FA KM, MARTEN AND HOIBKHOLI 111 tfitu lr Ihf II AUfrlioll. Plants kept in the windows should h turned every morning, or the lighi striking one side ouly, will draw th plar.! to that wdo so that nil its branch* and leaves will turn townrd tlu> window Whon color on a fabric has leeii see dentally or otherwise destroyed by acid ammonia is applied to neutralise th acid, after which an application of chit roforru will, in almost all canon, restor the original color. The application i ammonia is common, but that of eh lore form is hut little known. If the heat of it roan oocupiisl by m invalid is oppressive, it may bo great 1; lessened by hanging in the open win dow>> some towels or *nva* well wetted Water, in |us.sin from a liquid to i gaseous stata, atorl>n calorie. Thi chemical process will lower in a few min utes the temperature of a room by tlvi or six tlegrnes. and tlin humidity tlis tributed iu the air makes the host mon supportable. Moths will work in carpet* in tootm that are kept warm, in the winter as wel as in the summer. A sure method of re moving the pv;ts is to pour strong aluit L fel water 'n tho floor to the distance of hall A yard around the edge* before lsjiu| the carjH-ts, Phon oeoe ©r twice during the season sprinkle dry salt Qf< the oor p t 1 a fore sweeping." Insects do uot like salt, and sutNcjent a.there* to the , K oarjau to preveut their alighting apou m iu Those wlu> are iu the habit of scalding their tomatoes liefore paring tliem can hardly tlunk how much nicer they are without the scalding. It is not so diffi cult to pare a fully ripe tomato without the scalding when one gets in the habit of doing it. If oue is paring those not fully ripe they should have a sharp tlnn knife, and pare from the hloaaom to tin stem, instead of areuud Ukcan apple. II they are not mwrntli one can cut them apart in |he creases, and thus get at the ■kin. Cat W araia. Searching for the worms when thej come out to feed, or digging them from their holes near the plant, and killing theiu. is doubtless tlie most effectual remedy we can emplov. Curtis .-aiys one-quarter ounce of salt dissolved in a quart of water will drive the grub away, _ and preset vethephmt till WMiied off by rain. Tobacco water will kill them if it comes iu contact with them. Quicklime will also de<-troy them if put on the plant when wel, and dry soot dug iuto t he ground is very offensive to the grub. Suds made of one pound of aoap to ten gallons of wofc*. and applied warm, will cans.' them to dart out. when they can be immediately kiile,k Four on nop* ot aloes dissolved in a gallon of water and appln d to the piaats, is said to preserve them from the cut worm. Smooth holes mad with a rak •or hoe handle near the plants, will serve as traps into which the worms fall, and may there be destroyed. Coal tar and water, a spoonful of the former to a gallon of the Utter, will, it is said, drive th* worm away without in juring the plant. Where a few choice plants are to be protected, this may be done by wrapping stiff paper or walnut leaves around the stem when setting them out, leaviug the paper a bttie above ground, and an inch or two be low. Cow dnugstirnsl in water, and poured around the pUnt so that the solid j>art will remain vr.d form a liard surUce, through which the worm cannot pene trate, has been recommended. For a similar insect iu Europe, Kollar advises lime ashes applied to the land, or lLum wat- rin damp weather. If the female ruoti'.s arc attracted by sweet liquids, many of them may lw> killed ; and an they arc also attracted by lurid lights in the evening, they may be destroyed iu this mar uueto flom* extent. SpplrltiK tlanrr. A paper read before the American foresera'dnb says; How shall manure be applied f There is one way to apply it rightly, and that is to put it under ground—cover it. When applied per fectly it must lie well mixed with the b->il--the entire arable earth being com pletely commingled with it, and the plow is the implement to do the work with* To effect this at ouee the manure miut be thoroughly rotted. For imme diate effect on plant growth, farmers in the main (I suppose) understand that manure mnsff be more or let** rotted— som. plant* requiring the manure to be bett. r rotted thum ethers ; and yet good farmers will always keep their farms in snch condition that they can plow in green manure and wait a season perhaps for full effect, for I am convinced thai the chemical ctringea that green manure undergoes in the process of decomposi tion, if undergone in the ground, an; highly beneficial to the ground. Ma nure, then when properly applied, is covered in the ground. This rule is so general that in my experience I known* but two exceptions, and these are not from the i.eo>-*aiUea of the situation. Grass ground cannot have manure ap plied to it other than by top-dreeeing. It would be better to manure before seed ing, and to break up when the applica tion needs repeating. The second ex ception is that where wheat is liable to winter-kill, top-dressingitrill counteract the effect of .freezing. It is not for ma nured purjMjsea, let ft be noticed, that this application is made. In this case the end justifies and compensates for the waste of manurial substance. Manure to meadows should lie well rotted and applied in the cool moist weather of the spring and fall. Ilw I* I N CM*. Mrs. hnma Moody, lady assistant steward of Mount Vernon (IntL) grauge, communicate* to the Jfootier Patron the following plan for conning com. 1. Get the best sweet corn, scald it on the ear, and cat it off while hot; pnt a pan over a kettle of boiling water to keep it hot until yon get enough to fill a can. Have some weak brine boiling in a porcelain kettle. Fill your can within an inch of the top with oorn ; cover the bottom with brine, leaving room for it to swell; seal the ran while boiling hot. Dissolve one and ono-fourth ounces of tartaric acid in one-half pint of water ; cut the cdrn from the cob ; pit it in a vessel over the fife and bring to a boiling point; to each pint of corn allow one tnhlespoonfal of the solution. Boil one half hour, stirring occasionally ; then put the com in quart cant and seal tight ly. When wanted for use, put the corn into a bow! and Mir in two-thirds of a teiispoo!i|hl of soda to each quart of com. Lot it stand one hour before co< iking. • 3. Cut* the corn off tho cob and jmek closely in quart cans ; then solder so that every particle of air is excluded ; "t the PAS In u kettle of cold water and brinu to ahoil; let the oorn boil two and a i*lf hours in this sized cans (larger em •; wiJl require more time ); when done, ponr 'oflit) water into the kettle to e<>ol the cans and enable yon to remove them carefully. I"\ . ii* I/!> unit Oil. First—Always .till your lamp iu the morning lor then you have daylight to work tfic lumps and oil are cold. ivofiond—Never jwur oil from a can tint has been recently agitated. Third—Never allow your lamps or can to -tanil long near a stove, or in any other vrujm ulace. Fourth—Always keep the tube of a lamp clean, and trim the wick every morning. Fifthj—Sever blow down a chimney to put out your light, but blow up from the bottom or turn the wick down. Sixth—Buy roneAfnt the best oil. •Sevei C—-Never pour oil on a lire, for one-half t ho.Uvea lost by oil have been lost ray. C*WK. repeatedly urged the necessi the cows well fed. At this eitar the pußtui esare often Vowed corn or other fonige In order. An allowance \feed of sowed corn will profitable. If we Tteensive method of and feeding HuVunklcil on it, we that such wouhl ■AV 'Jfc •!!, but it 1* too ' y of our D. ' WOMANH INFLrtATE, A Mardror Tnrnrrf lr* kl Putpaur 1 it Wotnnn'a Aeiwnl. Ike . Mrs. Van Oott sp>nt a portion of last l u ', month iu earnest effort* for the Ohns (>f) tiauiKiug of sundry towns iuid villsgana w in Tommy I rani a. Among Uiesa> villag>s is the village of Frosdiim, in York ooun j ty, where she met with marked success, and held enthuaiaatie me>tings. Oue () evening, while canvassing the house for J-,. ropeuUnt siuners, sh> aohral a middle aged mau, the sUiliil xpnvsiiu of wluwe " fs.>' attracted her attention and excited ' her feminine curivsity ; so, in her usual magnetic manner, she approuched him ui iuid asked him whMher lie would not ly like to follow in the path of the right u eons. No answer could she gam, ami il. with an audible prayer of "May God a drive the dumb devil out of you, my le : brother," she passed ou to interview a- : more iiuptvaaibfe subjects, re | Two nights jvieosl, and the stranger s i again npjsyirisl t the ehttreh ; but tliis re j tune his eye* were lighted up with au I almost nianiiuwl gbtt<>r, and hi* ooutite • iiauee seemed the plsyground of the JJ { liveliest emotions. Quickly approach j ing the alter, he knelt among the sob < hing and shouting one*, and as tho relt gious shephervtess drew umr he askinl her if alio knew him. " Why, vee; £ you're the man who hail the dumb d*vil the other night," she nqvhed. He then i . begge.l of her the privilege of saying s f few words; and, the re<iiiMtt lieiuggrant hl, he arose and, dehberatelv drawing a 1 revolver from his breast, held it aloft in j a thrilling dramatic manner, while he g told his history of life to the eager lis n teners. He was a resident of Chicago, e where he hail for many years follow.si I- his pn>f>ssion of pln>U>gnpher. For it the last four years he liad strayed for it from the )<ath of right and virtuous liv •t mg, aud, as a cvmsHjueinv of his disai n jwtion and debauchery, his wife had de e sorted him and returned to her friends [f I in Tennsylvauia, Inkiug his tluve chil u dreu with her. Driven to frenzy bv e f this, he sank still lower and lower, until, SS if the fleudishuess of hell itself JHW sessed him, he lia.l purchased this v weajKiu of death and start.nl for the East, determinevl to murder his wife „ and children and then put an end to bus j own miserable existence. Only two „ nights liefore he sat iu that church u gl.siting over the fiendish plot. Tlie . ! wonts then spoken to him had aroused y his almost l.<st mauli.iod, and falling j ogam on his knees he desired Mrs. Van t> Cott to pray for him. She spoke at once, t . extending her hand towanl him. u • "Child, give me that,'' and with tlie meekness of a child he handed her the , weapon, wd then feeling iu I lis pocket 1 produced a box of cartridges, which he x also placed in her liand. The strange t . sight was then presented of tho woman ) i revivalist hokhng in ou band * *eveu , shooter and in the other a IKIX of death B dealiug missiles, while she offered to e Heaven AU iaruest prayer for the saving f of tius brand from die burning. As Mrs. Van Cott finished telling the inei , dent, die said: " Never in my life did 111 frel such j>ower in prayer, and never . before did 1 offer up a )>etitiou to my g Heavenly Father under such circuiu e stmi.vs.The next day the man, clothed t in his right mind and liappy in heart, { *->ught the injured wife, erfecUd are ■ conciliation, and another will soon he ~ ' added to the list of happy homes in t'hi • oogu. An Encounter with a Wildcat. A Nevada paper n lates ihe following : '• William Lyell, a rancher, living u.-ar ft lluffaker'a, iu Washoe county, hal oon -8 siderable of a tussle with a wildcat. He ° was ont hunting witli a couple of dogs ; 8 wheu near the lower end of bis ranch '• tlie dogs scared up the cat, which, lteiug 8 prowned hard, turned and stood sullenly n at lov. t>ue of the dogs, a shepherd, u bounced upon it at on.-e, which action tho " varmnit" was waiting for, as she sod had him down and was hiking him u savagely. The other dog, attacking it e fn>m tho rear, mauiupNl to put tho cat _ on the defensive. At this juncture the r animal managed to ilisengage hers. If, .. and made a rush for Mr. Lvell, who t . had been unable h> got a shot ui for fear of killing ILLS dogs. He received her j. with the butt end of his gun, breaking it over her ; bat she, nothing daunted, e evinced snch a strong determination to K force the liattle that he was glad to leave n the giui barrels iu her {Kisseasion. t Kallyiug his dogs for another onset, and 1 grasping the atock of his gun, his solo p wen poo, he boldly advanced to where j stood the ait with gleaming eyes seeni- Q ingly emitting flashes of tire, her tail j waving impatiently in the air, as if in s defiance to liim. Quick as a flash, the I feline sprang at our hero, who, with in p trepid oounige, calmly awaited the oou ing event, ami met her with a well- B directed blow from his gun-barrel, which he had managed to regain, laying her 8 dead at his feet. The cat, on tieing taken to the ranch, was found to weigh j- thirty-three pounds, and measured three t feet four inches from tip to tip. j Shade Trees. Many farmer* now sec how much they liave missal it by jiermittiug the whole - salt destrnctn ui of forest trees U|s>n 5 tlieir lamia. From tho nakedness of the t country, droughts are lieaiming >m . ' mon. From the varcity of titular trees, t' the cost of fencing and" erecting build e inga is annnaliy increasing. Bat there [ e is one way whereby amends may partly 0 lie made. Let tliere l<e one miit<l plan j to have rows of lieaiitifnl and nwftti e trees set out on both sides of all our public highways. Let sugar trees, wal nut trees, oak treos, chestnut trwe, 10, , cutt trees, ratal pa trees, silver-leafed poplar trees, etc., stretch their l..ug sve- nues iu every direction all over the cmin try. How it would relieve the nnked ness of the land ! What a grateful shade t they would give to the weary traveler! o The value of farms would become al- U most immediately enhanced as soon as these rows of beautiful trees were plant- j ® ed ont. And in the distant future, . when those trees should arrive at matn ' , rity of growth, the value of the timber ® j itself would become a most imiiortant ; item. Let grangers and others take hold s of this matter. " A Mhiunder>dandinsr. H A meek looking colporteur espying liim, wended his way towards him, stiy- Q mg : "Here's a brand 1 will snatch from the burning. Here's a fellow a l>eing from whose wheat I will remove B he tares"—feeling in his pocket for a t f tract. "My friend," said he to the e countryman. " I have something here 1 wish to call your attention to." In an k instant the bucolic eyes shot s flame 0 tliat boded excitement of an nnosnal . cliarai-ter. " You liave, eh, "interrogated j their owner, knocking—in ring parlance 0 —the two eyes of tho meek stranger into , one with a powerful blow. "You've H got a freight bill for me to JMIV, have P you t You know my folks, PK>, don't 0 yon f" lie continued, showering blows on tho unresisting man. "You've shqit with ray nurle Bill, pulled candy with lay Aunt Bens, and got vaccinated with e my grandmotler, haven't yonf No, o old boss," said lie, giving the man of . tracts a weary left bander tinder the ti belt, "1 don't pay my own freight bills, i and I ain't goiu' to pay any for a fellow a ( with worsted gloves." a Aiifnmn leaves. y There are several ways of preparing these. Prose the leaves in books for two 0 or three weeks until they aro perfectly a dry, then varnish with mnstic varnish ; copal varnish causes the leaves to crum ble. Or, take the leaves when first r gathered, place them on a smooth board, u inelt n little beeswax on a hot smoothing . iron, and iron the leaf, thus covering it 1 with a thin <x>ating of the wax ; after pressing a day or two the leaves are ready for use. Or, press the leaves in 8 ( books till dry aad then with a woolen II rag rub enough boiled linßeed oil on e each leaf to give it a gloss. Forfasten -1 ing leaves on paper gum tragacanth is better than gum arabic, as it does not show in any way. i . e It is now ascertained that the injurious i effect of furnace vapors upon vegetation o i is due to tlie sulphur acids contained iu r the vapors, and not to the lead, arsenic, 1 or finely-divided carbon. ' A Mrtlhrr'a Anguish. ( Charles H. Maden, aged twenty, WOJ tried iii the general HOUMOUS of Nev York on an indictment for burgloi v n I I the first degree in breaking into a dwell ing. Mrs. F.lima Maden. his mother ' i was the complainant and only witucm ' for the jHHiple. She was aluioat IKUUI to the witneea aland, and after she win : nested her whole frame trembled. Tho ' , eoutinuad during the preliminaries ol ' j twlhng the jury. When she was snort she lost her M'lf control, and atmosl ' slirieked : "O, my 0*1, take me awa> from here! Take me out I 1 ahai . die !" The prisouer H1OII< stsuned uuaffts'hsl. ! Hi' sat with his hamla folded acowin ho | Dreast, a half cynical, half contemptn j mis smile playing around his mouth. The seem' was urolonged many min I utes liefore Mrs. Minion's nerves Isswim ! (H)ual to the task of describing her son's infamy. She then hinted rather than told how his waywardness, ingratitude, and disobedience lunl graduoli) do vol ojssl into crime. Every eorris'tiio means had lnxU exhausted, hut the pa rents tin! uot cease their effort* until tlieir sou assaulted las mother with a carving knife, and was with dillhuilty prevented from adding matricide to his other crones. I'ln n his father insisn >1 that tlie ts>y should live elsewhere, slid actually tsud his tsxird in a neighlsiroig 1 street. Si is. Maileu wras alone ou the night of August iy. Near midnight slie awoke and raw her sou eiiU rmg the r\H>ni through the window. Her fear of t him after his attempt to kill her was so great that she lay still, afnud to more. He went straight to where her dress was imaging and Ustk from the pocket a puree containing lie then went out bv the front disr. After his departure \lra. Maden arose and sat up sleep loss the rest of the Iligtit. James H. Ms.h u. the father, recount <sl to Keconler Hockett all that he hail done to effect the reformation of his son. He liad at last lMHtmie convinced that the only way to keep his soil from crime was to keep lam iu prison. The prisoner asksl to be heard in his own defense, and he was sworn. lie said that las parents were peraecntiug hun. " The old man never treated me right. 1 came down from two years and a half iu Sing Sing only u few months ago, and he would do uotliing for me; told me to go uwuy ami never speak to him again. Then he weut to Justioc Kilbreth and swore that I trie,! to kdl him and mother. He wauted the to put me away until I was twenty oue, hut the judge only gave me six mouths, and I got away from the island liefore 1 had been there a week." The jury returned a verdict of guilty from their seats. Said the recorder to the prisoner: "This case is the most pitiable and dis teeming that 1 have witnessed iu all uiy official career. The fact that yon have by your crimes made your own parents your prosecutors is of itself oiiiv less distressing than the terrible affliction, visible to all iu this court, that the ne oesaity had impimed upon them. The sentence is imprisonment in State prison for twenty years." A Vexed (Question. A curious little question of caste is to Is* juvsscd upon by the local authorities of Brentwood, N. 11. For several years the inhabitants of SCL<h>l district No. 'J iu which the lw.K'kiughnm county farm is locutevl, have objected to having the pauper children atteml the public school, while tlie county commissioner* have claimed their rigid to school privileges. There have be-cu but four <>r five such children to attend school, and the com missioners have off; rel to frny more than the achotd tux assessed ou the farm, if ticsired ; but the iuluthitnnta were un willing that tlieir children should associ ate with paupers. Judge Foster, of the circuit court, ILLS recently decided that the gi-mus of our free institutions de mands that the jiooru-d children should have full and equal school privileges with tlie rvt, and that the school must admit the little outcasts. Upon this, residents of the district have petitioned to the school committ*s* and selectmen to set off and conatitute tire county farm a separate school district by itself, the commissioners toexjwnd the farm SCli>h>l tax in schiHilitig tlie pauper children at the farm. It is mud their application will be refused as a flagrant violation of republican traditions which should not l>e for a moment tolerated, in whatever technical legal guise it may *h<>w itself. How they Learn. The rapidity with which female* adapt themselves to the circumstances and fashions with which thev are auTToand el, and *sja>cially the fashions, is simply marvelous. One Monday a fatly in a Western city, who employs several do mestics, got a uew table girl, just arrived in the city from rural districts—a bright eyed, ruay-ohceked damsel win > blushed whenever any of tire mule members of the household looked at her ; a girl whose hair was corn lied smoothly laok from off her tanned forehead ; whose dress ha<l sleeve* to it, came up to her throat and down to her feet. Un Tues day her hair went up on to the top of her j head, and was coiled tip over a—some thing ; on Wednesday she cut the aleeves off her dress, turned it iu at tin; throat, pinned it back and humped it out be hind, and could look all the men iu tlie hou.ve square iu the face for half an hour without the hue of modesty -showing through h<*r chalk complexion. Thttrs day she completed her degradation by cutting off all but an inch or two of her front hair. (In the Lakes. The cry for an American Plimsoll, since the d aasters on the lakes, is gain ing in vigor, and the cry is backed by some ugly facts and figures. Kvery year the property destroyed on the lakes is counted by millions, and the lives lost by hundreds. There are 1,527 vessels of all descriptions registered on the lakes, o which only ton are rated as un seaworthy. Yet in* 1868 the vessels lost numbered 113, vainer! at £2,423,- 500, with a loss of 380 people. The Losses of 1871 were double those of 1868, and last year the destruction of property was more than £s,<>oo,lXH>, with hundreds of lives lost. Hie mis chief is in the practice of running nn seaworthy craft, a thing rosy enough to accomplish in the condition of our in spection service. After an old and over loaded tub and her cargo are heavily in-- sunvl it seems to make little difference to th* owners whether she sinks or swims. New York Hats. We do not mean tlie flats who stand about hotels and street corners with their hair parted in the middle, hut those large buildings, each floor of which constitutes a dwelling house. Of these flats a writer says; So flat that is of any dimensions or surroundings above u brown stone tenement-house can be had short of £I,OOO a year, or £BO a month. Indeed, nine tenths of these flats are tenement houses culled by n hKI injnri out name. It is a good way for lazy women and people with siaali furniture to affect to live. It is better than hoard I ing, in that you rut your own hash. It 'is purgatory, la-tween tho heavon of houscholditig and the tophet of n dys peptic's public table. Itisailcvioe to makn unrentable hoitsee rentable by farming out the floors and putting in wash-tubs. Large Trees. Upon the land of Mr. Webb, of Mason county, W. T., is a cedar tree, which it forty five feet in circumference three feet above the ground. This tree lias lieen burnt out by tho the, leaving n hollow in it iut* which five men on horseback might ride and remain at one time with ear-e and <s>rafort. Near this monarch of the forest is another one, also a cedar, which seems to have been blown down by the wind, and is burnt out like the other, within whose old, charred walls ten men on horseback might at one time find comfortable shelter. California is not the only place where big trees may be found. If, in instructing n child, you are vex ! Ed with it for a want, of adroitness, try, if yon have never tt ted before, to write with your loft liaud, and then remember ' that a child is all leit baud. KORKU WADK'M OFFKNNF.. is Hogwr Wulo lived with Jonas Hram. *v ! Jons* was it narrow Bimtovt, grasping ll Uliill, whom' nhitl nt it bargain, and I whoMC inevitable -ilowliea* in pushing r, | lux work turn, lui.l given liiin the name w mining hw tiwuN|MH>|ilo uf "(.Mil Horew v, Diivcr." i* No turn ever know him to "take off" in or "throw in it little," lxHviuite it man >f WIIN |ir<<NM4<il by misfortune, itiul lackrnt n the money to psy him his price. ll it woiihl have th<> " uttermost farthing," V nvn though tho exaction brought Tit* il ' debtor ruin. It witN in thi< oitrly spring thut Roger I. Wmle agrccil to work eight month* mi n h IN farm, for lit* Inwvrd ami fifty ix-uts a wiN'k. Hteru uwwwit) forced the umuii | ploytxl ami homloaa bov into Uiih miu tnu-t, jiiNt it* it hs* hundreds of Otiler* << ' into similar situation*. Ami Jouan (tram N < lutit received more thmi an o<iiuval*ut n for what lie paid lorn, in haril latter the very hardest, ami tlte moat he oolthl (HuMibly get out of linger'* deah ami i< ' iuilN<<lna. One bright aiituuiu afterniMiu, linger I I hiul In-!i at work in Mr. iiraui'N five i ten orehar.l, gathering fruit. He ha.l i tilled aever.il latrrela w ilh ahmco spplcs, ami there was a large lu<a|> of |M-urn on I i th grmtml, whieh lie *m carefully nut 1 ting into Is-xt-a, when the black, curling ; aiuoke of an engine appeared in eight. < aiiil tile lotnl w hiatle aiilu <lllK<<<ll the ap t proa.'h of an imxming tram. i The railroad run through the w<<at end f I of Mr. Hraui'a farm, ami out off a little < ; from the orchard. The statu <u won a al<4>ut a quarter of a mile above. < linger patiM-il iu hi* work, ami *too<l 1 attentively watching the e-trs aa they t I went thuudehug by, only a few rod* • from huu. Then he heard the Nharp rat > tie and crack of the brake*, the engine WHH reverned, and in a minute the train rolled alowly back. It lia.l IHW-II switoh -1 ed off upon a aide truck, and now it < stood there oloae to the orchard, waiting i ! for a long freight train to pa**. 1 i The day waa an uuuaually warm one, and moat of the oar window* were wid < opeu, and the paaa. ugem were gaxuig • cur 10 ualy out, impatient at the delay. AN linger atood beanie the great heap of pear*, looking at the people, a bright, I restless little girl, occupying a aeal 111 1 tbo tirat mr, oalle.!: " Hoy ! boy ! idcase throw me one of ■ those nice js-ars. ' The u.-st moment u great juicy Hart i lett went whirling through the air, urn! < entered the car window, and fell into I her Lip. The child laugheil her thank*, and immediately begun eating it with great relish. Juat In-hind her *at a pale, aad looking ■ young man, with dreamy dowucnat eye*. Ilia bleak, cheer leas face excited Roger's pity, and picking up another riju< pear, he shouted : " Catch, catch!" i The young man looked up, and a 1 Ninile hrightenetl hi* fm-c an he caught the well aimtsi |<4<ar. The freight train soon came along, putting a stop to fur tlier communication with the ltoy in the ■■ oreliard, and by the time it was past, the i passenger mr* had lieguu t.i move. Just aa the rear car came in Night, itog<-r ! eapi.*.! John H<-swell, one of hni intimate friends, leaning out of one of the win j 1 ilow> " liullo, ltoger!" " Hallo, John !" And in an in*taut ; the biggest }<4-ur <<f the heap wrllt living toward John, propelled with all the force of the sender'* arm. The n|h<4sl of the train wraa iucrt<a*iiig, and instead of reaching John, the pear broke through a closed window, shiver I .si the p-uie, and struck a gray haire.l , tu ill in the temple, cl<* to the eye. H<- was half stuntus! by the blow, ami bloisl instantly tlowisl from an ugly cut iiaiwii by the broken glass. Hoger saw the aocidelit, and la<!iev<sl ' that he ha.l injured some one, but the train disappeared so toon that he rvuld n< t know the extent of the mischief. I Hi* heart l*-at violently. Undoubtedly 1 he wi uhl hear something yet from the ; unlucky throw, and he tortured himself 1 with wondering who waa hurt, and I whether the rnilrotu! emnpeny, or any • one else, would prosecute liim. 1 The sharp voice of Mr. Brain just be hind him recalled lus wandering si-useo. ' "Standing here doing uothing, yon rascal! It's a pity if I can't be gone > t.ui minnti-a without having the work f stop." 11l KIIeQCO Roger again la gan tilling tln> lioxes, l<ut his thoughts w< re l<u*y with other things, lie feared trouble was in store for him. The afternoon passed, and twilight , eame, Th cows wire milk<sl. and | Roger's work was done. .As he was standing in the *ha4le of a great spruce tree near the goto. two tneu canu- along on the rami. Said one: " Rs4juire 1,.*-'* gut hut. He baa just I come from Ohio, and as he wn< sitting iu the car this afternoon, jo*t lie low tlte station, a ts>y threw something at him r and hit him. 1 ' " Hurt seriously f" inquired the other man. " Don't know. Thev say his head is . badly cuL " Iwoprlutencd to those word*, and a . cold chill run over him. Esquire Lee, then, was tho injured passenger. He was a man learned in the law, and had long been justice in the town. Many a youth fill offender hail found cause to fear* his , | stern sentences, for liis severity was well . known against all who willfully or care , IcHsly broke "the statute." llognr passed a wretched night. He , j now fully believed that he ha I got him , self into serious difficulty. He was W4<ll ticquuiiib'd with Esquire ISH-'S charac ter, and felt a terrible dread of inqxuui iug punishment. I saving linger a while t< his fears, we will now follow the esquire, and learn alaiut his hurt, and what is really likely ' to como of it. When the tiring pear and the broken glass .struck him iu the face, the shock ' confused him for the moment, but he soon revived, and with the aid of an -1 other passenger bandaged his bleeding 1' temple. His eye ha.l a narrow escap*. ; but in truth the moat serious immediate effect of his injury was his indignation • at the deed which had so nearly done f him a serious injury. 1 " Who threw that pear ?" he inquired of John Hoswell in front of him. " Was I it Roger Wiole ?" " Yes, sir," answered John ; " but he 1 never meant to hit yon. Ho threw it to ! me, an dsn p posed I would catch it." " Well, it was a rogue's performance, j nnd 1 shall take care that he learns not to repeat this reckless business," said ■ ; Esquire Lee, angrily. "I lioj< you wont make Roger suffer I for an accident, judge—on accident that i i|ciiii partly to blnme for. Roger is a I good boy ; and he lias a dreadful hard 1 I time. lie works for tliat old screw t driver, Jonas Brum. I'm sure if you 1 knew Roger as well as I do, you'd pity • him and not punish him," pleuded • John. 1 Esquire Eeo and John Boswel! left [ the train at the station and wnlkcil to ward home. Mr. I*<e had just reached his gate, when again the anxious voice of John Hoswell spoke. <j "Judge," he said, "you are very 1 j angry with Roger, I know you are. You menu to have him arrested, and bring i him to trial, and pass sonic dreadful sen [ tenoe upon him. Do let him off, sir. It | was only n thoughtless net. Roger Wade > j wouldn't do any mischief nor hurt any < ; body on purpose, never ! never !" 1 Inquire Lee's sb*rn face softened to a ' smile. "Your friend has a good lawyer in 1 you. Don't lie distressed on his ik-- 1 count," he said, kindly. The next morning, while Roger was at < work alone, a message came, summoning > him to appear before Esquire Lee in his 1 office. Roger went without saying a 1 word. < 1 Esquire Lee was reading his news < paper as the boy entered the office. He ' slowly took off iiis spectacles, and tixed i his sharp eyes on Roger's face, t " What is your name If" he inquired. , " It'iger Wade, sir," t "I am told that the injury I received 1 here was caused hy you," touching 1 lightly las for< head where a piece of ad hesive piaster concealed the wound. "I—l—l —am —sorry, sir. I—I—I" stammered Roger, in great confusion, , and stopped. . i "And for tlii'i unprovoked assault you r are liable to lie arrested and brought to trial," said the esquire, iu a stem tone. " I know it, air," in a hardly audible j voice. ' " For throwing misailea at a railway j traiu, you mav la- lined <<r imprinoiKal, or Isith," ismtiniied the justiiv. * ! " Yi<a, air," aaid lbiger, ehoking down his agitatiou. "And what would you do if 1 should . : tllie you f" " I 1 iHiiildu't pay it, air. 1 haven't j ; any money." " Then vou might lie sentenced to ! jail." s ! R-iger iua<le no r<q<!y. " Ami going to jail is a hard thing for r a laiy. Oati you make a gmNl defense ( for yoiirM*<lf uow, aiul ahow why you t should not 1< sent there f" Rogt-r li>keil up more brightly at thi*. "AM 1 4*l! say is, that I intended to ( throw the p-ar to John lloawell," aunt t h<>. " Hut the traiu had started, ami I _ , miaaetl him, uud hit you. 1 would have I done anything rather than hurt yon." There was truth iu Roger's face and word*. The frowning brow of F.nqutie I<<e relaxi'tl very (wnviitibly. He was convinced of what Joint HoswcH ha<l I j told lniu. " Ij4<t me He,-," he said, reilectively i " you live with Jonas Hrani I" " Y*. air. If yon semi me to jail it won't le much worse titan liviug with him." The c*4|uire laughed. "If lie i* so i har<l on you, why <iou't you leave him t j You are not bound out to him, are you f" | " Well, I agrwsl to work for huu eight mouth*. Mr.Lelaud wantame in his store, ami will j<ay me well if I go now ; but ! j my time isn't up, ami a bargain ia a liar j ' gain, even a bait one." " Won't Mr. Leland wait for youf" " No, air. 1 shall lose the chalice ; but 1 shall not break my word with Mr. j | 11 rum, if he does make slave of me. John '' in-swell say* 1 am a fool not to leave 1 him, wjien i can do so much I letter. But I can't, it wouldn't be right," Esquire Lee pot mtd his liiuid over hi* ! eyes. " You can go uow. 1 freely for j J give your thoughtloaalicHH. You never ; ' nerd four me." " Thank you, thank you f" criel Roger, joyfully : uud he left the office with nimhle fivt. A month jiaa-wd. One bright Oeto j INT morning, as lU<ger was coming out of Mr. Bram's gat4<, he eliauced to meet Esquire lose. "dotal morning, Roger," he aaid, in a pleasant, friendly voice. " When is | your time out with Mr. Brum f" " To-morrow." " Well, 1 am in want of just such a faithful, honest laiy as yon are. .Mr. E-laud lias <Nnitlrni4'd your statement. He told me lie offered you more Ulan double what Mr. Brum is paying you, if you would work for him, and that you refused to h-ave this hard master, be cause you wouhl not break your promise to bim. 1 honor a boy who vuluc* his word more than money." Roger looked very grateful. " 1/ vou will work for me as errand ; ami office laiy, I will give jou your ls<ard and nix dollars a mouth, with a good increase another v-ar, if you do well." A sjiarkle of delight <*uie into Roger's < y<- at them- word*. Two days after he entered the office of Mr. lee. His faith ' ful j<*rf<rmauiw< of duty soon wu Uu I highest oouftdeuce of his employer, who la im<> th-eply int<<reated iu him Every O]<|>ortuiitty for improvement within hi* reach was eagerly seised, and in time, leing generously aided by Mr. las-, he iMspimsl a lds<ral edmaitiou, and ls<came an able an<t successful lawyer.— ( bfil/NUtiM. A Major (•eneral's Poverty. The Cincinnati In>(uirrr says : \ tall, hagganl and ragge.l l-mkiug individual found his way into the Uumminnvillr station-house and into a cell for safe keeping. He hod all tke marks of disai ]aittou ulsiut him—bloodshot ow, in- 1 tlumcd skin and bruised face. He IUMI wlmt was still wursi- ami still more <xn i vineiug -a violent attack of Uiat terrible disease, delirium tremens. He claimed to lie h<>iu<-l<-NH, friendless and ui<meyleN, ami to have wnlketl all tho wuy from ludiaiia|xilis. He said he vras Major (•ejierml William H. Wheeler, of the late Confederate arinv, on his way to his old home and birthplace in Uul|epper Court House, Va., where he wanted to 4li*. (b<ueral Wheeler w<U IH< rememlx-r<d i as a ilashiug officer who flgtiml so hnl | liautly during tho war iu the cavaby service. The story of this poor tramp, claiming to lie thi* famous general, is a stal oue if true, nnd an interesting one, any way. He says he is sixty two years dlu, that lie graduated at West Point in tile class of "t'i : that while <x<mmanding at the lmttle of Shiloh hi* son wa* alift and kUhxi ; tliat iu less tlian two week* afb<r iiib-lligenoe came of the death of his wife, (lien the escape of all his slavcs-- numliering nearly twenty and lastly, his Virginin farm* that he had sigmxl over to Ins brother t<> esoa(M> eontliaw tion, hatl lawn N<-ir.i-d or aoltl by tliat brother's creditors, Iraving him a|uniier. At the eha of the war he alleges he ! drifted from one plane to another, finally bringing up iu MiKsissippi, where, , until a few weeks since, lie has liv<tl. He journeyed up the river to Evanavilh twe wrecks ago, landed there and went to Torre Haute, where he expected to find a couple of nephews : was disap poirih-d ; went to Indiana|x>lis, and t from there tramjied to this city. He claims that hia mother was s sister of Governor Trimble's wife ; that hi* only sister is Mrs. Colonel Martin, of Hamilton, Ohio, and that his only mir riving child i* a married Wlv living in j Baltimore. His whole story is very straightforward, ami iu his conversation he lx<trars an intelligence and familiarity with public men and things which om< would scarcely look for in an ordinary tramp. WhisVy H<<4<ms at lat to have wracked him, and it will prolvably lx< his fab- to H|M>nd his lost days in the Cincinnati hospital. A Personal Narrative. The following extract from a private letter received l<y a gentleman from a niece living at Indianola, gives a brief j personal narrative of the nxxuit calamity at that place : It is with the dee]>et grief that I a<l dress thew lines to yon, as W<<ll as all your family. My heart is so full that I scarcely know what I write. Oil Soptem l>er 15th Iwgan one of the most severe storms that in this part of tho conntry was ever wituessed. Before people knew where they were the water had gotten so high that it was certain death to attempt to viu-atc any house to look for one more snfe. By eight o'elook on the evening of tli<- ir.th.atlie storm was at its worst ; th water was five feet higher than it had ever las<n even in the hard>st sbirais ; houscN were swept away, taking with tliein all that was withiu. Arthur's was washed from its blocks, hut lodged ill the yard. He, with all hi-- family, and two other families were saved. Willie, with his family, consisting of his wife and two children, also, his wife's sister with her three children, were swept away. Willie lieiug more power ful than the rest, elung to a plank and was saved : his wife and children were j drowned in his arms. The worst blow of all was mode known to us yesterday. Mother, who has been in Hiilnria for some time, where her health was lietter than iu this place, was washed off with thirty or thirty-five others, three of whom only were saved. George and Rebecca ami family ami William were nil saved. This is the most desolate place you ever saw ; there are not one dozen houses left iu their j proper places, ami there are but a few houses to mnrk the place where <<noo stood the pleasant little town of Indian ola. The shipping is destroyed ; also the railroad. Our relatives have beou sending us enough to keep us from starvation, hut it cannot last. I appeal to you in behalf of all our dear ones that remain for help. We aie destitute, i The loss of life is not less than one hundred and fifty ; the loss of property is untold ; the town is as nothing. In this day of poetic obituaries, we shall perhapH lie excused for exhuming the following from the dust of former decades : f. Oh ! Iwnlix gono, and am *h went And is 1 left here all alone 7 Oil, cruel fate, thou wast unkind ' To taku she fore and leave 1 hind! I 11 MIMMAKT OF NEWH. Ilrai *1 latereM free* Hear* ae4 Xknal- Aa six plat form ear*, containing rerentjr i lal.uret*. wore being |ndid at a fair rale of a|M<4l by a lon "Be .live on lite lUrhwoud. I ' Orumtuoiid and Alliabaska railroad, Canada, they struck aotua obslrucUou. throwing orei t two or three car*, killing el*r*u and wouiullng twenty-Are other*. It I* thought the obstruc ' tion wae |>ur|Mi*ely piaced Au eaprnea ; Irwin o* Ut Hamilton and Dayton road waa run into by a freight liaiu at Hamilton, Ohio, and throe man stealing a rtda on the sleeping oar esre killed NodO Baldwin, the pugil ist. l-ettci known as the "Irish disnt," wae shot by his bueiiieaa |*rlur Iu lew York, ami died two daya afterward in gieat agony. lbs murderer gave himeelf up to tiie poliee .... lUchaid llobliieau, the mnrdeier uf klr*. Diauu at Norwlrbtowii. Conn , dleil lu Jail from the offecta of (wleiu taken after bis an est .. .The Jewish New Year festival wae celebrated iu all the syuagogtles thiougbout the ooautry Hept loth Aooot-ling to Itehrow rev-kuntug that ' waa the Arst day of (tie year irihi ... .The loss of human hfe ou Matagorda hay, Teaaa, was and of cattle lu that vtmuity, 76 (JOU head Adrtoea from < Ulna state that in a heavy lypheon at Che-Foo, three Kuro|*an and many Chinese voseele weie wreckeit, and thirty Uvea wnie lust. ..'lire latest iel urns from the fowl and month disease in hngland shew Uiat in Kast Suss, v (here are 6,'JVi beasts affet tfwl lu Olotmnsier, I't.OOO , in Warwickshire, n.uOO, in Cumlielland. 6 700, and Ui Weetmoreland, (tie. Yoikshue shows a large mcreeee i ('apt. Dawkina, of the Itrilish ram Vanguard, j which wa* run down tu Ute channel by another : ship of Uie squadron, ha* l-eeu remiured and j diemiaaad from tlte service Cardinal ItcCloskey took poeaeeelou of his title In the Church uf Han eta Maria Hu| ra Miner v an at Itime, with Uu|<uelug eeremouiee. A t-atteau coutiuiiiug Outldard Helse, of Camden, N. J., WUilam lianduii, of Philadel phia. and a child four year* of ago, was run down hy Lho sloop Il4<urtstta, lu the Delaware I river. Mr. liandou and the ahrid wae drowned. Mr Holes oiling to the anchor cable and thus saved himself .. During the lategalea ftali lug boat was wrecked near Hi. Anns Do* Mouto, Canada, and her crew named laberge , (two brothers), M isahej (father and two arms), and Ptceid. Peruier, and Cote, were drowned, j . . Hy an explosion of gas lu the Anchor oolhery, at Heck*cherville. Pa., two men were killed and oue severely lujurd. They had been onlered out of the nuns by the Arw-buee, but did not obey .... An examination of the houkv of the l'lanterw' NaUuual hank, at Louis ville, Ky , reveals a defalcation of #IO6,(JUO, taking during the last Are years by the late teller. Isrots Uehm. lt will t<e .-emembered that itrhm recently rot-bed the bank safe of tIOO.OW, and endeavored to deceive the au thorities by telling them that he had been taken pom his bed at night by masked men and forced"to open the bank ...A sanglo-eoul race ktwN-u Prank Denmarsh, of PiUaburgh, at>d John I'edgrtft. of Chicago, over a course of one and a half miles and repeat, waa wan by Denmareh in 19.3* , aaid tu be the fastest time ou record, 'lho referee decided the match a draw on account of a ftmL The ten gold medals to h* preset]'ed hy the I'lilted State* authorities to the p-erwrjo* who manned the life arid ft*lung boat* and rewcutd Unrly-two |versons from the wreck of the Bteamer Moiu 111 1 Aiiig Island wound ou thi Ihirty-Aret of .Vugm-t, hare been forwarded to their intended owner*. They are of pure gold, about twu inch,* in diameter, the ituriuaic value of each UNug #IMI. The obverse repre sent lire eceue of the diaasler off Watch Hill \ light, and upon the reverse is tbo name of , lite (>erw-ui to whom prrecntad Theeecre- j laiy of the treaeury will redeem the following j buudscf Julio 30. Do.t, on and after January I, In7< (onjton bonds. ToO. Nva 3.301 to No. A7l. baillt inclusive ; tlou. No. 1 - 601 to No ; 1'J,10. both inclusive . #6OO. No. 16,301 to No I * OOP, t-olh litclualv* . (I .OJO, NO. 69 70l U> { No. CN.UOQ, buili Inclueive ; total. #'J .'<oo,ooo lleguttered l-onds, #6O, No. 09 to No. 160. both Inclusive; #IOO, No. 6>'l to No. 1.(00, both j incliuuve ; #6OO, No. (N-J UJ NO "50. both in clusive . #I,OOO, No. *J 061 to No. 4 IWO, both inclusive ; (YOM), No. 1 661 to No. 3 100, both inclusive . #lO. (IJO. Su 3.761 to No. 4 000. both inclusive . total, #J.600.000 ; grand total. #6 - 900,000. . WiUard Car)-Jiter, a wealthy old gentleman, ha* given #6*0.000 to endow a new school at Kvansvtlle. lud .... Hhrferd, Hall -I Co., c-f Host HI, tumtver dealers, faded for j H.fioo.tsv Tov October public debt elate- j mentshows a leduction uf #3,:>4*i 6CJ f-1 durmg Heplembcr, ireving the debt t -tai at #3,265,- j 749, N9fi.95.... lty a misphav*.! , witch at Pair haven. VL, a freight train ran into a lucuoto- \ livo standing on the track, turning it cum- I pletely over and killing lb* fireman and aMiat ar>L The engineer saved bis life by Jumping .... Nathan Hollowav, his wife, and Mr*. Hnell were drowned by the ti|*>eMing of Uietr trust while crossing the river from Honor*que Deuada. to Fisher's landing, N. Y .... Die . II vston Jury In the case* ><f the Jefierwon I tor : deu mnltneerw returned a verdict in which Miller and Smith were found guilty of murder and Giew was acquitted The bishop of : Ilrnslaii ha* noli&ed the German ecrleeraatical court that lie is d< u-nmued not to obey its ; summon* to attend for trial, on the ground 1 Uiat tli* court la not competent to try him. The assistant treasurer at New York has i been instructed by the secietery of the treas ury to sell #4.(00.000 of grdd during October. A decree is putihshed in Hpain re-enacting j the law of DfO, preecrlbing the election t4i the ] cortee hy universal suffrage, of one deputy to every 60.0tX) inhabitant*. ..A Cat noli, proews- i aion in Toronto wa* attacked by a mob, which ! I wa* tired upon by the I-ob.ee and several jver •ant injurtvl The fara <u* trotting horse i American Girl fell dea l at hinura. N. Y„ while trotting the first heat of a race. A jwv*f-iorfcii examination *howei that tier death wae ooca enured l-v over-exertnei while recovering from the epirootic. She wa* valued at #26.tko, and j her l<eet recoi-l waa 3 17' 4 .... A railroad train wa*sbvppevlhy tmgaiidetwdweenHairagnmaaml j lianvelona, Hpain. and all the pa*seugeri< were rubbed. Among them were seventoen otbeere ; autl seamen uf the American man-of-war f'rankhii.... Mayor Hlocurn, of Newport, It 1., has forbidden the fall ItivcriMa* (committee b> solicit aid ill New|iort for fall llivsr striker*, and ordered them at re* tod it they atlempted it.... A young la-ly iu fog land swam ten mile* without anppott or stimulant, m two hours and ; twenty-three miuute* Albert H. League ' appttweiieil the aacrisiy of 8t Tatrick * eliurch, . in Itoston. while service* were going en. *u attempted to shoot the pa-tor. father ttaelley. on account a* lavegne alb ~o*. of father Gaet ley having put his iLexgUa'a) daughter in a Catholie convent in Indiana. League -as ar reeted ..A wat*rspmlw)t away part of La* Crnoee, New Meaco, and the next tlay anotlier water*|<out washed off all the remaining house*. The authentic* of Kingetou. Jamaica, have weixed the steamer Uruguay, which waa ladeu with gun* and ammunition for the Cuban* By the swamping of a bat trail in Lake Ht IVtcr, Canada. Copt Hamel. j the owner, lim wife and time clnidien were drowned. i ('raft tiie pedestrian, finished Ins walk o : eiglit hundred nules in fourteen days at Kclie nectady, N. \\. two and a half hour* ahead of time. At the finish lie waa in good condition. 1 .... Ac imruiUee appointed to examine into Hie M-uitprlier Female Humane Aaaoctalion l*>ttery, of Alexandria. Ya., prononnoe the drawing t-< have been a fraud. Over frrOO.OCO in tiokete ba<l been Üb-n.. .. The Swedish t-l<vnw L. J llager. running between Lubsck and Co)<enhagen, ha* l<ecn Imitio I in the Bal tic. Tweuty-fotir of tho pasrougeia and eleven of the crew perialied George Miller and William Smith. oonvicte<! of murder on board the ve*sel Jefferson Harden, were aenteneed to l<e hanged Jan 14. They received their > sentence without emotion The jury in i the suit of Maitha Hutchinson against tho : Boston Gaslight Company returned a verdict for the plaintiff, awarding bet #12,6u0. line is tho suit to rscovor damages for personal in j mies received at the time of the gieat tiro in November, 1872, when the buiidiug. No. 11 Hummer street, wan blown up by gas Dan gerous counterfeits are m cnculatiou of the denomination of #6 of the following bauke: j The First National Bank of Chicago, III.; the Traders' National Bank of Chieago, UI.; the First National Bank of l'axton, 111 ; tho Fiml j National Bank of Canton, 111 An old mau j named Goodwin was beaten to death by hie | sou in Jersey City, while the entire party were , iiudcr the influence of liquor The Vau- j derbilt University, at Nashville, Toon., waa j ] opened with appropriate exercises. Coiniuo j i -lore YaiideibiU, hy li endowments the I I university eras built, was not present. In the Philadelphia United Htates Circuit Court a decision waa rendered (hat the govern ment had priority over oilier creditors against J. Cooke A Co. * a*aet*. The'lxmdon house owed the government about #BOO,OOO ..... Hop-iit* from ail |*<rUt<a uf the oonutry In dicate that the horse the '-<n|>er is spreading. The rargo of |<eeclies evi-l to Kiiglan-I lu s steamer es|w<clally rhsiteied fur Uie par - |<*e having turned out ruinously, a small euuajgumeut waa sent hy another eteamar In a box on deck, arranged on Uie Allegretti re ftlgeraUng plan. The result waa entirely successful, sud the frail sold rapidly at good prtoes Thw Chinee* goverumeul Issued * decree ty<ucrdlug hereafter Hilarovjurw* be tween the chiefs of the government d*|<ert mento aud foreign ministers The Kugiiah h-q< pi- Ivors bavc now enUreiy finished their j work. It I* believed that no lees than on* fifth ef the crop has failed, the hope being left ou the poles, as they are not worth the |iicklag. The growth this year aenuat supply Uie hwtue trade. Uuod samples of Knghali hups have aocordUigly advanced from eight to ten ehllhuge per ewt 'lite government has tueUtuted suite against If. il. Ciafftn AOn , the heavy dry goods house uf New York, for #1,600,000, for dealiug tu and concealing tutor matiou in isgard lu atlks kuown to have been smuggled The American Board of Poreigt il lesion* held a meeting in Chicago. The re ports ■ bowed thai #4OB 830 were teoetved the I est year and #i6u,33<i disbursed. NuiuUi of mis-ion* trig li teen ; number of stations, seventy eight , number of out-alaUous, 498 , \ Is bo I els employed hy uuselous, 1,432 , pages printed fur distribution, 6,171,000 , number of cbeicbaa, 223 , members, 11,646 , somber ot pupils in eduoaUonai d*|<arlatent, 22.603. An Uuspprcrlalrd Flnanrlcr. A long-haired, aallow oomplexiourwi in- ' dtviilual, arriving at Aurura t Ind.) depot the other day, cauacd no little gtwiMiii in ; the village. He waa myalenonaly ailent alwiut hia name owl buaineaa. All ex I pected auuiethuig remarkable of him. Filially all agrtwwl that he wa* au Ohio poliliciaii oome duwu to talk uu tiie cur rency <juention. They were willing to givw'him a teapectfal hearing. At seven o'clock thsir ruri<anty reached a climax a* he emerged from hi* hotel and mounted a dry goo.l* box in the market j square. Both parties cheered him, for i each thought lie vraa thi-ir friend. When the sili-tioe waa reached, he be gsn : " Ixuliea ami Umtlrmrn I came to ; your Imautiful little city h- rsl-lerl by no flourish of luxiinet - or double-leaded an nouncements in Uie U' srs)<!|* rw. IV exju'rieuce of' a lifetime ho* taught me tliat the fine pert-options and delicate fa- j cultleH of American people will dlrvoover uiertt aud appreciate it uuder whatever circumstances it may appear. Aa I look upou your upturned faoua to night 1 aui aaaurv-d that yuu are uo exoeptiuus to the general rule. I *ee tx-auty, lutelligcnoe, t and the love of country stamped on overv connteuatioe lieforc me." \\ hik* tlm <m<wd gathered chaw-rtohim, he Miuffeii hia lard oil lamp with his thumb and finger and went ou. "It Uuy lie jMMMible that you have never henr.l of me In-fore, and it would not In come m<* to go into any detailed account uf myself on thw oocueiou. lam Pro feaoor BitU-ud'-r, of Cleveland, 0." A louoing cheer went up. " The whole country ia uw straining it* eyee for light nj*<n the great question of the hour. One faction cries aiou-i for inflation, and the other lifts up its voice ; auvl King" the aoug of oontractiou The | quc*t! -n may l<e narrowed down to 'gold and graenlaicka.' My frieuda," j ! aiul lie rawed hw finger imprevisively, I ! " either is govwl enough for me." He open<-tl a little tin trunk, and took out several small red paper boxes. As he continued he held one of tbein up to view. " I have iu this little package the greatest combination of medical proper- ( tie* that ever the wuu ahone U|<oii. I coll it my ' Balaam of Cornucopia, or lught uuig Wait and Bunion Kt ad Later.' If there ia anv lady or gentleman in this vast assemblage who low a troublewome excnuct-nce, let her or him limp forward, ami 1 will remove it without money and without price. I will anatcli, aa it were, the " Hut he uever got further than tliat. Sme broken windows in the ueighbor i hood, a js-rva-lrig odor of ancient <ggs j which still hang* almut the place, and splinters of wood acatterad about 'he Mjuare, aloue remain to remind thw An roraiw of the vnut of the Cleveland ooru- I doctor. A Terrible Record. The annual nqsvrt of the New Yoik Is*l.l of health far 1874 reveal* some very startling facta, not the leant of j whn-h i the statement mod concerning tiie dcatha from alcoholism. The aver age number of deaths from this canae 'n* about seven a week during the win ter uionUis.but out of 824 death* for the wt t-k ending July 18, alcoholism carried : off more than one third of the whole i j number, vis.: 867. The week following there were 870. out of a total of H6l, and the week following that 311, out of a total of 744, from the (tame cause, i Iu the three following weeks 770 d<-atha are scored to the credit of the demon nun. The 4lewth roll to this terrible ac count for the year gives the numlx-r of the victims at 8,496 Hnrely there is plenty of work set for the temjx-nui-e j advocate. Hurt Iflm. At Kiifatila, Ala., a mulatto, about tweuty three year* of age. diet! from a rather unusual cause. (Some time ago he attendel church, and, aa usual, some of the females I--comy excitrxl. and were surging and plnugiug about, and he tin j del took to hold one of the more violent- I ' ly affected, but in so doing she threw I bock one of her arms with great force, striking him a most violent blow across hi* chest and nearly killing him out right at the time. He recovered slight ly, however, but continued to oomplaiu, and frequently li*d hemorrhages from the chest, or blood-spitting, aud died a few - lays after. RKOISTKUKD LitTTKits.—The registry 1 i department is oue of the great conveni . euoos of our post-office system. A reg-is j tored letter is safer than the ordinary letter, Iweuw it <s entered in a record book, s< ole-1 np a sj-ecial envelope, a receipt for it is taken of every agent or |4<*tm wlm re-ceives it, and it is to the personal custody of ; - lie rxnil agent, instead of In'iiig put into ' the mail bag. It tak'-s but one trial to shew the i purity and merit of Ihrbbius' Electric i Soap (made by Cragin A Co., Phitadcl- 1 phial. For your own iuterest gi\<- it that one trial. AH grocers keep it. * Important to Travelers. Tersons viaitirg New York or leaving br lbs oars from (iraii-l Central Depot, will save an no* anoe and expense of esrrisge hire an t Itag cage rxpressags 1-y stopi-rag at Grand Union ; 11--let. ojqxisite Grand (Vutrai Depot. Over ; i.VI elegantlr fnrnishi-t rooms and lltietl up at a coat of #900,000. Ftuopesn plan. Guests >wn live more tuxnrionsly for th money st tiie I Grand Union than at any other first-ejass boose m New Yoik Stag.-* and street rare pass toe doors to ail part* ->f tie eitv Kes that the 1 hotel yon enter is the Gianii Union Hotel.— j Ocnt. Wonderful I'aiut. All about patnuug ahonld do as we have incloss stamp, aud ha e reuj free the hook " ttow Every Man ran Paint," and *< lee' 1 colors, witli spanimen* of thirty brilliant ooloin, i . an I full amount of a prej-araliou of olrt Kh. ish I sail and Fronoh tno. rea-ly mixed, in ad 1 color*, that will endure mueh longer and less in prion than any othei paint of the pr< sent -lay. Every one who ha* pauitinc to do will save money in reading the bo<<k, win thee 1 they buy the paint or not. Address Im.rn -1 sou. I'AIST WORKS, NO. 261 Front strvet. New York. Mr. logeraoll makes large re ductions to churches requiring paint.—Com. MISTKKI Sor.Mtn.—The great secret ©f ! th wotidtrful success of YegsUue. It strikes at the root of -Urease by pnrifiying flu- hi <od, j nstvning the liver ana kidneys to hselthy ac'iou. invigorating the narvoussystem. Corn. FIRST GRXSO txrre-mo* of the Tradesmen's I induetrial Instituie, Pittsburgh I'a .o; ens Oct. | 7, closes Nov. H. Address A. J. Nellie. President. Com. ______________ Par/ton*' Purgative Pttl-n will greatly ! relieve, if not entirely cure, dyspepsia when eveiything else fails. They have I*en tried in oine d<-<q>otale cares, and hare given mote I leliof than any other medicine. -Com. Hi Win To-lUt.—Ti trndntm lo naglwt a oongh, h<we**r alight Otmenrap •ton mar follow, arxl thoogli Or. WtiUtr'i Hal •am nf Willi t'hrrry ha* fr*|iintlr rtireri till* morli ilrMitwl dlMwioo, It almoal Invariably rare* Ui a primary illeaeae# of the throat, Innga •nil duett. Fifty rout* aiwl on* dollar a botUa. large bottle* iniu'li the Mumper.— (Jam. Many traluahln It one# die from Urn •Soot* of oolic Tb* Uil thing to do In a oaa* of ihia bind la lo poor a bottle of Jt<hn *nn'r drwwiywe lAninimt Into a long-necked junk bottle, add half a pint of tnolaaaaa and water, then poor the whol# down the hocaa'a throat In ten minute* the bum* wtll begin to eat Oom. I ONMI MPTION CAN HK ( I HKII. kwnt'i gVUMSM Hki r, Araaat a'a Kn Wean Toeir, a. aa*. a'a MA*d*ab* FILL*. An the eel# ■ ■ditto# tbel wlil earn Fe he near? Uee • neltnim Unt wtll atop a eoe*k wtlt Me An tin Ante of Um i >Ua*t, that leek e* lee It nr. a the elrvaie lee of Ike l.luud. jp rrbtao Hilluea, le iael. teer iu* the aetlne ■>• Ike #ry urgent tket I #HMHM ||MI fiTflfll I Um (ioMpltipl tod Ume|*> an Ike otaaw of twe IklrAe "f Um mm uf < aeMepUw M.i.j per toot an# uUte of a dml pale le Uie tel., eee Upe'luo. tutted be, tea. pel# le UM, *fcaaidaf blade. let If tie* of drwwel una *ad ielm" a, MM feed hie* heavily ue the ■leeieek. ac-rrapael#d wHk t< Idlt* and i.#i. ui a* ~t .led rtion nerlin wotlly urwdoele frute • dlw.dwnd c-attdtUuu of 111 #<.>Mtct> of e taqiM Mm Fereeei w> afltiuied If Um* lake aa at Iwe kae) ouldt. eed If Um •>.<>( la IMM hi mm M tuddaoly ■keeked, wtll ted UM Mnfelj eat llnr tligatd re j welnle* ucrM eed leeetln, eed ,1a . before ten en even. Ie Inapt en e Mot# uf eune. eed uleere od. tk# neult of at, cm It dealt, vh-eak't Feldeoaio kf rep It pa tt inula, eel wkfeh duaa a A eeelele uplura at aayUdaa #ticulo'#d le ebeek e eu*h teddeelf Ikiuock', e, Weed Tuelt dlttultet Ike lead, taiete lu, ike aaetrw late# of Ike aLesorb. aide dteaetlee. Wine ike koeet, an' m*, tkla aetlew, at Ike avwplutMt tiaatetat at a blttoe# laedeeei, kekeeek't Mettdieka FlUe en ie,nuil Tbtee teed mete en imwnd eelr bf J li Iv MSIII A Hop, N K freer Milk eed Ate* gteweu. FWIi Aed an for tele 1./ ell dr#**ttt# eed 1 iitlart The Market*. pee wu. Deaf OelUe—Frtate te kure n ..jMtka II Ilk Itomiuw lo Ucaed Teixtu........ if— ; Miiro Ouwe,. . te Ob otO Ub Hope— lA nattm <V twieaiid 10 , Hk t •map .... M 0* i Unite # || I OdOon- Middling IS ,# Ufc j rUiur-Ktlra Waelerti ( ku g I U Met* litre. . *0 m • 1* Wheel —Had Wtelere H d I II No, 1kpn0e...... 11l dill ■yt-auu i • m \ Barter— Mate .... I H # 1 10 Barter Mail I Ml g | KM Qata— Mixed teku II t^ Ourn—Mixed Wt#ra e* g TOM liar, par eat •I in threw, per ewl '**•* Hope, Tta. 0t It u.da 04 # (d Pork-Maaa ill, #n K : Lard UHd U% \ Flak— MkeAerai Mo. 1, 1it*.,,,,,. Ml eg On Wo 1. bee KM : K Dry God, ear rai . a frt *|H leitbl. Healed, per boi M *>, atl j Parrohnm— Grade • S it! 1 , BrSaed, lt% j Wool —Uailfornla Fleeot X) id Treat - B g n ' AuftraUen " a* M : Better— naau ... xa a| m WaMerti Dairy p # St ! Wtwtert, Tallow II * II Waatara Ordinary . U • Id > Penuaysrana Dm • ■ # n ')•"- Plale rarlorr II g lit* . " Kklnonad H g 111 a mart,. W i |l I K*xa- rial* , anti Wheat I M I M 1 kye-Klai* H Md . ilorb-Mliad Tl • It r*ey—Htete | illggl I lie i 1 t a'a— dial* • *3 ecrvaio noor . ( <* • T Vfhrnt-Me I| r .i in gis item— Mixed | ttk i lata * # |j Rye....... H g II I Bariey 1 16 # I IS aexwmoM. Ooooa— bow Mlddliam 15 *, s IX Fleer— Extra. .. . ........ ( 5* tl • TX Wheal— k*d Weatern 1 •1 an 1 Rye M g rt ' Oeru— Trliow I| d Tl (tela-Miied II K Ptdralekle. Ut', * Mb IMUldtnib. Floor— Prnnayivuda kllra.. ....... IP flit Wheal- WreWt, Urd 1 (1 g 1 10 *p ■ n g n (tern—Tehtrw KM K Mum! TX Tl . iiMe— Mixed. tl g tl j •> tew— Grade . ,| l|f •! ,|f h-tntd. IS •nvfnfl Thnedk Ike knelk aed tmedlk |e"l Ik'i aleV "• He lead Ik. all.- r%il4 N J*. * M I IPPktl Bu.de aed ■ ■HjldMllMmtur addle Ikr nilhoa fur panel# km li* leei Iwuw aa Walim.N -um m tfcue th.nl Tlpa •etdMndßßdmaafcttdl ale. ir> w ir. veuwd a .le CABLE*"SCREW WIRE gcf>l;|nai j fttwsto Mtii hsdw* HitbiTCHs aiw HCC'Ct Z l3tvi un Ml) mmi th*f mrm thm MMMiM HMMhnit gu*4 U4 NUt FtW iud J| ' VBihHHHNBMB PATPVT6 r AILHIO 8T J. <*. U Iweltw * tten *Mp k———na r relea4. a. , ** W IMAsi" 'hunaMir Uua, Wee Fee a# k tujierv* lo #ll uilMr Ithw Foe U re. Wear A I'a-lrem. ty * TA' V'tl'if. ee. .e, ~oe# F.nw fTQQ | Umo all the itniilM* daamd | , WvHwlJ * 1? • tvn*,l#M hakltM Powder* 1 A r ** " " a He tl. to* lor , ->.i-i.l.< ted >MI |ma>. and i f Irwdn.l Inner I.U for lhr.lrtdM aed eell ' **SW.I,I> Maui Valuable . . .klup rerlpn k.y'o£*yTj I :l hoe 5..) be 4 irruiar lu Ik I —4 lt.ni. r. tiAVT/ a ru., ltd lltaar Nd., Near Vark. Aeeoto Warned Kttrm ladeimiataednadl kendMatnp i j he circular Alet Mallun*. A Go. Wunkewdue. Man f i IT A KMII. IIKtrMCWs I OVNt VIPTION. \ ; r cured t* KFtk'N Wee Method l ~o,uluu.c In. by nail Add nan Ha. g p Myn j kAkll. Rtgn Skad*,Sa g W. i|talt,lhaTex 1 i gnmgaajßtfjSwnwa lO® pagr Book aad tanpln of ■ Rtblirr K.--Elr> rotttpf rtr : for wdw reef. **r a R. ! MgtJ.l daraln Hrep. laallr Cj hlled amh ptedltie aatlrde-Out. : ■ Write at mrrudtairiwny . B M. V. Slat* 800 fin* Co. HMBHH 7 A fl T VTQ w heul OU Chenoee nooeled acae ! AU£tn ISpill l. Konfunaod < hnn. !a/ noey ipMat, Stu ecal Ghrrewo Oe. Phlla. Pa j I I / 4\V te t'aarata. T> make Framn. Kaaeia , 111/ M Pan. Ptcren Ih.m. tea head two j ateati* he l* A dcet*tia J. Jal Uofln,Bea>aa.lSen. j WIFE NO. 19 BY ANN E|JZA YOUNG, |ri|hem Voungte Rebellious Wife. TV mi, mmw, tin of all o>. RKGRgTS ' i BRICMANTS HARf M m e Hie / PMyeaniy. hoe Ue ..rr l-c r • r.£ Kaarty goo Ifre lUekJn, bnto'r IV ear* It it (k. km aJtnc keek Bill ikl I- I 0,000 nun Areata. Bit aad a lata. I r, Mtpknnl ,Jmal, kn tl IJ IO fa.lj. ALL LIVE AC EW T 8 an emnr *- dend . .reuira ek LARCk TIRNR. W"I ftn Doa<edhay. mi addmtM flte DUfflS, CILMAN M CO.. Uaarroaa, Ct m Ceicae*,Tu-or Ciacitt n,X4*jo. CDSHINGS MANUAL Of Parliamentary Practice. Rulet of pmoßgdtat and dehkl* In (Mttm'ttv mamrpmh 1 I IJir* Ttm t* lh# tUndanl kttUMtU in MU UM> luind HutM Md t> an bdI|MMMh)F Hnnd B<4 fur *ry rBFWhFT uf M dfdlbefklifF hnd|. MM M ronxf > rrfFPMCS ttjrun | UM> tiTtnMllli n*** l Wftlitf of Mft* iinw-wM-ding in debgt>dß j " lb* rbwl Mutlk .rT.AUv e. Ptpniiodor uf ABMncM par hM.ment*rj U C*A* M NMtlt frkw. cnniM Neat Ky anU >t vcip( <4 micg. Addmi TIIOMI'huV liKUUN A U>., j linrfßM, Humm. j II piTCROMAXCTf #r Kwbl 4 hßiming." ' ■ I •!" if' Bill |w ITS, "in X y M k ot..v*6k hiklaMlt Tito art Mil CRM j I WRMiidM. )n*. I*v tikdkll r.fbt*. Inftthrf R 'tii R Lrkrt • OtLto, I j kg|T' n !■>w*Tk> !li*Ul„la<M.|r I MMR.MM gmlti A I ghee; k.VI .1 W!I.UAh k <\> • rtoitßaWliMitß. I TXriiKTANT TO COHmi HPTITKM. 1 A fiNiilMUti hittai tiMNi mo fnrtanni* MM to ran hi* i mem of ( in ItM WGfSI gtMfßk. ftflM Mk * KttMO ap u. dto bj U most cMirMtad pbyNeikM. d | ■lrg* U> ruMk* tb# cor# > which )P'*w occ#Mßfui ! In mrmr j %mmm> • Ukmm kfßtctd with iUHmi. Hmnoh! 1 tid <V>tigte a iViJd- •'-umawik tM, mh-1 nil tllRVinai of j iSn Thrum nnd m* 4 will gettd U># HKi|vn. frw# ml | rlibfy*. U> nil mho dmit- it. If b#y will forward thnftf : gddtiMlM IHMKI, AOKK. ;|tf Üb#cty M N#w Ymh ■ WAN I** At. KXT th m+mry t-nntj fhtiarrjutd IVV* I Frw mo ft kbits##* Month AddtwwM TEUi I U** It i'kklkl, t.ft KRgde W , Sew 1 'i4 Dim-ATI HOUR, for rtabfc I Mhl Pftimbm! Youth* r Adult* A<tiltw* H ; fcrr . lumftklr* A*# nnbUcMiiun of th# iplftdtd new £IFE-AD7ENTDRSSiORIENT A hmn new Kwvk of Tttf*l. Idmitwt. and Ktpmrncr. tur j Tno W Knot, mtti %• macnißcrnt #rr EncT**<nf-thr flnrwt esrr RTFH It MCumll> mrih at i itfotrmirf |wwnk. M4 outwclU all other hmCkg Itel. No i worn wag rcrr rndor##d *o hirhlr nonr •#!)• bo fa*t nrpiu , Ht MTttlr *. L-vW mow IR iwwr* libe fyrertl A*)d til j in rs## wmmlr. avsother ill in <k*f Idwriliii We want .wo •wore Retire ncwM* ww. Ol TUT T KtT i mH A hoend pnmpMrt w?h fhtorctmen and iUustmtiong of this fa- ! mow work, fall iWwrrlptHkn gad unosußl Trrma. m*H free to j nay on*. A4Jrv A. U. hOKTUIM.TO% A < ., llartford.Ct ! VISITING CARDS. P*|k Finn Whit# Rrlntul Vlatttnw L aid*, with your H ' Nam# ldkutlfally prtntwd *u thgnt. o>*t ild. fw jftl c"U JO R#j| ir Ihstnn k. sftl ct KlßffA it <Wd • 'Mrg. |U ct w# hav# or#r •><) filff#r#oi Mtjl#a of j Omkl*, tnrludinf 4il*n. SoowfTw #. Marhln. tTniv#r#tt> Maid, ntc. Hood Msrop fur Samplf*. or IO ctn. fur A*# i*' . in Uf \\ H. 11. WAI.IHCW ><*rit AUnwtMa Hnaa._ C AGENTS WANTED FOR THE ENTENNIAL HISTORY of the U.S. Tb# mat )nt#r#*t In thn thrtlltpn hlßtary of our oonn i try m%kn this the fatnt **ll nr lo* It "rtr puh|t*b*d. }lt csntnln* orar 4CNI tin# hlturlcal #^#r*rtn• nod I i IHNI mcM, with n toll account of thw ni*hronchlnß j I fffand OnimnUl coWbratiuß Sen ' for a full d cilp- I thsfi and nstra lerms to Arwat*. NA'l lONAL PUB ! ISHtW' 'O-. >*ntl delnnl* Pa j Ma xk p * A MONTH Amah wanted #r*ry U 'I kf| *h*r#. Bu*ln#an honoraM# nnd ftnst ! • n/illll rlawi Partlrular* went fr## Addroa* ViIVV m. Mo. a f\TTW nnd .Ylor|hinc Hit bit nbaoiotnly nod 1U 111 H *p*nd:* cor#d Palnloaa .no publicity, i A* f 111 ffl Send Rtantn for pnrticaUra. lr. ('AMI, | mJ rn iwHA . ao. Hi. 4&Q C 4 \f I>l If 1 PKKK and biff pay to | TOO nAIMI 1J ri male* nnd famnio* •rn. | whom. Addroaa THK I t mon PC*. ( '<> , N#wark. N. J. TIIK WHAT I* ITe—ScnmUitrff u*w Snli* nt i alff hi Biff Indo#m#ntn to Acoutn Snmploa. ay ! oontn nnd rtamn A* ntR Wanted S#od for ata \ loffon. V h SPKCI AfaTV (X) . I I Onntinl Kt.,Bonlon. WANTED AHKNTN. **%#• *+* o*m/+~\ iW. ffclif A. fX)IJI#TKR h 00.. Obi—ffc- EYKH\ ¥ K MIIeY WANTh IT. MfßJf h>M Sold •19 N H*Y at hum#. A#ntn wautgtd. Outfit and tnrm* j Add:##- TRI'K A Mnlu* CiA QOr , "*' , ' v - hnd fr • 'hr*.rtu 4 "h lalnctb i J) lu~M>Z \J J . 11 bL>rr*jnp , bom a. i>ut#n. Moat ) > "Trot* it W|My. ami will Prtvail." VECETINE Purifies the Blood and Restores the Health. isrE?mr.o?i* TEAM OF AGE. RA*T M i MB. I*l 11. Ae*. a, MM. k-ismMim ••mediae fer tkl* eumrtalel. f kew let. te aitt relief et free Ike VuMm*}. II feMlkeet te .niptota# fer wteek NkmMMMN ,n%BI*M H RH.SMMAM EXPERIENCE OF TEARS. ixourrnwi. Meat. Marek —. M* lit AtHuTukl I hate Mewl peer ** Rfeeg Frepe ! tetewrf Vaurrnrai le m, family fur tetetei y mm eed iklnk Lkal rer Aerefela er Geekerewt Hie*i, er Skew atallo affttlieee, II aeeeet k. .imileit arut et i bUxx! perl iter aud tpriee iee*l iitee. R to Ike bee. tteeg I kee e#er eaed. aed I ha,a eeed eel t,etyltite* I eae ekeerfelly „ neettf M le way ewe le etad of tocb a -ed'ate- Ymut f.l^ IM RaatD VreeL WHT IS NKKDED. Mm. r#e u. im iee.e it wu tm—atet repertor te K I#r Urtae ewtetete fer tkKA It U te.t Watt, weted tk.iiirteßf 1.1 me-- '' Rle Item whe feel tern <kep aeed eat tela* le reaxete tea* le eerteel keeßk PtnsWß M. FMUacOl gCte. IO Kele kx. lte.ee. Vaenrn* ante* He laßemn tea# emry mm •* Ike treat i*t nlaw neeutti wMk I t feeedeMee. atl dictated aeH i ami nt ill* Hal pewem. : ore ilea a kaekkt ftrewll.e eed pert*term, of te* 1 Uutd drtrta* eel diet***, ami teerte* ill." te pte ! fen* MA allotted IMb IBimW I* mmU by Prubte | M. T. M. P.-Jte. m B-osahst.'stsaistst.VT. OPIDM CHESS la* i'i.i D. Mtektr.F U.te.miHi"! led PRESENT OONFLIOT. A mam book ue IM MA ntkl widlw eftea Bar. W rtssbsmHr.sst Rssitf IGttTS t CTTJS "KATDRE'S 6REAT REMEDY." Tbia cerdUl i* * CERTADC CUSUB (er Ceagte, CwgMe, HiiM—lte Laateite# TknU ami Mr**#, ■■■#'• tte,**A If Mb* l MM#. WUlmwM*# baltel dlereae Cate*—|Mlte. Thm be#* mf (kit etrd'-*— tee yrrptraftee mt Ter eb laietd by a wtewllar pa mrmma beea tb* amp mf Ik. Fter Trea, IV BlrAeel paapar Ite* mi wkMk ere well toewa. WMk Iklt rata, rtaeh mt wtehete ..*!■■ wnlkte Ml heeW— tan Mil i, tbM* ■.ehlw* It (k* ern POTm AOOirgT te ell "* 'BaTLTTwisnAsrs PINE.TREE TAR CORDIAL '-"ggri't: olSTaffiu tklT Aim UTI.I-TR.II3> mm*tm*mm thai bee been la deity me* te BallM atedl Inlelllgtat pAytlrlav Car Uw te* Mrt.te ytarv aad a nekta wf te ttee klxkiM terae# by all wtea bare ■*.< K. we teaw ■eadt Of UKSOLICrrtD TESTIMO NIALS grave. . If re* eatery h aay itmmmmm te whtrb date t erilal te rnwartel, WW „.Hee..a.tely Mty. TRY IT, WE KNOW IT vmJLIHJ TOO OOOD." A Magle bottle will liauaMiH tea vaiaf nbU nnnillli*. m IIIU BIBtttSTS 111 STHEIEERK. PRINCIPAL. DEPOT, 23'4'Xorth^Second.St.,, Philod'd, affSte The lleatea Telearapk. Tb# aeree# ate Itde { cnrhU kbera upMeXd by tk> teate kextftte HneMidi ] Ik# prtet etukrer of Ik# ■)#.a iHt udwtd. tee trkekt ! etwuat urpaataxtkue t# perteß. ebeixtewd he te* IM** 1 beta* Tmrrßßl'* VHsrr Aprrirwi J ereht eekn la ntimiaf aw i'#a drkikt, arMMp fraat 1 h> vwnlmwiff üb* aldwnach u it* acwmaj ene li taun. and k##ptaf th# hnwwl* frm hqr nB 4nafSMk ■■■ Yon want *n w ahn ;DOHTss® ; 'adrtlSi? JOCUI jjr-.B.prtb. la* mrwrw m OUXUSTUO a am# Sk / / Mele aad Fe*Mk. la •btdr owe leeeatr Oil Terae aad OCTk'tT FRAE Addreet j F O VICE ART t OO . AacwnatMatee. g lar^^giuk FIEE®MfSiS. ■tl I KVk AI.TKK A- CO.. Bather# aad * Kreher—, Na. 11l Wett new. Vr— V eek C> iAn A MONTH tod KXl'l-TSf Su. #U. ArMebel > T J|| n, #tsr*r uUm Stmrie frtet IJNJ IXiTON.XKW^TuRKoct HtCAUO^_| IV I V 1 W 'll Tl .i'V.T .Sew Turk 1 **l • *1 Meikfaetwrar ut SouoOoLh ! jRWEUtT of etery dee, rlptv* Tb# < *t ltr**,vwr I cVdee. ead a oftarad el neeil 1 trad# prww# te kaup uer -orkiatei tnlai Kill# end## (I t.P 11 order te adeaaot , ' >•—r g I A.C u D prlriiep# wei.Mtei OatetegMaa Baa COME AND SEE Tbate Rick FVatrtaa Searta OW* leinioe acre# for ah aa ! ike SV4J isty end tb. Ftal R. E . end oa the McOrapur I tod MMaeirl Klmr R. K Hntnl Itrp# traeia for Uoh i net > <ea or #ar>d <v*mw,Kl—# to *,train, ttmry oae e.eket aeae teehad Ukee K Apply ke UAVIIkMON A ( Al hIVN Htklei. CkwrrU Co# hpa. NEW YORK TRIBUNE. Tb* Ti—ding Amencan Newspaper TIIK BENT IDIKKTIMIMI RKDICM. ; Daiiy.SlO a year. Rewu-Weekly. S3. Weekly, SR. e ym. t# ■A# Ahiitte Speetneo GopM# aad : l.<wwi Rut# Krtt Weekly, la elnb* of SO or ana, ; aely gI. pota*o pete Addrwe TM TXixrax. W. T. GEO, p. Rowell m Co. I OF TIIK WK-T, tke beet Mrmwbarty. li~ MllMuut nf tree# tad Pit: V Fieaeaa Neraery ' Scad teOwtet. WM. FARKT. vteoaeteMD#, O. e! , )il per VVeeh Hatary. htkw Pieil, Obae- Wi>" Ur fr— Ad l-tt Crytttl t... .lo4ltetpo<lt.lod bit eae i roa# • wata vttb paifart fft t AIT lin o—te *° J day. Adapt r AM •••III# U iimll lo etary mot toe at 1111. ]■ te- bo.N rV.4nlo* Rep 'or* un<Jw to* Uj4fl sisrciw onvwrt i \ ti ma nntli pwrm* n#n' V M field cummQ hi t • Elastic Truss Co., >a. UK3 llrttteii, it. 1. (111, e, —tl hy retlt. Hell or eel ft • Dlronit: tad be rayed tl In <9fl • < l*J r at hum*. StroW## worth SI tent ' D 10 MAU (ra . St IK4IN J i',> . P.inltod. M mm *k Plitrly PriMlrtl llrielol Vlallln |1 ardatanl itet pslJ ft.r *•> cte. Rand —' W ■ B tttmp -or ttmpk- uf I, I net tarda, Hurhlr. -iio> flukrt, -croll. tin. me-h.Vir. w I".—r 4firt#be. Irwu Wee fed. A. H. PI'UA. A Go.. Bwctke, Mt# MAPS n CHARTS ' I>MmL must UroMiumiiAi M Owrivot. >i*Linl Affwat mui#u lu nana lowtwap Bond fw/rn * * luF**u nnd r#rm to K a • KI Hnrulaff Si ,W. ▼ or j I7 W 4th Nt. ClncirnMti O llwrw t hnwrr. THE $50,000 BONANZA Ag M#/k Inree4l la WtU StreeL Tr\ *K*bll nn.j 1-tdtL, e Koitao# <# *U TWV Ka.l perlicultit hee. Aditrew PKMH.KW.V iV K KA It, Htbkeit, OA WaH terret. New V orh. Mysimsi2.s() With IMGertridxee. gAUP V.OUUanld. rwy on# warran . tad. alkfutte narmntr-d. flvmwf fkatett he. WESTERS Villi WORKNChlraf*, lib, 6 Daerbaiiat., (McCurmlclilUock). •J—7 —mil ll a * —y-U >• Aretjrf • K •#WV*>HK ' r O "H "H w.l lAA • r#o< |v#}u.uiu<) puwpAa'joy 1 STlto UJ ' Pl# —lroi '• j-pmered jo) Pa|n* prep (viaod peat eit-i xupi* u •tettttip Mtouvnrei ojg tpu,— er#t oy uaddon ■eei.| on eitmiiri (inf H- J *rA4 ivory-ed<uo eras -ratal X.vt oe pue wpyid eu| it icaneoxg ■ SPEIPBOJPH IEJIB3D UjSDOOSIA arDiAv. KIM ini'lUl CttLM • .<C ■ "'vr/Pi VutTA'aKLi.t-Taoß*i.Taaui. rV, i . .' /" Btnilt er# iudurted by On V x \ J / A ma# eaiinenl ptiyriciem ie VhTli/r ><a- lli-worldfortbecureofrbeu ■S\\l)i / —S' inttitm,neuralgia.lirercom- Ci/ild/ # - pltlnt, dytp-ptia. kidney die — Jm rev.*cbre.palut,uerroudl /if urdcna.flU.femalerumplaiDt* / f|W and general debditr. s* end other t-hronie dlMeart of r4|m tbarlwet.beed.Hrer.atome' !■ . _ ktdu-yt end bbiod. Btx k will 'IFF htl ftrlirthfttetw 1n i ■* , aw mi* te# gaur U)., Ctevlboeli. ÜbV.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers