FARM, GARDEN AND IHHSEHOI.I) Iftal* la Dtilrmtn, A Philadelphia authority on dairy matter*. who has recently returned from a vit h> England. luia issued a circular in whioft *e dud Uie following note worthy remarks; It is well known to almost every producer that England is our great clnxvso customer, and then fore, one conlii not do better than study her requirements oarefully. The tlra't imjHirhuit thing I learned while tliere was, that the English nation gave jmr tienlar attention to the study of foods, and that the jieoplo knew the I tost and wanted the best of everything, for which they were both willing and able to pay ♦he value. Jio more erroneous opinion oHiltl Iv entertained than the one too generally prevalent in America, that any kiiul of food would suit the English mar kets. I found the country preeperoua. the working people receiving gixxl jvxy tor their labor, and wliere not iurticted with the curse of trade unions ami strikes, in a prosperous condition. This prosperity lias resulted iu a call by the tnaaifki for prime cheese, mainly of American manufacture, though contain ing much i>oor stock of home production. The fine g.xxls liad met with a good sale at good put**,, and would have brought larger figures but for the large supply of inferior goods, while tha latter was a drug upon the market. 1 saw thousand* of choose that ha.l been lx-ught in A nieriea at the comparatively low price of eight •uid ten CiUits .last suuuner that were still unsold, and offering in some iu stanofjfiiil hUif the Original cost. lew as it was, while to Uie loss iant lie added the shmikngp ai d interest upon their <\at. Ail the importer* of American chese whom I saw complained of an unproflt able year, sn|xrindnecd by high prices and poor goods. They expect chacoe t> rule mudi lower the present year ; and 1 mn firmly of the belief tliat their puai tion, combine*! with the general deprea siou of business in this country, and the disproportion lietwwen the present price of cheese and all other articles of food, must result iu lower figures this season upon the general average; I have every reason to beiiere, however, that reall'v fine ohwse will pay the producer well, unless tliere are So many poor one* made as to still effect the val"c of high class g.xxls. J here cannot be too many fine cheese produced—Euglan.l stands rv a.l v to take all we eau scud her, but poor st.vk is iu little favor there or elsewhere. I have time and time again advised my frieinls, the dairymen aud factorvmen, against tusking half skimmed on c-esc. , My experience the jmst year and my ob servation in England more than confirms me iu my opinion that it is the worst thing they can do. The Englisli people have formed a terrible aversiou to them. I saw quantities of this kind of stock that liad defffbipiated one hundred per cent, in v-dne after Wing kept a few mouths, and I expect to see it generally neglected henoefurth. It lias lxx>n suggested tliat you use some other kind of grease if you take the cream out. Such advice is most pernicious, and your intelligence should prevent its adoption. I say, if yon value your reputation as dairymen and have regard for honesty, fair'deal mg, and your owu interests, upou no account use anything as a substitute for cream or butter. * Oleomargarine has had its hrief .lay. A KKO.Ir INLAND Pmlift Fnra. A correspondent of the Boston JYan ftipi civ,-* an account of a visit to the fana of Mr. I. C. Wilbour, in Little Compton, IL L A ]>ortaon of the farm is devoted to poultry. The object at this time of the yew is the production of eggs, ri:.l we visited more than a dozen buildings devoted to the use of fouls and, this branch of production. The limits of this article will not allow of a detailed description of the building or of the different varieties of fowls or their management, bat we understand that there were now on the premises about eleven hundred hens, and that it was no buustlU thing to send two hun dred dozen of eggs per week to market. Our ideas of the labor of hunting hena'eggs were greatly modified wlieu we saw the man is charge walk along in front of the long ro#s of nests and pick np about four hundred fine, large, clean eggs. The eggs are all carr folly gathered at night and sent weekly to the Boston market, so that there is no chance for them to l>e otherwise than fresh and good; indeed, we were told that everv egg is warranted to lie perfectly fresii and sweet The labor of providing the required variety of food for so large a family is no small item. Wheat shorts, beef scraps, and meal aie bought by • the ton, and corn by the car-load, while occasionally other vane ties of grain are u*ej, with broke# oyster shells in abun dance. Cleanliness and a vArietv and liberal supply of food, we should judge, were the strong points of the manage ment here. We observed that disin fectants were freely used, and were told that deaths by disease were of rare oe currenoa. A regnhir system of debit and . credit i lettrnved in this business, but in the absence of the proprietor we had no means of getting the figures. From our standpoint, it seemed not only pleasant but highly profitable. Hints. Yzrdigkib.—To remove verdigris from a ooj>per boiler scour it with sand, ami then wash it with a strong solution of salt and vinegar. Mock Apple Pie.—Two soda crackers, one egg, one cup of sngar and ope of water, the juice and yellow rind grated of a lei&on. * Bake with upper and under crust. linUßAHii Flb.—Take off the thin skin, cut the stalks 111 small pieces, add a little flour, place it between two covers. When the paste is done remove the top crust and add sugar and butter, mixing then* thwongtdy pith the rhubarb. Pat tho tup #us&4>* again and serve warm. Other setisopifig qiy be aildod if de sired. Rhubarb pies made in this way do not run over and waste their sweet , noss in the oven, Oukijst Socpple.—From five eggs remove the whites of throe and put in a sepffftMfrh. Beat the five yolks and two remaining whites together, add half a cup of milk, and poor into a frying pan with butter uiit just hot enough not to bum. When this is nearly ked, spread ovtsr tin.' top the three whites beatep to a stiff froth, and set in a hot oven two or ill cue minutes. Fold over, turn o a rlstter, mid serve hot. A de licious didn Preventive Asaiaat Haiti*. A very pleasant perfume, and also pre ventive- against moths may be matle of the foliowßig ingredients: Take of cloves, caraway seed, nntm-g, maoe, cinnamon, and' tonquin beana, of each one ounce, then add as much florentine orrisroot as trill equal the other ingre dients put tigothr. Grind the whole well to powder and' ptff in little bags among your clothes, ete. This will answer for.fufy alsd; but I never tried anything Jtioro- cbrtiuu as a protection against inolha in furs than to find shake out or bent out every foreign subntai.ee Is-fore putting uwiiy for tho aeascii. Than wrap tb<- np in a perfectly mnd newapap**.' Wuatlnienu by sound is, that there shall be no hulas or breaks in the paper. Make a bag oi the paper by pasting; pack in and jaste up tin-month of the lug. Putin a drawer where it will not be disturbed. If well done not u moth Will ever befonnd inside. A I'l l>ftrjcr. Tim St. Jos-j.h fMo.) Herald says : Professor O. V. ftiley, State entomolo gist, has of, kte been receiving a large lmmbdr of lettersfrftm farmers in various parts of the State, making inquiries con certing a eui loyis, phenomenon., It ap pears that the .white grub worm, a great destroyer of corn, potatoes, and other vegetable products, has been attacked by an ereanyi which threatens its ex-! t. 1 rainatrm. professor has reocived numerous fjperimena, haviqg, two sprouts of greeft Vegetable grdwtii growing oat! of the h&vd, of the grub, one on either side, a hog'y tusk m shape, i'hti faug grotrudes through the earth, and prevent* every appearance of vege table growth. The worms thus attacked die, ntid the profeasdr is of the opinion tiiat'the sliaftase wf!J materially deci ease the numliers of tliis groat pest of the husbandman, if it does not totally eradi- 1 cate it. ' Au Englishuian hwd up, has just sold the contents'of his wiuo cellar for £150,- > irk • THE IU'RNING FORESTS. Wlitlf TUlnar* AhnaSanrit h Ibrlr In hnMlnai*. The inhabitants of Locust Uidge, Evergreen, Stoddnrtaville, GouhUboro, and of many lnmWriiig MUleuient* in Pennsylvania where forest fire* have raged, were all driven from their homes, scores of which were laid in ashes Hundreds of people saved only what clothing they wore. Families were driven for miles before the advancing conflagration, through the forests, be fore thev nwchel iila.ee of safety. One Stoddarfcmllo family named Tot, consisting of a father, mother, seven small children, and Mr. Ooi'i mother, nearly one hundred years of age, suf ferixl untold horror* iu the burning w.xvl*, Thev lived on the outskirts of the place, and dial with the rest of the inhabitant* Old Mrs. Cox was unable to walk unite th-ui a mile nnaidcd. Her son assisted her some distance further, when she fell fco the ground utterly ex hansted. Reside* helping his aged mother, Oox retried two of his children, his wife carrying two more, the three larger ones making their own way. t'ox attempted to War his mother aloug also, but found that his progress was so re tarded tliat the fire threatened to over take them. The old lady begged her son t> leave her ami save himself and ehil dren. He tried to induce the children to run along Uieuiaelvm, but they were so frightened by the terror of Uie scene at tout litem that they clang to their father and refused to go on alone. The flames a.hanced rapidly toward the group, and Cx, after dragging hi* mother some distance to the right of ♦lik direct path of the conflagration, was forced to atiandon her to save the rest of liis family. She was sx>u enveloped by ' Uie flames and burned to ashes. The rest of Uie family were driven high into to mountain*, w here they w ere obliged to remain, ou a barren ridge, fur a day and a night. Two of the smaller chil dren liereme delirious with hunger and Urirst, aud one has since died. The others are sUll sick from the effects of their dreadful imprisonment in the burning forest. An aid niau named Cliamberkin was alsi> overtaken bv Uie ftre, which was driveu along by a high wind with great rapidity. An effort was made to save him by some member of hi* family, but iu vAiu. lie was burned to death. On the mouutain from White Haven to Gouldsboro fifty two farm houses were burned, with barn*. farm imple incut*, stock, etc. Besides these, heavy individual k*wes are reported in the Monroe county region, including 10,- 000,000 feet of manufactured liuulx-r, twelve saw mills, four stores, and over two hundred head of valuable hor>.< -and cattle. The losses in the region, inde pendent of Uie standing timber, ate placed at $500,000. The main loss.-* fall on JKx>r people, who are rendered homeless. An organization to solicit aid fi>r the sufferer* has Ixx-n forme.l, with Win. Ellis of Stoddarixville treas urer. The loss iu bridges is alxuit $lO,- 000, which must be borne by the count v. Along the Mud river the tires spread with such velocity tliat if swept down upon settlements before the inhabitants were aware of their danger. The village of Mud Run was totally destroyed. This place was one of the most extensive , lumbering stations in northern Penn- i- syivani*. Five mills, with a total oa e J>acity of 500,000 feet a day, were ile e; streyed, and not less than 30,000,000 a | feet of lumber. Not a building was left t' standing in that vicinity. When the a tire swept down from tho mountains on a the place the wife of John Gets, a f wealthy lumber operator, lay dead in . the house, awaiting burial. The funeral r services were being bold. The advance ? of Lhe flames were so rapid that the r lionse was almost surronniled before the ] mourners and their friends oonld escape, s ' The body of the dead woman was cou t snmed with the house. Thousands of acres of the best timber . land were ruined. The loss on Mud s river will reach more than half a million t dollars. Much of the property destroytal ■> there was insured. 11 Incidents of the Holyoke Disaster. Wild efforts were made by the people r to rnah pell mell into the burning church j to rescue their friends and it was with r difficulty that they were kept back, j This was particularly the case with , parents who had on the first impulse , rushed from the church to save their own lives, bnt suddenly remembered that ' r | they had left children behind to perish. , ' Actual personal violence had to tie used , in several cases to keep women back. All about the streets men, women anil [ chilelren were wandering, piteonsly in quiring if their friends had lieen saved. ' One woman was jmaitive that her has band had perished, and could only be [ | quieted by the assurance from a friend that he hail just been walking with him I { One of the most touching cases was t' thnt of two Httle girls about twelve years I of age, who rushed for tire entrant* of ( the building while the fire was at its height, thinking to find their father and mother, who were within. They could only tie restrained by an officer, who ( took them in his arms. Immediately upon the brraking ont of | the flames all the occupants of the galleries rushed to the east door and crowded so that they fell upon one another and ' choked np the doorways with their j Ixtdiee, piled in all ways, seven or eight | feet deep, and here most of the lives were lost. It is a disputed question whether both | the front doors of the church were avail able for esca{>e. There are those who say positively that one of them was | closed and that it was impossible to : open it on account of the crush. One man, it is asserted, went to the closed door anil flourithing a club threatened violence to any one who came near, in order to get the crowd away, but with out success. A Dangerous Business. The shark fishery of the northern ice • sea in the luiy of Terdberskya and the peninsula Kola has recently been re ' vived. Two kinds of shark are found in | this region, the Greenland shark anil the basking shark. They fri-quently assem , ble in shoals, and boats engaged in the fishery are often surrounded by a hun dred or more of these sea hyenas grt;ily for prey. The Russians fish no&r the , coast with small hosts holding four men. Anchoring at a certain distance from the land, they sink a vessel pierced with ! holes, containing oil, tallow, or other fat, which the sea currents distribute in ! tlw neigh I tor hood. This attracts tho sharks, and tliey are caught with baited hooks attached to iron chains, as they t could instantly bite throngh the stroug ! est rojic. Three of the men poll the fish : toward the boat, and tho fourth stands ready with n wooden hammer weighing twenty pounds to strike with all his force the moment the head appears. The , shark is then cat open, the oil taken and its swimming bladder inflated. It is then . e„mt a Uift to float, as if allowed to sink the other sharks would eat it anil not care for other bait. Home times the sharks t unwind a boat so thickly that it cumot escape, and the crew nro killed. Death from the Ilite of a Cat. Mr. Kben Smith, of Bridgeton, Me., was bitten by a cat ueariy six months ago, and died, it is said, from the effects on the 13th of May. Tho circumstances, as related by the local payer, are these : Mr. Smith undertook to kill a cut for n neighbor, and was about to swing the -aniiiud by the hind leg.-i, so as to bring ; her head down on a block, when she ! seized his hand and liit t severely. He tore her off, dispatched her, and resumed his lalsirs. Boon, however, erysipela tous inflammation resulted, wlneh, de- Spite medical skill, extended gradually up his arm to the shoulder, accompanied with severe pain. This was followed by a general eruption over his body, in volving the mucous membrane of the head and stomach ; abscesses formed in his leg, which during his sickness dis harged so an eighty gallons purulent j matter ; the bones of his hand and leg , became diseased; internal abscesses formed ; his constitution broke down, 1 and he continued to grow more and more feeble until precisely twenty-two ! weeks from the day he was taken down, when his sufferings were relieved by ; death. Through that long period he - ' never left his room. ' RAININU HAN ANAS IN FLORIDA. lalrrealtn* fat-la I tta.-rriiltt* xSta l.aatlau* Kiall.-frclla >l ihr t 'rae. The most jierfx*t Imuaiia plantation ill the Tinted State* is that of t 01. Whitner, mvir Stiver lake, over Iwo bundled miles south from Jacksonville, Florids, and pracUosllv lieyond the region of killing frosts, 'fins plantation covers an ami of several acres, ami contains over ten thousaml plants, most of them in lxar ing. The plants are of different varie ties. Some of them un< huge trees, twenty f.s't high, with a trunk from six to eight iuohes in diameter, while others, ami prolsibly the largest utimbcr, are of the celebrated dwarf species, standing from six to eight feet high, with a trunk frotu four to five inches iu dnum ter. The Lmaua. a* cultivated in this climate, l>ear* no visible seed, but it i* propagated from slijis or cuttings which Imur traits planting well, and grew with great rapidity. These slips are generally planter! about eight feet npart; if it 1* the dwarf Kp.x-ies, an aer of ground will contain frem six hundred to seven huu dred plants. They require a deep, rich *.nl, and couaideraiile moisture. It ha* no m-ason, but the fruit matures gn orally in froui eleven to thirteen month* from .late of planting, and by projwrlj timing the planting ripe fruit may be obtained at all season* of the year. The catlings once planted, first develop two leaves tightly rolled together, which grow tea height of three or four fust, w hen the blades la-gin to unfold one af tor another, into great bowel leaves, the stem* forming a tuu.Hiih trunk, which giows to the hire of a large apple tree, .*uujxwH-dentirely of th.w ooucentricleaf stem* or petal*. In alxmt eight or nine month*, according to the warmth of the season, a deep purple bud |**<|ie out just at the (Kiint of ilivergencs of the uptier leaves, and s.*iu pushee itself into lull view, its lengthening stem 1 vending under the weight of a purple blossom, slu.jied Uke a jKUtite-il egg. B.xm a leaf of this blossom oj*-n* at the pointed end, and rolls Iwu-k t.< the Ims.-, disclosing a r.>w of five or six tiuv tiamuias, uestled close together, as if hiding under the slu-lU-r of this protect ing leaf. Eiu-h miniature fruit has a waxen yellow flower at the end, with a stigma projecting through it. Other leaves of the blosh.nu unfold one after another, in the same wav, until tweutv or thirty clusters of fruit are developed, all clinging to one stem, when tliese leaves wither and fall, and the fruit swells and lengthens to maturity, which repiires generally alxmt thrvx- or four months. The great stem on which the fruit grow* lends under it* weight until the long finger like lruit hangs down in graceful clusters. Each plant Ix-ara but a single bunch of fruit, and then withers and dies, but while the fruit is maturing there springs up from the base of the truuk several off shoots, which take the place of the old plant when that has Ixxm removed, and go ou growing to tluv full size of tlis jwrexit tn*>. The fruit, when grown full aire, liegins to ahow streaks of yellow uixm its deep green skin, when it should lx< gathered for ahipiucut to mark, t, a* it is easily aud quickly rijx-n.xl after ontting by wrapping the bunch iu straw or iu a blanket, and keeping it iu a warm plao*. By cutting the bunches at the right time they can Iw shijqxxi to New York with perfect safety. Col. Whituer has upon his plantation to-day thousands of bunches, in all tagn of development, from tho little minia ture buds t-. tho well matured fruit six or seven inches long. Many of those bunches contain one hundred and twenty-five bananas, which sell readily to shippers at two cents each, from whu-it may be inferred the gri-at profits of tianona culture. An acre of ground will readily sup port six hundred plants. Suppose the bunches to average seventy-five lias each, and wo have an annual incoitro of 9900 from a single acre. Tho <\>*t of preparing and enriching the ground and setting the plants the first year, includ ing tho Ciwt of the slips, will average, j say, 91 per plant, h-aving a profit of but they perjietuate tanaa-lie* after tin- first year, and require but little expenditure. Besides, the shoots that spring up from the bulbous r>iot stock - *ill supply plants enough to double the ground each year; or they may In- 'sold for mora than enough to pay for all ex penses after the first year, thus leaving the glkW net for the second and subse quent years. Humboldt states that an amount of land tliat will produce I.fKX) pounils of potatoes will yield jhiuUilk of iuuiauas, and a surface Is-ariug wheat enough to feed one man will yield bananas enough to feed twenty-five tneu. The River I*l lot. Mark Twain makes a Mississippi river captain sjwak as follows of his pilot ; " Why, bless me ! 1 wouldn't have such a wild creature on my boat for the world • —not for the whole world! Ho swears, he sings, he whistles, he yills—l never saw such an Injun to yell. All times of th* night—it never made any difference to bim. He would just yell that way, not for anything in imrtienlar, but mere ly on account of a kind of devilish coin fort he got out of it. I never could get into a sound sleep but he would fetch me out of bed, all in a cold sweat, with one of those dreadful war whoops. A queer being—very queer lieing ; no re spect for anything or anybody. Bomo ■ times he called me 'Johunv.' And he kept a fiddle, and a cat. lie played ex ecrably. Tins seemed to distress tho cat, and so the cat would howl. Xolasly could sleep where that mnu—and his family—was. And reckless ? There never was anything like it. Now you may believe it or not, but as sure as I am sitting here, he brought rav boat a tilting down throngh those awful snags at Chicot under a rattling head of steam, and the wind a-bluwing like the very nation, nt thnt 1 My offiivrs will toil you so. They saw it. And, air, while ho was a-teariug right down through those snags, and 1 a .shaking in my shoos and praying, I wish I may never speak again if he didn't pucker up his mouth and go to whistling! Yes,sir ; whistling ' Buf falo gals, can't yon cotno out to night, can't you come out to-night; can't you onrao out to-night and doing it us calmly as if we were attending a funeral and weren't related to the corpse. And .when I remonstrated with him aliout it, he smiled down on me as if I was his child, ana told me to run in the house and try to Ixi good, ami not be meddling with Jny superiors!" Broail Yorkshire. There wor once a mason nt Oniseiey gnt it intov his hoc ad 'at he wor just cut aht for a jireyeher, no he went to see a Metbody parson, an' asst him if ho couldn't get him a job as a "local" somowhear; he wor sewer if they'd nob but give him n night rhonre lie could convert sinners wholesale. Well, after n gooid deal o' bother t' parson gnt a va cant jxsiilpit for hitnt' some ahtaide country place, au' theer one fine Humla' mom in' in t' mason went, reiglit weel miited wi' hiz en. Up into t' pooilpit he mahiitcil, like one at wor weel useil t' job. All went on quietly euilT, wliol t' time come for him to Is-gin his snrinon, an' theer wor a raro congregation to listi-n till him. "Nah, my friends," he licgnn in a stammcrin' soart of way, "t' text is this: 'I am t" li*t o't' woriiL" He then wait ed n bit, an' a'ter thunipin' t' pooil|it top toathree times he gat on n bit fur ther. " Firstly, my friends," ho says, "firstly, I —l—l urn t' leet o* t' world," an' then he com' to another full sto]>, and thumpt tho |Kxiilpit agean a Int. "Yes," he went on agean, "in t' first place I—l 1 am t' leet o' t' world," but ho couldn't get a word further, dew what lie would. At t' last, hahiwer, there wor nn owd woman among t' eorigregntion sang aht: "" I tell tha what it is, lad, if tha'rt t' leet o' t' world, thah sadly wants snuff in'." An' t' poor mason hookt it aht o' t' chapel ns if he'd been bitten wi' a mail dog. Ho wor niwer known to outer a pooilpit at after. Btaton Island (N. J.) is fast brooming the great center of the Eastern lager beer manufacturing interests. It has eight breweries, which annually manu facture 81,800,000 worth of beer. A Sucre** for Ihr Fishery Com mix*inn. "Never eoe'ri uuthin like it, mr ; I've been it ncttin' net* on tin* 'ore river for mnrn'ii ten yenr, ami there ain't 1HOII no time when North river nlukl was it* mitliv it* they are now. They're a* plentiful a* norgtoM, mill wo rtUl't get BOtllill for "em. Why we u*e,l to get our two. dollar* or a dollar an" it half n pimvt for them in tlie early apritig; but now- why there'* nn old woman a a>Uin' 'em curt of a keg for twenty live cent* it pair. It'* ruinoUH, thi* i*; thexn ttuherv feller* have jn*t busted the hutineM* ; 1 might jo#' a* well •ell the net*, ami take ter muekrel tlaliili'. rim* retuarkeil u Witnliiiigtoii Market firdi thaler to the editor til the •Sl'irii/i/tii ,1 im rii tiit the other day, nft.-r he luid requested hi* ojuutoii oil the attdden lluwea.se in the *had mti'h, which ovor Hi 1,000 fish taken already thi* spring d< noted. "Thorn fishery feller*," ill other word* the State tUliery Ooutini* *ion, hint stocked tlie river anew, hrokeu U|> the tl*h famine, and tilled the 11 nil son with tim-r and l>etler ahnd than have tieen aeen in it for \ ear*. The nae of net* extending clear aero** the *troam, which now, we Iwhove, i* forlmtden hy law, hail resulted in practical de]H>|>tlla turn ; for the fish were completely Inured out of the headwater* where ihey were wont to *pawu. Gradually they dimluiabod until North river ahad iH-miue a dainty fur beyoud the reiu-h of the average puckt. Three or four vear.i ago, science, under the guiae of Sir. Setli (ireeu and hi* aa*iNtaiit*. net to work to make up the deficiency. Five million young Halt were plaomt in the Hud*on and it* tribu turie.s, ami the reault we are now puttier ing. Thi* l* a grand aucceaa for the pisciculturist*, and the jasiple will up prA-iate it. We trust that it i* hut the prs-ur*or of other |>aJpahle proof* of the possibility of euiargtug our mipiily of tinny fk>d ; for an uicrtsiaed jKipular in tercet, which will thus engendered, is sure to lie followed lv substantial con tribution* through winch the lalair* of the t|s| culturiata can lie anted and their value further augmented. Anecdote of Lord I'aumtire. In hi* yunnger days, when Lord Fan mure was only the Hon. WUluuu Mutile, he wa* not only fond of doing charitable aud hvUi'VoltUil tilings, but he liked to do them surreptitiously. lie did not wish to become notorious for hi* alius giving, and uot (infrequently, whan Imund upou a charitable ex|mdition, he would go in disguise. It is related of him that upon a oar tain invasion he entered the odtage of a |Hsir old woman at Muintrmn, with a wallet filial with oatiui id nluug over hi* shoulder, his garb, soiled and ahahhy. On asking chanty the woman sat lnfure htm such food us she had. After outing he entered into conversation with the old woman, and found her really very pour. Ha persuaded her to buy what lie prufoaard to be his tieggur'* meal at half price. Shortly after he had departed the woman examined tlie lucal she had pur chasml, ami found it to contain a goodly *um in silver coin. Thinking the jsmr man had made his uieal pack the tie jxieitory of hi* cash, ami that he must have forgotten the fact, she rualied ufti r him, shouting : " Hoy, hoy, mirn ! ye've left a' yet sil ler amatig the iue.d ye m il me !" Hut the more and the louder she 1 shouted the faster did the Iwggnr make off, until, finally, he struck into a run. . At length the poor woman returned to . her eot, ami a she told her neighbor* of the wouderful mim, she })reiMer. The wife near ly bit the ©nd of her tongue off in the first day's trial, snapping op the harsh • words which tried to eacajwj her lips. [ Hut l>oth were dismally peaceable nutil ! the afWrnoon of the second day, when ! the htislmud flew into a passion simply 1 IsH-anao one of the cltildreu polished his . stocking foot with a blackening brush while he was taking his usual nap. At the first burst of anger his wife delivered, alio agreed to let him off. But it was a narrow ©scai>o. The I'oor Empress. A Brussels pajier gives a painful ac . eonnt of the ex-Empress Charlotte, of . Mexico. Her physical health is good, , but her mental condition is hop-less. ( She lives in constant communication t with imaginary beings, and dislike© the presence of any living ]>©raou. She ( sjw-aks only when obliged to do so, and gives orders to her attendants iu writing. ' She dresses herself without stiffering aa- I sistance, takes a fixed walk in the park , every morning when fine, frequently . plays on the pianoforte, and sometimes I draws ami paints with decided taste. , Hhe recogniz-s no visitors, not oven her , brother, King Leopold, or the Queen. The latter always accomjuuiiea the phy sician on his monthly visit, when, in , reply to his inquiries as to her health, , the Empress coldly says she is well, and I immediately retires. She h.ts la-come I stouter, urnl shows a tendency to corpu lency, but lit present it is stated that i this only increase© her beauty, which is . uow truly striking. The Murder In the Church Tower. Mabel H. Young, the victim of the murder in the War ran Avenue Baptist church, Boston, wn the elder child of Ctinrles H. Young, lately deceased, and Mrs. Helen L. Young, a daughter of 1 Mr. James W. Hobbs. Her age was , flvo year, two months, and thirteen days. She was a bright, intelligent, ami j very beautiful child, and was much be loved by licr playmates and all who 1 knew her. Her mother lias .-.till left her a little sou three and a half years old. The mangled remains were conveyed to Mount Auburn for interment. The ser vices were held as privately as possible, but this did not prevent the exhibition of many tokens of affection and smypa thy on the part of friends. The casket was covered by a profusion of flowers, some of which were sent by t he members of ltev. Mr. Pentecost's church. What Nhe Could Do. A carping old woman said once to her l>n*tor: " Dear me, ministers mnk' muckle sdoo nboot their liard work ; but what's two hits o* sermons in the wreck toe tuak' up? I could do't mysel'.' "Weel, Janet," said the minister, good humoredly, " let's hear you try't. "Come nw.i' wi' n text, then/' qnoth she. He repeated, with emphasis: " It is ls-t terto dwell in the corner of the housetop than with a brawling wsinan ami in a wide house." Janet fired up instantly. "What's thnt ye say, sir ? I >oo ye intend onything personal?" "Stop, stop," broke in her pastor; "you would never do for a minister." "And what for no'?" said she. "Because, Janet, you oomc ower soon to the application." Great excitement in a rieli family at the disappearance of a gold snuffbox, richly sot with brilliants; and equal satisfaction when a young gentleman of six acknowledged thnt ho had utilized it as a ooftin and buried it with his pet canary in the garden. I i MUDDLING IN HI'HINESX. A Tlrw Takrn of * Tfmlril llNatnras .Via* U B* I UI iM .1 11*1 a MMIMI The N't<*t tf for thotn ; he was Ktcody, prudent, economical, vir tuous, isiuaervative, cautioua, shrewd, | HUgUcioUK." He disappeared one day, having de frutlded those who had Hunted lilltl, Ulld the Tribwir nioraliae* a* follow* : And now what has he done with the money I He had no vice*. He tlrank uot, neither wa* he a votary of draw poker, nor did lie haras* the tiger in his aei-ret den. He did Uot afMHHllati* ;he had no passion for anyUtitig not a pa* siott, exempt, indeed, for other people'a money, and jHwiaihly for clean linen. What then ha* been done with the uioueyf Himply, we suspect, he ha* muddled it awuy. The end ha* proved him a fraud, clean through and through —he hasn't been even the clever bu*i- He** mail lie was suppose dto lie. Peo ple thought him honest am! lie wasn't; they al*othought htiu shrewd ami they were equally mistaken. It in evident now that lie must have taken this money to rc|*ur hi* own blunder* in business. The really clever commercial man with a thorough knowledge of the nature of j buhuic**, not ouly him no occasion to steal, hut he has a horror of stealing, because he fully comprehends that in the long run it is the iuot unprofitable tiling which he can do. No matter what was thought of the muii in the ItmiksauJ brokers'ollicer* of Itostou last week -they w ill tell von to day that lie ha* managed liaJlv. Very oft-n society meet* with tlii* kind of astonishment. Old hoUM-*, which were thought to be built upon a rock of gold, tumble in; Meaara. Dom- IH-V, l'lutu* & Co. go into cham-ery; Mr. Merdie, who iunuogte lost upon the government when next three millions of it* subject* desire to bathe and drink in an area six hun dred and fifty foot long by tliirty feet broad. Neither rhould it be lost on white water drinkers who, on tlieir travels in the mofnssil, drink freely from lotos, without troubling themselves as to the whereabout* or character of the crystal spring nt which they filled. An Old Set Her. "I'm an old settler here, and I'm sorry," said a prisoner iu the Detroit police court, a man nearly sixty years of age. " What did you take I asked the court. " Whisky straight." " Don't conic here again, old man. If old men like you and I go on a spree, wlint can lie expected of the younger ones < I've lived in this world a full half century, aud I've found that there's nothing liko cold water for a steady drink. You can go. Bijnh will hunt up your missing coat tail aiul lint, and it's nil right if you don't oomo again." There is a certain peril si in every boy's life when he would rather be ring nmsicr in n circus than President of the United States. HI'MMAKY OF NEWS. ___ !•■ ml liar** Irmm !■■■• l AkrM* Tti* Hlmit Indlau* refu to sign Uie treaty ceillna llis JUec-k Utile to Uio govoruiueiil for #SA,OOO A violent wiml aiul rain storm (■essrat over section* of Indiana, dot or greet damage to ew>|t and |irtwrty. The treck of , tlie Jkdlefoiilaine ratlrcswl was waehod away near Oakland and a train of rain thrown Into a culvert, by which the conductor and three oilier men were killed. Uodgee and emhank mniila wore *wo|.| away on nearly all tlie roads lesdlna Into Indisns|sdl#. In lUehtooud three churrhee were much daaiagtxl by wtist or lightning, end many other Isige buiidmga, in cluiUii* the post-oftlc-o, uuroofed. The dsuts*e thru||hrt* fitoa Colombo* |t> ) and Ismtsvlile (Ky.) indicate thai tlie name tornado jiaesod over thuee alUee, as many huUdlua* were unroofed..... Tlie dedlcaUuu of the Maeouh Temple iu New York wa* cele brated bye grand parade and imposing cere monies. Not less than twenty thousaud Masons |MUti<\|>aied In the which was the largest ever formed by Ute onler, comprising luemt-ers from sll parts of the I'niuu and Canada, 'the bouses alirug the match were ;hand*ouirly do-oiaitd, and with the hitillßJil banners of the order and the sbowy uniforms, cttmpnar-tl a aceue of i-pleistor never before equaled in New Y0rk...,. Tlie ! fureel tilo of l'enneyhaula were never before I so destructive ss this y*r. The vtliagee of | (ioldsboro, MtoddarlvllJe, Evergreen and Locuet lUilge, Ujgelher with sooree of watterei farm bi:ildlii|;s aud sawmilis have been aimuet com- \ pletely deetruyoiL The lueee* will amount to ! over one million dollars, inusi of which falls on ! puor people.... The Kepuhhoana of Uhio i held their His to Convention at C-oilumbua and nomuiaied It. ti. Hayes, of Handuaky, fur tiov cruor. and Thomas L. Vottug fur laeuleuanlr (iorcmor. The platform adopted favor* a tariff for revenue , deciarea that Ute Htalee are one as a natlou aud all ciU/eus are e<|ual under the laws; is lit favor of frt o education . that there should be no couuectlou between church and Htate, aud u|ipoeea all legislation Ui the interest of one particular sect. Of the third term. It says The observance of Washington's example, Ui retiring at the dose of a second Trosideutial term, will be iu the future, as it has beeu in the past, regarded .a* a fun damental rule in the unwritten law of the re public. 'the committee of Lhe New York board of aldermen appointed to investigate the official conduct of Comptroller Or sen subm.ttai a re lirt charging him with gross official miscon duct, carolesrnesß, neglect of duty and waste of public fund*. The rep>irt was atupted Hilly persons were drowned by the oe|einu of s lighter in the Tagua, near laabuu, Portu gal .... The coal exchange of Chicago having reduced the wagreof Coal wheeler* fiom fi to ri per day, several huntiled of the men struck, and then went about to the different yards and drove off those who were willing to work. Several noo-slrikeni were severely injured.... A dispatch from Han 1 Hego says that a letter to the Kan litego f' itovt, fnua Cues Honors, re put-- that general excitement prevails over the Mexican raids in Texar. War ts fnamTlhere between the Cuitcd Htate* and Mexico Ily the cxp'uslou of a locomotive at Hhuiebecs, on the Hudson river road, the engineer and tin man were seriously injured A heavy j cyclone ou the lluueee coast is reported to j have done much damage to shipping .... | President (Irani has extended the time of the j conn of coowibMUuuers of Alabama claims for j a period of *ii months after July -Chid ' Tlul. 11. Khendau, Ijeuteuanl-iieucrsl of the army, was married to Miss Irene; daughter of (.mart master-lit neral !iuct>r, i f (Incago. Tho Aiumoan nne team left New York on lite IhlT of I'hoder for Ireland to attend the j international metch Ui 1re1and......A United States s|*cial agent of tho Treasury dej-srV- j mmt seised a lace draws valued at ♦ 10,000, s lace aha* 1 worth £5.000 and other lace* to the , value of £5.000. which had been smuggled. They were formerly tho property of Tm|reas I'.ugrme.. .. Judge lUatchfurd. in the United States district court of New York, decides U-at it re puted one->|uarter of the creditors in num bers and one-third in value of those who actu ally proved chums to assent to a bankrupt's discharge W. P. Leslie, receiving teller tr. the banking hou-o of Dtincsti, Kharman A Co.. of New York, ha* absconded with tIi.OOO gold The letter announcing to Mexico the accession of Alfonso to the throne of Hpetu having miscarried, the tt;ia>>iah legation has not beeu recognised by that government...... ('apt. W, 11. lirowu. a regular aimy offiver, cum milled soxado In New York by cutting his threat. No cause was ued.... Tho JJD paror YYilHam has conferred the order of ciTil merit ou the Hon. George Bancroft, the his ns.au aud ilcury \Y. Longfellow, the pout, of America ... Twenty thousand Catholic pil grims visited the shrine of 1 'sray-lo- Monial in Prance.... There were XH.Ofit) men in (be j Masonic procession in New York, according to , the otlVcial figures of the chief of staff By the bursting of some dues in the boiler of the stoanwr Crescent City, from New York for Havana, live coajs were thrown from the fires into the coel bunkers, and a formidable confla gration was only prevented by the ooolncee of tlie captain and chief engineer. Tlie latter locked himself and men in the engine ream and closed the ventilator, thus preventing tlie flames from spreading. Not much damage wa* done George W. Pemiwsrton, whose j murder of Mrs. Bingham, of Boston, will be re membered as one "t horrible atrocity, has been found guilty of murder hi the first degree..... The Ohio Unlvcisaliet*. ui convention at Co lambus, adopted a reeolotion in which they declare It to be the duty of •'every religions .letiaminsUon wlilch is loyal to the national fcinn of government to unite in enpport of our free school *yrteui The coroner's jury holding au inquest overs victim of the Holyoke horror, censure the constructors of the church on account of the large gallery with so poor rgTcns ; find the immediate cause of the fire in the o*e of flimsy adornments for the altar, aud pine sheathing Instead of plaster ceiling, and condemn in strong terms Ute use of such materials in public buildings Tlie city of New York has brought suit against the widow of ex-County Auditor Watson in the sum of gfi.ooo.ooo. alleged to have been Uken during the Tweed reign. The cot poration of I-ondon hve derided to ' invite the Mayor of New York to au inter- j national municipal banquet next mouth j Tlie Swedish nksday has appropriated £95,800 j in gold to defray the expenses of their cottn- i try men in the Philadelphia Centennial j The Washington Hwmtey W-TOW states tliat ; General Meig* i* to l* placed tn command ' of the department of the South, vice General ' Irwin McDowell, who is to be put on tlie re tired list Owing to the failure of the negotiation* in Washington, it is believed that the Black Hills will not be ojiened lluseummer. The grass and gram crejw throughout Long Island have lieeu much injured lu conse- ' queues of lite long-continued drought I Officer Ilettpp, of the Trenton (N. J.) police. I attomptcd to arrcat a party of rough* who ' wore conducting themselves boisterously, when one of them, named Kertian. drew a pistol aud shot him. Heupp subsequently died, leaving , a wife and four children Humors having been * float for some time that Secretary De- : lano was 'o resign, he has authorised a Wash- j uighiit nevnqvaper to deny the report* i The Maryland court of appeals has recently j decided au iuqvortant life insurance question ; in regard to suicides. It is to the effect thst when the set of self-destruction is done during Insanity, it la denth by acciiletif, and the insur ance company is responsible for the amount of the policy, notwithstanding their proviso, wli cli makes it " void if tlie insured shall die by his own hand or act" Denote Ihvyle, employed as a coUectqj ivy the Tradesman's Hank of New Y'ork, dc<-smi*v,l with money amounting to la I ween y.1,000 and £4,000, be longing to the institution. Two New Yorkers, Dr. A. 8. Curtis and Sal vsdor Cot ter- si. fought a duel near Havana. Cuba, with deadly results. It appear* tliat they had been great friends in New York, and on Cortereal's going to Havana to purchase tobacco, Curtis visited hitu there, S|-ondmg two weeks at his honro, until finally Cortereal < charged Curtis with unduo intimacy with hi* 1 wife, and slapped liis face. Curtis denied llis , charge, aud hot words ensued, resulting in a i challenge to bo fought thai day. They went to Martanao without wituemos, and fsught at twenty pace*, odvanciug and firing. Curtis fell at tlie fifth fire, shot through the lups, and fainted from 10-s of blood. Upon reoover- 1 ing coiieciouMieeft, he save he saw Cortereal re- , load his revolver and shoot himself through j the hesd, evidently thinking ho had killed his I opponent.... The Adjutant-General of Mi* souri is bringing to light frwodulsut war clsuki which tliat Htate baa paid. Already be finds i fraudulent claim of over #l,000,M which wsi paid ltsporta from the Black Hill* rag toe slots that a I "arty of minors, under Prater were attacked by L.l'sns, and five of then killed A band of Atsp-boe Indians msd< a raid au Harjier • ranch, Wyoming, and sue csaded in getting away with ons hundred and ninety head of bores* The manager of th< Tremout opera luusa, at Galvastun, Texaa. was arrested and fined under the etvil rights law for refusing to allow two colored women scale in the penpietla W. T. Leah a, wbc defaulted with £12,000 belungtug to Duneou, Hhorman A Co., of New York, wae arrested m Canada and brought hack fur trial. He ward away In comjsuiy with a diaeolule woman, laaviug a wife and child The Atlantic cotton mill*, of l-owreuos, Mass.. employing l.X&n tqierauvea, aud manufacturing 450,000 yards a week, wit) shut dowu ou aooount of Ute dull market, oa the 10th of July, and remain closed till He|-tsmher 1 An eighteen-year old daughter of a farmer named Jackson was brutally outraged by a negro near Odautoa, Md. Miss Jackson fought Iter assailant dee l-eralely, and her cloth tug wae nearly lorn from her body, end her nock and face badly ; bruteed befure he ecouarphehed his pttrpuee. lhe scoundrel was captured two days after ward by a party of meu who had been looking for bitn all that lune He wae only saved from lyuohuig by the peraonol ap iterance of Gov. Gruorne. The HecreUry of the Interior has apputntad Gov, Ax toll, of Utah Territory, to l>s Governor of New Mexico, vies tilddluge, deceased, end Geo. W. lonely to be Governor of Utah, vice i Axlall The town of Marshal>sk. ou (lie I'ana river, Uueeia, containing a population of JO,OOO, was eutiroly destroyed by fire ... The Unler of the tanth paper nulla, at Lea, Mass., exploded, killing two persons, and injuring fourteen, and inflicting a hies of £25,000 William I'arxuenter and sou. and two other men named Thompson and Healey, who were fishing by rushlight from a boat on Itnquetl* river, near I'otadam, N. Y., were owned over the dam by the current and all drowned A disease known as the "Hack tooth" has Itrokou out among the swine ou the Uppw (iltawa river, Ontario, and has proved fatal Ui isrge herds By the burning of part of a square in Toronto, Canada, a number of shop*, -lores and dwellings were destroyed involving a lues of £150,000 Tbe Newark Methodist Kplscopel Conference held an extra session for the |Kirpoee of oelehrating the one hundredth Utthdey of liev. Henry Boehm - familiarly known as Father Boehm - one of their mem bers Deputy United Htates Marshal liem sey attempted to arrest two horse thieve* at Htockiuu. Kan , when one of them shot him. liamsey returned the fire, killing hie assailant, but lhe other thief escaped. Within au hour llamsey died from the effects of bis wound.... A sad accident uccnrred in Brooklyn, N. Y., by which a young man named Metcolf loot hi* Life. Bis mother had aummoned him to break tost, aud be had just cheerfully answered "Yes, mother," when the report of e pistol wa* heard in his room, and ou Mrs. Metcolf rushing up, she found her son dying with a bullet hole tn his heed. It Is thought the j the pistol, of which be always hod two under hie pillow, fell on the floor and exploded. A Gigantic Icicle. There i no record of eneh ice fields | mi have been gliding (mat onr shores ibis wwa>n, nays n letter from New foundland . The sealing captains report the 100 in many iustoiiaoa twenty feet in tbirkiiomi, and hard as floating masse* of irraiiitc. Had tlie season I**ll a stiirmy I -Ute this ice wuuld have played oo>l havoc nmoug (tir fleet From tho Btb of Jan nary, when the ice first ap|**aml here, : till the 11th of May, it was never out of sight—a huge river of ioe aloxrly floating poet. .Ships that come through it re uorttwl it tr> Iw two hundred mile* in breadth. It* length is unknown, but in all jirobability it extended from Baffin's Bar to tlie (stxlf Stream, a dis tance of I,bOO to 2,000 mile*. The in tense e-.ld of this winter seems to have converted the whole surface of the sea along Greenland into ice-fields, and no sootier wan one borne sway ou the bosom of the Arctic current than another ne wa* formed. One would sup]ante tliat such an eu-mnous ioe delivery would t mporariiy lower the temfierature> ' of the Gulf Stream itself and give us a colli summer. Even at this date vast onantities of ice are paining south, though not in sight. Tbe first two out ward-bound mail steamera from Liver - i pool were unable to enter the port of St. Louis, owing to the ioe, and hod to run on to lralifax; aud the same is true of the first two home ward-bound steamers. The third out ward bound mail steamer, by which this letter should be conveyed, is overdue, aud may also have tiavvd as by. The " oldest inhabitant ' remem bers no such season as thi*. Glad Tidings for the Slates of King Alcohol. How many a manly farm is palmed; liow many a noble mind is destroyed; how many a priceless soul lost through the curse of Mtroug drink! To the de- 3 'Hiring victims of the sstauic tyrant, cohol, whose shattered nexvea, and trembling limbs, and racking headaches ;eom to find no relief except in the re newed use of tlie fatal poison which bring* thera every day nearer to their miserable end, we announce glad tiding* of great joy. Dr. Walker a Vim-gar Hitter* contain not a single drop of alco hol in any form, but are a sovereign remedy for the ills of drunkenness. They restore time and strength to the system, and entirely eradicate the perni cious appetite for* liquor. Try n few ltotilea of Vinegar Bitters, and vou will never crave strong spirits again, but find your health repaired, your mind re htored, and bv once more a man in the lo*t sense. Health is cheap when Vine gar Bitter* are §1 a bottle. • A* they entered s dry good* store you would have naid that love dwelt in loth heart* aud tliat a dove of peace roosted on every *hingle on the roof of their abiding tdace. She saw s lovely dress, and ahe tw-gged him to bny, but he re plied : *• 1 oau't darling, uot before next week." "Can'tyou, dear?" ahe nmilod. " Well, I will wait." They had hardly OAHWHI out the door before be said: "I'd like to see myself getting tliat dress !" And she answered ; "You couldn't buy one ride of it. *nd if you could you are too *tingy and mean to do it!" We cheerfully call the attent ion of our reader* to tlie merits of Dobbins' Elec tric Soap < made by Cragiu A Co.. Fhila.), who confidently nak a trial. The soap will till its own story. Try it. • Let the Froplc Speak. B. Y. Pierce, Buffalo. N. Y.: JSwr Nir—Your Favorite Prescription har done my wife a world of good. She has uearlv taken two tioltlee aud has felt letter the part two week* Ui*u at r-nv time in the pest two yearn. No root e periodical poma; none of that aching back, or dragging peuamtion in her stomach ahe liti been a--customed to for never*! year*. I have so much confidence iu it that 1 would be perfectJv willing to warrant to certain ruatomcrw of ours who would be clad to get bold of relief at any expense. I have tried many medicines, but never hod any occasion to extol one Kr fore. Very truly yours, Geo. B. YVHITISO. Mr*. K. R. Daly. Metropolis 111.. write*: "Dr. It. V. Pierce—My eirter itsiue the Favorite Preecriprion with great benefit. Marv Ann Frrel.ie, la-hmau. Pa., wtilee : " Dr. R. V. Pierce—What I have taken of your medicine lias been of more benefit to me then all others and hundreds of doctors' b Ha." Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription IN sold by dealers in medicines generally.—Com. HAVK MONEY AND HEALTH. —Tho repu tation of the Wilson shuttle sewing machine ie eo thoroughly established that no wotd in its commendation ie uecoeeary. The plan adopted bv the msimfatitmcra of this famous machine of placing their (iricee so low as to come within , tiie roach of the poorer classes, certainly en tities lliem lo tho gratitude of those who are really nyrst in need of such an articio. Ma chinos will Ire delivered st any railroad station in HUH county, free of transportation charges, ie ordered through the company's branch house at 827 and 829 Broadway, New York. They send an olegant ratalogne'und chromo circular froo on application. Thia company want a fowmore good agents.— Com. Life ha* few charms for the dyspeptic, which is not to bo woudered at when wo take into account the amount of bodily and mental suffering that this distressing malady geue rato. lhe Peruvian Hyrnp (a protoxide of irou) hoe cured thousands who wore suffering from this disease.—Com. • If Johnson '* Atwtlf/w Jjinlment ia hall M m nliwbl* aa fKojil* M; it la. DO family ikoald . ! ba without it. ('oruunlj no pmmi. I* ha law ! jar doctor, mini*tar, or of any other profaa ■ rioti. should at art rm a Jonroay without it. Nc aallor, Oahannao, or wood,— ehouW ba wiih r : tml it In fact, it la uaadad whararar tliara la _ an aoha. sprain, out, bruiaa, wo*b or oold. ™ -(Mm,. lo ■— "" a- Farm em and " htiracißcn " arc con d UnualJy li|titrti>a; what wa know of tba unlit? e of .s/teruhKi a f'urairy CimdtiUm /Vnnbri, aid in reply. a would nay. through tba cotumna of '• tbla papor. tbal wo bara board front hundradn a who bar* uaad tliewi with gratifying raaulla , „ that la also our atporianoa.—oow>. .0 ._______ Wfiri NR. ANP I'M, Ml vol IJOOO.w ' It in luauy (MwnM I* oar huUni lanllr J hjul|la* n IMJIII. I.*M.l.|'V*W MOOT AMf IIKSM , BITTKIIto ar* iba fc-*t, f* eu* autaet mrtm eod > naa ariMw tin to. .m-mbl) i-uri iy and c leaner Ilia btund of all Maaamln*. nam and MMWHII d# '• WW*, llw eoairiolnl. ■aairillm, ftloo, g tarug-,. faulai.Mm.li. 1-* . aad api-dll*. aamfa loan >lll a*. *u In, a. Wa. akin dime* >be gin aad am* g oar debt—. I'iirt era la lira troaal and d.af—at MM bwarnrblf Mera inralu aa a Italb ■*dll liira " aaf .*!.• yet dt*r~-,*rw4 b"ld l. *ll draaglMa ÜBO s l; I.OODWIN A CXlTlbwriia. WbolaaaWAwMla u i The Markets, a HW toaa. ttaaf OktUo-Prl— to If lira buUoria IIW# MR Outntnet) to Oued Tataaa.......... .••4 llg - Kilo Oum SOUO #M 00 , itaga- IJ * (HW** MM* 1 111 met <■>,<§ I*H f ahaet, CI <§ Mi| Uwb oa i ilk OoUua -Middling It 1(1* 1* - Floor ElU* Mratara < H 4**lo Wat. Km* NO 4* ■ 10 E Wbaat—Kad Wmtora 1H RIM I* Ma. 1 oaring I 111(4* I 11 . Bya—-Mela ...... ll* *I * hurloy—BUl* I M | 1* Harlay Mall I M SIN . Uata-Mired Wrtara Ilifri It > Onm-Miaad Wmtara 17 # 11 r | Hay, pa* cat. SO ri I OS Wrra. | fork-Mora. ...It 40 |lt tt Lard ........ lata# Mb ' riah-Markerl Me. 1, an 11 00 rill OS r " So X. wa • SO #lO ( Dry Oad, par eart ........ tori •SO 1 . Herrtna. Bmb-1, par hot .. *■/ i* 40 PairrrUum <>md. 0M bM Setead, IS Wool—-Gettfartua Fl*#c*. .. • SB Tta< " M < N Auakroltaa " II * H baltar Mai* . . * * SO Waaterti Dairy tt * Wraaara Tallow SB |* SI Weatert 0rdinary......... 10 O 11 raonay ivaoia Flag 10 # St • i Ck"o>a-Wat*ractMT 11 # lib " HkUbtoad OSS Waatara..... OS # i Eg ga—Stale U M | ALklNf Wheal IB SIS , bya—Htata 1 M ri 100 Oora-Mnad ti # M ' Ur*| Miu | nag 1 lib Oala—B(ala 71 * 71 nervate near I 30 |IM Wheat Mo 1 Hpr.ng IM SIM Ooru-Mlled Mb# >h Oala 00 ri 0k Mye 1 <1 <* 1 id •artey | to I tO tiuntant. (tottae-Low Middlings. ll\| I k Floor-lUlra 0 It ft S It Wheal—Med W eatam I *1 4* I >1 Bya I 10 ri 1 11 Corn—frllow .... H ri Oala-Mlted. Of 00 PrtrtdMua S Ms ' rniLahtLLrnta. Pleor—Pewßajrlvaaia IfM ..,-.. 0 00 Ik S 17* Wh-at Wraterl. Bed 1 St # 1 SI , Bya 111 * I II ' Oorw— Tallow II g b I Mimed n ri t> (lata—Mi sad M g M Irtmtrtia. Cruda...... Ballad U* I • ■waaaßaHM A pair at aboaa all I eaat ja M ISk'J Si t oai t t rmli mm with • i l3H silver tip ■riwriritrilri aa tbw aUkuM, end U alb add I LMI a f|l Mrl lam uu e*( at tbm thai to tbaki aWkawriaaMl - Tea mama at tba gaaaaa ah' dl out Ilka IMMf • C ' 1 jfl Jgt i AHI.k MbKw is IMB aM t Jin H..0 ant *>*w* Aa) ft dn |k.M Cf * 4 A , j aarh air*( atß 1— hi-—r.il, |]bfknp'kP*4 arietei tif haying a pu aad Mvl 1 i# 3M Mriririkwi • 1 (MM! tgrala Waatad bunli aaa bagaaaa Oera , X larafraa higpßrita VOt'MO.MMßraadawy.S. f A (iBMTM bead a* roar addeara aad eaaatva by re I j\ tum atall anaetntng tbal a*l pg yoa for rear ■rouble Variety Bracket Work* Hmatb baud, ludleaa r SOMETHING VFgi kriwa Mnri wit .l Btofiof lef rill. men <*r ipMMHI, war* ar ftrik. Mhok Of ritrriff U hrikbl her * Ifllttjll ; A44mm KTTAFSK 4IU K. Xmm H*>4!r£ MM • I QINi far nnmplm* UIMMIRICMmIMMM r+* r wtMriri mi fri-r-iki|' fgfg. /* rib 4 JT<|Wil lorMtbg #•#■■*• /mtrifbfd 'wtf •/ (APM tMHktlf. f IK?3 riri# IM74* tor /VrririUw Jt^criy BOILERS & ENGINES KOM r.%M wEKx AMD OTilkH*. His Ntrea Iw It Hcraa Paara Kraaeb burr Btaaa , Crtu MUl*.at- IV* lMnaul alb Int*. Hlrbwa* ri Barrel L I dole Bella. M. V. : agents | LIVINGSTONE'S WANTED I NEW BOOK!! Ha aaa M-ry at Iba last trrr> yaaaa at Ida Lria Head far C rralan te R W.lUfe A <). Hartford i Ot. w BUKii A CO. Meaih. it. J. > I Malikd Keyaalda,Afaeeaa <4 raa* t e | *,td aad out a atagta oa|il*at read lor rirrala> b. tsao ROawrf . | * Co. Utt Daaaabh. Nao Vet* 10 Wf-T At; m MS Wriririkwm •OT ntk SMUTTUI teotm AdOean Juka***. Park A Ok, twain,. Ma** Sir Ink Oty. nortaegt.. P* Ctrnaga. U .arri. leab* (RIM IIS i beat am lor ia oaa tltkM ottb Dywagala ar Iba Blaa* It aaa*T7ul ta d > raa gw>d ka read b. the nao ■ I edtttoa eoatala* ebgaat Ittaairatbnw KlataaUy hooad < Prto* Wg (Nl. Agent* e*oted la aaary eoaaty. Addram , H T HtH* I KKi ,k> . 7|g Haaama ht.. PlnlaOaliabla * S. The World la la Bloom. M>tata aoata bar *a mer Malta Bat tba itrtkr of Mia mm Prkittiy la bke a UMblad hraoot, ka lh* aaaablaa Let bba rartiabaa. tarn aad panfy kw ryat atth Tbrmnt** Effi-rrrscfst Sellwr Aperient. BOLD BY ALL r>Rf(. Agenia ItTWIAiroBUSaiIHI 00.. PhtUdrdphta. Pa_ LHiRY FAMILY WAVTw IT, M IU L\J 11 In rroaawßaaa, Bab—. Mmk ! eOOk AGEVTS WANTED ■Tw (TELL IT ALL By Mia Bb lift ami of Salt Laka City, fat U Mart Ua* .(• at a Morram Hark PriMt la (radoctwa by Mra. b**e 'if- itey at a efaaa** nyrbwta by* hare tbe -Solera ei, .una —till dmaga. Ik at ba Sm—l aa a "aabroaakb M lira " BrtgM. Pbra J (-of. tklbk* a*o knak ntiL actaaliy •a ottb m-d g.p fat aS. It tt ywpetar rrery *' V via terry bod*, and outer',., ail alkr boaki Iber ar ee. M aatrr ear (fad ayeW a-" Kmraral vraora radar** it l-wiWit aaata (i aad arret* art arihat #ea—* l> taVO * i.y r BACb tk****aad rer la fee—' Wi erael MBP maiy In—i* *r*ei* Ml W —ftrr* ar aoaif-a aad ar* '"t ararl Wutkt * ee*n> tboer oba anU raa*a* 1 >r\. aamal.lrw -l-AJutl part- elan. m* at*, are)/re* re -)( Adrian A. t detiuirwivr A la, Martfard. Caob. fePORTa^BLE SODA FOUNTAINS S4O, $:o, $75, M SIOO. GOOD, DI'RAKLK. AMD CHEAP Shipped Ready for Uab Maaafartnrod by ill A P.'MAM A CO.. MndUoH, lad. tWßeod far a Oat—fame. . r —I Trnaara, .Supportera aad Pile lu ' Seeleyh H.r*l habfar /e^jljri \ Trunea " Uu4. claaut). Ilfbt. par C f|rir-MB 1 lerlly aaf— and eooifnrlabla. Ire. ping, or aallliallln annieaaam nets uMsi tn hktlituE iuuorMrit bi fba pn'leaop.a, long te.t*d, alway* rellahle.' I'KMaKK or IWIrAIIOKb i.er.utne e-amy—d "I B. Beeley." Katal•llaSme.ita. 1.147 I bt—tout Street. Philadelphia, and "J ill Bmadaay.Meo York Sent by mail or o>praaa ; and ald by loading droggtau. Saod tor eaiak gne. ft e> HA tl PI.K Free and Bh> Pay to Mala ami •% Female rierj*here. Addreaa. *4f% Mil |1 hlrtk PVIB txv . Moarark. It. J. 18 nu "i i 1 i Whalir tor m on iru or bnaat. llarohaal'a l-arglio* Oil wi.l l I'.uad on InralaabSa JUaiawn', and worfaf < " °f bjr rear. reaidiwt In tha land. Wa know of o.> pmpreata-y mwdlaina or article now uood In lb- Bnitod B*'a which •harwa tha jr -id will of the p-ople to a creator dejrn-e than 11>Yellow wrapper tor animal and whir* lor human flaab. -jr. ) Jadepawd.*!. MERCHANT'S GARGLING OIL la tho RUndaH Unlmaot of tha U litad Kitabllahrd 1133. Uri Im, Bf.OOl m Httm also. .V) coots: aoull slzn 26 conta Snil tlxo for f BUy qm, 26 irota Mar nfactiuod at N. \ F March*nt' Clarsliug Oil Company JOHN IIODMK, *erretary. s ' ifflq Jjl*■ *] LijWfik !• l)r. J. Walker'* CallfornU Tin* * i rear Hitter* are a purely Vegetable ' pirparatiou, luade chiefly from tie na tive herb* found on the foirer ranfea of ' tie Sierra Nevada mountains of Califor nia, tbe medicinal nropertlee of wbki are extracted therefrom without Uie UN > of Alcohol. The question is altnoel > daily asked. " What U the cause of tie , unparalleled suceeea of VIJTKOAK BIT -1 TKKsf" Our answer i*, that tiey remove | the cause of disease, and tbe patient re covers bis health. They are tbe {treat blood purifier and a life-giving principle, a perfect Renovator and lnvigorator of 'tie Bjsleui. Never before in tbe htatory f the world Uaa a tßgdida* ixwe eomiHiutidrd pobe*m(f the rtniAtkahl* qilAlltloa Of VISSOAB U ITTEBS la hc*Uog_tb* tick of every dineaee man is heir to. They are a genti* I'urgauve m well as a Tunie, relieving Cunfetum <>r I u&Aiumatioa of the later and Yuceral Organ* ia liilioea Disi sans The properties of Dm. WALK*** VIMBHAB Itmsbk ai* Ajiwnwtu. IftacihoraUa, Carminative, Nurnuuu*. Laxative, Inurßtigy gkriatire, Cuunfer Irritaal gudonfie, AltenF lira, and Anu Uilitiua. H. n. SbOOtSLB * CO.. T'ni|si **4 Git. Agifei Ami 9VsnOMMMi t bbd oar. of WftriuiuiiMi sad Ckarilaa Sto . V. T. BwM by Alt Progg Ul- ud [b uhre. TT m tr-rij'st S2OO $5 I S2O A: DO YOUR OWN PRINTINCt : AM P2DTTIN& P2ZSS. HC'laa „*"* Prafn.naal auk* Aaulaur Frt-l-ra. aMbeelaTWmtolbfU. Mbjk* , |w - s JToSbVSS^iSSS I pw—*riw te L fcladt at Prionng MktkOgL bnrt ateanpftw OBtol-CBal A Pubaa-ul gc. lmiZ *U(RI AfiKNTo W aairt lag Iteaala* KriUm. R OX K. By Mm. J. E CHAMBI-ltot. fe> frum Ma pmamaat : m.p tb-LAST J lit-MB kLS-rimriiHil '; fSsTS?: I Geo- P. Rowtu m Co. I ThM tow Ti— P w*r # 1 wub y n*iai g-mr-fk m X rijydbt *&■& AtSripee Mb. SSI Brwautoay, tt. T. CUy. | ; mdmrn bg—ri Cri —>l IwOririMrilißiif. V- F. BURVMAin W TTMBIN* M* Water Wheel v weS?YISe tiST JIP"3Fy D G . • **4 hm pretei to kw am hkt. |.|s mmm Rtotto. rwtrmm sWHV/ ln*ff thm risa W torn merits. Smd tar my gasrurly etagnsiß* ( tbal bmr bet a pankkkMSUr ecred. I clalJS U hsvw Hiwiari uxt prbdixwd lbs rterr obmual ASB avLT mi eema rom ertew Sartre. PBL e. M. COLUXk, bm Pwrte. I—L m Wa aall as ratal, tbe moif.f.verm - A Turbine Water Wheel. ke MB It w lb# bam Wbml la tba mm - 3 Ink. DoimaorrtJM. r—m . •• NriJri mrg It la a#o- —WW Uawaf Witor aa* IV%ta—mr . baa aa kdj—>l4* Bkap. fcfjff rrvi L-jri Saod fa* Pußanbiat to ATTEYTKW, PWYRIU OP HORJIRH. a a Aak rowr Bara—Maksr far ! tha ilhC COI.I SB PAB. ■URririK*E3 They ate warractcd to car* any *era berk oa barm or m.V T CmMM-M aiaiv.ar atoon rvfaitdad.if m. kMBnoW ' / / prta>ad *Hertiti or* M- Ski CaiHr rw< ObT— StaSfrfTtb. Baeb—m. Mteß SMITH ORGAN CO. ttomtoxk, XkXMdßris. TUrar fttmndmrd Inrtromrmta Sold by Music Dealers Everywhere. Agents Wanted in Every Town. Bald ibroogbom Iba tlattad Statu* oa tba INSTALLMENT FLANk That Is, oa s Byafafti of Mcntbly hi—lt Pun baaar, abould aak for tba BHTTB AIOCKIC** OaSA*. t'suhw and full putlratMi oa spplkriUutL Established ISSS. TIAXIB SUBS. PATDmto. Trie boat sad rhripnt Patat In tba World for Iraa, Tin or IVood. For twig fc T .nsi* r !J PT, * r ' n * b * ra Pmurr® s " mtTAU.IO PAINT CO.. MsoaftYwe. M fWar St.. Now Twt ttrCA-trriOrV.-Punhamrk will plma. that oar nsma and trsda mark are oc esth and tvety psckafa. Sen A for a Clrcalar. IDEAL ESTATE. m r— wMUsg to boy. anil or aacAaags Real Relkt- au advurttaa umtr wute at vary aaaall mpaoaa la aav-rul hudrad M—p-rw— fa Mow Y ark. New Euglao*. Maw Jaraag. Pftnaiyfvmata, eke. Cuts, bjgam mat tree to any midrwae aa uppßantleb to gyrSwfalL IWWkrikHi.. Now Tor b PPII CPC V ' FIT-* cured b) the oaa of RoaV tr ILE.ro I Km n t-tr i:txii>ict. Tni Pack, ow— mmmm CH g '' '* put circuten. ovldanoo of aaocoao, ate . a.ldraa* BOB* RHUS.. tUobmond. In for ram ktototoim. „ C*il iij >t oo*. ar Utr m •r-ftoM Ig Dm—to. l^Hto"rLsZ%°by "mZ,"ilja?*