The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, January 22, 1874, Image 4

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    By the Seaside,
Why do I linger so late alone t
There'• a charm for me tn yon wave-wash d
•tone.
1 ong yean ago. when my life WM young.
In the golden time that poets have sung.
Together we sat on that stone eo wet:
Row sharp it was I rememler ret!
I aek'd her, " Lucy, you'll be my wife f
Parting, 1 love von far more than life."
And then she answer'd. "lam so vex'd,
Hut I'm to ba aaarriod. Hue month or nest."
" I should have taM you" Always a
friend "
Td no idea," —8o on to the end.
Hoon wet* yon married, my love, my dear ;
And soon your husband found out, I heai.
That yon Had a temper ; ami he- -ah, well.
How mm-h yon try luu no words can tell.
No wonder I lore, by the sounding sea.
The place where Lucy said "No to me.
Farm, Harden and Household.
Odutillr Rerlfri.
To PRESERVE CLOTHING Pisa.—Thcv
should be boiled a few momenta anil
quickly dried once or twice a month,
when they become flexible and durable.
Cloth lines will laat longer and keep in
better order for wash-day service, if oc
casionally treated in the same manner.
CORN FRITTERS.— Young, sweet corn,
pepper, salt, nutmeg, butter hot in the
pan. Grate the corn from the cobs
into a basin, season and drop by spoon
-1 nla into the pan, and fry nntil brown.
This ia a delicious breakfast relish, but
requires a eoneideruble time to prepare.
TEA Cm.—One cup white sugar,
half a cup butter, one cup sweet milk,
one egg, one-half teaspoonful soda, one
of cream tartar, and flonr enough to
make it like soft giugerbread. Flavor
with the juice of a small lemon. This
makes a good-aixed loaf.
GINGEB COOKIES. —Due cup of mo
lasses, one-half cap of sngsr, two-thirvl*
rap of batter, one-half cup of water,
i ne egg, two teaspoonful* of saleratns,
one-half teaspoonful of alum, one tea
spoonfnl of giuger, floor enough to roll
out soft Bake quick.
FILTER TOR CISTERN WATER.—Per
forate the bottom of a wooden box with
a number of small holes ; place inside
a piece of flannel covered with coarsely
powdered charcoal, over this coarse
river sand, and on this small pieces of
sandstone.
FrßxrrrnK POLISH —Make a mixture
cf three parts linseed oil. and one part
• pints of turpentine. It not only
covers the disfigured surface, but re
stores wood to its original color, and
leaves a lustre upon the surface. Put
on with a woolen cloth, and when dry
rub with woolen.
To Sacrsx A FITTING GLOVE.— Take
a tape and measure your hand around
the Knuckles. The number of inches
and quarter of an inch it measures ia
txactly the size of a glove. That is, if
it measures five inches and three-quar
ters around, you want glove number
live and three-quarters.
To ROAST GEESE AND Dress.—Boil
ing water should be poured all ever,
and inside cf a goose or duck, before
yon prepare them for cooking, to take
•at the strong oily taste. Let the fowl
)>e picked clean, and wiped dry with a
• loth inside and out; fill the body and
• rop with stuffing ; if you prefer not to
Muff it, pnt an onion inside; pnt it
down to the fire, and roast it hrown.
It will take two hour* and a hall
Patterning Bkerp.
The following paper, on the subject
of fattening sheep, by L. A. Morn-11,
was read before a Farmer's Clnb :
Having advocated in former papers
prwtecton of sheep during winter, with
a view to warmth as an essential teems
to facilitate the fattening process, I
now proceed to furnish testimonials
irom abroad to confirm that position.
It is generally conceded that no coun
try produces better cattle and sheep,
and nowhere are the means adopted
Jor fattening them better understood
ihan in England. Would, ttme permit,
J could easilv famish (foundant proofs
of the fact, but £%hll confine myself
to adducing tww instances only, wmch
••learly establish the principle involved
in the question, before us. The facta
stated were originally published in the
Journal of the Rojpal Agricultural So
ciety of England, and J quote verbatim
tbe respective reports. The first is by
Lord Ducie, as foihtes:.^^
" One hundred sheep were placed in
a shed, and ate twenty pOmala u# Swede
turnips each per day, while another
1 undred in the open air ate tweety-five
pounds, and at the end of a oertain
period the former animals weighed each
three pounds more than th lattsr,
plainly showing that, to a certain ex
tent, warmth ia a substitute for food."
This was also proved by the same
nobleman in other experiments, which
also illustrated the effect of exercise.
No. 1. Five sheep were fed in the
open air between the 20th of November
and tbe Ist of December. Tbey con
sumed ninety pounds of food per day,
the temperature being abont 40 deg.:
at the end of this time they weighed
two pounflft less than when fleet sx
jKed. No. X Five sheep were placed
under shelter, the temperature of winch
was 49 deg.; they consumed at first
• ighty-two pounds, then seventy pounds
ler day, and increased in" weight
twenty-three pounds. No. 3. Five
sheep were placed in tbe same shed,
but not allowed any exercise ; they ate
at first sixty-four pounds, then fifty
eight pounds, and increased in weight
thirty ponnds. No. 4. Five sheep were
kept in the dark, quiet said covered;
they ate thirty-five pounds per day,
and increased in weight eight pounds."
T CltM tIM Tralfc.
To insure psrlect cleanliness of the
teeth they should be brushed three
times daily, and a toothpick should be
used after each meal to remove any
fjod lodged between the teeth, while a
suitable powder should be used suffi
ciently often to keep them in good con
dition, even though it be twioe daily.
A very good rule to adopt and follow
systematically, would be to brnah them
thoroughly each morning. After each
meal use toothpick, brush and soft
water, and in the evening before re
tiring, again use brush and water thor
oughly, One good, thorough brushing
duly, is better than five superficial ana
careless attempts. The best toothpicks
are those made from a quill, properly
shaped. Choose a brush with the bris
tles pointed, and of different lengths.
A good brush is really cheapest in the
end, and more efficient than the eheap
and almost worthless substitutes.
Brash lAe teeth lengthwise m well as
crosswise, so as to remove any particles
of food in the interstices, and do not
neglect the surface of molars?'
A Cheap Drag.
A correspondent of the Country Gen
tleman writes: I make the side pieces
or frame of two inch plank, eight umbos
wide, and turned up at the ends, and
nail the bottom board on with heavy
apikee. I used one and one half inch lum
ber for the bottom, and it does not mat
ter how wide or bow narrow it is. I
nut a seat on it and tide, as my weight
helps to crush the clods. By having
tbe ends slightly turned np, it runs
easier, and does better work. I always
liaul all small atones off the field on my
drg. Any farmer who can use an axe,
a saw, a hammer, and an auger, can
make one, and after he has once used
one he would not farm without it They
run lighter than a roller, and grind the
clods and lumps Into powder, while a
poller very often only presses them into
the ground. And they level the ground
better than a roller can do ; after going
for t'le field with a drag, it looks as u
had been gone over with a smooth
g iron, and it never packs thu ground.
Wooden Raair Ami.
Every fanner who Mves in the North
Is compelled to do a good fieal of snow
■beveling every winter, and if it is done
before the snow becomes compact and
*olid, he may work with greater ease
■■d rapidity by using a light, broad
■now shovel made of wood. The blade
■hoiMf be '.of thin wood, about three
fourths of an inch thick, thirteen, tautae
SF. .
wide and sixteen inches long, the etlge
dressed down and covered with ahoet
iron three or four inches back. The
end piece should be su inch snd a half
wide, screwed on the blade, ao sa to
form a atifiTener or cleat to prevent
warping and splitting, and for this rea
son it should never le nailed on the
end of the blade. The handle which
ia about four feet and a half long, ia
screwed on so as to be alniut 'hi inches
from the fioor when the blade liea fist.
This shovel mar lie nsed for chaff,
grain, Aa., as well as for attow.—o>wu
fry Omttmum.
Ilo* (• Nsko a Cistern.
I see some of your readers wish to
know how to oonalruel a cistern. The
best way ia to dig yotur nit the aisc vou
wish and to wall it with brick ; build a
partitiou wall across it, leaving two
thirds on one aide. I.esve a uumher of
holes through the l>otU>a of the partit ion
wall about four inches square ; then
plaster well with not less than twoeouta.
rill np to the smallest aide of the par
tition wall witlt charcoal ; then fill up
the other aide about three feet with
coarse saint. Let the water in ou the
charcoal, letting it pa*a uuder the par
tition wid! up through the sand. It
will be as pure aa a freestone spring.
It will bar* no taste of rain water.—/>-
atoßf.
To (Itui smoky P|Ht Hawglag*.
Take a piece of wood of the shape of
a scrubbing brush, nail a handle on
the liaek, then upon the face uail a
piece of dried sheepskin with wool
upon it; or flax or tow will do; or cot
ton flannel of several thicknesses will
answer very well. Dip this brush into
dry whiting, and rub the smoke lightly
with the brush on the uppar parts of
the room first—protecting Utc carpet
with matting or newspaper, aa the
whiting dust ia hard to sweep off a ear
pet. The whiting that remains on the
wall is easily brushed off with a soft
cloth attached to a stick. It is verv
effectual if the room is not damp and
the whiting is dry.
The Steamer Virginia*.
Message of President Urssl to the I'nlted
States Congress.
WASHINGTON, January s. —The Presi
dent to-day acnt the following message
to the Senate and House of Representa
tives;
In my annual message of December
laat I gave reason to expect that when
the foil and aocurate text of the corres
pondence relative to the steamer Vir
ginias, which had been telegraphed in
cipher, should be received, the papers
concerning the capture of the vessel,
the execution of a part of its passengers
and crew, and the restoration of the
ship and the survivors would be trans
mitted to Congress in compliance with
the expectations then held out. . I now
transmit the papers and correspondence
on that subject.
On the twenty-sixth day of Septem
ber, 1870, the Virginias was registered
in the Custom-house at New York as
the property of a citizen of the United
States, he having first made oath as re
quired by law that he was the true and
only owner of the said vessel, and that
there was no subject or citizen of any
f reign prince or state direcUy or indi
rectly, byway of trust, confidence, or
tthsrwise, interested therein. Having
complied with the requisites of the
s state in that behalf she cleared in the
usual way for the port of Curaeoa, and
on or about the fourth day of October,
1870, sailed for that port. It is not
disputed that she made the voyage ac
cording to her clearance, nor that from
that day to this ahe has not returned
within the territorial jurisdiction of the
United States. It is also understood
that ahe preserved her American pa
pers, and that when within foreign ports
she made the practice of putting forth
claim to American nationality, which
was ,reoagnixed by the authorities at
such porta.
When, therefore, she left the port of
Kingston in Octolier laat under the flag
of the United States, she would appear
to have had, aa against all powers ex
cept the United States, the right to fly
that flag, and tp claim its protection as
enjoyed by all regularly documented
vessels, roistered as part of our com
mercial marine. No state of war ex
isted conferring upon a maritime power
the right to molest and detain upon the
high seas a documented vessel, and it
cannot be pretended that the Virginias
had placea herself without the pale of
all law by acts of piracy againat the
human race. If her papers were irreg
ular or fraudulent, the offence was one
against thi laws of the United States,
justifiable only in their tribunals.
When, therefore, it became known that
the Virginias had been captured on the
high seas by a Spanish man-of-war,
that the American flag had been hauled
down by the captors, that the vessel
had been carried to a Spanish port, and
that Spanish tribunals were taking
jurisdiction over the persons of those
found on her and exercising that juris
diction upon American citizens, not
only in violation of international law
but in contravention of the provisions
of the treaty of 1795, I directed a de
mand to be made upon Spain for the
restoration of the vessel and for the re
turn of the survivors to the protection
of the United States, for a salute to the
flag, and for the punishment of the
offending parties.
The principles upon which these de
mands rested could not be seriously
anertioned ; but it was suggested by
is Spanish Government that there were
grave doubts whether the Virginias wss
entitled to the character given her by
her papers, and that therefore it might
be proper for the United States alter
the surrender of the vessel and the sur
vivors to dispense with the salute to the
should such facte be established
to their satisfaction. This seemed to
be reasonable and just. I therefore
assented to it, on the sasnranoe that
Spain would then declare that no in
salt to tbe flag of the United States had
been intended. I also authorized an
agreement to be made that should it be
shown to the satisfaction of this Gov
ernment that the Virginia" was im
properly bearing tbb flag proceedings
should be instituted in oar courts for
the punishment of the offence commit
ted against the United States. On her
part, Spain undertook to proceed
against those who had offended the
sovereignty of the United States or who
had violated their treaty rights. The
surrendering of the vessel and the sur
vivors to the jurisdiction of the tribu
nals of the United States was an admis
sion of the principles upon which our
I demand has been founded. I therefore
had no hesitation in agreeing to the
arrangements finally made between the
two governments, an arrangement
which was moderate and just, and eal
cnlated to cement the good relations
which have so long existed between
Spain and the United States.
Under this agreement the Virginias,
with the American flag flying, was de
livered to the Navy of the United States
at Bahia Honda, in the Island of Cabs,
on tbe 16th ult.
She was in an nnseawortby condition
in the passage to New York. She en
countered one of the most tempestuous
of our winter storms. At the risk of
their lives the officers and crew placed
in charge of her attempted to keep her
afloat. Their efforts were unavailing,
and she sunk off Cape Fear. The pris
oners who survived the massacres were
surrendered at Santiago de Cnba on the
18th nit, and reached the port of New
York in safety. The evidence sub
mitted on the part of Spain to establish
the fset that the Virginias at the time
of her capture was improperly bearing
the flag of the United States is trans
mitted herewith, together with tbe
opinion of theAttorney-General thereon
and a copy of the note of the Spanish
Miaiater, expressing on bealf of his
Government a disclaimer of any intent
of indignity to the flag of the United
States.
(Signed) U. 8. Gbamt.
The Tablet publishes a number of
statistics as to the manufactures of
Ireland. They clearly prove that, as
regards motive power or mechanical
force, Ireland is interior to England
A Vir'i Record.
Kiwit fr till lis I b •••-
l(trl Ontrr,
Mxcur.
1. F.lecUou of Prince Wru. C. Lu
nalilo as King of Utc Sandwich Islands,
- Burning of the Fifllt Arenac Theatre,
Now York. The day generally observed
throughout the country.
2. A tempest of wind, rain,and ttuow.
accompanied l>y terrific thunder and
lightning, prevailed at Birmingham,
Qneenatown, and Southampton, Eng.
3. Hoott deatrtution of property in
Now England, the Middle Statea, and
on the Onio River by thaws and break
ing up of tee.
4. E. H. Htokea ouuvicted of murdo:
in the first degree. -A freezing raiu
caused much damage iu New York City.
6, A second Credit Mobillier Com
mitte appointed by the House of Repre
sentatives, J. M. Wilson, Chairman. -
F, S. Stokes sentenced to IH hanged,
Feb. 28.
7. A heavy storm, accompanied by
singular electrical phenomena, prevailed
from Omaha to Chicago.
9. Inauguration of Lnnalilo I„ King
of the Sandwich Islands.
IS, The Tweed trial begun.
14. The New Jerwey legislature or
ganized. —A loan of iIO.OIsJ.OOO author
ised bv the Erie Railway Directors.
15, Funeral of Napolen 111. at Chisel
hurst, Euglaud ; funeral services held
iu Italy and Honmania.—Louis V. Bogy
elected I*. 8. {Senator from Missouri.
17. Federal officials forbidden by
order of the President from holding
State •* municipal offices.
21. Timothy O. Howe re-elected U. 8.
Senator from Wisoonain ; Simon Cam
eron from Pennsylvania; and JOIIL P.
Jones elected from Nevada.
±2. John B. Gordon elected U. 8.
Seuator from Georgia, anil Richard J.
Oglesby from Illinois.- -Masses hold in
l*ris for Napoleon 111.
23. Emigrant vts#*t 1 Northfleet ran
down by the Murillo ff Duagenesa,
England"; over 300 liven lost—The
Secretary of the Treasury coutraetcd for
negotiating the remaining $360,000,000
of the five per cent. loan.
24. Wm. Foster sentenced to he hang
ed March 7, for killing Avery I). Put
nam April 26, 1871, in New York.
27. Final repeal of the Franking
Privilege by Congress.
28. Defense opened in the Tweed
case.—The National Theatre at Wash
ington burned.
29. Defeat of Senator S. C. Pomeroy
and election of John J. lugalls as U. S.
Senator from Kansas. —Bankruptcy of
the Atlantic Mail Steamship Company.
31. Disagreement and discharge of
jury in the Tweed trial.—Appointment
of a Peace Commission to confer with
the Modoc Indians.—B. B. Conover
elected U. S. Senator from Florida.
nurav,
I. Arrival at Richmond of the first
tram eastward over the Chesapeake and
Ohio Railroad.—A bill of exceptions
filed in the case of F. S. Stokes.
4. Farewell banquet to Prof. John
Tyndall, F. R. S., in New York.
6. Discovery of a planet of the 10th
magnitude by for. IYters of Clinton, X.
Y".—Opening of the British Parliament.
11. Abdication of Amadeus, King of
Spain; adoption of a republican form
of government by the Cortes.
IX Formation of a Republic in
Spain; D* Katanislao Figueras ap
pointed lYesident of tbeCouncit.—Vote
of the Electoral College for President
and Vioe-President counted by Con
gress.
IX Senor Marios elected President of
the Spanish Assembly.
14. President Grant transmitted a
message to Congress concerning the
Mormons.
17. Discovery of a planet of the 11th
magnitude by l>r. Charles Peters, of
Clinton, N. Y.
18. Expulsion of Congressmen Ames
md Brooks recommended by the Poland
Credit Mobilier Committee.
30. Verdiot for the deft ml*nt iu the
Jnmei estate case.
21. Foreclosure proceedings Ugtiu
against the Bo*ton. Hartford and Erie
Road by the Erie Railway.
22. Anniversary of Washington's
birthday generally observed.
25. Formation of a new Spanish
Ministry. (hikes Ames's defense
against tie Credit Mobilier report read
in the House of Representatives.
27. Congressmen Ames and Brooks
censured by the House of Representa
tivrs for the Credit Mobilier transac
tions.—Expulsion of Senator Patterson
of New Hampshire recommended by
tbe Senate Credit Mobilier Committee.
28. Impeachment of Judge Delahay
of Kansas ordered by the U. H. Hoase
of Representative*.—The Louisiana bill
rejected by the Senate.
IUBCR.
1. Gen. Butler'a salary bill recon
sidered and passed in the House of
Representatives.
3. B,*tb Houses of Congresa agreed
to the increase of official salaries.
4. President Grant reinangurated.—
Tbe XLIId Congress adjourned, and
the special session of the Senste was
begun.—Execution of William Foster's
sentence suspended by Gov. Dix till
March 21. —Terms of peace offered the
Modoc*.—The French Assembly asserts
its constitutional rights.
5. Conflict between the McKnerv
militia and the Metropolitan Police at
New Orleans; the disturbance soon
quelled.—Passage of s general railroad
bill by the New Jersey Assembly.
6. A large portion of Blossbnrg, Pa.,
destroyed by Are.
12. Geo. 8. Bontwell elected U. 8.
Senator from Massachusetts.—The Irish
University bill rejected by the British
House of Commons ; resignation of the
Ministry.
18. The French Assembly adopted
the constitutional project of the Com
mittee of Thirty.
14. Death of Bishop Mcllvaine (Epis
copal) of Ohio at Florence, Italy.
15. Mr. Disraeli and the Earl of
Derby decline to form a new British
Ministrv.
17. Resignation of Geo. 8. Bontwell,
Secretary of the Treasury.—William A.
Richardson nominated for Secretary of
the Treasury ; the other members of
the Cabinet renominated.— Forged cer
tificates of railroad stock thrown iuto
Wall street
19. Destruction of San Salvador,
Central America, bv earthquakes ; 50
persons killed. The Massachusetts
House refused to expunge Mr. Hoyt's
resolution oensuring Senator Sumner.
20. Defalcation in and suspension of
tbe Bull's Head Bank, Naw York.—
Arrest of George Macdonnell, the Bank
of England forger.—Mr. Gladstone re
turns to office as British Premier.
21. Wm. Eostrr hanged in New York,
and James McElhaney, the wife mur
derer, at Boston.—Murder of Charles
Goodrich in Brooklyn.—General defeat
of Local Option in i'ennsylvauia.—Erie
Railway depots and ferry-honse burned
in Jersey City.—Controfing interest in
the Franklin Telegraph Company pur
chased by the Atlantic and Pacific Com
*St Passage by the Spanish Assembly
of the bill emancipating slaves in Porto
Rico, and dissolution of the Cortes
voted.
25. Senators Bogy and Clayton ex
onerated from charges against them by
the U. 8. Senate. —A severe snow-storm
passed over the Northwestern Slides.
26. William M. Tweed resigns us a
New York State Senator.—Adjournment
of tbe U. S. Senate.—Death of Count
von Bernstorff, Prussian Minister, ir
London.
27. Appropriation of g1,000,000 by
the Pennsylvania Legislature for the
Centennial celebration.
29. A wind and rain storm did much
damage m New York, on Long Island,
and the Hudson River.—The Bonaparte
family exiled by the French Assembly.
—The English boat-race won by tne
Cambridge crew,
APRIL.
1. The steamship Atlantic wrecked off
Nova Scotia ; 546 lives lost.—Passage
of the General Railroad law in the New
Jersey Legislature.
2. Stats Convention of Illinois Farm
ers at Springfield to consider the
Transportation question.
4. Adjournment of the New Jersey
IegiaUtur*. —ML Louie Buffet elected
President of the French Assembly.
ft. Portion* of Now York Oity without
g* on account of the strike.
8. Spring flood* reported in the Mid
dle ami Western States, ami snow
storms in lowa ami Kanaaa.
10. Adjournment of the I'outlay Ivaum
Legislature.
11. Geu K- P. H. Cuuby ami lie*. K.
Thomas, I>.!>., mnrderej by Hie Mo
dives at a pence conference ; nthera of
the Peace Commission wounded. El
tensive forest tires repot ted in Virginia.
I'd. A strong ami jiersisteut attack on
Hie Modooa ordered by tten. Sherman.
Fum-ral of lieu. Csuby and l>r.
Thomas at l>ava llod Csmp.
IS. BliKhly ounrtiot bctwwMHie whiten
tuul tisgrvx-n ut G'lfux, Int.; in-nilj 100
uegmrs killed.
18. Twtr fiulurea iu Wall street.—
I uttrnl Hletcs trnops ordered In (\dfsx,
1 ,e.
10. Railway tram wrecked st lUch
utoud Switch, 14. 1. ; a uumlier of |*r
aoua killed sad Woundad. Large por
tion of OaiuuUite, N. Y., burned.
21. Keasaeuibtiug of Ute Uritislt I'ar
liamcvi.—Beer Hot st Frankfort-on-the-
Maiu ; 12 )>ersous killed.
2H. Aiiuual setaitui of tlie Naltuual
Roanl of I'uderwriters begun in New
York.
24. Suspension of P. H. Commission
ers to the Vienna Exhibition for alleged
irregularities; temporary Commission
appointed.
2ft. fippearauce of cholera iu Vienna.
2ti. Delalcation of the canhier of ttie
N. Y. Atlantic Nstionsl Hank for JftlW,-
000.—t'. S. troopii siuprised by Mo
docs; jl soldiers killed and 18 wounded.
MAY.
1. Tke Vicuna Exhibition opened.—•
Strike tu the Rhode Inland woolen and
cotton tuilis; strike of the New York
and Jefrev City cooper*. —Resignation
' of tlie Italian Ministry.
4. Ofer 30 lives lost by the falling of
the Dixon (III) iron bridge.
ft. Tke Italian Ministry resumed
office.
9. L#s of the steamer Polaris of the
Arctic Expedition and death of Captain
Hall r#|>orted.- -PMiic on ths Vienna
Bourset
11. l'uneral of Chief-Jnstice Chase
in New York.
12. Funeral of Chief-Justice Chase
in Washington.
13. Operation of the Hank set sus
pended in Vienna —Forty-eight lives
lost by a colliery explosion in Nova
Scotia.
I 15. tAie hundred additional failures
in Vienna.
17. Resignation of the French Mm
, istrr.
18. A new French Ministry formed.
jft. A convention of Governors favor
ing cheap transportation met at Au
gusta, (la.—M. Louis Hnflfet re-eleoted
President of the Freneh Assembly.
22. 1 "resident Grant issues a procla
mation sustaining the Kellogg Govern
ment m Louisiana.— Surrender of the
Hot Crsok allies of the Modoos.
24. Resignation of M. Thiers, I*resi
dent of the Freneh Republic, and elee
i Hon of Marshal MacMahou.
27. M. Thiers took his seat in the
French Assembly.
28. Meeting of Hie National Agricul
tural Congress at Indianapolis.
29. The Modocs driven from their
stronghold in the Lavs Reds.
30. Three acres of Hie business part
of Boston burned. —Decoration Day
generally observed.
Ml. The Spanish Constitutional Cortes
assembled ; lienor Oreuse elected Pres
ident.—Arrival of the Shall of Perns
at Berlin.
rrxß.
1. Hurrenderof CapL Jack and his
band of Modoc Indians.
3. Murder of Mansfield Tracy Wal
worth, in New York, by his son, Frank
H. Walworth.
5. Arrival of the Polaris survivor* at
Washington.
fi. Call for the redemption of #20,-
1 000,000, in United States bonds.
7. Senor Oreuse elected President of
the Spanish Cortea.
8. A Federal Republic proclaimed in
Spain ; the old Ministry resumes office.
9. Four Modoc captives massacred
by white men. The Alexandra Palace,
London, destroyed by fire.
10. Capture of Khiva by Hie Russian
forces ; escape of the Khan.
IE Strike of 150 Chinese workmen
at Beaver Falls, Penn.
I". Adjournment of the New Ramp
j shire legislature.
17. The Shah of Persia arrived in
London.- Miss Susan B. Anthony oon
vieted at Can am! signs, N. Y., of voting
illegally.
) 21. Hprewd of cholera in Europe and
the United States.
24. The Juniata sailed in search of
the lost Polaris.
28. Organization of a military com
mission at Fort Klamath to try the
Hod oca.
29. Thirteen oaeea of enn-stroke re
ported in Sew York.
I. President Orant decisive Articlea
18 to 25 and Article 80 of the Washing—
ton Treaty, relating to the fisheries, in
foroe.
•L Independence D*y generally ob
served.
5. The tteamer City of Washington
wrecked off Nova Scotia.—F. H. Wal
worth Bentenoed to prison for life.—Dis
astrous storm* in New England and the
Went.
8. Anderaon Hehaol of Natural His to
ry opened on remkoae LelancL
11. The TigreMi Bailed in search af
the Polaris.
18. King Oscar crowned in Norway.
19. E. 8. Mills (deceasedj, President
of the Brooklvu Trust Company, al
leged to be a defaulter; snspension of
the bank and appointment of a receiver.
22. Bpread of cholera in the Went.
24. Saratoga raws begun; Tom Bowl
ing, Ktrachiao, and Regardless the win
ners.
25. Ten squares bnrncd in Baltimore.
27. Discovery of a comet at Mar
seilles by Borelli.
28. Brigham Young sued for a di
vorce by Ann Eliza Webb, liis 19th
wife.
31. Evacuation of Nancy and Belfort
by the German troops.
a cue ST.
1. Suspension of the lloboken < N. J.)
Havings Bank.
2. Twentv-threc blocks burned in
Portland, Oregon.
5. Civil Service rules approved and
Sromulgated by President ffrant.—The
tandard On Works at Hunter's Point,
L. L, burned.—The British Parliament
prorogued.
8. Steamer Wawaset burned on the
Potomac river; over 80 lives lost.
9. Three steamers and two docks
burned at Portland, Me,; three lives
lost.
10. Portions of Baltimore flooded by
heavy rain-storms.
11. Three men of the Yellowstone
Ei|>edition killed in n fight with the In
dians near Big Horn river; ludiai
loss estimated at It) killed and wounded.
11. Heavy rain-storms in the Middle
and Now England States.
It). Strike in the Leicestershire (Eng.)
ooal mines.
17. Discovery of a planet of the 11th
magnitude by Prof. Watson of Ann Ar
bor, Mich.
21. Discovery of a comet by Borelli
at Marseilles.
22. Prinoe Jerome Napoleon elected
Preeident of the Coraicau Council-Gen
eral,
24. President Orant approves the
sentence of death passed on the Modocs.
—Discovery of a comet by M. Henry at
Paris.
SEPTEMBER.
8. Plaza Vapor at Havana burned.
8. Decline in gold forced the suspen
sion of the Warehoueo and Security
Company, and several sugar firms in
New York.—lncrease of yellow fever at
S breve port, La.
9. The Oeneva award ($15,000,000)
paid and invested in U. H. Government
funds.
10. Report that the Polaris crew is
probably safe.
11. Organization of a permanent In
stitute of International Law* at Ghent.
12. Collapse of Thr Graphic balloon
in Brooklyn.
15. Meeting of the Grand Lodge of
Odd Fellow# of America at Baltimore.—
Loaa of Hie steamer Ironsides near
Grand Harm, Mioh. ; 14 persona
drowned ami alx missing.
17. Hixty-fonr house* burned lu
Chicago.
18. Suspension of Jar Cook A Oo.'a
lauika in Now York, Piuladeiplns, ami
Washington, and the First National
llank of Washington ; failure of lUcli
ard Ht'licll, in New York.— The Polaris
survivors arrived safely at Dundee,
Scotland.
19, Failure of 19 banking tlrnia iu
New York and 11 iu Philadelphia. Pub
licatkiu of the story of the itnddington
party of the Polaria erew.
'JO. Htiapeuaiuu of the N. Y. t'nion
Trust Company , defalcation of its Hco
retary exptwod.
21. Spread of yellow ferer iu Metu
pltia reported.
2J. The Government purobaaed over
$3,000,000 in bonds iu Wall street.
Huna on Chicago, Albany, cud Trenton
banks.
'id. Failure of lleurv Clews A Co.
The panic renewed in Wail street.
24. Suspension of Howes A Marv in
New York ; Clews, Hatch A Co. of Lou
don, snd firms in other cities.
2ft. Large currency payments sns
pended in Western and Southern cities.
20. New failures iu the West and
South.
28. Discovery of s planet of Hie tenth
magnitude by f'ruf. Foerater of Berlin,
reported.
3d. Tlte New York Block Kxcluuigo
re-opsnetl.
OfTOBER.
3. Four Modocs hanged st Foil ltU
math ; sentence of two comntuUHl to
life imprisonment bv the President,
4. Suspension of lW, Opdykc A Co.
6. Connecticut voted in favor of one
capital.- Marshal fUsstne's trial by
Oourt marshal begun at Versailles.
7. Charles town, Brighton and Weat
ltoibtirj annexed to Boston.
9. The Duddiugton party of the Po
laris erew arrived at Washington.
10. He lease of the Indian chiefs San
tsnta and Big Tree at Fort Sill.
12. Cloae of the Evangelical Alliance.
14. Advance in gold and heavy de
cline in stocks; six New York failures
reported.
15. lleaetion iu Wall street; two
failures.
20. The Jesuits ordered bj the Ital
ian Government to racaU- their projwrty
in Rome.
21. Hn storm at Cincinnati and
Carton.
22. Convention of Karth-wsfftarn Far
mers at Chicago.
23. The Canadian Parliament opened,
27. Bix acres burned over in Cauas
tota, N. Y.
29. Another panic on the Vienna
Bourse.—E. 8. Btokea convicted of
manslaughter in the third degree, and
seutuc*i to the State Prison for four
year*.
80. Payment snapended by Hoyt,
Sprmgue A Co., and failure of three
other New York house*.
31. Capture of the Cuban steamer
Virginiua by the Spaniah gunt-oat Tor
nado, near Jamaica.—A A W. Sprague,
of Providence, suspended jiayment.
xornouo.
2. The Vienna Exhibition cloned.
1. Execution of Varona, Cespode*.
I>el Sol and Ryan, captured on the
Virginiua ; condemned and shot at San
tiago de Cuba.
7. Thirty-eeven Virginiua prisoners,
including Captain Fry, shot at Ban
tiago.
8. Cuban indignation meeting held in
New York.
9. Twelve passengers on Virginias
alio! bv the Spaniards.
12. l>iaeovery of a faint oomet at
Vienna.
It The U. K. eloop-of-war Kansas
sailed tor Cuban waters.
IR. Wind, rain and snow storms in
the Middle and Eastern States. Sus
pension of the Pittsburg National Truat
Company.
19. Tweed found guilty on several
counts, —William J. Sharkey, the mur
derer, escapes from the tombs prison
diaguined aa a woman.
21. ('anal navigation closed.
22. Tweed sentenced to 12 yearn on
Blaekwrll's Island, and to pay a fine of
$12,750.18. The Viile du Havre aunk
in mid-ocean by the Loch Earn; 220
lire* lost,
24. Robert ( rotter appointed U. 8.
Senator from Kansas.
2tV. Jay Cook A Co., adjudicated
bankrupt* at Philadelphia; appoint
ment of a receiver.
27. Thn*kgiving Day generally ob
served. -The ftooaac Tunnel opened.
28. Sjaun concedes all Ute demand*
of the I oiled States arming out of the
Virginiua aeixure. -Sentence of J. IL
IngersoU to the State Prison for Ave
year*, and J. D. Farriagton for one
year and a half.
OBOUIBEn.
1. First session of the XLllld Con
gress opened; Speaker lllaine re
elected.
2. President Grant's Message read in
both Ilouaee of Congress. -The Re
formed Episcopal Church established
in New York, by Bishop Cummins and
others ; the Rev. C. II Cheuey. D.D..
elected an Associate Bishop.—Richard
Coke, Democrat, elected Governor of
Texan.
8. Admiral Scott, U. 8. N., made a
report upon the capture of the Vir
giuus by the Spaniards.- Repeal of the
"iron-clad " oath in the C 7 . 8. Ilottae of
Representatives.
9. Report of the confirmation of the
Washington Protocol in the Virginiua
matter by the Madrid Cabinet.
10. Marshall Banninc condemned to
deith by the Versailles court-martial;
all the members of the court joined in
b appeal for mercy.
p 11. Mr. Carpenter elected President
ro tern, of the U. 8. Senate.
12. The Virginiua taken from Havana
to Bahia Honda by a Spanish man-of
war. -The Secretary aaka for an in
crease of taxation. —Marshal Ihuuune'a
sentenoo commuted to twenty years'
seclusion.
14. Consecration of the Rov. C. E.
Cheney at Chicago, as a Bishop of the
Reformed Episcopal Church.
1(1. Surrender of the Virginiua at
Bahia Honda.—Adoption of tLe new
Pennsylvania Constitution by large ma
jorities.
17. Passage of a Salary bill in the
House.—Great fog in New York.
18. Report of deposition of IWi,
President of Santo Domingo, and es
tablishment of a Provisional Govern
ment.—Surrender of the Virginiua pris
oners at Santiago.
19. Holiday adjournment of Con
gress.—Conviction of Henry W. Genet
of false pretenses. Western Union
lease of the Pacific and Atlantic Tele
graph lines.
20. Gen. Hickles's resignation aa U.S. I
Minister to Spain accepted.
21. The Govrament decides thst the
Virginiua had forfeited her right to
carry the American flag ; the salute at
Santiago to be disponed with.
22. Escape ol H. W. Genet from the
custody of a Depnty Sheriff.
24. Ex-Mayor Hall acquitted.
25. Christmas gensrally observed.
2d. Loss of the Virginias off Cape
Fesr.
27. The Spanish mission tendered to ;
Caleb Cashing.
28. Arrival of 102 Virginius prisoners
at New York.
29. Close of the official examination
of the Virginias prisoners.
80. Gen. Burriel summoned to Mad
rid to answer charges of insubordina
tion.
The English colony at Pitcaira'a
Island, oomposod of descendants of the
mutineers of the ship Bounty, now con
sists of seventv-six persons, who are
very poor and lack many requisites of
civilised life. Recently they have re
ceived supplies of food, Ac.," from San
Francisoo upon the representation of a
captain in the merchant marine, who
reported the pressing necessities of the
people and made a public appeal in their
behalf. The people maintain s school,
and are very religions.
What wan intended to be a uiock
marriage at a Fond dn Lac evening
party has been found to be a legal one,
■tud the fanny pair find themselves com
pelled to make the beet of it.
XI.IIM rOYHRWW,
SIMITK.
TU Juitlalsry tVmueitiM of the ftwisl* rw
|mii uml hark tha Hons# ftankniptcy bOl, w*b
snieudrasiii*.
Mr Ikwy addressed lite ftsnsie cm U>a lluan
>4al qoeeuoti, favorta* an Intel tun of llw no
rriiojr, lis ikeuaUl ia*rs bad lsii an unequal
distribution of tha currency Tla sit New
Kus'lacst Htalr* had received #1 IS,(*(1,1100
altait tha* srrw souths) lo hut *.IV.MU,WI> i
the Middle Hlalcsi had revolved an ooas of
ulna million, ahlla tlu> Houtbem Hratas wars
delict cut tu lhair isirtitHi t)fly cm# milllcni,
and tha Western Htataa twiul*-.*Mi rulllu.u
He advocated tha lalasaa of the f.wCvfoor
milium logs! Ulster reserve, su sddlltowsl
laaue of arty tatlUuii lu lavs' Uttdarw, ate I an
leeiia of twenty-five million In national bank
■lotos to W cSterii I milks
A peiMfcai of nuasa of I'aaueytvwnia was
l'i rsrnled sskjiia lut the affSnUMUtl of •
contatisMon to leaulau tlis sal# of alcoholic
NqjSo*.
Duong ihe saiai * kali Jaime Mr. Flanagan,
of I esse, said if that* aas guilt |mrU|t>lna la
any Neitahn arlio advocated tba peaoage of ilia
ill iiM-raasiog salaries ha was gouty Ha
faioted the |iassigs and voted few U out of the
i'ttraat muUvea, as ha believed l ongtwaa had •
right to enact said law, Ha thought #7.500
not an sxeeaeive saiara, and had remarked
ai u the tali fseaad that It ahuaid haaa baast
flu,(SO, Snow than he has not changed hie
m uuoti He had drawn the money (prtsiurfng
the green hacks ft out his pocket); " liars the*
sae, sir; this is my pay , 1 ant gutug n d ( bt
for it tlljtbe last (&iigbtar.) "I have not
stolen that pay; 1 have dona nothtuf that
prwys mam bj> ecMtsoumre ; 1 have midi ivorad
to oat nil," I bene aad laughter ) (eivontor,
of Wlaronein, said ha had spanl the back nay
drawn last session faithfully and ibetoogmff,
and be knew of no pews* under the < onautu
torn fc> get It haak. It would ha a tjuostioo ba
ts era trie fiovemwent and his creditors, and
he sauld Wave thatnto fight it out." (Laugh
ter.)
Ml. Rumnm presented s petition of Xi.lTf
tienxsis of Ohio sgalnst ths jropoaed thso
logtoal amriidaionl to tba t-onatlMUoti of the
U 111 ted Mates He aald the total kanglit ot tba
Iwtiuon waa 353 feet. Referred to the Com
mittee on J udwlarv
Mr. Pratt e aau-iidmaot u the Hater* MIL
elib.li |.ro\ idea that the pay fur the balance of
tin* Cougreae altall be curb amount aa tu make
the total, with that airaady received (#10,000),
•&.ODO fur each year, was rejected by 44 says
tu It yeae.
Ovr )(* bills were pr*nte4 on the opening
dsv of the HMM
Wi liawse offal ml a rwuJoliuo dirv-uug the
. Surgeon (ieueral of tb* arm? to detaii una or
mote waris-st ottceei of the arm? to visit the
IOWUB al ehteli dbotera prevailed daring WW.
) <>r atK'h of then aa tlx burgeon tieoetalmay
derm itaceeeary. and confer wllh the health
authorities and the isslitsiit tdtvatdaii* of such
tone and collet* all faesa of UDportauss with
reference So auoh epldeaMs, and to make a de
tailed report on or before January Ist. ITS. Ha
nlsted that tiie alienUou and that of the Hnr
*ooo itaoeral bad beau eallad to ths gnat
importance of the *uhject by leaatw from Ms.
J. Proctor KuoU, former)* a Reproaeutaiivs
| from Kentucky The re Jtitlon wa adopted
Mr Wheeler from ths omwtuee on Aporo
, iwtaUou*. reported the Away AppropnaUou UU,
•pprtHWlating RJMI9 tl6. which ese made a
I epecid order The original MIIBIM called for
I Ml Ktt.til*. The beaneuwr ol War. da the ra
il* mkj oidcrod by the House, reduced ihetu l<o
71# The Committee iwi ApixtrptiaUoiia
! bae farther reduced them by the earn of
| fl afa.TW.
Mr. i-u pheiin made a long speech on the
ctvfl aervtca Gil, in *blrti b* admitted that his
opyioaiiKMi eprung from no prejailte* oo aamurt
Tte ilouae (Vmiu.it'se on ilailroads and
! Canal* agreed to a UU regulating charge* bv
raitraade for tsauspertiag pa- ■aagerw ana
frajtbl
The Wlhuurv fommiitec is about equally
■ di Tided as to ths nam H be pursued in the
<-ase of iMunii Howard.
The (UTII berrtos Commute® hate begun an
un* ligation to determine whether tha busi
iirsa of the i (ovwrtimsnl cannot be wrnagrd
mora ecutnoourailr.
Mr. bypher of 1a . asked leava to introduce
a joint reeoluuon, which be eotd had the ap
pvovol of th* Pradlial It remmd that wall
authenticated rw|<ort *jwx rffiwlb Uwught to
the capital by Huthnp M' Ulnar. of LotUsiana,
•bow that in certain loralitloa of the South the
l<eople are datum* end In s camltttaa of
darrtUiu owing to the failure of the crops,
and it direct* the Secretary of War to taeue
army rations in each qnaittines aa amy bo re
iturol to alleviate the immediate suffering of
the inheUtauta of (hose deetiuiie eommnui-
Uca.
Mr llaHlrr of MtaoSiuSta apoheta favor
of tha -ujn*'-mentarr Onl Ugbu Ull. ciowag
; the debate , the UU wee reoummiUed, with
lea* to reprrt at any time.
Tli* reaumioa far the relief of deetitathftt la
i !e SmUi wa* r* ported upon advemtv.
A UU eppomting Aea Ore*. J. 1>- Dana.
ll*nrv iViptiai John JlclAao. and Peter Parker,
regent* of Uae SmuhaotiUn InalMaUoa wwa
| eased
Is docusaing the Houae apt'ropriatrou Mil,
Mi Archer of Maryland said the dlMcnhiea
with Htwta had not pa asd by. There bed been
a probaUhty that the reialiona with rifaatu
might retuan. |waefu) while Castetsr WW at
iJe tme-t of the W(.*nl*b (kiverumeai. for (We
teigr was kiKtwn to tie a fneod of the iasiisi
repaidic. bet that verr friendship bed cause I
; Ida deposition, and in hta jdare ww now the
> Idoudt Seif ana. who had nothing hw hatred
| and Jtaitke to ths t'utat Males, and rot UM
pi opneittoa ww that the navy should stand,
not on the tonal peers loeia. bat oca- fourth
G low the nasal peso* harts No gTaarti mU
take can be mail* than Ui rutting down the
navy in the cry of economy. The true econo
my ww to keep up a trong nary in order that
uar may ba averted : no! 14 be erooomwal
until war comes, and thou launch out into wild
expethtniw
RoglNl Coal latamt*.
Prof. Leone Levi atated torn* facta
of ettrreul iotareat in a recett ad J res*
delivered In Ixmdou. The average
wago* of coal-miner* have advanera,
he aaid, H2 pererat. ahtoe 1871, bat the
profits of Hrttiah coal owners show an
mcreaae of neatly 500 par oeot He
also stated thai, while tha dearnaaa of
coal added #8 to sls per too to the cost
of iron, and checked the foreign de
mand for that metal, it did not aeri
oualy affect some manufacturers. If
ooalj for instance, doubled in price, it
would cauae a rise of only one-half per
cent, in the coat of worsted. About 75
per oent. of the coal raised in Great
Britain is consumed there in manufac
tures, and 15 jer cent, i* need for do
mestic purposes, and the remaining 10
per cent, ia exported.
Matrlmaay.
All young men, and moat yonug
women have in interest in this subject, '
aa it is a condition in life to which all
look forward, and hope to attain at
some future period, and if the voung
man ha* auy prudence, he will not
assume the responsibilities of married ;
life until he can make some provision
for the support of those dependent upon
him, ah<nld he be called away by an (
early death. In the great majority of
cases this provision can only be aecared
by mean* of a life insurance poliev,
that will cost but a small sum annually
ami yet provide all the security that
can l>e desired. One of the moot re
liable of these companies ia the Penn
sylvania Mutual Life Insurance Com
pany of Philadelphia, through which
life policies may he obtained or agencies
secured by application to the home .
office, or to Jas. W. Iredell, Jr.,fSupt. of
Agencies, No. 78 West 3d street, Cin
cinnati, Ohio.—Cbwt.
HEART DIKIUIIK. —Many persons suffer
with heart disease without knowing it ,
—suddenly they drop off, aud their ,
friends are astonished, oo a poet mortem
examination, to learn that they died of j
heart disease. The heart, like the
brain, ia the seat of life—ita disease*
are of several characters. The most
common are valvular disease, fatty de- !
generation, aud functional derange
ment. If the liver becomes deranged, j
aud digestion is impaired, the heart,
through sympathy and iuxtapoaition,
becomes abnormal. 'Hie following
symptoms indicate approaching disease:
palpitation, giddiness, fainbness, nerv- '
ous prostration, deranged digestion,
vertigo, oohl extremities, etc., etc., for |
which the aid school will administer ,
iron, opium, antimony, mercury, and ,
many other mineral poisons. Heart
direase is a blood disease—parify the ■
blood ; remove obstruction* to a limpid ,
circulation bv taking that Vepefobfe !
Atfcrative, Vixnoan Brrnma, and yon i
will tie a sound person in two or three j
months.— Com.
A good and useful Christmas present
to a gentleman or boy, will be a carton I
of Elm wood or Warwick oollara, eon- I
taining 100 collars. Any furnishing I
store can supply them.— Com.
Fo* AN IRRITATED THROAT, COCOH OR
Cold, " flnwit'i BronrtioJ 7VocAs*" sre offered
with the fullest Cenftdenoe In their efficacy.
They msinUin the good repnt*tloi they hire
Justly scquirsd.—Gn.
PAIN-KlULßß.—' There is probably no
other |ueparaUoti lusuufsctnred that has be
come so much of a household word • the
fain-Killer ■. For over thirty years it baa stood
Itefore the public, and the innumerable testi
monial* that have been called forth voluntarily,
testify fully to Me merit*. When you need a
family medicine buy the Pain-Killer.—[COM
Wi#Taa'# BtHMM or Won Owner.—[Com.
ronsnmpllna,
the senurga nf ths human famll*. may In its
early atrgea U promptly areaeted and psrma
lLvasawooo, W. Vg., Oct., 2Stb, li7t.
Dr. II V. Pntar* I
Wr— rw ttm kast year I have baen naiag
yoUr Uuldwß Madf al lbaoov|' 1 • ■(
1 life to MT havitiM Iweti afflssed for vests. Did
UM ITAE It tmi abort tune twfnrs 1 waa lame
nted s at that time 1 way vary bad, not able to
•it Up much, am auffermg greetiy with at*
throat waa fetdiiK blind, bad a dry cough and
much pain in nt* mi-** I have need Iarte
lull We uf the Lbscovenr and am aimsM wail
KATK T. WAIUTSKU.
A mam ef Mr J If Msamw, of fltalhatu
Pour <knier, N, V., has been cured of (W
■ntUpUou b* fir. Piece * Oolian Medti al Die
fwvaiy, —no aeya Mr. (V 11 Canfleid, editor of
the i 'Kathmm Cvurur
b. R. Kot *s, dnurgist. of Wsat Unfon 0.,
write# to state that Ot I term's ttoideo Medi
cal Ibaourery be* affoiitad a wcoderftti euro of
(MMsnmptlou lu hie neighborhood. - (Cots
Kr**TaoDi is hoarse. Tliars never
waa etwh a Hpnr for cougbe and colds, and
never esuli e utMvamal and mgant dm*id for
Haui liusst o ll'iaasuLsti *sn Tea.
pike'* Tmdltachs Drape cure in one minute
| —(Cum
Uspl. Charles Hsgcr, who keeps a
upr b atoek of livery Iwewee in Portland, Me..
.<.r--rated ua raeanUy that be nam S*rrfUm's
t -ire'-v t -ogdifi-u /Vrdrr# iwgnia<|i in itht
I am tin and that the expats* is mora then off
eat by the dtmltdsbad emosni of grata mia
amy to kerp hi* bomm alaeya M good order.—
' (IVMS
Many peojila, purUoolarly childiwtt,
sugar wuh the ear ache. and for the benefit
lef each we rive a sure but simple remedy Pat
ta lea or lire* dmpe of /oAnsew r fwdyw
f inbus, Map fhe ssr with nadrsseed wool,
bathe the fart in warm water befure gotnff to
Led. and keep the head wans at ufght.—{Gum.
OMRAWIO'I Fxosnaeon HAXB DRA
1 etanda anrtvaied and alone. He men* have
been so mdTenally aokriowWdged that it would
i be a etijK-rerv-gattan to deecant on them toy
further—nothing ean beet IA —Oes*.
FLMM's limtn fiiuar. Warrantad
< to rotter# all Klietunatfai Afßu-t Bfeaine,
Heuialgta. etc. The heat, the nmt and the
. auiokaet remedy for aU Banal <Vsn|deHiU Ho
' lief guermnteed or the monef refunded— CW.
CAjrp*i> Uuia, face, rough akin,
i rtm-worms, eaW-rbenm. and Miter
cute neons agisH— euiwd. and the akis made
eoft and smnnfh. by laang the Jtmtvss Tea
Hoar, made by Gaewsix, llaaasti 4 Co., Now
Verb, lie oertain to gat the Jumiprr Tv Hoep,
made by oa. as there are many imitation# made
with common tar width aim worth lea* —Com
Tin it TV tatar EUPUUEKM or
Am out araia.
umi. wis shows aootmvs imr n m
rutcumoserni uuetni Esmete r*r
nee* aas asrem to me Vetted Ma to*, end hee
haaa eeadSw thlMv reere wim werwr mtnas sartlf
ad niiis By mlWliaiw mitt era sad ebtldrsa
free* ma laeMs toiaet af awa weabeld tothaadsM
b aarraeW aateity arm* Stan MS. laVeraa wtad
sella, i age la tee ths hawata. and pnt rest, baatm
aad aoramrl toawthar tnd sHId. W* tatl.ve ft ta
ta (ha Baal aadVwrem Bemad r te to* Wsrtd to alt
•atta ef eridiTidf mm kbuiiau u CBH-
Dim. whet bar tt aMSaa hum T**UU<w at mom
aas wthataeaaa. Fall dirwttaat tot at ia* wtU se
wn sany seek touts. Jtoee Saaata* welaaa me
ttowueilaef OVBTldd mtlMan meewMMe
wraaasr.
SO LP VT ALL WtPXCIVI PEALEBS.
UUtkBKBM orrtl LOOK PAldi AMD
ncK
(torn ae athar nut than tost as tern ta ma
•tomaeh.
Baotnrs vßEwmroa cowrrrs
wtti dntwrfstiwi simMt uttrr.M m# mttd,
tolas rertSMtr srvtta. andftoaWom aU aetaetas
at ataae t*anona lasiedtanta wannUr weed ta
c Chris a now, rwphiuii.
Ba. •l:ranoa Btraet, Hew TarS.
eatd to PrtoiSi end Pktiita*. end daaierv ta
dd-nm at fwanw-arra ftra a tot
Tit*. uotikitOLu raw scat A
earn
tTAIULt LUUUUT
li the beat rmeiiy ta me world am me aam*
nimaiemm, via. I tranyi ta tha Ltmto and Stam
ash. Pate to me Staauah. Besrate tr Bide. Shea
mnltem Is aU Its tarau, BlUeaa Oehc, Baeralgto
Ctoleis, Praeatary, OatSa, EWah WWnnSa, Bwrm,
Sera Threat. Satael Oeawlamto, Sytato* and
BrwUn. ChUto aad Tevat. Ear totarwel and Bs
mmten.
lu Bill sitae U nee stay to raUevß tha taSnt
tot aaurtly tamovß* ttoseaMßf tha aoeiptaUiA.
tl sasimnfm aad per-radaa to* wtota irrua. rw
• u rt neaioa ta nil iu parte, and
!35i- : T!rfasp~~"'~ - ' *—
" ccri, . .um.
Be. via Bsltoe Street,BewTorb.
Ber eala to att Prnsßisto
aSfwowriAL k CoCaH ' Cola ' BoM Thr °* i
nmia Intliti tnmadtata altaaUon, aad
TBOCMMS rtoofcad. V liulfti
, waeuns* Irriuuoa *< tk Lees*, a
OOTOVS rr rmmam* IWroat ABemea or aa
*s laearaht* Laos P'taau, u eAea
OOLDS IKA malt
BROWN'S BRONCHIAL TROCHES
■aViesa djrmri itotoeeeeeetto parts, t*f "smf
Slata ralier Par BrenrbVHS, Aarhna. Catarrh.
CoxtamnUM and Vhraat Hid are
ewd wtA prwet nevsw*
StKOKM AKD PCBUO SI'EAKABS
Win Sad Ttwctos asafai to Cleertat thesetaa wtoa
mnaa tartar* sinsms er Sweahlas. and rwHtvtas
th* thrwat after an aanwaf aaaruoa ot tto roaa)
*Wfato toy " InnS Bronchial Tutam." aad
ta net teh* aay f the worthies* mitouot * that
ann rf fjTaf,MgnMkmd- BewsW. Ash year
snsr*iarit >n *r nstowiw. j
Tit Mattel*.
—at Otfia-rww teßstra amnesSW .U a JJ as:
s: iii
Ordinary tton Oettt* ... Ma a .1*
ItfMhralmapMf artfe M
mkh Oowm. .* was mm
pi—J M\m M\%
...... *• mt
Ooetoa-MlddMas-.-z J*Va 1S
Waar liiafiw IMt eS.M
Nuwiuu-t. ...... ....... a.w a:.•
Whaat-iudW—ra }-* IUJ
No. t BptUW l. e 1.54
Rt ..\T. . IN (IN
B—y-Mslt J® a 1M
O—-Vtaad WMm .• a M
Oora-Mlsed W—fa. -.A. .W a .W
Uv.rmHm W *.•
Ibt*, m tiff aM.lt
Hop* fT. utnvieo-wr. e a .u
raS-w-. . NM.a
Lard ... - aMe .Mi*
Tttatltaai OfM*. *•* *•*•* ii*
ami Miii Mt a M
oato, ru. J a *
•• TeQo* i a.
WNIMI arataarr. -• a .at
Ptaavlnala t0*.... M a .It
Oh— Nfmtt TV-mry (• a .1*
OB a.•
Ohio J>t a .11
fan ft*- * a.
Mffll*
IMOMH •. aMK
ShMB A........ I* a T.jrriJ
Hon -U > N a .TI
f1an....... „ M am
Wheat-Eo.lßrrtt I.* a I.M
Otra. MH .W
Oatt ... a W
Sm.'.V..:. 1 arao
Krh* IJ£ • •
lead M t M
MMU,
Wheal M a I.M
Mt a JO
Oern—Mtstd. •••• •** a M
111 ill ill 11 1 Ut tIM
Pan lite M * M
tJo ail
wheat—w—n W . I.® a IM
iDwl M a.
RWPOIWMB—Qfwde 1 B**aed.lS
aumM • ete.oo
Timetfer *JO aM
ftiLtZVOftli
cJS^rS*
(M.: it * M
STkn-Ntotu
Tht bait Tta lafrt4 111
•ml* •*millhtff. MMM
Ha tail S Viniilhuil. Wew
foth. r. a iioi- O i4
fmr cm— Naaamr dies" •
$ 15
AT 'utTa^iwaMMßrs
\VafHn.B*m.etrU ul Boye r*tee.*> hR oar
>1 rTiMh at ABfiMU ImlrrJMta. NBM
~
CONSUMPTION
And Itm Oure.
WILMOPTS
Carbolated Cod Liver Oil
BBS
ioa'mDil mre proof. . _ . _
the known world, ft
U'rioaloto lh I lniulaßoa.lt J* aoaa ftWplM wttb
tad doetgrettett.B parts* the toarow
C&tmtSoT***** o***''* 0 ***''* _ """J** 1 *
£W&&SSBrS&S n
f. . waiiioiT,
WJMuiIUtM, Btm Tw>
m y | r£:.r.
oE | %xs^Jastue^aai
"(M'RBT IHT IVOCRM <
Hi": ffdW I
ri*fHpg!. Babaaa.B,*ba*J> j
S8 to V! 0 =5
gg^HxavßOgiS
~,.s**, ir iwn '-Koaikmßarq. r, J
r-==s—|
GARGLING OIL
Ths Busdsrf Uiint #f (b DaM Buns.
MOOWNO
asaS 5 -* fists*,**
Si%5T~ fa/ia
r~* *£* #^e
fry"*?.. . 7^StoJ?S2U
3E4p^
J AM'"*
Fbil Aral AW #<* fcte
MM y 4 M ■>*<!. mw aMhi,
AoWk
LarfaSuatlOO MadiamMe. ltoante
•Mil 11m i>r Faa.ily Cat, **el*.
Tfcr uwvttef <M Mi taws to waa see
li.mrni afore MR All we Mfc I* • ASF
*M but te Hitud loltow dlf rrl—■
lArMfoow iiiiioatai srdtalarmfßt.
(Ml Mali* foe* tar (M bTour AltoaaaM, AMI
fMt wta* <h w My ihNl the OIL
•toe tMtsiißc Ca to far tote by ellsto
TfajStr. ihreugbuut tb* rfcl
IhirUtHwWiibM fenw MUtUW F
Mil, (H i arr aaanifoMaA Wf
MrnbaaCt mw Tabteto.
W* Ml (>* aad ÜbrnU Mb U, Ml
4mfy tminAtctkm. Maauforkarßd W
lAck|iort, H. T C. S. A- . by
■erehanUs SaiKliDg Oil Co,
J OHM HODGE, SMrtUiy
41 I 111 k * BMtt M MM, MaMMS, W MM rib
** |
Dr. Turn's Gnie ti Mtt.
mnll Mw mwimi t br w> mm Iwlb
t IIMIH 4 it| bil.buiul at Mfb.lMf .
yoaao : lor Ml Mr**- a*aa*. m mmmm la MS* I
i t|MU awlM tm ibia Uw ba*l aaUUg WbjMA
i luil; M 4 te ma f r Mafb way aW L.
remit ••. M *Mbt|tui itww, R ti*,fc
IOWA FAEIIIV6 LAUDS.
o* i.ee,eo<> mm kiikMUMm Ma c.
=Si-r,rf r.ar 'isrsresusi
Mb* im. •' lM< Maptmnmg TifltM i My j
iwinl -l>naanr oairmi m Mlu JOM* B
r Uilr- If MM toaaMMMt, M bUM<M
lu,t. cib|i',w CtM k*vt*. law*. j
nut r **si' jwm®" l
Toledo Blade!:
saaeT-e rim. ... j
a, ipt *h ,
SOOKS ALMOST GIVEN AWAY !
AUJCWTW win BO BVMtrwHuib
LftoraJ CN F4T * (M aaA A***. ball
MM I Wrtto far M Mtit ImM j
t* a** M*. it mu Mhia m m im I
U|l ff.4 to lrt bow to rr itMlifl Mi tor
•Hunt aMtaa mm to* niaaji.iyii wtto
Urai U Ifiab L*C*a A T'le*a. O-
Id.llKlK'l KM** wiiim M* lUllnl
I*l tMI If. Tarn SUA OK raflawrrty. '
lOKim Wimn Atj*TH
UNDEVELOPED WEST;
FIVE YEARS 111 THE TERRITORIES.
IM KHmi. niMt* IMiMtuM. MBU
CartonSato ma. It *to<aa >• *** MyM.
4 Ul|mty, L* 4*. Faaeto aa CtrtMliMot
tbaOraat *m< Ml t* tb* ipMut aaa MM mO
ik| bo"b ••* ywbHab#* MIMlMbw rwii
aa* r*t'•*. wuk tarau. tHN, SaTIOSaI.
Ft 81-ISStWO CO FlllMrtyX*.Fa.
V wnuari aawwo
j PURE COD LIVSE
L OIL ADD LIME. J
• S t
bM to toarb tb*t Dr Wtlbor ku tnyM. ,
, ffo iiibru< of •*!) r ihaat—il rw'ltaa.
ta MakMUf iM paro Ml aaitoa.* ka tmi+ a mm j
. MI Umi ll !• atonal la IM taaaa. aaiiu rfcda j
<• taa uMallU ara truly woakaitot T*r
: akkf prK.o* *ba* oaa waraoaaaa >•••!
till k< t wka had lafcon lk> claar oU tor a toa MMa
wttbatii aiarba* r'i.k*t baaa aauralf ear*# bf
uainit thi pii arottor- ■ .ur# aad |M iMfSil-
IM. btnbrorM oaly by a to WiLBOe. CbaolM,
Aaakaa. MM by atl *raMP*t*
'•rare to iiirta H
| TM* PiraKlaaa ruatoa wtb ba t**a t* rear*
•aaacrtbai w
GOOEYS LADY'S BooKforlß74,
-r^.yss?
iilnn. 1* A. AOKtT, _
* a^J!Lf%y*w , arwffltW toaaaka.
f ie*"lrtl. la* j
IMMifiki haybiftkklakfl.
*• ■.fltom. rn AtaaAkMf,. f.
Good New^* t,en,itm *' elrts!
n> roll
AGENTS, frti Mepeidat.
Out (tatsta ul lylrafli FrtMlaM* tor aM
now roakf Toa caa Mill; kill tTOM f!' •
par awtk I ikml ottk maafMNn ftlf. Itary
M* aabambar rarwtraa a praaita wartb aaa
thaa tb* aabaariatb.a priva. W* **M kpadal
iraau fnr arary kowa. Fortrra* aaAtlMafpf*-
aiTait-k aMraai K C OVn. Farb Ptoaa, faw
Tork, or BafcßtaaV A DOVLII, M Fo*Uaa
I wrl. A ktao ___
MMMM r pa. kvr* of FiaC Baß*a Bml IBM
L toKJkkkki will toraa wAiakar* *a grow
I U ■thlrk Mi kaaay aa tba MMMkM faaa
■ UJ M(wtiAoak la)ur*> la tl iafk, or aaHt
Pi |ili|rafbada4 *l*. a parkak. peatpald.
t A *1 * M't t tot 4# eta. Oaa appUMt >aa mmy
kvi I n Httr Carlo- wUI rart Ma kair af
tJalnit aaa baaatiratty, aatlttorttaa
■■ A rta. a paakaaa, pa*t
■JUfMli. J Bur X eta.
B tr JORSS. AkfclaaA. Baa*.
OSRSLI [tWJITMNLj
THE GREAT ALTERATIVE
AXD BLOOD furdteb.
Ik is not • qnsek aoftim
Tb insmliFots srs frabtiahsd
on ftocß bottls of median®. It
i iued and recommended by
PbystciaiiA trkerrrer it ku
bees introduced. It trill
poeiGrely cure SCROFULA
in iU. i Hwt ftnor*. JtUEW-
UtATTSM, WHITE SWEL
LING. GOVT, GOITRE,
RRONCHITIS, EERrOVB
DEBIUTY, INCIPIENT
CONS I HP TJON. and ail die
mm* in.-/ p from en impure
condition of the blood. Send
for cmrßoeaPki-w Alxakac, in *
which yon will find rertificatee
from relikhleand trnstworthy
iHiysicifjw. Ministers of the
Ooapel end others.
Dr. R. Vibes OUT. *4 ItabtMara,
Nil t • < ** uM<i it in iaar* ct SerefSto
arid olirr dtaMBM ettk Bark aatlalao.
dliaaaed mood, Mjiay it to aapaUar to
act 1 trrkralioa be ba* erer seed.
lean a* Bach beoeStted by Ma eaaathU
b* cborrfttUy rnraaaariifk it to aQ ka
frteada and ken m lata art a.
Lg^t'Mscisrssi
.ta'lo.
Ti ma mi a. Ml* it cured klai o( Bkao
atatton abes aB ato* failad.
yes yoaiTtaTTa x COWnBCTIOW WTTH 0P
artll aar* Chiila and Frear.Ltaar CnMplalst. Pya
papal*, ate Wa raarante* Boaacaua avpartar ta
alfatbar Stood PnrtSor*. Sand tor Paacrtptiaa
Circular or klaianac.
Addraaa COMMITS S CO.,
• S. Ct romaroa St.. JIIHmW, JU.
toataambar to aak roar Draolal Sir a—rriid
NO MORE WET CARPETS I NO MORE COLO FEET!
ll^r
THE ADJUSTABLE THRESHOLD.
ilium rrtUty 2EZ. ,r i!? d< iX H to •"??■*'•/•* Urtjs oti*of onlor, I nmdlf
TRroß m.
to UU n to rt, l^, ! "*WO *" "**** * THNE **F OUROMS. FoitoM.oor 4 -wtoLftorlto
tjrTbor will *ve iheirCMUe on* MMon.la the cogßunptton of fotL
Ak fer Ihcia t ii,e U*.-dwiu stars* jor we * 111 tewKtro of opwm, rocetpi of tlx price,
wxusox, pcaci * co.. su W—MHIW, ass cim* cMMfL
FfST Bittdr* ars prrelT Vasedshli
orepsrstfem, msds ehfaiT from Urn os- •
tire herbs found on the lower ranfss of
the flierm Ksrads mmmtsioA of
nist, the modWiml propertfoe of whieh
sm estmetod tboreironi without the we
of AlcoboL XL" onestioo Is *ltwn
dnilv asked, "Whatthe cause of the
napitndlt'ied mcCwee of Viitwiar Bit
riKKf Oar answer is, that they remore
Lb# cease of diarttae, said the fMtlentre
ooeess his heaUh. They are the rest
Ueod w rifisf and a life giv iai; principle,
• perfect Beooruor sod torigomtpr
of the system. Nerer beftire In thu
bisurry of the world has a medfetssieim
uokiivtaitdtof iiussismlbk the roaußtsWe
Vm
mm a prntim Uuifstira ■* l w S u **. * , Toaic ;
isllevii.< ' Inflsmmsbrtn as
the liw and Ylseeisi Orfsna, Is Biikms
CM-:.. :L'fo% Dsuhfoea. JUMSJibto IMwetto,
Uodsuve, Couatar IrriUnt, gudofdb, Allsm
||W A A _A|
Bfi MM juiO'i>nwa.,
Gntifiil Thn—nils rnrrhfrn
mar Bittrrs the most womtorfel fa
%%fant thai ewr soslafoed the dakieß
IJ CWm caa ukf feme Bittrrs
aeecwtllQß to dinwtkms, mod rnnain loitoc
unwell, protrided their booss are nedde
etffwed by mineral paieoo or other
menus, and Tttsd acpaas wasted bey end
Bilious. ImillMt a4 later
mi ties t irererik, which sow ee pws~
lent in the ralleys of .air gtml rrrsrs
iliroutfbout the Umiod idiy
those of the Misstesippi, Ohio, IDeeoun.
Ulhiuis. Tennessee, Chmberisnd, Altsu
MM. RM. Colorado. Bnuts, Rk> Grsndo,
IVArt, Akfaaas, MoWte, ftarwrasb, Ro
snoke. James, and many others, with
their rest ihmorboot r
talis country dertng She fhanmer stxf
Aotoma, and rtmsrtutbiy so dnrtoßSse
sons of tumsusi hesx sod dryness, an
tnmrahi * snwimtantart hy e*tire de
nunpemeuu of the ntuuach sod Urer,
other sbdMiunsi efoeont. In tbslt
tresnaant, a purgstire. exertiuijE a pow
erfsl infloßoec upon tnase various or
is innrtiiifr nsßessary. There
esthertic for the porpose oqual to
Dr. J. Walkrr's Vis no an Bcctrrs.
as they ami speedily remove the dark
ookired iiacKi aiaUer with which the
bowefe art loaded, at the WM tune
stimulating the secretions of the liter,
aikl generally restoring the healthy
functions of the digestive organs.
Fortify the body MRißst 4b*M*
by porifvmg all its teidawith Vwroaw
Bittrrs. NO epidamfo can tabs bod-lf
of a system thns fofe-enned.
Pytmopids or ladlgoitloo, Bsnd*
schr. Fein in the SheuJderß, Coughs.
TighlueM of the Chest, LHsxiness, ikmr
Eructstkms of tin Stomach, Itad Taste
in the Mouth, Bilious Attacks, Palpiu
tstioo of the Heart, Inflammalioti of the
Lungs, Pain in the region of the Ed
ney*. end e htiadred osher paiufoi eynsn
totna, are the odbprings of Dyqiepna.
One bottle sriU prow a better guarantee
of Ms merits than a lengthy adtssthm-
or Klrr's ErflL Whiu
Swetham. UWra,
Ooltnt, BtsofnUro, Inßseißeirtnns. T~ at
LadeanßSlfoet, Mereorisl AfMoas OM
gores, MraptinM of the tikie. Saee Byesk els.
la Uutoa*. sa is all other BSistiletMinal Di#-
snaas, Waluk's Visssas Brrrass hate
shown thm grtmi rmwUra powers In thw
ntest ebstlaeU! and inttwotsMe eeees.
For Igiannstory gad Chronic
Bbfamtisai, Gont, Btlkms, Bemit
•eotacdlntenxiiUent Fevers, Diaensee of
the lhoad, liver. Rtdaowa sad Madder,
theae Biu<r bans ne esml busk tease inn
are canard by Vitiated feUad.
gaged In Paints and Minerals, snob as
ptuwibcra, TypomMew. Oehl testoirg and
Miners, as they adeancw In his, art. mfons
to uaialyato of tho Bawh. Tw Not
sgsmat this, take e doa* of WtunlTv
MAS Brrms mnwinneHy.
ForSkln MwiUfs, Eruptions. Tet
wjdt-hitß. Ufonfoo. hp^^sßptes.
Bywa.
2*rheteawlw^
fr nature, sie Mtengy dug ap and esariod
net of the syeteui in a shoii ham by the me
ef these BHSsn.
FfaL Ti, gad other Worm*,
lurking in the mwtera of so many thousands. .
an rrfii iaaily daouwyid And twsioved. go
T*tca ef median* so vermifuges, nt an-
Uteiminitics will bee the tystem ftwn Wtonn*
hka thees Biitera.
For Female CompUintx, in yoong
or old. unnisd w dngte. at the dawn ef we
manhood. r the twm of lifK those Took
Bitten d -;••*? sodoaUad an influence that
uaprotwnteoi to eoau percepriUle.
(Immf tho VithtiM Blood wben
rr roe flod ito impantaashnestmgtfoaagii
the wctai in PiapM, Krepdan. or Bore*,
cleanse it when yon gad it eketmrtsil and
aiuggnh in the twine; cleanse it whan it ia
fwulT vour feelings wiß tett yen when. Keep
the famed pure, and the health ef the eytosei
w&l follow.
n. ■. Bkooetu) rn ce..
D*WNtotk kkiiOM.
aadear af Watotußu oei UMStomfk. K. T.
toy toy all tWwmtotk *a< Pl*rm.
x r. x r.—w*.
A Htw iai CwM HatSAay out.
A OMabtaaitkki of BtotUvv CaM. * tie makltli
M*lfWana wbtch wrttar* aieilaU* u. p*ll la
oorrkcily. Far taw by Inttatni ul at Mas
CK-Wrut Slraak. rbti*v.*lpk,a. Fa SrwS /orlto
umghm n Urn aaa*.
I* iwj k-i-vtiao t
I mm oiibmt. bcubk
wtb* Awe oto Ary ap • eeegh eed toaw tba eeaae
K*M. tort toasaa* K ttoaM iba toart aad Mtoym
hSßHou,tba*PMM*toßUoOM*artbaeMtpialnt.
CONSUMPTION CAN BK CURED
bf a tlMki* maart to thto itoehed riMaty. m Is
atov*< by eeadradaor tMOMMtoi* It hM *K*i*a4
TfakFHika* to klyokd -A SbOk" ae tb* wraMwr,
srrtt W. FOW I K A SOUK. PKWIITOM, Ra*-
*to> km. Said by dMlar* gMakEy.
pm CKXTS tor tb* Wbmckt Wiacoaaia, ika
kl to*t Family rp-t.for atoaiba. rockaintr g
IU Iba k..|* *1 ikk uiUinilti arrlal Mary,
tJ|| TBtrrTßey or LkeriKOToe nurse.
w w TMa f-a* r*at*r* <toaa wot lalHaNkunaa
tba >aifl,lMH of atbar A* part ■cm*. Iba
Wißilt Wiacoaup I* ato calami quarto- >*,**,
tkaatba X Tark U* frror ibc -\rw Turk Wnii v
Kampto coptaa frto. AU lattar* akoul.i toeaarcfully
addiaaaaSlH AMKto AIIUtikACSTsEH
miwaufc**. Wla. |
•iIK Par Day OoMaataataa at |M a wtob
a*f Salary, an* auyoaa*. Wa oe*r H aoA wkU
pawn. AFPtyeto*. O. wBSBBB A CO.. Marine, o