Farm, harden and lloavehnM. HniiwhnM RrO|>rl. Porxp CAR*.-— One pound of flonr, •ne pound of sugar, three quarters of a pnttnd of butter, eight eggs, and a pinch of salt jpLrw PcoDUtq.—Two eggs, six crack rs, thrho nints of sweet milk, a piece of butter the sire of an egg, one cup of raisins, a litilo salt and nutmeg. Arm* Bare*.—Two quarts of water, a pint of molasses, a root of giuger, and boil all together twenty minuses ; put in while boiling a peck "of pared, cored snd quartered apples. Stew until ton dor. LONOOH' STU-AWB.—A pint and a half of sherry ; two ounces of angar ; grated nutmeg ; two quarts of milk. Sweeten a piut aud a half of aherrv with the loaf sugar in a bowl, and add nut meg. Milk into it from the cow abont two quarts of tuilk. Fnrrr CAR*. —One enp of butter, one enp of browu sugar, one -tip of molas ses. one enp of sweet milk, three cups of flour, four eggs, one and one-half teaspoonful* of cream of tartar, one tea spoonful of soda, one Wtitmeg, and two C>unds of raisins. This makes two avos. BAKHIIMIUX Prrntva.—Four eggs, one quart of sweet milk, five large tea spooufulsof Indian meal, nutmeg and sugar to the taste. Boil the milk and scald the Indian meal in it, then let it cool before adding the egg*. Bake three-quarters of an hour. Rat with butter or sweet sauce. Rios rtaniUNo.—One cup of rice; three quarts of milk ; one teaapoonful of salt ; two-thirds of a cap of sugar ; bake very alowly. Eat with butter, or leave out the sugar and servo with sauce. One egg ; one teacup of st:gar ; Wat together twentw minutes; two thirds of a pint of boiling water. APPLE TAKTLETS. Peel six large applex, boil to a pulp, mix with sugar, cloves anl lemonqwl to taste • let tins mixture stand till quite cold, theu mix with it two ounces of dried currants. Mix a lirbt puff paste, obtain a large flat baking-tin, and pour the mixtnreiu. Cover it with the pastry, and bake half an hour in very hot oven. VELVET CAKE.— One quart of new, nnsKimmed milk (half eream and half milk is preferablei, three eggs (white and yolka beaten separately and very stiff!* one teaspoonful salt, rice flour. Mix the beaten yolka with the milk and the salt, then nee flour to make a batter thick as that for flannel cakes ; lastly, whip in the stiffened whites very light ly, and bake immediately. As EXCELLENT PTPDISO.— One-half pound sue*, shred fine ; one half pound grated bread crumbs; one-quart or pound loaf sugar, the yolks of four eggs and the whites of two, well beaten : two table*poottfuls of orange marmalade or sliced citron, if preferred. To bo put into a buttered mold and boiled for two hours. To be served with wiue poured over it, or sauce. Xutaw Slant* Don. A man who will habitually take a horse tbrouch a narrow door knows Terr little of what a horse remembers, or what is fair treatment to the animal. One single blow on tbe hip against the sharp corner of a doorway is sometimes sufficient to ruin a valuable horse. But when that blow becomes several times repeated the horse becomes valueless, because he has become a highly dan gerous animal. We have seen a horse whose hips were never healed after striking two or three times in passing through a narrow way. Another dan gerous practice is the leading of horses out of the barn door, by the sides of loads of hay, grain, etc. A slight blow upon the hip will sometimes so excite a high spirited horse thst the person lending loses control over him, and he escapes upon a jump, banging his hips and shoulders as he proceeds, leaving patches of skin and hair as evidence that he haa got through. Many a valu able horse has been ruined in this way, and many a valuable one can be saved by never leading him through a nfrrow space.— yew England Fanner. Keeping Hams. Farmers* families are often troubled about how to keep hams in the sum mer time. We hare tried a good many wnys, and have alwavs failed in keep ing them nicely. The smoke house, though bidden away in among the apple trees that lay their limbs loving ly over, above, and around it, is atill too warm; tbe wide, roomy cellar too damp, and the shop, though cool and airy, being the large third story of tbe "old honse," is too light. A good neighbor, who knows all about it, tells me that he always packs awav hams in the early spring time, before the flies come, in a box, with a!! tbe in terstices between the bams filled np with some coarse, dry salt that he has used foe many years for the same pur pose ; salt that came out of flsh barrels. He washed and dried it thoroughly first He keeps the box in his barn in a cool, airy place. To PrtHrri Apples \\ hole. Peel and core large firm apples (pip pins are best). Throw them into water as you pare them. Boil the rariDgs in water for fifteen inmates, allowing a pint to one pound of fruit. Then strain, and adding three-quarters of a pound of sngar to each pint of water, as mea*- nred at first, wi.u enough lemon peel, orange peel, or mace to impart a pleas ant flavor, return to the kettle. When the sirup has been well skimmed, and is clear, pour it boiling hot over the ap ples, which must be drained from the water in which they havs hitherto stood. Let them remain in theairup until both are perfectly cold. Then covering close ly. let them simmer over a slow fire until transparent. When all the minu tiae of these directions are attended to the fntit will remain unbroken, and present a beautiful and inviting appear ance. Grvaslng of Axle*. The Canada Farinrr gives the folj lowing directions : should never be used on a wagon, for it will pene trate the hub and work its way around the tendons of the spokes aDd spoil the wheel. Castor oil is a good material for use on an iron axle; just oil enough should be applied to a spindle to give it a light coating; this ig better than more, for the surplus put on will work ont at the ends and be forced by the shoulders and nnt into the hub around the outside of the boxes. To oil the axletree, first wipe the spindles clean I with a cloth wet with turpentine, if it 1 won't wipe without it. On a buggy or carriage, wipe sod elean off the back and front ends of the hubs, and then apnly a very small quantity of castor oil, or more especially prepared lnbri- , cator, near the shoulder's point. Manni-la* wlUt Brush. A correspondent says: •' I cut abont two tons of water-brush, hardback, and other small bushes, and let them lie in a pile exposed to the weather one year, and then applied them to a half acre of land, and applied barn-yard manure to another half acre adjoining. The result proved the manure to be a little the best the first year, which was oorn. Sowed grass seed in the fall after har vesting the corn. The manured piece did pretty well for about five years, the brush piece did well for about ten years, proving the theory to be correct. I used two cords of the manure as a bal ance for the two tons of bushes ; the plowing was six or eight inches deep. I have repeated the experiment since with the same result. Feus. A writer in the London Gardener's Chronicle planted early and late peas at the same time in the same drill. The early sorts, he says, " came up first, caught hold of the stakes, supported the others until they got ho'-d of the same, snd the result was he lad a beau tiful crop of peas three weeks before the late varieties were ready to gather, thus giv*' f>ff the same P a A JOHN* SHORT, IHSTILI.F.R. The Ml or)- of a Man •'" t'pa llUill lery within a l*rlo*n Wall*-—A Ma who Oil Kb! to tor tblr to Mlr a U •prrtablr I.lt lug. John Short, th* Sing Sing convict 1 who made a reputation by establishing a distillery insid* the priaqti-wall*, i* out, tuul tell* how he carried on hut ! business. Were the offense a less sert- I on* one llion l wouhl If found much I that i* comical alxmt it. John savs : •' I draw'd the plan*for mv atill: being ! a practical distiller 1 know it just what I wanted. The things was all made | outside the prison, from n.y plana, and j fetched in for me. It was a good deal I jof bother, though, for the worm was I made wrong first, and it had to be sent ! hack. This was in 1869, and I'd been j there about a year ou ail eight-year sea | tence. Warden Nrlsou was IH>* then, and 1 was a good deal sea rod of him j The bora all said he was mighty severe. | and I know'd if he got hold of me I'd ■ suffer for it, I was what they call cap- I tain of the ball—had charge of giving j out the blanket#, ran errands, and so I on. That gave me a kiud of lee-wav, i sir, and I wasn't watched so close as ! the other convicts. 1 had a cell next to j me that was used for storing things, and was pretty full of rubhinli. 1 had charge of it, and nobody else went iu scarcely ever, I lit on that cell right away as the place for mv still, and 1 got it tlxed up without anybody's kuow lUg it as hadn't ought to. The still was a little thing, but it would turu out trotn eight to ten quarts a day of first class stuff Being in and out when iu the way of doing my duty, 1 could look after it without being caught. I used to run it nights, too, sometimes; iu my owu cell. You see, air, the guards thought if there wasu't a light iu the evil cwerjthi&g all right: *o *ll 1 had to do wait to keep everything shady. I worked mighty hard, and didn't deep more'n three or four hour* * night sometimes for * week. Prett* soon 1 got so (wile sud wore out that they was going to send me to the hospital. So 1 had to let up on it a little. " Could 1 make good whisky ? Well, sir, I wish 1 had some of it here for you to try. The talk about my using potato peelings, stale bread, and stieh stuff is lies. Every drop of whisky I made was out of good barley that 1 got 1 know how—from outside. The convicts said it was prime, and they was as good judges as vou could come across any where. they didn t know where my still was. moat of em, but they bought the whiskv and paid cash for it. Oh, 1 tell TOU, sir. Sing Sing's the beet place in the world to tun an illicit distillery. No collectors prying ronnd, and no competition. I bottled it, and got gen erally a dollar a bottle—about a pint. When I wa* running the still night and day, the profit w-as about SIH or S2O every tweutv-fonr hours. 1 got ou the best "kind for fourteen months and then Warden Nelson got a kind of suspicion that something was going ou. Some of the couvu-ta got drunk on my whisky, and the Warden know'd they was being supplied wiih the stuff. 1 don't believe , he tbougut it was being made right slap inaide of the prison. Ho nosed round to catch some of the keepers fetching it in. Them as know d about my distillery scared me by saying Nel son waa pretty severe in his discipline. Well, sir, I held off awhile, but 1 had too good a thing not to get at it again. , When Nelson had got hunting for somebody tliat was fetching whisky in, , and of course didn't find 'em, it all blowed over. The storage cell wasn't searched at all, and after shivering for a month or so, I got my still going , again. Ton see, sir, the demand was big—morne'n 1 could supply ; but I couldn't enlarge, because the still was . as large as could be run without being dead certain of beiug found out. Some- ( times the smell fA>m the mash was pretty strong, and there was danger. ;, too, that some jealous convict would , find ont where 'twas and blow on it. \ The barley was brought in to me in bags, and coat me more'n the regular price in the market, but in spite of that the profits was sometimes as much as eighteen or twenty dollars a day. I give my wife some of the money on the 1 sly, anil the rest I hid in the prison. *" Well, air, tilings went on a swim- ' ming till 1872—February, I guess 'twas ' —when I was bust tip, 'Twos this way 1 it happened : The convicts ain't sup- 1 posed to have any money. They earn a good deal, the smart ones do, on their overtime work, but the Warden keeps every cent They can leave it on de posit or have it turned oTer to their relatives outside. Well, a wife or a brother or somebody that'll pass for a . relation comes in, and the convict goes to the Warden and asks to have his money turned over to this friend. The warden thinks it's all straight and hands it over wihoui suspicioaing nothing. Then it's easy enongh for the friend to clip it over on the quiet to the convict . That was how my customers got money, and I got cash for my whisky, ! Well, sir, one day a convict bought a bottle of the stuff and gave me a twenty i dollar bill to pay for it. While I was 1 making change" in the hall a convict * saw what was going on. He wasn't a customer himself, and he thought he could get a point for favors from Nel- j son by blowing on me. Ho did it, and I was gone. That night Nelson and a body guard that he had ctme a march- 1 ing down the hall ami stopped plump 1 against my celL 'ls this John Short's cell ?' he says. Yes, sir, soys I, and I know'd something was up serious. He sniffed through my grating, sir, and says he, * Seems to me. John, there's a meli of whisky round here.' He had 1 the door opened, and says he, 'John, you've got considerable money abont von. Give it to me.' I put mv hand in my pocket, and pnlh-d ont a purse that had eight or ten dollars in it Then he told the guards to search, and they cleaned me out Ton see, sir, I had something of a store right there in my cell, and in the qjher cell where the atifl was then. 'Twaa a dead clean-out. They got a b>t of whiskv is bottles all read v fo selling, and fifteen or twenty gal lons of mash. I'd jnst got a bag of ' nice Irish oat meal for mixing through the barley—best thing in the world, air, for making the liquor mild and smooth. They got that, and four gallon* of mo lasses that I wns going to make into Jamaica rum. You aee, sir, the boys was hankering for a change, and I was just preparing to give it to them. "Nelson stood there scowling while the guards were pulling out all this stuff. Anil they kept findiiig it. They ! seized ray dialiiler. The Warden had me locked up in another cell, but he fore leaving ine he said, ' John, you're a smart man. You don't seem to drink much of vonr own liquor.' ' No, air,' said I, ' I'm good at making it, bnt a poor hand at drinking it.' Then he handed me hack five cents and a box of matches, and everything else was taken away. He kept me locked np close three days, and had me down in his private office three timea. He tried j his best to get out of me what officers was in with me, but ho never has found out and he never will. I was then re moved to the quarry, and for three months 1 didn't go into business again. Along there sometime Warden Hub bell came in, aud with Nelson out of the way I thought 'twas time to be at it. I've been nndar five or six wardens, and, sir, Mr. Hubbell gets along there the best of the lot. The convicts have a big respect for him, and lie's always kind. He gives the best grub, and the boys think he's really a good, square toed Christian. I don't believe a pound 1 of tuinted meat or sour bread has been eaten in Sing Sing since he's been there. Bat I fooled him, sir, I fooled him, and run my distillery right np to within a few days before I left. " Yon see, sir, I was in for eight years, but the cut-off for good behavior was about a year and a half; that bronght my time out on the '2lth of March. Well, sir, as I was telling you, I started again. I had another still made aliout the size of the first one. My work was changed to looking after a cow, and I fixed up my distillery in [ an old sited back of the female prison. It run along all right till last Beptem eUfj-.-*. qijless it was. Then Warden out whisky was being boys. About that time the ad au account of my making of kitchen stuff. That was i Hway. A convict named O'Day I wont to Warden FlnbbeU and told him 1 wiw distilling the whisky. Hnblwll had mo down in his office, and asked mo about it in hi* kind, dignified war. ' Mr. HubbeH,' say* 1, very honest and injured like, ' ain't mv wont aa good a* any other convict'*?' He waa staggered, anil, after locking me tip a few hour*, he let me go. So, air, my atill wasn't really discovered at *ll, and 1 kept it ntuuing ** long aa 1 stayed. When I was discharged, I packed tip tUV money in a hand-hag and gripped it close till it waa in a safe place. \\ hat am t going |to do with it? Well, *ir, 1 am looking around for aome business opening ; if von learn of anything in the distillery line, 1 wish you would let me know of ! it," Did Not Fight. A case in which a duel was prevented by one of the aecond*, much to the dts , g*t of the other, who happened to he a military man. nay* an old stager, may be related here. It ooonrred during the extra session of Congress in ISll. Thomas F. Marshall invited three gen tlemen to dine with htm one stormy, dismal Sunday. One of the guests was an officer of liie army, from the South, who afterward made something of a name during the rebellion. The other two were connected with the press. An entertainment given bv Tom Marshall before he joined the cold ater associa tiou was sure t.l>e ahuudautly furnished with wiue. Marshall and one of the newspaper men, wuo was front New Or leans, drank deeply. They hud been class mates in college, and were on terms i f familiar intimacy. A slight miauuderstaudiug arose between them, and both lu'itig considerably elevated, a harsh remark was made by the editor. Marshall luouireil if he wo* responsible for what he had said. The reply was, •'Tom Marshall, you ought to know tne too well to ask such a question. The party broke up rather suddenly, and a short time afterward the editor brought to his friend of the press who was present at a dinner a challenge which he had just received from Mar shall. with an unconditional acceptance, asking him to deliver the reply, ree the armv officer, who was to act aa Mar shall'# second, and make arrangements for ati immediate meeting. The friend of the editor was inexperienced in such matter*, but he was impressed with the folly of a duel between two gentlemen ou a misunderstanding at the diuter table, and determined to prevent a tight at all hazards. He held the acceptance until near the close of the following day, when he waited upon Mar*hall. " You cuue, I presume, ou behalf of Mr. ?" •' Yea, air." " You have been a very long time in getting here!" " That ia my fanlt entirely. Your challenge was accepted at once." '• Let me have the acceptance, then, without further delay." " Here it is," the geutleman replied. *' But I do not propose to deliver it at all. I will not be accessory to a dnel between twe meu who have no rsal cause of quarrel and thereupon tore the pnper in pieces and threw the frag ments into the tire. Marshall was much astonished, and inquired of the gentle man if he know the responsibility he had assumed in so doing. The reply was that he neither knew nor cared. " Yon have pot yourself in your prin cipal's place, and I presume you are prepared to take the consequences," J said Marshall. " Nonsense," was the reply. " I will neither let meet yon, nor will 1 tight you myself ou any such ridiculous quarrel. Now what do you iutend to do abont it ?" Marshall finally burst into a laugh, and in less than an hour's time all the parties were taking a friendly drink to gether at (tadsby's. The army officer was inclined to make a scene, protest tug against the irregularity of the whole procwdiiig, but there the difficulty ended. A San Leaps into a Furnace. The Seranton (Penn.) Republican says that th< men working on the uight - shift at the blast furnace of the Lacka wanna Iron and Coal Company, were horrified by one of tbe must shocking cases of self-destruction Uist has ever occurred in that city. Tho victim was a young man named Theodore Marene. who took advantage of the temporary j absence of the workmen, and plunged into the seething furnace, which, at the time, was at s white heat. His cries attracted attention, and tbe workmen ran to the furnace and looked down, only to see the unfortunate Marone, and waving his bauds ami feet in the most intense agony. A long-bandied shovel was lowered to him, but he was uncon scious of its presence. One of tbe men ran immediately and stopped the blast, but human aid was of no avail to saTe | the unfortunate man in the furnace, and he was dragged up as qnickly as I possible, by means of a large hook, a i charred, disfigured; and nnrecognixa- Ibie mass. He could not have been in the furnace above a few minutes, but tho intense beat was sufficient to de stroy life if he hod not been there more 1 than a second. Theodore Marone was a native of Pomsrn, East Prussia, wheTe his father was professor of one of the gymnasiums or schools, in which Theodore was also employed as a teacher. He was sub sequently engaged in the war, in 1866, between Prussia and Austria, and emi grated to this country about four years ago. He was theu twenty-five years of age, and might have done well but for dissolute habits which beset him and j reduced him to a state of abject misery. He found work in the employ of the Ox ford Iron Company as a common lahor i er, and often at his daily toil, when, ! comparing his position with what he was at home, he wept in the presence of his fellow-workmen. These fits of despondency had a terrible effect upon him, and his friends feared he would lose his reason while suffering from one ol them. He came to Be ran ton and fonnd shelter at tbe Centre street lock up. While there lie attempted to take his life by beating a poker red-hot in tbe stove and placing it to his neck to destroy the carotid-artery, when he was detected by one of the officers. He lay around the blast furnace during the evening prior to his destruction in con sequence of some men being at work therewith whom lie was acquainted at the Oxford iron mine*. Itnmod Tp. Bhakspearc'n " To what base uses we may come at last " has a fresh illustra tion mentioned in the biography of the late BMiaM J, May. Mr. M.'s father came in one morning from a walk, and remarked : " I have aeon something wondcrfally interesting this morning. A I passed the Old Granary burial ground I saw that the tomh was open in which I knew wore the remains of James Otis, and, with the help of the sexton, I opened the lid of Otis'a coffin, and behold 1 the coffin was full of the fibrous roots of the elm, especially thick and matted abont the skull. And going out, I looked up at the noble ver dant Paddock Elm, and there iu trans figured glory was sll that was material of James Otis." And now these wretched irreverent Bostonians have been burn ing up James Otis for firewood 1 GOLD FlSH.— Referring to the state ment now going the rounds, thai Seth Green pioposes to stock Irondeuu it Bay, Lake Erie, with gold fish, which ho says are good eating, the Herman town TcUr/raph observes : " We shanld say that the gold fish will not be re garded as edible by anybody who can get any other fish. They have an un natural sweetish taste, not unlike the smelt, but lacking the flavor of the smelt, and rendering them quite in sipid. We have not tasted one for thirty years, but that taste was suffi cient not to desire another since that time." CunonAii. —We see it stated as an opinion in the Journal of Chemistry that hydrate of chloral is a safe article for any intelligent physician to employ; that while it is useless to give it to re lieve pain, it produces a sound, refresh ing sleep when used in cases of nervous wakefulness, and it does not lose its in fluence when persistently employed. i! Cmiftfa ami Cirri of rural)*!*. j | Paraiysl*, *iya Pr. llrown Srquanl, I* ' i runahtrr. il to rt-aull Inim a cs-aiivti of bp • llviljr nf n | art of Ilia* brain trnm ttlacaar I Idrt, for iuaUno*, it iMdratk' exist in that I purl of lht> brain that wc call the anterior Inlic. That part U cn*irlrrptl a* Ik-I I:* In , (jrt"t tin asurt- the -eat of Ihv will 'lbal II part la tlcsir-vynl try illaraap, ami war flail n ! paral) >l* , atn! tlio view is, as I have said that ilm raralyai* rrsu la from a rmssthm of the activity of lliat part. It ar ailtult tills view, then 11l Mi' la no lieixl of *,t'C|il lug what 1 bavo taught hero : that an uri t.ilmi starts from a plant) that la tllectu |Hialtlon to I art* \\ r M-o every day that a lilkcabc vsbleb la txccrxlhigly j llmltnl in extent hi the brain ran [.i.Muc. the moat iiMit|rli'le paral-sii, HII le. on tin i titer hand, we ai-e that lilx-nsc which lias de trovnl an itumruat) pan of the brain may u<>| pivnlut'e a |iaraltkit at ail it is lin to COM ltxtt) that lanalysis priax-evls tu a ilirret way Irotn the deaUrintioii of lis auc that wo wo after d> atlt. There must la- an intermediate agency Utwien the at of tho dUeaao and the |>ara!) tin Ami that intermeiliate agency is what 1 have I He I to make VOU umleislaml in sy ing that the inltatlou s ail- flotu the place where the dtaeaae la, and grwa to other |>a(la of the brain, and also to Uie |iinal cord, to atop tho activity of Utotv l-art*. It will bo cvi- Jciit to pi-rains ht re who know a Utile atx.ut dtitioniy, that It U Itttpomib'e to admit the old view atarut paralysis. In the base ol the liralu there la n orgiU which la called (he paw* i .iraht This t the otdv part by which coinitianicalloiii take place l-elweeli tiie brain an 1 the apinal cord and (lie rest . of the body for v- luutary urovrmcnta . Du re is also an ther pail iu fuml which is j calnd the rrurv* trr*(> r- legi of the hraltl I I'iiat part is c<.mp. scd of two halves, quite distiuct one frctu another. Let us suj.qv.iae i lliat tt ere is a dise.-w ether iu one part of ' the />.. tarc.'o or of llie c aeu err tin, an) thatdiwaae has destroy e l a small part of one of thrae. \\ hat ilrall we aay if the view that moat all phvatologista have is cor reel I Why, that the destruction of our |>art of the rrara crrrtri or /vti* lU rvlii UfCei sarily w ill produce a parslysia in i >me mus cles of olie-hall of he body. Hut that is not what we we. In C.M'J of disease trie re. the par-lysis may ens' iu .'the same side of lite li dv where the disease is or ou the op ' jrosite side. It inav he tu one arm only or in one leg only. The fa -is are altogether in i ppoaition to the adruiUed view You may see also case# tu whieh the y—i rare,it is destroyed without any paralysis at all We should say also, according to the com • men v.cw, that a disease lti.il has destroy i d on y a few of thefibers would produce ouly a para'ysis of some- of Ute uiu* ha. Tin re are Do suoh ca • utt record. It Is cssruual to take another view of ihts matter. I have 1 proposed this rsp.anatu'it that paralysis apjrrars i nlv from an Irritation which s arts front tho place wher • the d tease Is, and acts upon pa ts at a distance so as to modi fy them AU of you kitow that ati kliug < of the ao'c* of the feat produces different ctl c sht d llercut |wo,de >o we can eattiy undcnuand thst an irritation in the brain which will produce a corplcfc or a [-anial [mrdysis in one |>crson will produce no pir aiysis iu another, according to Ute en lia bility of iliff rent people Take the fac ai ucrve now That nerve in aluwa: all per sons who have a chronic dta>ase of the t-raln is partially paralyzed, perhaps only a few fibers of it Well, st lie iliseax- which produced Ibis parslysts Is limited iu every instance, and as the disease may occupy every pirt of the brdn, if we com lude thai paralis s rvnses because the nervous i e trr ■if the lacial uenre is destroyed, we would have to place that center in every part of the brain ; in one individual in one part. in another individual in another [-art. and so on. Au iaa we hod cases In which a destruction of a considerable pan of the brain dors tt t result in that paralysis, we would have to conclude that some indl- ! viduais do not receive Ural nerve in their brain. This is a mfariw si shsnfva We haw therefore to throw overboard that , theorr. Slausbtcr la the .Soath Sea*. By the arrival of her Majesty'* schooner Rcuanl uvi the Sidney i/rrjld, we have hern placcij in | mens lon of the folluwins; particulare n-j>ccting the whohaalc and u.oalu-rrible alaugiilcr of lb - crcwr of the b rkriuU): The I'luio, '.'Hi. t n. C plain llarke, owned hv Mr. ('.'Uingwutid. of Suudcrl-wd. Mkilei! from New rattle. New South W ac, on the i'dth of A|iril a la.uud for Hong Kong wtha<*• go of otial. She got on a re I outlying from New Caledonia, aud hreamo a total wreck. The rrrw Sfcurrd one of the boats, and as a strong southeast monetxin was Mowipg Captain Clarke deb riinnrd to make f r the SOUHPOD Oroup, and suteeqenlly rem hing l\jrt Adsui. (Mulayfab ilerv a landing uu elicCJftl by a p<>r'lon of the crew, who wanted to obtain water, the boat meanwhile K ing off at anchor . but the native* came Jowu in numbers aud kilted every soul tlmt t*ndeL Capt. Clarke at one* put to sea. hut canoes were in chase, and nnforfunalrly the hat got on a reef. Ileitis w 1 hout any amis, the crnoe* smm ranged alongside, and rtnhbssly slaughtrrvd all on boitd ihc boat, with the exception of one man iunn d John Collins, wh • has been spued to describe the horrible acme. Tbi man was terrible woundedbj am w, lint primipally aiioul the lower por ion of the body, uid a supendition apt>ears to cits', among the n aive# of this locality tha'. when- d.ath does not al once ensue, the victim must not b.- again attacked, and be is tabooed from fa ther harm. 11c was taken on *h re, and would ap;-car to hare been well treatctl While at the " Hanks Group." Lieutenant buckling received Intelligence fr.-m the that a wtdic man w s in llie hands of the natives at Malayta Heat once got under wiy and proceeded to the sjait. a'.d after eonsidrrahle difficulty succeeded in getting the unfortunate man out > f their b aids and paring hiiu a .fety un ts.ard the Ileuartl. Her Majesty's ship Dido was fallen in with abort!v after an 1 C. 111ns trausfeircd to her, list lug been in tin- hards ol the natives two mouuis, Collins statiTi that the chief officer, who was in the boat and witnessed the deaths of the shore parly kideil himself with a tonialnwk to avoid fa ling iulo lite hands of t'.e savages. The ltenud also found four of the missing men of the ship Itobtrt Towns on the south part of M .llico'lo Island, where they hail boon almost six weeks. The natives treated them kindly up to thnt time, but they were getting tired ot the un n. ar.d it is not im possible that they would have killed them. Capt. Macdouald, of the schoon. r Success, went in the Ilgnard with I.hut. Suckling to Mallicollo' Island, and treated with Lite natives for their rt liase. which was con ceded on ]>a) utent of uirr tomahawks A Singular Suit. An seiinn for libel brought by M. Itous fcau againort(>it by the committor Not sliall auy on# tiling embrace ittura than SO,OUO acraa. instead of likt.tHK) Agreed to. Mr. Itaiaasy alao sub nutted an Biurndnirnt to lha 'Jd sbcIIOU of tits lull providing that Inositol! tuiglit alao lie uisto u|wni i-et'lttlu Indian lands in Mintiasota, Uald in tiilsl ly the thin imiicnl, not evroedlug liUI •ores fit each luomhsf of tho soelaty. Agremi to l-BVta, of W Vs. lutroibicml a hill to reduce the tat on the rtirulvUon of Htale banks to an kiiiount equal to that |-aid by natisnai bsnka. Ilr said lno tai on national t>aiik eUtrulaUOM was one |*r orttl , and tkat on Mlate l-atik ct eulaltott ten |ter foul , whteh pcaetisaliy p/a vatttoil any I'll l'ltlaltou of the latter cla. 110 •aw no reason why uatl"ual banks should have llir Bib antago iwsr Ktato t-snks ten to one. 1 ho Heuate passed tho till! atuendalory of Ilia art to provide internal toietiuo to aupt*irt llio (iovaiiiuient to iiay the UltertMt on ths public data, aud fur other purpuwes, apiroveit June 30, fWH. it pro-idea Itial no legal doeuiuout or |>a|>or requned l.y law to t-e wlttch was marts, signed or issued tu tho Kouthoru Stairs prior t.iUis Ist of July, INtS, altail ba .let-mod or bald a* invalid and of no affect, by roa*"ti of the fatluru to luqmsa tborsult tbe re quired stamp. Mr St-wart, of Nov., Introduced a Mil U probitut national l.anks from lending money on mot lev an senility aud for other puijawaa. Ita foneii to Uie t'oiumutee on Kuianoa. Mr. Wind.'tu, from the t'omuiUlee on torn meiee and Itoutes, iu prasanting their r#|ort, dell, .-led a huig speech. Ilessid lhal ti.e value of coin modules uioved by lallroe.!* . , was o\os till uuu.uon.uun. for winch tfieir griws ro- I oaipt* weia 173 341,063. and yet the faciiiUo# were inadequate to supply tho demand Con sequently agriculture is para*ysoil ami UUir lUtereats languish The various routes for carrying Western |troduee to tbe seaboard eie spoken of lu detail, and llio cotnuiiltee s ob servations and foiiclualoua slated Mr Mdmunds, of Vt . introduced, by rcjui-et. a bill to i-MtbU for a edmuttasiuu u|ou ihe •übjoci of (Hsilal lelegrt|iby. llefenvsd to llie t'.'iuittllllee ou P.wl Oftli-e* and Post llteli. The t hkutuan of the Ju.bciary l'.>mmille reporte.l unfavorably on Uie bills to relieve the ii.liticl diseUhlies of J. \V. llctuiell of Mary laiul John P.Tsvth of AlalNtma. licrge Pickett i-f Virginia. OevtJ A. Telfair. of Kurth l'ru lu>* *4.4 Kapha#! Hemmee of Alatwin*. Musi •>f IIK*MJ bill* did not h the uevoeaary peti tion* fivin (be |*r(ie* named, and llw latter olio the i juim'.lre*aa li"l .hap-wed loe.mw.ler favorably. Hoeever, ilia committee *a dia ctiarged from their further MiwUlritlida. Ibe vi.lu <>f lire I'roehieul of I lie Finance UU *• coi.aljered. *n4 lie t'hatr an nounced that llie Kiuanoe bill *a* before tbe Senate. and Ibe .jural,on u a*. KUOuUt It Ji**a, ittHkJilhaiaiubiig Ibe I'feaidenl# objection* ? t'|ou tin* t|UM>iiott Uie t'ooeiiluUou re-iuued tii*t tbe O'le ahoutd be ukcu by yea* and nay*. No one taking Ibe It—or , the roll waa called, autl the role reeuiled a folio** Vtie Moeer* Alleoti, Ktfy B .reman C*m eron. Carpenter, Clayton, t .mover, /trenii, Dorwey, I'eMT (MwIA.), lioMllwuie, b'cnlM, Harvey, IbllKkcl, iiisail*. JtAmtUm, l.r*ta, LoK*u. Vc ''rvwy tferrtoum, MiU'brll, A r. te .it Oiilmliv, l'altereou, I'eaael'raU. Latitat y. Kobettaun, Sj*-uvr, Srauuis. I t pro*. \Ve*l, Witldom aut Uii([bl 31 Sat*. Mcwn Anthony, /liyrtrtf Bowl well, Hi. kinghaiii Chandler. Conkliug, I fagin, /Vtru tUlinand*. l'i*fo, Ferry (Conn.), Flanagan. 1 leluukiywn, (ti'beft, f/.iorr, f/aellitM (Ml i Hamilton .Tex**!. Hatiihu, Howe, J olio, AVi.cy, Morrill (V I.), Sargent, Scull, Sherman Strnnmtm, Hie • art. Siocklun, flaniMtr aii 4 A). lvui'A'iaU Ui italic* an J libeta.l* in amall cat a (ale. 1 wo-Uur.b not iotitic ut the a&rmauve. lbs UU IM llMt mat Mr Southard, of Ohio, offered a resolution matrucung the Committee on banking and Cur rent"* to ltH|uire and r*|*l thereaeotie why the t33 000,000 of naUoual bank currency, author ized to be withdraen from the State* having more than their iirojairti.m baa not teen with drawn and dlatr.t-uled under the prolinuria of the act of the 13th of July, liCo and a I.at further legislation u neoeeaary to eectuu that reruti. Mr. Hereford, of W V., introduced a bill providing that the tat on Stale bank* a hall not be other er greater than the let uu uaUunal bank* lull* wer* ttitmd iceal re;eahti(; all •tatnlm which forfeit widow*' pettanui* for aec >nj mar riage . to permit jarUra to testify in their ori defenee in Filled State* ,-o.irU . to Mnn.lt a free ayatein of national tanking auJ for llie reeutnpuuu i f #pe\e |;meula . to facilitate llie reaumptl 'ii of epec.c jaituenta ar.d to prevent fluctuation* lu the talue of irnlal State* note* repealing all law* impoamg a tar n State bank* to imp.ee alar of flvo per cent. u> ail income* of individual* and enrpora- U.*i exceeding 15 COO . declaring it to itniuM atdltioual tataU'Wi, and inexpedient to retrench uu necexaary aj'projwtation* already male ut the tutcreel* of commerce, and pn> *tditig aa a meaere of icropomr* relief for the leaue of an additional aft; milUooe of legal lender note*. New Spring Goods and Styles. Tbe variety of fabrics in less this sea son than last. With fi-w< r purely ephemeral ami fanciful goods, there ia nevertheless a goodly number to eho< ae from, and auch as are very oretty, M >at of the stuff* are of ailk ami wool, ao beguiling to the eye, aa to cause the mind to forget that material* of mixed threads are neTei a safe purchaae, on account of their disposition to shrink and cockle. There is the usual choice of silken pougeea, soft, clinging reps and cashmere*, alpacas and brillian tinea, Hergea, plain and with diagonal stnjMH, the numlierlesa atuffs (tearing the naroo of poplina, foulards,—deli cate of texture, and useful from April to Octeber,—and the ever new, yet cvct old, summer ailka. There is a notice able lack of polonaise goods, which in dicates, if straws show anything, that that valuable garment ia no longer the highest style, UiUgh-surfseed fabrics hare given placa to those of finer finish, even the camel's hair cloths Iteing less hairy than of old. And camel's hair cloth, by the way, is much lower than last year,—a good quality being purchasable for 81.-"I per yard, doable told, —because it is not adapted to whole suits, and be cause few polonaises, barring those matching skirts, will be worn. Tin re is always sonic tangible reason for any great reduction in the price of any thing, if we are only careful to look for i\ The average rate of niee and sra a nihle dress materials M from fifty cents to 81 a yard, though, of course, a certain class of cotton, and mixd cot ton and wool fabrics, ranges as low as thirty cents. These do not pay for making, either in appcarxnco or wear. A s.uiud rale tor purchasing is to select as nearly the beat of its kind as can be afforded. One good gown will ontlsat two poor ones, snd prove the wiser economy in the end. The prices of silk seem somewlist lower than last season, to be in keeping with our assumption of poverty. Hulfi eieutly niee summer qtislities may l>a had for gl.no a yard ; and now and then a bargain may be made for leas. They are iu the usual fine, colored and white stri|es ; brighter lines than heretofore —such as blue and purple aud green - being devoted to street costumes. A Suggestion. A Connecticut school-teacher, in a paper recently read before a teachers' institute suggests that a pupil of each sex bo placed at the same desk and al lowed to assist each other in their les sons, and at the eijd of each month per mitted to select Tiew partners if tlicy desire. It was claimed there would IHJ less trouble in governing a school, more tidiness in tho pupils' appearance, and greater ease in their conversation and intercourse, which would be of much advantage when tliey became men and women. It was affirmed that where the experiment has been tried it had been attended with success. RTATifrrrrs now that of the thousands who die annually, alarge proportion are dent roved, not l>y old ago, or by the natural exhaustion of vitality, bat through intemperance, or disregard o'thcr on the part of the sufferer, or his parents, of tho simplest laws of nature. Uuch being the esse—and fli/urcs can not misrepresent fact* —the conclusion is that were the causes of intem|>eranee, its kindred vices, and a disregard for natural laws, removed, the average length of tho human life-timo would be extended proportionately. What agent most rapidly, harmlessly and certainty will eradicate these vices, or the tendency to them, is tho question which lias been as thoroughly and per sistently agitated as lias the search for the Philosopher's stone. The discovery has been made by Dr. Joseph Walker, whose widely known VINKCUK BITTEHS are accomplishing wonders which the old f"gy doctors never dreamed of. Try them and judge for yourself, as thou sands arc doing all over the country.— Com. llronrhltl*. This la an Irritation or inflammation of the bronchial tube* which carry the air we breaths Into tbe lungs. It arias* front a eld settled In llie throat, from I'alatih eilcu.hug to tbsss pail*, flora ncrofutoua affaetlou*. and from ■overs Use of tbe votes. 'llia Irritation from till* laltrt causa eoiuuisncsa in the btrywz and >jloiiu. which are tbe argaua of lha vsice. aud. etlen.iiiig downward*, produces iioaraensss, coughing and spitting mucous matter, *otns- Umea noted with blr*Ml It is chiefly danger mis from Ita tendency to spread Into Uie lungs, and terminate tu ei>nsiuti|itlou. It ta lu the cure of severe aud olietlliale c*eea of this disease thai Dl I'leice'* Uol.leu MedioaJ I >ow oveiy ha* acliieve.l uiiparallel.d suooeaa, aud won tbe loudest praise fiom ail who liave used Ik A PKHT or oaaTirroa Mas. Mini Tarr, of I.lk Point, liskota Ter ritory. called at the World'a l-i*|ietiaary, Aug. '3D, 1*73, to acknowledge a debt of graUtude due fir. Pierce, having Iwen entirely cured of f'atarib, complicated with Idiroat Inaeaee. by tbe u*e uf In Mag*'# t atari li ttemedy and llr. Plot CO a Uolden Medical Hteouvery. 1 >cci.lciily the lieat roiuo.iy that haa ever been tluwvovered fur rheumatism, swollen or ktlff joints, flesh wounds sprains, tuuises .•ills and burns, is y.dmson j d twsfynr UnitHmj. We use it, aud always recommend U to our frleuils. una. Tim fai-t that flvo milliou of |>eira of Ml I.VKit Til'Pl.U Kiiooa are ma. ttipßi.,y aarb bottle Mens Osauiae unless tbe ta. ..tails of ct'BTta A Pglutiaa is as tbe oataids wrapper. Bonn ar AI t. Mapirma DKALBRB itiibuuit* otrrtLM i,H.ii pals Aam SICK Moss a* oust eaats tksu Sanaa worms ta UM stesaacA. ■ aowtr-a VEKMIPCoa COM PITS will destroy worms sukMl Ujsry to ths Ski Id, being psrtectly wutra, an* tree (turn all solo ring or other layarieus lugrsdieuts aeaally assd ta worm prspamunas. 0t arta g Row*, Preprtstera, *o 'dia.Fultim airset, Ms* York. md 4 H Pr-ypMS. *AAd rwauii asid dea*rs ta NfiMMAI Tuserv Pl.B Cam A *o HOT.SKUOL U-XA'Mg will tsa kaffsr I panacea •" p*raoes Astinag AMI r " >— Fsaraigia, FAMILY Rill us Cslte, Fata U Ik* IJMUENT, hacb.hewsls er aide, w* wetd **y las tt cuaou ruscu sea FAMILY hint a car IT of ail HOL SEBOLD Otasrs IBs remedy yea waat PANACEA fo * "-terete sad ssteraal ase JISD A A" eared lb* above earn FAMILY F'teet* l Uomdsnds el cesss "bsr* It ae misiahs aboat it. LINIMENT. Try It Bold by all Pruggtsta The Mark ft*. •aw voaa. beef Cattle-Prim* to Extra llubock* I .11 a .11 llrat quality .11%* -ISM s.um |u* Uy . .lu** .11 toritlnarj tbla t'ait.r . . a ,10b liiiirn.l m haw (tat. .* a* .I* Mitch row* SJ CO *MG on ituga-i-iv* : s . ; I iraaeed 7a* .7 Hheep „ .*S t-ertoD. Middling IT %% .I'' fiiiw -litn tlarnrt .CM aI.H Mat# .SJ a *4 Oata . ....... .4* a .41 lty ltd a 1.04 tWrtey I.M a 1.04 1-erJ ....... 'y* .ley ItlMI, *heet . Ml 1 |. It ye—-State 1.01t,* l. Corw-Mire.l si ya ZKtw barley Slat* 1.75 a 1J0 Oala - State . .tub* .61 rmiiMirnu. Flour 7 .50 a 6IS WTheal- Waalern Re-1 ... I.M a 1.44 Obh-Mn ■ * *0 Ml re 1 m * .80 r-lrolrum -Crudr 11 Iteßtiad 14% Ckilar See.) aSo *ll,l* 7 .math J 3.74 * 300 •itrmout rotton- fdtw Middling .16 a .16% Flour-P.a Ira 7.3a a 635 Wheat 150 a 1.64 I'ore eTa .67 OaU . .60 a .47 "$lO A DAY." At*nl| can ob<*!n T*rmancnt nt Ptr.|lt7 fnr tb • I* < f thr t>r • t •£U f *rft •t* It r. Amy r r - in h 4 C-..r-Murifh !*♦ ITPIII l*lat C 400U I'lrlurti, FriffiM 4c, PJ [i Uy a. pa*-'* wa< l'*la |*r era hi I*4 • II P. If r*r* bio!trt 3 -t ttampt. O K Piiivt. 11 UV V Vat ! •hrr. U R> .t •!♦•. TOffc Vgtnlft Wftotrd 0r I'ft J rigviT g* 9*nA 2ft tti for ••mulct J. H lot'CM 4 C<'..Wtrrt,hL THE INTER-OCEAN, The Loading Republican Paper in the Northwest. A Uniilo I'uprr.ronUlnlnc Fort, -Right I.org# Columns of lirodina NslUr. AS A LITERARY. COMMERCIAL AND FAMILY PAPER It is UnexcsUsl by any la th# Country. DAILY ft? a# per vr HVMI iWFKI.T I'li-I'tni WKI.KLT 180 ptiyiu SAUrLK COriKS SKST TRKK dddreu INTER-OCUAN. 119 Luke Ftrret. Ch.r.jo. 11l S"w,> Kh week Aeent, wanted, parti on _ i Ct liri fro. i. VQkTH i (V , St. Inula Mo N.tiaontond Swrct Potato Plant*. May and . one. B-ol lor the northern ilniete. rn hi-j to carry I i.g dtatencea Br mail. prepaid tern par If*. Br Eaprvaa, 1.800 H Plai oui.l on WA Uk ESI AW A TEH. MINERAL ROCK SPRING, CURES Drops, Diabetes, Gravel, Dyspepsia, Constipation, Jaundice, Bright's Disease. And All lliam f IBS llvr and htdneya. TBI* ~T,r it > OR kuowii and a.-Id aa a re meCy for tha abort dtaraara.in tall parta "f lb* worlf. It la trial, wonderful what aßai-l it haa vp--n thr human ajatam. It ta now brlag ahlppad At lha f tlowlnf prtraa lUrre'4o gal 1, half do. ft; dem-John and )uga. Ml ranta p--r g.l . pai hage ratra . hntitaa tqla.i #J M par dor. Money mint accompany tna ordar. a* capl to our rrg-ilar anthoriaad agant. Irqul'Oof your Dtußgiat for Waukraha Mlnaral R-. k Sprli g Waiar. Adrtreaa e. f. OI.IN A 10., Waukeah*. Wla., for ordara for tha watar or ftrr circular a. eincutnart, Juna 11,1STX r r. 01.1 S A CO.. Wauarahs. Wta Havtm uaad your Watar liom tha Mlnaral B-. k Spiti g. Wauka aha Wta . for tha Dlabatra 1 hava found grrat ir Itiffroai tha uao of lha aatni*. Bafora 1 r.-nt maurad uatng Una watar, my phyatrlan rip-mod to n-r tha aparlflr gravity of my arlna waa :C. and aftar nalng It f-r twauly daya tha apariflt gravity of tha uriiia waa radu- ad to ill, ah wlnga groat Improvrmont. and flntflng grrat relief In not baltig rompallod to urinate ao frequently. I had other aatera. but give It aa iny opinion that tha M-iieral Rock Spring ta preferable. Ami Ido ra n rally re. ommand It to all who ara afflicted with the dtaeaae commonly known aa Platctca. IteepeetDilty youra. Ai.rajto WuAOir, Dept. Coll. Int. Rev., Bo S W. Third Street, Cincinnati. Ohio Hroaos, Wis.. May 7,ISJS. MXMR* e. c. OUR CO.—Dear Sim: In testi mony if lha great ral te of Mineral K>rk Spcug Water fur thoa* tuffe'ing Willi diaeaac nf the Ktd neyi.lwmilt atata thi 1 had been aufferlng for month* with InahMta, pasting large quantities Ofnrtue, hcary with sugar, end tnrmon'ed with * dtatrc-aing Herat. gradually losing firth end • Ire Bill aud finally the ute of my lower llmba, wnirn became ilmul derma of feeling. My ptiy • tnans iiarr ma up, sue aald that 1 had but a abort time to ITTC. 1 had lost all -hopca sratC sli SI r-ioi t sets llk Ml skl wu. Al'Blr • II k -t I llSlts V Prss'l. SSI I'BSAIUBI SI f'Sil* I. J w tkti.ri.t-. Osn Waat Supi I in. so BBS B til aOKNT* wsntsS IB laws BBS I In A a.II ISA or . 1 I Lb Alia ordsr A Mrr tks lnAl TaaCoißpMi| ta Amsn.-s Importsrs' BfteßS aß< tniaiwwaau to Assuia ks'"l S'f etrruW. A•", tunißß r wauus. u vstsy St., m no. as. tm THE MORION WIFE. Am UKS'IS Uskim fr IklA (MllkSS SkcS It An# Iks Advsrourss BBS 1-WnSSWtU BW'.IMSI M I Iffsn tp ksrspy kr I ASM IkAWlksl B Ml. r Kin Prnptl.l . <1 S .IlKtlif Bit lkl lIBfllA I. ua. i*so And sUwtlmil fun of ttoillli'd ad VSBIUfSt, ' HIBI'IBUS BBS pklßStlr ArsBSS | ISS BNI ftaai insi I l l rlltul Vurtrait ol tSs AaMwirsss Slid I.f Irs I. S-'tsssss. MA nod as.'ansa ; trite Bd Irri.riMH ink, A P" e'rrstjitA, sdntssa M SMT Poaii PUI lVtklllMO t-o . hsi td.rd.eoMß. 1 **uo¥sc This hswisy MsrAias y is* IA bd MlidsqiM le Ik* uwr i* puid far ere t.itdtlv nul it ikr isW >/ *a te S*B If Ikrr* |* M.I li srillr " SgVAAI As v> ,CI c h"V hs fit' V If 'r I A.w 1 A A| livni ikiioi lead BA rt*. le Ufa p Row Ft.<. A < <., dl Isik Rub.BSW V. Ik f tbsvr B|Afrf U Ilk. uipi rßMtltiiag llsl# ■ f *** i.swt pvpsr*. lit stiiiasl t saowia* . utl of severtAdlag THE Agents Make SIBO A Ovet per Maatb, telling ear 808 Q _ CT vt APS. IMtnttKS, til HO- OtST Ut. Br., mass Ma* of ItkH V I'ttte I \ l ie. kslid fr.r Utl Chteb-gus Sled AS* oar saw utters urr It bttinoMAN, Tt I k M.ielsy atrswl N Y nil ikM'b . Fill li t FAMILY PIIYKI'IAN Will ba seat lis* by ass 11 is any ess sshdtag tbelr kddisit lufit liroAdwsy, Hit Yrfc _ ProfltaoleEmplovment Wor* for Everybody Oeod Wages Pvrass as .1 Employmtui. Mm and Wumea warned - nil peniculars frs*. Add red!, W A BFNliFkaO* d On Clevslsed, i..iw tl, heait.Mo 15,000 Sold in 60 Days. AGENTS WANTEDZZZVSrX ■ r Mary Clamnvar Amea. b !—*** Uft." tMilari, eiwrrt, ej Hrrw, miM ie lac* M-. i th* m • *H' t*a* " Wi |HM was-- -hem." nu us n, ... uv'wi sl bat as* U. . ... AiutAf ,te)< rur ev.k f- utsss Mr StL ll Is 18, CSV *v, *k*rr Silk A.prylßA, SkK-HI Ist ksd sikr ttf Dunns**. OSS lev •" 444 *•**>. Is SB* ASSkAkl* " MIS lu Alp< *' ls"t S*t ft" t er.4. t It eslasUA all rll.tr Wu. si .1 kn* Msd AA". S HUIMU". 11 Is AS ASA - .iuue. It w*** dni) ■ AAtrsv. A. SACATSiy hssc. . Mrs Is Ihs HAS Mr A* ee.AU • A At. j hssy A. sky mi Is . IT. San snv ss* AS. Ai " All* VASI:S. 11**..*, <1 aBR A CO., Boston. Msts .SI Cits, er Pltulmrab. fh r *" '" U drsrnp'irr le ths Elastic True Co., uruv rr .o -- rte sua hddi**sr# of I oihsrt ha* " " • ir.s.rt p. stpsid A Fttir cbreme. w.rtb VAT $1 M sad tOAtrwr-tirnvA to. rlehr GL6 S day NUI, rniat d r*., Xt tevUnt 11. TOHTRAir or Charles Sumner. bis* Itn-10. Frlrr, tieu. •sat postpaid o* rsee'pt id lb* pile*. Ag**ti What** ia *v**y city sud tovra Address LKR 4 MrFARO. Return dVONWTANT KNFLUIHRXT.-AI bom* V m.l* or temtlr .# r w*k estrsaled He cspl Ist reguirsd Fail phMtrulsrt and a vaiasUr ttmplr art.l Ire* adeirtk, siltlrl. rsiy-a stamp. A O YiTKP. V una Bt . Wilnsmraareh W Y THE AMERICAN BASKET COMPANY. Sew tirtlslla, < onto., Tks irads say. maautmrtais lb* best Bsth t ta lb* ts A f I*l IS SAC f. ..ts Itatos Rst'sa sad trhst, a tisilug uf lb* dig*i*ui k'ud* t*l.sc f.r Also BAA* efsriareiA if lb* i'*l*brAi#g Amsrtcaa Bsrrt lissbsi sud 1 rale, V*b*t>a sad plant Baskets Uisp* I- in „f ail sisrs, st pries* to salt th* tlmss t ed tei Fries List OR.PIERCE'S -urea att 31 n more trrm the wwri Strol ' it In In a rututat> Blolrh or I'mipl. . From two t" til botUe* are vimuM to < tali It fcrnm or Tetter, rinplee on lace, Holla, Eryaipelaa and l.tver lomptalnt. Mr to twelve boi !". warrauicl to rare trralaloas vw ell Inua and Sorre and all Mltln and Itlood blarsara Ity |l rderfcl Hrrloral y ti.jwrtlev Uwlll rare the not loir n I ■ : Hr.pertng Cotigh in half the tlft.e iw|wrd l.r any .Owr madirine ai d t l-rr(r. tlj aafe. \- >rning cmifti. aootti trg IniuttCn, and retlrvinrr K-rrwe hold 1" a; 1' • r -i- ||.I.PIi:K(T,MD. \ nrlit'i lyiapriiaary, buOalu, N. V. '<££*> FLORENCE i®T ra# I ncy-ranlHlnl SaU a/ (he rUHti.M I "t w IM. vttttilNHCO. -. ika Marat. Whaalat 4 W ilaaa, 4 .4.*4 #**■ •aoo.cioo. Il flnnVfi bp (he Sv. , . (aarl of Ihe 1 M.lrU Aretea la fa ,i in* • I 111.1 MI. *7ika *!*•* haa hral'N fha haaayaly of (f.yt I'rlwi. THE NEW FLOPENCI J$ lA# OS t Y vnnrhlH* fluff mn Mrk* %i\trd aril ear pair ralahrated Article* fr Lad-ea' wear Iwdlapeaeahleeea ataolufrly nrcratary 10,000 SOI.U stOA'Tlll.3 . The* aleeemaMrl and aati*. fact.on sOPKMJtI.KI It ISO WITH. OFT TItK.M. samplr •. I on rrcaiyt rf • 4.0il KM KK. send S>r Meatratee etrrm ar IK IIIIJ Rl-RHFk Cfi . P ChawHrra S' NT GREAT REDUCTION. TEAS AND COFFEES AT W Hol.JtßAl.lt 1 RICKS ocreased Facilities to Club Organisers. Mva.l for Sew l*rlre-l.t*t. THE GREAT AMERICAN TEA CO., P. O Iter 36411. M end S3 Veaay l , W. T HO! FOR COLORADO! With tta lorlon eltmate. na*tseent acanery. tn-.utrtf reanercea, aterk (rrwtaa. farrpine and health adrantafra O.neraland .nertal liih.rma llnn rr. fry# Addrvaa A. II PATTERSON, Fort Collins. Colorado. . TkAnfT of Mod I cat Wand ara abonld ha read by Hi I! I Mall Sent free f.-r f atampa Addrt aa DUUH, DB UItRAI'MIT) Ctoctrinatt.C. "EAT TO LIVE." F. E. SMITH A CO.'S O WHITE WHEAT. Alia*tie Mill' Brook'.™. K V >• lha PrrAwflwaa of Food. AVHolcanntr, Itrllrloua ami kco. nnmlrßlt * tmtpit h*hy* Fvr rhiUimi rml Mtiim. we*!'? it • Rttid h* * \ ORnCCft** rmnhlpu. with lo ik.f mf rttn h t* Food Mhl HrnllK wm frss. TtHKa I MJtlTtt fr Faraiert a S|trcisHy. THE SABBATH. (Jrrolrmt and iMlrml of I'hnrrh Choir Itnoka. For all deipimUiaUiina.Ha.6o a dor Saap.er-py.f 1.38 CI. * KKf a X Ett M KTIIUD FOR Til F. I'l IXO-roRTE. TB* lIhST cur Iseisrc nou Boosa. flaatbeendoraemeutof allgood t- .\<-!ier* who have raamtned it. Vrul 6, mail, 3.78. "THE AMATEUR." Tn* ORBIT Mrair*t. MOHTBLT ! F.I.KV F.N page# of pt-w inuair—ami NINK pages of nmaiial tualtar tn ra. ti nunilx-r. loigh If. lOrta •.? •.; n in eiudinp U.tuttfiU I'MHOMO. SI.OO per year. LEE Si WALKER'S MUSICAL ALMANAC. .tentfrrt to any tutdrai. Gi i/i-sst uooi. FORI ii rose t\. • THE rmvuin IsarsocToa." "TIB bssl work for teachora and ptipila. ■Vent fcy Mail, price. >3.80. LEE & WALKER. IHUM # , *XPOSEDti-S;SH-S - --I . >■ . i- i—- MTrttnnil wftlaml Truth Triumphant! Arenta, lUUIIAIiJII iisiistsnyiMtnireW OresHtilhdorw mmta tn Ajrnt and Piirchaftera. ('aUucifrves. Term*, and full particular* teat free toslL T. O. Vic tut AT. AUAUSU. Vlnuu BUY J. & P. COATS' BLACK THREAD for TOUT MACHINE THE DYING BODY SUPPLIED WITH THE VIGOR OF LIFE THROUGH DR. RADWAY'S Sarsaparillian ResoM, THE CREAT Blood Burifier 1 OWE BOTTLE Will rntki Ik* Blood par*, tb* tkta eiaar, DM Xyw brltui, ih* Oeatplatia* laMk and InuptMri, Ik* ■*lr Mimii, tad NBon ill Mor*e,l*uapUa, Blaleha*. fuMuin. Tetter*, (lulmi, Ha., from Ik* Baad, rum, Mark, Mouth, and Htm. U I* III***■! la Uk* tot Ik* doaa I* null. II Baaolraaaway Diaeaaot Dapoalta; It forth#* Ik* Koot ud IhMaovtto* Ik* Syatam, It MUM with c*rt*ity all Ckronle Dtaeaaaa (hat kartlln|*r*4 la th*ry*t*ta knar Ma fan, wbathar It fa* Scrofula or Njrphllltlr, Hereditary or t'outafflouf, BE IT SEATED IM THE Lu|t or Stomach. Skia or Bosoa, mu.k ar Narva*. ooßarrriso THE SOLID* AID VITIATIEO THE ELL-IDS. rr ii TAX OHLY poiitirs CTTU FOB KIDNEY and BLADDER COMPLAINTS, Urtsary and Wi.mb Din****. Orsnt, Irtabataa, Drop.,, Sioppa** at Water, 1 neon n nan a* of Drtao, Brtfuc. D IMII. Albuminuria, aad tm *1 Ml* wkor* Ihrro ar* lrtrt-du*i d-p tha Lara, aad Uu ant form at Bdua UMMMI, Eruption*, la Bona, Scald Hand, Riug Won* Halt Itb-om, Erralpela*, Jurat, Ulara Hp.*., Worm* in th* rteoh, Caaear* In tha Womb. and all ****** In* tad palatal duaharp**. Sight damn, Lnaa of Sperm aad all want** at tka M* principle ara wiilua th* enratfr* rang* ef thM *wud*r at Modru l'b*mi*try, *r,d a f*a day** oa* will proa* to any |irr*ot uatag a for either of tkaa* forma at dlaaaa* ila ptnt po mar to oar* tkaa*. Sold by Drugglata 91XX) par %xda. Ra Ra Ra RADWAY'S READY RELIEF, The Cheapest tad Best Medicine for Family Use in the World! Oaa M) Cast Bottln WILL CCEE HOKE OOMPLAIJITB AMD PKE VEST THE KThTKM AUAIXHT HCI'DKM AT TACKS or EVIDKMICI* AMOOUXTAUIOUS DIS EASES THAM USE HL'SDRED POU-AJU EX PKSDED FOB OTHLIt MEDICTSES 0 MEDI CAL ATTESDAKCE THE HOME XT KUDWArtKEADT EEI.IET IS APPLIED EXTEftSALLT—OK TAKES IST tit K ADI-T AOC lU DISCI TO DJKKcT to**—PAIS, TEOM WHATKVKH CACHE, CEASES TO EXLUT. IMPQSTAXI —H aera, Termor*. and otkar* iw- OdJßg ta aparae'y-art lied di.ln.-U, ahrre It U dlfk rail ta*near*U*riKw*of apbyttcuen, HAD WAV* KEADT BELILE M taralaabt*. It c*a tp u**d *ttk poottir* mortar* at Aaiuf pood la *JS cam akef* lata or diammfurt tii-nrmul; or If amaad vith inJuraaa, Dtptbona, Hor* Throat, Had Uougha, H.<- rnr*a, luUoiw Colic, Inflammation of lb* itoaula, Stemarh, Dung*. Larer. Kidney*: or with Croon. Qui nam, Trrrt aad Ayur ; ar with Srurah *•*, Haadaokr, Tta Datoraui, Toothache, Earache; at with Lomhagu, fata ta th. Beck. or Kkrumatlam; or wttk Diarrhea*, Cholera Mt but, or Dyoaalery; or with euro*, Iv-aid*. or Brutaaa ; or with Htrmloa, Cramt*. or Mpa*m*. Th* aj>i-Ucatlob at HADWAYH HKaDT UKUEE Wili car* you at tb. warn at tkm oomplateta la a faw hoar*. Twaaty drop* In half a tam Mar at nil wll. la a f*w momoat* cur* CKAMML SPASM A, bOCE ATOMACU, HE A rents, EICE HEADACHE, 1>: M'.KH.Lt, DTSESTEItr.OOLIC.WISD IK THE tWELA, aad all ISTKUSAL PAIXB. Travctcr* abould alwar* carry a bottw at EAD- WtCt HEADV hU.li r mbibm. A few drop* la water *rili pravmit alckaa** or patua frota rhaac* at watar. It M hollar tkaa Fraaok Brandy at Hiitari *a a attmulaaL •aid by Drsgfiata. Price. M Ccnta. DR. RADWAY'S Regulating Pills, treUlw*. ibiwtlf c**t*d with nraet ran, Cim. r-wnlaU. purify. cleanee. u d *tr*actoaa. M'*irs FlUil. forth* cut* of B dfrdirtof thr Mwiuri, Liver, Boweto, Kidney*. NU, X-rvon* I KMM, Headache, OcmltpMlon, Oovtlv*. n#**. ldn—nop. Dmjsit, BUtouiMM, Bllkr** F**r, InlLmmaiioti of th* Hereto, Ink*, and *ll' lff*4iiiiiU of th* Internal Vtaoer*. Warranted a* rffart a poaitlv* our*. Far*!; V<*rdahle, maul*- iny no marrury, ißiorrala, or 4eUrtoa drag*. t*~ Obaarr. tb* foliowia# mptoOM raaaMfag from Inrertore at th* Dwmin Cigtw: Ccmujiauoa, lanid !*U, ratla**. of tb* Wood la tb* Head, Acidity of tb* Htonocb. N a uvea. Heart burn. I>i*gat at rood, Folia*** at W*tgbt t* th* ftu!**rb. Roar KroctaOoa*. ftlnktbk or Fluttering at tb* Ptt of tb* Matter*. fnmtUnj of lb* Head. Martlod and bilbtt Bmtbiag. Flutters** *1 tb* Kaon. Choking or PuffooaUaj SmttUoaa wbra ta • Lytnf Poet are. [r.mon* of fhioa, !>ot* or Web* bo for* tb* fitght, ftw and M Fata la U>* Head, tMrtaoejr of Pmpirattoa. Teilowu*** of th* Kfeta and Kyua. Palo to th* Sid*, Cheat. Uat*, tad *n4d*u n**b* of H*t, Burning In th. Vm\. A torn do*** of tUDVV AVU FILLS trill fn* th* •j!*m from all tb* *bor* earned diaordm. Print, tt Caats par l*t Sill hy Droggirta. B**d "FALSE AMD TRUE * Sand at* )*tt*r-**aiap to KADWAT * CI.. Ko. Warren Street, >iw Tort. Information worth tbonaand* will bo **nt to a. CONSUMPTION And Its Cure. wnxsoN-s Carbolated Cod Liver Oil If • actrntt* combination of two woD-knwwn modt ■no*. Its thoor* to drat U orraM th* donpf. IM MlfttltoipMl Fhysktoe* had lh*dorartneeee r*rl Th* really UartUag can* performed by WJX MtOilm proof. Otrhobc in* jimntoito I i into Jtooag. It h to* ■toot OWWWTBI •atlwpttc tn th* known wwrM. En t*H*g Into tb* rlrrutottoa, TT *J OM* gianplto with y&t **' daonr r**** It Fniiiii wo thtow* Otd hirer OU to JPatwrv** htw tohtod to raotottog Count* pUoa. Fat wp la harm* wtdgt ibnpod totttot J. ML WTUMOV. M Jetm th ;i npi U f uMMn '• k lTj| "if" / I >—Br EI MO " Th oui l>Mhl* Called kp.tuo In Markek AOKRT* of Ml Capital Ao better Ibw Mykto** Liab'.hiue Rod* or l.euranc*. Thouaaada of leatl mo.laVStob# rurnt.hed MM tor ctrcolara and jours- compose® bed srewo" Manafactorj, Bt louth iud Street beiee Pock. " Pall un.riu. Pa. Colorado for Invalids aol Toorists. H* ..leantae**, for Coouptto and Aathmat ,r*. Pall prtuolr }▼•" Addrciit A. H. FATTKMOW, port Colltno. Colorado. OC* e week. Af.Hi ontrl. luilnm l.ptl. '. ~ I mate. A. Brents hall. Mn.catlno, low*. LOVERS GUIDES Model lore letter*—nrl of gaining loreof and mar rving w bo and when too pie* e—how to be hand some—cures for humlredsof disease*. aim many new secrets, art*, mysteries. money making method a, Ac. Price only Si cent*. Addreaa. XTKPHEM * CO., Publisher*, _ t'litcaso. 111. A real. Wanted.-Mm or women. EM a week, A or >> forfeited. r.lwoMr /r Writ* at once to P. M. RKRD, Eighth Street, hew York. MITCHELL'3 ATLAS of the WORLD! The BEST AND CHEAPEST srer Pub lished. AGENTS WANTED-to whom tha I .argent Commission* will be paid. For full particulars, address tha Publisher!. BBAPLEY k COMPANY, No. 66 North 4th Street, Philadelphia, Pa. tTAlao Publisher* of Standard Religion. Works, _ Dinatrated FamllyJßtblee, Ac , ho, AfiKNTI W A NTKB tor the new book, UFI AM> adventures op Kit Carson turn tmeu dtcUUd by kl him It Thswilrmi u4 ipteonh ItUof AtuerkH 1 ® frstcwi HUNTKR, TRAPPER, SCOUT m4 Gl'IPE* ft .t-ltEhedl rU *ad compUtE dEEertntMM #flW In.l Us If. We •! OteKAR WERT, ee et br KHCwm, wit* a I*ll. fEIUbU arc omnt of tW M<>iKX>.ad tW MODOC WAS. Ae a wot k of HISTORT.It It lartlEtklE. Hsad Camou'a OertiAoakte. T aoa, New Matvck TSUilt U> Ptrtifr l>it DeWMI C PeUts. M. I> .Sr. J. Walker's California Vin egar Bitters are a purely VejretaW* preparation, made chiefly from toe na tive berU fonmi on the lower ' c 4 ranges - the Sierra KePada mountains of Califor nia, the medicinal propertlea of which are extracted therefrom without the one of Alcohol. The question la almost dally aaked. "What la the cause of the uiijterallelod snccees of VI*EOA* BlT TKitaf Our answer Is, that they remove the cause of disease, and the patient re covers hie health. They are the great blood purifier and a life-giving principle, a perfect Benovator and Invtgorator of the arstem. Never before in the history of" the world hss a medietas base oomMHmdM Mssssning lbs remarkable aIiUM of Tissues BITTCBS in heaJJnglhe of every dieeaee man is heir to. J!%ey era e gentle Purgative as weti as s Twla relieving Cooaeeuoa or iriisnnrisrioß m (be Uvtr sad V woeral Organs, in Bilious Uimam. The propprtlp* of D. Wxinft Vinoss kittkiu are Aperient. lioinbowdA Carminative, Xuiritwae. Lassliva. lnurere, bedeuve, Counter-irritant, Sudorific, Altera tive. and Anti Biliotu. (*ral*Tul Thousands proclaim Vi* go A K BITTKES tbe most wonderful In ngorasi that arm susuwsd tb* sinking fttta. >s> Peroon ran take these Bitters according to directum*, and remain long unwell, provided their boned are not de stroyed by mineral polaoo or other meant, and vital orgaoa wasted beyond repair. Billon*. Remittent and Inter mittent Fever*, wfakb ere ao preva lent in tbe valleys of our great rivers throughout tbo United States, especially these of tbe Uiastaaippi, Ohio, Mutaoan, lllinoia, Tennessee, Cumberland, Arkan sas. Bed, Colorado, Brarot, Rio Grande, Pearl, Alabama, Mobile, Savannah, Ro anoke, James, and many others, with their vast tn by tariff, throughout oar entire country during UB Summer and Aututpu, and remarkably so during sea sons of unusual beat and dryness, are invariably accompanied by extensive de rangements of tbe stomach and liver, and other abdominal viscera. In thak treatment, a purgative, exerting a pow erful Influence upon these venous or gam, is essentially necessary. Them is no cathartic lor tbe purpose equal l) Da. J. Walesa's VIXSOAB BITTEBB. as tbev will speedily remove tbe da: k colored viacid matter with which the bowels are loaded, t! tbe same time stimulating the secretions of tbe liver, and generally restoring the healthy function* of tbe digestive organs. Fortify the body against dines* 9 by purifying all its fluids with VIXET.ak Bnmut&. No epidemic can take hold of a system thus fore armed. Dyspepsia or Indigestion, Head acbe. Pain in the Shoulders, Coughs, Tightness of tbe Cbest, Dizziness, Sou* Eructations of the Stomach, Bad Teste in tbe Mouth, Bilious Attacks. Pal pit*- tat ion of tbe Heart, Inflammation of ti,. Lungs, Pain in tbe region of tbe Kid neys, and a hundred other painful symp tom*, are tbe offsprings of Dyspepsia One bottle will prove a better guarantee of it* merits than a lengthy advertise, mem. Scrofula, or King's Evil, Whits Swelling*. Ulcer*. Eryupelaa. Swelled Nuct Goitre, Scrofulous lnfUmmauoiu, Indolent Inflammations, Mercurial Affections, Old Sorer, Ernpuon* of the Sam, Sore Eye*, eta. la these, a* in all other tunsutubonal Dis ease*, Walui s VIA*; AS BITTSBA hare tbown Ur greet curative power* in the mo*t obstinate and intrer table caw. For Inflammatory and Chronig Rheumatism, Gout. Bilious, Remit tent and 1 ntermtttent Fever*. Diseases of th* Blood. Liver, Kidney* and Bladder, there Bitter* have DO <-qunL Such Li* tie re are ratiaed by Vitiated Blood. Mechanical Diseases,-Persons en gaged in Paints and Minerals, such as number*. Type-retten. Gold bearer*, sad Miners, u they advance m life, are cubjeeC to paralysis of the Boweia To guard again it this, take s dose of W autxa'a V tx •SAB BITTEKS ocoasionaUy. For Skin Diseases, Eruptions. Tet ter, Salt-Rheum, Bkdchea Spot*. Pimples. Pustule), Botk, Carbuncles. Ringworm*. Scald-head. Bora Eyre. Erystpeiaa Itch. Scurf*, Qiaooloretiotu of the Skin, Humors and D tresses of the Skin of whatever nam* or nature, are literally dug up sod earned out of the system in a'short time by ths ore of there Bittare. Pin, Tape, and other Worms, lurking in the ivrtrm of eo many thousand*, are effectually destroyed mad removed. Ms system of medicine, no vermifuge* no am tiieinumUc* will free the system hum worms like these Bitter*. For Female Complaints, in young or old, married or single, at the dawn of wo manhood, or the tarn of life, them Tome Bitten display so decided an influence thai improvement it soon perceptible. Cleanse the Vitiated Blood when ever you And its impurities bunting through the akin in Pimples, Eruption*, or Sores, cleanse it when von find it obstructed it i sluggish in the veins; cleanse it when ; is fool; your feelings will tell you wbau. Keep the blood pure, aitd the health uf Uo systaa will follow. R. H. MrDOXALD JL CO.. Drwctota *ad O** At*, Su \ rwaetoen. CaUhwalA ud ear. of Wawhiofloa sad v. £ irikm Sl*.. X T. ■old by ell Ors*m* >nd IValrr*. x. r. A. P. —!*o. >a W> "t VMI llil CototolMlu* *r UUO • W.-1 Satar;. *Bd ■■**•• Waoßnrltswd wIU pay u Ayely reW'Jh*' l ?y* A Co. Mariiin. o Nature's Great Remedy THROAT AND LUNG DISEASES!! itb tk wiul principl* Of tlx Plm Trt*. Milaif ZLti 10 tht o/ tke ux. bf wKhCK it highest medicinal properties ere remitted. Trn even in its erode state has been recommended by emteent physicians of rv*ry mrk+ml. It u caohdentiy to the afflicted fee tbe following simple maooi: ** mirnfib ti&fint tk* cwmgk Imt by dimolving the phlegm end minting mttfmr* tm throw off the unhealthy mxnez ceusing the irritatioo. CONSUMI*TION it both prolongs end t ** dert burdenrome the life of the afflicted sufferer. •* Its heeling principle act* upon the irritated nr. , of the lung*, penetrating fa rtuk iMrf/grt. relieving pein, end subduing inftmmatim. h J V*IPIS ARU KMJIICMIB Ttt BLOOD. Ffllitffm ■T curing ell humors, from the cenmoo riMPLi or VumoN to the severest ceses of Scrohile Thousands of effldevlts could be produced from those who heve felt the beneficial effecu of Piwb Trb Ten Cnm In the various diseases arising from ixri'tms Off TMB BLOOD. * impmmim 'Ju d&ttn, rar* w retow sFwib*!b** known or tried I>T. L. Q. c Wto- Ban • remedies reauire no rrfcrmce* from us, bat tb* ■aims of thousano* cured by them can b* gives to any oo* who doubu our itatetnrut. Dr. U Q. C Wuhan", Gran Amrrican PkOs ami WORM Sugar Drgd have never been equalled. Wot sale by ail Druggist* and Storekeepers, and at Dr. L a C. WISHABTS Qflcs, *. *3 K. Stead *A# JSUadV Gtoovp, UJ li, Armsa, icd re£J Iho inaoar, LOSS and CHEST, are tnanenUv curt^bj - im'i Bai sam or Xii Cmtir, which doc* nut dry up a cough and lar* tii* CHUM behind, but hwaenalt. cleanse* tbe ltu*and allay* tmUlioa, thus removing the caul* of the complaint. CONSUMPTION CAN BE CURED *jrr * timdr TCW>rt to thl* atondard remedy, ■* la proved by imndred* of teatlmontol* It ha* received, fho pea vina i earned "I. ButU" oo th* wrep-cr, ■ETII W. KOVLE vt PONS, Faor-idojia, Bo*- Sua, ILlss. bold Ly 'l-altr* generally.