" AFTEB SUNKEN TBEASRRE.— It may be remembered tiiat about two years back a company was formed in France to moke another attempt to recover the treasure supposed to have been sunk in the Spanish gnlleons in 1702. The pro moters of the enterprise did not conceal the hazardous nature of it; if successful the speculators obtained an immense return for their outlay, but if ended in failure their capital would be complete ly lost. This latter eventuality haa been realized; the expedition has just return ed to Havre, and is now landing the materials used, consisting of diving ap paratus, cranes, Ac., nnd which farm the sole assets of the company. A Fable. —One day General Gram mar mustered his auxiliary forces, and hade them answer to their names. "I)o?" "Here, sir." "Be?" "Here, sir." "Have?" "Here, sir." "Shall?" "Here, sir." "Will?" "Here, sir." "May?" "Here, sir." "Can?" "Here, sir," answered Will. " What do yon mean, man ?" thun dered the general. "You have an swered to your name already. I culled for Can 1" " Beg pardon, yonr honor, Can is only another name of mine," replied Will, giving the salute. — Good Thing*. TEXAN BEEP. —Beef is now preserved by a new process in Texas, and taken to hugland and sold there for t#n cents a pound. The meat, eut into joints, un dergoes a chemical process, is then packed in casks, which are tilled up with the blood, and in that condition iH found fresh at the expiration of several months. Recently some of the meat thus prepared was cooked and served up at a dinner in Liverpool; it was pro nounced deficient in flavor, but tender and juicy and free from taint. Among the Alligators. * Balsa Haaisr Rttoto Ms KsgsHsass with !>• Nussnh sf lbs U|ms. A .Vim correspondent lias been inter viewing an old Florid* alligator hnnter, aud from him gained soiuo interesting information relative to the monsters of the lsgiMiu. Formerly the lagoon* and lukea, as well as the river itself, above Enterprise, were filled Willi alligators. They are thicker there now than on any i other part of the Ht. John's . If * pas i aenger osa river boat killed an alligator, ! Cone, the hunter, marked the spot. ' Oocaaionally three or four alligabirs would lie killed inside of three miles, ('apt. Cone would then east off his little host, retrace his course and skin the . annuals. He gets seventy-Ave cents s ' piece fur the hides delivered in Jackson ville, At this time he was filling ati order from a London Arm, through a ! Jacksonville merchant, for 8,000 hides. I Said Cone these here skins makethree | hundred and forty odd 'gators, I reckon, I have bugged. You see huntiu' 'gators I haint what it used to be. There lianit tlie number o' 'gators iu tlie first plscc, i ami the big 'gator* is more skeery. 1 reckon they know more than tlicy kuowed ouivt. Now, 1 can remember throe or four v*ars ago when gator hide* was wutb from two to four dollars apiece in Jacksonville. Sow they hain't wuth a quarter as much. Correspon dent— How large was the biggest 'gator killed by yo|# this season ? Csjit. Cone j —-Not over ten feet. The 'gators is little this season, I reckon, or the big uus is too plagtiey skeery. But it's all the same on the hides. One hide's wuth as much as t'other. Correspondent | —How long does it take you to skin an alligator? Capt. Cone- Well, I done 1 peeled the bark from a 'gator iu twelve minit*. I'll everedge fifteen minits, I reckon. At this point two passengers saw au alligator on the right of the i boat, and opened tire. The old 'gator I huuterstraightened himself up, grabbed his rifle ami rushed on the other aide of the pilot house just iu time to see the slimy black animal slide into the water. '• Now," said Capt. Cone, on his return, | " the hnn[f o" lead that is thrown sway on 'gators by tliesa here die-hards who come down to Florida every winter, is more than any man 'ud reckon on. Yesterday a die-hard signified to me tlrat lie thought kc saw a 'gator with hia head out of the wuter, and he went to pitchiu' bullets iuto that here 'gator, lie had one of these rifles that shoot* eighteen times one after another with out sloppiu'.aml I'll be dug-guued ef he didn't put eighteen bullets into the | 'gator, and the 'gator stood it. T'waut nothing but a sunken log stickiu' out of the water after all." Tlie old 'gator hnnter said that he had killed a few alligators by moonlight. Occasiuually he found them in the night time away from the river, prowling for food in the pine woods. Indeed the pine woods iu Sourtheru Florida are flil<-d with alii ' gators. I found them thicker there than in any other sjioi. The woods are frequently cut up iuto swampa and savannas, and water stands in these places all the year round. The alliga tor makes large holes in these swamps I aud ravaiinaa. He covers the holes ' with dried cane, grass, and wliatever he can And of a similar nature. This cov ering is raised like a cone, and is two or three feet in height. There is a hole in one side of the covering, through which j the 'gator crawls out aud in. In these holes the female alligator raises her family. In Turubull swamp, near New Smyrna. I saw an alligator hole which set-ined to lie Ailed with young ones about eight inches long. 1 was hunting desr with Mr. A. J. Alexander of Wood | burn farm, Kentucky, and Capt. Frank i Hams, a prominent Indian nvcr hunter. Sams was about to pnt bis hand in tlie hole to pick up one of the little 'gators when Mr. Alexander shouted, " Hold on. Hums, there's an old alic one in that hole, aud she's watching you. I can see hor head." Mr. Alexander then j drew a I wad on the old she one, and fired. There was a thrashing of tlie [ water as if a tiger had fallen into a cistern. Mr. Alexander hail hit the old | 'gator, but hail not killed her. In her agony she had thrown one of the little I fellows near the month of her nest, i Hams snatched it up and put it in bis pocket. The little fellow was very lively, aud his eyes wore as bright as diamonds. We took him to Lowd's Hotel at Smyrna and tied him on the mantelpiece. He lxcatne quite tome and would amuse himself by catching flics. He was very pugnacious and would croak and snap at little aticka on the slightest provocation. About : Smyrna there are thousands of alliga tors. The people there say it doe* not j pay to kill them for their hidea, as Smyrna ia too far from a market. It was sundown when Capt. Cone prepared to leave the taint. He said he knew where then- were two 'gator* in a marsh near on old Indian mound, and he was going after them. As he enter ed his boat I asked him what was the length of the largest 'gator lie had ever killed. y Fifteen feet and two inches, I reckon," he shouted back. He then hoisted his sail, and we anon lost sight of him in the tall maiden canc. Crowds of Northern men flock to ; Enterprise during the winter, and many of them employ their time in hunting alligators. The guests sit upon the verandah of the hotel honr after hour polishing alligator teeth with sandpaper and buckskin. Every day someliody brings in an alligator which has l>een shot in the vicinity. After killing the alligator, the men hitch him to the | stern of their boat with a chain and tow him to the beach in front of tlie hotel. Tbev then hire a negro to cut off liia head and skin him. After the head is cut off it is lmried for two weeks. This is necessary to secure the monster's b-eth. It is amusing to see eminent bankers, ministers, judges, and others watching a spot in the ground, near the hotel, where they have buried An alligator's head. Oocaaionally some gentleman gets hold of the wroug head, and then there is a row. Everybody seems crazy on the snbjcct of alligator teeth. They sell from two dollars apiece up to five dollars. I saw one tooth Atc inches longsold to Capt. Tom Reeves for twenty dollars. Some ne groes make a fair living by carving flowers and enriona figure* on the teeth. City rs. Country Newspapers. The city weekly newspaper is usually made np from reading matter used and paid for by the daily paper ; hence it coats but little ; while the eonntry paper, on account of the limited amount of the local advertising patronage, cannot af ford a daily, and must make its weekly from mutter expressly prepared for its columns. The city paper is made general in character,— adapted to one jmrt of tlio eonntry as well as another, and conse quently has a wide field for circulation ; while the country paper mnst le made local, nnd adapted to its particular lati tude, hence its circulation is limited to its particular locality. But does the city paper answer the purpose, and sat isfy the wants of the country reader ? By no means. The paper published in the city re alizes thousands of dollars from its ad vertising patronage, while tho local country pnjter gets but a meager aup portf from this source. The principal clerk in one of tho agricultural news pajter offices in New York informed ns that the "advertising patronage of their paper amounted to an annual income of over one hundred thousand dollars." And yet the people of the eonntry ex pect the local paper to be furnished at a lower price than the city monopoly. And while ho pays cash in advance for his city paper, he put* his home paper off with a promise to pay when he sells his produce after harvest, or when ho gets roady, and can licst spare the money, at tho end of from ono to three yours. The tendency of such procedure on the part of some delinquent subscribers, as well as the recent act of Congress, taking nway from country publishers and their county subscribers the only boon they ever allowed them to have, will require the utmost economy in the conducting of the country papers. The best way for subscribers to en courage their papers and keep them up to their present standard, is to be prompt in their payments.— Exchange. The Florid* India* Hound*. Th Turtle mound is among iho moat famous in Florida. A oorrmpondout mts of it: Tbo mound is ou the beach aide of Mosquito IjAgooii, nearly a hundred utiles south til Hi. Augustiuo. About eighty feet in height, it oovers nearly an ae'rs of ground, and ean be seen at a great distance looming np on the eastern horiaon far above the paliurttn scrub fringing tlm ocean. It ia shaped bite an immuuse turtle. This shape gives it it* name. It is the highest IMiint of latnl on the eastern coast of 'lurid*, and stands within three hun dred yards of the roaring ocean surf. From the deck of a vessel ten miles at sea it resembles a ruined fortification built uiem a hill. Turtle Muuud ia a great heap of very large ovater shells covered with fmm one to two feet of dirt. On the uorth west corner the rain has washed awsy the dirt, leaving s perpendicular bunk of shells, eighty feet high. The build ers <>f the work evidently raised it with the greatest care. Every shell wss placed in a given jxisitioD. Where the slide has occurred the oyster shells rest in plumbed layers, with lb# smooth sur face facing the sky. A stone wall could not have been erected with wore pre cision. The mound ia alive with tropi cal shrubbery. Wild orange trees load ed with fruit wiive on its summit above ttu almost iin|ieiietrable thieket. A hollow covered with'rank vegetation has been acooped out of the top of the hill. It has an easy slope, and is probably twelve feet in depth. It looks as though the Imiies of some large aiiiiual had been dug out of it iu ages past. Moa nuito I . ..goon washes the western base of the mound. I found a small deer path which led from a little sandspit up the aide of tlie lull. The |utli, however, was soon lost in the thicket, and it was with the greastest difficulty that I Anally suc ceeded in forcing my way through the thorny undergrowth and sharp-pointed Spanish bayonets to tli# top of tlie mouml. Even then the ahrtibbery ws# higher than my head, and the wild orange# were higher than the shmblx-rv I #}M-ut half an hour in forcing myself to a point of observation. No nuiuiitaiua nor lulls could be seen from tlu* wound ; nothing but one vast flat surface veined with lagoon# and river# and covered with spot# of wax like vegetation. The builder* of Turtle Mound are unknown. They were undoubtedly a race of Indians who were wiped out of existence centuriea ago. The Seminolea and other Florida tribe# declare that they have no traditions that explain tlie mystery. They look upon the muuud with nearly the same awe as tlie whites. What ia singular with regard to Turtle Mouml i# the fact that there are no oys ter* excepting the small coon oyster, within thirty miles. It wonld Ims inter esting to know why three shells were brought from *n oyater region faraway and ao carefully deposited at this spot. Hume tlnnk that tlie muuud builder# of Florida were contemporary with the mound builder* of the West. They be lieve that the whole State was once un der their control, and that thouaauda of voars ago they were accustomed to visit Turtle Mound once a year, fill thera- M-lvea with fat orsterw winch might at that time have been found in the vicini ty, and pile the shells ia layer* a# they now appear in tlie mound. This may have been a religious observation with the Indian*. But the whole thing is speculation. Nobody knows anything about it, and there is no probability that any one will ever discover the se cret. The Formation of Fgg. I will now state, says Prof. Agnsaiz, a# far a# it ia known, what an egg is, and how it ia formed. As the egg grows steadily until it has completed it# trans formation, it is difficult to give a de scription of it which will answer for all these stages, since at every successive stage, while growing, the egg differs from what it was before and from what it is to be. All eggs, however, arise in what are called ovaries. Tbeao are clusters of cells, forming buuche# of a somewhat glandular character in ap pearance. Between these cell# the eggs are formed aud in such away as at first to be hardly distinguished from the cells themselves. The same is true of siierm cells, which arise in organs of the same character as the ovary, and are formed in a maimer perfectly simi lar to that of the formation of the egg. Ho we have these two spheres of growth which characterize sex in the animal kingdom, arising in conditions so very similar that the easence of the two is hardly to be determined by observation. It is only by the process of growth, bj the influences produced by the one upon the other, and by the consequences Of these influences, that we recognize the essential difference which distin guishes them. Iu order fully to appreciate what eggs are, we must remember—what has liecn known for about a half ceutury ouly— that all organized taxlic* are composed of little bags whicb are called cells, and which are formed and multipled in va rious way*. Most of these cells are so small that they can only lie perceived bv the aid of high magnifying powers. There are. it is true, a few cell stme tnres large enough to be seen with the naked eye, as for instance the cells of common elder pith, or the coarse cells of the orange. It ia one of the great problems of modern research to ascer tain how these cells are formed and what ia their mode of reproduction. For it does not seem that eella are form ed in the same way nnder all circum stances. Home naturalist* assume that in the animal substance accreted by a living bodv, such as milk which is se creted hy tlie mammary glands or simi lar substances accreted by other organs, certain particle# become center# of ac tion, around which other particles crowd ; and when a little connection of this kind, microscopically small, lias lieen formed, an envelope arises around it, and wo have the utricle or cell. Others lielicve that minute, impercepti ble particles of animal substance swell and enlarge, ar' become hollow, so that n litt'e bug ia formed, a ce'l envelope in short, which fll'a as it enlarges iuto a fluid substance. A Strange Suicide. The Han Francisco Vail tclla of ncase of suicide in that city which of de cided interest, apm/to* of the Goodrich case. The name of the anieide was James P. Wilson. The {xml mortem examination revealed the fact that there was a bullet wound in the upper portion of the head and another iu the regien of the right eye. The bullet which pro duced the wound first dosrrilted entered the forehead and shattered the frontal hone, then glanced along the upper part of the brain, while the other bullet entered the right eye, and after passing through the brain, lodged in the back of the head. This, in connection with the fact that, when fonnd, the deceased held in his right hand a single-liarrel breech-loading pistol, led to the belief thnt he could uot have oommitted sui cide. The argument used in favor of that lielief oras that deceased could not have inflicted two wounds such as de scribed with a single barrel pistol. A further investigation, however, showed that any other theory was mite lable. One of the witnesses testified that he saw s man walking along Turk street, and saw the man stop, raise his hand toward his head, and then heard a re- Cort of a weapon, and saw smoke. That e supposed at the time thnt the man was shooting at birds, for after the shot had been fired he saw the man continue along Turk street, and saw him erosa a fence. That about half or three-quar ters of an hour after that he saw the same man ret urn to the place where the first shot was fired, heard him fire a second shot, and saw him fall. That there was no one in the vioinity at the time. He afterward learned that the man was dead, having shot himself. Ten feet from where the bedy waa fonnd a pool of blood was discovered, and near it an empty cartridge shell which ex actly fitted the pistol. The peace conference at Camp Verde, Arizona, has resulted iu the uuoon ditional surrender of two of the worst bands of the Apache Indiaus. slaughter by Roll. Tks TerrlbU AscMsmX MUdbm Ua Mallrusd. The wholesale slaughter at Rich mond switch brought sudden bereave ment into score# of families and add# another to the tad mommies which will rise unhidden hi the mind of the travel er as he seat# himself in a railway ear. Fourteen miles oast of Htoiiingion, on the route to J'rovideuor, the Shore Liu# Railroad crosses Fawcatuek river, the buutidary brtweeu Connecticut and Rhode Island. The bridge was a short one without a draw. It must alao have been without a watchman. At eleven o'clock tlie previous night a trsin crossed it coming west. After this time a milldam on the stream above the crossing was swept away by the ua uaual torrent of the spring freshet, lite rush of water escaping from the pond undermined the railway bridge and car ried it away, leaving > yawning chasm, soon to be the common grave of an un-! counted multitude. At half part two' in the morning the steamboat train left Snouugton, taking the passengers from i New York by the evening sh-amer. One hundred and sixteen person*oon , sidered themselves safe iu tin# train rushing toward# disaster, WlflfHß maiming at the a peed of thirty-fhTuadoS i an hour. Twenty minutes brought them to a halt—many of theia lo the cud of life'# journey. Without a word or #ign of warning the engine, umler full preo- 1 sure of steam, and with the momentum of the train's weight, jumpedelraraeru*# the stream, wrecking itself ou the east-, rn bank, while the cars crashed the one iuto and ujmju the other, and at once took fire. Only the smoking car escaped, re maining on the western twuk. In the mass of wreck men were drowned, crushed aud burned. Mangled and hardly recognizable as human beings, the bodies of the dead were recovered. The injured were forty in number. Ouly tne addition of freezing to the deadly horror* it lacking to eomplet* the parallel with the gbaatlv scene of two years ago at New Hamburg, la the twinkling of an eye death dosed the account of these men, till then full of life, courage aud hopeful anticipation. Lac* birl of Nottingham. Ewit lire nMliiM cmplojrißg two men if'qairew twenty to Uiirty won**! to wuiil lije silk or twtUi* first, ami to drew, finish, clip, and scallop. and card or fold, ami pack up the goods at la#t. The above ia a moderate estimate of the proportion of girl* over sixteen years old required. 44 Pattern girta," who make Bp pattern-hooka, and post up and prepare, ticket and number, tittle pack ets of patterns to go abroad, and who, therefore, must have auuo education, or at least write fairly, get about £! a week. From three or" four to thirty or forty of these smart girla are employed ir each warehouse. They must be dreasfnl well, and sometimes rather smartly, becanaa lb ay am suna'.anUy in and out of the sale-rooms, and seen by the buyers. "Jeuniere," who windthc lace on the cards, get about £1 a week, and finishers generally 12*. to £1 s*. These are " warehouse hands," and they eouaider themselves superior to " fac tory hands," though they do not, 1 should think, get on an average higher wages, tf so much, for a clever frame dipper or winiie4 wit* lU fleet rarwl. WHAT THE DOC TO SI SAT Pre WHeon a Ward. plTiinui arid Sramteta. write ftow Centrerille. Tea*. "We pttiiSoeed Atari'a Lmmf Balaam and tt eelle mptdty We are practicing pbytlrien, ee well *e frutft'S. US take plaeaate in reooatairnaiac a great remedy, nut u we know l*l< to be." Dr. Lloyd, at Ohio, sergeon la (he army Satin* the war, froia eapoaaie. contracted cnemnntion lie mere- " I kttreo beet tan ejr la etetinc tbet It wae by tbe aee of yoar /.f Balaam tbet 1 aw sew elite end enjoying good bcaltA." Setkenlel Herrle.of MtSSleberry, Tt.. eaye " I lereaewefia wtlleona t,nna ecleeeteal rewe ! diet tertl for tbe rare of ell Sieeeeee ot tbe Tbroat Bronchial Tebee end Lenge" Abm Woolly. M. D.. of Soerlaeea Co . Tnd . am For tbree yeere peel I bare aeeS ABea'r La a* Balaam et tenetrely la wy prertire. and I aw tatte ' fled tbe re la so better medicine flee loa* Steaaaaa ' ta aee." Fhyelctaae So not reocamead a wedlclae wbicb bee bo went. Wbat tbey eay about AI.LBX'B LCXO BALSAM can be tabem ae a fact. Let aU US tar tod Wat It I ! once, and be conrlnraS of He real merite. A, an eeyootnrant It bae no e*t>al. |l le barwleee to tbe moet delicate cbllS. It contain, no opmw ta any bra. Direction, accompany eerb bottle. CACTIOK —cu a>r ALLKK'B LCSQ KALBAM t. B HARRIS A CO . ClaaiaaNU, 0. Flora isro at. rsaar DAVIS A SON.Oraatal AfMU Fntrtdcac*. R. i. Sold fry Alt Htdirtas Daalcra. FOB tA i s at JOHN F. HRKET. Nw York. BBC C. GOODWIN A CO Coato*. JOHNSON HOLOWAX A CO.. rhH4)jllla. it is H.TMITSU wtoss. k> wss tin a ad Couth or Cold, wbrn tk* risk It •• rsl MS a 1 rraiadr ao aarr, rcw*t and tkar*ak as Dr. i Jaj ns'a Kaprctcraat ran taadllr h* toaad. The Markets. saw mas Ba< Oattto—mar* to Nttra 4 .isqa .14% Ftmt qnalltj. tl\a ,ll|| BMODI U\A .13 H Ordinary thin CatUt... .10 a .11% Inferior OS a .10 Hitch Cow .on ,lt.m Ho* I. • .05 % ,W| llmwnt .07%! .<* HhI .07Sa .07% Cation Hlddllns JS'.a .30% flsar—Extra Wmirrn dan a 7.13 SUM Extra A.SO A I.SO fegimliO? jfthS, Oau Mixad Wwtorn Hit .M Hat, per lon 17.00 *38.00 Straw. |rM ... ....... sigHW H0p.,.:... JiS.dA--OA.MiO As rark-m <*•. .7.... TTI7/T ~ .T..... "~® Lard .OSlta .wX PHrolriini —tVtidt XA .10 R. flnrd 90 ,* Butter SUM 37 a .45 Ohio Panrf 3S a .S3 " Yellow IS a .38 Wiwtorn Ordinary JO a JS IViuMtlvaaia fine. .... .30 A M Chanao- state FhrSort A J .ls a .18 '* Bklminod 05 a .10 Ohio 1M .IS RMB~BUto .10 A .17 ■trrraiA. Borf Cattle A.O A 6.8S Sharp 7.35 A 9.15 Hoc*— iJvr 5.50 A R.OO now 7.1# a 10.35 Wheat- - No. 3 Sprlaf . 1.47 a 1.5S Corn dt a .61 Oats 0 a .43 Hr 95 5 .96 Barlv HO a I. Oats—State 64XA .55 rmußtuiu. Flour —Fran. Extra 7.50 a 8.15 Wheat—Western Bed I.K3XA LID If Corn—Yellow 1X A .63 Mixed 63XA .S3X Petroleum—Crude ... 14 RefinedlSX Beef Cattle .06 a .88 Clorer Heed 8.00 a 9.35 , Timothy 8.50 aslTSi Mtmmi. Cotton—low lUdUnfi. 18',* .18% floor— Extra 3.76 a Mt Wheat 1-70 a 3.15 Corn—Yellow a M Oats 47 a. Dm. HA* eon • Hi** Syrup and Tola, or Honey Hmip, 1* not * pnr*4 by • regular pU/riciau uf ovwr twenty vetiw' pm-tiee, who used it many year* aitb iir*t mmoom in bit large prtoiiot for Ibt rurw .>f Cb>iu>, r< la lb* bona* w> be randy for a auddan attack. Only 36 oanla. - Com. CUiolttr* Morbus i* instantly cured by lr. Miller # Magnatic Maim. Nnuermiu abunM l.j witUoal a botiU o* Uio ti'tij, aa a timab Jim may *** lift 15 rt* par bottla only Raa advertise Slant in tint pa|wr - Horn. It rcn nrc going to travel provide t.wirwlf wttli Kim*"*! Cottar* Tb*y art tb* •Html kind yoe can take wttti yon,—Com. The greatest novelty of modern medi al and cbataical ananea ia found in l)r Pierce - * I'lnaeaut I'urgauv* J'alieta, or Tt nUlas*. Iwnt odL Concentrated IbxA ate! Herbal Juice, AnU* Billmt* ft ranula •oOrorfy Utrgrr that tnutlnrH eob yet tnoai iniiny aa mueb Uiaitle power* aa lira old atyia uf lan*. lepuistv* pills, while il.rv art mure easily taken and are piaaaaid in ■ fleet. 35 rents a vial by Druggists. Tmtid bt Tm*.— For Throat Die eases, Cold.. and Coughs, • Jtmum* Urim iktoi JVofftm* have ynwed tbatr efltewy by * l*ei of many year*. - Com. • W* shun hi not heaitnte to reoommend o any friend ofotir*. tarmmd I'm-yamw Hiu ; ibey are wtentjA-ally prepared, and are adapt ed to all aba purpose* of a good purgative fowl*-insCum. iWidtMlly the Inset remedy that has •*ar baau diaoovarad far rfcannn inmi, awuttan iff a*f j <34l*l*, dprh ttuuudi, sprftim, bmlMMi, rule, and burn*, U JAMHMM* .tsodysa I.lM pwllf We Mat ii. and paoaaaneud it fa our friend* —ftodi. Ciitmu Hoia, FaOe, rough skin, pingta*. aab rWnw. and atbar autsnaista aMaettona cured, and tba akin made •oft and amoutb by uatng Urn Jlhu-s* T* Hoar, mada by Carwru. H*xa*i> A Co , Sag If orb. lis eartain to gat the Jmrniprr Tar Ktxtjt, aetbere ere many mutation* made wHIi common tar wbisb are worUflan*.—Com. OnUfTAJCKiBu'* EjunUdikOß Haib Dt* atAnde uurttaied *ud aluna. It* menta bav been eo tdven>ai:< aeknoie4g*d that it would baa auperaeagaAtuu bo daaranl an tb* any furtbor uutbtug can h*at tt—Cam. TUUOQ'H Ihhtajit lUtusr ha* *tood imnit veara' iaal. I* vrarrantnd togiv* itnmt irri*,*at aibaaplt t* wbtrb fb* wrabrr aem ar* aaciaatraly tatyart. Hoatettar** *U*ra baa ia enmpatiteral beam or abeeat AGENTS , t£fj£ \IX A WATCH FREE art •• oar ifritl Imimh lull lU koHftUa MM mad. in i d.y. fealnatU a* fai Xirrjbodr ban a U. OH'I #•' (IUHWU. Mutt Kr It. L .t..tlialF | naiT' Kawuaay ICQ.YUTLFCTLFK.?L- j WASTED AfSKWTO ararjakaia la prtc-or. >1 titnubara ft* tta ftu Oiars oc*r. • L.trr.ij and TaaMitSM M atari nr. of *4 pay**. allraMut aa< kaalxwlr AulnM. tmla boa ctbvaw.na Mr aakirf from sa> to AM par wort ftaanri oopi.. ana Inaarerttona to natal* •r* aaaUad am rnmpi of aaula. Addrc** laoo WAILT MUIIINF R, MUVARTK. K $25,000 GIVEN AWAY IS CAH pranatama to Ua MiMfrtWn of iki TaA**rtjirrtc Hr'.Afiaa Tk* ptalikor or tk Traaani laMie, lanrra at raprtj. Urn rft w amnaal !• rkrop rtmaoa, will dl.tnt-ut* Antony 1h feral s.AO nra iit wptariferikr praoaal ?w lit arm <-f fedl.tMHl in caak. at toll owy: Oarara .r.kOf *fe.OW I < .of fel.feOO. v,nfSfta, l*a of felftU i fl*l at taOl Vifn. ftrrd of Ikl* new I port rI Ifc.rr araa talat* tart yaw tha tarasi Pampklm awar (rati in Amr rlra. wrtykiny IK Ilia Pirr laafi ami post paid ft>r coal*, or lara-hro ftaada far SraaU A-ldrraa, Jb H. UtWKltt Parruprrt, !.*>■ CHICAGO, MILWAUKEE A ST. PAUL RAILWAY. (KOvAnkM ft $t Paul Railway Co.) Irlmltw from rhkacf w Mllwtakm. U frmar, Uinona. Halllafk *l. Pan, an* Mluorapolta. A! W> M.tll.oaa. Fmlrlr da (Ahm. Anrtlaa. IHaaldaaa. (I.arfcm tMr. Hum city .ni Alwaana i al.o m Janr.allfc, Monro*. |tl|>ou. Hrrlln nf Oahkmb. Km branny aoif Ua.ltara.l rnlrraiUFltar ■rr Kraort. than any Porlfcrtlm Una CHU JIUO DEPOT-f orm** f .aal mm* Madlann nirrrin.(•>it PiHabbrw. ,vrt Warn. A ' "cltaJlrt'ny v? "i"ih"!art*h*nll Railway* Iw*ry la# I km. ft. n atrwt OKXMAI O*RII-*a-llllarankaa, Wla. I t ft MNI-USAALRUFW. XO C OftfLT. A"t Oca loanr. A. T U.C ARFKKTK* O T. and T. Aywat rjOOLEY'C I YEAST. -POWDER TRY IT, SOLD BY 1 rn Ik* taUIUM anak Url M Mp*rt M FASTEN YOUR WINDOWS ! Wo apt toy t. kraak.n raiUaynf aaki (■>>, dmr •!<•. t a* ' * upl>M : koldi utk tl any | trill#. M • irllhillif: vim tka mk la 4Mn Krad Mtip .| cl iratal. Clrralai and UK coppnr > cwirt toe*. iAI to any addraaatn Ik* V p l paid on • aca.p lrtl I .bataJ uantnriiii (fc It ado Uii want L Add rat. BATH WK Co.. IF. k.t at. Haiitt>nra. fa 1 War U}f aarai ton aflata rksa ate aud kaai tecAana Wtofi tioumMi Mfnm,N. f. JmJ*fsn4rn4, ate &% | (SkMkh.ktd MM.] ** Weloh, db Orlflltliu, >Mannfa<-lurrr* of liai, BCIKRIOB TO ALL OTHRRS. %. Fast. &EX.TXSO AXD MACHOTRY I.IKKRA! PISCOTKT*. fitMMm u WELCH * CRIFFITHS, ■ Bo lion. Man*. k Dwali, Mick. _ : GT/ITCf7T3I THE A-NEC TAR WISABSBSB ta a rcai yjgßW Blncla TEA arllk tka Oiaan Taa Flarer. Tka taa Imported. Wot tak# anrtalwa And for tain Z trbofcurcla only ky Ik* 6ml fm JUtS Atlantic aad Pact dc Taa Co.. Ka V® .jlHWiriMi 1"' P'tlioi Bt.,a*t# Cknrck mflnOW at in rora. p. o. a*, ** Bead *>r Thaa-Bar-laf Clmilai "AMERICAN SAWS." BJtWT IN THK WORLD. {WOT till.K-TOOTHED CIBCIUIW, rUtl ROSJt HTK. A*F.RI(AN>AW CO., SEW YORK. MCM&IM Sew in ar Is the BEST IN THE WORLD. w.f. on nnn reward tpXtV/V/V/ For any caaa of Blind, Rland " 4. tun, Itcklna, or Utcaratad P"" ikat WK BINOI PILR JCVO Wcu U KKMKDT iatte ta aura. It la praparad axprcaaly Id nire th* P!l* and nothing alaa. SOLD BT ALL DRUGGISTS PtICR Si Stft tn R9O P' r day l Arant, wantad I All olaatet 9*J w kU ofarorlußi>*<"plolattk#r ae*. young ■ rid, mk mora tm>n*r at tiork for uii In tkalr ss^^isfcrwrii^ lana.Hr. HiciMcuM.^sssifas; ttotniaanua thorn*, dar m eratua*; no capital iwpi ir d; fantnatraoMona and rateable package of tooda aeat Dr. Whittier, Lanftat |MXI and moat mc-craaital pnyali lam tka an, Couaultatlona or pamphlot fraa. Call or arrlta. ' ' ' _ —— GREATEST (MOOT cou aetliac waaklyTPrlen 60 oanta. Ito ton bny. AddrntoQanaoa A. Baaasd Co., Beaton, Maaa. R R R RADWAY'S READY RKLISF Curcn th® Wort t* ma, Oil TO TWXVTf XIWEJTM WOT own Hon* ami ** awrawmaemrr Need my one Suffer with Pata. Radway'i Bssdy lisiiaf U a übw far rvory Dais. >v til r*a etaav aim m THE ONLY PAIN REMEDY •bat Intleeilf ate** tba meat MArwtaHngJgJiJfv allay* la*m*i>*s. ana carra CiwuaaMasa, wbrtn* a. afikr Un>*t. ileaaauA, Bowaia, ar Atbar gtasM ar argaa*. by m> ayyhrali#*, ia nam cm* TO twhii wtwttm, a aiattar ban violent ar aaeraetattag lb*. pylajb* k SADWAVS HEAD* BELIEF WILL ATTORD IWITART RRRR unu-u. "fcggl— *- sun. ■—"- " —' ~" t: •WSa. * a. a—. Cn*a ll*k*lA, CtUrrt, lamsHi Bsadasba, Tootbacba, Bhwll)rt bw, CoU Cbilla, Agaa Chills j; "*Te"y Tag* Is MM a tamblar af waiar etn ia a . , wed to *e BohrrM. aa4 all *•""} 1,..11.re abimM aleaya ar y a beWa e I *A SSSS;3!S ler* asaaumslar gfly reutt- Tbsi* ia as* a rnaatlal a*ant is ibta aerti taa "Jj ,! '**? *>,r, aa4 aa**. *■>! all elk" Malari--A> B""', TynHMA T.Uew.asA *r *'*'"*•&& b, iintrv FJtXii a* **>ui aa BAnWAt 1 * gbtnv Bti ivr , „ _ ITPTY CEWTS PER BOTTLE. HEALTHrBEAUTY, •OTffiilpirr DR. RADWAY'S Siriiiifllliu Resolrail •AWMbWWir Ivery Dey u Imtmm is FltA md Weight ii Sees mad Felt # The Ore at Blood Purifier ■vary fo* e# the A**AFAWIbIAB *■■*- Is tba OlasAa aa* stbe: garw **ik* ayatasL Aeia ISsS^swsifJrisrf.fdJSlßrs rraaain*. aaweeSSta a..aatwrn aaaO>* >**a|ra lb* earn* wttb • V-u htbithy Ik4-m4 Uu* th* tAAFAtI*IIAII wtSs m4 fori S CTAF# f WUtW ; v,tar';si-.sivspd7., ,^sw t -l Star *<> as fc-lver, am*UIR ISUWU*, AS* •Ss%*^i£Sr3S-A.-R- s - c - : .ttfsis.'Ksss.ns-a'Lrjsi'siiSs; bet u la tb* antjr e*m tan A* Kidney nad Bladder Complaints, tea nmrmcnarb. bibyaa aafaiara. aa* *bty 4' 1-a ta.aeA Wbea tb*ralas rt*ki6, 1.0 raii aexaai.ea *aa b*aatafl Me. aa* yaaa la tba fault of tb batk *4 atuag tba buiea. Tumor erf 12 Yoei*' Growth Cared by Bndwny's Reoolvont . PRICE SI.OO PER 601TLE. . DR F.ADWATB 1 Perfect Protirc aii tetilaflif PHU, pvrfertly laaul*aa. it***'l>f ** a* rttb awe** 1-r tb* lloaaac*. lav**- Soar*Sa. BiAeeya, blaaaer. Xerreaa L.traaea, M*AaAba,o.matn*an.CiOUvw Via gra VarraaM* a* rcSa**aaittv* n.■ PJ ly VuiuUa. traialan* is maßry. niauili. a* 4 t>bar*o**bYatim*e* tye*"am raeuHtag Boa* AiaorSeracftba IMeUva 0 **a: . Cwtaupauen. jßvirt Fijee HuOneeiol IMIW*! la tba iiraS. A .any ef tb. a*a ■ < f f kj" •s at tba fil of tba ea*b.a*Uß.ul 'I fbe B"rA, HanrlaA at>4 D.*,aU Brratbia*. Vlar Ut at the Heart. Cbekin* " •eflemuee'Vi-aaU^** igja^WTiafffgeg^eg and aaAAea Fleabaa "* Heat. Vtart. A few 4(*e* <m kaPWAT A Cft , Xa.WWarrea tl . B.T. tufarmaxtaa wortb IbowaauAa arUl be teal I*- _? r e—n*. w 12,000,000_ ACRES ! Cheap Farms! Tba Cbaagaol naaA la HArbet, tax aala by tba UNION PACIFIC RAILROAD COMPANY, la tba GREAT rLATTE TAAUtV. MM.IIH Arm la Croltnl Sttamaka Haw tor ante In tract, or tarty acrte M aparaiAa on in aad taa yaara nadtt at par Mat. Bo Partite Ball, a. MAjtJCB V I* TBS WW* I - wraat ■later Br*iona or Wyotetaß. Colorado, V tak and Narad*. b*m aapplicd ky tka termors ta tka Plait* Vkltojr. WLDIKRI KSTITLF.D TO A HOSE. STBAD OK ltd ACRES. THE BEST LOCATIONS far COLONIES. PHI Horn PAIR ALL I MtUloam at aaraa at itwrr Ooranuaant Lands <.p*a tut antra attest tka Hamaatnan La*, naar tkta Oraat Railroad, ottk r-d autm. aad aU Ma eawnwieneea of an oM I ra* p.ian ta'pnrrkatara l ARRHIA lit CHILDREK, wkathar an a In* troaa Iwlklat or aay otbar caaaa. Depand upon It, aotkara, It wtH lira raat to yomt aalria and Saliaf tad Haklth to Tonr ißfuto. It aura and call for "Mr. Winalow'a Soothing Syrup," Hartnr tka foe-atntla of "CDRTIi d rSEXIKB' Ok tka oktalda arrappar. Skid hp Druggtota throughout tha World. &I*ORT A BLK Soda Fountains, f0, SSO sls and SIUU. DURABLE. AMD CKXAF ■Bin RD READY FOR Ell Manufootured kjr J. W. CHAPMAN A CO, Madiaan. IrA. —Rand for Circular.— Dr. Whittiar, nE&PR" wsajs issss&rsa or wrtta. ____ tin to tPIVJ vVI AH.fclalr t Co. kL Loot a. Mo. THIS 18 NO HI'MBUG. By aaadlnf eta., arttk a*r. kalakt, cotorafayaa and katr, yea wtU raeatva a corraot plct ara of yoar (a tar a butband or wlfa. with naaia and data of nar rtara W FOX F. O. Drawer l, Fulton allla. R. T rn.n o no RACE wm-iOUTi wartbd 9 / d.WU Baalaeta Ikfltlnata. Fartioalara trad. J. WORTH kt. Lnntalta now WW T'Si'j.vjgv.tenaiaam g S4O . r*/ra X Cornywnfßffiwtottajfrlch.