FARM, HARDEN AND HOUSEHOLD. The Parmer's (lirdra. The greatest objection on the part of farmers to a lilwral garden pateh prob ably is, the lalxir nsiuinsl for its projier cultivation. Tho lal>or could Ire very much lessened by such an arrangement of the garden plot and the garden crops that most of them might Is* cultivated by liorw labor. We will suppose that a farmer wishes to devote about half an acre to the kitchen garden, ami that he determines to lay it out in circular form. The circle would be about ten rials in diameter and thirty one rods in circumference Should the exterior row lie devoted half to grapes and half to hlaokberrnis, the former eight feet and the latter six feet apart, lie could plant thirty two gra|>oa and forty-two blackberries, which would afford, when iu full bwaring, quite a liberal supply for a family. Eight feet inside of tlus a row of raspberries could l>e planted, alxmt twenty-eight rials in length. At three feet apait 154 raspberries could he plant ed in a row, whien could In* divided be tween tile red aud black varieties, to suit the tastes of the family. Six feet inside of tins, n row about tweuty six rods long could be planted to currants and gooneberrie*. \t four feet apart about 108 plants could be set dn this row, or, if that would le more than the family would like of these species, raspberries or whortleberries could Ni substituted for part. Four feet inside of this, a row of strawberries, over twenty-live nvls, or 418 feet, could be plauted. Set one fimt iqxirt, 418 plants could lw< set iu the row. Four tows of strawberries, three feet apart, would cimtain about 1,600 plants, covering about one-ninth of an acri>, which, prvqwrly cultivated, ought to vicld eighty bushels of this delicious fruit. After tusking this liberal allowance for th • small fruits iu the kitchen gar don. there will bo a drrakr space, fifty four foot iu diameter, 170 foot iu cirvutn fereu>\ loft for twtteblct. The out side row of this might bo planted to as}varagus, and tho next to rhuliarb, and tho remainder planted to those annual TtnUhles, a small amount of which is relished in every family.—imrrtMa Hum! Honit. T'ara NMN. Kansas sows twenty fire jier cent, m >ro wheat this fall thau iu any other previous year. We have said repeatedly that the lest way of treating the cabbage worms is to leave it in the hands of its parasite. A Michigan potato grower reports Eureka equal iu quality to Early Roar and Snow flake a little better. Buy of and sell to men whom you know personally, or who are en gaged iu regular, permanent business, whenever this can be done. Other things being equal, buy and sell iu the market nearest homo. R >c keeing is characterized by an in tellm. Nt correspondent of the Maine fttrnur as "a science," and he adds, very truthfully, that a person who would sno.ved iu the business must not have only a fancy for it, to begin with, but experience. The writer once lost a large jar of butter down a well where it remained for three years. On cleaning the well the butter was found to be perfectly good, except an inch on the top. Good butter will keepany length of time when completely excluded from the air, in a cool plaoe. Gather up the farm tools and care fully put them away for another year. Remember, there is much made iu sav ing as there is iu making. The tool tliat would wear out in a year or two if left exposed, when protected with shelter and other care, will last yon to raise eev< ral additional crops. Unwilling to share his ripening cher ries with the hirda, he p>aid a good round prkx for an admirably-formed cat, large as life, and almost as natural, of a beau tiful tortoise shell color, with a " cute lookmg " head and noble tail, and set him up) conspicuously in the favorite tree—believing the representations of the dealer in iron cats, that he would frighten away all feathered depredators from the neighborhood. Fancy his feel ings then, when, the very next morning, he saw a robin perched on that iron cat's back and looking leisurely about to see which cherry it had better go for first How Often should ( wi be Milked. Regularity iu the milking of cows is of !.-> much importance aa regularity in feeding them. In a state of nature, the cow is relieved of its milk a great many times a day. A calf allowed to remain with its mother will help itself seven or eight times a day. Under such circum stances the udder of the cow will remain smail, and if allowed to retain the milk secreted during the twelve hours, fever ish symptoms are likely to be produced. The practice of milking cows more than twice in twenty-four hours causes the capacity of the udder to be greatly in creased, and probably helps in maintain ing the lacteal secretion long after preg nancy has taken place. When, how ever, by an artificial system, the oow has been enabled to retain her milk without inconvenience for twelve hours or so, she ought to be milked regularly every day at the same hour. When the time for milking arrives, the udder usually becomes distended to its utmost capacity, and if the milk is not spxedily removed, the animal suffers considerable pain. Cases of fever, the result of allowing animals to remain too long nnmilkeJ, are, indeed, by no means of unfrequent occurrence. It is especially necessary to attend to this point for some days after the animal has brought forth its young, for during that period very little* irrita tion of the lacteal organs is likely to bring on that most fatal of all maladies, fever. If milking be too long delayed, nature will try to help the poor animal. An absorption of milk into the blood, wiil to some extent take plaoe, and that which remains in the adder will become deteriorated. When neglect to milk a oow at the regular time is repieated several time., naturally the secretion 1 of the fluid is permanently checked; and there are many cases where, by such neglect, an animal has become dry in less than a month. .The Wheal Weevil. H. P. F., Wayne county, N. Y., sends to the Time a a "kernel of wheat contain ing an insect, which he ilixcovrred work ing its way out. He writes, "if worthy of notice, let us hear about it." Reply.—This is the grain weevil which is so destructive in granaries, and wlfbat bins in mills. It is the larva of a small beetle known as Calanririu granaria, of Linnaeus. The beetle is a red iusect, about ono-eighth of an inch long, which subsists upon wheat. The female deposits her eggs npoD the wheat, after it is housed. The young grubs, immediately after they are hatched, bur row into the grain and devour the henrt. One grub only inhabits each grain. The hole by which the grub enters is very small, and it is only by the lightness of the grain thst the damage can lie easily perceived. In time the mature bc< tie is produced, ami emerges from the gram. The remedy is to keep the windows of the mills or granaries covered with very fine wire gauze ; to sweep out ah loose grain from the bias every season ; to scald the corneis and cracks of the bins with boiling hot lye, and to allow no rubbish to accumulate in which the beetles may hide. Sometimes a barn or * mill becomes so infested with weevils that grain cannot be stored in them without destruction. A Good Soap According to the London Agriculfural Gazelle, a very good family sonp is made from one and one-half pounds of leau beef, two pounds of potatoes sliced thin, one large carrot, one large onion, a few eiialots, one turnip, one stick of celery, four quarts of water. Let it sim mer four hours, flavor with hot sauce to suit the taste, salt, pepper, etc. It is a great improvement to fry all the vege tables when cut in Bmall pieces, together with meat also cut in pieces conveni ently smnll, taking care that there is fat enough added to prevent the raw vege tables from burning. A dessertspoonful of ooarse brown sugar may be thrown into the pan while the meat, vegetables, etc., are frying. After it has simmered ! four hours, it should l>e set to cool for ; the fat to bo takeu from the top of the | soup Wforr being served up for use. The meat should N sent to table iu the i soup, not strained as is usually done. tlMa*rlAll lirttM. Tnef lowing is the testimony of !>r. i 1 siring sjwx'tmg Hungarian grass : 1 | believe I can make more milk with tins I grass, cut ami mixed with corn meal ami shorts, than 1 can with the beat timothy j hay, cut ami mixed iu the > me manner. ; Ami when you rciuembcr i hat you can ; raise on ordinary land, by sowing the seed of Hungarian grass la> > ill June, from two ami one-half t< tince ami one half tons of good fodder to the acre, and that this crop can be sown after we have : ascertained whether we are to have a : good crop of hay or not, you will see the value of this grass. I have such a high opinion of it that on my own farm I have tins year and last year raissl from sev only live to one hundred tons of it for the purpose of feeding Uiy milch cows Juriug tile winter Him* lr lUrtpwr • If your horse it iu the habit of kick ing, use a low Wvard, and your home will soon got over it. Keep your horae fat ; don't allow wtiv on# to get a lieu on him. When your horse refuses to take up an oat, couaider him as having failed. To make your horse fast*tie luui with halter*. Look carefully after the lut-s of your horse, or vou may aou le looking aft-r tho bits it your wagon. If you have a projier address yon may receive a couple o/ lines from a horse, but on no account drop a line. However you may lai atlachisl to your horse, you must ts> isutain that your hom is well at twins I to your carnage. Mr I.and. No man can make money off poor land. Aa you travel you have usually observed, other things tveiug equal, that goixl laud maxes thriving farmers, while families brought up ou hard, }KH>r laud ar> generally |xair. Miuiy men have sjwnt tlieir lives in plowing around atones and died poor, who on giKal laud might, with the same labor, have Ih-,-u independent. With us, no land which docs not produce a large crop is worth cultivating. Small or even middling cropa will uot pay for the labor aud the manure. Mt*k I'p a l.ktllr. It has lieen saiil that no man is aopoer that he ue\l have his pig trough at the front door; aud I may add that no farm er among us is ao poor that he cannot have, not only a pleasant house but iiieasaut surroundings, with a neatly lent dooryard or lawn, with shade trees and fruit tresis and dowers—and finally such attractions as well as conveniences aKntt home that farmers' ilaughters need net resolve that they wilt never be farmers' wives. The Confederate Currency Some time after the close of the late civil war, says Hugh McCullough, I met Virginian who contended tliat the failure of the South to establish its inde pendence was attributable to its finan cial condition. He related to me an in cident which I will repeat, as nearly as I can recollect, in his own language: I knew, said he, that our Confederate notes which had Iteeu made a legal ten der were terribly depreciated, but a little purchase tuat I made brought the fact home to me very forcibly. As 1 was walking along one of the streets of Kich mond with some of my friemla from the 1 country, a short time before the fall of the city, I observed in the window of a i shop some fine apples for sale. Thiuk ing that it would be a nice thing to treat each of my friends to an apple, which was then a very rare fruit iu Richmond, I stepped into the shop and said to the dealer: " How much for your apples t" "Three dollars apiece," was the reply. "Three dollars apiece!" I exclaimed; "that is an outrageous price for apples." "Can't help: it," said the dealer ; "it is as cheap) as I can afford to sell them." There were eight iu the party and £l4 was rather more than I could conve niently spare at the time, but as I had undertaken to do a clever thing I did not like to back down ; so I said to the dealer: " The price is extravagant, but will take eight of the apples." The applies were placed upon the counter, and as I was taking out my wallet to pay for them, it occurred to me that I had two half dollars in silver in my pocket, and that it would look better to pay for the apples with them thau with the Con federate notes ; so, involuntarily almost, I threw both pieces down np>ou the counter, remarkiug: " Perhaps that will pv for them." "Oh, yes," said the dealer, seizing the half dollars, and hastily dropping them into his till, " that will pay for them and leave you some change." I took the apples and he handed me back the change, and how much do you think the change was ? Why, sir, $36 in Confederate notes. He Wanted to (let Off. He had been on a spree for a couple of weeks, and drinking hard. He want ed to get off, he said, but couldn't. He tried two or three cocktails, remarking to the bartender as he was mixing them that he would like to get off if he only could. He met a friend who gently hinted that he had been "going it" long enough. "Well, ain't I trying to get off?" snarled the mau, and then he went into a saloon and drank half a tumbler of brandy to steady himself. A man dropped in jnst after and asked him to drink; he hesitated a moment, but drank, for—don't yon see i—he wanted to get off. All through the day he continued to drink at intervals, wou dering all the time why he didn't seem to make any headway in getting off. Singular that a man can't get off when he tries so hard to. He made his un certain way out of a beer saloon late that night, staggered home, with a con fused inquiry in his mind as to whether he was off or not, and stumbled into his room to bed. The next morning there was no response to load knocks at his door, and when the door was forced open he was found dead in his bed. lie had got off! Experts in Writing. Two experts, one from New York and one from Roston, testified iu relation to the genuineness of tho signature of a note m a trial in Columbia county, N. Y\, th''ir opinions being based not on the comparison of tho handwriting with that of which it was alleged to lie an imitation, but on a scientific analysis of each letter and stroke, whereby, they al leged, they could tell whether the writ ing was genuiue or an imitation, wheth er it ww written slowly or with rapidity, and, in fact, whether or not it was a for gery. One of the experts testified that he had been employed in over one hun dred cases. There are said to be but four experts of this kind in the world, and the ones in question charged SIOO per day while in attendance at the trial. ThiH is the second time the case has been tried, the first trial lasting about five days. The expenses have been about five times the amount of the note. A verdict of $2,500 for the plaintiff was rendered. Simple O-ersklrts. Among simple and stylish new over skirts, says a fashion journal, is a good design that requires but two breadths of the wool goods now in vogue, yet is long enough and full enough for taste. The front is a wide deep apron, with the fullness necessary for length laid in two folds high across the top. The back is a three cornered piece, pointed in shawl shape below, trimmed all around, and its fullness laid in easv plaits set on the sides of the front The middle of this triangular breadth would not be long enough for the puffed look at the top of the back if it were sewed to the belt, hence it is suspended by a tape that is concealed under the two double box plaits that its width requires. EQCAIJTT. —Lady Clara "Vere de Vere "Can you tell me, Jane, what you most want for your wedding?" Jane— " Really, my lady, I can't 'ardly say. I 'aven't got nothing. But you'd know best, my lady. Anything just what you'd want, mv lady, if you was in the same position. MOODY AN D SINK FY. Tlirlr Ur*hnl Merlins* In —Tk l.arir Anrndnncn, Kir. The meetnigs of Moody and Sunkey iii Hrooklyti are nlli'iidi'il l>v immense throng*. Tlii' Kink, where thoee meet ing* arc held, in tlthst for al>out fi.tkHl to 7,000 people, but ut noma of tho moot nigs fully 10,(HH> to '20,000 have hlihhl nUrnt tho building* during tho services, iiiuihlo to obtain admittance, A rojHirt deeortlnis tho scene at a mooting a* fol Iowa: It was a half hour Ix-fore tho tuuo appoioutod for th imnrina, hut Mr. Nankey seated himself ut lit* organ, and lod lua choir through a half dosoii of lua triumphant, nuliant chants, ami the croud outside, In uring tho luilMO, grow wildor ami wilder for admission. In vain tho ushera told thorn that tho Umk was tilled; they replied that thoy would not go away until tln-v had aooti tho Kvaiigoliata. Thoy shouted for tlioiu ly namo; thoy omloavorod to I clamber in at tho windows, ami a uooro of uioii rotnikiuod through tho m rvuv jwhtsl ou tlio sharp edges of tho h Mi ens! window sashes, and thou thoy waihsl outside, tilookiug tho streets, so tliat at tho cloao it was as d illicit It for the iMUgrogatiou to go out as it had leon for thorn ail hour oarlior to got in. Mr. Moody'a sermon waa upon tho Gospel as Isung of glad tidiiign amlgtaal cheer. It is essential, said ho, that a jx'rsoit who la to preach tho tlotqiel should undorstaml what tho Goh|h 1 is, ami my dotlnitiou is that which is given in tho bible of its bring a message ,f glad tidmga ami good uowa. It la a simple tlioory, lamed upon tbc lifo, tho ! crucifixion, and tho doath of florist. A clergyman iu a Western city once sanl U> mo: " Drothor Moody, our modes of preaching aro radically different, and oitlior you must la- right and I wrong, or 1 right and you wrong." I had not hoard liini preach, ami ao had to ask him wherein wodiffered. " 1 uovor," replied ho, " prraoh of tho doath of Christ. 1 preach of his lifo, and you punch of his doatli." "What tlion .to you do when yon come to audi a to it as, ' It v his stnpos wo aro healed /' lh> you leave thorn out i" llorophod that lie preached essay*, moral essays, hut loft out atouo mont. Now, 1 toll you, for my part, 1 don't want any ltiblo without atonement. If you tako out tho doatli of Christ and tho scarlet thread of hlood runniug through tho book, tho Dible is no gtsnl to mo. If it must bo takon out, I may as woll go to farming or something else, for all tho good I can do preaching is gouo. Whv, what did l'aul preach at Autiooh and at Corinth ( Ho preached Christ and Christ crucified; tho lifo, doath, crucifixion, burial, ami resume tiou. And now I want to tell you why the Gospel is good news and glad tidings. First, because it takes out of our paths all sin. God, through his Gospel, lias taken all our sins and put them behind his back where the devil cannot get them. When God has hidden them thev are buried so deep that they cannot lx< fouutl; but if we hide them ourselves, they keep coming up against us. An other reason why I call the Gospel good news, is because through it death has lost his sting. That is the last thing that we gain as wo become Christians— fearlessness in looking at death. We can indeed cry, " Oh, death, wliere is thv sting I" and a voice, grand in volume, strong and powerful, comes rolling down from Calvarv : "It is hid den in the bottom of the Lord." And if the sting is removed what other terror remains I None. If we pull out the sting of a bee or a wasp the insect lie comes as Intrudes* as a tly, and so death, robbed of his sting, is pleasiug to look upon. Yes, yea, let death come upon this platform and plant his cold icy lin gers upou me. Then- what I I will lie with the king, my Father. Should I not then welcome him, repulsive in form though he may lie, for his sting is gone. Years ago, in North field, where I was brought up>, thev hail the custom of toll ing the age of tlie dead, anil as the lx*ll tolled I used to listen. Sometimes there would be seventy strokes of the bell, and then I would slap mvself in glee as I thought how long 1 had to live. Again there would be but few strokes—only fifteen or sixteen—and they would ring in my ears for days, and estux-ially for nights, reminding me tliat 1 must die. I was tortured and wretched ; for then death Lad not lust his sting. I can stand now by an ojs n grave, and looking in it, sav : " Grave, where is thy vic tory ?" Yet the time has been when the fall of the clod upon the coffin made me start with dread. Have yon ever thought of the picture of death gloating over the grave of the Lord 1 There he sat, grin ning and gllastly at the entrance to the tomb. "Oh, wliere," cried the sj*oter, gloatingly, "is the resurrectionist and the life now 1 I have him. I have him. I have got him locked up in a grave." But as he sat there, before the women came in the morning, the angels came unseen by him, and rolled away the stone, and stole the laxly from his care ; and iu three days the Ixxly was clothed with life. It is good, I sav. that the Lord, when he went into the little grave yard in Bethany, called Lazarus by name, for had he not, all the dead then* buried would have Isx-u raised and clothed with life. Production of Hall*. Tho total productio of roils of all kinds in the United States in IST4 was 720,413 net tons, against 890,077 tons in 1873, 1,000,000 in 1872, and 775,733 tons in 1871. Nineteen States made rails in 1874, against eighteen States in 18771, Kansas having entered the list of rail-making States Slay, 1874, when the Topeka puling mill was put in opera tion. This was the first rolling mill in Kansas. Since its erection the Ihvntur rolling mill has been removed from De catur, Illinois, to Roeedale, Wyandotte county, Kansas, and there are now two rail rolling mills in tliat State. A roil rolling mill has this year gone into operation at Laramie, in Wyoming Ter ritory. It is owned and operated by the Union Pacific rail rote 1 company. The whole number of rail rolling mills in the conntrv was ninety-one, of which fifty-seven make heavy rails mainly, and thirty-four make. only light or street rails. Of the whole ninety-one mills, twenty two made no rails in 1874. The product of the year was therefore rolled by sixty nine mills, and many of these ran only a |>art of the time. The capacity of all the rail rolling mills of the country is at least double the' pro duct of 1874, which was 729,413 uet tons. Of these sixty-nine mills which made rails in 1874, seven made Ixith iron and Bessemer steel rails, one male Bes semer steel rails exclusively, two made steel-headed rails exclusively, two made steel -headed rails mid iron rails, atnl one made solid cast steel rails and iron rails. Hold In Alaska. Alaska is not a territory to which the immigrant has been powerfully nttraobMl hitherto. Its settlement has seemed likely to be postponed until that remote time when the inhabitants of all the rest of tho country should begiu to feel un comfortably crowded. If, however, any thing can turn a steady current of travel toward a new land it is the discovery of gold therein. Report of such a discov ery in Alaska has recently been made. It needs confirmation, it is tme, but that is all that is necessary to attract ad venturers in greater numbers than could the moat salubrious climate ora tropical ly rich soil. Quid- digging is tho least profitable of ali digging—to the diggers; but that lesson is never learned by those persons who suffer most from ignorance of it. Occupation of Sew Houses. It is possible to avoid danger from dampness of new bouses by passing air through them rapidly enough to pre vent its becoming saturated with moisture. Air which contains no watery vapor is neither pleasant nor whole some. It should be two-thirds satura ted : and if this proportion be not mnch exoeeded no injury can arise from such vapor only, and there seems no reason why. if it be derived from a damp wall, it should be injurious if not in ex cess—that is, if tho air be changed rapidly enough to prevent it becoming too damp. Kin' and (lie Nnord In Spain. A Corrwqtotuient of the 1 edition /'intra, under date of Hantundor, writee an follow*; It in itii|HMMil>l for any one not on the epot to realise the vruntoii devastation of |iro|w rtT mill hurluii ity to pemou* with which the civil wur la Ix-uig carried on bjr the ooiulHitautn tn the llnnqiie jtrov inccH and Navarre. Many an Kiighnh toiirint who haa entered Spain liy Iruu, r rowfr to Schtudnui, unint rotuetnber the fuir country, iv|irinklcd witli farm himwa, orchard*, niaioe field* and grove* on gentle acclivities which *|>rend iietwecu those two plan-*. It * now al tuoat a wilderueM* of trampled crop*, trees distioycd and holneateiula hnrnt. I he name picture of deeolatinu pri-m-ut* llnelf tu Navarre, eioept that liintead of orchard* the vineyard* are out down v illi hatchet* liy the government troop*. With thl* material rum, the ravage npiut of the war In-come* more luteline, and, although neither party publicly ud lull* the act, ncareely nuy ipiailer t given on either *iile. The reprtral* of i i lencral Trillo go too far and are cruelly unjuvt, lieoau*e the place* he ha* direct Cil to l>e thstruyeil are o|ten town*, or ndlii-r village*, not occupied militarily by the eneiuy, whereat llernani, lim-La ru and Sun Belautian, which are being cannonaded by the U. The |M-MC fill plain* thu* loomed by tlie Alfoiieiue chief aim) ivontalU the houeoe, nhopa, *torea and furniture In-loiigiug to tiuut lx-r* of lilierul*. SupiHirtt'r* uf the gov crnuicnt, who, obliged to fiy or expelled tin lr house* by tlie (Wlintn, will think their devotion b> it ill requited by tliia wanton destruction of their prujicrty. The name remark appllea to the Ixiiu bardmeut of the tlHliiug village* along the Iti-icavan ooaat by the iron clad Vit tori.a. I learn from a truntworthy ijuar t-r that, notwithntandiiig the efforts of the Minister of War m Madrid, it ia In coming doubtful whether the intended autumn cuiu|xugn will lx> uudcrtskeu. The |utcihcutiou of Catalonia, or, at least, the reduction of the insurrection to lutigniticant dimenaioua, * tin ban* U(HIII which the plan had lieeii formed. Thuv contingency i* not tmng realised so completely aa was cxjxvted after the flight of Dorregmruy'a forces Info re (ieuentl Jovellar'a nuuu-roii* army. They are returning in small oar tic* through the mountain paems of t'p tx-r Catalonia; and Castella, whom Don Cation had appointed captain geuerwl of that province in the room of Sal will*, dixgrncad, ia reorganising tin* fugitive* with a view to creating a divoreioU in favor of Navarre and the Basque prov incea, where the iutentiou of the govern lut-ut to aapprcas the fucroa of the latter and devastate both haa created a bad luipreaxiou and strengthened the Carlmt jxtrtv. A Sciivlthc Officer. A ii*ular oa> bus juut U**u trud at MuhUuiusen, iu Alsace. A ourtoma ufti t ao very doae under the officer'a nose, that he dt-clarea the smell and the alarm made him sick, liesidca, the action was in sulting to an official ui the execution of his duty. Hence an action at Muhlhaa sen for rriistauce to constatued authori ties and offense to the jK>w r* of State Jean has had rather a narrow escape of it. The judge decided, however, that since he hail not in juried the official's "honor," and could not reasonably be expo-toil to know that a sudden smell of herrings would make him ill, the defen dant might be suffered to resume hia carpentering with an admonition. The Mormon t hlef. A young lady write* from Utah aotne ib-uis of interest about Hrighani Young. He was born in Yeruout aeveiity-tive years ag<>, and brought up to a oarjwii tor's trade. Iu person he is rather com manding, and striking in ap|seu depicted iu n person professing such a high position i* so much ecclesiastical, civil and po litical renown. Irosl in Chiriuro. I romomltor, ssvs n ourrosiMiiitlont of Chicago pajx-r, when tliiTi- wsirt any Twrnty tiiird slrtx-t, nor even Mtulisuu. I was thinking over it the other day, ss I watclnsl the crowds shunt the corner of Clark and llandolph, how one day, a lung time ago, an old fashioned country wagon, with a canvas cover, cams wind ing along the lake short* up townrd the village. Outside the sand hills that linixl the lake shore it was heavy haul ing through the Hand, anil inside the sand hills the prnirie grass was so tail thnt it was hard work for the moving family, the wife ami children, to walk; they were obliged t> keep right iieliind the wagon, in the path it made through the grass. But, somehow, as the wagon wound its way around tho marshy places, one of the children, a little boy, getting leg weary, lagged behind, ami before anybody knew it he was lost in the tall grass. It was just before dark, and as soon its the family got to the vil lage ami made their loss known, every body turned out to search for the lost child. They kept up the search all that night, and it was not until six o'clock next morning that they found liitn alsiut on the sjsit where the Hhermat) House now atauds. The little fellow was all wet, but ho WHS so wearied that ho had been asleep in tho wet grass. That boy was—or rather is —Judge Blodgett. What He Preferred. Hhe M n romantic young lady, and he, her father, took a practical view of everything. Hhe looked np from her liook in botany and inquired : " Father, did yon ever nttidy botany?" He was interested in bin paper and did not reply, and presently alio con tinned : " Papa, what flower do yon prefer ?" " Flour, ehf" he replied aa he loobd np, " why, I always get that from win ter wheat, if I can—l think it makes better bread 1" Hhe sighed and wished there was a young man on the other side of the sofa. HER DREAM. —One morning, not long ago a Vickshurg wife woke np and in formed her husband that she dreamed she had found a live dollar greenback in the street. He didn't say auything until he had looked into his wullet and fonnd his funds five dollars short, and then he remarked : " Mary, I dreamed that yon handed me that live dollar bill an soon on you found it." "Yon did?" "Yes, Mary, and I thought I told you it would be dangerous to do any more such dreaming, and that I hid my wallet where yon couldn't find it again." She passed it over. SUMSIAItY OF NKWS. Ilrma at lalereal Item Heme wad .thread A severe aliock of eaillnpiake la re|x>rleil at Kiut Yuma, on the Culm a.l<> river, California The letutloti I'itU Villi linaifr, tn a leading article, eaya " The I ugllah aMttp*. liou of Kgypl la ouly a tpieaUun of Urne, aa that elep la neceaaaiy for the praeervation of our Indian empire " ... A parly of tiaiuhla ...cuihled lu Han Juan del Norte, Nlcaiagua, and after flung on and wounding the governor, demanded hie teeigiialiou, which waa given, and the government placed In the handa of the Kugllah vice txeiaul. Two American and one Kiighah war vessels arc in the haibor to piotect Cillaena of ttioeo eotiliUlee The town of l.junpie I'nru. waaaluioal eiillrelr de alloyed by Are October 7lh. The town waa built entirely of wood, even the aldewalka, and the flauiee tap|>ed up everything with the nt ■uoai rapiditr. All the ftuoel hulldlnga were destroyed. The loee la (Kit at #5.000,000, on which there ia no Inauiance. Many fautlliea are homeloaa and dealitute Aid wae eent from lima and other lowui .., The Klrst Natitmal bank of I'illalou, Tenn., waa rubbed of f4O 000 In honda and currency. The rob t*ra cut a hole lu the roof and let themaelvoa, by roiea. into the vault, where they blew o( n two spherical safes. I'avtJ Hobinetiu, realdlug near Kokunto, ltnl , eliol at hia Wife and ehleal aim, uuaue ceaaftilly, (beu cut the tin oat of hie daughter aa *be lay lu bed, look (he life of a young eon lu Ihe name manner, and mounting a hoiee fled. Ilia dead body waa subsequently found a mile off, and it re auppoaed he comtuilted suicide Win McKee, of the Ht. bouts h'iofw-/Vmtvriif, and eiTullecUu Magulre, of He l-uttia, have haoud iug OOUpOtt detached and canceled, aa in the oaee if psimriii . The Ixinduu P all Vol.' lliUrtl* Is authoiiaed to aiate thai the ad- mlrahv . fuglUve slave cirou.i will tw with ttrswu smt new luaUiictluua to levtiod .... i'ruMis lis. ttakml An.ma n> pro out in.hup k'uerater, while reaultng in tlie Austrian ilio ceee, frutu eieret.iug sujr epiaco(isl fuucliuu tuaotuuK ihe I'rueaisn purttuu Ihe direct cable lias been euooeaefully reouverrd. Uie break rt>|anted, and cable raleanill be reduced by the old company .. Tlia liuisui arsenal at lleuitaburg, liulateiii, u dealiuyod by an clploaion. Lues, t.UKi.UoO marks. The counsel iu the *I7,IAM treasury burglary having queelloued (ha legality uf the grand jury, tha question waa brought tip ou a teet case, and the legality of the jury assured The Vatican haa sent a note to Mmlml which etprehsee approval of i'aidiual Simcoui a cou duct regarding tho circular. Tlie uols ui>i.n Ujxaithe eieeuliou of tiia oouotmlal , rv-fueee to reougiure the royal >l-iraf. attributes the civil war to religious toierauce. and demands that tha bishop of L'rgol be tried by eocloaiae- Ucai judges and not by an ordinary tribunal. .... Tha inhabitants of Kaka, on the Whits Nile, have revoltsd and defeated tho Egyjitiau troops, killing one hundred of them. The government has diaialched re-anfurceuentr thtther ... The eastern division of the He Joseph and lleuer railroad wae sold by the Muter in Chancery, of Kanraa. to the bond holders Comuultee for ItCfI.UOO fulled Hiatem truu[is caught a band uf cut-lhroaia and horse thieves oa tlioHweet Wafer river, Indian Territory. The band had fifty stolen under. .... A fast trim from Saw York to Wash ington u> bring arranged The Atlanta CuMWstiwii exploring ) arty have left Hooter ville. lit, far Okefonukee sira:ti|>. The pert; number* Iwonly-twu. end are fully equipped. Prof lauie, the Stale geologist, scoompauim Uie expedition ... Charlee O Conor te ex pected to conduct (he |>rueeoutiaii ogam*! lheUrwlilyni.lt- Y.) ring ..President liroul hoe |d liobeit A. I'eareau, formerly eaeUter and teller of Uie Ithade Island national bank of Providence, who work •rntene-d three years ago to tune years' unpriaoument fur Mnbrxxitng SIrC.OoC. On and after Jauaary first the letter t>stage to Prance will be fourteen rente, ou eecnuul of the Prwnch government imjswiug a tax colled "sea postage." The postage to other pert* of Europe will remain at fire cents The Poet office department issued 30,l*)0,000 portal card* in Octol>er Miners or* still being found in the lUsck illlie by the military. and are driven out .... The ironclad Sera pi* ar rived iu It,mbey, India, with the Prtoce of Wales on board A conflagration at White hall, N. Y.. caused groat destruction to pro perly .... A train of forty cars on the Ileos selser and Saratoga railrued. when near White hall. N 1., broke iu two, ami ahortly after came together again, when sixteen oars were thrown down ao embankment and ruined, with most of their freight. No one seriously In jured The atl-rney-general ha* decided that ctiial boat* are not required to be docu mented as vessel* of the Untied States . .... Iti Wtkslsochet. it 1., aome vandal* entered (Htk Htll cemetery and threw down and broke about eighty marble monument*, headstones, •te. No motrvo is Assigned for the outrage, ("harlee J. t'unnor, one of tiie innet |Vomment ciUxcn* of Concord. N it., and elieri (T of Mem mack county, waa arrestrsl on charge of sotting Ore to bit store The Austrian frontier forte at Kiiin lanea and itegusa are being prepared fur hostilities .... A heavy earthquake shock is reported from Sou ileum, ooonty, Colifonita, preceded by a harsh rtua bling noise. The direction of vibration w from east lo west Judge McUran. of the New Jersey supremo court, has rendered a drcieion that an oral order to on officer is insufficient to Justify the commitme.it of a prwoner ; and Lbat such ordei should be writ ten, and elating the tenu of imprisonment. . Henry A. Mann, treasurer of Saratoga eoaiity. N. V., lias defaulted to the amount of f 141,000 during tiie past fifteen ream. • Intelligence fmm i'euatig. Malaya, announ ces that the Malayan* are hemeglng the British reeitlenry at I'erak. All the native rajahs are su|>ecll of oomplicity in the mur der of the late rest.lent, Mr. B rch. It Is re ported that the Malayans are preparing for resistance. The Sultan Imnatl is collecting e considerable force for Uio purpose of at tempting to expel the llnush from the coun try A Berlin telegram says that the cen tral government for AJeace-Is>rraie will lie established st Berlin. I'roliahly a special ministry mil be created for these provinces. The Khedive of Kgvpt has applied ofh cially to Knglaud for two huanciers to under take Egyptian finances, promising tha fullest (information to tho great powers The aggregate amount of bonineea transacted at the Booton snlxtreastiry daring the |,277 The total vote of lowe. In the late clec ion, was 318,921 the largeet ever polled in the State .., The steamship Pa-ific sailed from Victoria for San Knuinisr t with over one , liuudred souls on board, ami was lost with all on b.wr.l with (he exception of one man. who was picked up after hitvuig flontod abont on the pilot-house for two d*ys and uiglds. He was too much exhausted togivoat y accouu. of | the disaster. 'the losses by the Whitehall (N. Y.) flro were 250,000. The steamer City of Wacs, of Msllory's lioe, ftor a good trip from New Yo k. anchored ouiaide of Galveston, during the night, in order t<> sail up to the oity by d.ylight. About one o'olock, however, she was discovered to be on dm, am) u burned to the vtlcii edge, (lis hall afleiwerd sinking. Tha paaaaiigera anil craw, iitnubertng about fifty, took to the Imala. but aa a lil|li sea ami stiff breaaa pre tatloil, wore unable to tnaka land, and ware driven from the ooaat Hlenmtiige ware aeutlu aearuh of tlioru lu the mueaitig, but at the time of thla ilia (latch nothing had been heard of them The Waco waa valued at #I3O,(KK>, and had #IOO,OOO worth of cargo.,,. The brig J. W. Hpeucwr, of Huston, the brig Tororttu, the acltuouera Moena ratten, NetUe Chase and Hrrena, all aatled from Southern porta Juat previous to the hurrtoaue which deraatated iialveaiuu , and aa thejr hate nut been heard of eiuoe, it la |iroautuoil they were all I oat, with their erewa ... A iecial dia|ia!oh from Penang, Malaya, alaiea that ail thla aide of the Malay |*uinenla la greatly eroded A general outbreak ia feareil Hong Kong haa two telegraphed to for Uotqar ihie man-of war, two gunboats, and a!-cml four hundred lrou|* ara uoaf at I'erak .. lieetiforoarueuu fur the hpaigah army in Ouha ooutiiiua to ar rive. i'lie aooouuta of the Pacific disaster now place the luea of lifa at twohuudiad , and the opinion la goneral thai the aieeiucr elruck e aunken rock. All I ulurky Diamond. A lady of great aooomplinhmeuts, and one who has ltsil considerable experi ence of life nolle other than the wile of Captain Burton, the renowned African traveler has just published a book, in which she fori tells much |M-ril to Kng land, and c*j>eelaily to tyueeii Victoria, if that sovereign j*-r*i>Ui m letsiuing m her possession the uelobratcil Kuh i noor tliiUiiOliil. That stone has always had a bud reputation. It is raid to have Iwwn discovered iu the mines of (lolcouda, and that ill consequence of some terrible deed of cruelty |ier|>etrated units fltlder, his dying curse still clings to it. Mrs. Burton traces the history of the geiu through inuuy p< >ruvosnorn, all of whom auficrud sutue terrible itisaater or iwuiie to a violent death. The first lost his kingdom, the second died in exile, others were M rang led or asanarcitatcd iu different ways. The fail of the onor great empire of Auriuiga<*be she at tributes to tlie "mountaiu of light." Wlieu Nailir Hindi captured Dlln, he took awav with him to IVrsia treasure and jewel* of inmlculable value, among them the Koh-i-noor. From the mo ment he reached i'anua " cverrtlnug went wrong." The emperor was soon after avaasKiiutted, and his jewels stolen* It* next |HM*es*ur was puisoticd ; the two next had their eyos put out, uul no |)U, iliaaeti-r ever following the stone till it came into tlie IMMMCNKII in of Hunjcet Hiiig, the lion of tlie Punjab. He died soon afb'r; tlieu hut son was jMiisontHl, and at brief intervals hia grandson and great gnunisou also were assassinated. Anarchy followed ; thou came tlie con quest of the Punjab, aud so the diamond full to its present destination. This One. A little fiv year-old friend, who was always allowed to chtsms the prettiest kitten for las pint aud playmate, before the other nurslings were drowned, was taken to hia mother'*, sick room the other uuimiug to *> the tiny, new, twin I tabic*, lie looked reflectively from one to the other for a minute or two, then l>oking his chubby finger into the cheek of the plum j **t Imby, lie said decidedly; "Have tlii* oue." If every one of our reader* would try lhibbin's Klectric Soap (fragin A Co., Philadelphia i they would, like us, lie come firm believer* in its woudcHul merit. Have jour grocer order it. • Burnett's Cucoaine is tho bust and cheapest hair drowsing in the world. Con*. Yegetine is now acknowledged by onr tswt physicians lo t>e the only sure and safe remedy for all d.seaeea arlstsg from impure blood, sonh a* scrofula and scrofulous hu mors.— Cora. Th<> sweetest word in onr language ia besith. At the Orel indication of disease aw well-known nj d , pprurad remedies. Par dy* i-ejtols or indigestion, uee Paran, /'mryaiit* }'i.U tor soughs. £dds. sore or tame stom och. use Jihuwi * .tuodywc inumnit Ohm. A case uf olirouic rbcuniatism of nn usual seventy, cured by /cWiasow'* Anodyne /.isisvaf. to m diced by one of oar exchangee. A large bunch aame nut upas lbs lit rest of the snflerer, ai d ap|>eared like part of the twees! buoe. Used internally and eilrmallv. Cbsa. I'lircrtr ia Bad, but the worst kind of poverty is povarty of the bloo I , this makes man "poor indeed," for it lakes sway his strength, courage and energy ; but er-rtch the blood with its vital element, iron, by taking the Peruvian Sirup protoxide uf iron), and you will feel rich and " as good as auvbedy " Trv lb Own. lm|K)riant to Travrlrni. Person* itfiUnj Now York or leering by lb* *m from Grand Cxt.Ual Depot, will eave an noyance md H|*aw of carnage hire uid lsg gage by etopptng at Grand Dtuuo Hotel, opposite Grand Central Depot. Over J .150 clogs' Uy furnished room* and fitted up al a coat of fifta.tuo. European plan. OnaU nen live more luxuriously for low money at ths Grand l iuoit than at any ottiar firwt-claee house ID Now York. Huge* and street car* pee* the door* for ail pan* of tho city 800 that the ' h4el you rntor la tho Grand Culoo Hotel. ! ' n. •M lI FX K*H ri LMONK- KYIttT, rtlK Til It < I Klt OF ( ONal MfTIOM, (Ot'UIlN AMI ( Ol.ua TO* iml vtrtss f Ihl* anxJlcfM I* tost It rtpMM IN* iuu and Unm It oat ol U> *j*lsai. railfi* tos | Mood, and lbs* aSwu a eara Sawst-a's a* w**t> Tonic. ro *■ Craa or Dtinnu. i*inninK Krr Ths Tonic otodooaa a InalUit utm at ih* atmaark. rraatlaa aa anUta. tstswinc rhjla, and carina la* saoat obctlnaU ttm o> ladlancUoa scarwca'B Htanbii Pnja. roa tw* fvaa or Ileal tmiruniT. Ere. Throe IlUa arc altocaUra. and prodaea a health? acttaa c 4 Um Heat si thou I tb* loaat daitrac.aa Utar a>a fraa (rota eaksnel and rt mora odlnactoaa la raatartaa a baaltbr aettoa of lha Ilcac. Thaaa tamodlaa ara a aartalo eara toe Oooaoaiplioa. •a lha Pulmonic NvrtiS' rtiaam lha miliar and fmlfts. Um blood Tfia Mandraia PUB act apoa lha Urar. . raala a health J 141a. and ram *a all dlaaaaaa of lha Itrar. oft an a oaaaa of t'onaamptlna Tba Una Wa>d Toalc Ciraa tona aad •tnviflb h tha atcanarh. makaa a *•■! dtnaatkm. and anahma tha orcam to form <-d Mod . and thai craatoa a haaJlhjr rtrralaUon of health) bkmd Tha oomhload artt.'B of thaaa madlctoaa. aa tbaa eiplained. wtU core arary nana <4 txawtuaiiUon. If taken In Una, and tha ana of Um madtclaaa poraaratad la Dr. Schaork la Lmrf—AmaHy M bU prtoripaJ othtm, IWIW Hiith and Arab fblladalphla. n Monti**, ahara all Wtiara for atuat bm addra—ad. So.hicV for aaia by all !>ruUt* Thr l*rkeU. >t* Toas. Baof ratUa-Trltnato Extra Bullocks 0*lk l*ti IVmnnow to Good Texan*...... •" <4 10 Mlkli I firra 10 00 <*7l 00 Hogw-Uv* <**(4 04 < lr <42 00 , So. 3. now 17 00 (414 1 0 Pry Cod, par cwt s•> <4 178 Hrrrink. Scaled, par lot ... Sft <4 40 Patrolatim—Onida H- ftn.sl—lSV. Wool—Oalifornta rinnan 26 <4 kt Tniaa •• 34 (4 11 AtMtraltan " ... 41 <4 <6 Bottnr—Stair 34 <4 17 M'natam Hairy 33 <4 14 IVaatrrn Yellow. 14 <4 *.! IV aa torn Ordinary. It <4 14 rantiailrania Ftna 10 (4 M Ohaaan— Slam Factory (* 14 14 Stale Skimmed 01 <4 04 \8 cetera 04 (4 11 Kftga—Stale M # M ALkJUU. Wheat 1 40 ( 1 43 Bye—Stale 00 <* 0> Corn—MltM 74 (4 74 Barley -Slate 44 rtl 44 try Wtr K-.U M W 4nll Vjrt lllll*4 fUAm WhUHM Have you ever seen ri* IlluairtUsJ iUl(us of ffcff #•* /WlAt /*!' Md I'rwfft rm* issdi m At* .a s ~*(• A Imm 4"IIit buy* * piM mm! lf|** lot )•* |iiU<>4 rtrnU, UUk, mtc , *1 fM*f prtn Utl' |if|t Ml Ant a M*sy m- t I**l MIM KwatMff** kf /* *4*# Htiiw HtMitl im il*ln|w ltf r*(|ngru. U* U Mi.. W n I i -i , A 111.. MeHffre, (aaa. #2O list tait WM I nil N II.K n. imi, Md Va Miff r. Send 1.4 wiulaw J rol.lt. w UedMa*--.., Imt >t I FANCV *111.1,7 *i)lM. iu. Mam. tor. (l i-r j ft in *iVr> a.■ v v |,'|> I,' I,' A bl| hiamg. ' licalw. u< fin* ■ ll lil i Iw. hi.a DUB. I-• MUU \ i ||W MAI.AIt V Mil, Aeeaia e.uiwl BmU mi > r.ue Aibitaaa I. S 1 a...ri.a M.c. ~ obi., I> I TTI t( OU ill imi Ihmka r*. hwlma, i ■ Sfl.Affsreß* Suß|,U. to ad i..U M h jr $5 to S2O ir %ttdjrw.7SiJsj. H -O.Si. * rei.it ail u* WwaiuiA Wot. Sam. isu |4|iw Aumnima k-* Ktuimna*. H Y All * , " r *elSiß. Aaaola W..tMl . " ' ilJie. J kfmiiu? A I*l , K 1 l.u, r,(t. J.,4 UTANTCI* At.K.l'lm, V > lim OAi £ iVil'i.fks AOO . I ..a,i u i JJ2 f ffa .I boOB iiwu .iKUt ixasi era |U W j "Aim. Addme. ill ( 1 ill Hmm Odk MKIY < A MOM 7 horn. u HUM, lllr. I m.'',-.. ... i). J I! ill hlkli. Sammii. * T I -- -m t. r nnrmis rin irm ——— I Hfl"to , v''" d *J! *aa*fcrfkaetsiC.ulayw ! JIU gtj lu n-o.k .a ftualaa. Mbm A CURIOSITY. *ri, ' ,t* Wa—eSc.M T J ai>'i t fist* lo A#m,u BA B*e artMe sad Urn tmat I'm.' foallj ri( I. Aui-rU., BIU, two W6 km I w AMKM M I U Jiisi be*d.. S V $350 V? 525 ? r.r Addma. J. SMIISsoK, Hen.ii Mid, AftCfl A, AIONTH - Aaaeu MM \ f*||| ,! ttiiiiaaw L- auraki. ■.Jura (DnJU ti*". - l'*ea .Ui mat In. A.i 7H / g "U. .mi I m.- la nan aaa Maul) V I I lem. .r l uIHH i IHCit Add .■ o Vickaky iuj l &i.ai..ii,iM A RFN W AUfin i o -• M SLvwUaC. SMiasnHti uUii? 1 !! ia?. • 1,.-air., bue MU.CI (-„ .ij luili.il. uad |U(, Ua , ~ .ad U. 1.. wi titf (ai.Xi l'Mf fk.M la.l.nUt 44MJ li H.emillVO .M„ i A i . , |an h lu. M . HPTTTM UllUm •■ < SS* ln.Ula.ttli )M< 4 u ■ WWS !■ ialaa.l > (mi the. I'm cam *ffvsie VAselrd! v,4aisaed On , Aeaadttd m n/*7 an " Pictorial BIBLES. AGENTS rttgsz ■VF 1.-rml I'br Km BB^ t.y >kkk M BM (.a. .tu iMid l aaili Ms llakc K2STSTK'.!S7 , tS',?.irS7.j!r!a: slOl SSOO ▼' W *re#V\/ 7X imam torn* niaUinlod eeruuof sad CUdtem a! *.ea>i affrt. •• ,#r erarl.i tulm-rllH-r.. Tkn J.. -•>■ I ttt Ki.M.arrd ike MKiT .1 tl- riantt. Ad dreee l ive Herk Joarnal. Meffale. A. V. mm mm m.h, pnsird nriM.i vi.ut. Kb U V t mrds msi im tmld i.-i It.) rt. kaatd ~ ■ ■ atßeiß MoeiM at tilae. erdo, %W WW K.rMr, ha.al.Ura hnmll, OK. ma.k, Fir. W. )> .r IIS) ( A Tl >1 LUltt A Oo . bhaeklnm. Mmm I V.4C11 Til kKuwur ha fat, ~ I ■ , kswlwlant ot InUlllniUi •tw HJtY of rr ffaanristtna Tim ou>o u U ■ '. mm art n Ami .1 rated a! int. pnM to kaap omr ■ayjWl Hill. an.lMWl4.ro tUld.uM Onn, * I l.|> I'd ril M ■ Ul 1 UK In. I .ÜbflK. lit. WANTED IMMEDIATELW 1 !. 3 .■f*** Vna MM u, Urn TKUt W t.HAI'MY lanxT SluU4 (..(.lilnnt V Addnm.. *Hh Swi.. WrKKI.VTK* I tirrr isms 7FI fi.uaph cvm I rivv o II 1: M I. I \ . OHIO. PRINTERS' ROLLERS M*o. fens um r,ws >• is <-r later" I r - vtn. ell. ••*. s-i s9 iJ h, U-. wseihar prkos. SO nas i— sound to ssed to prtotteg the paper J. H. t ill I , t,i.. fM> Aee Ml., V V. t I mm, mI Mm I smius to* best ■ V ■ eiu.-U ew 1-Seeed to Afou' One A sent tsaiu 1 .4 to three bourn Try 11 . Addrere. Hoop A .tuMrt'fi. It dUnA|Kille. tad. I Uli ll* J(t elate or Unled Rrtoto! MeU M) A • Anetike. Mart-to. Rep or Uwul UrS St) l.leee, to .te nun Seat nuae IteuaUtulh pn-ted ou It e-n u at Al.Hlwio, Sltlsk, llsrrsla , S.. Isws. AOUTI Vtlttt tar ear SAW'bosk ea MOODY and SANKEY ii um w -i w us ,a mf • s~ R SB isnm vi.s, Hvnr. * >ru, at Ma Mout'V foe I*en. scd ss Kit wrnisws or od raavici r*sv Is his greet ismU mssuegs Is Raoutwii. Is A.oel anJ ntm.rai b setneat lk:lMlu> N*), Pi.aa Fewutaei ibsSoavw Wrasrwa* I'snrasrrx " Ms, "-r Fss 4 S mtlHem esg 1 ,■) rwsto, to (lea " lias l tet SMSltn to AMtKIUAR I TBI ir-Hl.yu I VP. HoMford. O ss_ This sew Trees t sort etth perfset tsal V| 111* leU sight set dm}. AdmeU MM mi Itas Is eserp rnoltos el W. TftD •I. MB in* retolotrs l.a tare nni*T the tsMltal etareles ssserss \ W toala aaUl paratusttl M M swiwk. hold Oheas bt the \mJ Elastic Truss Co., vie. RMS RrsaJwor, X. V. tin it 1 seat Ml wall ihllw wat fer < htcslar sec ha sreg SENTp^ii^slotO l'roflia. KflHroM Kltvcli. pßpp Iter'H jßfin 1 ILXJ JL ttft lo ftlchl draft*. yUU U fit < Ktt 41 TKR A (O h Hunker* md llrokr ra, Nn. HI U nil *"'rn. \ . \*rU. Tie Best Paper for Farmers. NEW-YORK WEEKLY TRIBUNE OSR IKILUR par jeai la clnba of thirty or arm. Spaaimoa aopina fea For tornm aad aommlanioaa, Addrwaa THE TKIBI XK. he. York Wisconsin Central Railroad Lands. Kix 4kU*n! Farm# at f>Ho aod aa mamj form* 1 Kar 'V p# -<'••] Wi#r Hatthf led rafrtrinf* aod IMi a full aooooftl of tho approach tag graud ( o;jionoi.\l t lol.ratri.n Sood fr a foil tiFocrlu Moo Aid ottra t4*ru* to kgita !fATtUNAIi Pt'p LIXHIWU Oil . Fglhkdalphla. Ta ( . . Herd, > 'rt gj, Wtrso '> . • • •* TOUT Soa Frxaui A-sCHak.i\i l*o oicolloal c rth tho hWm.I II lo a %% .ndortul ft. pau tk,%n " N aajr all /vr-TmAA I'lirhrr. Mlntarr A / I W'tl.W# f>vO/wT JBsvsfOO. M| a 1 vvy #/ w ** Er toko plo4koro In rscnmmfid r>ur Koo Vmmm . Ibo Hoot I'-s'.inf rontlw we'-npetrr rhM " / V.l I'artioo nro utung it will barr no M j l,l k J It alo am iminn tro I I f 1 1 Ntmtl fur olrrulac to w—S--® K.I. %> 1/ A 4' ft.* I*ll Ouhno Hie, Nrw \ orh. CRANO CMAWCB FOR AGENTS, wA WifeJYo. 19. ANN ELIZA YOUNG S NEW BOOK. w.W ,CM *!".JSWWSer POLYGAMY. te-twk 5.4 M.. 7 ... •. .!• ..I!' > 10 1 20 ""T toyj I(UI1.4. ■ * n ' >nl YOU . 4>ll. 1 - le.l wli m . 200 ILL USTR ATIOWS,. Yvueiw I iuxi',l > .• <>. • • I *", .'i -117. till MAN 4 (< , lIIMTNMU . 1 ■<.., CsH'l. lll.,ClSCt Itt, Ittmjefl Our lftOO Outati v*r* ord*rd by ot4 afynt* Is nifi srt ml pahlimUoa oi Un iplysdld stw book "BACK AHFESH" or ORIENT A bran new book af Travel, Adrrnture, aad EapeHaata. by Thoi W Kfitu. oitk tAO matfYiiffaent opto Efr*o!ag_tlM 4aet ever aoea ll tetaaUjr xlli 01 "tgAl to teere wide-awake, pmoraMira peraoa, and auurlli all other books €lo I. Ho work waa ever tndortod ao highly aoao aotla mi faaior Me* •o llig thousand now in ****. Out aeeal aold 814 la hoo wooKa, another 41 * la one w waat HWt more artiee afaoU now. OTTFIT FREE to *U A hoaad pamphlrt with Spoeimea rge and Tllutrmhotit of tak fa moo* work, full IWcrlption and uaaeual Term*. Mstvw to aaj on*. Addma A. u. WOATHUOTOR A CO., llaxtford, Ct. BARNEY'S •All fc MMMtgHal ORANGE 3SS\!i IwF* err—aWa hi Mm pm __ _ | i- _ _ Mn ft. Mid to 111 i— armad VT.IIW D iimm iimma >hii ■ ■ A Jj U V V Jj XV flMni ndar, |I hM no muJ 1.f1.T IlilOK) A I U., ... . . Hwli*. Mmma. WATER. JSHSimmmmm mm&asn MOallr M llirn to AO m|M tm ■* to IM J4IIUM7 m Mill Mm 'lleal* IUMI irt .1.1 to b* Mnl a&fßi.rsr "ASS •Mil. to tMU to Mt.wtf Ml UlOwn UHOUMD Tto graadaM itoM *ad maut total nunum to UM Mi# : b liti< no Aiiiji" tii am. I "'MM *ed Cl.ltd to Ml It ll (I'M UM Hhttwoa 4 mini la. i Pattb, i> *• u. imiirfit llf '•lfnrt 1.1 M1 o i'lmti etu. lito'a H arl, lMfi'"M IMTihIoII nwrilw, to Itonn ito ! Miruli Tfcrirt. ll talii iwfofto ell lUHilMtof i fUM 4|m< 1.111 ja. mw'4 17, II 1.4 VA, (m mat Mto an.l J I aaaaat into Km>l l.aa II AtaM ■to iiia •-* ed ten lead b, mutm Mibllatatol. uaM •aaaia latoiiaj Im Ilk tot. Uui tola toeataae MM 1-nopU aaaa inM aaal It toed lot Mi< ilu and Urmia to •Meet* W. /.IK. I UK A 111., AIM Arrb *Mrrt, nllalrlaMa, Pa. SMITH ORGAN CO. Boatoii. JMCmmmmi. Th rmr Mr ala. , ttrtf IwalruMraft Sold by Lusie Dealers Everywhere. A recti Wan led in Every Town. ttoid Uoaafbaal to* Catted toil** aa to* IKMTII.I.MKKT PI. AN I VMM to, mm i Mfilito to Mitotlt tMaato ratal laantomald aaklaa lb* Mum luitraiUMit i kiakfua ud loi! *aratewlara O, ai rlltell'i. MICH \( ij\ \ PINE AND FARMING LANDS, FOR SALE. ■ lead Mall! I.ato Timber' liato AlrlUato M alar ! Uatotllla! Heallbt l llaaalr ' The retire lata* l.raai ml ito Vital A Par* laraarlta Italla.i I aaaaat, MkdJUU it UK*, la afato (aa *toa let |*r* na rl I ataa I aetttoaael u patato* a* darned HnO.IIOO.UOO tee. to Piua, iuaetad aaa*i*lal to to* Ma* to to* (toiaatot I r entiled lai a aa gmd aa aa> la III* * tail, (to iliia* | ito lim . and aul a* toll aa met fa* raliM It nn i,. aa laaiHUlaa Ttataaa t ta* H-.n, Maid*. Kato Etoa Hiaak t natty. #*..■, Haa. H ail to. *4a. ato j Kamy aaatot# to Uatoaa. *atl rd anaiaa* b*>**4 toll Lead aad RaUiuad lauiiika aa* 111 Aim ato—4 uaaiiiar. and toaa* alto eub t.. acta ***** toil 4* I wall to apply aa*l| aito taba atom* ■ It.nam Tajuaa ■ iu* !■ ana la aaaa tuto faataao* alia aaaaal torn mi m V *at aaat. a* lau I* arraad lalanaatta* *) Mat M'Z.ar, r * iddreH Al KMN Seilaee lMi 500,000 ACRES - or Michigan Lands F O IX S A Ii B t I Tit Uatla at lit Jtrhaaa. laaMaf uto itoilaaa Mallraa4 t aapaal in Maw OPPKHPO POM *AI.K ( Tba nt attaaiad aJimn M* rallraad and raetata lam* uaautoaaotoiaei 1 4RMIMU aa* PINK Lead* Tb* (aiming bad* I . I*4* ana to MM bI lartlt* aa4 aatl aalf ll hai *. 4 laada la Ito Ittat* Tbaf at* uatoto aaaito/ • ill tor* aaili ato todaA. mfe bleak. aaadr laata, and atoaad to aprlaga to para* relet MMhlgaa a aaa to Ito lamt badUMad MM M waaaaaaaa Aaatoa ta ta. I'atoa. ato Ma tawaabaaa a a aa at itrtit| to erupt ato Manatlbu aaa Vaaaara Mate VMb a.m. to tb* (iratrt* Ktalaa aaaf pa*4mi aota la trail abatoaea* ia tot* as nUaar uataaat and atod tbu aru* latla Miiuu . j 101 l .aa, a* baa baaa tto aaaa ua* pato Mat ta loaaaaa la Mtotaaba. Ptlaa /rata AK-AO la U IMI pw aora. toad let I Uaairatadr aat pbtto ATXraaa O. M. BiKMM, t aaatulaalanrr, I aatlai, Nlrb. GIVEN AWAY Tb at act r*a4it to Tb* Pa at II 7 Jaa ratal ■ CENTENNIAL AMERICA. A eiO Tlaird l airailna. alar t/ltl. Oar lam* aad BaamifaJ Ttatad aarrmrtaa aaataiatto •tat roo HMtntaJ Via** and Pvruatu to all iaaabt* *1 aula tad twa. iat* Itraa tto Uaini to ' 'nlaaitiaa ba tto ******* lima lonlndia* a aMcatbaaal ard a till m ataa to tto Cbanaaalai Kuiid intra ta Ctttaaaal Par* at Phliadalt'l'l*. VtU b l*na. Pa Ut Mrndiirt of aaa gr tar iataaary and tor" .dk ■ aalrly fkauli "i i *l (VeieUMH n*w f+mttummd riTiwi. 11 gsijiMii wtu eboii eUUbM satoS * iert* Meoeei of —r' 'Use saa taadta* rant a ta the ptaaoforM. Tha laa.a are a* a pais. lUir i. Bsll iik- usataD.aary heaatlfol la aaat txsauoa m alirmtuae tntb IBs myta loaas Tha erase may Is aef alaua. and B la atari rampart at cvnaplMe aad perfect aa wttt aa .itßoai Ua PI ANo HARP. taay ts na-A sith the PI A ho HARP . tha la Mar May ha nurd aaearaioiy id la enatbtaaUaa ah k any at ail la# Maya of lha orean U- shirk Ii add. yrrwUy M rtasrfty. Ufa aad aartaty alißlti It la a MBCB adder raace a Hneke. Upon He teaaotioa aad lairadaalioa. skoal a year at are. thß sea laatmnatu sat rerei.rd sttk to Mark I a tor that tha d-ratad yiadh as reeded IBs man nfer la/are' a moat ahOMy ta SB a# A as thai i Bey hare Bad aa aaeaaiim ta adrartlaa It aiiaamlaa4y Hatute ata pe-t—cte i fasltl laa tor a larya aapply. tha* offer It to the pa bio sun aaa fid wi I*- Utn alera. atlt die. met and fall daarrtnMnaa. flaw. MeBON A HAMI.IN nm.i* 00.. lAf Trrawoel Straws. BURTON; t \ I'alnn Bqaara. NEW YORE NO aaA NX Adam* Street. < RK'Atio Burnett's Cocoalne Pretnsote Iba Half from Falling. Burnett's Cocoaine Pronotae Its Healthy Growth. Burnett's Cocoaine le not Grimej nor Sticky. Burnett's Cocoaine Idttw no IhaefraeatiW Odor. Burnett's Cocoaine PuMwa Reftwctory Hair. Burnett's Cocoaine SooUiee the Irritated Soa*lbe (pikers are: Lot hwrrJUwuv I ranut, Uoowm. H.rroa. HOWB. Tnrurr. liMtr, Outtm, An Tbe Meato af K*|lM Maea will tie aaak. peak [>ald.l'i ear addlrwr fur Uta KeielT I rlra. stock la. la Em*. HAD, u. 6.4k. •S.ou. r Verb. ■. T. H. 0.-oe m Wbra lb* Klee4 Ma.kra eilb rnefcektlb* ete acaa et afakl. M fa e ran, la el*M Ibe* e HA. aalakltaai. ttMiUtl m 4 W|HiUit| IftuUtt It raqiLrMl, iftd lArrsnr* l.tTervfaopnl KeiUer Aperient enltmieeeewmiHe ■OLD UR ALL uuvooum S H*e LIVER OTVipO RATOR, Ceeeeee4r4 rutlrrly fr*a beau. Tfaaea Ul HBn* e Pa reefae a.tmg zm" rritt * x u£c£: Danlbaajrelae. x a Daal tou.ll . apply I"M la Q let lee, free t 111 lit pi era ay Uaitwaafall t* kr altk > law mt *AM * tokl r t pooa talj bUa i larlfaral Qj .ac < wdlaf U tf iag lb* sleraarb, " fart, lor alt afa m*l| M te fit briiau mt Uka HAjraat w.ll, Ptl*l fb# Li VIB, Irwtn. Urrilli TUB". (if lartUnarHMfa. ■UMiB. flTtM* f> mm at It ■■■ faawafai. I mn f AJM | hlliw r tl Altibti |tyn4, to Uka wfaale w u . rat aaar caasad rataery, near _IJ ky aarhlknan. lay Ifaa raaa* of J . . oral aa Blllaw Uka a#- W Pt Niurki, CoeUrs brtlaa a radical area, ( kraak IM rl in B'AW- mrr kea.Bllara. IIT UfcUlt IKIlt C Lib. J.aaJlesabd lIkIAMIIAL- - Zonula Ktak. KB, mm* la AL- " a rear a. I to Ma. WA*R *A*K. I M .paaaffall take* at we raniMiai mi mm allark mt SICK HJUOAOHIwibiUeIMIai.YKC Lew or SA Lie* bus HA k i ui th* H I. far 1 kault. TKI IT! Par yaaiybM MMtalalu aeafal fafaraillua aal all abaal ibaUwr.allrei BR. BAIFORIk, Haw Tarb. IW>LB Rt ALL BBFWilftb ASSIfBL 08. RADWAT? Sarsaparillian Resolvent, TO BKXAT BLOOD ITBOIIB. at gpsm, btakshaa. ytmatee. Ifaa Am toab aUr eat baaltk,. Iba aria. ahaaeMfnaa * *■*■ tad aad aloud, ifianni la a aiaar warry ar wkw asto ■ Jrirddrt tkrea*^jUa diaisetiM at faaautr aad frag away ml taaataaiarr ralali, datkaiaa. .11 .Hi wad tW awl. Uk aanali A y.iamul n-r. lacraaaad Mraaalb a&ftalt*4 ta tJfeO WMMNAMW * oAfa, MMf f'"i iTnrt'l "NRh tuua "I'iLTrSe aa*tka waliTi'Sl area. aad tka we A, al' . awpaaeaaaa ml tka tola ab.neal ka a ataaa. BMW. aad kaariky rfar A Tiioa. .>wia treat aato ar iliriatil !w ar takarcUw otli ra.il,. grant kaatl la I I mil iaM faaatr ika teagb akiarai ar ananas lw Ike lean. MB . kmaaßl ar atodrtpe. tbronl or kaad diauafabtaa ml tka tr.ria tod WC> gwastota era. ra at anetl tha ma'am; ■amp of tm won awd pi ib■ and >■ IIBM *' id MM aaklaa. kasa. Bkaau.n. aa*., Baaa.ii aat aald ax! cBUw. MM'W ■toMUia . kul* breatttat awA par■ m> aa IMtmviMliiltllMiimu All lll■■ dmaraaw M mrtaw iiaduilfiM aaraij \ AM day after Aa* Mm M AM*A FAki I 1.1 AW k Maa w atttia af raaa relay teatU wU. jiwr : aa Lb* BliwA Mpwul la IHI 181 ud w-rk. Ai am atal AA ■la lab. Md all fnpelrß awA wi*aa 4e -m. . naAaa, taawwa. wiirwr. hard tama*, ate ,ha 1 Mini 11 avai awe v. * awaCHat WMaa tAw. ale . MM NAHM* PA Mil 1.1 AN all aaaatra am# tkwaa Aw nwiad eklaraw ua the nraaaf tha llniii kaa lbs ?7iaM wW aae takt 1a at tar- tha aaaa aLratarbe XtJVSS? aaa. beah: tmr*-rmy. Bar baa* awA ewlytii lawawMay at aaaa > —.4 j| jUW a aa>.loj£*l EaSsTueaaaaa-tAs rtraa at Ua Inn n It **a LuaaJaa; I tf sot anaetaA awA Artaaa I rata IBs hi—it h Mb apraaA IT 4 ibl''m*KMaVaKlU.lA> maAaa Ua ptm : - taal )attar.* aaarr Bear ywe adU era* MBw awA M araaaa la haaltb. aaawtt awA tear The (Mat aaM a' ttß iIB ilt M la Alaaaaaa that : ihmataa iMaln as la OnaaaMiMaa af IBa U-oya taf tiea Pbißtam. Ben-fa i*. NnßilutA Ptamai. Waal la#. 111 BBS BM 111 a. toA Ulaarslf-.-a <4 IBa lUAtwya. Dtahetaa. ttevxr af Watay llaalinltMi BB rallef ■ . I-rdwi aßara nai B ill n Baaa ta be an i f.tßaa I laa mi I alak IBa Bain's! iai alias af aakaa Utaaa l.wtmaaaata!. AMBBIaMB war M tßa MaAAat. aaA m til aaaaa af [a- I laaata a af IBa Rudder uf KAnra. la Obnatla I aaaaa af IwaiimhAi aAA Utmtau AMaaaaa U aaawaa.aAa. BwrA lamp. aaA atjniUoM ataaaa: ta I af Ua lueya. la yeah Aniwaiila. ikatatlßa. rtahata; I la aarctntl Aamakß W Mia IBa l.nAila home W Amsmb. arßiat IBa ktata hoAy Baa Baasaaa a auaaplsSa ereck. aaA naara aaan Beat at aamawaa U Urrtwre. ehareia 188 (raat rißßtfr ebaJlaayea IBs nlnaltßMaal tsA tfaliaiaa af IBs slab It Bla ewrfc aaaaa, seem ail (Be Bwaaa-SB af ertateaaa BUM eat <4 treat tßa malaria sale. aaA By Ma wawAecfel. tlwal a iiieraeweai ayawet. H rsatnaaa IBa bi-pariar ta a aaa Ilia aaA aea it Baaa II aliaaa 188 gtaal nan At BtaAt alaaa ta ta ntaßi aaA aaaaa. la IBa ai miliary afeta AMaaaaa tßal eaery oee la mat* a> tat MtMB ruk a las aaA a *TWa StataA wWb BBmata Ateaweea aßealf aarataaaa RADWAY'B READY RELIEF wax AFFORD nwTAiw KAM. unn.*ww*T!ow or THE KioitiTS. UfriakMMATlOR OK rim sußpu (.\ri.IMMATIOR OK THK BOWKIA (XWOKsnUM or TUB U'HuA, •OR* THRO\T l BffWPI.T ItRKATHINO, rAXf IT ATIOK QT TWK HKAKT. HVMKRIfS, CR H P (lIPIFTBRmiA. CATARRH. IRPIX'KRRA. HRAPACHR.TOOTHAOHR. MUHPi. HHJRAUIIA. RHKVM ATIBM. OOLD obILLB. AUU* OIYIUA ttaa ißilll.ll a af lbs RKADV RKI.IPF In tha pMt V pmrtm wbrm thm paia or 4l®ru.ty wiil aM mm *a4 fSiaa% 4r