■T ARDKS JLMI HOUSEHOLD. V . NrtMiiklt ninln. Everything should be fully prepared for cutting grain, before harvest be- Sun, Wheat and rye that is left until eat! ripe, may t>e thrashed aa it ia cut. jt in beet to cut before thin period is reached. Wheu the grain ia firm but Fill soft, so that it can lie pinched in two with the thumbnail, it is iu good order for cutting, and will not shell out. Oata do not ripeu evenly, and may lie cut when the largest portion of the crop in ripe. Cut aa much aa possible when the •low is on, to prevent shelling. Out barley aa nearly ripe as may ba The conditions beihg right, it is safest to ent, bind, and shock grain the name day. If a sudden shower comes op, it ia soon secured. As binding and shocking must be done, no time ia lost iu doing it at once. * '* Corn ami roots must not l>e neglected. KP the ground mellow and free from w t v,k Nothing helps so much as this to ovorooine tho effect* of dry weather. Cultivate no root crois or beans while the soil and plants are wet. (live the Colorado potato beetle n rest, Attend to this matter lief ore break fast every mowing. and if part* green must be nsod, •pruhle it while the dew is on the loaves, , As soon s a green thing appears on a summer fallow, it needs attention. (K> over it with the fiarrow or the cultivator. The anrfaoa should never be allowed to ernst or bake over after a rain, for then the benefits of the air and moiature are lost, tlrowiug weeds tin a fallow to plow under, in the hope of gainiug the greeu manure, may d W one great object of the tallow. Some weeds ripen their seed before their bloseomutp is suspected, and a fresh crop of weeds is thus sown without knowing it. Where s crop of clover has been plowed in. do not dis turb it by rejdowing. Work the soil with tho cultivator or a Share's harrow, or horse-hoe, and mix any fine manure with tho surface soil. Au oat or barley stubble intended for wheat, should be plowed as soon as the crop is off, three or lour inches deep, and this surface re peatedly rolled. harrowed, or cultivated, will prevent Uie under soil from becom ing hard, and will act as a mulch. Then plow immediately before drilling the seed, and it will be easier and better than leaving tne stubbie to bake and harden. Buckwheat may be sown now, and if Use soil is good, a seeding of grass and clover will often make a g>vvl catch. Rongli pieces of ground may thus tie re seeded economically. One bnshel of seed to the acre is ample. Tho gray buckwheat is the best for flour. The variety known as Indian wheat is only suitalile for stock feed, and scarcely fit for that, where better varieties may be grown. Cora may still lie planted for fodder. Rata I suras and yellow Aberdeen turnips should be sown immediately. White turnips may be left until later. Millet or Hungarian grass may be sown now for a cn>p of hay. Sorghum thickly sown in drills tw o feet apart makes valu able Raider to use green, bnt it is hard to cure. Two hundred pounds of guano or blood manure per acre will euatile lab- fodder crops to push rapidly.—Ag riculturist. llrdlral ItlnU. KNOCK KNEES. A correspondent's advice and testimony are as follows: I commenced the practice of placing a small book between my knees, and tying a handkerchief tight around my ankles. This I did two or three times a day, in creasing the sulnstance at every fresh trial, until I could hold a brick with ease breadthway. When I first commenced this practice I was as badly knock-kneed as possible; but now 1 am as straight as anyone. I likewise made it the practice of "lying an cay hack in bed, with my legs" crossed and my knees fixed tightly together. This, I believe, did me a great deal of good. NETTLE Rasa.—This complaint gen erally arises from the use of certain arti cles of food, such as shellfish, fruit, etc. In some persons, these produce, after a few hours, feelings of tingling of the skin; and then itching, and then horning. Soon after the itching has commenced, wheals appear on the skin; these are of a white color, and the skin around them, is very red; the face is swelled, the erjrae closed, and often with all this there is a feeling of nausea, and -weight a* the pit of the stomach. The best treatmAit is to dislodge the offend ing matter by an emetic of ipecacuanha < eighteen grains, or one scruple of the pAwder for an adolt), and afterward a brisk aperient should be taken. The warm batb often gives much relief. Dnxxracrrae LIQUID. —The following is a snbetitue for chloride of lime, which lias the effect of being soon exhausted: Take two tablespoonfuls of kitchen salt (chloride of sodium), two tablespoonfula of red lead (deutoxide of lead), a large winegLissful of common sulphuric acid and water. Introduce the solid sab stances into a bottle with some water, then add the sulphuric acid gradually, gently shaking the bottle at intervals. A portion of the sulphuric acid com bines with the red lead, forming a sul phate, which is precipitated, another portion attacks the sodium of the salt, and sets the chlorine at liberty, which is at onoe dissolved in the water. In order to use the latter, pour it into a saucer offering a efficiently large surface for the evaporation; the' chlorine will then be gradually evolved, and disinfect the apartment. Fara Notes mad Hlats. Granges are being instituted in New Brunswick, and the Colonial Farmer *aj3 that within a short time every county will have its organizations scat tered here and there throughout them. Eighty-two counties in Virginia have granges in them. The treatment feu- chronic rheumatism in horses consists in not exposing the animal to draughts of oold air after driving or working him hard and when he is perspiring. When the soles of the feet do not drop down, as they some times do, his life will not be materially shortened, and he will be almost as use ful on a farm as if the accident had not happened to him. Some agricultural societies ore offering premiums for tbo beet walking horses. This is good for a beginning, but the time must com* when the premium is s feature of each fsir. Walking—not run ning or trotting—is the farm gait, and a horse that will walk four miles on boor •will do twice the work of one that crawls two, withqnk costing any more for his keeping. A correspondent of the Indiana Farmer is satisfied that the producing cause of chinch bugs was the introduc tion of Hungarian grass. Select a light, dryish soil for the peach; a strong, loamy noil for the pear; nearly the same for the plum; heavy loam for the apple—if on limestone, all the lietter; and for the cherry a soil similar to that of the peach. Fruit frwm Barren Trees. I wish to describe to you a method of making fruit trees bear that I blun dered on. Som fifteen years ago I liad a small apple tree that leaned consider ably. I drove a stake by it, tied a string to a limb and fastened it to the stake. The nest year that limb blossom ed fall and not another blossom appear ed en the tree, and, as Tim Banker said, "it sot me a thinking," and I came to the conclusion that the string was so tight that it prevented the sap returning to the roots, consequently it formed fruit buds. Having a couple of pear trees that ware large enough to bear, but never blossomed, I took a coarse twine and wound it several times around the tree above the lower limbs, and tied it as tight as I could. The next spring all the top above the cord blossomed as -white as a sheet, and there was not one blossom below where the oord was tied. A neighbor, seeing my trees loaded with pears, used this -method with the some result. I have since tried the experi ment on several trees, almost with the same result. I think it a much lietter way than cutting off the roots. In early summer,say J use or July, wind a strong twine several times around the tree, or a single limb, and tie it, the tighter the better, ami yon will be plowed with UM result; the nut winter or spring the eord may be taken off. Tbe Csbhaa* Wane. We triel, last year, a unniber of reme dioa for the oablvige worm, an insect tH> well known to many persons aa a vora cious ester of the pulp of the leaf. The sprinkling of red popiwr did well; but the boat, simplest, eheajwat and moat efficient was applying hot water. It may be wrongly applied, to the injury nud destruction of the |4ant; aud it may be properly applied, doing no injury, and killing the insects. Fill s watering pot with I toiling aster, and sprinkle the in feated leaves only for s tay\nd or 4 wo. It does its work ijuicily on the worms; but tlie leaves being thick are not heated nor injured. The older the heads lie dime, the Ices the danger. The operator must practice and spoil a few plants to save the rest. The water, by the time it reaches the plauta, will be several de grees lielow boiling; he must determine by trying how long the hot water will do its work ere becoming too cold. At the same time he must ascertain by ex periment how long he dui contrive to apply the hot water before the leaves are injured by it; a very little time will determine those points.—(Yxmfry (Jctt (lanm. Death on the llcarh. Poring the holiday season a aid dm aster took place at* Hockaway, L. I. Visitors to the I teach were numbered by thousands, and many were enjoying a bath in the ocean. Suddenly a woman's shriek rent the air, and a lady was heard to exclaim: " For (hat's sake, John, save Lena!" This agonising a>-ream spread consternation among the lather*, who, almost jiarulyied with far, all began to make for the shore, not knowing what else to do. As if by instinct, the lather* cast their cyoa seaward and beheld there a female form struggling hard with the waves. It was Lena licit 1. One luuid was raised out of tho water over her head, and her piercing apjxwl, " Save me! have me !" was heard above the noise of the breakers that thundered along the beach. Several brave rneu faced toward the spot where the girl was yet struggling against the cruel waves for hsr young life. John Gummier, ahead of the others, made toward her with strong strokes, and for a moment it seemed that she might yet be rescued. When the swimmer had got within three or four yards of the girl she sank beneath the surface and was lost to sight. GOBH mer swum for a few moments aticut the olacc where she had disappeared and then turned toward the shore. Other men, who were also going to the rescue, seeing that all hope was abandoned, returned. Goaamer, who must have been exhausted from his efforts, now cried for a rope. This was the first sign given fo 1 his being iu any difficulty. No rope could be had at the moment, and William I Good lull gallantly weut to the assistance of the exhausted swimmer. Hundreds | of aching and tearful eyes watched both men with intense anxiety. As soon as they touched each oilier it seemed as if a desperate straggle for life commenced between them. One inomeut they were on the water, another under it; at one instant both beads were seen above tho breakers, and at another arm- and legs were discerned in violent motion, until | some huge billow would for a few seconds ! bury them under its briny crest. It was I now perceived that tho two brave meu who had tried so hard to save human life were themselves about to meet a wat- ry grave. William Lloyd crossed the :"life lines" and swum toward tin drowning man. He had not got well started on his mission of mercy ere both Goaamer and Goodhill went down to gether. The sight of their sad fate most have made a strong impression on Lloyd's mind, for he immediately (through fear, it is conjectured! cried out for a rope, aud sank himself. With the help of a rope in the iiands of au expert swimmer, Lloyd was reachtxl, clutched by the hair of the head and ilragg.d ashore in an unconscious condition; but his life was saved. The Ice-Flolds of the Atlantic. The sinking of the steamer Vieksburg in the ioe, one hdhdred and twenty miles from tbaooast of Newfoundland, and the attendant loss of life, brings vividly be fore our minds a peril of the sua which is often lost sight of or Yery much un derestimated. The narrow escape of the steamer State of Nevada from ship wreck, through collision with an iceberg in mid-ocean, deepens our present sense of this peril. Very few persons, unless their attention has been specially direct ed to the subject, have an adequate idea of the immense quantities of ice which at certain seasons encumber the north Atlantic. From the frnxeu seas of the Arctic regions ; from Baffin's bay and from Hudson bay ; from the glaciers of Greenland anil the wild coasts of Lab rador, comes bergs and fields of ice, floating out into the broad ocean, where, driven together by furious wimlß, they form bodies of vast extent, covering the sea for hundreds of miles. These bodies are continually breaking np and reform ing with the Tarying winds and currents, but they sometimes preserve identity and are recognised by menus of iceberg* of exceptional size or peculiar form which accompany them, and their pro gress can thus be observed from time to time sa they drift southward in the spring. As we have asid, they are of great size. An exploring vessel was once carried a thousand miles out of her course by an ioe-field covering three hundred thousand square miles. Even on the coast of Labrador the fields are hundreds of miles in extent, but the floes are so broken up by wind and wave that the frozen pavement of the ocean heaves and rolls with the ground swell underneath, the icebergs towering mo tiouless above the surface of the mass. Wanted, a Minister. A newspaper in Milwaukee, Wis., pub lished the following among its advertise ments the other day : WAXTTD —A rSctor for St. Junes' Parish. Wilwaukee, Wis. He most possess all the christian graces and a few worldly ones ; mast bars such tact ai d disposition as will suable him to aide with all pat ties in the parish oil all points, siring offense to none ; should possess a will of his own. hot arre* wilh all the vestry; most be socially inclined and of dignified man ners : affable to alt neither running after the wealthy nor turning his back upon the poor ; a man -if high-low church tendencies preferred must be willing to preach finl-dami sermons and do first-clues work at second-class compen sations: salary should not tie too much of an object ae the desire to he a real one laborer in the vineyard : should be able to conrmoe all that they aro miserable sinners without giving offence ; each sermon must lie short and com plete in itself—fail of old-fashioned theology in modern dreee-deep, but popular, and free from the eloquence peculiar to newly graduated theologians : should be young enough to tie en thinner tic, but poeeea* the Judgment of one of rij e years and experience. Ho only who prissei'ses the above qualifications need apply. To such a one will be given steady employment for a term of years. For further informattou apply to any member of ths congregation. A (*ood Time to Do It. There could not be a bettor time than the present for yonng folks to fix in their rninda the imjiortaiit dates and de tails of our country's history. Schools might wt 11 throw aside for a while the regular histories of the United States, and arrange a popular series ol lessous based on the centennials that will occur all along during the coming eight or ten yea. i. The natural interest awakened in t< i young mind to obtain a clear and connt. ted idea of an event whose hun dredth anniversary is aliont lieing cele brated should be unproved by teacher*. It would be worth more than all the didactic precept ever ottered to pupils about the importance of studying his tory. The occurrence of these centen nials gives a reality to pest events which the me**> reoord of them does not, and thus the facts are impressed upon the young. BURIED ALIVE.—A painful story is afloat to the effect that the opening of the vault used for the reception of bodies during the winter, in a cemetery in Quebec, has disclosed a case of pre mature interment. The unfortunate gentleman was well known, and was sup posed to have died suddenly. The cigar shop of the Connecticut State prison has turned out half a mil lion cigars since last October. They sell them at sls to sl6 per thousand. THE LOCUST IS IIISTOHY. An Istereatlaa Arrnnl nfiUn •nil tin Firm tpprnrnnr* In Amrrlrn. Olia*. R. assistant entomolo gist in th United Htat department of agriculture, gives tlu> Now York Jicmtti the following interesting account of the locust, Ho nay*: If w go laiek to history for the tinot mvvmnts of limnst plagues wo must go '°k 1° Rible times. iui.l, iudoed, it wus proliably an old ! story then, for tho accounts of the terri ! bio ravages of these devouring armies in tho page* of Holy Writ aro an trno |>ivtnnM the scenes of tho last fow weeks in our own country a* Uioy doubtless woro of tho torrtblo scourge in Kgypt. Thoir devastations aro recorded iu tho hintorv of many nations, from ltiblo times down to llio present, and tho numtmrhHui ao count* of thoir diroful presence in ! many parts of Asia, Africa and Hoiitberu Kuropo aro only too woll authenticated in fact, tho liwtorv of thoir ravages in tho old world in fulf and complete. Wo liavo bean speaking of these untoota merely an " locusts, ' without going in to detail. Tho l>cust of tho old world, howovor, differ* vorv muoh from tlioao wo aro considering, though tho general uatural history in tin- same. Tho locust of Scripturo in probably tho „4t-rMfut ptHjfhnum, an thin insect nut iu Asia and Africa, though in Gwopt tlio dovant iug or migratory species in (A'di/xxfo imymtoria. The onrlimt nwrd of locust injuries iu Amoricn i given by Mr. lliloy an atniut tho year 1632, when thoy visited Guatemala. Tho Jesuit missionaries of (.'aliform* have also loft rooordn of vim tatious iu tliat State for numbers of yoani lielwecu 1722 and 1765 ; and in tho present century tlioy aro reported in tho natuo State iu ISiiT, 1828, 1834, 1838, 1846 and 1553, though iu all protuihility tho insect iu this instance is a different specie* from tho one operating oast of the Rooky mountaina. Tho history of the Red rivor settlements, according to Mr. J. W. Taylor, presents a similar proportion of years of suiYoring and ex emption, tho locusts having uppeared iu 1818 aiul 1818, thou a long iutervnl to 1837 and 1858, then to lM">4 and 1865, 1867 to 1870, aud 1871 to 1873—the last seven yours' having been jwculiarly un fortunate. Iu Minnesota, since its set tlement. the yours 1858-57, 1884, 1873 and 1874-75, are marked grasshopper yours. It is probable that all these early swarms were more or less destruc tive in Kansas and tho northwest coun try at tho same time. They ap|>oared iu Texas in 1843 and 1843, and Mr. Tay lor, iu an article on tho subject in one of tho Smithsonian reports, names the year 1855 as a general grasshopper venr over tho whole Western continent, including parts of Mexico and Central America. The years 18t'>8 and 1887 ware marked locust yean in Kansas, Nebraska aud adjacent territory; in 1887 they wore also very destructive in Utah. Mr. Walsh, who studied up the grasshopper invasion of 1867, shows conclusively that after the departure of the grasshop per* that hail hatched from eggs de posited tho previous year a fresh host of invaders descended upon the fertile plains of the Mississippi from tho Rocky mouutains, and at precisely tho saiuo period of the year us in the preceding one. The dates given aro August 25 to to September 30, while the swarms hatched from eggs laid tho year In-fore matured and took wing at least forty two days earlier From 1869, 1870 ami 1872 and 1873 they again appeared, though the next locust rear of importance was last season, when, as your readers are well aware, hundreds of homes were made desolate, farms were laid waste, and famine al most ensued ; and had not the wide spread calamity proved a national one and the symputhie* of the jKH>]le Ixx-n enlisted, untold suffering anil death would have been the oonaeqnence. The ihunage inflicted upon Colorado, Ne braska, Kansas and portions of Wyom ing, Dakota, Miniiesta, lowa, Missouri and a few other Stahw and Territories liaslieeu estimated at nearly $50,090, • 000 for that season, when there was a fresh invasion from the Rocky moun tains in addition to the hosts already present from the eggs laid in 1873. In 1875 they again appear over the same territory, the eggs deposited in 1874 hatched out by the million, not withstanding tlie cold winter, which seemed to encroach far into spring, and nutil the present time they have l>oen ravaging the country pretty much in the same manner as last year, though it has been hoped that early migration would vet give time for replanting and for bountiful crops. A Tramp's Death. The following associated press dispatch was published: " A train or to organize in co-operative associa tions both distributive and productive, and the government should aid and encoura e all such efforts. That no charters should be granted except on the principle of dividing the sarplna, after paying expenses and Interest on the capital in vested, among all the employees in proportion to their earnings. The retracing of the eteje looking to forced specie payments and the substitution of a full legal-tender paper cnrrency, making the rate of intereat the ineaenre of iln value. Demanding the punishment of corrnptioniele and smugglers in high pooitioue, and appeal ing to President Grant to cut loose from the raoncy-chaiigere who have of late controlled his actions. The Inebriate Aaylnnt. The laat annual report of the Franklin Reformatory Home for Inebriate*, of I'hiWlelpliia, an inatitution of miMleet preU'iimona which haa had decided auo ts*nn in the work for which it i" designed, 1 >r. Harris, the attending iihyniiuau, ex imwa some viown in relation to ine briate asylum" which are worth iittcu tioti. In the Franklin Home the theory that drunkenness ia a disease llnd" no favor; intemperance ia liMiketl upou an a Ntn, a morn! evil to IH> met with moral nieana alter the applicant hy melical treatment haa l>eteranoe. He attriliutea the dif- Acuities of the asylum ayatem to the fact that the iuiuatea have 110 business to occupy theiu; that many of them have no sincere dtwiiv for reformation; and to tlie demoralising tendency of their aaao ciatioli together, their claaaithntiou be ing lutsed ruther upon ms'ial ground* than the ddgree of anxiety or indiffer ence they mauifoat upon the question of reformation. A powerful iufluence ia exerted upon tho inmates of the Franklin Home by the visits of reformed *ine briatea who have lteen reclaimed there, ami who regularly devote a part of their time to the encouragement of those who are endeavoring to follow their example. Ihmtig the tlitee year* that the institu tion liaa been iu operation, of 371 l appli canta who have been admitted, lfto are reported aa reformed, forty-live as benm tlted, and 13t) as " doubtful." The average time tliat the inebriates had been in the haiiit of drinking to eioeaa was six yearn and seven months. Repre sentatives of 113 different occupations, among tliem clergymen, physicians ami merchant*. have availed themselves of the opportunities afforded by the home for the work of self-reformat ion, under the favorable influences afforded there. The Story of a Wreck. I Lu those itays of wrecked steamship*, this curious alary connected with the loss of tho Ceatnl Ammriet, which foundered at sea Oil tho coast of i Ueorgia, in August, 1867, with six huudred |>oat*ugout liia vessel, gradually lowering, until the bird wu* as it were aiming at him. He jerked out a I veiny lug pin, at nick at the bird, missed it, when the hawk again rose high in tho air : and a tieooßd time began to deaceud, contract hia circle, and make at him again. The second time ho hit the bird, and struck it to the deck. This strange fact made him uneasy, and ho thought it betokened danger; ho wont to the binnacle, saw the course he was steering, and, without any particular reason, ho ordered tho steersman to alter the course oue p tint to the east. " After this it became quite dark, and he contiuuod to promenade the deck, and haee(steak right, need not worry about her future. A lXxaitrr nf Sea. Aliont eleven o'clot-k at night a fear ful accident occurred in Hampton Roads, caused bv the collision between the steamer fwuic 8011, of the Old Domin ion line, and the tug Lumberman, by which ten men lost their live*. 'fhe Lumliermati, witli a private fxcuraioti party, was returning from Old Point, after the fireworks, and when about a mile this side of Vue do Lean was ruu into by the Bell and stink iustautly. From the survivors we leant that tip to a moment or NO before the collision there was not the slightest idea thnt tho 1 Hints would collide. The Bell was seen coming down the harbor and her move ments watched. Whistles were blown, but, as before stated, her proximity was not noticed until a moment or so pre viously, when in an iustant the Lumtter mon was crushed like an egg shell. The first cry of warning was front n passenger who cried ont to Captain Brown that the Isaac Bell would be down upon them, and in n flash the collision oc curred. The steamer Isaac Bell im mediately stopped and put out her boats to the rttseu" and succeeded in picking up many of the passengers. Trouble Ahead. "See that fat man, don't yon Jack f' queried a bootblack at the post-office; " well, he's laying up heaps of trouble. When you see a mau named Johnson, for instance, living around to the gener al delivery window and getting little Sink envelopes directed to 'De Forest' e's standing on the verge of the grave. The first thing he knows, his wife 'ill come down here and get hold of one of those purty little letters, and then she'll untie her bonnet strings aud mop her husband all over these flags, aud the public 'll get np'n 'rah for her side I" And Jack began to ponder. THE FLOORS I* FRANCE. A ftad fttery ef Deeelallea, Deewetr sad Prtlk. 'Hi* news from Franc* ia very aad. The dispatches which have come to na from 1 aria, Totilooae, Rortloatix, by cable from time to time, have pre|nreil lis for this diaiual narrative. Hut when we read tlie detail" "f the calamity wo we tliat not one half lIOH beau told. The mialurtiuie of col and tine like thia ia thut tlicy cau le< attrihutcd to DO niihap of adminiHtrution, no diaregard of plain and necessary iliiUea, no overaipht or negWt. It" ia not like a jiestileuce. That iwuiicH elowlv, aud w may eeeajio from its doaillv blight. It 1* not like a famine. That we can forcer*-, and the eiib rprine ami humanity f favored no tioii" can generally uv-rt or alleviate its influence. It i uot like war; for war, with it trials, more terrible, we regfet b> "ay. than any other visitation, ho* its coui|"'U"atioua iu the patriotic feeling which "hiink" from nooooriflco,however exacting devaetation, rapine, even death itself—when in behalf of father land. Thia diHiwter tame like a thuii dertmlt, in a night, without warning and without remedy, awoapiug all before it in its deaolating away. In the tine old words of tlie taw Ik"">ka, it tan only t>e called "the vi"itatioli of Ood." No part of France is more Intereating t< the etudeut and the traveler than tho valley of the (Inronue. Its history goea back to the time when the lloiuan arms were a weeping over the Oonliofllt ainl bringing tlie ancient tlomiuiouii of Haul within the limit" of the gigantic empire. It vnut here tluit thv Viaigotlia made a desperate effort to found their rude and (Miwerful dvuaatiea. Themi plain" are memorable from imuiy campaign*—from thooe of Charlemagne, wheti tfp founded biff empire, to tho<> of NaMflktm, who fought hi" lost battle for fne d<>uiiui<>n of Europe l>eforw lie waa driven to Elba. It luut a "o*l and proud memory to all who rememl>er tlie "truggh-a of tho Al bigciimMi" for religions frsadom—un availing struggle" against the supreme and widely reaching power of ltomc. Iu thia country the tieautiful language of Oe ia spoken tho language of romauoe and hraotis were deprived of means of subsistence. Oue ipiarter of that city contained two hundred ami fif teen bodies of drowned cilueiis, " ami tliis is but a fractional jmrt of the death roll," many people )>erishiug in the horns* which were swept away. In ad dition to the rains there wms the mi It ing of the snows on the Pyrenees and the C Vrvi'iiue*. IJUUI* were overflowed, fields deluged, towns and suburtvs flood - ed. It comes in the time of harvest, and after a harvest of unusual richness and premise. " The com. the wine and the oil," says one writer, " the fair x --| van si* of the finest wheat, the cluster ing and the trellised vim*, the olive and tho mulberry trees, are tho victims of the southern rivers' riotous outbursts when the volume of water became uu controllable, while the Ivanks were orer leapi-d by the impatient torrent." France has seen no such flood for twi-uty year*, when the valley of the Seine suffered from a similar calamity and the Kinpe rer Napoleon went into the country to remedy the distress. At that time the einjKTor, who was new to his throne and anxious to win some sorer title to popu lar favor than even a Hussian war, went among tho people —at a great personal sacrifice ami uot without danger—and distributed relief. It was a timely and grateful net, enhancing his popularity ami remembered to his honor and ad vantage long alter more noisy achieve meuts were forgotten. What Napoleon as erajwror did Mar- Malion an president is doing now. In a govern nieut as jiateriial an France, where tin' jieoplo, no mnttor Un-tr sir.s, look to Paris for aid anl direction, the direct ]n r*"iwil intxmotion of the chief of Ike state ia always welcomed. ho wo hsve liad the president promptly hurrying to the scene of tin' disaxt-r and stirring U> give succor. Tb" assembly at onco of fered n contribution to thr> aid of the wrrtchod anil unfortunate j iconic. Other countries have passed in their contributions. England, always ready and (rneraoi in welldoing, has given large minis of raouev. The aaino way lie aaid of Belgium, Holland and warm hearted little Switxerlan 1, In the proa ence of aorrow and distress HO vaat aud widespread nationalities are forgotten, race and politic* are forgotten, and we have the brotherhood of humanity, which in only ft step toward that complete brotherhood which we trust some day to we all over Europe. While we tnonrn with France over her miafortnnea we rejoice with her over the armjiathy and kindness they have evoked. This is due to France. Whatever the faults of the people they have never looked on in ailenoe or njiathy when the cry of distress waa heard. We regret that the benevo lence of America doea not apitear in this noble record. The Americana are a generous |aople, and Mpechlly ao to France. Now ia the time to make this appear. We trust tliat onr people will seize the unhappy opportunity and ont of that abundant and (lowing chanty, nlwaytt a plory to the American name, acini n Hubseriptiou to the (Jannine, testifying our sympathy with this un toward liianJ-ter and our desire to show the highest and most practical illustra tion of a friendship which, wheuever invoked by s, hna never failed to lw reaponded to by France.—Arte York Hrrald. The Haby'* IXttinn. A ffirl apparently ahtint two wtwks old, whs left upon tho porch of tho honao of a (fontlcmaD in Lena, N. Y. Accompanying tho child wiut tho follow ing notn: la thoro room for mo f I havo oomo to tho dtsir of this house flint tho Ixortl hath hloMsod in liojNwt of finding it o|M'ii. My little wings aro weary, seeking the crevices in the lnountaiim, and forsaken by my father and mother, 1 atu a little wanderer, n tiny baby girl, and like tho dear Joans, " no place to lay my head." 80, "aa not n sparrow falls to the ground without the Father's notice," I navel*en directed here. Take me,love nio, {•retort me, and hoar fho Gentle Shep it rd: " Hungry and ye fed me, thirsty and yo gave mo drink, nnko ! and yo clothed me, a strangor and yo took uio in." " Inasmuch as yo have done it unto fho least of those, yo have done it unto me." Then, <> turn me not away, but let tno nestle close to your bosom, aud when covered br your love I shall ceaao to bo nobody's child. You can keep mo; my parents cannot. Parentage respectable, healthy, aud not low in nmral character. The child was well dressed, and with it was a goiHl snpply of infant's clothing. The child haa been adopted bv the family, who are well pleased with tho unexpected present. A bong Suit. A lawsuit in progress in Kentucky was begun in 1815, the matter at issue being the title to a tract of 10,000 acres of land. The original plaintiff was Joseph lilackwell, and the defendants were ninety- nine in number. The plaintiff died thirty years ago. and now it is be- , licved that not one of the original par ties or of the attorneys originally era- ! ployed survives. The suit descends j from father to son as much as a prized family possession. Ml XMAItY OF NEWK. llama al I sir ram tram llama aad llraat Tha Mltmoaota Hlata Democratic OonveuUoo nominated I>. t.. lluoll for governor. Tha platforui o|i|sjwaa all attempts to limit the free. I ilom of tlio piaaa 1 a raturo to gold and silver sa the baaia af the currancy of tha country, with ||>stsUi>u slid effootive mosauraa to I iwwMire Ilia loanuipllon of specie |>symauta , ' (an IT for raveuuaouly oouslaleul with an hou aat sduilulalralton, uo government partnorslilp with pn>Uteul mouo|Hilioa , txjual and atact Justice to all man , uo partial logialaUoo j uo partial taxation , frea and uniform excise law*; no sumptuary lawa Tha Wlaounain lU>- puhlleau Hta to Convention nominated Mayor llarriaou l.udingtou, of Mtlwaiikaa, for gov enior. The platform adopted approvaa tha laUar of President (Irani discouraging tha oonUiiuanoe in uftli-a of any Chief M agist rata , of lite uatlou for a longer panud then two tonus 1 favors the gradual resumption of epecie peyiuriila by cuuUuuoua alopa 111 thatdlreoUuu, iu such a manuei as to dlatiuh Ilia Imam owe Intelssts of the country as lulls as pumlble , and favoia a tariff for revenue uuly, so adjusted ss to be the Iseat lnuiloiwaw and the must f ami able to th internals of labor and indus try .... Mr. (iildaralesve, of the American rifle loam, won Ilia cup offsred by the mayor of lielfael, which waa shot fur al that place el one thousand yards. When ail the contestants I I hail had their Ave shots, it was found that Oil -1 demloeve, of the American (earn, and bee, of the li i*h, buli- counted miieleep out of k (MJMI- Us twenty. They each then filed three shots to decide the mailer, hut again tiod. Once inure they tried wbeu tiildarsleeve noun ted twelve to his opponent's ten. The rnthusiasui was great. The members of Plymouth Church, at a meeting held fur the purine*, voted unanimously that Mr. lieeeber a salary for the year le7ft should he #IOO,OOO. Ilia regular salary being fJO.OUO, lite church lakee this center to allow him #OO,OOO toward the ex peniM-e of hie late trial Italy dot hues to take {tart lu our couUtunial exhibition uo ac couul of the expeuse .. boader and Price, the alleged per jurere In the iieecher case, had a preliminary examination, and were committed to aw ail the actios of the grand Jury. Uov. lis burn, of hsiiaaa, has forwarded to tlie Pre-idem a strong remoustrauce against the settlement of the Hioux and other boeule Indians ui the Indian Territory, adjacent to Kansas. The steamer Puyang. from Hong Kong to Macoa, ('Ulna, was loot with over oue hundred •onla on Uiard .... Ttiotna* Malune, employed Ui a year l factory at HitaevJle, Isaig Island, wluie aUrnng a large tauk of boiling yeaet, lorl hie balance and fell in. lie waa boiled to death the akin being completely • tripped from hi* body.... George brown, the tiotod oars man. died at Halifax, N. H., at the ege of tillrtjr-en years.... Capt. gueeu, of the United hiaiee steamer Haranac, recently loat uear Vancouver's Island, haa made an official report, IU which he elatee that the vernal waa caught m a whirlpool which prevented her minding the rudder, and in Una condition ehe was thrown bodily on the aunken r0ck..,.. The Erie railway company a ewt against (Vvmmodore Vanderbilt to recover ucuiy ♦1,000,000, al leged to have been fraudulently obtained by huu from the company. was decided lately on appeal in favor of the cumjiany .... General Frank P. lilair died suddenly in Kt. Lottie. He bad lew very low for many month a, but undrr the treatment of blood infusing waa gradually gaming, and bad already ridden out a number of limes, even walking down stairs the day of hia death...,. The famihee of the Indian prisoners at Kt. Augustine are to be eeut them. Tlx- bravery of an rxprer* miwnngnr tu all lliat jirwvciitod a heavy robbery an Ui# Vait itaha road, a abort itiaiance from Casy, 1 lu nula. Two men Rot on tho engiue while 11 waa •lopping fur water and after killing (tie en gineer alerted the machinery. Meanwhile other# of the band had uncoupled the A llama etpim* car, ao that the tnoviug tiaia under chatge uf the robbers emn*u-tl of the eugtne. tender and ei|saea car, leaving the balance of the train atan-iuig eliU. After proceeding two mile* the engine *a* stepped and the robber* demanded ad mutative of the cxpreae meeaen ger. but aa hi* ear waa strong and without windows be refused to surrender, and offered to aheot any one who broke into hie car. The robbers were unaacMwaful in their effort* to •eeurs an entrance and had to content them •elves by Ortiig many ehot* thiongh the car in hopes of tutting the messenger. A eouo a* lhe conductor and train employee# di*oo\cred the engine and car gone they organised a force and followed on, but the robbers bad gone without securing anything .... Mark ilrown wae hanged at MonliceUo, N. Y,. for the mur der of Hy breaker Cart at Purrte in October la*:. He wae intoxicated at the time of the murder. The American ride team having decided to engage in bot one loam match during their visit, have declined to shoot against a packed team of Kngliah ndemen. They will enter Wimbledon for the Albert cup aud othar places ojHsn to all comers The Hraxihan naval surgeon who volunteered and helped u> take care of the persona sick with yellow fever on 1-oard the Untied State* ateamer Lancaster, after the two regular alup surgeon* had |>eriah ed of the fever, accompanied the vessel to Una country and was thanked by our government for hia action. The government also aaked Inm to visit our principal alias and wa'.anng placea aud detailed an officer to accompany kin. Edward Kelly, a bridge watchmen, bis wife and child, was run over at Otsego. N Y.. by a railroad train. Kelly and Uia wrtfe were killed, but the child eeoqied.... The insurrection In Hxrzegotma eateisie along the lslmlisri border. It is much more serious thsn the usual disturbances in that <|uarter. The popu lace have attacked the Turkish authorities In the frontier towns, and in many places the Austrian flag lias been raised The Atlantic cotton nulls of Lawrence, Uus.. which em ploye 1,350 operativea, shut down on s late Saturday for eight weeks. Tht •napenataa may he for a longer ume If the present stock of good* is not marketed... The Salmon Kalis Manufacturing Company in Salmon Falls, N. 11.. have closed their null No. X for two month*. Mrs. Nortori* has presentl Prevalent Grant with s grandaoo Gen. Frank Blair's funcrsl was attended by Gen. Shetmxti and staff. Gen. Blair's old tvgimeut, and many distinguished men During a dispute Ix twcen John Van Voortaud a sixteoo ysar-nld toy named J> hn Barrett, in Loisl urg N. J.. Barrett struck Vui Voort on the hack of tho head with a ball club, killing him. The on hnnilred and twelfth anniversary of the battle of the Boyne was generally cele brated by the Orangemen throughout the conn try by indulging in picnice. The only disturb ance reported was at I-awrenco, Mass., where a parly of a dozen Orangemen with their ladies were assaulted by a ni< b of several hundred and manv stones thrown at thero. The little party sought the protection of the police, and under charge of the mayor and a sqnvl of off. cent started for their homes. The mob, much augmented, again attacked them aitb bricks, stones and other missiles, until every one of the party excepting the iusyr were injured. Finally, as tho mob made another onslaught with the enr of •• Kill the Orangemen," the latter drew their pistols and final into the crowd, which quickly dispersed them. The riot lasted for an hour and a half, and resulted in the wounding of two men, ono woman, and a boy on Uie part of the mob. and tvrslv* Oraugenien and four poheemen more or leea sertoualy injured by bricks A terrible crime committed In March last has Just come to light near Raleigh, N. Scott I'artin. a while tuan. cut his wife's throat, then cut her head off, unjoinled her at every joint, cut the flesh off her bones, aud attempted to burn hr body up. tmt did not succeed. Then lie mur dered In* little boy, a child eight mouth* ok), and buried the two bodice in a mars) Doer* *rc sg*iu at woik at the sunken ftuhiller, and it is thought they w 1! recover the treasure A bold robl ery wae perpetrated lu Now Voik in broad dsy light. At ten o'clock in tho morning three nun called at the botie of a Mrs. Darner, in Eleventh street, and ou Mi*. Dancer (who was the only person in the houe) answering the ring, tlu-y Informed her that Uiey were sent by the water company to examine the pipes. Who resdilr admitted them, but wheu the door was closed foiiud herself suddenly seized from behiud, gagged aud shackled. Tho thieves then admitted two or three confederates, and the party, after vainly endeavoring to make Mr*. Denser tell where her husband kept his bonds, com menced a close investigation of the entire house, broaking open closets and drawers, tuning everything over, and even ripping up the r*qU wd upholstery. They finally left, takl ng with tbern #40,000 In Virginia bond*. Prof. Marwh, of Yale Oollege, who mad* a trip to (ha Indian country la the tnlcraaia of acterion. baa addraaaad a latter to Praaidant (Irani In relalinu to frauda which came under his ayea at I tod Cloud's agaiuy, and which ha promised JUd (", nd to call the attention of lha Preatdent to. lia elates that the agent la wholly unfit for hta poet Lion and guilty of gruae frauda ; that all the food la of rary poor •|uaUty, lu oouse<|ueneo of which the 1 tali so* •ulfarw! much..... Oen. Crook, la command at lha BUci Hills, has received lo atrueUuns from the War department to cxw nuuo to keep jwKipla from gotug to the black llllla. at least tutUl tha result of tba labor of lha com mission to treat with tha Indiana la known .... Mi-eer*. Moody and Hankoy wora touderod a farowoll hy lha rlorgy of l/uodon, at wluoh oua hundred and eighty-eight Cplaoo pal clergymon wora present, fw exceeding any other denomination. Tha gautiaoMtt daoUnad any rouuuoradan from lha ruoi rnlG.ee Thau meetings during the past four mouths have been Iu ('amberwell, sixty meeting 11, attended by 4X0.000 per eons, in Victoria, forty-five meetings, attended by 40.000 persaas , tu the o|N-rs house sixty meetings, attended by 590,- 000 |.ersoiis ; in How, sixty meeUngs attended by 600.000 persons, and in Agricultural hall, sixty meetings, attended by 730,(100 persona. .... Tbs roes of tha frashtnau ti at Mara tK> was una of the finest V|iallc oooteete ever recorded. Tlie four ereere Uarvod, Urovn, l'riic*tuu aud Coraall -got away to*ether at the word, aud at the half mile flag they were out half a Ut length between euy of Iheee, with Corueli leeditig , at the mile flag Harvard had a slight lead, which aha also held at tha mile aud a half flag 1 as they uaarad the two aula flag Harvard spurted aud led by half a boat, with Urowu, Princeton aud Cornell in order close behind. Ou the last mile hi owe oaugut a " crab " aud lost bar poaitiou as se cond. which wa* ."~ ]n lb* bn<| walk* of Uftfon will ftsd ass and womsw who ars *uft*Hn fmto iir*pr*U. Urov rosipUlnt. bond *eh*. rortlfo. dotolltr ol ISo narrow* psm. snsMlpo- U.. cldltj. dspond*sr. and maar othot nulodto* oonand from an bnpniw *Uto of Uw blood. This M*U of thtogsvued not •.!- DM. I.tHMUG W HOOT AND 111-Mil aid Ititur* • II fff • nf Bid M 4 l| U ltwt.t. (SRO tt ftOODWIJf A tx>. Bo#rew. Wh..iMnU A*ou The Marketa. Www toll. Hoof twt'ln—Prtwi* V> Extra PiUionks .lis* .IS'* (Vnumon to Oood Tsxans 0: N -II Milch Oows **•< Bogs—l-1 .* tlrowod JW'.ta .0 M liamtw .1' • -1® CotU—Middling lift# •. Fiotir—Kitr* W**l*rn....... ...... *So B t.HX NUio Kxtrw I.Ji id S.*S VThMI-Hod Wsstorn 1.8 d 1.1 No. 9 Spring I ttild 1.1 Rys—fHsto I" < b' barley—Stito I f si l.*J< lUrloy Vail l.tiSdl I *0 Oats—llitrd Wwtrrn...... . A .M Oorn—Mlvod Wo*torn T * .HIM Hay, por cwt M SI I.l# Htm*, por rwl M> 41 .5 Hot* Ids. XtASk—olds ua A ,l Port -Mns *> 4I. hard 13'.* 1 N nab-Uackerv! Ne. 1. new 1W #ll.OO " No. J. now M> #IO.OO • Dry Cod. par 0w1...... SXO # O.CO Ho'rrtng, Hoalod, jwr box 10 # .10 MroNa-Cnii* iSNSItO'v Rvlnd, 11% Aool -Cailfoinls Fl-wvw... SO A. Tot as " W A.% Aiwtia'Un " ............. .10 * .01 Hotter—SU.o ........... J* SI .SO Western Dairy........... .. .11 A .M% Western Ye110w...... ...... .18 A .93 Western Ordinary .. .10 A .14 Pennsylvania Kiue 33 A .V Ohsese—Ntote Factory .09 A .13% " Slimmed. 09 A -W IV* -lira .00 A .10 Kg,-*- 5tate........ .93 A .23 ALAAMWt W.e*'- 1.40 A 1.40 -Stole 100 # 1.00 Oern-Silxed...... ,M A .'4 Hai'ey—State...... 1.39 A 1. '3 Oals—Htola.. 10 A .1) wmu. Flcnr 9.3.1 AIM Wbrat -Jfo. 1 Spring 1.13 A 1.38 Oorn—Mixed 94 A .74 OAs .. .02 A -' Kje 1.13 A 1.13 Uarley 140 A 1.40 tULTIIIOIUt tlettnt.—l-nw Middlings I#% A .13% t lour—Extra 8.? A *.36 Wb.at—H.-d Wtotem 1.33 A 1.33 Itye .91 A.• Oorn—Yellow...... si A .99 (Ut—Mixed 3 A ' Hetroleura...... QM4A .06% Pwn.aiiKi.raiA. Flonr—Pnoiwylvanl* Extra.......... 6.*7%A 9*1% W1 eat—Wtotern Bed 14 t A1 4 1 Ky< 1.03 A 103 Oiro—Yellow HI A *4 Mlxet 81 A *4 Oate—Mixed A let roleuin A<** if fined, .11% Han Francisco r-oDtramee one-third mora liquor than Chicago. ■arasasraapMMassOß Aaxx> MM *S Ml (Ml, It MIVI4LI l art ..f | "1 ft J| CABLE SCREW WIRE ISdfHfl ItouM and ataxia oaa trial Bill KdaMiaM "Mriassm. atU aet rlpar Irak Hvl lsa 31 ill bote Cba Palaul huaf DOUBLE YOUR TRADE tm*iMS. Uraaara and tlaalaw Para CSSas aad Jmm* in -aalad im kaaa, arrav Ma •#. boarr, w half Clirau C'Mt't' >■•<— laud tar olrcalar Tat WlI U Taa Ooataamr, mil V altos* Bui 4MMI. WihTKO iUKNTa, taulaaM >M||/Ii TV ai ii** wi a ii)lm 4 00., uaiaagi SOLDIERS' RECORD, I raaiy lWa^iaad ( iM Prlaa, Iflata Nanus W ftrtuMtUi, V B Data AUocMty.lritllraf uSt,!**. Haarr. H'atka Ac <•-, thm I a nil Ua"/*r4, n , it* Mr a drtTafcai > "•' ai iduUa laad ( til llraad fglWiM PmiaiaUuaa Our aaiaa ara (oar IZS&W fcniSf- Vr% Uualarili. Mraddrr Ac U n j VTQ t Ifwri, It mm, ar#; ""H** auld . 1 I . roar Mr a faaai (or Uu sari IViW/if/ lIIM laara irtui bar fori aMWar ua u> all ahu tartr Ixmstat It." Iyta-' vt I lu waaar la auodartal, car I, mjV m AI tiro tr. UAITTA Ar I^.. jFfw ilaaaa W a JWrwt trk. AGENTS WANTED FOR PATHWAYS OF THE HOLY LAND liana a fall l#oa truss art PalaaMar. Ma HMUf#. ialt | ootliaa, labal< near It, ttada Icr MM Pa Manor It ( i una KaiMd IMM II aalta at d(tt. Baad (ar "ar ultra I nay to At**'* aad aaa ah# aaila tutor than Idteu PLhi.idnmo oo.rsasAttoma.Pa. Boston's Best Sermons Ara #t*aa la Tbr Itaaiaa Vt rrhl lilatr. Oal# >' cla lor a Moataa. i- *i*t* tram fw Uum Pr • 00. KSS WaahMtttoa (toraai. Bnatoa. WANTED ft HIl I CII toto. \t iw, ld lUjMMtM. &o(4mi Pm HAIIm. m Mami* Atoll a Plata* **f J I ■■hj. jirii PMnfl, cyls s ** x-'-^wwu 4 \ •jfiß^r u ssJsrte fi TAVIrIB. On* i—r M— if AtorstucA Oiiaa !a ATt. J B -Taa rataatto Psssato fa#—to Tritium with Btltsaaar— Wss'l Da. to UMa war tiwMi dliaraa It bun—tal oa A dtaardatad krar It MM iimti iaai i id a foal Mi raj to aad til mud tnaili. aad tor tor# tatt pupa -I tot la nrirtll to pat It a la parisri or-Sac, aad trap tiara an. it Tarrant's Kltriftwil ipfrirat. BOLD JKT AIA DRl'COtm SOMETHING W. Ur> aura aad SUMS# lur all. aaa ta an ■ ra, bo#a at • tiilr. atoilr or rtarv Uinr Hard rtuap lur • itlilafaa Addraar KKANh I.UICK. Baa Badtord. Mato. I WirtittßA B*UB| <-t 1* 1A <6 ta A44ew Wu# f TOW 400 . jAAbuAvtliA, Kid Kai W* jm IA UIU | JHOOK AGEITI WAITED HffiSk"GLEANINGS WBFOU THECLRIOIS." Ptltdn at Ulmirii. rri. utiiM. hlrany to 11 latCT aarto M ■ Ui MM. harr tara fatod aad aijlad tar Ma no rod ciinaai Onajq . - • - : avar i* tkara -1 boot ll la araaadp mmmjkm rap ato baaublul. tato tat MxnitMi aad hatha, ntiot, aratiaaaL ißfreama darteaa. aad thr an ana 1 daralfartr |>l ruMrartaarMr ron taaaa Thiaaaatiaaf - If. arfrona - i#rsa ai -tra a Kit WfT. aad tbra no* u u-1 rrpart ■••1.""—"to."*—"to 'wdan a aarb : >■ laallr nuMrilr off tdirt haotr itoar aa aar (w -aaßaaaar a" W, aasi Iti.PdM aun trwl# Afrit aaa-inn , . nan -ad aa addMaflßartlrPraa , la Ihaaa aho wtli raaraaa Ut MMfi bu aMh toll par- IMuUn. turwi. rt.- arm lo oil Adit MM A- D WuBTUUiUTuN A CO. Itoaifau. Can. $lO SSOO rirrythUM. and oop# a# lha to alt nfrrri Krilra SENT FREE. I STOCKS dll to At %HF St* York Mock bcittgtti m 4 1 ioU W (Mob aukrjto 4*l 6w jtr OML PRIVILEGES it mm to itw (Mr Mat fraw mark** MI itfttoW York t ia(uMiarrM|BiuiU lArotwM luMtoßi rMkMdttoimi 40 4|% Pmt ar caU ouiia oa KW ißana $106.25 Hfrrddlaa pi \(l rarh. aoafnd BK) ahana at Mack tar . SU da#a iAmH lardar rtak abila aua It aaiiil I duUan pndt ma# ba aatuad Adnaa aad Uiluamattaa iiimbhud Puttrsd i. eaatataiaa ralaabta Mtnatlaal laluraMUasi aad rboatop haa Wall toraat tpaaaltuMi ara ooodactod aaal FREE . o rap addram rtrdam aalknltad ta# mall a* atra and praapMr aaarabad t ) oa AddraM Tl MUKJIM.R A- CO. Haokrra mm* tic altera, __ Ma. t Wail Birrrf, Meat Vnli. p Wil l Hu roi-BOOOIW Suad H aaaMaad " aa aU rand ta# n,acl. praprld.aar Lam# KtUKto. ■ rata ahich raa era Ifl aa# Ammnr S map WAua 3t nanif cAfaara a tattui# priari ml ad' a# w I laii. Ai rrma ua> aa atoll vua all oar P rod tonar totrtbia trn rata amfal Buaatoald L arl-lua a tit a hie: an# prraue aaa mala from Pi I*l ItH dnilr Wa aaal Ar.Mli rvmrab.fr EJATIIIMI. Aumv KMfUMIt'M. K. v *(♦ _ r?T( T FA MIt.V W NT !T._JbMß| \ Sidd lit Arab Addnrr* M X lit V KM. Krta. F UFttBSTLVAMA VIII.IT tK V A(A 11 KM V .far I tor. Pa . (I#ua sjm Nib Irwaitun taraMhfal rnoaada uaplr. I rlldtax. cmoumdioar Unl pajflnari Tap. Mia CUanc-t aid KapM-fa ttaomaptab unpbt For I'lrcalaia aind# to OouTHBU HVATT. /arrtdrm \VAKTBPi AiiltTto* .yi'iiiliarfnrivr Crp. " Irarlil ilUfarv diDO lufa. #iU ißrirr Inp*. raUinc aril. Addmri It. < HOCUHTOS d IV . 1 Nna-rraa- Kliaat. toirtaa. Mara DEAL ESTATE. ■ m rII 111 altotop to ba#. ran ar arotaaapa Baa. Kataur aa tira-lM toatr aula al car# Marl' rtpaaaa la moral taoodrod Kmntaom la Maa VocA. ■l" Kafasd. tara Jaran#. faamrtraaU. •:. Oata I'C.ira arot troo < a a# addcaaa oo appimaUoa to i 'v . t dsn U. I.V MrnVri. Mew Vart a atoofta to af-uir eairrsa* Addiam .r-aobtaaa Mtra 3 Pounds of Sutter from 1 Quart of Milk fan ba mada ar#aherr. b| aa# ana. Ko rhnra|a ra (jairod. Macni|i; mi (or -J". a Addrraa r. o. Hut i?i, riiiidiiptia. Fa. CtD'CO'v NtJ to("tarni)i uiifsa 4)1 U' 4)4.vJ I. ■ rtl)II T \f IIAItIT (Vmd I'braj, (Ka pab* 'ill* Hrrriaa.il lib In Actual Use: MORE THAN 55,000 ESTEY ORGANS! MANUFACTURED BY ESTEY & CO., L 3.% TTLIiBORO, VT. IF" .ipai rot lixrt**Tn> firiimiiT ueTDiAru itmn kctietci rmM! ,w' "'wrL Ymu'ilCtHtto kanitA ' <.V** t f \'r Bao.lT aia Indurtrd b# Itar V V \ ■ J r P t al rtniarnt pbrriclaDt io | "NXrlf ,'y __ 111. rofW (or tlmrurr ofrbro- 1 - | ~VAki/ . _ p!*.o. u> rprprla. taut oar dir. i • rn 14 S „ hm. . ix-rrooi dii- ; A j erdrrr.tln.lrtoala conplrtott | / f arranur and f nrrrl drbllltv. | s* an I I'lhrr rbmnlf dlaram uf i 'dK |bri beal.bnAd.lirar,rtomarli | , _ _ kidiMu trad Mood Itooaniita ; IS LIF E_ tolljiartiealarrftaah* *at#4 I toll tor I. I. fT I NEW YORK TRIBUNE. The Lealiug American Newspaper. TIIK HKir ADFRKTItaIXIi MKIIttM. Daily. $lO a year. S*mi- VkiY. $3. Weakly, $2 | /Wfa PVet (• th* Smb*rri*-rr Np*ctW (Viptai aad ! A.twtl liM RitoKr* Wwg|j, hf u' l f3O ruia, on'y nI j>al .i I 'n - 1m i m N \ 10 DOLLi^n AW Sfwmmtntw • f VMI f imuTTLE Aevtoc Morhim Addrw Johnoitii. Clark A On., Iktoian. Mam ' York CUy. Ftttobtorfb. P* . Chtrajo, 111 oi Si. Mo. Nil4l MM tj UrocTloU. M etnu MM! opwrwrda Whether lor ana oo man or brut. Marohaafj Gnrl4nlHl M L(nlW' v a of unaV. .Tory rnmdaot loth, land We k0.. of oo proortor.rr mafMatafcOC mUMo Wtmonad.tott* la^ which iharaa tb (ood will of the pooplo . /-IfnJmt. _ __ MERCHANTS GARGLING OIL II tha Standard Uolmant of . Ho -ta. r. P. O. ta>! lift. Irumtalid. , WWW Uftal #n(M imii; !IWMS lliiMl k MS VMS raiou, i #MtMTKta* k# earn * S°"V*° uuSlar r-.-c. rJ tirHr raStatudlrs Itar BM4- rr la> tanrwt# SiannmS r siiaSntl* 9HM. 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