The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, April 27, 1876, Image 4

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    FARM, GARDEN AND HOIAIUOLD.
Ilonsehel* niiin,
SITRCB roit PTPDIKO.— On pint of
milk, two egff*. half cupful of sugar, one
tahlespoonfiil of corn starch; flavor witii
lemon or vanilla.
PiOKun Qrntcns. —Pan* and quarter;
bi every ten pounds add three jsmnds o
brown sugar,<uie pint vinegar, onconnc.
clovoa, one ounce cinnamou; boil till
tender.
JOHNNY CAKR.— Two onpfula of sour
milk, one egg, to tabh spoonfuls of
sugar, two tshlesjHHinfuU of melted lard,
two cupful* of meal, one cupful of flour,
one and one-half teaapoonful* oF soda,
ralh
TASTR FOR CMCAMKU BRASSR*. — Rot
ten atone, two ounces; oxalic acid, half
an ounce; sweet oil, three quarters of
mi ounce; turpentine, enough to make
a paste Apply it with a little water.
OOTTAOK PcnniNU,—Two eggs, one
cupful of sweet milk, one pint of flour,
one cupful of sugar, two tablespoon fuls
of butter, half teupoooful of soils, one
teaspoonful of cream of tartar, nutmeg,
hake in a square tiu about thirty miu
tttce; cat hot.
A NICK Ihan or KICK,— Boil a teacup
ful of rice; • wee ten with powdered
: ugar, and pile up on a dish; spot it
with square lumps of jellv; tieat the
v 1 ites of live eggs with sugar,
and flavor with vanilla; pour it over tin
nee.
Cartkts.—Moths will work
# is.to carpets in rooms that are kept dark
i r warm, in vrintor as well a* summer,
Before laying down the cupel pom
long alum water alvnt the floor, and
occasionally sprinkle dry sat over th
carpet before sweeping.
Hons SODA WAT**.— Tour three
pints of boiling water on three pounds
of white sugar and allow it to stand un
til cooL Then add the whibw of tlm.
eggs well beaten, two ountvs of tarta:
acid, and one ounce eeseoce of wii.!< r
green. Take two tMblespooufnl* of this
liquid in a tumbler and fill it two-third
fail of water, then add one half tea
spoonful of carbonate of so. la, and stir
it up until it foams.
YK.VL FOR BREAEFAST. —Take a round
rartkoni disk and put in it a layer of
bread cnuulvs. Over these put spots of
butter. Then H layer of ininccd cold
vc*l, with salt and pepper; then crumbs,
butter, vwl, salt and popper. When
the dish is full, with a layer of crumbs
for the top, pour over it ui egg, beaten
well, and mixed in hall a cupful of milk.
If you have gravy it is better than milk.
Bake until brown.
HICK CI-STAKIX —BoiI the rice slowly
without stirring much, until it is tender:
turn it into a mold to cool; make a boil
ed custard thin, and sweet, and pour
over the rice before it is served.
MOLASSES C'AXM.— One pint white
coffee sugar, one pint molasses, ou
tablespooufni of vinegar, one table
spoonful of butter; cook slowly a long
time, until it 14 strings" from the spoon
w hen dipped np; pour upon a greased
t a pan; then pull it till it becomes
shite.
DRAWN BITTER. —Take one pint of
sweet milk, a piece of bnttfr the si*) of
an egg, two or three tableepoonfula of
ur or corn starch; rnb the butter and
!l ur together; when the milk is boiling,
stir lnjhe butter and flour; have ready
two hard boiled eggs; Lake off the ahellV
and chop or slice them; stir them in as
you take the butter from the fire; pep
per and salt to taste; send to table im
mediate! v.
ICING FOR CAXJL— Icing can be madi
very easily by merely mixing the white
. i f eggs with sugar, and adding to each
• erg one teaspoonful of ice-cold water.
This takes more sugar than when tht
egg is beaten to a froth, but it will keep
soft for some days. To make the icing
very thick, it must be put on in two or
three layers, as otherwise it will be thick
nil the edges of the loaf and thin on the
top. It will not pile up like old fash
ioned icirg.
SETTLE PTTDING. —Three eggs, beat
light; add a little salt aud floor to make
a paste that will roll: roll the paste an
eighth of au inch thick; fold the paste
t-hred fine; boil in clear water, with a
little salt; put them in the water while it
is boiling, and do not allow them to
stick together, or uncover the pot for
ten minutes; take them out and drain
well; bake them one hour; beat two eggt
light; mix them in a qnart of milk, and
stir in the neudles; add salt, sugar, and
spices to taste, and bake as custard.
SALT FISH. —To be used to advantage
salt fish must be soaked the afternoon
previous to nsing, the water changed
before be.itirae, and again early in the
morning. Once more change the water
after breakfast, put it on the back of the
range or stove and never allow it to boil,
: careely simmer until you find it soft
enough to pick a{rt very fine with a
fork. It must not be chopped but care
fully picked; it takes more time but is
the only right way. For codfish cakes
have the potatoes nicely mashed with
milk and a little butter, proportion of
one cup of fish to three of potatoes, a
little pepper, red or black. Dip in egg
or not, as you prefer, before frying
t rown. To be made in cakes not too
thick.
SflMff luoirad of TKaare.
Prof. Stockbriilge, of the Ma®achn
s tts agricultural college, has laid down
his formulas for growing wheat, com
:md potatoes, all the results of chemical
investigations into the nature of those
different plants, and all verified by ac
tual experiments.
Prof, bt i-khridge's formula for pota
toes is as follows; To produce one hun
dred bushels of potatoes per acre with
out any manure, and their natural pro
portion of tops,%ore than the natural
yield of the laud, and in like propor
tions for other quantities, apply twenty
one pounds nitrogen, thirty-four pounds
r.etual potash, eleven pounds soluble
/>kosphoricacid, obtained from four hun
dred to five hundred pounds of crude
materials; cost, sl2.
Hie formula for In dim corn, which
will increase the natural production of
au aero fifty bushels, is sixty-four
pounds nitrogen, seventy-seven pounds
actual potash, thirty-one pounds soluble
j.hosphoric acid, obtained from seven
hundred to one thousand pounds crude
materials, and costing abont $25.
His formula for wheat, which is cal
culated to give a yield of twenty-five
bushels per acre beyond the naturll pro
duction, is forty-one pounds nitrogen,
twenty-four pounds potash, and twenty
pounds phosphoric acid obtained from
four hundred and fifty to six hundred
pounds crude material.- , according to
grades, and costing about sls.
Farm >otr.
Rainwater brings down yearly about
twelve pounds of ammonia per acre of
ground. To supply an equal amount in
sulphate of ammonia at six cents per
pound would cost the farmer $2.88, and
this is therefore the maunrial value of
rain. To tiiis, however, must be ad led
a certain quantity of nitric or nitrons
acid.
The nu. her of eggs aunually laid by
a fowl is est! a ted at fifty two, which
would weigh ;.bout sixty-one pounds, and
as a fowl seldom weighs more than three
pounds, a hen lays aunually eggs double
her own weight. * %
Broom corn may be grown upon any
soil that will produce a good crop of
corn. There is n > better manure or
preparation for this crop than barn
yard manure, or that usual in putting
iu a corn crop. Where the soil is not
free from weeds hill planting is best.
I bad a horse lame with wind-gall,
which I cured of lameness with the fol
lowing recipe, viz.: Olive oil, two
ounces; oil of spike, one ounce; aqua
amnion:.i, one ounce; oil of ro-emary,
one ounce. Mix thoroughly. Apply
once a day for a few days, not too freely.
UralOsf (jirnpra.
I do not consider, says a writer on
grape culture, that anything is gained
by grafting one variety of grape upon
another, when the vines of any variety
can be easily grown from layers, that
are much belter than scions if they
grow, which is not always the case. But
if one desires to try his iuck in grafting,
he should wait till the leaves of the
vines are partially grown, some time in
June, aud after the flow of sap has
somewhat abated; then take a cane of
suitable mm of the last season s |to*th
which has its base near tho ground, out
it off, and graft iu tho manner of oloft
grafting; thon plao* the grafted part
under tho earth, with tho end of tho
scion and one bud just above the sur
face of tho ground. Tho stock had ttot
ter l>e placed in position in a trench a
few inches deep, pegged down, ami the
grafted end turned up and tied to a
small stake; thou cut off and grafted as
above Hiatal, ami till in around tho con
neetion and pack tho earth firmly, HO
that the graft and stock may be kept
moist.
IVrpnrtna fhl. hra Feathers.
B. Benjamin. New York, wrote as fol
lows t> the farmers, club: 1 read in a
Boston journal, not long ago, a new use
for chicken feathers, which may bring
large profit*. The operation is to out
the plume portion of the feather* from
the stem hv means of ordinary shears or
scissors. The former are placed in
quantities in a coarse l>ag, which, when
full, is tied up and subjected to a thor
ough kneading with the hands. By tin*
process the feathers iu a few minute* le
oome disaggregate! and felted together,
forming a down of great lightnoas, which
thus prepared, in Taris brings two dol
lars jvr pound. This would make the
f<wth<w- of an ordinary aiaod heu wortli
alauit twenty cent*. as the yield would
le iu the neighborhood of 1,6 'IW
ouuoea. 1 semi it to the club, so tiiat
there uinv be a large quantity of the
down made by children, to ls di*|>o*ed
of at gvsal price* to the upholsterers, if
uot need Oil for domestic use at home.
Wrk ('•*.
A member of the American farmer's
club, who read some tiuse ago iu one id
the agricultural paper* a recipe for cur
iug hollow horu, or hunt ail, as it is
often called, u,l that he had occasion
w.>ou after Iu try the remedy on lus only
cow, and has no doubt that it saved her
life. The recipe was as follows ; Take
two piece* of salt |Hirk alsnit tlic i£e of
the two forefingers, split them open and
put iu each a teaspoouful of revenue
pepper; stand Oil the right side of the
animal and elevate the jaws with the
left arm, and put the pork between the
grinder* with the right baud, keeping
the jaws elevated till the dose is chewed
and swallowed, oulv putting iu one piece
at a time. After tliey are admiuistered
give two more pieces of the same sue,
if you elio.ee with the popper, and if
the auuual seems affected by the cold
give water with the chill taken off to
1 drink, and put on a warm blanket. This
remedy is alia* said to be very good
when the animal has taken Cold or lost
its appetite iu auy way.
Reorganising the Tutted States Army.
The committee ou military affairs of
the Tinted States House agreed upon a
bill to reorganize the army, it being
Representative Banning a bill, with
some amendments, and ordered it to be
reported favorably to the House. It
does not reduce the present effective
force of the army, but reduces the uum
ber of infantry regiments from twenty
five to tifeuty, and the cavalry from ten
to eight, thus reducing the number of
infantry officers fifty five and of cavalry
officers lifteen, and increase* the size of
the oompaniea and regiments. It does
away with the regimental organization of
the artillery, reducing the field officers
of artillery seventeen. It consolidates
the quartermaster and commissary de
partments into one, designated as the
dej>artment of supplies, making a large
reduction of officers. It provides for a
board to examine officers and for the dis
charge of all worthless and inefficient
officers, and for an examination of the
condition of retired officers. All officers
who lose their places under the bill are
placed upon a list of supernumeraries,
and are permitted to resign with one
year's pay for each eight years of ser
vice, or remain in service to perform
such duty as they may lie assigned to.
It provides for the education of non
commissioned officers and soldiers by
the commissioned officers, aud for the
promotion of non-commissioned officers
to commissioned officers. It abolishes
the office of judge advocate, fixes the
pay of first sergeants at S4O per month,
makes the headquarters of the general
of the army at Washingtou in time of
peace, and provides that he may act as
secretary of war in the atiscnce of
the secretary or temporary vacancy in
the office.
It provides that sutlers and poet trad
ers shall be first elected by a council of
the administration, approved by the de
partment commander and the general of
the army, and appointed by the secre
tary of war. It reduces '.he staff oi all
general officers, and requires the general
of the army to report reforms to Con
gress annually and to look to economy
in all branches of the army. The bill
is approved by the testimony of many
of the officers of the army. It is a re
duction of about two hundred officers,
and proposes reforms which, if adopted,
will, a Washington dispatch says, it is
claimed, add greatly to the efficiency of
the army.
Mrs. Fitch's Diamonds.
The revenue authorities are puzzled
to know what to do with the khedive of
Egypt's famous gift to General Sher
man's daughter. The diamonds are
locked up in the big vault in the sob
treasury. They were placed there in
Jane last, and unless they are taken away
before next June, they will be classified
as unclaimed goods, and sold by anction
to {jav the duties and storage. If this
should happen, the money, after the de
duction of the fficial charges, would be
paid to Drexel, Morgan A Co., in whose
name tbe diamonds are consigned. The
trouble is that Congress iu authorizing
Lieut. Fitch to receive the present to
his wife, neglected to relieve him from
the payment of the duties. The neck
lace aud eatings which compose the gift
were first said to be worth $250,000, but
experts have siuce appraised them at
$75,000. The duty on tills amount would
be about $4b,000. Gen. .Sherman feels
that he is too poor to pay this, and he is
unwilling to appeal to Congress for an
exemption of the payment of the duties.
Neither the secretary of the treasury,
the collector, nor any of his deputies are
disposed to exercise their ]>ower of
granting a free permit for the diamonds,
and the Turkish ambassador, who has
the official prerogative of receiving them
in his name, will not ask for their re
lease, because tbe khedive is only recog
nized by his government as a vassal.
Where he Tame From.
As the train stopped for ten minutes,
and that individual who goes along tap
ping the wheels with his hammer was
passing rapidly by the smoking car, one
of the windows was hoisted and a tor
rent of tobacco spit was ejected which
completely deluged him. The machin
ist pußsed for a moment, and, wiping
some of the streams from his person,
said to the offender:
"Mister, what part of the country did
you come from ?"
44 Me !" said the spitter, puekoring
his lips for another expectoration, 44 1
come from Kansas.."
44 1 thought so," said the machinist,
44 for if yon bad lived in Massachusetts
or Connecticut they would have had a
water wheel iu your mouth long ago."
Afraid of the Precedent.
Home years ago Moses S. Wheeler was
convicted of arson, in Massachusetts,
mainly on the evidence of his own sis
ter, and sentenced to the State prison
for life. After remaining in prison eight
years, his sister having died in the
meautime, he was enabled to satisfy tbe
governor and council that be was inno
cent, and was pardoned out. He ap
plied to tko Legislature for compensa
tion for eight years of service, anil bis
claim was supported by several gentle
men of Boston. After a patient bearing
the committee made a report adverse to
tbe claim, on tbe ground that it would
establish a dangerous and costly prece
dent.
THK RESULT. —Mr. Welsh, chairman
of the bos -d of finance, estimates the
number of people who are likely to
visit the Centennial exhibition at 3,300,-
000 in all, and that the number of en
trance tickets sold will probably average
three for each person. That would be
abont 10,000,000 tickets. These at fifty
cents apiece would bring some $5,000,-
000 in entrance foes.
Margaret's Mission.
" Agnoa (tray aava that every woman
has a miaaiou. What do you suppo**
ciy minaion is, mamma t"
•• Miaaion, indeed," laughed Mr*.
Alleyne, looking proudly at her pretty
daughter; " 1 suspect, my d>ar Meggy,
your mission is to ilirt and dance."
Mrs. Alleyne was wealthy, and Mar
garet was her only child, Her whole
life was s|x>nt iu rendering her daughter
happy, so Margaret was petted to her
heat I s eoutont, To look as pretty ami
Ivewitching as |H*Mble, to lie arrayed
like Sih>uiou iu all his glory from tuoru
lug till night, to pans her time iu an
endless sucwaaioti of gnyety, was her
child's mission, according to Mrs. A1
leyne's idea; so Margaret received all
the gifts fortune sliowtrod upon her as a
matter of course, and enjoved life as
her mother expected she would do.
At last Margaret luet her fate, to the
great wonderment of her friends, in the
|<crnon of Johu tiraliam, a wealthy
young merchant . for Margaret AUeyue,
with her !>ahv face and CHJuetttsh man
ner, was the last person in the world you
would imagine the grave business man
would love, and he the most unlikely of
all her suitors to carry off the hollo.
But Margaret did love her lover; he was
so grave ami clever. Ho auudst the cm
gralulatious of his friends and the tears
of her parents, John Orahaiu bore his
fair bride off to his home.
He was very much in love with pretty
Margant. The soft, rose flushed face,
the tellder blue eyes, the crinkled gold
en hair, never loot their charm for him.
But he never dreamed that this little
fragile creature could share the burden
of life will. him. No, that dimpled face
was only made for ainiU s, so he in
dulged and caressed her, but his car.-*
tic bore alone.
The large fortune left by John's
father had In-cn double.} by his euergy ;
but uow, by tho simultaneous failure of
iwo or three firms he ltad trusted and
the villainy of a confidential clerk, the
wealthy merchant saw himself upon the
brink of ruin. Love rendered Margaret
keeu sighted; she quickly perceived
that all wus not right with her Irani iaud ;
his wan, haggard face frightened her.
But dearly as she loved him she was Ue
proud to seek his confidence ; so both
were wretched, though each endeavored
to eouival it from the other.
When John saw that ruin was inevi
table he wrv te to Mrs. Allevue, frankly
disclosing the state of affairs. The
mother msisU'tl that her daughter
should rid urn to her ; her husband could
claim her when fortune again smiled
upon him ; but in the meantime Mar
garet was l<ettor with her ; to s|are her
anxiety, it was better she should not
kuow of her husband's difficulties.
With a heavy heart John ago ed to all
Mrs. Alleyue's demands. Margaret's
love was the only brightness left m his
life; but of course if she could be kap
pier with her mother he could sacrifice
it. His stern, pale face aud constrained
manner affected Margaret painfully
when he told her he de.sircd her to ac
oept he mother's invitation.
"He no longer loves me—he wishes
me to leave him," the poor child cried
afterwards, in a jsissiou of tear*. But
before him she presented a calui exte
nor, and John Graham thought that his
young wife, like the rest of the world,
was ready to desert the ship.
So Margart t returned to the home of
ht r girlhood, cailtug all her pndc to her
assistance to enable her to apj>ear iudif
ferent; but her heart was rent by bitter
Jiangs, for she had persuaded herself
that her husband no longer loved her.
Whole nights spent iu tears leave
traces; pretty Margaret grew j>ale and
thin, and Mrs. Alleyne i>eguii to fear
that, after all. In r tendemass could not
constitute her ilarLing's happineas. Still,
the girl never complained, bat bore her
burden in proud silence.
One night Margaret was at a ball given
by an intimate friend. She bad ilanoed
a great deal, and being very tired sat
down uear an open window; a heavy
curtain entirely concealed her. Two
gentlemen wire standing near, and she
could hear their conversation dis
tinctly.
"So John Graham is bankrupt. lam
very worry to hoar it; he is a most honor
able fellow," said one.
"Yes," answered the other; "I saw
him last week; he look* wretchedly.
You know he married Miss Alleyne, a
pretty little dull without an idea, and
what is worse, without a heart ; now
she ha* deserted him in his adversity.
It is rather hard when a man's own wife
will not aid him to bear his trouble."
Margaret's heart gave a great botiud.
How she hail misjudged him! How
true and tender he wis ! He was alone
and in trouble ; surely her place was at
his side. Then, heedless of o -mments,
she left her hiding place.
The next day John Graham's stately
mansion was to 1M- sold. He had taken
great pride in his home ; a thousand
tender associations connects! with
every room. Now, with a heavy heart,
be wandered through the deserted apart
ments. Here was Margaret's piano ;
the harp he hail given her ; the pictures
and statues they hail chosen togethi r ;
every article appeared like an old friend.
Then a feeling of intense desolation
crept over him—he was so utterly lonely.
The strong spirit was almost crushed.
He threw himself upon the bed and
wept like a child. A quiet step npon
the stairs, a rnstle of silken robes, a
glad cry, then clinging arms were twined
about his neck, a soft cheek was pressed
to his, tangled golden ctirls mingled
with his dark locks. Was it a dream I
He pressed her close to make sure of
the reality, and kissed her with snob
passionate fervor that Margaret wept for
joy.
44 Margaret, my wife—Margaret !
he sobbed.
" Oh, John, how cruel you were to
send m<- away! I'll never leave yon
again, darling."
When they had both regained calm
ncss, John Graham explained to liis wife
that the next day the house was to be
sold—he could not take her into lodg
ings—perhaps she had better return to
her mother. But Margaret firmly re
fused.
"Any place that is good enough for
yon, John, is good enough for mo. My
place is with yon. I can assist yon
more thnn you think," she said.
Then Margaret commenced the battle
of life in earnest. It is not easy to turn
from a life of pleasnre and luxury to one
of comparative poverty. Margaret nt
first did not find her path strewn with
there w.-re difficulties to be en
c metered; slights to bo endured, ease
to be sacrificed; bnt she had a brave
heart, and love hail changed the gay,
careless girl into the fender, self-sacri
ficing woman. Hhe IM-came her hus
band's closest friend, his best advisor,
the sympathizing confidant of all his
plans, ever ready to cheer in moments
of depression—the first to rejoice iu his
success.
John Graham is a wealthy man again
now; success lias crowned his cflortA ;
but ho evi r blesses the adv rsity which
taught him to know the real value of
his wife.
Ho Margaret found her mission as a
devoted wife and moila r, much to her
mother's amazement; ami John Graham
fotiud he bud married not a pr.tty but
terfly of fashion, but an earnest, loving
woman.
A Nice Little Boy.
He is a nice little boy who lives in
Erie, Pa. They had a performance in
the opera house, and he stationed him
self at the head of the stairway, and said,
so sweetly and naturally: "Tickets,
please," and they gave him the tickets,
but soon they camo to a big, burly man
at a door, who wanted tickets, too, and
wouldn't let them in because they had
none. And the nice little boy went with
his friends to the show, and they could
not find him there to pay him for being
doorkeeper.
DRESS REFORM. —The advantage of
having a dress reform woman for a wife :
Time, midnight; same, a Ixsl chamber;
two pairs of pants banging over a chnir;
enter the bloody minded burglar; sees
pants. "Aba! curse on 'eml one man
I would carve; two 1 will uot face!"
Exit burglar in alarm; burglar deceived;
only one man in bed; other punts bo
long to wife.
NUMMARY Or JIKWH.
'sl.rs.llsl Ilea.. Ireoi llesse aa* tbr.nd.
A bat go containing ten thousand bushels of
Corn became unmanageable Just above St
l.cula and struck the bridge Willi such force ae
to break In two, drowning the entire crew of
all colorivt uieii . .The nomination of Itichant
It. liana, Jr., aa minister lo England, was re
jected by Ibe Senate . .Tlie estimates for the
Itiver and Harbor bill wete cut down lu the
cuugraaeloaal ooiuuilttee from tU.IIOI.INKI to
♦J sn.Ott) A break rvft v feet wide Is re
ported til the Milliken Itend levee, a few miles
above Ylckaburg Misa Hradiev N t'uin
lulngs. a well known merchant of lLietou,
committed suicide while leuiporsiily liisaue by
drowning himself in a shallow pool of water
.Tlio stsauier Agrigenla from Phwua
for Italian port., collided with the 1 ugtlsh
steamer llilton ('sells off the scuUi coast of
Ibe Motea Ttie immediately sunk,
and tuns of the crew and twenty passengers
Wcle drowunt lle|<oits flom Newfound
land slate that tlie ti.tilug aea.ou has beeuiiii
faioiable, and that s number of sealing leasela
were ciusbe-l and suek by the I. e. llealltulloii
preialla in many parte of tiroau llsy. l'lte
schiHitier Helen H. llolway went ashore near
i ire Island, off i.otig Island, and six lives were
1.-ct A sevetiteen-year old sou of l'atrick
Ticketing, in Columbus, Ohio, bavin,, INS
ciste.l Willi futbldden coni|>anluns, tbe fatlier,
while Intoxicated. Ilia. 1C htm go down U|H>U
bis knees and protmee not to do so again.
W bile Uie youth wan lu this poaillou Hie father
discharge.! a gun at him, killiug him iuslanlly.
.... lu couseipieuce of Thomas Tracy and
wife being unable to live happily together,
near t'arhusville, lib, Ibe w.iman ooucluded lu
leave ber huelaud, and was .-airiing out her
iuleutioua wbeu he shot and killed ber, and
then beat cut the brains of their six-year old
daughter. Kulecjueully he ouuwiltled suicide
by culling his throat.
Chief-Justice Walle admluistored the oath
to the Tutted Males Senators, slid they Lmuio
diately organised themselice into a high court
uf uu|>eachment fur the tual of lielknap
The ai my hcad<ptarters has been ordered back
to Washington from St. Louis by Secretary
Tafl . .It is reported that the UihahilatiUi uf
the lUhxos district of lljeuta have revolted
against the sultan ... li real Kalis. NY, lost
four stores and a dwelling by Are. O. li Hill
and sister were I timed tu death. la-eo #55,-
IHNI , insurance, #2O,(AM Tbe nail works at
Uanwv.>od, W. Va, employing Ave hundred
bands, were burned to the ground . Yellew
feist is increasing at Itio Janeiro.... Tour
powder maganues, siluat d within olio tniie of
Salt l.ake Tily, exploded with terrthc force and
did an Immense amount of damage throughout
tin- town nearly all the g!a-a being shattered
t y the shuck. Heari biwlders were Uiruwu
from the inagax.nes iuto the city, kilUug one
lady and wounding others. Human remains,
found near the scons of the explosion, have
boon identified as lb.ee uf two boys who went
m that ilireotiou tu the with gu a iu
their ha.id*. ft . aii|>i>oeod they Aral tutu
une i.tgaxiue, the roucuaaiou of which ax-
plostou >c' off the other*. The larked uiaga
xluc eoulaitml one ai. ! one-half carhada of
powder, and the amalleel ten to: a Hume,
the fam oca *iamuaiat, died anddonly in
Turojx) . .fly the falling of an old trick I u:ld
u g in proecea uf dcmoi.Uu iu No* York City,
three boy* wrre fatally ana aeveral oCheta cn
ottaly lujated ..The alroi.g current of the
river Hee, Scotland, overturned a ferryboat tu
ui. ii>;nam and it la thought that thirty |*e
actigrra pertahrd ... Kh.de laland Kepuhh
cane carried the I.egtalalare ; but ihnr candi
dates for governor and heulenant-govtrt.or
only received a plurality of votes and not a
majority. The Logt*!ature wtf elect Llppitl
to the gubernatorial chair.
Stephen H. \ an Hcha.ck, a arrogate of New
York, died at Savannah, (ia,... The luaur
recti on which broke out in the fiihacn JuLrict
U in full headway along the Brin and north
lljanian frontier, and all the place* between
Mugdane Tolje and i'etruwatx have risen
The uiootno tax iu (Irrat liritaiu haa been In
creased a pinny on a l>otUi-d ... Met lean re
ports alale thai the declaration# of mait:al law
have checked tbe progreee of revolution tu
many atatoe, but Oaiaca cauhnned in ]<sm
non of the ineurgeulr. A large ai>, ml lage of
pereocia who met in the vicinity of Mexico City
to rejoice over the r volution were ai Lacked
by'the police, who kJled over one hundred uf
the malconteuUi. Commerce ta para!v zed.
and iu oonerquenoe of increased taxation prices
have guao up twenty-Arc per cent ....The
Canadian parliamet-t hae voted #1.*10.000 to
ward the coaetractiou of a Pacific railway
S. C. I'arsons, a well-known drnggiat at
Northampton, Masa , drowned huseeif. while
itisane from brain fever .... The Haverhill
(Maes ) lank ha* had #I3.(XX) in note* and
check* returned by exprewe—hetng part of the
money stolen from the president* pocket a
short time since.
The European ■.•in market ha* a downward
tendency ... Capt. Kabn, of the Francouia.
which sui k the Hlralholyde, by which die
a*ter ao nia-iy persona loai their live* off the
coast of England, haa been f nnd guilty of
manslaughter .. The Turka violated the late
anntslicr by receiving two ahiploede of te-en
fiHcemente and conceiittatlng their artny. In
ooreeqoonoe the inaurgente renounced the
mgotiatton* in progress. AI! Uoen'x U now
m open rebellion Die four-ball game of
billiard* between Cyrillo Hion and A T ltn
dolpbe, in New Y rk, for #u"U a aide and the
diamond championship cue, resulted in a vic
tory fur Diou by a eoore of 1.50J against 3si.
The Panama railway company haa sued
the PertAc Mail company for #:i.IS,OTJ, due for
transportation across the islhrnn* Samuel
Lvaus, a colored sailor, who lived in a room in
New Y'ork with t -t> women, one white and the
other colored, fa a'ly etabl e-l tho white girl
for threatening to dceort him .. lty the
death of Misa Newlcry, at lh me, between
two and three million dollars, l-cqusthed by
her father, revert to tho city of Chicago for a
free library. The evtate i* v tired at *6.<i00,-
000 Three men wcro killed aiid another
fatally injured by a locomotive exploding near
ltol<! K*gle, Pa
OTrtiary, tho Chicago pedestrian, walked
five hundred miiee in 139 hour* and thirty-two
miuntea in Han Krauciua The 459 th mile
was made in eight mumte* and Afty-elght
aecunds Oold-m tli Maid trotted against
Golden Gate in San Kraticisoo- tlie latter to
run a nule and 550 yards. The Maid won in
2;l9>i", boating Golden Gate three seconds....
A fire in Haiti mure destroyed Wm. H. Drown
3t Bro.'a drug house and damaged the nrighlior
ing buildings. Diss, #225,000 'Die
Music Hall, at AUiol, Maas., and a dwelling
adjoining were destroyed by fire, and several
honsea partially burne 1. Loss, #75,000
Garibaldi Lao acreptrd tho gift of 100,000 lire
(♦20.00O) offered by the Italian government
and king some time siiioe Heltons agrarian
outbreaks have taken plsoe in tho Buslar dis
trict of Madrls. India. Thirty thousand peas
ant? assembled, and troops woro dispatched
to rceloro order While Charles Car
ter, foreman of tho boiler shop of Shapiey
X Wells, at Binghampton, N. Y , was testing a
sixty-homo power boilor, which stood on tho
sidewalk preparatory for shipment, it ex
ploded. Carter and two o'hors were killed
and several paenorsby more or loss injured
Cainbiidge heat Oxford Ly three lengths, in
tho great Knglieli univcm.ty boat race. Time,
twenty minutes aud nineteen scoonds, being
tho fa-.tost over recorded In those races
T. G. Hattle, formerly railway elation agont at
l'otoei. Mo . who KM removed on cimplsmtof
Engineer Bamuol Cow ell. shot and killed tho
latter In oonseqnonoe, aud then killed himaelf.
Tho czar of Itnnaia liaa given np all
thought of abdication, as his health has been
fully reooverod lbs Afghanistan Amcor
of Cabtil baa defeated hie rebo.l.ou* mibjoct,
the Moer of Maimeua. The latter loot throe
then-and nun iu tlio battle.
Sir. Alexander T. Stewart, the merchant
prince, died In New York of inflammation of
tho bowels, brought on by a severe cold, in
the seventy fourth year of hia ago. Mr.
Stewart was horn near Belfast, Ireland, of
Hcoteh-lriah parents. After graduating at
Trinity College, Dublin, he uumigratod to this
country in 1*22, M tho age of twenty years,
aud openeJ a aoltct nohool in New Yoik. lie
soon afterward gave up tbi* project aud start
ed a amaJl retail dry gooda store on Broadway,
which soon became noted for the line quality
of the stock displayed, and was liberally
patronized by the wealthy inhabitants. By
strict attention to business, coupled with ex
tensive but judicious advertising, Mr. Htowait
had so prospered by IMS that lie wis enabled
to ereut the large marble store at present
standing on the corner of Broadway aud
Chambers stroot, and from that tune on hia
fortuns Increased with the greatest raptiltty
Foreseeing tlio nwwrji fui an uptown move
ment on llta pail of the retail drelrra, Mr.
Stewart erected the liantlaoiue eight-story
bulllllig iKVti|yitjt the entire block from Ninth
to Tenth atreeta, and from Itroedway to Fourth
avenue, and occupied It an a letall de|iartment,
retaining tlio uld store for whulesalolng. The
Uptown atore ooveni two and a half acres of
ground, employs two Ihoiiaand handa, and the
i mining etpeuaea are over #I.UUO.UOO |>er
anntiui being the tuoat eiteualve eatabliah
tuent of the kind In the world. The whuleaale
and retail ealahltahtuente hate eold t'*' (Hk) OIK)
worth of gouda In a year llceidea the two
Colossal atofea, Mr. Htewatt held a large
amount of New Yotk oily property, the elegant
tlraiul t'llion hotel at Marsh ga, Ituuienae lullla
near Kiahkill, N 1., and the entire tiardeu
Pity on l.ong I eland whieh waa a pot eoheiuo
of the founder, where he utado great outlays
lu putting up hoitnee and alorea, connecting
with the oily l>y a railway rnu l>y hia em
ployrv a Ilia eetato haa leti oatimated all the
way front ♦ JOOIO.UOO to 6A0,000,000, hut prob
ably now nearly appmaobee the la'.tar auui
Mr. titewart, i iilalde of bualuoaa, waa of a
pieaaant dia|nitlou, and delighted to euter
laiu distinguished |H<rwoiiag*a in a royal lu-a
tier. Ilia wife eurtivea him , but aa alio la
rhiklloea, it la coiijeouirrd that the bulk of the
property la left to charitable purpoeaa.
The Massachusetts eupretue .XlUrl haa de
rided that. If armed with proper payiera and
haling reaaoli to believe tlio poison nought la
witlitu a houre, an oftloer tnay, after demand
tug and being refueed adiutanlou, enter by
force, Uur can be be treated aa a troapaaaer if
the peraoii aoughl la not there ~ Ocean
traire|>ortatlon having fallen off. the large
oeearr steamships will run loan frapirnUy dur
ing the neat few in untie .. Philadelphia a
Imputation, accenting to the Census Juat taken,
laßl7 Iwi rtie revulu'toniata in Mtxico
are gaining giouud liurlug the battle of
New hart do, near tlio boundary line. tho Min
es:. etate troops died on I'utted Mates troope.
who in turn shelled the town . John 11
Sell, teller and bookkeeper of the defunct
Security bank lu Now York uubr/xled #70,0(10
while euga.'ed In aa-tsliiig to eeltle up the
banks accounts .The s (Torlug lu Iceland
the past winter waa muck less than geneiaily
eup|Kieed The puuiioe ashea from volcanoes,
wh.ch colored a large portion of the island to
the depth of three inches, and which waa
thought would kid vegetation, turns out to
have a manuring property which exuao* grata
to grow rapidly ..A fire in hotaville, N. Y ,
destroyed live of the largest stores in the
place. There was no prulceuuu against Are
rt.-ept a force jump, which waa froxeu.
Every day bring- intelligence uf additions to
the insurrectionary movement among the
Christian jwaiplo under Tuikiah rule Central
liueuta la now tu revolt The revuluiiumtla
uf Mexico have taken the town of New Larodo.
A Ui aty uf |>e*oa hae been made l>e
! w i < ii ;he repubhc uf I.iberia and the rev >.ting
trtbea Audreaa Kucha, who killed H.tu
rn ot.a tu lhtxiklyu, N. V., and afterward out
the body into amail (Aecee which be hid about
in different placre, waa sentenced to be hutig
on June 2 . Turkey tutor me Ibe inter
ceding puweiw that she haa conceded to her
re belli us autqrc'.a all the refutmt euneutenl
with her eelf raa|*ct . Oteet d<rtituU nia
rej-orttd arnuug the inhabitant* of Caj>e
lireton, and three hundred persona in tlie
neighborhood of Sydney are avid lu ho with
out Uie ncccaearioe uf Ute . Harvard will
undoubtedly ecLd a rrew lo Philadelphia to
contend with the eight oartd crews from
Oxfur! and Catul tidge Phe duect catio
to England ia once mure ta working unler
TORTY-IOUKIT! COKENS.
The 19 as Is —• si t.esrrwl twiereel Trnea
erteS.
IUITL
Mr. Momil (Ksp ), uf Maine, from the com
mittee on appropi.xtions. rrp-rted without
amendment tlie Hu.uc Lll making apppropn
aliutia fur {orUAcatloii* an 1 Ml.rr wurka of
defense for tbe fiscal jeer ending June 90,
1-77, a id raximincndii g tliat It be passed aa it
came from Uie House l'laced on the calendar.
The Ghair laid b. fore tho Senate a message
fr< tu the President of the J.'Mled bleiea, rc
llining to Uie s.-xiale without bia apjvroral tlie
t ill for the re-hof uf <,. 11 Kyier and E. U.
Euckett, utlyuaie of IV, T. t iieeihatu. Ihe
tueaavpe and accoiupai.yo g pa-.ers wcrereferr
<vl. on ti. -'.. -ii of Mr. McCreory (1 x*m ). of
Kentucky, to the ivmimiltee uu claims.
Mr. rtherman I itep ), of Ohio, called up the
H xiee UK to enable tiie aecrvtar v of the treas
ury to pay the judgments rend<-rwd by tho
court of Alabama claims Paa-cd
Mr. Clayton (lisp.), of Arkar -s- froa the
(V'thmiUee on Indian affair*, rep Hot favor
ably on the House tail to (vrovtjc fur the sale
of the Kansas Indian lands In Kansas to actual
eetliera, and for Uie d*l>owlliou of the |Wo
offt*ds of the sale.
The House tall authonziug the aale of the
rawnce Indian reservation was paeenl
The Senate theu to. k up tho bill Axing tbe
rat# of jo-tage ou third-class mail matter, and
for oUier parjsiece.
Mr. ilamlin (Rap.), of Maine, aubmitled an
amendment which was agreed to. to insert tbe
words " l-cforv the same shall be trarvstnlUed
hv mail,'' eo it would read
If, however, the postage on tMrd-claa* mat!
matter mailed el ati office snail be ieea Utan
the full amount above prescribed in case
where the sender is kuown. eitch sender shall
!• notified of the fad, and the amount of
poala :e due shall be c llicled from such
••iider t>efurv the aamo aliall be tranatm'.ted
by mail, etc.
Mr. Hlicrtuan (Hep.), of Ohio, frcm Uie
(Maiwiittec <>u Alienor, reported favorably on
the llou*e bill to provide fur a deficiency in
the engraving and piinting bureau of the
treasury det artment.
Mr. Wr.gnl lllep.), of lowa, from the c>vtn
mittec on Uie judiciary, rrj-ortrd adverwelv on
the)4nate bill to make jveraona chargeable with
cnmc# and offense* witnemvee In court* of the
I'nited States, and it was indefinitely puet
potted.
.Mr. Klierman ( Kep ). of Ohio, called np the
iloueo bill to provide for a deficiency iu the
printing and engraving bureau (f Uie Treas
ury department, and for the issue uf silver
coin of Iho Toiled Mates m place of fractional
currency Tbe bill aas read a third time and
passed It la as follows
lie It unacted. That there be, and hereby ia
appropriated out of any m-mer tu the treae
, ury not otherwise appropriated, the euni of
♦ 1(73.00(1. to provide f.-r (ngravingand pirint
u>g an<! other rx|iiaee of making and loaning
t'nitod Htatee notes, and the further eum of
ftrt.ooo to jirovide for engraving and printing
national hank notes, lo be disbursed under tbe
' secretary of the treasure.
That tii* m> rotary of ill* treasury is hereby
directed to :aetie ailver ooins of the I'mteil
Metes of the douomiue'ioa of ten, twenty.
twenty-tlTe, and fifty cent*, of standard Talus
in redemption of a* npal amount of fractional
cuirency, whellicr Uio aauo be new in the
treasury awaiting redemptlyr. or wherever it
may lie presented for redemption, and the aec
retary of the treasury may. u:>der regulations
of tho Treaanry department, provide for sneh
rtdemplion and issue by rulolltntion at the
regular aab-treaenriee and pnbltr depositories
of the United Htates, until the whole amount
of fractional currency outstanding shall lie re
deemed. and the frr -tlonal carroncy redeemed
under this act shall In :d to bo a part of the
sinking fund provide<l for by the existing law.
tho interest to tie computed thereon as m the
rase of bonds redeemed under llie acts relat
ing to the sinking fnud.
Mr. Kdamiids from tho committee on the
Jud.csary, ispoitod adversely on the House bill
to protect witnesses who shall bo ri|aired to
testify in oertain cases, and tbe tall was
placed on the calendar.
Mr Morrill (Itep.), of Vermont, called np
the lull making appropriations to continne the
work of improving the Capitol grounds, and
the amendment of the House, reducing the
amount from $25,000 to 020.000, was agreed
to, and tho bill passed
■oram.
Mr Knox (Dora.). of Kentucky, olfairman of
tlie judiciary committee, reported the tali to
amend sictioti l.oit of tho revise ) staiutes. so
as to provide that no person shall be proaecut
id. tried or punished for any offense. except
against llie internal revenue, unless Indicted
w,thin three years after such offense has been
or may I r •nuti.l red. After diacuasiou the
bill was panels).
Mr. Hnann (Dem.), of Maryland, chairman
of the committee 0:1 foreign affairs, reported
the bill to restore to the Japanese government
what Is known as the Japanese indemnity
fund, including all mtoreet and accumiilaliona
thereof, but reserving #I2S.(MX) claimed by
officers and men of Ute navy until Congress
sliall otherwise direct.
Mr. Schleicher (l>oni.), of Texas, chairman
of i lie committse on Texas frontier trouhles,
reported a bill for the prediction of tlie Texas
fio ,t m ron the I.ower Bio Grand* It anihor
i/ s tlie President to order 111" troops to crosa
thn Itio (irai de. and use such means as may
bo found nsocaaary to reonvcr tho t den prop
erty and to c ,ecii the laid*, guar ing, bow
over, against uiim cessaiy injuiy to the peace
able inhabitants of Mexico.
Mr. Durham (tiem ). of Kontuoky. from the
cummitteo on ox|ieii(liturt in ti.e department
of justice, lejiorlod a lull to regulate tho em
ployment of special c innrol for tlie govern
ment, authorizing it only on the ci rtifioalo of
tlie jiulge ilint it is necessary, and requiring
the judge llao to fix the fees, t'ossod.
Mr. Oox (l)eui.), of Now Yolk, frotn the
cxmmitieo on bank ng and cmroncy. rtqiorb d
the bill hi regulate tlie winding np i f national
bank'. Ho i xiiDiued that tbe object of tho
bill was to facilitate liquidation, and that in
solvent backs may bo honestly and speedily
closid up in Hie interest of tlie pablio.
I'a-etd.
Mi. Hubbell i ltep.), of Michigan, from tho
committeo on banking and curreuoy, reported
tiack adversely Ilia l>tll Axing the legal rata of
Interest on national tuonay lkMn(luml Uie
lulled Htetes at not exceeding all par cent.,
end stilting ponelttne for lt MolaUon
Mr. Ilolman (Item.), of Indiana, from Uie
oomiuitlee on appropriation*, reported back
the Senate bill Aung lite pieeideuUal salary,
aflur Uie fourUr of Mareb, 1*77, at #2S,MX).
I'aeaed without discussion.
The ipiesUotl Was taken (HI a motion made
by Mr Ilolman to refer Io tha •xtmmlllee of
the whole the bill reported adversely from the
comiultUe uti banking ami currency, to regu
late therataof interest Uiruugbout the country
on national money (that ta, greenbacks, naUun
al batik notes, etc. > stul to inaks it six iwr
cent. The motion was rejected yeae, 75 j
nava, Uft, and the bill was tabled.
Mr. ttaid d'eui ), uf New York, from Ilia
committee uii commerce, re|M>rled a bill ax-
ECJ| •ting uisstefa of veesels engaged In trtule
betweeu Ibe t'wlte<| Slates and lblUsb North
America, or tbe West Indies, or Mexico, and
the masters of i easels of loss than seventy
ttvn tons burden, bound from a port uu the
Atlantic lo a put on the i'acitieatul vice versa,
(lorn tbe uec-eaeity of ablpplug their erewa or
prisiuriiig then shipping articles to be signed
before a shipping r-unmieMoner I'aseed.
Mi, Hereford (liem ), uf Weal Yirgiuia,
chairman of the i mmittes on commerce, In
troduced a lull, which waa paused. making an
approprtatton fur lite construction, repair,
preseivatiun, and eompletiou uf diffe'ont pub
lic wotks on rivers and bat bora Tbe total
amount appropriated is #s.M7'i,>isU. uf which
♦ SUM 000 IS for the lu pruvemenl of New York
hatbur and tbe removal uf übelrurttous at Hell
i.sle
Mr. lierefuid (Hem.), of Went Virginia,
from the c mmiltee on Ootumerce. reported
adiorseiy the bill fur tbe ap|iouitmetit i fa
commission tu tu<|uire as to the tortus on which
a c*-uuueiciai liesly can be made with (lanada.
Mr Kehr (Hem ), of Missouri, from the
same commitU e, reported a bill lu autbotiae
tba const ruction of a budge scr.ns the Mis
souri river, at or near niuux City, lowa
I'aaaed
Mr Wells (Hem ), uf Missouri, from the
committee uu appropriations, reported the la
ttdeney bill. 1 lie UU sppruprlatee #052,4*6
tio moiiou uf Mi. lloliuau (Hem.), of Indi
ana the twumiv bill ap| r.)|'tisung for
tbe improvement of the I spitol grounds was
amended by reducing the amount to ff'jO.OOO,
and was passcl.
Hon Tiny Lite.
Our Wtixlthleet aiul tin ml noted men,
nu\n the New Vurk Uraphits, are tlie uistt
tiietlnehpiil M their HUHHIUHH lntbitn.
Mr. A. T. Bto wart ride* to hi* uptown
atore at ten a. M., and promptly at
twelve MII be found at his whoieaale
warebenao at Chamliera street, which he
tot promptly leaven at four. Gomtnodore
Yaudurhilt in never a moment behind
eleven in reaching his Fourth atreot
office, and aa the hauilfl of the clock
point to two he buttons on hi* great
coat for tlie constitutional afternoon
drive behind bin fuel trot Lent, reaching
home invariably at five to dine. Jay
Gould plods in the office in the base
ment of his Fifth avenue manaiou from
ten to three, never stopping even for
lunch, and on a ploaaaut afternoon can
be seen tu the park behind a pair of
delicate limlied pontes to a r<d wagon
after the latter hour, always alone. IVter
Cooper rides to hia down-town glue
store in an old ramshackle cioutie every
day at ten, returning to hia Lome iu
Lexington avenue at tin-orthodox dining
hour of two, etudiouely dittca-diug the
fashionable six o'clock rejautt. Until
his old carryall was ujiaet a year or two
ago in Liberty street by a dray, tbe
phila-lhropist landing iu the arms of a
passer-by, Mr. Cooper insisted upon
drivit g the old gray horse which
IHUWWI Uie war uamj*ugu under
General " Haidy " Smith, at
tache,! to the Vehicle mentioned, but
the Liburty atreet exjwrieuce was too
much for the old gentleman, and he wa*
prevailed tijHtu to overcome his scruples
against the more modern coupe, and
now c.'UScut* to be driven. Ibun or
ahine, summer and winter, the venerable
William Cullen Hryaut, bis white locks
floating in the wind, c*n Iwseeu walking
down the east side of Broadway, be
cause the leat crowded, invariably
reaching the office of the Evmmg I\'
at eleven oVJtwk. Iu the hot mouths he
remains at his country seat at Itoalyn,
Mid for n few weeks does not go to the
office. Iu all other aeanona, however,
his movement* are regulated with clock
work jiunctuahty. Once arrived at the
editorial rooms he opens and reads his
comsjsiudeuoe, di-|* using with a secre
tary, and at the age of seventy nine an
swering with his own hand till his oorre
sjvondetit*. Then the morning journals
are read with religions care. Contrary
to a general itnpremion, he seldom writes
an editorial. A docen a year will cover
all his work in this direction. Great
public emergencies only call forth hia
editorial quill, at which tunes the print
era are s<*tawl with dismay, (or hia chiro
gr*j>hy is not copjier-plate by any moans;
bnt tlie readers of us article in print
are treated to some iioautiful employ
ment of English, which often carries
conviction, a* well ashaudsomely round
ed sentences. Promptly at two he
gathers up bis bundles and parcels, for
he is seldom without one, and takes up
his trudge along tlie east side of Broad
way for hia home in West Sixteenth
strict. Uncle Daniel Drew riaos at aix,
holds morning prayers at seven, break
fasts at eight, and watchea the iudicator
iu his mansion in Umou Bjnsre from
the time of the opening of the exchange
until the doors are closed. Then he
dines. Ilis evenings he spend* with a
broker or two in his library, seldom go
ing out even for exercise. When Fisk
and Gould were at the Grand Opera
House it wa* tlie old man's habit to go
there every day at eleven and spend an
hour. _
His Own Doctor.
A man of high intelligence, well edu
cated, and of vigtrons understanding in
most things, wax nevertheless given to
the practice of self tormenting iu re
gard to the state of his health. He was
fairly robust, ste and drank well, slept
easily, walked with remarkable energy,
was capable of service and long sustain
ed mental lalmr Mid of much physical
exertion. Unluckily for himself, he be
gan to study domestic medicine, and
straightway a too active imagination led
him to simulate in his own case the
symptoms of almost every disease be
had happened to road of. He was par
alytic, apoplectic, rheumatic; he had
heart disease, his lungs were affected,
his liver was congested; gout threaten
ed him; his vision became enfeebled;
obscure sensations alarmed him as to the
state of hia brain; fevers of one kind or
another were perpetually hatching in his
system. The man's life Ixx'ame a bur
den and n misery to him; he half-kille 1
himself with H irer, and nearly succeed
ed in getting poisoned by a succoasion
of variixl and opposing remedies.
At last he was enrtxi. Reading the
symptoms of a condition from whieh it
i* physiologically im|>ossil>lo that men
should recover, he found to his horror
that each particular symptom was dis
tinctly marked in his own ease. Ho
went over the ground again and again ;
each renewed examination only served
to bring out the symptoms with more
alarming distinctness. Then the affair
liecame too ludicrous; a hearty fit of
laughter dissipated not only that par
ticular ailment, but all the rest, and the
sufferer was cured.
A lilind Mhii'n Bravory.
A hotel in Is- Mars, lowa, waa burned
the other night. I was a small frame
building, in the suburbs of the town.
Some late pedestrians saw the fire three
quarters of a mile off, and went to it as
rapidly as possible. When they got
there everybody in the house was asleep,
and in ignorance of the fact that their
pnssage to the ground was already out
off by the flames. They alarmed the
house and broke in the doors. Several
people oweaped with paiuful aeorohea.
A family named Niermeyer, consisting
of n mail and wife and six small children,
boarded in the house. Three of the
children, the oldest three and a half
years, were sleeping with their father
nud mother. Two of them were sleep
ing with Mr. Niermeyer"s blind brother
in the house, and one was spending tho
night away from home. Mr. Niermejer
jumped out of bod and got out of the
house in a delirium of fright, his blind
brother, with great preneuoe of mind
and noble devotion, picked up his two
little bediellows, aud taking ore under
each arm, made his way to the burning
stairs. The stairs fell with hiin in his
descent, but he held fast to the children
and brought them safely out of the fire.
All three of them were burned, but not
seriously. Mrs. Niermeyer aud her
threej helpless babes perished in tho
ttani<>B. Their remains were found all in
a heap among the cinders. Mr. Nier
meyer is now a hopeless maniac.
A Gnat Story.
For aom time istart Urn clerk* at a
station in IjrmwriUa have boon annoyed
by goat* that infoat that imiuadiata lo
mlity. Not natutflwri with the •
devilment tiirwMi sly raanal* am guilty of
they chew all th tag* off the cotton
haliM mint them for ahipmetit, thereby
intuiting a yrmt ileal of trouble lu ahip
|ing tun cut to r. The other (lay tlte
clerk* Rurrouodetl alront a doaen of the
goat* ami aunoentUxl ill driving them into
a IKJI oar alongside the platform and
fanteiiitiK the door. Tliat niffht Uit-rw
wag a carload of K<>ata going north,
hitchrwl to a freight train. The oar vra*
left at ludiauapolia, and the next day
the door waa thrown o|>eu and the goat*
runtied out and made a raid through the
town, tipnrtiiug and butting clerkn,
haiidw, lioxea, latino, etc , aa they ea
ia|x'd. Not IwiiiK apprised of the ehip
ment byway bill the Inriianapolia clerk*
ehawed th m all river town, endeavoring
to catch them, of oourue I relict tug the
company would have to pay for them a*
"lost freight" if they were not caught,
lly night all were caught and put back
in the car. A di|*ateh waa went to Uie
atatiou man in LoubrriUa : " Heud on
your way bilL (lot all the goaU." A
di*|iatch went back iu reply : " Don't
want any. I*H 'em go. ' The race iu
ludiauapolia i* aaid to have (teen very
exciting.
LOOT Hut Lira. —A local wit of LA
favttte. Ark., undertook to fool Dr.
YV eatbrook one ducky evening into the
1 relief that a plug of twiat tobacco that
he |>ointed at the doctor's brad waa a
pistol. li t Muaoeeded admirably, and
waa ahot dead before he could explain
that it waa all a joke.
At our rerjueat Oragin A Go., of I'hil
iwlelphia, IV, liave promised to aend
any of our reader*, gratia (on receipt of
fifteen cent* to jay pontage), a aa tuple
of Dobbin*' Electric Soap to try. Heitd
at once. , •
If you have a discharge from the noew,
offensive or otherwise. partial Inaa of lite
sense of sroeU laebe or hearing eyes watery
or weak, foal doll and stupid or delrtjitet*)',
Iwiu or pressure in the bead, take euid eeeily.
you taav reel assured that you have the ca
tarrh Thousands annually, without manifest
lug half of Lb# abovs symptoms, terminate to
consumption and end in the grave. No disease te
eo common, more deoeptiva. or loaa understood
by phyaiotaiia. B. f Pierce, If 1' < f
buffalo N Y , is the proprietor of l>r. hags s
Tilerrb Itemady— a perfect spociffc for aeiarrh.
eold in Uie. bead,' or oauurbal headache *
Pimptaft on tb fftoe, rough akin,
rUepfjed tuuida, eaitrbe ua tad ill ouUuaoca
iffoctiuae onrwd, tII > u mwlo soft end
•nwuUi, by Uii iiM of Jl Mill TilHoap Tbil
made by On w oil, Hisinl A Go , Now York, i
lit* only kind tint nut* riUod on, ia there
im nutT imitiuoua. mule from oommou ur
which lie worUileei.—Oom.
Vegrtiin* isncknowleidgfyi by all cJmwra
(if Ino (ill to be Ike beet tbd Quel rehab)*
blood iHinder in the world.
Southern Hotel, St. Louin, Mo.
The moat complete hotel in ill lta ip; .bit
menle in lbs Waat. The vible tup plied it ill
Uiqm Willi the beet the uirkel iffordi.
Important to lVnom V lilting New Tori
or tin* Centennial,
Tb Ginn UmoM Horn. Sew York, oppo
ute (lie Urn 4 Centrii depot, hie orr k&Onle
t'liitly fitrubliwl loom*. Mentor, tu-tu. nod
ill nedern im oi rtnenu Kuropenu plin.
Carriage hire le mod, la bigfii)fe ia iikati
to ind from the de.ol. free of rigriie The
met uiinL ti|>jih.vi ailh Uie U--t. Outwit
ceo live better for low money it the (bend
Gutou, thin it my other firi cleea n.ee.
H;ii;e md care piae the hotel oooklu ll> to ill
pine of Uie city, and to I'bllldelpbii dr|.c.
Dr. ( IIKM M* eTAMHKU MKXKDI CI.
The .teadard iwdle fee ill dleaaeet ef tie luf. ire
ttnxri ri'Liiei. .Mii r. koma'i Ut Who
T.u. and I.UIK'I'I Meaiilill Ptue.iid.lf taken
tele* toe la eg. we deetiorwd. e pod) cafe la effected
To than. three medicine. Dt J 11 lie bench. of Phil*
de'phle. ewee h awl.lied eaiuiaat ti u>e Imlleni ef
pelntoaai? d 1 ■■
The I'liiawnk hrraa rt|ee> tie morbid nude la the
luaae aeluie Lheoee It ok bf la eeer eipectaralioe. hw
ebea the phlegm or matter le ripe e u#-bi aougb ettl
threw It oft tie p.Heel bee reel lad lie hue bu le
heel
To enable the Pulmonic hrrep to do tile, teteeeh**
Mandrake PlUt end Bcheeck'e tee Weed Toe.lt meet he
freelr need u> c Irene. tie etumecl end Ueer !tcbench*.
Mandrake PHI* eel ne tie liter, reatclne ell otw.ren
uaee. relet tie ill bladder, the bile Merle tree:,. end
lie lire. t. eaoo mimed.
bdeoch'r tee Weed Toetc w i gentle elf elect end
eltefmilre. tie ol.ell at elleh It W eompneed to lie.
will tie lead en prereote enuring. It urttl. tie digue
tin b> toeing up tie ttawweh lee heelllj c edition en
tie! lie food end tie Pulmonic tirrap will tali, (wed
blood ilea tl. lone* bail, md Urn pelieet will .orelr
gel etui it cere u lelee to ptwmel fiaeh eold
111 who wlel to ecmealt Dr Rclaeek. eltler pwocmell)
or !•) eteor. eea do ao el it. prtaelpeJ ofhoe eorant ef
Mill end Area Mreete. I'L.led.lpl.i* mrj Monde)
N. bench*, madwtnm ere eaM b ai. druggtela through
oei toe ooontn
The Markets,
■aw max
tfawf flattie-Prime to Extra BwDecfea (9\ • It
Cobuboii in Oml T*wa..... *
Dm tv to :i w
Hops—ldrr (*.# its
Drmweil l(i%# ley
Kiis-r v# V
Lamfaa. 9 to # 9 CO
Ootum—Middling ltfc# !>\
Floor—Extra Wawtara IH yt t 90
g'alr Extra f *t a
Wheat— Red Western... 1 St # t M
No. t Spring t sr # i sr
Rye—Htass I 00 # I <e
lUrlrv—Klate 7 # M
Barley—Mall 97 A f
Oaia— Mixed Wretern 49 4 4
Ooru—Mixed Wiwtern............ .. fl 4 M
Bay, per cart , )is
Straw, prr cwl M to I 10
Hope Tate—lt #!*... eida 1)1 4 X
Pork—Mea* 9 to tall to
hard lit** t ka
Fish—Mackerel, No. t. new * Or #ST 0
* No. l, new ] to yfit M
fry Cod. per rwt 3S a I II
Herring, Sealed, per tot SI # }4
Pen lean tfrtlde U9l|#Oi<4f Keflncd, lV
Wool—iTnhfornla Fleec*. II A V)
Texaa •' SO VI M
Australian " S A It
Butter— State Ban
Western fairy IS e M
Western Tei10w...... 2 ya tu
Western ordinary It a St
Obseae- flat# Factory 07 ta 171j
state Skimmed ft g N
Western...... i ' a is
Eggs—State IP V# lt,
kuan.
Wh*at I r. A t n
Bye—Kate 91 .4 el
Corn—M*i*d to ye 94
Barley—Mate 94 # M
Data—Slate Ha H
SPfftlA
Fleer 0 it #lO to
Wheal—No. I Hprtng IK SIM
Oorn— Mixed...... . Ban
Owle 31 A 7
Hrs fx a 79
Barley 91 a II
BAtSTMOBM.
Cotton—lew Middling* 11V* 12V
Floor—Extra ... 9 78 A
Wheat-Bed Western 1 JO # 1 SO
Bye 71 a 7a
Oorn—Yellow to ta to
Oslo— Mixed 4.1 A **
Petroleum 09 V 4 09V
rxruMtuxn.
Beef Oattie— Extra 04 A 07
Sheep 09ti*
nog*--freaae.l It i 4 U
Four—Pennsylvania Extra 9 St at 9 St
Wheal—Red western... 1 In I HI
Rye 91 # IS 1
Ooru—Yellow 91 # ft
Mtxwd. 91 # S3
Oats—Mixed a| 49
Petroleum—Crude. 11 At dkl Ikg Kilned, 14V
WATCRTOWW, MASS.
Beef Oattie—poor to Choirs 9(10 A 9 f
■beep S Ml #7OO
Lambs S to # 9 90
■MMMMato The Allan IrOable Is a uatienal
kl • St i henltl.toar*
SILVER TPPED
Shoes tor children. Nevec weat
Bare a 111 3#a* through al the ma
mmraamkrimwSm
Rv .. - STANDARD m * J * W|U
SCREW
Gnvcramrnl ONLY ABSOLUTE^
>fk Bairn Fine .Mlard I arrt*. with Name. IO
cis . port p*ld 1.. Jonas ACo . Naaa.u, N 1
/• YKKY deal rah )• NEW AkTICLKN for Agents
Ik Mir'.l hj J t; Cxrawri.t . Co . Cheshire. Cnw
SEN IX NTAMI* f " Circular* and Speotmnn OLD
„ ODIN O. A Bl"l.kl.KY.Uranvtlin. New 1 ork.
Profit nhie, l'leasant work . hnndrnd* uowemploywd .
hundred* more wanted. M N Uiviu, Itrtr, P.
djttilA A .7IIINTH. A gwola wanted KxowL Mfg.
ll " Co.. IAI Mlohhnn Ate-itt, ( mcago. 11l
111 I FAK.7IM FOB sAI K m Dai. Md.. Va. and
Pa hand forOnlaiogwa J POLK, e nmlngtoo. ( -
A fIOMTC (let the heat art tola ever seen to nail
Aui!lll ID rwt fnim T. It Ntayoar A (*o .Pro* .R. I.
IiRKK 1.111 ot a Piano fordlairlbutlox mr olreulara
r ACdreaa ll.h Piatei Cn . H 111 Broadwai Nee York
jrffntf Oft* day al home Nan- visa worth # t anot
$0 M) frea HTINhON A Oil.. Bor land. Ma
W.tNTKI), I.Af I ESi to rail Iba lmpmvad Tidy
77 • aslener ft J I • wjl.% a day mada. Send g A ota_for
sampler Addraaa HCSINKSh, Box 4Alf.N*n>ort.R.l.
AGENTS WANTEDS
Dictionary of
Christian Antiquities
l°y 'll r. 1 1* ""*2 It L. 1 S I iVlarVrwhonT. Vw^aanatWa
rear*, aevratx-arvrs of Ihr frwaiml *ch(dar* la lb* iworld
lisrrWrn rnrgd upoa Ihir work, wiuehkegln*
•• lllble Itlelioaary " toarew aff. w waat ld Agraq,
Clergyman. Ttarhrr*. Slndrata lannrm, rte .lo fODplv d
lo Ihr ihm.ooo farailkr who hr* Xht-BM* /Set y, who r
Kinliao fur and nowr *oc lhl> CwntlnnnXlan. ,*F'*nU
who sold ihr •• rtitJc fyf V" arw skd to uly thjff aid
•Ohr. ribrr* with tha Ctosrawwrnns BmyorOrculaii;
sitilrnr A. D- WoavmiaßTOg A Co., Hartford. Coaa.
SIJ r^rrriiinwsttssiraLr
-25 BK'I ttffj&MßCftCW:
25 rs. , i , ?'fe.'..'s3itafe3S
Slo£S2sr-{JSS.KJrK2S
s2o S , .*BBUB Aaamur"
Add raw. olio damp. fM fAIIB. Tatodi. O.
KA -I'l I AI.I.INU ('AHUM, la urn..
?.Unr~j ffiToSSfiirß f 4
®Q£fi * Mwlk. iuWy*d S Mall.
2>oDU 'M ort-cira la lha aartd Oaa mmqlmjrm.
* wwv AddraraJAV MtONMftN. BimJi.Bl*
ilim WANTKIf. T.t fill Maaoiod
A Obrraaoa fur fI. Sran.pl- ha araS.pwl i-aldJfOa
Ou*n*aT4i.OM<mo (V. . A7 Ami m . Sow York
iiO ££9 STJUff
I'liM—i. am ValuaHl. Haraplra fraa atob Utraalara.
II I. FI.KTOHKB I I I fWun Mini, Mow lt
T*AMt ilt ,WL<IA& r . Y
JLM HR.I •'> I.AIXKM Addnwa.ann .taiap JL
Mil fell HAN TK1..1 ■.. uklKUk.iF
/Ta""■■■■ KRK WHS* 1.1 Ai.AKTHEOto Aaala
s77&Miy£
ADTfTV ttttfSS#
urlUffl Swaspieys
CORA
viOll wHTHTHT UO'VtoTratoT&a
Hnli WulH! MadaM aad Ulploraaa,lwW
, UVEAS'* p ictor i a i BIBLES.
rr.iTirwyx". ,* A "~
NOON
, Wl ii la* fl •" k" "•
Uiinra. um kauH">anmito
AMKkU'AS Ft'MUCHISO Ou. Hart*ad,OA_
' MOOOV aa aINKKT.-tWaato
MIMiH oruiaai.aalWulK., U4 oraatAalo laaotd
..tUwra Ma W4 lhaif autka Aoorar. </
AUR.iT". itoUd'Mki hai>4 (uf dfoufllt la
AMKKK 'AN I-i HI.IHIUBO flft, Hnrtfuod. <X
OPIUM M^llTtMaa' 4 iMalCw*
14Iim l. PL R. ♦ AlfM. Oalaor. Mirk.
AMtTlf HABI7 carad ( btaaaa aaada rl
fIDITT IYI Uu* foiarara II a I I.inntr Pw
1 I f 111 Iwl ma* lauwtora aIU. brain— or ilaM
UliUrl
ii.mf 1 ■ ft?
lavalll- Caaaa, tor M Caato. fact iaiaiaa.
a aaa abwk to < >ato aal fcato h—a— la. !*"-
tr a MJSMjcgyyg
rao.A. | lr . .unaalW)<ato
U Waraod A It rrua A < VA. limnlnaaJßaaa.
CHICACO 0 -""
SCRAPER at. ti>—trial Prtaa nii
ia.r "nod fur Maaaal l Kami MaAiad
a jaLV|- a aoOl [MCldr*. Il Add 1 * ttoAoeee
DITCHER - raw. aad iwaharOa uaw—a
LUBRICATING OH.
.fH31 94 Tosr °& tzsrjvzz
SemSMBBm ftoiupU < aa J K Hit) fa.Tl
PRINTER'S ROLLERS
Ural. fraa Ida f alaal - Kirrlator" I •■Malltoa.
alii raeaal. aal adooiod bp Uw araittat . prwa. SO aaaU
■-nySEsSfffflLnT.
. vrMsttts a
iflaaa, 441 aba . wnA traar aaaaa twaaUtaii* pMriad as
(Sara aad **H mmfLm ml tfpa. adaato' arleatt*. **.
aaai bi rat am aal as aaaMM ofartaa lrwaeot la
ISuba Km of aS. W. U. CAfflU*. Kaaatoad
K'.raa Uooloo liafara %a A M. Pttlfltoni A OS.
T>.. ;ana. a O. .■' 'a
V RA| B
Mf Tllsarrstra • r Aiaaa far
tosow raa3jr7i'r . r f. , ldto<asaalf lto*A
Vuxiaji 1l Ro a - sis *bi rc.boauia.lUr*
Are You Awake
To Ik* tac* l hat a ftm OWiar. will b*| a anili PortahJ*
t'rluituc Pro a. fjia. Ink. -tr . ail ii*P*Ma, ab rt will
/■rtu pa> w Hard*. koaalnvs. Bfllhaad*. uMMW.,
*1 a*ru> Prtolar*. prtia • Pr*a<- at S3 aa<aaart.
tSaad tn lit alartipa tor Utaatratad < atal c*> I*
Kmaaom f—* do.. lhHfa,Owt
FITS,
EPILEPSY, FALLING FITB
CURED.
ran la Ho Hrnoa, For utmma-lje. tn jnlr. of or
■rrtta t,. MitYKU BHOTMKIUt. wt>..isat> l>roc*lau.
atswhso. i wjMßta* (JaaV. lheaalTiati
IJZz& lIEHTENNIAL
VXirXKMAL HISTORY
To UM *ta*a of U Br lOtl r**r> of on Hallooa) lad*
iModaoo. locf*dln aa aaaooat of th. oiau* (.rood
IXIMIUI FahtMtiM. UK I pa***. 800 omttaß,
looHtoa qMct aa Knra MM bd for tWolar
r tr üb&lkr A oa.*ii kt*> i .rwitaws..r*.
SAVE MONEY
Rr otmdlßß •.?* tar ao> *4 Macula. *ad THE
WEFKI.T TKIHCJCK iracolar ptto* 8 . or #&-14
for U Macula, and THE RKMI WEKKLT TRI
Bt'ffK incalar prlea **< Add res
Till TKIBI EK. >r*.Vk.
bin CGNTDiUED OB SESSATKffIIL
IU I I Worts la Ttrr- PKIPU'B I.FIKI KM
■ r\Bt .arc* |*|N •rmrt ml Ratal. tahoc
iIU r., sat* MM lx>nts AlooM. Ml* Mar*
J liilaa**. OUrar UMM. and fuH anatri
boa* SMirr (IKTRIAI. THRUM MONTHS FOR
OHI.Y Ml CEXTIi Ma.te of dtSwaol dataa MOI
IKKK for a S-o~,< .tamp
H. K. I I HTIS PokllaUrr. Kaaioo. lIM.
NPII IM
U1 llilVi Mmpice
Eprevllly cured bT DR BECK'S onlr known ur I
(tin- ttrmod*. ko IHtItUE for iroauaoct
uuUl cured.' Coll on or add res
Dr. J. C. BISK, U3 ;is St, Cbdnst!, a
BCDCCKD TO A CKBTAUSTT.
Chance to Cain
$50,000
NO RISK.
Send for circular at one* No time to loo*.
W. 11. rxifULCTu*, Banker, 7t Maiden I-ana,
NEW TOIL
PORTABLE GRINDING HILLS.
fin* rrrarb ■srrMrffaptn.
01. uadM-euaaara, re<o brad
% rlr Mill Btwoi of all
/ffWIH alaaa.*s*ls natr-MAa
/ASIHL krr RalllS <W*Uh. Mill
/Mm QI vi
pf MUlMarSsrj and Miliar*'
*%. i Brad far FarapkSK.
Mi IN rank Mill l asRSJ,
"Vr IIAI IMA.! iMlnnail. o.
C AGENTS WANTED FOR THE
I ENTENNIAL
HISTORYOFTHE U. S.
Tbo great In tors. I to lb. Uidllfa. history of war ocar
try maV< • this t be faetoa: selling book www published.
It contains a full account of the .rand Uu'iatU
OMstoN -Old. luootuplete and I'nrwltable Work* I
are 'wing urulaied. see thai tbe lok you buy ooculna ,
44 I toe Kacrurlar* and UFA Pears.
Bond for olrruisrs and eitrm lta> to Agents. Address
NA . IOX Al PUBI.ISHINO tx . Philadelphia. Pa
QmCAGOj EOBER
FOR SI,OO, POSTPAID.
In order that FTerybo-dj may ba enabled to take thh
great Story and Family Newspaper, we hare determined
la offer It UU Jan.. 1*77, for SI.OO, postpaid. It It tha
LARCEST, HANDSOMEST, BEST,
and moat widely circulated Xswepepat la tho Wm
Sal money addraoasd
THE LKDUKR. UWTCAOO, lu.
THE enliecrit*-rs are manufacturers and proprie
tor" of Dr. H. W. Head'• tVlehratc.l Aathma Re
lief, whloli i undoubtedly the beat Aathma Remedy
yet discovered, Instant rellrf la guaranteed or pur
chase price refunded. We put up the medicine u
boxes of three sixes, which retail for 25c., 50c. and
sl. Persona remitting retail price will have the
medicine promptly forwarded t.y mail, [>oat-paiJ,
Also sample" "cut free to any who may desire.
Pricea j-er dor., $1.75; $3.50 and $7.00: gross price,
$18; fid ; $72. Wholesale agents : John F. Henry,
Cnrrari A Co.. K. Y.; John D. Park A Bona, Cincin
nati, Ohio; Kichardson A Co., 81 Louis, Mo.; Lord,
Smith A Co.. Chicago, 111.: O. D. Goodwin A Co.,
Beaton,Mas.; Freuch, Richards A Co., Philadelphia,
Pa. Address ETHERIDGE, TDLLER A CO.,
Rome, N. Y.
SnVYItaM-ALPINE NOET
Tree-Protecting WAX.
Will ."'wwe Trees by I he MllLuit.
All that la necessary to he aald of this
I It I- pronounced b, those who bsre used it
asths RKBT INVENTION everdia, (rsndfor SI'RKI.Y
OURING sU WotTNt*. DIBKASKS AKI>CKAI as or iB(
UABK OK L- oTaof Fruit sad bhsdc Trees, Grspertoea,
R.WS l.u.he, shrtihlx*. Plan's slo , whl.h are invari
ably ruined wbeu damvieed b, Antluala, wonn<. Kaecta.
Oraaahoppers, I r*i. Hot Sue. r ftom a yCM her causa
Ons Jar of It will pr trot you ssalnst besvy hws, anil
will kso ' tha Trees In a lis 1 y slats and hearing oo i
dltlon. New la the time. in , the so not you no 10~ ar.ch
dUeaees, t tie letter, lei- i o a rierer-laill.rr turp.ra
tion for Grnfri y T*■ * I rlp. l:i dure uf 8 iba.. 11l :
C lbs., EU.TA ; 18 It a . Kes ot 34 lbs. 98..V1.
Oasn wiih order bent l,y 11, pr .a with lull dlieotlons.
under my -sal and signature I have no kgen's. for
ward ail orders to the 1 iveu'or. un.ieralgued, and get itw
genuine nrllcle UGDFRKY ASCII MANN . landsca-X
Gardeuer, 3118 Geimaotown Are., Pblladelphla, Fa.
W. B —Plana drawn and laid oat and Katlmates atrna
for Fruit Orchards, Gardens, lawns. Country Heals.
Rustic Hotuas and Bridges, Grwenhouaaa, etc., and all
work promptlylattanded to.
Uaafsa !>•• attlaa* HI as taaaisa*a add sola Ifea toaa
FOUTZ'S
horse and oattlk powders.
<]jy *F-'*EWQ
<"■01 '"'tjffiljrara mr paaarn IWaraas.
Tits Nsvfist Tiing in Pictures.
A Tha Asaartraa Ultotf'A C H.Q
V
1 trff anad thajr ati! Mil, fnasald. la
f mif iwaadtor a thto papa* ato aill ratara
lj Ibara UW aaaaa ad I artlAnafa attA Aftf aaatoa
Q BftS3ks2ttUPißKK
A Idas, aaasaonac Ui Id la. (.-• ■ ataslt for 93 I 111.
IT aad la a /aaa.n. a* an all palaflsd wsrtfc
0 |IIO. Ta alas dtotrtoa.a .paelswato -# todr
IV awra a'abaaala war*. Ibar atll latsaad (rafat
A uraato. At awf laatA pare aaar of tba ahora,
A wboaa aaaaaa alll U roaiarad a raaaloai, •
1) OU *ui*apb , n> laafc-a.
If **A4draaa, A*. Otl 'Hi HAPII CO..
Ns. IMS U'.laat lfrl, . _
J < larlaaslL. O.
pf IV Oor OVT Tdta DllHfiein
. a
a Tbto OatttAaafa aoaoaioaalad bp a
a ftrn (tilt, aatlltoa IHa aaiidai la IMS a
a
a f S-OO OlladrapH, "Pprlai Baaailra," a
1 adrartf.ad bp AM UIUMiRAm CO..
IMS Wain at Suaat, ( tncmaaU, O.
i | i;
" HALE'S
HOHEY orHoEEHOUKD AMDTAL
rot tbi ccbs'or •
Coran, CdUS, IrrrtCTOfXA, Hqamf
JCEAA, Dteetcclt BUSATBIMO, A*D
all imenoxt aw ybb Tbboat,
UAfMCMIAL 1 CUBA, AlfO LfSOA.
LXAJPOIO TO CUMSUMPtiOB.
Thia tntkllibto reatedj is oomposed at
the llobbt of lbs plant fiorehotmd. ia
rbtsnkcAl union irttn Tab- Bajlh, extract
ed from the Ltwu Pnrxcirui at the
fonst tree Abxbs Baiaamba, or Beim
at Giknd.
The Honey of Horehooßd Mtxrrftßß
ajtd scattbbaall irritßttoos and inflnat*
miiUra And tbe Tor-Balm cxxabbbs
a* BBAJB tle thront end sir-pMMM
LAADIM ts the tones. Ftvb AdtiiUoa* 1
IcrraiienU keep the ocganA coed-,
end in hcellHul Actio a. Let no pre
(adice keep yqafroiß tryinf
medicine of iBZDOis doctor, who baa
■need thoomnda of Ufes by U in his
ATM prima pmctioa. . .
JL -Tba Tar Balm baa no BAH
tacts otiodL
TSICSA, 50 CBCTt ASS fl *BB BUt'UA
Oraal auuc t bp iacr> Ban
Bold by all DrogpaOk
** Pike's Tootbache I>rops*>
rare in 1 minute.
The Wonders of Modern Chssilstry.
Smpariai aii 15 iaratn
(u|m u Bead aiad Mi m Tbar DaJtp
Uarar mjtrr t aind a Pear Pun mf
Dr. Radway's
Sarsaparillian
Resolvent,
THE GREAT BLOOD PURIFIER.
t. i ljjL JIiLL.-
C T to -r aura ARA—HA Iraprraac arttob far
fnnd. a> AMRAI .aararalua. or aaiaibraab, A—D DB
111 A"III *I f ■* —-**—--—* - I —R aaataa farah aad
aid baattaJTtlu Mralu ujT
THU H. II I dp appaaraiir to a ctoar aaartr ararabra
aalra; nurgna. TRA.I) trora TTO* Maddra liiafpM ba
aratbra atttocrat para aural itlag. Mttto ra aa aadtraaad .
j!^43asrisJSS.BLaga.t
M WBSD U ORA aad taacdtoaal bar
r..iety i mi T GTMid iO liMt tW" ft B4 fsyaßA
AT allow UOEE EE UW eblte E ia apwa. aad the eear-
THP.aadraa apararaara of AA WA <Aaaaad W a daw
-t q
labaratoa WUL laaluw raal baaattta Rl,tonltot
fraatotpatoadb PANQRAAP trara MRA laafa, ato
cwtta. broaabl or wttxi ;apa. tbraal or baad ; dtralntotdaa
af Ua FRAAA—R, of ooadH ■ aoaorml larraarr of Mraadlk
Uwoagbrato tba apaura . AUVWAEA OF ATOM laaitoaad
pala. and f—UNA of waakaraa .NWAD lb. anUra. top.,
■II ii aldnrr afa. . CAM AOL auld aad oHllla. aaaaa of
SSiM
UW I aa-noi raada aaaad aad braltuj U.OORA. toaar
na. ajphilltir aorra. Croato tola dwra... radaalu
Hainan ifnT*--11 OALDRAWLW tllw PTOD
ato ia illatTi' la Uw OD*ARTI*AI K ,ra.prUlaa. aaracrar
wu Hrd of iViOA • hara aacaraalai
ad aad b-T<raa dopowMd la UW bona.. .1 JATA. ata .
naaaiad oarlaa of Uw Wwa, rifkrW. apwd rarralarae,
oot.WU.x. abita aarali-I*., RADORATO HAAS*., *>•
KfHHirtKll.l l AN a! rad wo IU-- d.
PWDLA ---* azlamlaat* tlw rtraa of Uw fliiia frtao Ida
TL?:Hraa aba ara lakln '.Soao mndldara for Uwrara
of Cbraotr. Norofaloaa < MPHLSUO dtoa.ora. boaarar
ab*a A1.3 LA tba oara. fool Wtara, aaflMUwtiw
TRAJ ! •..- ITSTRA * TI. IM: CRAB U4 aalpbt torraadad
TTAOVA.U to arara *O UI.TTIW rura to
111 I.|l.wlnT- tbraa dlraaara tb. paitoot Wthra rot.
SRSRORALARA tboruaaof Uwdawaa.toaot fcwdlra
If oot arraorad and drt.OO I mat th. TOWF. It aIU aparad
aad OAUNA TO UADOMILTW LLO *■ TIMTRLIUA Aa aoaa
RA Uw • A KTOAL'AM 11 I.IAN awkajlAo PF>
- fad H-URA " orarf bo.r *AFLL draw Hot lor aad la
cmaaala ba*H. ■t-iawatH aad FLORB.
Tbo RRRAL poara < ( FBW nraodir to In FTOWW Uwl
tbraatoa Datfi • IN OARAMPTBW of t- L P aad
Taborrakioa ItitLow. Kroohila. SFLIIKLD Dlraaaa .
Waatraa. OWE. rati ra, ND T'kwaaa ''f tba Koloop*.
ftoalirtra. HTTRIAC* of H WOT ITMUTAMM* abrl a.
tin D, IT aborooalbraor. ha.a UI I-NRA.I, I boa DOMR aaa ,
with UW painful oporatfcra D! aalaa ton. lowrum-ut. ,
teoltinf at .AW la Uw blddot. and la J caw of la-
Aaranauoa of lb. Hladdor and KIDTWJA, la I nroatc
narrt "f I J:SITY*RTLE TND DTTWSBWW
la tuixn r* wade*, hard lanpsaad SFpAtkdd alcrm ta
Atom s fta eewwl •■* tfcm.l. okm. aed la talnrro^
sEte d^^s^bS-i:ii* to of
,tH,|-I atwra Uwboraao HODP ha. breraaa a <- RAID*••
work and ahora ..IJ Hat of oiwwooa to lortnro.
aliatiin LF*ti • R-AWDP cuaTonrra tboa.rat*hian
aad adwli.'UßA of tbo atrk TL to ta WK* oaeia. wtwro
-H tlw • OF rilMw appaar OAL oS frora to*
aafarttr B, It. arradorful. ahanot mporaatani
aaa. .. I—l -wUw tx iialnw to a aaa ltto aad aaa
attolonoo atwra THI. praat rraaadp MAD. atoa. to tta
dtonawa that orary ORW TO awe, or
law troohlod attb. a F." doara atll tnraoW oaaac aad a
(OA hmtlra la tba aiora aararatod fraraa, work a par
™TW 35RAAD attb obraaf ' dtorara. aboald oarrhra;
RADWAY'S
READY RELIEF
WIU A rFORD INSTANT EASE
nm-AiTMATTON OF THE KTTIXKTS.
- INFI. VMMATION OF TIIK HI.ADDER.
INFLAMMATION OF THK BOWELS.
CONGESTION OF THK L.L'SKM.
BORE THROAT. DIFFICULT RREATHIXG,
PALPITATkoN Or THK HEART.
HYSTERICS CROUP. DIPHTHERIA,
OATARkH. INFLUENZA.
HEADACHE. TOOTHACHR. MI'MPS.
NEUROMA. RHEUMATISM.
COLD chn.i.s. AGUE oik ILLS.
The appl!aat*wi of tho READY RELIEF to the
port or parts where tlx pain or difficulty ibu will
aEord moot ud comfort.
Twwnty drops LB half a tumbler of wator wilt, 1B a few
momenta, cor. CU VMPB. SPASMS. SOI'R BTOM
ACH. HEARTBCRX. MCE HEADACHE, DIAR
RHEA. DYSENTERY. COLIC. WIND IX THK
BOWKLB. and all INTERNAL PAINS.
Trevelers should niw.ys carry a b -tile of RAD.
WAV'S Kf 1.1 UKwita them. A few drops In watet
wtli J)recant atckoaaa or pains from change of wator.
IT IS BETTER THAN FRENCH BRANDY OR
'" - BITTERS AS A STIMULANT.
Price AO CMU. Mf by Druggists.
DR. RADWAY'S
BE6ULAK PILLS
Perfectly test el.ss. elegantly coated with mM com,
Itnaa rh, Llm, Bovtlt, Ki<l;ir* lil*dd*r, Ntrrou
DLUMM, H*dach Qpoattpttion,( oetlvtmMs, In
tioa, DjlpeMll, bIIIOUDM. lit Itoua F#w, InfLamica
tlon of Ik* nowi. Pllpr, and all ihmagt>ra*nta of tba
lntaraal Vboera Warranwd to affect a poalUeaoora.
Pttiwly Vacatabla, containing no iuervury, mlaaraL, or
dal*t*-H>u drug*.
|F" Dbaarratba following ijmptoms raaulting from
1) aordara of tho Dtgvativa Organ#:
l onatination. Inward Pilaa, Fullnaaa of tba Blood la
tba Haad, Acidity of tha Moom-h, Nanana, Hrartburu,
1 h-fun or Food, Fallneaa or Weight in tho htoroach.
Bour Rraetattooa, Sinking or Flattering at tbo Pit JI
tha Stomach, Swimming uf tha Haad, Uttriad and Ihf
flcult Brantblng, Fluttaring at tha Haajt. i'bo kin a r
Suffocating Sooaatiuna whan in a Lying PoMur*. D*ni
naaa of Vision. l>otg or Waba *f-ira tha Sight. Favar
and Dull Pain In tha Haad. Deficiency of Parapiratton,
Yaliownaaa of tha Skin and Kyea, P.in in tha Side,
1 'hast, Limb*. and Sudden Floahea 01 Heat, Burning is
tha Flash.
I A few doM.of RADWAY'S PILLS will free tho
vetea from all tha above uair-d disorders. I'rice 85
Cent* per Be*. BOLD BY DRUGGISTS.
Read."FALSE AND TRUE."
hadnnUKwataßp to RADVAT Ar CO., No.
IfW'arrr. Birwi, New York. Inlomiarinu
worth thousands wtli bo sent yon. f
N Y X II N" *
TYTHEK WAIT ox DYEEi'lAAato
™ p.cat. aar teat yo. a.w Iti ■dvwU.Mi.B
>a thi.